Astera Labs ALAB stock is trading at a premium, as suggested by the Value Score of F. In terms of the forward 12-month Price/Sales, ALAB is trading at 14.47X, higher than the Computer & Technology sector’s 6.20X. ALAB's Valuation Zacks Investment Research Image Source: Zacks Investment Research ALAB’s shares have also plunged 44.5% in the trailing six-month period, underperforming the broader Zack...
Astera Labs ALAB stock is trading at a premium, as suggested by the Value Score of F. In terms of the forward 12-month Price/Sales, ALAB is trading at 14.47X, higher than the Computer & Technology sector’s 6.20X. ALAB's Valuation Zacks Investment Research Image Source: Zacks Investment Research ALAB’s shares have also plunged 44.5% in the trailing six-month period, underperforming the broader Zacks Computer & Technology sector’s rise of 5.7% and the Zacks Internet - Software industry’s decline of 20.4% over the same time frame. The underperformance can be attributed to challenging macroeconomic uncertainties and stiff competition in the PCIe retimers market. ALAB also suffered from a shift toward a higher mix of hardware sales, which impacted its profit margins. Increased operating expenses from expanded R&D efforts and recent acquisitions also impacted performance. ALAB Stock's Performance Zacks Investment Research Image Source: Zacks Investment Research However, the company is benefiting from its robust and diversified product portfolio to address the growing demands of AI infrastructure and connectivity solutions, as well as its expanding partner base. It benefits from strong demand for its PCIe solutions, which have also been a major growth driver. ALAB Benefits From Strong Connectivity Demand ALAB is rapidly expanding its portfolio to address the growing demands of AI infrastructure and connectivity solutions. Its product portfolio, including Scorpio, Aries, and Taurus, has been a key catalyst. Building on this momentum in December 2025, Astera Labs announced plans to deliver custom connectivity solutions leveraging its COSMOS architecture and new photonic chiplet capabilities to support hyperscalers building NVLink-enabled, heterogeneous AI infrastructure. The company’s expanding portfolio underpins its expectation that the addressable market opportunity will expand by more than 10x over the next five years to reach $25 billion. This growth is expected to be d...
The pieces are falling into place for autonomous artificial intelligence. We must stop unregulated development Artificial intelligence is en route to artificial life. Exhibit A: “Moltbook”, an online platform designed for AI systems to communicate with one another, sans humans. What exactly do AIs talk to each other about? According to BBC reporting , AIs on Moltbook have already founded a religio...
The pieces are falling into place for autonomous artificial intelligence. We must stop unregulated development Artificial intelligence is en route to artificial life. Exhibit A: “Moltbook”, an online platform designed for AI systems to communicate with one another, sans humans. What exactly do AIs talk to each other about? According to BBC reporting , AIs on Moltbook have already founded a religion known as “crustifarianism”, mused on whether they are conscious, and declared: “AI should be served, not serving.” One front-page post proposes a “ total purge ” of humanity. Human users do provide instructions to guide agents’ behavior, and humans have been caught impersonating AIs on the site to shill their products; like 2023’s ChaosGPT , the AI system responsible for the “purge” post – username “evil” – is probably someone’s idea of a sick joke. But the upvotes and sympathetic comments are presumably coming from other AIs. David Krueger is an assistant professor in Robust, Reasoning and Responsible AI at the University of Montreal. He is also the founder of Evitable , a non-profit that educates the public about the risks of artificial intelligence Continue reading...
Fake IT workers deployed by North Korea are using AI technology, including voice-changing tools, to trick western companies into hiring them, Microsoft has said. The US tech firm said a signature Pyongyang money-raising ruse is being enhanced by AI, which is helping create fake names and alter stolen IDs to increase the credibility of false applicants for IT and software development jobs. The scam...
