CNH Industrial ( CNH ) declares $0.10/share quarterly dividend . Forward yield 3.58% Payable May 29; for shareholders of record May 21; ex-div May 21. See CNH Dividend Scorecard, Yield Chart, & Dividend Growth. More on CNH Industrial CNH Industrial: Cycle Ag Recovery Leverage, But Not A Lot Else Yet CNH Industrial N.V. (CNH) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript CNH Industrial N.V. 2025 Q4 - Results - ...
CNH Industrial ( CNH ) declares $0.10/share quarterly dividend . Forward yield 3.58% Payable May 29; for shareholders of record May 21; ex-div May 21. See CNH Dividend Scorecard, Yield Chart, & Dividend Growth. More on CNH Industrial CNH Industrial: Cycle Ag Recovery Leverage, But Not A Lot Else Yet CNH Industrial N.V. (CNH) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript CNH Industrial N.V. 2025 Q4 - Results - Earnings Call Presentation Most oversold large-cap industrial stocks on Wall Street amid Middle East disruptions CNH projects ag EBIT margin of 4.5%–5.5% for 2026 as cost savings offset tariffs and mix headwinds
(RTTNews) - Honeywell International Inc. (HON), the IT major, Thursday, announced that it is collaborating with Rhombus, a cloud-based video management company, to expand its cloud-connected security and access solutions portfolio with new, AI-powered video solutions.
(RTTNews) - Honeywell International Inc. (HON), the IT major, Thursday, announced that it is collaborating with Rhombus, a cloud-based video management company, to expand its cloud-connected security and access solutions portfolio with new, AI-powered video solutions.
Kratos Defense & Security Solutions ( KTOS ) on Thursday said it has been selected by the Naval Surface Warfare Center, Port Hueneme Division (NSWC PHD) for production and delivery of up to 36 Oriole solid rocket motors and three Thrust Vector Control ( TVC ) nozzle kits. The contract includes a funded base award for Oriole with options that, if fully exercised, bring the total contract value for ...
Kratos Defense & Security Solutions ( KTOS ) on Thursday said it has been selected by the Naval Surface Warfare Center, Port Hueneme Division (NSWC PHD) for production and delivery of up to 36 Oriole solid rocket motors and three Thrust Vector Control ( TVC ) nozzle kits. The contract includes a funded base award for Oriole with options that, if fully exercised, bring the total contract value for solid rockets to $39.08M. An option for 3 Oriole TVC production kits, valued at $10M, is also included in the award. The Oriole rocket system is a flight test solution, supporting the Navy’s critical suborbital target and experimental hypersonic test requirements with rapid delivery and fielding. KTOS -2.48% premarket to $77.99. Source: Press Release More on Kratos Defense & Security Kratos: Multiple Growth Drivers To Launch This Stock Kratos: The Best Stock To Buy For The Future Of Defense Kratos: Why I'm Buying A Hyped-Up Drone Stock After Its Poor Q1 Guidance SA Asks: What's the best drone stock right now? (Update) Airbus prepares Kratos drones for European combat system flight tests
BRP ( DOO ) declares CAD 0.25/share quarterly dividend , 16.3% increase from prior dividend of CAD 0.215. Payable April 24; for shareholders of record April 10; ex-div April 10. See DOO Dividend Scorecard, Yield Chart, & Dividend Growth. More on BRP Inc. BRP Non-GAAP EPS of C$2.21, revenue of C$2.46B; gives Q1 and FY27 outlook Historical earnings data for BRP Inc. Dividend scorecard for BRP Inc. F...
BRP ( DOO ) declares CAD 0.25/share quarterly dividend , 16.3% increase from prior dividend of CAD 0.215. Payable April 24; for shareholders of record April 10; ex-div April 10. See DOO Dividend Scorecard, Yield Chart, & Dividend Growth. More on BRP Inc. BRP Non-GAAP EPS of C$2.21, revenue of C$2.46B; gives Q1 and FY27 outlook Historical earnings data for BRP Inc. Dividend scorecard for BRP Inc. Financial information for BRP Inc.
Lawyer says witnesses clear player of wrongdoing Receiver was guilty only of ‘horseplay’, says lawyer Star Los Angeles Rams receiver Puka Nacua has been sued by a woman who says he made an antisemitic statement and bit her on the shoulder on New Year’s Eve. The civil lawsuit was filed this week in Los Angeles, according to TMZ . The suit also cites gender violence and negligence. Madison Atiabi an...
