To the Editor: I made some money by heeding Barron's call to invest in Oracle a few years back, but liquidated my positions long before the price skyrocketed (" Larry Ellison's Latest Gambit to Keep Oracle on Top Is His Biggest Bet Ever," Cover Story, Oct. 10). No regrets. I don't understand how a company of this size, and one led by an octogenarian, can operate with such high levels of debt. Is the risk commensurate with the potential rewards? Or does it portend something alarming about the market?
L.K. Shiu On Barrons.com
From Dollars to Gold
To the Editor: The premise of the 1981 film Rollover is that the Saudis had large Eurodollar deposits that they kept rolling over (" Gold's Rally Reflects the U.S. Deficit. Neither Is Ending Soon," The Economy, Oct. 10). A large amount matured, but losing faith in the dollar, they invested it in gold. Word gets out and everything goes south. So far, it has been a slow drip, drip, drip for the dollar, but I wouldn't rule out a sudden shock.
Gene Sweet Chicago
A Capital Suggestion
To the Editor: Take a look at Capital Southwest (" BDCs Yield 10% or More. They May Be Worth the Risk," Oct. 10). It's smaller but well managed, and it increased distributions by 30% in the past five years. It often takes equity participation as well as interest. The market recognizes quality: It trades at a premium to its net assets and still has a double-digit cash yield.
Larry Fellman On Barrons.com
The Case for OpenAI
To the Editor: In less than two years, OpenAI's ChatGPT has become nearly ubiquitous (" Bubble or Not, the AI Spending Binge Is Unprecedented in Every Way," Tech Trader, Oct. 10). ChatGPT already sees 2.5 billion prompts per day. Companies' initially cautious utilization of ChatGPT and similar technologies has enabled steadily increasing reductions in workforces across a swath of enterprises. These accelerating productivity improvements and resulting cost savings will soon be converted into powerful revenue streams for OpenAI and similar services.
Tom Routliffe Wakefield, R.I.
Uncharted Territory
To the Editor:
Anyone who becomes the next Federal Reserve chair is going to enter uncharted territory (" Kevin Warsh Says Jerome Powell Has Failed. Inside the Mind of the Man Who May Lead the Trump Fed," Oct. 12). Tariffs, government downsizing, international instability, and downward pressure on gross domestic product due to immigration policies will all be factors that make the job challenging.
Edward Olejniczak On Barrons.com
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October 17, 2025 18:45 ET (22:45 GMT)
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