Financial institutions are raising concerns about a potential AI investment bubble. The Bank of England on Wednesday warned that tech stock prices, inflated by AI optimism, could face a sharp correction. The IMF echoed these concerns, noting that global stock prices are surging due to high expectations for AI's productivity potential. Experts point to rapid tech stock growth and stretched market valuations as signs of a bubble. While tech leaders like Jeff Bezos and Sam Altman acknowledge some risks, they speak optimistically about AI's long-term benefits.

The sky itself is no limit for billionaire Jeff Bezos and fiancée Lauren Sánchez. They have traveled into space, and expectations are just about as high for their wedding in Venice. The team of the world's fourth-richest man has kept details under wraps. Still, whispers point to events spread across the lagoon city, adding complexity and cost. On Thursday, dozens of private jets touched down at Venice's airport as yachts pulled into the city's famed waterways. Aboard were athletes, celebrities, influencers and business leaders, converging to revel in extravagance that is as much a testament to the couple's love as to their extraordinary wealth. The nuptials have also become a lightning rod for protests.

Multibillionaire Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez have arrived in Venice ahead of their star-studded weekend wedding. Bezos waved from the water taxi as he and Sanchez arrived Wednesday at the dock of the Aman Hotel, a five-star hotel on the Grand Canal, with two security boats in tow. The nuptials have galvanized a wide assortment of activist groups protesting it as a sign of the growing disparity between the haves and have-nots as well as disregard of the city's residents. About a dozen Venetian organizations have united under the banner "No Space for Bezos." Among the 200 guests attending the wedding are Mick Jagger, Ivanka Trump, Oprah Winfrey, Katy Perry and Leonardo DiCaprio.

Some of President Donald Trump's working-class and middle-class supporters see a lack of emphasis on lowering consumer costs and making daily American life more affordable. Trump's second administration has opened with a notable embrace of some of the world's wealthiest people alongside a flurry of executive actions on immigration and other topics. There's a delicate balance for the populist president. And some progressive activists say it already has exposed the billionaire Republican president's true loyalties. Arizona home construction contractor Enrique Lopez says he's struck by Trump's lack of emphasis on housing costs or consumer interests. Trump insists his overall agenda will help working- and middle-class Americans.

VAN HORN, Texas (AP) — Hollywood's Captain Kirk, 90-year-old William Shatner, blasted into space Wednesday in a convergence of science fiction…