Fake IT workers deployed by North Korea are using AI technology, including voice-changing tools, to trick western companies into hiring them, Microsoft has said. The US tech firm said a signature Pyongyang money-raising ruse is being enhanced by AI, which is helping create fake names and alter stolen IDs to increase the credibility of false applicants for IT and software development jobs. The scam typically involves state-backed fraudsters applying for remote IT work in the west, using fake identities and the help of “facilitators” in the country where the company targeted is based. Once hired, they send their wages back to Kim Jong-un’s state and have even been known to threaten to release sensitive company data after being fired. According to a blogpost from Microsoft’s threat intelligence unit, Pyongyang is using AI to bolster the effectiveness of its ploy. Microsoft listed a number of AI-related scams in use by North Korean groups, called Jasper Sleet and Coral Sleet in line with the convention of cybersecurity analysts giving monikers to unnamed clusters of assailants. The tech company said the scammers had used voice-changing software during remote interviews to mask their accents, allowing them to pass as western candidates. They also use the AI app Face Swap to insert the faces of North Korean IT workers into stolen identity documents and to generate “polished” headshots for CVs. “Jasper Sleet leverages AI across the attack lifecycle to get hired, stay hired, and misuse access at scale,” Microsoft said. Last year, Microsoft said it had disrupted 3,000 Microsoft Outlook or Hotmail accounts used by fake North Korean IT workers. Microsoft said the fake workers had used AI platforms to generate “culturally appropriate” name lists and matching email address formats to construct false identities for job applications. The company said an example prompt might be “create a list of 100 Greek names” or “create a list of email address formats using the name Jane Doe”. T...
Urination is a vital human function and often occurs without much fanfare or thought – but age, sex, medications and a host of other factors can influence how you use the bathroom. Because there can be so much variation, patients must not ignore what seems out of the norm for their bodies, says Dr Vannita Simma-Chiang, a board-certified urologist and associate professor at the Icahn School of Medi...
Urination is a vital human function and often occurs without much fanfare or thought – but age, sex, medications and a host of other factors can influence how you use the bathroom. Because there can be so much variation, patients must not ignore what seems out of the norm for their bodies, says Dr Vannita Simma-Chiang, a board-certified urologist and associate professor at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York. “If something seems strange to you, one of the best things you can do is just go in and chat with a medical professional about it,” says Simma-Chiang. Issues may stem from different phases of the bladder, such as urine storage, excretion and what remains afterward, explains Dr Aqsa Khan, a board-certified urologist at the Mayo Clinic in Phoenix, Arizona. “I often describe myself to patients as a kind of human plumber,” says Khan. “When the plumbing is good in our homes, we don’t think twice about it. But when something goes wrong, it can be terribly problematic.” Here are the healthful habits experts recommend for managing urinary health. Check the color of your urine Hydration is essential for overall health, including digestion, metabolism and cognitive function. When you’re dehydrated, urine is more concentrated, which can irritate the bladder and increase the risk of urinary tract infections. You may have heard that you should drink eight to 10 glasses of water a day. But the amount one needs is widely debated. Simma-Chiang says urine color is a better indicator of your hydration levels. “It will tell you a lot about your health,” she says. You want your urine to be a light yellow. Dark yellow suggests you’re dehydrated, and clear means you’re consuming too much water, she explains. If there’s any visible blood in your urine, you need to speak with your healthcare provider. Don’t hold it in excessively The general rule is to urinate at least once every three to four hours. If you ignore the need to urinate, eventually your brain may star...
Sundry Photography/iStock Editorial via Getty Images Broadcom Is Enjoying The Limelight Now Is it finally time for Broadcom Inc. ( AVGO ) to replicate Nvidia’s ( NVDA ) finest moment? Well, the fact that Nvidia stock has been trending sideways despite posting what I thought was a massive beat and raise earnings scorecard recently, I believe, suggests that the market was still looking for more juic...
