Jensen Huang marked the coming Lunar New Year with Nvidia employees in Shanghai on Saturday, as the CEO of the world’s most valuable company made his first trip to China in 2026 amid uncertainties around its H200 graphics processing unit (GPU). Huang received a rock-star welcome when he joined Nvidia’s annual Lunar New Year celebration, according to two employees who asked not to be named as they ...
Jensen Huang marked the coming Lunar New Year with Nvidia employees in Shanghai on Saturday, as the CEO of the world’s most valuable company made his first trip to China in 2026 amid uncertainties around its H200 graphics processing unit (GPU). Huang received a rock-star welcome when he joined Nvidia’s annual Lunar New Year celebration, according to two employees who asked not to be named as they were not authorised to speak to the media. Huang gave a speech and handed out tangerines that he bought at a market earlier in the day, while staff members rushed to get his autograph, one employee said. Huang is “celebrating Chinese New Year with our local employees in China”, an Nvidia spokesperson told the Post on Sunday, without elaborating on his agenda. Advertisement The latest move came as Beijing is expected to allow imports of the company’s H200, its second most powerful GPU, after temporarily holding the chips at the border. The GPU, which remains an ideal option for Chinese big tech companies such as Alibaba Group Holding and ByteDance to train their artificial intelligence models, got Washington’s green light for exports earlier this month, on condition that the shipments not exceed 50 per cent of the volume sold domestically to US customers. Alibaba owns the Post. Advertisement The 62-year-old Huang began his latest trip to China earlier this week, after finishing his visit to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. He toured the chipmaker’s Shanghai office and met with staff to review Nvidia’s milestones and future product pipelines, Tencent Holdings’ news portal reported on Friday.
Written by Emily J. Thompson , Senior Investment Analyst Source: Fool PLTR $ 169.6 + Infinity % 1D 1D 5D 1M 3M 6M YTD 1Y 5Y 1D Line Candle Analyst Views on PLTR Wall Street analysts forecast PLTR stock price to rise over the next 12 months. According to Wall Street analysts, the average 1-year price target for PLTR is 192.88 USD with a low forecast of 50.00 USD and a high forecast of 255.00 USD. H...
Written by Emily J. Thompson , Senior Investment Analyst Source: Fool PLTR $ 169.6 + Infinity % 1D 1D 5D 1M 3M 6M YTD 1Y 5Y 1D Line Candle Analyst Views on PLTR Wall Street analysts forecast PLTR stock price to rise over the next 12 months. According to Wall Street analysts, the average 1-year price target for PLTR is 192.88 USD with a low forecast of 50.00 USD and a high forecast of 255.00 USD. However, analyst price targets are subjective and often lag stock prices, so investors should focus on the objective reasons behind analyst rating changes, which better reflect the company's fundamentals. 17 Analyst Rating Wall Street analysts forecast PLTR stock price to rise over the next 12 months. According to Wall Street analysts, the average 1-year price target for PLTR is 192.88 USD with a low forecast of 50.00 USD and a high forecast of 255.00 USD. However, analyst price targets are subjective and often lag stock prices, so investors should focus on the objective reasons behind analyst rating changes, which better reflect the company's fundamentals. 5 Buy 10 Hold 2 Sell Hold Current: 165.900 Low 50.00 Averages 192.88 High 255.00 Current: 165.900 Low 50.00 Averages 192.88 High 255.00 Phillip Securities initiated $208 2026-01-22 New Reason Phillip Securities Price Target $208 AI Analysis 2026-01-22 New initiated Reason Phillip Securities initiated coverage of Palantir with a Buy rating and $208 price target. The firm sees potential for the shares to re-rate higher, driving by improving fundamentals and a growing addressable market. Palantir has captured "just" 2.4% of its $119B 2020 total addressable market, the analyst tells investors in a research note. With the company's AI software growing 25%-plus annually, the addressable market has likely expanded, "supporting significant upside," contends Phillip. Truist Buy initiated $223 2026-01-06 Reason Truist Price Target $223 2026-01-06 initiated Buy Reason Truist initiated coverage of Palantir with a Buy rating and $223 ...
A 65-year-old Hong Kong woman has died after being trapped inside a taxi that crashed into a private car and overturned early on Sunday, police have said. A subsequent investigation by the force led to the arrest of the driver and passenger of the car involved in the collision in Pat Heung. They were suspected of possessing offensive weapons after officers found a knife and an extendable baton at ...
