WSJ What’s News - Google Adds AI to Its Search, Taking Aim at Chatbot Challengers
Episode Date: May 20, 2025P.M. Edition for May 20. Google is adding an AI chatbot feature to its iconic search page, allowing it to more closely rival competitors like ChatGPT. WSJ reporter Katherine Blunt discusses Google’s... parent, Alphabet, plans to bet even bigger on artificial intelligence. Plus, despite the fear of an immigration crackdown from the Trump administration, many workers without legal status are still going to work. Paul Kiernan, who covers the U.S. economy for the Journal, joins to talk about why that is, and what it means for industries dependent on migrant labor. And President Trump pressures Republican dissenters in the House to drop their objections to his tax and spending bill which could go on vote as early as tomorrow. Alex Ossola 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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What's behind Google's revamping of its classic search engine with a new artificial intelligence
feature? Plus, President Trump pressures Republican lawmakers to pass his tax agenda.
And why the U.S. immigration crackdown hasn't crushed the migrant labor force.
We've seen an uptick in immigration-related arrests.
We haven't seen a lot more deportations yet.
But still, the prevailing wisdom is that there's a less than 100% chance that you're going
to get rounded up and deported.
But there is a 100% chance that you won't be able to pay your bills if you don't work.
It's Tuesday, May 20th.
I'm Alex O'Sulliv for The Wall Street Journal.
This is the PM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories that move
the world today.
Your Google searches are about to look different.
Google is overhauling its iconic search engine. At its developers
conference today, the company announced that it has started rolling out what it calls AI
mode to its search page. It's being added as a tab within search for users in the US.
Speaking with me from outside that Google developers conference, WSJ reporter Katherine
Blunt said Alphabet is now taking aim at the AI companies challenging its search dominance.
One of the biggest announcements today out of the conference is that Google is rolling
out this AI mode capability and it's meant to create an experience for users akin to
what they might find if they use ChatGPT or one of ChatGPT's competitors or Google competitors.
And then other announcements that were made today were previews of what the company hopes
to achieve in AI, for example, with a universal AI assistant who could be very helpful in managing different
areas of your life and the administrative tasks we all have to do. There was a lot as
it related to images and videos and the creative capabilities that can come with more advancements
in AI. And this is a really interesting moment for Alphabet and for Google specifically.
Google has struggled to figure out how exactly to embrace AI, given that it does pose at
least some sort of threat to the traditional search model that's really been its largest
driver of revenue.
And so this is a big announcement today because it's Google finally conceding that the future
of search is really going to be very AI driven and it's going to have to adapt. Elon Musk isn't the only Tesla executive
rewriting the compensation playbook.
The electric car maker's finance chief,
Vabhav Tenasia, received a pay package
of $139 million last year.
That's more than most CEOs.
And according to Equilar,
the highest amount paid to a chief financial officer
since modern reporting began in 2006.
Teo Francis covers executive compensation for the journal.
Teo, why is Tenasia's pay so high?
The way the company explains it is that he hasn't received a raise since he was made
CFO in 2023.
They did a review of compensation at the company
for top executives, and they adjusted pay
where they felt like it was needed for competitive reasons,
for geographic reasons, and so on.
You also have to take it in the context of the company itself.
In general, Elon Musk is the highest paid CEO in the S&P 500,
bar none, using the method that the SEC requires for reporting
CEO compensation.
So it's not terribly surprising in that context that the CFO of the same company has a very
high pay package.
Tesla and Tenasia didn't respond to requests for comment.
But news of this pay package comes during a period of pretty mixed results for Tesla.
Its stock is way up, but global vehicle deliveries fell
for the first time in more than a decade recently.
Does Tenasia's pay reflect this?
The pay number that we have is the value
at the time the pay was granted.
So most of the pay is in stock
and restricted stock and options.
The question of how it ties into performance
is an interesting one
because in this case, it ties in more or less like a shareholders compensation or performance
would tie in. That said, in the past, Tesla, like a lot of companies, has structured its pay packages
with more direct links to performance. Elon Musk's multi-billion dollar pay package of a few years
ago, it was set up so that in order to get
the equity underlying the pay, the company had to meet certain operating and stock market
goals.
That's not the case with this pay package.
And so essentially over the course of four years, he is slated to get the stock and the
options underlying this pay package if he stays in the job.
That's not a high bar, except that, of course,
it's a pretty high profile, high stress job,
you would imagine.
That was WSJ reporter, Teo Francis.
Thank you, Teo.
No problem.
Separately, Elon Musk said today that he plans to cut back
on political spending.
Musk is the world's richest person
and spent a considerable fortune helping
to elect President Trump.
In a video interview at the Qatar Economic Forum today,
Musk indicated he still could increase spending again
if conditions change.
Musk played a polarizing role in the early weeks
of the Trump administration,
overseeing the Department of Government Efficiency
as it slashed federal spending and jobs.
In April, Musk said he was going to spend less time
in Washington and more overseeing
Tesla, his electric vehicle company, as investors had grown worried that he had taken his eye
off the ball.
Tesla sales and share price had dropped during his time in the White House.
Asked today if he would still be chief executive of Tesla in five years, Musk said yes.
He then added a caveat, saying, well, I might die.