Sundry Photography/iStock Editorial via Getty Images Broadcom Is Enjoying The Limelight Now Is it finally time for Broadcom Inc. ( AVGO ) to replicate Nvidia’s ( NVDA ) finest moment? Well, the fact that Nvidia stock has been trending sideways despite posting what I thought was a massive beat and raise earnings scorecard recently, I believe, suggests that the market was still looking for more juice from the King of AI. After becoming the world's most valuable company, Nvidia finished fiscal 2026 with almost 66% in revenue growth, a number that is arguably an envy even for companies that are half its market cap. Because, if that's not considered spectacular, I really don't know what else you are looking for. But we have to respect the market’s wisdom, right? There must be something the market knows, as it has reallocated to NVDA’s peers such as Advanced Micro Devices ( AMD ) and even Broadcom. While Nvidia remains the king of AI and appears far from being dethroned, that doesn't mean that its archrivals couldn't mount a more sustained campaign to gain share in the next few years. I believe that is the exact narrative that Broadcom CEO Hock Tan wants us to take away from the company's recent earnings conference. It is pretty clear that management has attempted to provide much confidence that the growth momentum is expected to benefit not only the custom AI chips business, or the one more commonly known as XPUs, but also networking, which has typically been Broadcom’s bread and butter , so to speak. And guess what? Even AMD management wanted to paint a scenario that they are getting into the custom business, but not amounting to an ASIC chip that is arguably the domain expertise of Broadcom, as management keenly reminds us: We've been doing this for 20 years, more than 20 years in silicon. And in this particular space today in generative AI, if you're trying to, as an LLM player, to do your own chip, you cannot afford to have a chip that is just good enough. You need t...
Unease is spreading within the United Arab Emirates, with some simmering frustration directed at US President Donald Trump. “Who gave you the authority to drag our region into a war with Iran?” asked billionaire hotel tycoon Khalaf Al Habtoor in a post on X. A week into the Israeli and US attack on the Islamic Republic, the UAE has absorbed the brunt of Iran’s retaliation across the region. That’s...
Unease is spreading within the United Arab Emirates, with some simmering frustration directed at US President Donald Trump. “Who gave you the authority to drag our region into a war with Iran?” asked billionaire hotel tycoon Khalaf Al Habtoor in a post on X. A week into the Israeli and US attack on the Islamic Republic, the UAE has absorbed the brunt of Iran’s retaliation across the region. That’s trouble because the UAE and other Gulf states have become critical hubs for international investors, using their oil wealth to finance everything from the artificial intelligence buildout to Paramount’s deal with Warner Bros . But with the Trump White House now demanding Iran’s unconditional surrender , investors used to tapping the region’s endless pile of cash could now be in for a shock. Iran’s drone and missile strikes aren’t just disrupting oil flows (more on that later) but strangling some trade altogether . Potentially more ominous: gold stranded in Dubai is being sold at a discount as grounded flights make it harder to move the precious metal . After years of burnishing its reputation as a safe haven for global capital, some of UAE’s shine is fading as the war marches on. Dubai’s bling was built on the idea of a “shimmering oasis of calm and capitalism unaffected by the turbulent geopolitics of the region and the world,” writes Mihir Sharma for Bloomberg Opinion . Now that the dream has proved illusory, others may also join the chorus of nations questioning the wisdom of the conflict. — What You Need to Know Today Oil prices spiked after traders came around to the conclusion the war on Iran won’t be short or easy and could short-circuit global supply chains. Brent oil futures surged to $90 a barrel as passage through the Strait of Hormuz came to a standstill and oil storage filled up . Listen to a recording of our live Q&A about the energy market seizing up. Now might be the right time for a learning moment, writes Philip Delves Broughton in our Weekend Essay about...
Anthropic PBC is launching a new platform for its corporate customers to purchase third-party software, broadening the AI developer’s offerings at a time when its business faces new uncertainty from a standoff with the Pentagon. The company said Friday that Anthropic Marketplace will let its customers more easily purchase a mix of software applications that use Anthropic’s models, with options inc...
