格隆汇3月7日|据彭博,知情人士透露,诺和诺德计划在Hims & Hers Health Inc.的平台上销售其减肥药,从而终结两家公司之间一场高度公开的纠纷,该纠纷上月曾升级为法律诉讼。这位要求匿名的知情人士表示,诺和诺德与Hims最早可能于下周一宣布建立新的合作关系。两家公司去年曾达成类似协议,但在Hims拒绝停止营销和销售仿制版本药物后,诺和诺德单方面终止了协议。
格隆汇3月7日|据彭博,知情人士透露,诺和诺德计划在Hims & Hers Health Inc.的平台上销售其减肥药,从而终结两家公司之间一场高度公开的纠纷,该纠纷上月曾升级为法律诉讼。这位要求匿名的知情人士表示,诺和诺德与Hims最早可能于下周一宣布建立新的合作关系。两家公司去年曾达成类似协议,但在Hims拒绝停止营销和销售仿制版本药物后,诺和诺德单方面终止了协议。
Experts have told BBC Verify that while many social media companies say they are trying to change their moderation and detection systems to address the scale and speed at which AI-generated content spreads, there is no simple solution to the problem.
Experts have told BBC Verify that while many social media companies say they are trying to change their moderation and detection systems to address the scale and speed at which AI-generated content spreads, there is no simple solution to the problem.
Novo Nordisk A/S plans to sell its weight-loss drugs on Hims & Hers Health Inc. ’s platform, according to a person familiar with the matter, ending a highly public feud between the two companies that spiraled into a legal battle last month. Novo and Hims plan to announce a new partnership as soon as Monday, according to the person, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. The two companies had a s...
Novo Nordisk A/S plans to sell its weight-loss drugs on Hims & Hers Health Inc. ’s platform, according to a person familiar with the matter, ending a highly public feud between the two companies that spiraled into a legal battle last month. Novo and Hims plan to announce a new partnership as soon as Monday, according to the person, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. The two companies had a similar agreement last year, but Novo abruptly scrapped it after Hims refused to stop marketing and selling copycat medications. The partnership is a surprising move for Novo, which sued Hims in February for launching a copycat version of its new Wegovy weight-loss pill. The Danish drugmaker accused Hims of breaching the US patents on the ingredient behind its best-selling medications Ozempic and Wegovy. At the time, John Kuckelman , general counsel at Novo, said Hims’ announcement was “egregious.” Shares of Hims rose 17% postmarket. Its stock had plummeted 52% this year as of Friday’s close. A spokesperson for Novo said Friday that “we are always in conversation with companies that can help improve patient access to FDA-approved medicines for people living with chronic diseases. These talks happen on an ongoing basis.” Hims didn’t immediately return messages for comment after normal business hours. Novo’s new pill was supposed to help it gain an edge in the highly competitive obesity market, where it’s been losing share to rival Eli Lilly & Co. and firms like Hims that sell copycat drugs. Novo’s willingness to partner with the telehealth platform now is a sign the drugmaker is under mounting pressure to regain its footing. Hims and other telehealth companies pounced on the opportunity to sell lower-cost copies of Lilly’s and Novo’s weight-loss shots during widespread supply shortages in recent years. Those shortages have since ended, meaning companies were supposed to stop selling copies of the shots. They’ve gotten around that by tweaking dosages or adding ingredients so t...
Gold's price recently clearing $5,190 an ounce was an undeniable sign that investors everywhere are paying up for what they think is a safe asset. When that happens, safety gets awfully expensive, often to the point of making riskier assets with lower valuations look a lot more appealing. On that note, many leading cryptocurrencies are currently priced a lot lower than in the recent past. Making a...
