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Visualizing U.S. Flight Cancellations Over the Shutdown

2025-11-26 05:12:48

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Bar chart showing the number of U.S. flight cancellations over the course of the government shutdown.

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U.S. Flight Cancellations Over the Government Shutdown

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • During the longest U.S. government shutdown on record, flight cancellations jumped to 2,260 on November 9th, nearly seven times higher than the 2024 average.
  • Major U.S. airlines are estimated to lose between $150 and $200 million in operating income due to the 43-day shutdown.

Over five million travelers were impacted by the U.S. government shutdown given flight-reduction orders across the country.

While the average number of daily flight cancellations in 2024 was 340, it skyrocketed to 2,260 on November 9th. Adding to this, air traffic controllers were already facing a shortage of nearly 4,000 fully certified personnel ahead of the shutdown.

This graphic shows the surge in flight cancellations over the government shutdown, based on data from Flightaware via CNN.

U.S. Flight Cancellations Skyrocket

Below, we show the number of flight cancellations over the longest shutdown in U.S. history, causing billions of dollars of damage to the U.S. travel industry:

Date Number of cancelled flights travelling to, from, or within the U.S.
Nov 9 2,260
Nov 8 1,600
Nov 7 1,000
Nov 6 202
Nov 5 171
Nov 4 151
Nov 3 84
Nov 2 244
Nov 1 173
Oct 31 493
Oct 30 1,300
Oct 29 157
Oct 28 153
Oct 27 161
Oct 26 193
Oct 25 175
Oct 24 454
Oct 23 283
Oct 22 57
Oct 21 64
Oct 20 86
Oct 19 118
Oct 18 324
Oct 17 56
Oct 16 49
Oct 15 54
Oct 14 146
Oct 13 593
Oct 12 271
Oct 11 114
2024 Average 340

After the Federal Aviation Administration ordered a 10% reduction in flights across 40 major airports, Delta Air Lines was among the hardest hit.

Over the last few days of the shutdown, as many as 34% of all Delta flights were delayed, while 11% were cancelled. American Airlines saw the second-highest number of flights impacted, with more than a third delayed.

Overall, airports in Chicago, New York, and Atlanta were among the most affected. Major airlines are expected to see up to a $200 million hit in operating income, while regional airlines could face up to $100 million.

Making matters worse, the U.S. travel industry is estimated to lose $5.7 billion in international tourism spending this year compared to 2024, largely driven by a decline in Canadian travelers.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the world’s busiest airports.

The Dangers of AI: Visualizing the Top Risks Companies Face

2025-11-26 03:23:41

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The following content is sponsored by Terzo

The Dangers of AI: Visualizing the Top Risks Companies Face

Key Takeaways

  • Of all the dangers of AI, inaccuracy is the biggest risk companies face.
  • Nearly a third of companies have been negatively impacted by AI inaccuracy at least once.

Companies are rushing to implement AI, but it’s not all smooth sailing. More than half of businesses say the dangers of AI have led to at least one negative consequence.

But which issues plague businesses the most? This infographic breaks down the most common risks. It’s a preview of the brand-new executive guide from Terzo and Visual Capitalist, AI’s Illusion of Truth: The Data Behind AI Errors.

The Top Dangers of AI

Inaccuracy is the biggest risk companies report, with almost a third experiencing a negative consequence at least once.

Risk Percent of Companies That Experienced
Negative Consequences at Least Once
Inaccuracy 30%
Explainability 14%
Personal/Individual Privacy 11%
Cybersecurity 10%
Regulatory Compliance 8%
Intellectual Property Infringement 8%
Unauthorized or Unintended Action 7%
Equity and Fairness 7%
Workforce Displacement 6%

Source: McKinsey, online survey of 1,753 participants conducted June 25 to July 29, 2025.

The other dangers of AI are reported on a much lower scale. Explainability, which is the ability for people to understand an AI system’s inner workings, has affected half as many companies as inaccuracy has.

The Knock-On Effects of Errors

AI inaccuracy can lead to much bigger issues. It undermines trust in AI systems, causes operational inefficiencies, and can lead to flawed strategic decisions. When AI generates incorrect outputs, the damage is often amplified through cascading processes.

It also has the potential to create legal issues. As the Harvard Law School recently pointed out, many insurance companies are adding limitations or excluding coverage for AI-related losses. This means that leaders may not be covered under traditional Directors & Officers policies for any liabilities that arise from AI errors.

Next Steps for Leaders

Many companies have started taking steps to combat the dangers of AI. In fact, 54% of businesses are actively working to mitigate AI inaccuracies.

Leaders can take charge by ensuring their teams have humans in the loop to review AI’s output before it is used. 