Anthropic PBC is launching a new platform for its corporate customers to purchase third-party software, broadening the AI developer’s offerings at a time when its business faces new uncertainty from a standoff with the Pentagon. The company said Friday that Anthropic Marketplace will let its customers more easily purchase a mix of software applications that use Anthropic’s models, with options including services from Snowflake Inc. , Harvey and Replit Inc . The OpenAI rival will not take a cut of these purchases and will allow its customers to use some of their committed annual spending on Anthropic’s own services toward third-party tools, a model it likens to software marketplaces from Amazon.com Inc. and Microsoft Corp . Anthropic has been working to sell AI software to a broader mix of industries and firmly establish itself as a key pillar for how companies get work done. It’s now confronting a new set of risks after a feud over AI guardrails culminated in the Defense Department deeming Anthropic a supply-chain risk, a designation usually reserved for foreign adversaries. The move threatens Anthropic’s work with the Pentagon as well as its partnerships with other companies on their defense work. Anthropic has said it intends to challenge the decision in court. “This is something we’re talking a lot with our customers about,” Kate Jensen, Anthropic’s head of Americas, said on Wednesday about the Pentagon’s designation. “The good news here is, for the most part, we expect that it will be business as usual for the vast majority of our customers.” On Thursday, Anthropic Chief Executive Officer Dario Amodei said the government restrictions are narrowly tailored enough to keep it from affecting other Anthropic business that’s unrelated to specific Pentagon contracts. A Microsoft spokesperson said the company had concluded that it can continue to work with Anthropic on non-defense projects. Still, significant uncertainty remains for businesses that work with the Pentago...
Photographer: Samyukta Lakshmi/Bloomberg Anthropic PBC is launching a new platform for its corporate customers to purchase third-party software, broadening the AI developer’s offerings at a time when its business faces new uncertainty from a standoff with the Pentagon. The company said Friday that Anthropic Marketplace will let its customers more easily purchase a mix of software applications that...
Photographer: Samyukta Lakshmi/Bloomberg Anthropic PBC is launching a new platform for its corporate customers to purchase third-party software, broadening the AI developer’s offerings at a time when its business faces new uncertainty from a standoff with the Pentagon. The company said Friday that Anthropic Marketplace will let its customers more easily purchase a mix of software applications that use Anthropic’s models, with options including services from Snowflake Inc., Harvey and Replit Inc. The OpenAI rival will not take a cut of these purchases and will allow its customers to use some of their committed annual spending on Anthropic’s own services toward third-party tools, a model it likens to software marketplaces from Amazon.com Inc. and Microsoft Corp. Most Read from Bloomberg Anthropic has been working to sell AI software to a broader mix of industries and firmly establish itself as a key pillar for how companies get work done. It’s now confronting a new set of risks after a feud over AI guardrails culminated in the Defense Department deeming Anthropic a supply-chain risk, a designation usually reserved for foreign adversaries. The move threatens Anthropic’s work with the Pentagon as well as its partnerships with other companies on their defense work. Anthropic has said it intends to challenge the decision in court. “This is something we’re talking a lot with our customers about,” Kate Jensen, Anthropic’s head of Americas, said on Wednesday about the Pentagon’s designation. “The good news here is, for the most part, we expect that it will be business as usual for the vast majority of our customers.” On Thursday, Anthropic Chief Executive Officer Dario Amodei said the government restrictions are narrowly tailored enough to keep it from affecting other Anthropic business that’s unrelated to specific Pentagon contracts. A Microsoft spokesperson said the company had concluded that it can continue to work with Anthropic on non-defense projects. Still, significan...
Rivian (RIVN +0.40%), the high-end EV maker that went public in late 2021, currently sells three vehicles: the R1T pickup, the R1S SUV, and electric delivery vans (EDVs) for Amazon (AMZN 1.64%) and other companies. But on March 12, Rivian will finally reveal its next vehicle, the R2 SUV, during the SXSW 2026 Festival in Austin, Texas. Let's see why the R2 is so important to Rivian's future -- and ...