A 65-year-old Hong Kong woman has died after being trapped inside a taxi that crashed into a private car and overturned early on Sunday, police have said. A subsequent investigation by the force led to the arrest of the driver and passenger of the car involved in the collision in Pat Heung. They were suspected of possessing offensive weapons after officers found a knife and an extendable baton at the scene. The crash occurred at around 12.30am when the driver of the taxi travelling along Kam Tin Road towards Yuen Long lost control while making a right turn onto Ying Ho Road. It collided with the car heading towards Pat Heung. Advertisement The taxi overturned, trapping the 60-year-old driver and his female passenger. The car struck a fence and a light pole, with its front section – including the bumper and bonnet – badly damaged. The female passenger of the taxi was taken to Pok Oi Hospital in Yuen Long, where she was certified dead. Photo: Jelly Tse Both were taken to Pok Oi Hospital in Yuen Long, where the woman was certified dead at 1.45am. The taxi driver sustained a head injury.
Written by Emily J. Thompson , Senior Investment Analyst Source: Yahoo Finance PLTR $ 169.6 + Infinity % 1D 1D 5D 1M 3M 6M YTD 1Y 5Y 1D Line Candle Analyst Views on PLTR Wall Street analysts forecast PLTR stock price to rise over the next 12 months. According to Wall Street analysts, the average 1-year price target for PLTR is 192.88 USD with a low forecast of 50.00 USD and a high forecast of 255....
Written by Emily J. Thompson , Senior Investment Analyst Source: Yahoo Finance PLTR $ 169.6 + Infinity % 1D 1D 5D 1M 3M 6M YTD 1Y 5Y 1D Line Candle Analyst Views on PLTR Wall Street analysts forecast PLTR stock price to rise over the next 12 months. According to Wall Street analysts, the average 1-year price target for PLTR is 192.88 USD with a low forecast of 50.00 USD and a high forecast of 255.00 USD. However, analyst price targets are subjective and often lag stock prices, so investors should focus on the objective reasons behind analyst rating changes, which better reflect the company's fundamentals. 17 Analyst Rating Wall Street analysts forecast PLTR stock price to rise over the next 12 months. According to Wall Street analysts, the average 1-year price target for PLTR is 192.88 USD with a low forecast of 50.00 USD and a high forecast of 255.00 USD. However, analyst price targets are subjective and often lag stock prices, so investors should focus on the objective reasons behind analyst rating changes, which better reflect the company's fundamentals. 5 Buy 10 Hold 2 Sell Hold Current: 165.900 Low 50.00 Averages 192.88 High 255.00 Current: 165.900 Low 50.00 Averages 192.88 High 255.00 Phillip Securities initiated $208 2026-01-22 New Reason Phillip Securities Price Target $208 AI Analysis 2026-01-22 New initiated Reason Phillip Securities initiated coverage of Palantir with a Buy rating and $208 price target. The firm sees potential for the shares to re-rate higher, driving by improving fundamentals and a growing addressable market. Palantir has captured "just" 2.4% of its $119B 2020 total addressable market, the analyst tells investors in a research note. With the company's AI software growing 25%-plus annually, the addressable market has likely expanded, "supporting significant upside," contends Phillip. Truist Buy initiated $223 2026-01-06 Reason Truist Price Target $223 2026-01-06 initiated Buy Reason Truist initiated coverage of Palantir with a Buy rating ...
Mission to Space With Francis Bourgeois 6.50pm, Channel 4 Can a trainspotter become an astronaut? You can’t help but root for train enthusiast Francis Bourgeois as he makes this his mission. Luckily, he has assistance from British astronaut Tim Peake, who happily helps him get to the NASA Space Center in Houston, Texas to follow his childhood dream of launching into orbit. It’s a surprisingly movi...