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See the data behind AI’s errors and how to get 99% accuracy in the free executive guide, AI’s Illusion of Truth.

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Charted: The Soaring Revenues of AI Companies (2023–2025)

2025-11-26 02:51:08

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This infographic compares the revenue growth of leading AI companies, including OpenAI, Anthropic, and xAI, from 2023 to 2025.

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Charted: The Soaring Revenues of AI Companies (2023–2025)

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • OpenAI’s annualized revenue surged to $13 billion by August 2025, up from $200 million in early 2023.
  • Anthropic’s annualized revenue climbed from $87 million in early 2024 to $7 billion in 2025.
  • xAI remains the smallest of the three but grew rapidly, reaching $500 million in annualized revenue in 2025.

The AI boom continues to reshape the technology landscape, which is evident in the explosive revenue growth of the world’s leading AI companies.

Increasing usage among consumers, along with enterprise adoption and new product offerings, have all fueled revenue growth for AI leaders.

This infographic shows how the annualized revenues of OpenAI, Anthropic, and xAI have scaled over the past two years using estimates from Epoch.ai.

How Fast Are AI Company Revenues Growing?

Between 2023 and 2025, revenues for AI model developers grew at an accelerated pace. The table below shows the latest disclosed or reported revenue figures for each AI company:

Company Date Annualized revenue (USD)
Anthropic 2024-01-01 $87,000,000
Anthropic 2024-12-31 $1,000,000,000
Anthropic 2025-03-01 $1,400,000,000
Anthropic 2025-03-31 $2,000,000,000
Anthropic 2025-05-30 $3,000,000,000
Anthropic 2025-07-01 $4,000,000,000
Anthropic 2025-07-29 $5,000,000,000
Anthropic 2025-10-21 $7,000,000,000
OpenAI 2023-03-01 $200,000,000
OpenAI 2023-08-29 $1,000,000,000
OpenAI 2023-10-10 $1,300,000,000
OpenAI 2023-12-30 $1,600,000,000
OpenAI 2023-12-31 $2,000,000,000
OpenAI 2024-06-12 $3,400,000,000
OpenAI 2024-08-15 $3,600,000,000
OpenAI 2024-09-12 $4,000,000,000
OpenAI 2024-12-31 $5,500,000,000
OpenAI 2025-06-09 $10,000,000,000
OpenAI 2025-07-30 $12,000,000,000
OpenAI 2025-08-01 $13,000,000,000
xAI 2024-11-20 $100,000,000
xAI 2025-01-31 $178,000,000
xAI 2025-03-31 $208,000,000
xAI 2025-07-31 $500,000,000

OpenAI saw the steepest rise, jumping from $200 million in early 2023 to $13 billion in annualized revenue by August 2025. The majority of OpenAI’s revenue comes from consumers and the increasing usage of ChatGPT.

Anthropic’s revenue trajectory is similarly dramatic, growing from just $87 million in annualized revenue at the start of 2024 to $7 billion by late 2025, marking an 80-fold increase. Estimates suggest that 70-80% of Anthropic’s revenue is from enterprise customers.

Elon Musk’s xAI, founded in 2023, is much earlier in its growth curve. However, with annualized revenues jumping from $100 million in late 2024 to $500 million by mid-2025, xAI is becoming a notable name in the industry. XAI also has the world’s most powerful AI supercomputer.

The Race to Monetize AI

As generative AI becomes embedded across industries, AI model developers are capturing new revenue streams.

OpenAI and Anthropic are racing to scale infrastructure, model capabilities, and enterprise integration tools, while xAI continues to expand its developer ecosystem and along with new versions of its model Grok.

If revenue trajectories continue on their current path, AI companies may soon mark one of the fastest industry expansions in recent history.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, see how AI companies are dominating the list of global unicorns in this infographic on Voronoi.

Visualizing the World’s Rare Earth Reserves

2025-11-25 23:49:56

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Voronoi graphic visualizing the world’s rare earth reserves.

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Visualizing the World’s Rare Earth Reserves

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • China accounts for nearly half of global rare earth reserves (44M of 92M metric tons).
  • Brazil ranks second (21M tons), while the U.S. holds 1.9M tons—about 2% of the total.

Rare earth elements (REEs) are the backbone of modern technology, from EV motors and wind turbines to smartphones and precision-guided systems.

This map breaks down where the world’s known rare earth reserves are located in 2025, highlighting how concentrated they are across a handful of countries.

The distribution is highly uneven. China alone holds nearly half of the global total, followed by Brazil’s sizable deposits. By contrast, many advanced economies have limited reserves.

The data for this visualization comes from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).

A Heavily Concentrated Reserve Base

China leads with 44.0 million metric tons, about 48% of the world total of 91.9 million metric tons. Brazil is a clear second at 21.0 million tons (23%), reflecting large ionic clay and hard-rock deposits that are still early in development.