Gold's price recently clearing $5,190 an ounce was an undeniable sign that investors everywhere are paying up for what they think is a safe asset. When that happens, safety gets awfully expensive, often to the point of making riskier assets with lower valuations look a lot more appealing. On that note, many leading cryptocurrencies are currently priced a lot lower than in the recent past. Making a simple crypto portfolio centered around the "harder" assets might be a better option than piling into gold while it's richly valued. Let's explore that possibility and figure out how to implement it properly. Gold is pricey and volatile Gold's appeal is that it doesn't need to print an earnings report to be valuable. Nor can it be issued by a government and have its value diluted. Those are worthwhile traits, but most investors don't store physical bars of gold in a vault. They buy a gold exchange-traded fund (ETF) like SPDR Gold Shares (GLD +1.58%). That can spare them a logistics headache, and enable them to purchase shares for less than the cost of an ounce, but it can't make the underlying asset any cheaper. Plus, with so many investors chasing gold, its price is currently a lot more volatile than it used to be, which somewhat reduces its appeal as a safe harbor asset. And if you buy an ETF, it'll charge you an expense fee. So loading up on gold at its current price isn't a very enticing proposition. Cryptocurrencies aren't as solid as gold, but they're not as pricey either On average, cryptocurrencies, even the safer and more established ones, aren't a great substitute for gold. They're far more volatile, and many derive their value from a very different set of properties. Nonetheless, Bitcoin (BTC 3.82%) and Ethereum (ETH 4.40%) might be a good place to start if you're loath to buy gold at its current price. Bitcoin has a 21-million-coin supply limit, and its supply policy ensures that it gets scarcer over time, which makes it a store of value. Its volatility makes i...
Key Points Everyone wants to hold gold right now. In contrast, Bitcoin and Ethereum are out of favor. Those cryptocurrencies will both likely grow a lot from here. 10 stocks we like better than Bitcoin › Gold's price recently clearing $5,190 an ounce was an undeniable sign that investors everywhere are paying up for what they think is a safe asset. When that happens, safety gets awfully expensive,...
Key Points Everyone wants to hold gold right now. In contrast, Bitcoin and Ethereum are out of favor. Those cryptocurrencies will both likely grow a lot from here. 10 stocks we like better than Bitcoin › Gold's price recently clearing $5,190 an ounce was an undeniable sign that investors everywhere are paying up for what they think is a safe asset. When that happens, safety gets awfully expensive, often to the point of making riskier assets with lower valuations look a lot more appealing. On that note, many leading cryptocurrencies are currently priced a lot lower than in the recent past. Making a simple crypto portfolio centered around the "harder" assets might be a better option than piling into gold while it's richly valued. Let's explore that possibility and figure out how to implement it properly. Will AI create the world's first trillionaire? Our team just released a report on the one little-known company, called an "Indispensable Monopoly" providing the critical technology Nvidia and Intel both need. Continue » Gold is pricey and volatile Gold's appeal is that it doesn't need to print an earnings report to be valuable. Nor can it be issued by a government and have its value diluted. Those are worthwhile traits, but most investors don't store physical bars of gold in a vault. They buy a gold exchange-traded fund (ETF) like SPDR Gold Shares (NYSEMKT: GLD). That can spare them a logistics headache, and enable them to purchase shares for less than the cost of an ounce, but it can't make the underlying asset any cheaper. Plus, with so many investors chasing gold, its price is currently a lot more volatile than it used to be, which somewhat reduces its appeal as a safe harbor asset. And if you buy an ETF, it'll charge you an expense fee. So loading up on gold at its current price isn't a very enticing proposition. Cryptocurrencies aren't as solid as gold, but they're not as pricey either On average, cryptocurrencies, even the safer and more established ones, aren't...
Destroying a fridge with a baseball bat or smashing glass bottles against a wall would normally be considered signs of hooliganism or problematic anger issues in Hong Kong. But tucked away in an industrial building in Kowloon Bay district, Smashroom HK is providing residents with exactly that opportunity, and the founders have said it is a way for people to deal with the stress of their daily live...
