NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) is one of the stocks Jim Cramer talked about, along with the memory shortage. Cramer highlighted his discussion of China business with the company CEO, as he commented: Hardly a day goes by when we don’t see some government intervention in the economy. Yesterday, I spoke to Jensen Huang, CEO of NVIDIA. He was in China… He seemed confident that he could win some mea...
NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) is one of the stocks Jim Cramer talked about, along with the memory shortage. Cramer highlighted his discussion of China business with the company CEO, as he commented: Hardly a day goes by when we don’t see some government intervention in the economy. Yesterday, I spoke to Jensen Huang, CEO of NVIDIA. He was in China… He seemed confident that he could win some meaningful Chinese business, but he said he preferred to keep the potential contracts out of any earnings estimate for the time being. Photo by Javier Esteban on Unsplash NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) develops accelerated computing and AI platforms, GPUs for gaming and professional use, cloud services, robotics and embedded systems, and automotive technologies. While we acknowledge the potential of NVDA as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: 30 Stocks That Should Double in 3 Years and 11 Hidden AI Stocks to Buy Right Now. Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.
Key Points Ledgewood Wealth Advisors, LLC increased its BSCR stake by 204,172 shares; estimated trade size is $4.03 million based on quarterly average price. The quarter-end position value rose $4.04 million, reflecting both share purchases and bond ETF price moves during the period. Transaction value equaled 2.3% of the fund’s $173.6 million 13F reportable assets under management (AUM) as of Dece...
Key Points Ledgewood Wealth Advisors, LLC increased its BSCR stake by 204,172 shares; estimated trade size is $4.03 million based on quarterly average price. The quarter-end position value rose $4.04 million, reflecting both share purchases and bond ETF price moves during the period. Transaction value equaled 2.3% of the fund’s $173.6 million 13F reportable assets under management (AUM) as of December 31, 2025. Post-trade, the fund held 509,794 shares valued at $10 million, representing 5.8% of reportable AUM, which places it outside the fund's top five holdings. The move increases the fund’s exposure to investment grade corporate bonds maturing in 2027, amid normal trading activity for the quarter. These 10 stocks could mint the next wave of millionaires › On Jan. 15, 2026, Ledgewood Wealth Advisors, LLC disclosed an increased position of 204,172 shares of the Invesco BulletShares 2027 Corporate Bond ETF (NASDAQ:BSCR), an estimated $4.03 million purchase based on quarterly average pricing. What happened According to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission dated Jan. 15, 2026, Ledgewood Wealth Advisors, LLC bought 204,172 additional shares of the Invesco BulletShares 2027 Corporate Bond ETF, with an estimated transaction value of $4.03 million based on the average closing price for the fourth quarter. The stake’s quarter-end value increased by $4 million, reflecting both the purchase and bond ETF price movements. What else to know This was a buy, bringing the BSCR stake to 5.8% of Ledgewood Wealth Advisors, LLC's 13F AUM as of Dec. 31, 2025. Top holdings after the filing: NYSEMKT: DFAU: $15.2 million (8.7% of AUM) NYSE: PFS: $13.4 million (7.7% of AUM) NASDAQ: MSEX: $12.8 million (7.4% of AUM) NYSEMKT: DFAI: $10.9 million (6.3% of AUM) NYSEMKT: DFCF: $10.6 million (6.1% of AUM) As of Jan. 15, 2026, BSCR shares were priced at $19.75, delivering a total return of 5.7% over the past year but trailing the S&P 500 by 12.5 percentage points. The fund’s a...
First Brands Group founder Patrick James and his brother Edward, a former executive at the company, were indicted by federal prosecutors in New York on Thursday with both men being charged on nine counts. Eliza Ronalds-Hannon reports on Bloomberg Television. (Source: Bloomberg)
First Brands Group founder Patrick James and his brother Edward, a former executive at the company, were indicted by federal prosecutors in New York on Thursday with both men being charged on nine counts. Eliza Ronalds-Hannon reports on Bloomberg Television. (Source: Bloomberg)
Key end users are predominantly large-scale retailers, quick commerce startups, and healthcare providers, each seeking to decrease last mile delivery time from the industry average of 90 minutes to under 30 minutes for urban orders. The most common vehicle types are sidewalk robots with a payload capacity of 20 to 40 pounds, and VTOL drones capable of carrying up to 10 pounds within a 10-mile radi...
