Zeta (ZETA) delivered earnings and revenue surprises of +23.51% and +3.73%, respectively, for the quarter ended December 2025. Do the numbers hold clues to what lies ahead for the stock?
Zeta (ZETA) delivered earnings and revenue surprises of +23.51% and +3.73%, respectively, for the quarter ended December 2025. Do the numbers hold clues to what lies ahead for the stock?
Tigo Energy, Inc. (TYGO) delivered earnings and revenue surprises of +18.26% and -0.32%, respectively, for the quarter ended December 2025. Do the numbers hold clues to what lies ahead for the stock?
Tigo Energy, Inc. (TYGO) delivered earnings and revenue surprises of +18.26% and -0.32%, respectively, for the quarter ended December 2025. Do the numbers hold clues to what lies ahead for the stock?
UFP (UFPT) delivered earnings and revenue surprises of +7.81% and -1.08%, respectively, for the quarter ended December 2025. Do the numbers hold clues to what lies ahead for the stock?
UFP (UFPT) delivered earnings and revenue surprises of +7.81% and -1.08%, respectively, for the quarter ended December 2025. Do the numbers hold clues to what lies ahead for the stock?
Universal Insurance (UVE) delivered earnings and revenue surprises of +66.92% and +9.37%, respectively, for the quarter ended December 2025. Do the numbers hold clues to what lies ahead for the stock?
Universal Insurance (UVE) delivered earnings and revenue surprises of +66.92% and +9.37%, respectively, for the quarter ended December 2025. Do the numbers hold clues to what lies ahead for the stock?
The average one-year price target for Macmahon Holdings (ASX:MAH) has been revised to $0.75 / share. This is an increase of 49.00% from the prior estimate of $0.50 dated February 1, 2026. The price target is an average of many targets provided by analysts. The
The average one-year price target for Macmahon Holdings (ASX:MAH) has been revised to $0.75 / share. This is an increase of 49.00% from the prior estimate of $0.50 dated February 1, 2026. The price target is an average of many targets provided by analysts. The
The mayor of New Zealand’s capital city took an afternoon dip on Wednesday hoping to assuage public fears after a breakdown at a local waste water treatment plant pumped raw sewage into the ocean and sprayed faecal matter on coastal homes. Millions of litres of raw sewage have flowed into the waters off Wellington’s picturesque south coast beaches since the breakdown of the Moa Point facility on F...
The mayor of New Zealand’s capital city took an afternoon dip on Wednesday hoping to assuage public fears after a breakdown at a local waste water treatment plant pumped raw sewage into the ocean and sprayed faecal matter on coastal homes. Millions of litres of raw sewage have flowed into the waters off Wellington’s picturesque south coast beaches since the breakdown of the Moa Point facility on February 4. Sporting swimming trunks and a rash guard shirt, Mayor Andrew Little dived face first...
Parradee Kietsirikul/iStock via Getty Images The following segment was excerpted from The Broyhill Q4 2025 Letter. The railroads were a bubble and they transformed America. Electricity was a bubble, and it transformed America. The broadband build-out of the late-1990s was a bubble that transformed America. I am not rooting for a bubble ... but given the amount of debt now flowing into AI data cent...
Parradee Kietsirikul/iStock via Getty Images The following segment was excerpted from The Broyhill Q4 2025 Letter. The railroads were a bubble and they transformed America. Electricity was a bubble, and it transformed America. The broadband build-out of the late-1990s was a bubble that transformed America. I am not rooting for a bubble ... but given the amount of debt now flowing into AI data center construction, I think it's unlikely that we're going to get out of this technology that isn't overbuilt and doesn't incur us a brief painful correction. - Derek Thompson, AI Could Be the Railroad of the 21st Century. AI could end scarcity, end humanity - or boost trend growth by 0.2 percentage points The surge in AI-driven infrastructure is a powerful force on par with the greatest capital investment cycles in history. Previous cycles, such as the build-out of railroads in the 1800s, electricity in the 1920s, and the late 1990s surge in telecommunications infrastructure, required heavy investment to retool the economy for a new era. In every case, excessive enthusiasm led to excessive investment, resulting in far more infrastructure than was needed, asset prices far too high relative to fundamentals, and ultimately losses far greater than anyone imagined. These bubbles didn't deflate because the technology disappointed. They deflated because the economic benefits they produced were captured downstream by the consumers and companies that employed the technologies. While it's difficult to gauge where we stand in the current cycle, historical comparisons can provide some perspective – and a dose of humility. Since the launch of ChatGPT in late 2022, AI investment has contributed roughly $250 billion to US GDP, as capital expenditures by hyperscalers (major cloud providers operating massive-scale data centers) increased from $160 billion (0.6% of GDP) to an estimated $415 billion (1.4% of GDP) last year. Current estimates put the pace of spending on track to reach 2.1% of GD...