(RTTNews) - Elbit Systems (ESLT) said it will supply the Helmet Display and Tracking System for the Israeli Air Force's UH 60?Black?Hawk helicopter fleet. The HDTS provides aircrews with advanced 3D Synthetic Vision Symbology depicting terrain, obstacles and flight plan in real t
(RTTNews) - Elbit Systems (ESLT) said it will supply the Helmet Display and Tracking System for the Israeli Air Force's UH 60?Black?Hawk helicopter fleet. The HDTS provides aircrews with advanced 3D Synthetic Vision Symbology depicting terrain, obstacles and flight plan in real t
US President Donald Trump’s new 10% global tariffs have gone into effect, kicking off a White House effort to preserve the president’s trade agenda after the Supreme Court struck down his original sweeping duties. (Source: Bloomberg)
US President Donald Trump’s new 10% global tariffs have gone into effect, kicking off a White House effort to preserve the president’s trade agenda after the Supreme Court struck down his original sweeping duties. (Source: Bloomberg)
Antonio Bordunovi/iStock Editorial via Getty Images Article Thesis NVIDIA Corporation ( NVDA ) will report its next quarterly earnings results, for the fiscal fourth quarter, which ended January 31, on Wednesday afternoon. In this article, I will take a look at what investors can expect and at some of the recent news from NVIDIA. While NVIDIA will likely grow nicely in the near term, its growth ra...
Antonio Bordunovi/iStock Editorial via Getty Images Article Thesis NVIDIA Corporation ( NVDA ) will report its next quarterly earnings results, for the fiscal fourth quarter, which ended January 31, on Wednesday afternoon. In this article, I will take a look at what investors can expect and at some of the recent news from NVIDIA. While NVIDIA will likely grow nicely in the near term, its growth rate is slowing down, and the market doesn't seem to be very enthusiastic about NVIDIA for now. Past Coverage I have written about NVIDIA Corporation here on Seeking Alpha in the past, most recently in November 2025, three months ago, when I covered NVDA's Q3 earnings report. I was neither bullish nor bearish back then, giving NVIDIA a neutral rating , which has worked out well so far, as shares mostly moved sideways since then -- they are down a relatively meager 2% over the last three months. With NVIDIA's next earnings results coming up soon, I want to take another look at the company today. NVIDIA's Q4: What Can We Expect? When NVIDIA reports its Q4 results following the market's close on Wednesday, the company will report revenues of $66 billion -- at least according to the Wall Street analyst community. This would represent growth of around 68% compared to one year earlier, which is, of course, a very strong growth rate, especially for a company this large. This would be the second-best quarter in the fiscal year, behind only the Q1 growth rate of 69%, but ahead of somewhat weaker growth in Q2 and Q3. Relative to the previous two years, the growth rate will be considerably lower, as Q4 year-over-year growth was 78% one year ago and north of 200% two years ago -- but it is no surprise that the growth rate slows down to some extent as the company becomes bigger. It is worth noting that NVIDIA tends to beat analyst estimates, with the company delivering more than 10 top-line beats in a row. The most recent quarterly report showed a revenue growth rate that was around 4% hi...
Antonio Bordunovi/iStock Editorial via Getty Images Article Thesis NVIDIA Corporation ( NVDA ) will report its next quarterly earnings results, for the fiscal fourth quarter, which ended January 31, on Wednesday afternoon. In this article, I will take a look at what investors can expect and at some of the recent news from NVIDIA. While NVIDIA will likely grow nicely in the near term, its growth ra...
Antonio Bordunovi/iStock Editorial via Getty Images Article Thesis NVIDIA Corporation ( NVDA ) will report its next quarterly earnings results, for the fiscal fourth quarter, which ended January 31, on Wednesday afternoon. In this article, I will take a look at what investors can expect and at some of the recent news from NVIDIA. While NVIDIA will likely grow nicely in the near term, its growth rate is slowing down, and the market doesn't seem to be very enthusiastic about NVIDIA for now. Past Coverage I have written about NVIDIA Corporation here on Seeking Alpha in the past, most recently in November 2025, three months ago, when I covered NVDA's Q3 earnings report. I was neither bullish nor bearish back then, giving NVIDIA a neutral rating , which has worked out well so far, as shares mostly moved sideways since then -- they are down a relatively meager 2% over the last three months. With NVIDIA's next earnings results coming up soon, I want to take another look at the company today. NVIDIA's Q4: What Can We Expect? When NVIDIA reports its Q4 results following the market's close on Wednesday, the company will report revenues of $66 billion -- at least according to the Wall Street analyst community. This would represent growth of around 68% compared to one year earlier, which is, of course, a very strong growth rate, especially for a company this large. This would be the second-best quarter in the fiscal year, behind only the Q1 growth rate of 69%, but ahead of somewhat weaker growth in Q2 and Q3. Relative to the previous two years, the growth rate will be considerably lower, as Q4 year-over-year growth was 78% one year ago and north of 200% two years ago -- but it is no surprise that the growth rate slows down to some extent as the company becomes bigger. It is worth noting that NVIDIA tends to beat analyst estimates, with the company delivering more than 10 top-line beats in a row. The most recent quarterly report showed a revenue growth rate that was around 4% hi...