Thanks to Musk's comments, Tesla stock was up about half a percent. But U.S. stocks fell
today as losses in big tech weighed on major indexes. The S&P 500 slipped about 0.4 percent,
ending a six-day winning streak. The Nasdaq also dropped about 0.4 percent, while the Dow dipped roughly 0.3 percent.
Home Depot said today that it plans to keep prices steady despite tariffs.
The company's chief financial officer Richard McPhail said in an interview that the retailer
has been pushing to source more of its supplies from outside of China and that it's working with suppliers to keep prices steady despite tariffs.
Last week, Walmart announced that it would raise prices because of tariffs, prompting
President Trump to criticize the company.
Walmart and Home Depot kept their financial forecasts for fiscal 2025 unchanged, contrasting
with a flurry of companies that have scaled back or suspended their forecasts
in response to on-again, off-again tariffs.
Coming up, why migrants are still going to work despite fears from an immigration crackdown.
That's after the break.
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President Trump's mass deportation push has instilled widespread fear among migrants.
What it hasn't done so far is stop many from showing up to work.
Data covering immigrants lacking permanent legal status is fragmentary, but according
to a monthly Census Bureau survey of households, as of April, the number of foreign-born workers
with jobs rose 0.1% from January.
The data doesn't distinguish between workers
in the US legally and those without legal status.
For more, I'm joined now by Paul Kiernan,
who covers the US economy for the Wall Street Journal.
Paul, migrants are worried,
but they're still going to work.
Why is that?
The short answer is that not many people can afford
to not work in the United States of America.
The sense that I got
from talking to people who were both here without legal authorization or had some kind of status
is that if you stay home and try to minimize as much as possible the risk of being caught in an
immigration raid or something like that, you are certain that you will fall behind on your bills.
And people just weigh that certainty
against the risk that's impossible to measure
of getting swept up in a raid somewhere.
For industries that rely on migrant workers,
what are they doing about this?
Many times immigrants from the same nationality
or even the same town will go to one community,
many of them will work in the same factory or the same farm. If the Trump administration is allowed
to revoke those people's status en masse, it could leave a lot of employers without a big chunk of
their workforce eventually, but we just haven't seen that happen yet.
They're just waiting with bated breath.
Employers haven't had to make really difficult decisions about letting people go
or scrambling to replace workers whose employment authorization was revoked.
But there is a lot of anxiety among employers out there that we talk to.
That was WSJ reporter Paul Kiernan.
Thank you Paul.
Thanks.
President Trump turned the screws on holdout Republicans, warning they would pay a steep
political price, including being knocked out of the party, if they stood in the way of
his tax and spending agenda.
In a closed-door meeting with the House GOP conference today, the president urged fiscal
conservatives to give up efforts to expand Medicaid cuts.
He also pushed a block of moderates to drop their drive for blue state tax relief, encouraging
them to unite around his one big beautiful budget bill.
That's according to people familiar with his comments.
Trump's arm twisting came at a high stakes moment.
House Speaker Mike Johnson has said he wants to vote
on the package as soon as tomorrow,
but holdout lawmakers said sticking points remained
and could force changes to the bill or delays in voting
despite Trump's exhortations.
And the Trump administration released
a more stringent set of guidelines
for approving COVID-19 vaccines, requiring more evidence for new shots
for healthy adults and children.
Any new COVID vaccines for many children and adults
will be required to undergo randomized controlled trials
before receiving approval from the Food and Drug Administration,
two agency leaders wrote today
in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The FDA expects that it'll be able to approve the shots
for adults older than 64 and high-risk
groups based on antibody testing, but will encourage drug makers to conduct more randomized
trials for those shots, too.
It's unclear whether COVID-19 vaccine manufacturers would be willing to invest in expensive new
trials for future products.
Vaccine maker Moderna declined to comment.
A spokesman for vaccine
manufacturer Pfizer said they're evaluating the details and that discussions with the FDA are ongoing.
We all like to think we're worth every penny in our paycheck. Heck, some of us could even use a
raise. But some Americans who scored big pay bumps a few years ago
are starting to realize that in today's cooling job market,
they're actually overpaid.
Now, many are unnerved by the thought of a pay cut
or worry their salaries could put bullseyes on their back
if their employers decide to cut costs.
WSJ columnist Callum Borchers
told our Your Money Briefing podcast that,
somewhat surprisingly, many workers agree that they're overpaid.
The data point that really stood out to me was this recent workforce report
found that two-thirds of workers self-reported being paid at or above the going rate for their
skills. I think a layer of this that's important is just the salary transparency era that we're in
right now. And I realize it's not in every single city or every single state, but more and more people
can see jobs like their own listed on job boards and you can see what the advertised
salary is these days.
And so it's really hard to kind of ignore the reality.
If you make way more than the going rate listed on advertised jobs today, then guess what?
You're probably overpaid.
To hear more from Callum,
listen to tomorrow's episode of Your Money Briefing.
And that's what's news for this Tuesday afternoon.
Today's show is produced by Pierre Bienneme
with supervising producer Michael Kosmides.
I'm Alex Osola for The Wall Street Journal.
We'll be back with a new show tomorrow morning.
Thanks for listening.