Destroying a fridge with a baseball bat or smashing glass bottles against a wall would normally be considered signs of hooliganism or problematic anger issues in Hong Kong. But tucked away in an industrial building in Kowloon Bay district, Smashroom HK is providing residents with exactly that opportunity, and the founders have said it is a way for people to deal with the stress of their daily lives. “I believe the pressure on Hongkongers is much greater here [than elsewhere],” said Leung Ka-lok, 29, who co-founded the business with long-time friend Alex Lau Kam-hin in 2024. Advertisement “Therefore, we hope to provide a place for everyone to breathe a little easier or let go of some negative energy.” “Smash rooms”, also known as rage rooms, have become something of a global phenomenon in recent years. While the exact origin is debated, they began to take off in the 2010s and have since spread to cities around the globe. Advertisement They offer customers the ability to rent a space for a limited time to use bats, hammers and other assorted tools to smash away life’s frustrations on everyday objects such as appliances and computers.
For a moment, Ireland threatened to run off into the night. After Jacob Stockdale ended his five-year wait for an international try, Ireland celebrated a second try against Wales just 10 minutes into Friday's Six Nations game when Jack Conan crashed over. But the home support's excitement at the possibility of a thumping turned to frustration when the try was ruled out for Tom O'Toole's knock on. ...
For a moment, Ireland threatened to run off into the night. After Jacob Stockdale ended his five-year wait for an international try, Ireland celebrated a second try against Wales just 10 minutes into Friday's Six Nations game when Jack Conan crashed over. But the home support's excitement at the possibility of a thumping turned to frustration when the try was ruled out for Tom O'Toole's knock on. It set up a nervy night for Ireland when their post-England euphoria was quickly forgotten as they set about keeping a stubborn and spirited Wales side quiet. In their record away win over England, Ireland ruthlessly built up a 22-0 lead before the hosts replied. On Friday, though, a hard-hitting Welsh defence stopped the hosts from building an insurmountable advantage. And when asked for his observations, Ireland head coach Andy Farrell was quick to both praise Wales after they provided his side a more uncomfortable examination than England last time out. "I actually thought Wales did fantastically well to stay in the game," he said. "Like Caelan [Doris, Ireland captain] said, if it goes to 14 points, it's a different game you're looking at, but they played tough, they hung on in there and kept it close on the scoreboard. I thought they were tremendous tonight. "It was a proper Test match and for us to come away with a bonus-point win, we'd certainly take that with how the game unfolded, because it was a different game to the game that we played last time round. "In regards to, we weren't playing rugby on the front foot because of how well they defended, I thought they were excellent in contact and set-piece."
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Judge Says Palantir Noncompete Language Is Too Restrictive By Ivan Moreno · A Manhattan federal judge who ruled last month that three former Palantir employees could keep working at a rival artificial intelligence business has said in his unsealed opinion that while evidence... To view the full article, register now.
Judge Says Palantir Noncompete Language Is Too Restrictive By Ivan Moreno · A Manhattan federal judge who ruled last month that three former Palantir employees could keep working at a rival artificial intelligence business has said in his unsealed opinion that while evidence... To view the full article, register now.
If you are wondering whether QUALCOMM's current share price lines up with its underlying value, you are not alone. That is exactly what this breakdown will tackle. The stock trades at US$135.66 after a 4.7% decline over the last week, an 8.9% decline over the last month, and a 21.6% decline year to date, while the 3 year and 5 year returns sit at 26.1% and 16.4% respectively. These moves sit again...
If you are wondering whether QUALCOMM's current share price lines up with its underlying value, you are not alone. That is exactly what this breakdown will tackle. The stock trades at US$135.66 after a 4.7% decline over the last week, an 8.9% decline over the last month, and a 21.6% decline year to date, while the 3 year and 5 year returns sit at 26.1% and 16.4% respectively. These moves sit against a steady flow of industry headlines around semiconductors, 5G deployment and broader interest in chipmakers, which keeps QUALCOMM firmly on many watchlists. The stock's recent performance gives investors a reason to look more closely at how the market is currently pricing those themes into QUALCOMM's shares. Our check based valuation framework gives QUALCOMM a . This points to several areas where the stock may be pricing in more caution than its fundamentals suggest. Next we will compare different valuation approaches before finishing with a broader way to think about what "fair value" really means for this company. Advertisement Approach 1: QUALCOMM Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Analysis A Discounted Cash Flow model takes estimates of a company’s future cash flows, then discounts them back to today using a required rate of return to reach an estimate of what the business might be worth now. For QUALCOMM, the model used is a 2 Stage Free Cash Flow to Equity approach, based on cash flow projections in $. The latest twelve month free cash flow sits at about $12.98b. Analyst inputs and extrapolated forecasts put projected free cash flow for 2030 at roughly $13.52b, with interim estimates across 2026 to 2035 feeding into the model. When all these projected cash flows are discounted back, the DCF output points to an estimated intrinsic value of about $148.14 per share. At the current share price of $135.66, this implies an intrinsic discount of around 8.4%. This indicates the shares are trading close to the model’s estimate of fair value rather than at an extreme discount or pre...