Mission to Space With Francis Bourgeois 6.50pm, Channel 4 Can a trainspotter become an astronaut? You can’t help but root for train enthusiast Francis Bourgeois as he makes this his mission. Luckily, he has assistance from British astronaut Tim Peake, who happily helps him get to the NASA Space Center in Houston, Texas to follow his childhood dream of launching into orbit. It’s a surprisingly moving two-parter – and somehow, watching Bourgeois use a sick bag in a simulator is an emotional TV experience. Hollie Richardson The Great Pottery Throw Down 7.50pm, Channel 4 It’s Raku week in the competition – a celebration of the medieval Japanese ceramics style, originally used for making tea ceremony bowls. Siobhán McSweeney hosts as the potters set to work on animal parent and child structures, before guest judge and master sculptor sets them a sculpting spot test. Who will crack? HR Call the Midwife 8pm, BBC One Joyce (Renee Bailey) is seconded to the antenatal clinic in St Cuthbert’s, where she meets a single mother with a rare blood type who has placenta praevia. Rosalind (Natalie Quarry), meanwhile, is curious when she finds a patient’s cousin eating out of a bin. And Blue Peter inspires the Turner kids and the Poplar community to bury a time capsule. HR The Night Manager 9pm, BBC One View image in fullscreen Back from the dead … The Night Manager on BBC One. Photograph: BBC/Ink Factory/Des Willie A penultimate episode built around momentous face-to-face conversations, as more than one cast member gets their big Tom Hiddleston moment: a two-hander with the man himself, since maverick spy Jonathan Pine is playing on the emotions of those involved with arms dealer Richard Roper. As the latter, Hugh Laurie moves convincingly into growling-evil mode. Jack Seale After the Flood 9pm, ITV1 Another dead body has been found on Benson land, but is there any connection between the two victims, besides their unusual post-mortem injuries? DC Jo Marshall (Sophie Rundell) and newl...
Officials provided differing accounts of Alex Pretti's death after an altercation with federal agents in Minneapolis on Saturday. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Pretti "reacted violently" when approached by law enforcement officers. However, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz described the claims as "nonsense", blaming federal officers deployed to the city for "sowing chaos and violence". R...
Officials provided differing accounts of Alex Pretti's death after an altercation with federal agents in Minneapolis on Saturday. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Pretti "reacted violently" when approached by law enforcement officers. However, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz described the claims as "nonsense", blaming federal officers deployed to the city for "sowing chaos and violence". Read more on this story here.
Planned data center build-outs are working in its favor. As artificial intelligence (AI) has gone mainstream, the tech sector has rightfully been the biggest beneficiary. These companies are responsible for building high-power hardware, developing and training AI, and creating the apps that people interact with daily. AI is largely why nine of the world's 10 most valuable public companies are tech...
Planned data center build-outs are working in its favor. As artificial intelligence (AI) has gone mainstream, the tech sector has rightfully been the biggest beneficiary. These companies are responsible for building high-power hardware, developing and training AI, and creating the apps that people interact with daily. AI is largely why nine of the world's 10 most valuable public companies are tech companies. However, with the expansion and adoption of AI has come a growing demand in nontech sectors, especially energy and industrials. If you're looking for a nontech stock making its mark and benefiting from AI, consider Vertiv (VRT +0.76%). Where Vertiv fits in the AI supply chain Have you ever been using your laptop and noticed it getting hot? That's because the hardware inside is creating heat as it works. Now, imagine a huge data center with thousands of servers. That's a lot of heat being generated. Aside from being uncomfortable for workers, excessive heat can also deteriorate and break equipment. That's money companies have to spend on replacing equipment and time spent without full computing capacity. There isn't a simple "turn on the air conditioning and let it do its job" solution, either. It requires specialized cooling infrastructure because even the most powerful air conditioning units aren't powerful enough to pull heat away. That's where companies like Vertiv come into the picture. Vertiv makes the cooling systems and power management tools that ensure data centers don't overheat. Its liquid cooling system pulls heat away from servers more efficiently than air by a long shot, and its power management tools act as a backup power source. Expand NYSE : VRT Vertiv Today's Change ( 0.76 %) $ 1.37 Current Price $ 182.49 Key Data Points Market Cap $70B Day's Range $ 175.73 - $ 183.72 52wk Range $ 53.60 - $ 202.45 Volume 3.5M Avg Vol 6.4M Gross Margin 33.73 % Dividend Yield 0.10 % High demand is reflected in Vertiv's financials Vertiv stock had a good 2025, fin...
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The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use
The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use
The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use
The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use
The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use
Smithfield Foods leverages its cash reserves to acquire Nathan's Famous in a strategic move that secures brand ownership and eliminates future royalty fees.