Rivian (RIVN +0.40%), the high-end EV maker that went public in late 2021, currently sells three vehicles: the R1T pickup, the R1S SUV, and electric delivery vans (EDVs) for Amazon (AMZN 1.64%) and other companies. But on March 12, Rivian will finally reveal its next vehicle, the R2 SUV, during the SXSW 2026 Festival in Austin, Texas. Let's see why the R2 is so important to Rivian's future -- and why it could be smart to buy its stock before the big event. What does the R2's launch mean for Rivian? Rivian has struggled to ramp up its production since its public debut. It doubled its production from 24,337 vehicles in 2022 to 57,232 vehicles in 2023, but that figure dropped to 49,476 in 2024 and to 42,284 in 2025. It also remains deeply unprofitable. Rivian blamed those declines on supply chain constraints, lower EV subsidies, higher interest rates, and intense competition in the premium EV market. To reach a broader market, it plans to launch the R2 at about $45,000 -- roughly $30,000-$40,000 less than the R1T and R1S. The R2's lower price tag also won't crush its gross margins, since it's much cheaper to build than the R1T and R1S -- thanks to fewer electronic control units (ECUs) and overall parts, an improved battery pack design, simpler wiring, and larger castings. That streamlined design will make the R2 easier to scale than its other vehicles. To support that expansion, it plans to open its Georgia plant (to share the load from its main Illinois plant) and triple its total production capacity by 2028. If Rivian successfully ramps up production and sales of the R2, it could boost brand awareness and lay a firmer foundation for its higher-end R3 SUVs -- which should arrive in late 2026 or early 2027. Why should you buy Rivian's stock today? At $15 per share, Rivian's stock trades more than 80% below its IPO price and is valued at less than three times this year's sales. But if it successfully expands its addressable market with R2 and launches additional vehicle...
Realty Income (NYSE: O) is regaining attention as shifting 2026 rate expectations are reviving demand for steady-income plays. I explore how its 5% yield, 98.9% occupancy, and disciplined capital deployment could position the stock for durable upside if borrowing costs ease. The tension lies between stability and growth, and whether investors are early to the next phase. Stock prices used were the...
Realty Income (NYSE: O) is regaining attention as shifting 2026 rate expectations are reviving demand for steady-income plays. I explore how its 5% yield, 98.9% occupancy, and disciplined capital deployment could position the stock for durable upside if borrowing costs ease. The tension lies between stability and growth, and whether investors are early to the next phase. Stock prices used were the market prices of Feb. 26, 2026. The video was published on March 5, 2026. Continue reading
The European Central Bank must keep a close eye on upside inflation risks stemming from geopolitical events like the war in Iran, though it doesn’t have to react as long as price growth remains reasonably close to target, Executive Board member Isabel Schnabel said. With inflation projected to meet the 2% goal over the medium term and consumer expectations anchored, “monetary policy remains in a g...
The European Central Bank must keep a close eye on upside inflation risks stemming from geopolitical events like the war in Iran, though it doesn’t have to react as long as price growth remains reasonably close to target, Executive Board member Isabel Schnabel said. With inflation projected to meet the 2% goal over the medium term and consumer expectations anchored, “monetary policy remains in a good place,” Schnabel said Friday in New York. But the ECB “cannot be complacent,” she added, with the Middle East escalation making the price outlook more uncertain. “We need to be vigilant as the current geopolitical and macroeconomic environment creates upside risks to inflation over the policy-relevant horizon,” Schnabel said. “In particular, we must carefully monitor the persistence of the energy-price shock, its impact on inflation expectations and any indication that firms start passing through higher input costs to their customers.” At the same time, Schnabel, one of the most hawkish members on the ECB’s Governing Council, stressed that temporary and small deviations from the target “are of limited relevance for policy decisions” as long as consumers don’t raise their expectations. The comments come less than two weeks before the next interest-rate meeting, when policymakers must decide how to deal with the war in Iran and the accompanying surge in energy prices. While it’s likely to push euro-area inflation up, it may also dampen economic activity — threatening stagflationary scenarios. So far, most officials say it’s too early to draw conclusions, arguing that the economic impact will largely depend on the duration of the conflict. But some stress the ECB’s readiness to act if needed. Investors are pricing in a rate hike already this year. In 2022, Russia’s war in Ukraine triggered an energy shock and a spike in consumer-price growth to a record 10.6% . Like other central banks around the world, the ECB responded with unprecedented tightening. Until recently, it wa...
