Alphabet & Intel

By Staff Reporters

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Alphabet has been declared a monopoly for the second time in under a year. Analysts will have plenty of questions about the repercussions of the most recent ruling, but don’t expect a breakup of Google’s many businesses just yet.

And, the best business unit of them all these days is YouTube, which has seen a stunning surge in popularity lately that the search company will likely try to capitalize on, while it continues to tinker with its Gemini AI model. Consensus: $2.02 EPS, $89.25 billion in revenue.

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Intel seems like a bit of an also-ran in the AI race these days, with shares down over 40% in the last 12 months. But to bulls, that just means the stock is cheap, while the company itself has plenty of opportunities for growth ahead, including partnerships with Nvidia and TSMC.

And, don’t forget that Intel’s status as a dark horse lets it slip below the tariff radar—the domestic chip producer dodged the latest round of restrictions that hit Nvidia and AMD. Shareholders will be hoping to hear more good news ahead. Consensus: $0.09 EPS, $12.31 billion in revenue.

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COLD CALL COWBOY: Vocal Persuasion in Telesales

By Staff Reporters and Lawrence Rosenberg

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Cold calling is a term that is typically applied to telesales, but most new business relationships actually begin with a “cold” contact of some kind. Whether through social media, email over the phone or door-to-door, “cold calling” lives up to its name; you are contacting prospects (hopefully decision makers) sans introduction and without warning. In some, if not many cases, you will be presenting to customers who have never heard of you, your firm, or your product/service prior to you getting a hold of them. You will also find yourself coming up against the palace guards (secretaries and personal assistants) whose most important job is to run interference for the boss and thwart any and all attempts that an unfamiliar caller might make to reach them. But, as the sales game will readily teach anyone with the fortitude to last long enough to learn the lesson, the more resistance one faces in the pursuit of a successful outcome, the bigger the payoff will be if one can muster the grit necessary to tough it out.

However difficult the road to riches, cold calling allows for a complete leveling of the playing field. Those that sweep the streets could tomorrow talk with billionaires; a man of little status or worth could enter into a contract with the founder of a blue chip, multinational firm — all with a single, unexpected phone call. The sheer daring of such an approach, its impromptu nature, works for so many reasons, not least of which is that it opens doors. From the intrigue and urgency the suddenness of the call implies, to the instant access a bold overture provides, cold calling is the great equalizer among executives, and a path to achievement open to all, no matter one’s experience, education or connections. Not that there ever were any truly insurmountable barriers to climbing the corporate ladder or accessing its highest rungs that a motivated self-starter could not overcome, but with the advent of the telephone and the brashness of the cold sell perfected, the most entrenched and frustrating of impediments, bureaucracy and fraternalism, ceased to be an obstacle. Yesteryear’s power elite traditionally only did business with friends, acquaintances and family (or perhaps a member of their local country club or lodge), but at the very least, those that connected in business were routinely introduced through a referral. However, the audacity of the unscheduled contact, the inspired notion of a “cold call,” and the realization that it worked, that a person of great esteem or importance was willing to do business with an unusually forward individual, made the glad-handing salesman who relied on his father’s rolodex obsolete.

With ivory towers toppled, etiquette overturned and tradition tossed out, ambitious men ignored propriety and custom and cold canvassed the board of directors and senior executive staff of companies both large and small. The old boy’s network, favoritism, and the “it’s not what you know, but who you know” principle of doing business crumbled in one fell swoop. The ramparts guarded by all manner of gatekeepers and middle men were trampled the moment the CEO became connected by wires to the outside world. Using nothing more than a telephone, a Horatio Alger-type work ethic and a well-rehearsed voice, the business world was invaded by those without patronage, underdogs and unknowns swarmed the gates. The cold call allowed the unfiltered, unapproved spirit of the upstart, unfettered by lackeys and administrators, to enter the inner sanctum of a chieftain and with the power of speech alone, win hearts and minds.

But, can one’s voice really move mountains? Must one not support the message with documentation and material, nurture relationships with lunches and meetings and personally shake hands to set the wheels of industry in motion? Is one unannounced, unsolicited, unscreened call enough?

The human voice is the master manipulator of sound and when paired with the right words it has a potent and intoxicating effect on behavior. Although some people react more favorably to stimulation of the other five senses, sound on its own can evoke them all. Those that study the science of suggestion will note the immense influence of other stimuli, such as that which affects sight and sensation, on how we make sense of our experiences, on how we make decisions, but it is the way in which such sensory bias is communicated (via the written word, and more powerfully, through speech) that truly tells the tale. The combination to unlocking the interests of many a man’s mind are often verbalized in the common yet telling replies to intriguing, thought provoking questions or action demanding requests.

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It is all a matter of deciphering the code, the clue-laden language:

“What you said really touched me.”