San Francisco startup Anthropic continues to ship new AI products and services at a blistering pace, despite a messy ongoing dispute with the U.S. Department of War . Today, the company announced Claude Marketplace , a new offering that lets enterprises with an existing Anthropic spend commitment apply part of it toward tools and applications powered by Anthropic's Claude models but made and offer...
San Francisco startup Anthropic continues to ship new AI products and services at a blistering pace, despite a messy ongoing dispute with the U.S. Department of War . Today, the company announced Claude Marketplace , a new offering that lets enterprises with an existing Anthropic spend commitment apply part of it toward tools and applications powered by Anthropic's Claude models but made and offered by external partners including GitLab, Harvey, Lovable, Replit, Rogo and Snowflake. According to Anthropic’s Claude Marketplace FAQ , the program is designed to simplify procurement and consolidate AI spend. Anthropic says the Marketplace is now in limited preview and that enterprises interested in using it should reach out to their Anthropic account team to get started. For customers interested in the Marketplace, Anthropic says purchases made through it “count against a portion of your existing Anthropic commitment,” and that the company will manage invoicing for partner spend — meaning enterprises can use part of their existing Anthropic commitment to buy Claude-powered partner solutions without separately handling partner invoicing. In effect, Anthropic is positioning Claude Marketplace as a more centralized way for enterprises to procure certain Claude-powered partner tools. Yet, the whole point of Anthropic's Claude Code and Claude Cowork applications for many users was that they could shift enterprise spend and time away from current third-party software-as-a-service (Saas) apps and instead, they could "vibe code" new solutions or bespoke, AI-powered workflows. This idea is so pervasive that prior Claude integrations have on several recent occasions caused a major selloff in SaaS stocks after investors thought Claude could threaten the underlying companies and applications. Claude Marketplace seems to be pushing against that idea, suggesting current SaaS apps are still valuable and perhaps even more useful and appealing to enterprises with Claude integrated into t...
Adelaide festival This won’t be everyone’s cup of tea, but Huppert delivers an exacting performance in Robert Wilson’s hypnotic, incantatory play Get our weekend culture and lifestyle email Mary, Queen of Scots is one of those perennial figures trotted out as a universal signifier, often for femininity itself, an image of rectitude and self-sacrifice in the face of unimaginable deprivation. The pr...
Adelaide festival This won’t be everyone’s cup of tea, but Huppert delivers an exacting performance in Robert Wilson’s hypnotic, incantatory play Get our weekend culture and lifestyle email Mary, Queen of Scots is one of those perennial figures trotted out as a universal signifier, often for femininity itself, an image of rectitude and self-sacrifice in the face of unimaginable deprivation. The problem is that the historical record doesn’t quite support this narrative: Mary possibly conspired to murder her second husband in order to marry her third, and despite protestations to the contrary, remained a serious threat to the reign of Elizabeth I until the moment she was executed. She was a political player who lost, not an ingenue caught in the crossfire of history. Famed French stage and screen actor Isabelle Huppert has worked with equally famed (and now sadly late) American theatre maker Robert Wilson twice before this collaboration, and it’s easy to see why she would come back a third time, like Mary to the matrimonial bed. Wilson’s artistic rigour was legendary, and his uncompromising aesthetic – so absolute it seems almost brutalist – frames Huppert’s singular talent superbly. She shimmers on stage, a regal pride emanating from her body and the precision of her movements. This is undeniably Huppert’s show. Sign up for the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morning Continue reading...