Key end users are predominantly large-scale retailers, quick commerce startups, and healthcare providers, each seeking to decrease last mile delivery time from the industry average of 90 minutes to under 30 minutes for urban orders. The most common vehicle types are sidewalk robots with a payload capacity of 20 to 40 pounds, and VTOL drones capable of carrying up to 10 pounds within a 10-mile radius. Deployment is now routine in over 60 cities worldwide, with more than 500 public-private pilot projects currently active. Applications are expanding beyond traditional parcel and grocery delivery in the autonomous last mile delivery market to include pharmaceuticals, quick service restaurants, and high-value retail. For instance, Walgreens, in collaboration with Wing, serves more than 100 autonomous drone routes for prescription delivery, while Domino’s has rolled out more than 400 Nuro R2 robots for contactless pizza delivery in the US Sun Belt. Demand in North America is particularly strong, where regulatory pilot programs have enabled more than 2,500 commercial drone delivery flights daily, led by companies such as Amazon Prime Air, Wing, and Zipline. On the hardware front, manufacturers have delivered more than 30,000 high-precision LIDAR units to OEMs this year, reflecting a clear migration toward sensor fusion platforms that blend cameras, radar, and advanced edge computing for real-time navigation. Additionally, battery manufacturers report unit shipments for delivery robots have doubled year-over-year, supporting extended range and payload improvements. The autonomous last mile delivery market in 2024 is encountering unparalleled momentum, propelled by surging urban e-commerce volume and acute labor shortages in logistics. Statistically, more than 15,000 autonomous delivery robots and drones are actively deployed across the US, Western Europe, and East Asia as of Q2 2024, with a majority concentrated in metropolitan zones like Los Angeles, London, and Shanghai. ...
Ethos Technologies ( LIFE ) stock opened at $19.00 in its trading debut on Thursday, the same as its initial offering price. Within minutes it fell as much as 15%. To be sure, the public debut occurred as overall markets were in the red on investors' concerns about how long it will take for tech companies to see AI pay off. The Nasdaq dropped 1.4% in midday trading. Ethos CEO Peter Colis said the ...
Ethos Technologies ( LIFE ) stock opened at $19.00 in its trading debut on Thursday, the same as its initial offering price. Within minutes it fell as much as 15%. To be sure, the public debut occurred as overall markets were in the red on investors' concerns about how long it will take for tech companies to see AI pay off. The Nasdaq dropped 1.4% in midday trading. Ethos CEO Peter Colis said the company based its decision to go public more on its progress than on external factors, such as the equity markets. The company has logged more than 50% growth in each of the last three years and is profitable, he pointed out. Ethos ( LIFE ) is at a scale and on a growth trajectory that "public markets were very excited," he told Seeking Alpha in an interview. Ethos's business is based on compressing the amount of time it takes to buy life insurance — from a five- to 10-week purchase process to 10 minutes online. And it compresses insurance agents' selling process and frees them up from shepherding clients through a complicated process. Furthermore, there's much more room for expansion in both the direct-to-consumer and the third-party, or agent, market, Colis said. "We're still in the early innings of both of those distribution models." Some 90% of life insurance is sold through agents, and Ethos only has a single-digit penetration, he added. On the agent side of the business, Ethos ( LIFE ) had 10,000 agents that sold on its platform in 2024, "and that business has continued to grow." "T his is the same kind of trajectory that the auto insurance industry went through, where GEICO and Progressive were able to make it a simple online process, and that led to a lot of net new growth," he said. Colis also highlighted the advantages of building its own digital native platform. Its competitors are either using legacy platforms or third-party vendor-managed technology, Colis said. He's also confident in the company's ability to harness artificial intelligence to propel its busine...
Hi, it’s Ryan Gould and Aaron Kirchfeld in New York, looking at the planned breakup of a 128—year old packaging company. Also today, a broker credited with getting young people hooked on trading is eyeing a role on the SpaceX IPO. Today’s top stories Packaging giant International Paper plans to break up . Blackstone in advanced talks to be New World’s top holder. VSE agrees $2 billion-plus deal fo...
