DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

CEOs at Davos are buying into the agentic AI hype

January 21, 2026
in News
CEOs at Davos are buying into the agentic AI hype
  • In today’s CEO Daily: Fortune Editor in Chief Alyson Shontell reports from Davos on CEOs’ top 2026 agenda items.
  • The big story: Trust has become the crisis CEOs can’t ignore.
  • The markets: Still jittery from renewed trade war fears.
  • Plus: All the news and watercooler chat from Fortune.

Good morning. The atmosphere here at the World Economic Forum in Davos is all about nervous excitement as the Trump administration descends on the normally quaint but currently chaotic ski town in the Alps.

President Donald Trump will be making remarks just a couple hours from now, and Fortune will be reporting live from USA House on the main promenade, with insights from government officials and chief executives during and immediately following the president’s conversation. Keep an eye on our livestream, here https://fortune.com/2026/01/21/ceos-davos-buy-into-the-agentic-ai-hype/.

Elsewhere around town, CEOs are setting their agendas for the year. Here’s what’s top of mind for a few of them:

This will actually be the year of agentic AI. The first time I heard the term “agentic AI” was at Davos last year. For all the hype around it, does the average CEO really know what it is or how to deploy it? And is AI good enough yet for agents to replace or even significantly assist human employees? The answer appears to be yes. Google Gemini head Demis Hassabis told me that Gemini 3 achieved some milestones that allow agentic AI to truly proliferate in terms of its capabilities. ServiceNow CEO Bill McDermott is also an emphatic “yes,” and says he is already using it to do things like automate his IT department (without doing layoffs, he stresses; he says he has repurposed employees instead). He thinks other CEOs are ready to do the same.

Get ready for Google glasses—for real, this time. A decade ago, Google launched its Google Glass eyewear to widespread mockery. Hassabis thinks the timing was just off; at the time there was no super app to go on the platform. AI has changed that, and Hassabis is bullish on Gemini glasses being the future form for consumer AI. Meta is betting the same thing, and OpenAI is also reportedly considering a super-device, but it doesn’t seem like either can match Gemini’s capabilities any time soon.

There’s artificial intelligence, and now there’s also “energy intelligence.” Schneider Electric CEO Olivier Blum says that nailing energy intelligence is his mission this year. By that he means he wants to capture data from various energy sources into a single “data cube,” filter it, and use agentic AI so customers can manage it all in one place to find opportunities to save power and money. “Our job is to make sure we go to the next level of energy technology to make energy more intelligent,” he told me yesterday. If he can achieve it, he sees a 7%-10% annual growth opportunity ahead.

Greenland: national panic or national security risk? I’ve heard various reactions to President Trump’s desire for a full U.S. takeover of the huge island—from outrage to vigorous support. If he does get his wish (which some here think is likely), could Europe retaliate by making life harder and more restrictive for big U.S. tech companies? That was one CEO’s consideration. Said another: “Clear-eyed people can agree that that is a national security concern. And having a national security concern is not just a U.S. concern, it’s also a NATO concern.” They were optimistic that the in-person meetings this week would help move the matter in a positive direction. You can follow all our Davos coverage—including Fortune live interviews today with Ray Dalio, Dara Khosrowshahi and more—right here.—Alyson Shontell Contact CEO Daily via Diane Brady at [email protected]

The post CEOs at Davos are buying into the agentic AI hype appeared first on Fortune.

As usual, teachers union puts children last
News

As usual, teachers union puts children last

by New York Post
February 15, 2026

Was it really worth keeping kids in San Francisco home from school for a week — for a 2% raise? ...

Read more
News

Weekly Horoscope: February 15-February 21

February 15, 2026
News

What French Romance Novels Could Tell Us About A.I. and Translation Jobs

February 15, 2026
News

How $40-a-Pack Cigarettes Pushed Australians to the Black Market

February 15, 2026
News

Meet the Crew That Makes Dancing Lions for the Lunar New Year

February 15, 2026
Southern California sky is lit up by Valentine’s Day SpaceX launch

Southern California sky is lit up by Valentine’s Day SpaceX launch

February 15, 2026
Evacuation warning for Palisades and Eaton Fire areas ahead of winter storm

Evacuation warning for Palisades and Eaton Fire areas ahead of winter storm

February 15, 2026
Damian Lillard, not even playing this season, makes history in NBA three-point contest

Damian Lillard, not even playing this season, makes history in NBA three-point contest

February 15, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026