Pornpimone Audkamkong/iStock via Getty Images By Mandy Xu Cross-Asset Volatility: Implied volatilities diverged across asset classes last week on the back of rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, changing tariff policy, and lingering AI worries. Commodity vol saw the biggest increase, with USO (Oil ETF) 1M implied volatility jumping over 12 pts to 52% (96th percentile high) as oil price...
Pornpimone Audkamkong/iStock via Getty Images By Mandy Xu Cross-Asset Volatility: Implied volatilities diverged across asset classes last week on the back of rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, changing tariff policy, and lingering AI worries. Commodity vol saw the biggest increase, with USO (Oil ETF) 1M implied volatility jumping over 12 pts to 52% (96th percentile high) as oil prices spiked on fear of an US-Iran conflict. Oil skew is the most inverted (calls trading at a premium to puts) since the 2022 Russia-Ukraine invasion with the inversion extending out to the 6M tenor, as traders position for a period of prolonged geopolitical tension (i.e., upside risk to oil). Gold was bid on the back of demand for safe haven, with GLD 1M implied volatility rising over 3 pts to the 97th percentile high. Equity volatility, in contrast, fell as stocks rallied on the Supreme Court’s decision to strike down Trump’s emergency tariffs, though uncertainty remains around new/additional tariffs. The VIX® index ended the week down 1.5 pts to 19%, as SPX® realized volatility also came in notably (1M realized vol down 2.5 pts to 12.2%). Rates vol remain fairly muted, with VIXTLT Index down 3nms last week to the 14th percentile low over the past year. Equity Volatility: Despite the decline in the VIX index last week, the implied volatility risk premium increased as realized volatility fell even more. SPX 1M implied-realized vol spread widened by 1 pt to 3.4% (70th percentile high). Skew also steepened, with SPX 1M skew (25-delta ratio) jumping to a 1-year high (see Exhibit 2). Notably, skew is rich not just for the front-month tenor but across the term structure (1Y skew in the 96th percentile high), as longer-term risks rise. This can also be seen in the term structure, which steepened last week, with longer-dated implied volatilities holding steady even as shorter-dated vols declined. The SPX 1Y-1M vol spread widened from 0.8% to 1.8% as a result (34th percentile). Despi...
The decision to file for Social Security is a big one in the context of retirement. That's because seniors' monthly benefits hinge on when they sign up. It's not uncommon to have questions about the Social Security benefits claiming process. It's also not uncommon to find the process of signing up intimidating. Image source: Getty Images. Continue reading
The decision to file for Social Security is a big one in the context of retirement. That's because seniors' monthly benefits hinge on when they sign up. It's not uncommon to have questions about the Social Security benefits claiming process. It's also not uncommon to find the process of signing up intimidating. Image source: Getty Images. Continue reading
zamrznutitonovi EU new car registrations dropped 3.9% Y/Y to a five-month low of 799,625 units in January, dragged down due to weaker demands in major markets including Germany and France. The fall reversed a 5.8% rise seen during the last month and marked the first contraction since June, the ACEA data showed. Segment-wise, battery electric vehicle registrations jumped 24% from a year earlier, wi...
zamrznutitonovi EU new car registrations dropped 3.9% Y/Y to a five-month low of 799,625 units in January, dragged down due to weaker demands in major markets including Germany and France. The fall reversed a 5.8% rise seen during the last month and marked the first contraction since June, the ACEA data showed. Segment-wise, battery electric vehicle registrations jumped 24% from a year earlier, with strong gains in Germany, France, Denmark, and Italy. Petrol car registrations fell about 26% compared to last year, down significantly in France by 49% and Germany by 30%. About 154,230 new BEVs were registered, accounting for 19.3% of the total EU market share, up from 14.9% a year ago. In 2025, overall EU car registrations rose 1.8% compared with 2024. Among Europe’s largest carmakers, registrations at Volkswagen ( VLKAF ) fell 3.8% Y/Y, while BMW ( BMWKY ) declined 3% and Renault ( RNSDF ) dropped 15%. Japan’s Toyota ( TM ) saw registrations slide 13%, while China's BYD ( BYDDF ) saw a 165% jump and Stellantis ( STLA ) saw a 7% rise. U.S. automaker Tesla ( TSLA ) continued its downward trend with a 17% Y/Y decline, the thirteenth month in a row in which sales have shrunk. Tickers to watch: Volkswagen Group ( OTCPK:VLKAF ), Stellantis ( STLA ), Renault Group ( OTCPK:RNSDF ), Hyundai ( OTCPK:HYMTF ), Toyota Motor (NYSE: TM ), BMW (BMWYY), Mercedes-Benz ( OTCPK:MBGAF ), Ford Motor (NYSE: F ), Volvo Cars, Tesla ( TSLA ), Nissan ( OTCPK:NSANY ), and Suzuki ( OTCPK:SZKMY ). More on Euro Area Beyond The Rate Hold: Examining The ECB's Path Forward Amidst Euro Strength U.S. Dollar Stakes Get Raised - What To Do Now In The Rates Space? Technical Levels For Major FX Pairs Ahead Of The FOMC Rate Decision Europe markets dip over renewed tariff tensions U.S. dollar slips, precious metals rebound on fresh tariff fears