Hi, it’s Ryan Gould and Aaron Kirchfeld in New York, looking at the planned breakup of a 128—year old packaging company. Also today, a broker credited with getting young people hooked on trading is eyeing a role on the SpaceX IPO. Today’s top stories Packaging giant International Paper plans to break up . Blackstone in advanced talks to be New World’s top holder. VSE agrees $2 billion-plus deal for Precision Aviation. Bain, Blackstone among suitors for UK vitamin maker Vitabiotics. Robinhood vies for key retail role on mega SpaceX IPO. Fold in two International Paper has revealed a breakup plan—and tucked inside is perhaps a rare piece of good news for London’s stock market. As we reported this morning , the US packaging giant is splitting itself in two, spinning off its European packaging business and sending it to the public markets through a dual listing in London and New York. IP’s decision stands out a time when City of London investors and policymakers seem to be spending more energy defending the London Stock Exchange than celebrating new arrivals to it. A broader trend has seen companies including the UK’s biggest drugmaker, AstraZeneca, drift toward Wall Street in search of a deeper and arguably more engaged investor base. A skeptic might say that the LSE is simply regaining something it already had. Those of you attuned to the ins and outs of packaging M&A will remember that IP agreed to acquire UK-based DS Smith for almost $10 billion including debt in 2024. That deal closed around a year ago, at which time DS Smith’s stock was delisted in London. One in, one out, as it were—but the UK capital will take the win. Both IP’s North American and European packaging businesses will include legacy IP and DS Smith assets, the company noted in this morning’s announcement—perhaps trying to get ahead of any claims that they have a touch of buyer’s remorse from the DS Smith acquisition. Meanwhile, it’s no surprise then that the planned breakup already has people whisp...
PicPay is bullish on prospects for Brazil’s economy this year. CEO Eduardo Chedid spoke on "Bloomberg Open Interest" after his firm staged the first trading debut for a Brazilian company in more than four years. (Source: Bloomberg)
PicPay is bullish on prospects for Brazil’s economy this year. CEO Eduardo Chedid spoke on "Bloomberg Open Interest" after his firm staged the first trading debut for a Brazilian company in more than four years. (Source: Bloomberg)
I often call the 200-day moving average the key barometer of health when judging a stock. Above it – the patient is healthy. Testing it – we need to examine and wait for further evidence to confirm its health. Below it – I yield to that the old adage: Bad things happen under the 200-day moving average. Right now, that prime example is Microsoft (MSFT) . As we headed into last night's results, Micr...
I often call the 200-day moving average the key barometer of health when judging a stock. Above it – the patient is healthy. Testing it – we need to examine and wait for further evidence to confirm its health. Below it – I yield to that the old adage: Bad things happen under the 200-day moving average. Right now, that prime example is Microsoft (MSFT) . As we headed into last night's results, Microsoft rallied right back to its 200-day moving average. I discussed the importance of this with Kelly Evans on " Power Lunch " earlier in the week. A move was coming. We knew it both fundamentally and technically. The signals were there. The good old "death cross" formed two weeks ago. Historically, it's a lagging indicator but indicative of the trend change. We had a classic double-top and rounding top formation as well. The rally back to the 200-day moving average was a textbook relief rally and set us up for today's move. In the case of Meta (META) , shares recaptured the 200-day and gapped above it – crisis averted for now. As for Microsoft, we have clearer levels of risk and reward and it's time to act. Let's break it down. Key levels to watch and how to trade Shares gapped below their first level of support around $450 and fell right to a critical level around $425. That level is holding for now and may be the area worth taking a position with a short leash. Why? Let us count the ways. The $425 level coincides with the upwards gap and prior low from its April 30 earnings. This is the first re-test of that low, and buyers should step in. Secondly, it also coincides with a key Fibonacci retracement level that tends to act as temporary support as well. The flush-out is there and may take a day or two to digest, but we believe the worst of this move is over and worth trading for a relief rally back to $450. Expect analyst downgrades over the coming days as 71 have a buy rating with the average target being $611 — 43% above current levels. That's the near-term set-up for a...