Lawyer says witnesses clear player of wrongdoing Receiver was guilty only of ‘horseplay’, says lawyer Star Los Angeles Rams receiver Puka Nacua has been sued by a woman who says he made an antisemitic statement and bit her on the shoulder on New Year’s Eve. The civil lawsuit was filed this week in Los Angeles, according to TMZ . The suit also cites gender violence and negligence. Madison Atiabi and her attorney, Joseph Kar, claim Nacua said “fuck all Jews” during a New Year’s Eve dinner in Los Angeles last year. Atiabi is Jewish and says she “immediately felt uncomfortable and emotionally distressed” when the wide receiver made the comments. She says Nacua also bit her and left teeth marks on her shoulder later in the night. The lawsuit also alleges that Nacua bit Atiabi’s friend on the thumb “with such force that her companion screamed in acute pain.” Nacua’s attorney, Levi McCathern, has strongly denied Nacua made any antisemitic statements. He described the bites as “horseplay.” McCathern said in a statement that “multiple sober witnesses have stated unequivocally that Puka never made the comments Ms Atiabi claims.” Continue reading...
Martin Barraud/OJO Images via Getty Images Thesis This is the third time I’ve written about H.B. Fuller Company ( FUL ) , which is a global company that makes adhesives used in many industries, including packaging, hygiene products, electronics, and construction. In my most recent analysis, I rated the stock as a buy. I did this because the company was selling off parts of its business that made l...
Martin Barraud/OJO Images via Getty Images Thesis This is the third time I’ve written about H.B. Fuller Company ( FUL ) , which is a global company that makes adhesives used in many industries, including packaging, hygiene products, electronics, and construction. In my most recent analysis, I rated the stock as a buy. I did this because the company was selling off parts of its business that made lower profits, focusing more on higher-value adhesive products, and beginning to show signs of improving profit margins and stronger cash flow. Seeking Alpha Since my last two calls, the stock tried to break out, fell back, and ended up roughly flat, more or less tracking the broader market ( SP500 ). Today, after going through its latest earnings report, I’m switching my take on the shares to a neutral stance because the margin story is holding up better than demand. Making Sense of H.B. Fuller’s Q1 2026 Net revenue : $770.8M (−2.3% YoY) Organic revenue growth: −6.6% YoY Price impact: +0.6% Volume impact: −7.2% FX impact: +3.6% M&A impact: +0.7% Let’s start with why sales were weak. The issue wasn’t pricing. The company didn’t suddenly start discounting or lose its ability to charge what it normally charges. In fact, they kept pricing fairly disciplined. They even pushed through some price increases. On top of that, they got a small lift from currency movements and from a small acquisition they did. But despite all that, sales still slipped. The real issue was volume. Basically, customers buying less adhesive. And that’s important because adhesives like the ones H.B. Fuller sells go into a ton of industries: packaging, construction materials, electronics, hygiene products, industrial manufacturing, things like that. Management essentially said the environment is “ challenging .” Customers are still tiptoeing around new orders. Especially in areas tied to construction and general industrial activity. At the same time, input costs (the costs of materials and supplies used to ...
A path is clearing for European holders of Russia’s foreign currency bonds to recover payments immobilized by international sanctions since the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Euroclear Bank SA has eased its rules for payments linked to frozen Russian securities, allowing certain transactions benefiting foreign, non-US investors to proceed without authorization from the US Treasury’s Office of Foreign A...
A path is clearing for European holders of Russia’s foreign currency bonds to recover payments immobilized by international sanctions since the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Euroclear Bank SA has eased its rules for payments linked to frozen Russian securities, allowing certain transactions benefiting foreign, non-US investors to proceed without authorization from the US Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control , according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified as the information wasn’t made public. The Belgium-based clearing house made the change after consulting with authorities, the person added. Gleb Boyko, a sanctions lawyer at Moscow-based Nektorov, Saveliev & Partners, and Roeland Moeyersons, a Brussels-based lawyer specializing in European sanctions law, said they were told about the new approach by Euroclear. Both have represented clients trying to recover money frozen by the clearing house . The clarification came at the end of 2025, Boyko said. After the 2022 invasion, sanctions prevented foreign investors receiving eurobond payments from Russia via the standard channels. As a workaround, Moscow offered to use the foreign assets of Russian investors frozen in accounts at Euroclear to make those payments, compensating them with rubles foreigners didn’t want. But that required the approval of Belgian and US authorities, and there’s no evidence that any payments were made this way, the sanctions lawyers said. Read More: Russian Central Bank Sues EU in Luxembourg on Frozen Assets Now that Euroclear has dropped the need for US permission in certain cases, the lawyers said they expect more investors to claim money that has been accruing over the past four years of war . Of €193 billion ($223 billion) in assets frozen at Euroclear, about €13 billion belongs to private Russian investors – more than enough to cover outstanding obligations to foreign bondholders. The obstacles to payment are “a bit less,” said Moeyersons. A representati...
