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All eyes are on Madrid this week as the U.S. and China square off on trade talks once again,
plus a deep dive into why Americans aren't responding to economic surveys and what that means for crucial government data.
The precision of things like the unemployment rate is diminished when you have a decline in response rates from more than 90 percent,
which is what it was for decades, to less than 70 percent, which is what it is now.
And could we be in the midst of a modern-day gold rush?
It's Monday, September 15th.
I'm Caitlin McCabe for The Wall Street Journal, and here's the AM edition of What's News,
the top headlines and business stories moving your world today.
Shares and Nvidia have slipped in off hours trading this morning after China's markets regulator said the AI chip giant violated the country's anti-competition law,
according to a preliminary probe,
adding that Beijing would continue its investigation into the company.
China approved an acquisition by Nvidia of Melanox Technologies in 2020 after the chip juggernaut agreed to conditions,
including guaranteeing supplies of chips to the country.
But since 2022,
the U.S. government has blocked Nvidia and other American chip vendors from selling many of their best AI chips to China.