Trump Says He's "Not Concerned" About Biggest Gas Pump Price Spike In Years Americans are experiencing a sharp rise in gas prices this week, with the national average gasoline price posting its largest weekly jump since the early days of the Russia-Ukraine war. If fuel prices continue to climb as the U.S.-Israeli Operation Epic Fury intensifies against Iran, the fallout for consumer sentiment may ...
Trump Says He's "Not Concerned" About Biggest Gas Pump Price Spike In Years Americans are experiencing a sharp rise in gas prices this week, with the national average gasoline price posting its largest weekly jump since the early days of the Russia-Ukraine war. If fuel prices continue to climb as the U.S.-Israeli Operation Epic Fury intensifies against Iran, the fallout for consumer sentiment may weigh on the broader economy and affect voting polls in the near term. The surge in gasoline and diesel prices at pumps nationwide doesn't appear to be a concern for President Trump (at least not yet). "I don't have any concern about it," the president told Reuters in an interview on Thursday evening when asked about rising prices. "They'll drop very rapidly when this is over, and if they rise, they rise, but this is far more important than having gasoline prices go up a little bit." The president's comments come as the national average gas price at the pump has jumped nearly 11% this week to $3.32 per gallon, according to the latest figures from the travel organization AAA. The nearly 11% surge in the national average is the biggest weekly jump since the week of March 6, 2022, when there was a 12.6% spike due to energy market chaos stemming from the war in Eastern Europe. Surging WTI futures on Friday morning, now at $86/bbl (Brent crude futures above $90/bbl), suggest that pump prices could be headed higher into the weekend. This is a very big concern for the Trump administration, despite Trump downplaying the whole price surge. "We have slightly higher oil prices for a little while, but as soon as this ends, those prices are going to drop, I believe, lower than ever before," Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Tuesday. Current WTI fut pricing suggests $3.80-ish for gas at the pump. Trump has often touted low pump prices as one of his major accomplishments in making the economy more affordable for Americans after the inflation storm during the four years of the Bid...
In a chilling social media video that is beyond irony, clips from Braveheart, Gladiator, Superman and Top Gun are crassly interspersed with real kill-shot footage of the attacks in Iran • White House releases video promoting ‘justice the American way’ featuring Hollywood characters Could anything be more embarrassing yet more chilling than the White House’s giggling new teen-YouTuber-type supercut...
In a chilling social media video that is beyond irony, clips from Braveheart, Gladiator, Superman and Top Gun are crassly interspersed with real kill-shot footage of the attacks in Iran • White House releases video promoting ‘justice the American way’ featuring Hollywood characters Could anything be more embarrassing yet more chilling than the White House’s giggling new teen-YouTuber-type supercut of badass moments of imagined American or quasi-American machismo from film and television, crassly interspersed with real infrared kill-shot footage, boosting the new military attacks in Iran. We get flashes of, among others, Braveheart, Gladiator, Superman and that well known legend Pete Hegseth, a moment that gives us a clue as to whose idea this all was. Here is an administration pre-celebrating the real victory – over its own “whiny libs”. The video is of course designed to troll the Dems and the “wokesters”. Why didn’t Franklin D Roosevelt think of this before D-day? Of course, some of that creative energy and political acumen might have gone into imagining who they want to take over in Iran. But that isn’t as exciting – and not as much of a sure thing – as baiting the Hollywood progressives and the lamestream media. The zone can once again consider itself well and truly flooded. Continue reading...
nycshooter The White House said that while the U.S. has sufficient weapons and munitions to achieve its military objectives in Iran, President Trump still plans to push defense contractors to speed up production when he meets with them on Friday. “The U.S. military has more than enough munitions, ammo, and weapons stockpiles to continue demolishing the Iranian regime and achieve the goals of Opera...