Will AI Trigger The Next Great Depression? Authored by Michael Lebowitz via RealInvestmentAdvice.com, Our article title is certainly scary. The question we pose has become a hot topic following the release of “ The 2028 Global Intelligence Crisis ,” by Citrini Research. While evaluating the impact of AI on the labor market is complex, we can distill both optimistic and pessimistic views into two s...
Will AI Trigger The Next Great Depression? Authored by Michael Lebowitz via RealInvestmentAdvice.com, Our article title is certainly scary. The question we pose has become a hot topic following the release of “ The 2028 Global Intelligence Crisis ,” by Citrini Research. While evaluating the impact of AI on the labor market is complex, we can distill both optimistic and pessimistic views into two straightforward questions. Will AI bring about an era of unmatched prosperity and productivity, freeing workers from monotonous tasks, revitalizing old industries, and creating new and unimaginable ones? Or will AI displace many white-collar workers faster than the economy can absorb them, triggering a deflationary spiral with consequences that rival the Great Financial Crisis or worse, the Great Depression? To better understand how AI might affect the labor market and, ultimately, the economy, we review the bleak Citrini article alongside more optimistic rebuttals from Citadel Securities and Bianco Research. The articles and our summaries provide a useful primer on how the labor markets may adjust to the upcoming major technological changes. The articles we review are linked below. The 2028 Global Intelligence Crisis – Citrini Research The 2026 Global Intelligence Crisis – Citadel Securities An Alternate View of the Post-AI Labor Market – Bianco Research Citrini: A Warning from the Future The pessimistic outlook comes from Citrini Research’s recent article, “The 2028 Global Intelligence Crisis.” The author cleverly frames the article as a memo written two years from now, looking back on an economic catastrophe that is already underway. The article is not a prediction. To wit, they start with the following caveat: What follows is a scenario, not a prediction. This isn’t bear porn or AI doomer fan-fiction. The sole intent of this piece is modeling a scenario that’s been relatively underexplored. Citrini’s scenario starts with the “ opening act ,” something that is already in ...
Legendary billionaire investor Seth Klarman needs no introduction. In 1982, Klarman teamed up with Harvard professor William Poorvu, Howard Stevenson, Jordan Baruch, and Isaac Auerbach to form Baupost Group, a fund with a nearly $5.3 billion public equities portfolio at the end of 2025. Klarman and his team are value investors at heart. For instance, Baupost Group purchased the bonds of distressed...
Legendary billionaire investor Seth Klarman needs no introduction. In 1982, Klarman teamed up with Harvard professor William Poorvu, Howard Stevenson, Jordan Baruch, and Isaac Auerbach to form Baupost Group, a fund with a nearly $5.3 billion public equities portfolio at the end of 2025. Klarman and his team are value investors at heart. For instance, Baupost Group purchased the bonds of distressed banks during the heart of the Great Recession. In the fund's first 26 years, Baupost Group generated 20% annualized returns, although returns have not been nearly as good since 2014, according to Bloomberg. Still, most investors pay close attention to Klarman when he appears on CNBC or comments on the market. In the fourth quarter of 2025, Baupost Group sold over 40% of its stake in Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL) and piled into an embattled fintech stock down 75% over the past year. Continue reading
The OECD says the conflict in the Middle East is reviving the specter of inflation and now sees the average rate for the Group of 20 this year jumping to 4%. OECD Secretary General Mathias Cormann says there clearly is “quite a significant level of downside risk to our outlook today.” (Source: Bloomberg)
The OECD says the conflict in the Middle East is reviving the specter of inflation and now sees the average rate for the Group of 20 this year jumping to 4%. OECD Secretary General Mathias Cormann says there clearly is “quite a significant level of downside risk to our outlook today.” (Source: Bloomberg)