WSJ What’s News - Flying Out of the U.S. Now Costs 50% More
Episode Date: May 5, 2026A.M. Edition for May 5. The Trump administration is weighing a new government-review process for AI tools that could pose cybersecurity risks, in response to Anthropic’s powerful Mythos model. Plus,... oil prices are slipping even as fresh attacks from Iran risk a further escalation in the war. But those higher fuel prices have already made their mark, pushing some U.S. airline ticket prices up 50%. And older Americans are sitting on $110 trillion of wealth. WSJ reporter Rachel Louise Ensign says they’re also living longer, meaning “the great wealth transfer” isn’t happening anytime soon. Daniel Bach hosts. Sign up for the WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Airfares for U.S. flight skyrocket as the Iran War takes its toll.
Plus, the White House considers whether new AI models pose a national security risk.
And tough luck if you're a millennial waiting for a big payout from mom and pop.
Americans over 55 control most wealth.
And a lot of those folks could have decades left to live.
So this idea that there's going to be this massive windfall for younger Americans is something that is just not.
really happening in mass yet.
It's Tuesday, May 5th.
I'm Daniel Bach for the Wall Street Journal, filling in for Luke Vargas.
And here is the AM edition of What's News, the top headlines, and business stories moving
your world today.
The U.S. and Iran are teetering on the edge of a new dangerous phase of the war, with both
countries returning to military force to try to break the standoff in the Strait of Hormuz.
Tehran has fired at U.S. warships trying to revive commercial shipping in the strait,
testing President Trump's desire to end the war.
U.S. officials say Trump has been weighing two competing impulses for days,
whether to order a new round of airstrikes to punish Iran for failing to abandon its nuclear ambitions
or leaning into a diplomatic solution.
Here he is speaking to conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt yesterday.
One way the other we win.
We either make the right deal or we win very easily from the military standpoint.
We've already won that.
Trump later said that he planned to stick with the status quo.
for now. He's called a press conference for senior Pentagon officials today, leaving it up to
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to outline the administration's
next steps. That's scheduled for 8 a.m. Eastern. Meanwhile, a rise in fuel price is driven by the
Iran War has piled pressure on U.S. airlines to increase fares. According to Kayak, the average price
of a domestic airline ticket in the U.S. increased 24% between early January and the 20th of April.
And prices for international flights departing the U.S. are up 50% compared to last year.
But the rise in oil prices may not be bad for everyone.
Later today, we've got a special bonus episode on how U.S. oil companies are navigating the crude crunch.
The latest what's news and earnings will be in your feed at midday.
And it is another busy earnings stay with all eyes on chipmaker advanced micro devices,
which releases its quarterly report this afternoon.
Investors will be watching whether AMD can continue to benefit from tech companies
looking to diversify their AI chip suppliers.
It comes after data analytics firm Palantir said its quarterly revenue surged 85% year-over-year
to more than $1.6 billion.
The results were driven by strong U.S. military demand and a rapidly growing enterprise
business for its data-crunching software.
Still, on the earnings call, executives tried to play down concerns about AI competition
that has led to its stock sinking 13% this year.
And shares in Paramount rallied off hours after beating analysts' estimates,
for quarterly revenue. Streaming and studio growth offset declines and income from TV advertising
and affiliates. The company is currently finalizing its blockbuster acquisition of Warner Brothers
Discovery. The White House is considering a new government review process for AI tools deemed
to pose cybersecurity risks. For more on this, we're joined by journal tech reporter Sam Schekner.
Sam, what is the aim of this oversight and what would that look like? Well, the goal from the
White House is to protect consumers and businesses, specifically from cyber attacks and other
disruptions that could be caused by AI that's released without proper safeguards. The way it will work
remains to be seen. The White House is considering an executive order that would formalize
government oversight and create some standards for the most powerful AI models. We'll have to
see what they actually come up with and announce. And is this a direct response to Anthropics
Methodist model. Well, we know that Anthropics model has caused shockwaves of concern in the U.S.
government and in the private sector, both in the U.S. and overseas. This model from Anthropic is
able to identify cybersecurity vulnerabilities at a level that AI tools haven't before. And the
fear is that bad actors could use it to figure out how to hack into all kinds of systems and cause
all sorts of disruptions. And so for that reason,
Anthropic has only released it to about 50 organizations involved in protecting critical infrastructure, all in the U.S.
And we're talking about big companies like Google and also the U.S. government.
Now, some of this is sounding like the guardrails and oversight.
The Biden administration was trying to put in place, which led to push back from AI and tech companies.
The president has voices inside his administration that have pushed him more towards a hands-off approach
to AI. So why this change now? Yeah, it really does seem a little bit like tiptoeing back towards
some of the regulations from the previous administration that Trump tore out when he took office,
canceling a Biden executive order on AI safety. And, you know, the Trump administration has
renamed what was called the AI Safety Institute into what's now called the Center for AI Standards
and Innovation. I think what's happening here is that there are national security implications,
to some of these new AI models.