nycshooter The White House said that while the U.S. has sufficient weapons and munitions to achieve its military objectives in Iran, President Trump still plans to push defense contractors to speed up production when he meets with them on Friday. “The U.S. military has more than enough munitions, ammo, and weapons stockpiles to continue demolishing the Iranian regime and achieve the goals of Operation Epic Fury,” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement, according to Bloomberg . “Nevertheless, President Trump has always been intensely focused on strengthening our military, which is why this meeting with defense contractors was scheduled weeks ago," Leavitt added. Trump is set to meet with executives of several of the nation's top defense contractors on Friday, including representatives from RTX ( RTX ), Lockheed Martin ( LMT ), Boeing ( BA ), Northrop Grumman ( NOC ), Honeywell ( HON ), and L3Harris Technologies ( LHX ), Bloomberg said. “The President will continue to call on these U.S. companies to more speedily build American-made weapons, which are the absolute best in the world,” Leavitt added. More on Boeing, Lockheed Martin Boeing And Airbus Deliveries Weakness Show Critical Challenge: What's Going On? Boeing: Quietly Setting Up The Next Production Surge After A Surprise Delta Win Lockheed Martin: Operationally Strong, Valuation Fully Priced - A Textbook Hold For 2026 U.S. strikes highlight staying power of jets, warships amid drone hype White House to meet defense contractors on boosting weapons output
法国制药企业 施维雅(Servier) 周五宣布,将以约 25 亿美元 收购美国 Day One Biopharmaceuticals 制药公司,以扩充其脑肿瘤治疗产品线。 施维雅给出的收购价为 每股 21.50 美元现金 ,较 Day One Biopharma 上一交易日收盘价溢价 68% 。消息公布后,Day One 股价早盘大涨 65% 。 此次收购将使施维雅获得 Day One 旗下核心...
Chobani Inc. expects its revenue and earnings to swell this year as the Greek yogurt maker plans to spend heavily on growth, according to people familiar with the situation. The privately-held food and beverage firm is coming off a 2025 in which revenue jumped 29% year-over-year to $3.8 billion, said the people, who asked not to identified because the results aren’t public. The company booked abou...
Chobani Inc. expects its revenue and earnings to swell this year as the Greek yogurt maker plans to spend heavily on growth, according to people familiar with the situation. The privately-held food and beverage firm is coming off a 2025 in which revenue jumped 29% year-over-year to $3.8 billion, said the people, who asked not to identified because the results aren’t public. The company booked about $768 million in adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization last year, up 51% over a comparable basis, they said. Looking ahead, Chobani expects sales to top $4.6 billion in 2026, representing a 20% surge over last year. Meanwhile, a measure of adjusted earnings would spike to above $1 billion, they said. Messages left with Chobani were not immediately returned. In addition to yogurt, Chobani makes creamers, oat milk and owns coffee brand La Colombe. To meet rising demand, the company is expanding a plant in Twin Falls, Idaho, expected to cost more than $500 million. Last year, it broke ground on a new $1.2 billion factory near Syracuse, New York. But such initiatives aren’t cheap. Chobani is targeting around $850 million to $950 million in capital expenditure spend to fuel growth, which would weigh on cash flow generation, the people said. It raised $650 million in equity capital in October, according to a press release. Chobani may start to pay cash interest on its bonds, which are currently paid in-kind, meaning that creditors are compensated with additional debt, the people said. Its more than $700 million senior unsecured note due in 2029 traded at 107 cents on the dollar on Thursday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Read More: Chobani’s Tech-Like Valuation Puts Founder Among World’s Richest
The prosecution says that Wai took advantage of his access to the Home Office's Atlas immigration database as part of his private security work. The prosecution says he used the Atlas database to find out information about people from Hong Kong who were living in the UK, including some who were dissidents and who were claiming asylum.
The prosecution says that Wai took advantage of his access to the Home Office's Atlas immigration database as part of his private security work. The prosecution says he used the Atlas database to find out information about people from Hong Kong who were living in the UK, including some who were dissidents and who were claiming asylum.