“I see the light!”

“You can smell his fear.”

“Let’s give that guy a taste of his own medicine.”

“You are coming across loud and clear.”

The way in which we describe our observations provides the key to how we interpret data, how that data impacts us, and through what primary pathway we process such information. It is our use of language that exposes how we perceive the world around us, how the gears of our minds are moved, and which of the five senses most effectively winds the springs that turn them.

Many times a prospect will request to have a look at your proposition in writing before moving forward, others will react positively based solely on their impression. Some say seeing is believing, but if it sounds exciting and beneficial, they will take action regardless because it just feels right.

All our senses come alive when the brain is stimulated, some more than others depending on the man and the moment, but the terms, phrases and idioms that we use when speaking (their quality, nuance and character) and the way in which they are expressed, have the power to move us in life-changing ways — the spoken word, when used properly, can play us like a piano.

Whether impacted more by sight, olfaction or incitement of the somatosensory system (the way things feel physically), one can induce the imagery and kinesthesia necessary to motivate and influence a prospect from afar with voice alone. Provocative descriptions, the proper use of tone and inflection, and the strategic interweaving of silence (of which sometimes nothing can be more deafening or exert more pressure) can activate or set in motion all manner of action. Practiced speech can lighten the heaviest heart or wrest tears from the coldest stare, it can conjure up a dream state or snap you back to reality. Never underestimate what a skillful performer can do with the right vocabulary and properly trained vocals. Charlton Heston could inspire awe, Orson Welles conjure intrigue, and Luciano Pavarotti demand devotion with nothing more than the weight and timbre of their words.

You too can affect people, positions and outcomes with sonant spirit and verbal substance. Invest in the greatest tool for success a deal maker has, your lexicon, your locution and your delivery.

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DAILY UPDATE: OpenAI, FDA, Roche & Rite Aid as Stocks Soar

MEDICAL EXECUTIVE-POST TODAY’S NEWSLETTER BRIEFING

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Essays, Opinions and Curated News in Health Economics, Investing, Business, Management and Financial Planning for Physician Entrepreneurs and their Savvy Advisors and Consultants

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  • OpenAI would be open to buying Chrome if Google is forced by a federal court to sell the web browser, the company’s ChatGPT head said yesterday.
  • The FDA suspended milk quality tests in some dairy products due to reduced capacity stemming from federal workforce cuts, Reuters reported.
  • Roche, the Swiss pharmaceutical giant, is investing $50 billion in US manufacturing to circumvent President Trump’s tariffs, the company said yesterday.
  • Rite Aid is preparing to sell itself in pieces ahead of a possible second bankruptcy, Bloomberg reported.

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What’s up

  • Intel surged 5.54% on reports that the chipmaker plans to cut 20% of its workforce.
  • Oklo gained 8.60% after OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced he’s stepping down as chairman of the board of the nuclear power startup.
  • Duolingo popped 10.01% after Morgan Stanley initiated coverage of the language learning company, calling it a “best-in-class consumer internet asset.”
  • Cava climbed 6.29% due to an upgrade from analysts at Bernstein, who think the bowl slop stock will not only survive but thrive in an economic downturn.
  • Amphenol rose 8.21% thanks to impressive earnings for the high-speed cable company, coupled with a solid fiscal outlook.
  • Vertiv Holdings jumped 8.60% after the data center company posted an impressive quarterly profit and raised its fiscal forecast.
  • SAP rose 7.47% following the software stock’s strong profit performance last quarter.
  • Novavax soared 19.52% on the news that the FDA has asked for more clinical data about its Covid vaccine.

What’s down

  • Enphase Energy plunged 15.65% thanks to a big miss on both the top and bottom lines for the solar tech stock.
  • Going down: Elevator manufacturer Otis Worldwide fell 6.64% on an earnings miss thanks to fewer orders from Chinese customers.
  • Online learning platform Chubb fell 2.17% after announcing a 38% decline in net income last quarter.
  • Baker Hughes may have beaten profit forecasts last quarter, but the oilfield operator’s revenue miss sent shares tumbling 6.44%.
  • Bristol Myers Squibb lost 2.59% after the pharma giant announced its schizophrenia drug Cobenfy performed poorly in Phase 3 trials.

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  • Stocks surged first thing this morning after President Trump said the media blew things out of proportion and that he has “no intention” of firing Jerome Powell. He also said he would be “very nice” to China in tariff negotiations.
  • Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent also did some damage control, touting the opportunity for a “big deal” between the US and China.
  • The combination sent a relief rally sweeping through markets, and while the euphoria faded by mid-afternoon, all three indexes ended the day in the green.
  • Gold fell and bitcoin rose as investors took on more risk (see below), while oil dropped on reports that OPEC+ may hike its crude output after its meeting next month.

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