And there are voices in the administration
and voices in the private sector
who are saying, okay,
the U.S. should get a handle
on these potential issues
before something potentially devastating happens.
We've heard about the Trump administration
and Anthropics battle.
Tell us a little bit more about the AI companies
working more closely with the government.
How important would that be for the Trump administration?
Well, yeah, Anthropic
and the Trump administration
have been feuding for quite some time, that was over a fight with the Pentagon about how
Anthropics models could be used. That fight is ongoing, and that's sort of complicated
things with the release of mythos. Anthropics CEO actually met with White House officials
to talk about how to handle the mythos rollout. It's an interesting situation because on one
hand, you have this laissez-faire approach to AI generally, but that's conflicting with some of the
business and political imperatives to take on a cybersecurity risk. The Trump administration
appears to be wanting to regulate or put some standards on cybersecurity risks in AI. That doesn't
necessarily mean they're walking back the approach to AI regulation more generally when it comes
to other types of issues that might arise. You know, there are initiatives to try and regulate
AI at the state level that the Trump administration has opposed. So we will have to see where
that nets out. Journal tech reporter Sam Schenner. Sam, thanks for your time. Thanks so much for having me.
Coming up, foreclosures are rising in a sign of just how unaffordable U.S. housing has become.
That story and more after the break. Okay. When I sell my business, I want the best tax and investment
advice. I want to help my kids, and I want to give back to the community. Ooh, then it's the
vacation of a lifetime. I wonder if my out of office has a forever setting.
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We're exclusively reporting that FINRA, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, has opened an inquiry into a Morgan Stanley investment banking program in Hungary.
The program was launched in Budapest two years ago, recruiting bankers from across Europe,
offering them a chance to one day work in the big leagues in New York or London.
For the bank, it was a way to offshore low-level jobs,
typically done by well-paid young investment bankers in the first years of their careers.
The probe is in the early stages and started after a whistleblower said the bank violated rules
meant to protect confidential information about clients and transactions from being mishandled.
Morgan Stanley and FINRA declined to comment.
US foreclosures have jumped after the Trump administration ended a generous Biden-era subsidy.
During the pandemic, homeowners with a federal mortgage who got into financial difficulty could apply for a partial claim to clear any unpaid balance on their mortgage.
Some borrowers also got a loan modification to make their monthly payments more manageable.
But as heard on the street columnist, Carol Ryan explains the Trump administration has now tightened the rules.
The Trump administration scrapped it because it was only ever supposed to be a temporary thing to help people during the pandemic.
It was brought in by the Biden administration.
and while most people who used it were in real distress, there are signs that some homeowners
were abusing it. We found examples of people who claim nearly $100,000 over five years.
The new rules are much tighter. There is some help available for people who are in arrears,
but homeowners can only get that help once every two years now. In one way, the housing market is
getting back to normal, the subsidy kept foreclosure numbers artificially low for the last four or five
years, so tens of thousands of distressed borrowers have built up in the system. But it's
also definitely a story about how
unaffordable housing has become in America.
And if you're worried about mortgage rates,
inflation, or the economy affecting your ability
to own or buy a home, we'd like
to hear from you. Send a voice memo to
WNPOD at WSJ.com
or leave a voicemail with your name and location
at 212-416-4328.
We might use it on the show.
And finally, as Americans
live longer, younger generations
are going to have to keep waiting
for their inheritance. Economics reporter Rachel Ensign says baby boomers and older Gen Xers are
hanging onto their assets longer. The idea that these big wealth firms have about the great
wealth transfer, you know, this idea that millennials are going to be getting a big windfall.
That's something that, you know, will eventually happen. You know, no one lives forever,
but it is not happening any time in the absolutely near future. While wealthy Americans are
spending on longevity and travel and parceling out wealth in small doses to children and grandchildren.
People 55 and older are sitting on $110 trillion of wealth.
That's a huge force in the economy in all sorts of different ways. And it's largely happened
because they own a bunch of stuff like stocks and privately held businesses that have
increased a lot in value in the last two decades. So they've owned these things for a long time.
They've owned houses for a long time, stocks for a long time. And time has been
good for them financially. Of course, no one has figured out how to live forever, so those assets
will be handed over. Research firm Sorrelli Associates says GenX is set to inherit the most money
of any group for the next 12 years. So millennials will just have to keep waiting. And that's it for
what's news for this Tuesday morning. Today's show was produced by Heidi Moyer. Our supervising producer
is Sondra Kilhoff. And I'm Daniel Bach for the Wall Street Journal. We'll be back tonight with
the new show. Until then, thanks for listening.
Thank you.