Smithfield Foods leverages its cash reserves to acquire Nathan's Famous in a strategic move that secures brand ownership and eliminates future royalty fees.
Carlos Alcaraz continued to build momentum in his pursuit of the career grand slam as he navigated a slow start and pushed through his first test at the Australian Open to reach the quarter-finals with a 7-6 (6), 6-4, 7-5 win over the 19th seed Tommy Paul. Alcaraz, the world No 1, has now reached the quarter-finals at Melbourne Park for three consecutive years and this is his first time doing so w...
Carlos Alcaraz continued to build momentum in his pursuit of the career grand slam as he navigated a slow start and pushed through his first test at the Australian Open to reach the quarter-finals with a 7-6 (6), 6-4, 7-5 win over the 19th seed Tommy Paul. Alcaraz, the world No 1, has now reached the quarter-finals at Melbourne Park for three consecutive years and this is his first time doing so without dropping a set. Having already won each of the three other grand slam tournaments twice, he will be attempting to break new ground by reaching the semi-finals of the Australian Open for the first time in his career. Things were far from easy for Alcaraz, who has played many tough matches with Paul over the past four years, losing to the American twice in their seven meetings. View image in fullscreen Carlos Alcaraz celebrates after his fourth round win over Tommy Paul. Photograph: Fred Lee/Getty Images Alcaraz trailed by a break early in the first set and still could not separate himself from an impressive Paul, who served well, put pressure on the American by taking the ball early and frustrated the Spaniard with his excellent defensive skills. Paul played admirably throughout the opening set, but in a set determined by such small margins he simply lacked conviction in the decisive moments. After going toe to toe with Alcaraz for more than an hour, he meekly gave away the set with a double fault, just his second of the set. With the first set secured, Alcaraz relaxed and calmly moved through the remainder of the match without issue. He did not face a single break point in the final two sets, rolling through his service games while patiently putting pressure on Paul’s serve. Once he earned those opportunities, he did not hesitate to strike.
The dingo pack linked to the death of Canadian tourist Piper James on Australian island K’gari will be destroyed, the Queensland government has announced. Environment minister Andrew Powell said on Sunday that an entire pack of 10 animals would be euthanised. The group were linked to the death of Piper James, 19, on Monday. An autopsy released on Friday found physical evidence consistent with drow...
The dingo pack linked to the death of Canadian tourist Piper James on Australian island K’gari will be destroyed, the Queensland government has announced. Environment minister Andrew Powell said on Sunday that an entire pack of 10 animals would be euthanised. The group were linked to the death of Piper James, 19, on Monday. An autopsy released on Friday found physical evidence consistent with drowning and injuries consistent with dingo bites, but “pre-mortem dingo bite marks” were “not likely to have caused immediate death”. The island, about 380 kilometres north of the Queensland capital, Brisbane, is home to an estimated 200 dingoes, which are sacred to the Indigenous Butchulla people, who call them wongari, and are specifically mentioned in K’gari’s world heritage listing. K’gari was previously known as Fraser Island. “This tragedy has deeply affected Queenslanders and touched the hearts of people around the world,” Powell said in a statement. A spokesperson for the department said rangers had spent the week closely monitoring the pack of dingoes involved in the incident and observed aggressive behaviour. They were deemed an “unacceptable public safety risk”. Powell said the dingoes would be “removed and humanely euthanised”. “This is a tough decision but I believe it’s the right call in the public interest,” Powell said. The Butchulla Aboriginal Corporation secretary, Christine Royan, described the decision as a “cull”. K’gari is a national park and owned through native title. The Butchulla people co-manage the island in collaboration with the state government. Six animals were destroyed on Saturday, but Royan said the traditional owners of the island hadn’t been consulted on the decision or even told about it until Sunday, in spite of the island’s management plan. “I was dumbfounded,” she said. “This government has no respect for First Nations people. It’s a disgrace”. Dingo attacks have become common in recent years, but deadly incidents are rare. Baby Azaria ...
A Chinese primary school boy saved his pocket money for half a year, accumulating one yuan at a time (14 US cents), to buy his mother a pair of shoes as a birthday gift, touching both the shop owner and millions of netizens. The 11-year-old boy from Hebei province in northern China entered a shoe shop with a stack of one-yuan notes in his hands, asking to purchase a pair of shoes for his mother. H...