200mm/iStock Unreleased via Getty Images Introduction & Financials L'Oréal ( LRLCF ) ( LRLCY ) has been performing well recently, maintaining a very strong financial position that could help them withstand and even take advantage of the currently weak consumer environment (as they did with a big deal recently), although the valuation already seems to take it into account, with little margin of saf...
200mm/iStock Unreleased via Getty Images Introduction & Financials L'Oréal ( LRLCF ) ( LRLCY ) has been performing well recently, maintaining a very strong financial position that could help them withstand and even take advantage of the currently weak consumer environment (as they did with a big deal recently), although the valuation already seems to take it into account, with little margin of safety while the environment could get worse. L'Oréal IR L'Oréal's Q3 was solid overall , with double-digit growth in online and a like-for-like 4.2% increase in sales, with strong performance especially in their Professional Products - outperforming the market, with great momentum seen especially in Europe and emerging markets, driven by significant e-commerce and selective distribution acceleration and salon market reignition focus - and Dermatological Beauty. L'Oréal IR The company's second half tends to be better in terms of free cash flow, with €2.74 billion reported in H1'25 compared to €1.99 billion in H1'24, but €6.64 billion in 2024 as a whole, with solid momentum in H1 despite the tariff uncertainty persisting. L'Oréal IR Financially, based on L'Oréal’s latest financial report, we continue to see a very strong position, with the current assets covering not only their current liabilities but also a good chunk of their few non-current ones, with limited debt given their size (a big advantage compared to peers), offering a massive advantage and significant financial flexibility, especially since they had €4.82 billion in cash and cash equivalents. Regarding the dividend, L'Oréal pays a 1.78% yield now, meaning about $4.59 billion in 2025, as well as $1.18 billion spent on buybacks over the past 12 months , for a modest combined yield of ~2.36%. L'Oréal is expected to release their Q4 report on February 12, and I expect the company to report relatively unimpressive numbers, as the environment is likely going to keep pressuring them in the near term, similar to how LVMH (...
ServiceNow beat expectations, but the stock still under pressure as Wall Street debates AI's impact on software. ServiceNow CEO Bill McDermott joined Bloomberg Open Interest to talk about on why his company says it’s not being disrupted by AI — it’s leading it. (Source: Bloomberg)
ServiceNow beat expectations, but the stock still under pressure as Wall Street debates AI's impact on software. ServiceNow CEO Bill McDermott joined Bloomberg Open Interest to talk about on why his company says it’s not being disrupted by AI — it’s leading it. (Source: Bloomberg)
Ongoing trade war has TSMC and Taiwan stuck between a rock and a hard place — concerns mount surrounding U.S deals cracking the nation's silicon shield Tom's Hardware
Ongoing trade war has TSMC and Taiwan stuck between a rock and a hard place — concerns mount surrounding U.S deals cracking the nation's silicon shield Tom's Hardware
Meta just silenced Wall Street's AI spending fears. A booming ad business drove holiday-quarter sales past expectations, sending shares soaring. Now Mark Zuckerberg is front-loading massive AI investment betting advertising strength can bankroll the race to superintelligence. Brian Wieser, Principal at Madison and Wall joined Bloomberg Open Interest to talk about Meta's results.
Meta just silenced Wall Street's AI spending fears. A booming ad business drove holiday-quarter sales past expectations, sending shares soaring. Now Mark Zuckerberg is front-loading massive AI investment betting advertising strength can bankroll the race to superintelligence. Brian Wieser, Principal at Madison and Wall joined Bloomberg Open Interest to talk about Meta's results.
Campaigners have forced the Soil Association to reveal its salmon farm inspection reports, amid claims that certifying the farmed fish as “organic” is misleading to consumers. The Soil Association’s Organic scheme, the UK’s oldest and most widely recognised organic certification, defines organic farming as “using methods that benefit our whole food system, from people to planet, plant health to an...
