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5 things to know before the stock market opens Wednesday, June 14


Here are the most important news items that investors need to start their trading day:

1. Will the Fed stay put?

2. AMD challenges Nvidia

AMD Chair and CEO Lisa Su speaks at the AMD Keynote address during the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) on January 4, 2023 in Las Vegas, Nevada. 

David Becker | Getty Images News | Getty Images

AMD isn’t content letting Nvidia have all the fun during the AI boom in tech. AMD said Tuesday it would start shipping its MI300X GPU chip to some of its customers later this year. GPUs are used by companies such as OpenAI to develop artificial intelligence programs. AMD CEO Lisa Su told investors that artificial intelligence is the “largest and most strategic long-term growth opportunity.” AMD has a lot of ground to make up, however. Nvidia dominates the AI chip environment with a market share of more than 80%, as CNBC’s Kif Leswing notes.

3. Backlash at Google

People walk near the Google offices on July 04, 2022 in New York City.

John Smith | View Press | Getty Images

Google’s new push to get employees to return to the office isn’t making many fans. Last week, the tech giant updated its hybrid work policy to start tracking workers’ badges and factoring attendance into performance reviews. It also said it may reevaluate whether workers granted remote work approval will keep that status. Google employees say the rule changes make them feel like they’re back in school all over again. “If you cannot attend the office today, your parents should submit an absence request,” reads one top-rated meme posted to an internal company site called Memegen.

4. Twilight for oil?

Bill Ross | The Image Bank | Getty Images

Expect global oil demand to peak this decade as the world more rapidly adopts electric vehicles and other technologies, the International Energy Agency said. “The shift to a clean energy economy is picking up pace, with a peak in global oil demand in sight before the end of this decade as electric vehicles, energy efficiency and other technologies advance,” said IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol. In a report issued Wednesday, the IEA said annual demand growth will slow dramatically from 2.4 million barrels per day this year to 400,000 barrels a day in 2028. China’s demand, which was pent up due to Covid shutdowns, will slow down more quickly, the agency projected. The nation, one of the two most populous on Earth, alongside India, is experiencing a rapid expansion of its EV market.

5. Trump in court

Former U.S. President Trump appears on classified document charges after a federal indictment at Wilkie D. Ferguson Jr. United States Courthouse, alongside his attorney Chris Kise in Miami, Florida, U.S., June 13, 2023 in a courtroom sketch. 

Jane Rosenberg | Reuters

And one more thing …

NEW YORK – NOVEMBER 16: Writer Cormac McCarthy attends the premiere of “The Road” at Clearview Chelsea Cinemas on November 16, 2009 in New York City. (Photo by Jim Spellman/WireImage)

Jim Spellman | Wireimage | Getty Images

Rest in peace, Cormac McCarthy. The Pultizer Prize-winning author of “No Country for Old Men” died this week at the age of 89. McCarthy started publishing novels in the mid-1960s, specializing in tales from the dark side of Americana. His earlier work pulsated with ornate, poetic sentences, reminding readers of William Faulkner and Herman Melville. No other book of McCarthy’s represented that style better than 1985’s “Blood Meridian,” a violent, biblical Western often hailed as one of the greatest works of American fiction. McCarthy used a starker, leaner, but no less devastating style in his later work – including 1992’s “All the Pretty Horses,” which was his commercial breakthrough, and 2006’s chilling, Oprah-approved post-apocalyptic novel “The Road.” (Famously reticent to give interviews, he still granted one to the superstar talk show host.) McCarthy’s death came just months after he published his last two novels, the sweeping companion pieces “The Passenger” and “Stella Maris,” which touch on themes including love, mortality, mathematics, money, the Manhattan Project and New Orleans cuisine.

– CNBC’s Alex Harring, Kif Leswing, Jennifer Elias, Ruxandra Iordache, Sam Meredith, Kevn Breuninger and Christina Wilkie contributed to this report.

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This story originally appeared on CNBC

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