Key Points Don't assume you'll be able to cover your costs on just Social Security. Don't assume healthcare is free once you enroll in Medicare. Don't assume it's a mistake to keep stocks in your portfolio. The $23,760 Social Security bonus most retirees completely overlook › Retirement isn't the sort of thing you should dive into on a whim. Rather, it's a stage of life that requires proper planni...
Key Points Don't assume you'll be able to cover your costs on just Social Security. Don't assume healthcare is free once you enroll in Medicare. Don't assume it's a mistake to keep stocks in your portfolio. The $23,760 Social Security bonus most retirees completely overlook › Retirement isn't the sort of thing you should dive into on a whim. Rather, it's a stage of life that requires proper planning. But even if you're making an effort to plan out your retirement, the wrong assumptions could throw you for a loop. Here are three that could seriously ruin your senior years. Will AI create the world's first trillionaire? Our team just released a report on the one little-known company, called an "Indispensable Monopoly" providing the critical technology Nvidia and Intel both need. Continue » 1. "Social Security will cover all of my bills" Social Security might end up being an important income stream for you in retirement. But if you're counting on those benefits to cover your bills in full, you may be in for a very unpleasant surprise. Your monthly Social Security checks might replace about 40% of your pre-retirement wages if you earn an average salary. But unless you're looking to take a 60% pay cut in retirement, you'll need income on top of Social Security to maintain a comfortable lifestyle. Plan ahead for that by building a retirement nest egg. And if you've been funding an IRA or 401(k) but aren't happy with your progress, take a close look at your spending and see if there's room to cut back anywhere. Boosting your savings rate even modestly could go a long way over time. 2. "I won't have to pay for healthcare once I'm eligible for Medicare" Some people assume that once they turn 65, all they need to do is enroll in Medicare and their healthcare needs will be covered in full. The reality is that there's a cost to getting Medicare coverage. Part B enrollees pay a monthly premium, and many Part D and Advantage plans charge premiums as well. There are also many cost...
Volodymyr Chmut/iStock via Getty Images Overview Market indices continue to trade sideways with heightened volatility related to the macro enviroment, global conflict, and uncertainty related to the technology sector. Through these challenges, the iShares Core Dividend Growth ETF ( DGRO ) continues to demonstrate why it is one of the highest quality long-term dividend growth ETFs in the market. Mo...
Volodymyr Chmut/iStock via Getty Images Overview Market indices continue to trade sideways with heightened volatility related to the macro enviroment, global conflict, and uncertainty related to the technology sector. Through these challenges, the iShares Core Dividend Growth ETF ( DGRO ) continues to demonstrate why it is one of the highest quality long-term dividend growth ETFs in the market. Moreover, these unique market conditions have almost created a 'perfect storm' scenario where investors get to clearly see the strength in its portfolio quality. DGRO has outperformed the market indices over the last few months, and if the start of the year is an indication to how the remainder of 2026 will go, DGRO is well positioned to continue navigating this storm. Looking at the performance over the last twelve months, we can see that DGRO's share price has increased by a little more than 13%. DGRO continues to demonstrate its ability to participate in the market's positive momentum. When including all dividends that were paid out to investors, the total return jumps up to nearly 17.2% over the same time frame. DGRO's starting dividend yield is quite low at 2%, but the magic is in its ability to provide a growing stream of income over a longer holding period. Data by YCharts When I previously covered DGRO, I issued a buy rating and discussed why its a great ETF for investors that are approaching retirement. Since then, DGRO has provided a double-digit total return that has outpaced the S&P 500. With markets off to a bad start for 2026, I wanted to revisit DGRO to reassess its current value propositions, some of its strengths, and its outlook for the remainder of the year. I believe that DGRO remains a great option for accumulators that want a straightforward buy-and-hold ETF, which can be attributed to its unique portfolio strategy. Fund Strategy According to the fund's latest overview , DGRO has total net assets of $38.1 billion that are allocated across nearly 400 diff...