Rank Country Reserves (Metric Tons)
1 🇨🇳 China 44,000,000
2 🇧🇷 Brazil 21,000,000
3 🇮🇳 India 6,900,000
4 🇦🇺 Australia 5,700,000
5 🇷🇺 Russia 3,800,000
6 🇻🇳 Vietnam 3,500,000
7 🇺🇸 U.S. 1,900,000
8 🇬🇱 Greenland 1,500,000
9 🇹🇿 Tanzania 890,000
10 🇿🇦 South Africa 860,000
11 🇨🇦 Canada 830,000
12 🇹🇭 Thailand 4,500
-- 🌍 Rest of World 1,015,500
-- 🌐 World Total 91,900,000

India (6.9 million tons) and Australia (5.7 million tons) round out the top tier, while Russia (3.8 million tons) and Vietnam (3.5 million tons) are also ahead of the United States. Together, the top six countries account for roughly four-fifths of known reserves.

Advanced Economies: Small Shares, Big Demand

The United States holds just 1.9 million metric tons of rare earths (2%), underscoring its reliance on trade and midstream processing to secure supply. In recent months, the Trump administration has sought to reduce U.S. dependence on Chinese materials by funding domestic mining projects, streamlining permits, and partnering with allies to diversify supply chains.

In October, President Trump and President Xi Jinping agreed to reduce tariffs in exchange for China maintaining the flow of rare earth exports.

Emerging Players

Canada (0.83 million tons) and the EU-adjacent Greenland (1.5 million tons) have meaningful but smaller bases.

Africa and the Arctic feature emerging sources: Tanzania (0.89 million tons) and South Africa (0.86 million tons) join Greenland as potential growth nodes if infrastructure and processing scale.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Why Rare Earths Are Critical to EV Motors on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

Mapped: U.S. Job Losses by State in 2025

2025-11-25 21:11:05

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Map showing job losses by state in 2025 as of October 2025.

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Mapped: Job Losses by U.S. State in 2025

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Washington, D.C. is home to more than a quarter of the nation’s job losses in 2025, reaching 303,778 as of October.
  • California accounts for 14% of U.S. layoffs, particularly in the tech and manufacturing sectors.

U.S. job weakness is disproportionately affecting certain states, as trade policy, immigration, and AI shapes the labor market.

So far, job losses in Washington, D.C. account for the largest share of the national total by far. California follows next in line, as Big Tech firms shed thousands of workers after a pandemic-era hiring spree.

This graphic shows job cuts by U.S. state in 2025, based on data from Challenger, Gray and Christmas.

U.S. Job Losses Hit 1.1 Million

This year, U.S. job losses have reached 1.1 million as of October, up sharply from last year’s total of 761,000.

State Job Losses YTD 2025 Change vs YTD 2024
Washington 303,778 773%
California 158,734 16%
New York 81,701 20%
Georgia 78,049 338%
Washington 77,658 111%
New Jersey 64,334 454%
Texas 46,352 -31%
Ohio 40,707 70%
Florida 22,771 76%
Illinois 20,678 3%
Michigan 19,336 -10%
Arizona 18,547 103%
Pennsylvania 17,256 12%
Massachusetts 14,430 -18%
Tennessee 11,566 -27%
North Carolina 10,720 26%
Maryland 9,480 27%
Virginia 9,304 32%
Alabama 9,115 180%
Minnesota 9,049 4%
Iowa 7,318 -8%
Maine 7,311 1,446%
Colorado 6,982 -50%
Missouri 5,519 -21%
Kentucky 5,277 52%
Nebraska 5,249 597%
Oregon 4,660 -54%
Wisconsin 3,511 -63%
Connecticut 3,251 -66%
South Carolina 3,136 -28%
Kansas 3,095 -36%
Nevada 2,668 -76%
Indiana 2,120 -45%
Oklahoma 2,061 124%
Louisiana 2,050 57%
Mississippi 2,006 95%
Alaska 1,712 2,346%
Utah 1,472 -75%
Rhode Island 1,221 -90%
Hawaii 1,063 -65%
West Virginia 989 1%
Arkansas 620 -63%
Idaho 531 -26%
South Dakota 478 -57%
Montana 461 -55%
Vermont 399 -15%
New Mexico 288 -68%
Delaware 209 -70%
New Hampshire 154 -35%
North Dakota 96 3%
Wyoming 28 -99%

As we can see, federal workforce overhauls have resulted in 303,778 layoffs in Washington, D.C., more than California and New York combined.

In California, job losses now total 158,734, reflecting a softening labor market. Overall, California is home to 18 million workers, the highest share in the country.

