Biden Wants Corporates Profits Shared
President Joe Biden sided with striking US auto workers Friday, saying they had not been given a fair cut of record profits at the "Big Three" manufacturers.
"Auto companies have seen record profits…. Those record profits have not been shared fairly, in my view, with those workers," Biden said.
In televised remarks from the White House, Biden urged a contract that "sustains (workers) in the middle class."
"It's my hope the parties can return to the negotiating team to forge a win-win agreement."
The strikes threaten Biden's 2024 re-election momentum, as he often touts his support for unions and has made reviving US manufacturing a key campaign plank.
The walkout followed a failed last-minute push by General Motors, Ford and Stellantis to produce an agreement before the deadline late Thursday.
Biden said he had been in touch with both sides and would now send two administration officials to join the negotiations.
"No one wants a strike but I respect the unions' right" to do so, he added in his brief remarks from the Roosevelt Room at the White House.
Biden declined to answer when asked whether he would get personally involved in the negotiations.
Yes, Corporate Profits Shared is a socialist ideal. It is based on the principle that the workers who create the profits of a corporation should also share in those profits. This is in contrast to the capitalist system, where profits are typically distributed to the owners of the corporation, even if they do not play a role in creating those profits.
There are a number of different ways to implement Corporate Profits Shared. One common approach is to require corporations to distribute a certain percentage of their profits to their employees. This can be done through direct payments to employees, or through employee ownership programs.
Another approach to Corporate Profits Shared is to create worker cooperatives. Worker cooperatives are businesses that are owned and operated by their employees. This means that the workers themselves share in the profits of the business.

Ontology Is the Idea Finance Has Been Missing
The world created around 181 zettabytes of data in 2025, and AI adds more every day than anyone can read. The scarce resource is no longer data or compute. It is understanding, and understanding is a picture. Shayne Heffernan on ontology, the visual layer that turns infinite data into insight, and why finance, banking and regulation need it most.

Economic Calendar and Trading Strategies for the Week Ahead: July 14–18, 2026
A pivotal week for markets: US strikes on Iran reignite the oil risk premium, June CPI and retail sales test the Fed's rate-cut path, and the $1 trillion AI capital loop keeps driving the tech trade. Full economic calendar plus trading strategies across oil, gold, Bitcoin, FX and AI stocks.

Ontology: Agentic AI and Infrastructure
The AI trade so far has been a compute trade. The next leg is a meaning trade — and ontology, secured and settled, is the layer almost everyone is skipping. Shayne Heffernan on why ontology is the missing layer in agentic AI, and the infrastructure it needs.

Quantum Computing Just Became an Institutional Risk
Shayne Heffernan on BlackRock's quantum-computing warning for Bitcoin and Ethereum, Google's cryptanalysis research, the two on-chain risk vectors, and how KXCO's Armature L1 — post-quantum from genesis, coordinated by its ontology — answers a threat that just went institutional.
Every story, signed and delivered.
Subscribe to the kxco channel and get the headline, the AI-written key takeaways, and the chain-anchor link the moment we publish. Audio versions and per-ticker subscriptions arrive in the next iteration.