Campaigners have forced the Soil Association to reveal its salmon farm inspection reports, amid claims that certifying the farmed fish as “organic” is misleading to consumers. The Soil Association’s Organic scheme, the UK’s oldest and most widely recognised organic certification, defines organic farming as “using methods that benefit our whole food system, from people to planet, plant health to animal welfare.” But critics say its Aquaculture Standard allows use of chemical treatments, including pesticides known to be toxic to marine life, and methods that are damaging to the environment and the welfare of the farmed fish. After a two-day hearing, the information tribunal ruled the charity’s certification arm must share its inspection reports with WildFish, a campaign group that has claimed labelling farmed salmon organic amounts to “unacceptable greenwashing”. “Inspection reports go to the heart of whether organic certification of salmon farming is credible at all,” a WildFish spokesperson said. “The fact that their disclosure was resisted, and had to be tested all the way to tribunal, only reinforces why independent scrutiny is essential.” WildFish says that certified “organic” salmon are produced using a very similar method to uncertified farms: reared in open-net cages, with the waste from the fish and chemicals used to treat them discharged directly into the surrounding environment. A 2023 report by Wildfish detailed how one organic-certified salmon farm had been treated with the chemical pesticide Deltamethrin – which is used to kill sea lice but is also highly toxic to lobsters and other marine invertebrates – twice in 12 months. It also documented the use of formaldehyde, a known human carcinogen, on several occasions to treat fungal infections on fish at organic farms. The tribunal’s decision this week is the culmination of an 18-month battle for disclosure, after WildFish first requested to see Soil Association’s reports under environmental information reg...
JPMorgan Active Bond ETF is an actively managed fund seeking to outperform the Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index over multi-year cycles. What happened According to its SEC filing dated January 16, 2026, Essex LLC increased its position in J.P. Morgan Exchange-Traded Fund Trust - JPMorgan Active Bond ETF (JBND +0.13%) by 190,674 shares, an estimated $10.35 million trade based on the average closi...
JPMorgan Active Bond ETF is an actively managed fund seeking to outperform the Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index over multi-year cycles. What happened According to its SEC filing dated January 16, 2026, Essex LLC increased its position in J.P. Morgan Exchange-Traded Fund Trust - JPMorgan Active Bond ETF (JBND +0.13%) by 190,674 shares, an estimated $10.35 million trade based on the average closing price for the quarter. What else to know This buy brings the stake to 5.9% of Essex LLC’s reportable 13F AUM as of December 31, 2025. Top holdings after the filing: NYSEMKT:XLK: $35.90 million (6.4% of AUM) NYSE:JBND: $33.22 million (5.9% of AUM) NASDAQ:VCRB: $33.00 million (5.8% of AUM) NASDAQ:VCIT: $29.63 million (5.2% of AUM) NYSEMKT:SCHX: $25.19 million (4.5% of AUM) As of January 16, 2026, shares were priced at $54.07, up 8.2% over the prior year but trailing the S&P 500 by 8.7 percentage points. Dividend yield stands at 4.44%; JBND is 3.06% below its 52-week high. Expand NYSE : JBND J.p. Morgan Exchange-Traded Fund Trust - JPMorgan Active Bond ETF Today's Change ( 0.13 %) $ 0.07 Current Price $ 54.21 Key Data Points Day's Range $ 54.09 - $ 54.21 52wk Range $ 51.96 - $ 55.78 Volume 576K ETF overview Metric Value AUM $5.44 billion Price (as of market close 1/16/26) $54.07 Dividend yield 4.44% 1-year total return 7.50% ETF snapshot Seeks to outperform the Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index over a 3–5 year market cycle through active management of a diversified bond portfolio. Maintains at least 80% of assets in bonds. Structured as an actively managed ETF. JBND is a large, actively managed fixed income ETF with an asset base of $5.44 billion. The fund applies a flexible, research-driven approach to portfolio construction, aiming to deliver attractive risk-adjusted returns through dynamic allocation across bond sectors. Its strategy leverages the scale and expertise of J.P. Morgan’s fixed income platform to seek consistent outperformance versus its benchmark. What thi...
As the U.S. stock market faces turbulence with major indices like the Dow Jones and S&P 500 experiencing declines, investors are keenly observing companies that exhibit resilience and potential for growth. In such a volatile environment, stocks of growth companies with high insider ownership often stand out as they suggest strong internal confidence in the business's future prospects. Top 10 Growt...