Across the broader U.S. tech sector, layoff announcements now total 141,159 compared with 120,470 this time last year. Notably, Intel plans to cut 5,000 workers in the U.S., mainly in California and Oregon. San Francisco-based Salesforce also plans to slash 4,000 workers this year.

Meanwhile, New York firms have cut 81,700 workers, a 20% increase from last year. New York-based Verizon alone announced cuts of 13,000 workers in November, largely affecting its U.S. employees.

By contrast, layoff data in Texas is significantly better in 2025 compared to a year ago. Not only that, it leads nationally in job creation, seeing some of the strongest growth in the services and hospitality sectors.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on unemployment by state.

Charted: Home and Rent Price Changes in Global Cities (2015-2025)

2025-11-25 02:44:51

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chart of real home price and rent price changes in major global cities from 2015 to 2025

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Charted: Home and Rent Price Changes in Global Cities (2015-2025)

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Miami leads all cities with 93.1% growth in real home prices over the last decade, far exceeding its rent increase of 12.7%.
  • Madrid’s rents jumped 48%, the largest rental rise globally, driven by surging tourism and short-term rental demand, while its home prices climbed about 42%.
  • Most cities saw property values outpace rental price growth, but some major cities like New York, Milan, London, and Hong Kong saw declines in both.

From 2015 to 2025, global real estate markets experienced significant divergence between real home price growth and rent price growth.

While most major cities saw home values rise faster than rents, a few key markets—particularly in Europe and Asia—showed softening property prices amid slowing demand and tighter credit conditions.

This visualization highlights 25 major global cities from the UBS Global Real Estate Bubble Index 2025, comparing inflation-adjusted percentage changes in both home and rental prices over the past decade.

Miami Leads Global Home Price Growth Since 2015

Miami topped the list with a staggering 93.1% increase in real home prices, showing the strongest decade-long appreciation globally.

Despite this, rent prices grew only 12.7%, reflecting a widening affordability gap.

The data table below shows the real home price change and real rent price change across 25 major cities around the world.

City Real home price change (2015-2025) Real rental price change (2015-2025)
🇺🇸 Miami, United States 93.1% 12.7%
🇯🇵 Tokyo, Japan 66.0% 23.1%
🇳🇱 Amsterdam, Netherlands 64.4% 17.2%
🇨🇦 Toronto, Canada 48.0% 8.3%
🇪🇸 Madrid, Spain 42.4% 48.0%
🇨🇭 Zurich, Switzerland 42.4% 23.1%
🇩🇪 Frankfurt, Germany 42.4% 14.9%
🇺🇸 Los Angeles, United States 42.4% -2.0%
🇨🇦 Vancouver, Canada 39.7% 21.9%
🇩🇪 Munich, Germany 30.5% 18.4%
🇸🇬 Singapore 25.5% 21.9%
🇨🇭 Geneva, Switzerland 17.2% 1.0%
🇦🇺 Sydney, Australia 16.1% 17.2%
🇦🇪 Dubai, UAE 12.7% 2.0%
🇺🇸 San Francisco, United States 7.2% -19.1%
🇫🇷 Paris, France 0.0% -8.6%
🇮🇹 Milan, Italy -4.9% -3.0%
🇺🇸 New York, United States -4.9% -7.7%
🇬🇧 London, United Kingdom -10.5% -10.5%
🇧🇷 São Paulo, Brazil -19.1% -3.0%
🇭🇰 Hong Kong -19.9% -11.4%

Similar trends occurred in other North American cities: Toronto’s home prices rose 48%, while rents climbed a modest 8.3%, and Vancouver saw a 39.7% jump in property values compared to 21.9% rent growth.

These disparities underscore how ownership demand in North America—fueled by migration, investment, and limited supply—has far outpaced rental market fundamentals.

New York City was an outlier, with declines in both home and rent prices of 4.9% and 7.7% respectively.

Europe’s Home and Rent Price Changes Vary

Europe’s housing performance was varied, with Madrid being an outlier with significant increases especially in rent prices.

Madrid saw home prices rise by 42.4%, while rents surged 48%, the steepest rental increase among all major global cities. This reflects Spain’s booming short-term rental sector and tourism rebound.

In contrast, London’s property and rent prices have fallen 10.5% since 2015, potentially reflecting Brexit’s lingering effects and the significant millionaire exodus the country faces.

Milan was another city which saw declines in both metrics, with a 4.9% and 3% fall in property and rental prices.

Meanwhile, Zurich and Munich both saw double-digit home price increases of 42.4% and 30.5%, with rent gains also in the double digits at 23.1% and 18.4%, respectively.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about rent prices around the world, check out this graphic which shows the global cities with the highest rent prices on the Voronoi app.