As the U.S. stock market faces turbulence with major indices like the Dow Jones and S&P 500 experiencing declines, investors are keenly observing companies that exhibit resilience and potential for growth. In such a volatile environment, stocks of growth companies with high insider ownership often stand out as they suggest strong internal confidence in the business's future prospects. Top 10 Growth Companies With High Insider Ownership In The United States Name Insider Ownership Earnings Growth Super Micro Computer (SMCI) 13.9% 50.7% StubHub Holdings (STUB) 25.1% 59% SES AI (SES) 12% 68.9% Prairie Operating (PROP) 32.2% 85.6% Niu Technologies (NIU) 37.2% 101.1% Karman Holdings (KRMN) 17.3% 62% GBank Financial Holdings (GBFH) 28.9% 46.2% Corcept Therapeutics (CORT) 11.5% 43.7% Bitdeer Technologies Group (BTDR) 33.4% 136.7% Astera Labs (ALAB) 10.5% 28.8% Click here to see the full list of 204 stocks from our Fast Growing US Companies With High Insider Ownership screener. Here we highlight a subset of our preferred stocks from the screener. Simply Wall St Growth Rating: ★★★★★☆ Overview: Gloo Holdings, Inc. designs and develops a vertical technology platform for the faith and flourishing ecosystem, with a market cap of approximately $477.40 million. Operations: The company's revenue segment includes the Gloo Segment, which generated $67.52 million. Insider Ownership: 13.3% Revenue Growth Forecast: 39.2% p.a. Gloo Holdings demonstrates potential as a growth company with high insider ownership, evidenced by substantial insider buying over the past three months. Despite recent losses, revenue grew 197% year-over-year, and earnings are forecast to grow 80.9% annually. The company anticipates more than doubling its revenue in fiscal year 2026 to over US$180 million. However, Gloo faces challenges with a volatile share price and less than one year of cash runway. GLOO Ownership Breakdown as at Jan 2026 Simply Wall St Growth Rating: ★★★★★☆ Overview: Similarweb Ltd. offers digi...
The Church of England’s second most senior cleric has been cleared of misconduct over his handling of a priest who committed sexual abuse. Stephen Cottrell, the archbishop of York, was criticised after he allowed the disgraced priest David Tudor to remain in ministry during his oversight from 2010, despite Tudor’s history of sexual abuse. Tudor was barred from ministry for life in 2024 after ackno...
The Church of England’s second most senior cleric has been cleared of misconduct over his handling of a priest who committed sexual abuse. Stephen Cottrell, the archbishop of York, was criticised after he allowed the disgraced priest David Tudor to remain in ministry during his oversight from 2010, despite Tudor’s history of sexual abuse. Tudor was barred from ministry for life in 2024 after acknowledging he had sexual relationships with two teenage girls, aged 15 and 16, in the 1980s. He had previously been suspended from ministry for five years in 1988 after admitting to having sex with a 16-year-old girl who was a pupil at a school where he was chaplain. He returned to working in the church in 1994. A BBC investigation found Cottrell, while bishop of Chelmsford, renewed Tudor’s contract as area dean in Essex on two occasions and was aware of Tudor’s past abuse, the fact he was banned from being alone with children and had paid £10,000 compensation to a sexual abuse victim. In findings published on Thursday, the church-appointed president of tribunals, Stephen Males, concluded that some mistakes were made in the handling of Tudor’s case, but the threshold for misconduct was not met. Males, a former court of appeal and high court judge, said Cottrell had no power to remove Tudor from ministry and could not be held responsible for the previous decision to allow Tudor back into ministry. “They were mistaken and regrettable appointments […] He should have appreciated they would be regarded as deeply painful for victims and survivors of Tudor,” Males said. However, “in the very difficult circumstances” Cottrell inherited, Males concluded the appointments were “made in good faith and do not amount to misconduct”. In response to the findings, Cottrell said: “We all have much to learn from this case. There are some things I wish I had done differently.” Church documents show that Cottrell was briefed about Tudor in his first few weeks as bishop of Chelmsford in 2010, and ...