A Chinese primary school boy saved his pocket money for half a year, accumulating one yuan at a time (14 US cents), to buy his mother a pair of shoes as a birthday gift, touching both the shop owner and millions of netizens. The 11-year-old boy from Hebei province in northern China entered a shoe shop with a stack of one-yuan notes in his hands, asking to purchase a pair of shoes for his mother. He indicated that it was a birthday gift for her to use during her daily commute, as he had noticed her reliance on a pair of shoes that were already worn out. Advertisement The stack of banknotes totalled about 200 yuan (US$28), which represented his pocket money saved since May last year. The shop owner sold him a pair of white trainers, offering him special discounts. Ultimately, he paid a little over 100 yuan. The boy explained that the shoes were a birthday gift to aid her mother’s daily commute, having noticed her old pair was worn out. Photo: Douyin She assured him that his mother could return or exchange the shoes if they were not to her liking and suggested he save the rest of his money.
Global betting companies are increasingly looking to secure a foothold in Africa's fast-growing gambling market. Super Group has been among those moving early and investing heavily in the continent. Super Group CEO Neal Menashe discusses why Africa has become such a key growth play for the company. (Source: Bloomberg)
Global betting companies are increasingly looking to secure a foothold in Africa's fast-growing gambling market. Super Group has been among those moving early and investing heavily in the continent. Super Group CEO Neal Menashe discusses why Africa has become such a key growth play for the company. (Source: Bloomberg)
In certain corners of the internet, on niche news feeds and algorithms, an AI-generated British schoolgirl has emerged as something of a cultural phenomenon. Her name is Amelia, a purple-haired “goth girl” who proudly carries a mini union flag everywhere she goes and appears to have a penchant for racism. If you are unfamiliar with Amelia, the chances are you will soon encounter one viral meme or ...
In certain corners of the internet, on niche news feeds and algorithms, an AI-generated British schoolgirl has emerged as something of a cultural phenomenon. Her name is Amelia, a purple-haired “goth girl” who proudly carries a mini union flag everywhere she goes and appears to have a penchant for racism. If you are unfamiliar with Amelia, the chances are you will soon encounter one viral meme or another inspired by her on Facebook or X, where her reputation is growing. Videos of Amelia typically feature her walking through London, or the House of Commons, declaring her love for England and warning of the dangers of “militant Muslims” or “third-world migrants”. In one clip she is harangued by bearded man in Islamic attire for eating a pork sausage. The message is one well rehearsed on far-right social media, but it is the AI invention of Amelia that has made her endlessly adaptable, creating a viral internet trend that anyone with access to a mainstream chatbot can take part in. Users of X have turned to its Grok AI tool to create so many Amelia memes, she is now breaking out of niche online silos. The origins of the character are ironic, to say they least. An early iteration of Amelia began life in a counter-extremism video game funded by the UK Home Office and created to deter young people aged 13-18 from being attracted to far right extremism in Yorkshire. 0:09 AI-generated Amelia far-right meme – video Pathways: Navigating the Internet and Extremism is a simple multiple choice format game with basic animation. Its players are taken on a journey as characters at a college. They are invited to make decisions in scenarios including whether or download potentially extremist content or join an Amelia character on a rally organised by “a small political group” protesting against changes in society and the “erosion in British values”. Certain choices result in a referral under the British government’s Prevent counter-terrorism programme. However, it is a subversion of ...
If geopolitics relies at least in part on bonhomie between global leaders, China made an unexpected play for Ireland’s good graces when the taoiseach visited Beijing this month. Meeting Ireland’s leader, Micheál Martin, in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China’s president, Xi Jinping, said a favourite book of his as a teenager was The Gadfly, by the Irish author Ethel Voynich, a novel set...
If geopolitics relies at least in part on bonhomie between global leaders, China made an unexpected play for Ireland’s good graces when the taoiseach visited Beijing this month. Meeting Ireland’s leader, Micheál Martin, in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China’s president, Xi Jinping, said a favourite book of his as a teenager was The Gadfly, by the Irish author Ethel Voynich, a novel set in the revolutionary fervour of Italy in the 1840s. “It was unusual that we ended up discussing The Gadfly and its impact on both of us but there you are,” Martin told reporters in Beijing. China is on a charm offensive with western leaders, a path cleared by Donald Trump’s increasingly erratic and destabilising power grabs on the global stage. Although Europe breathed a sigh of relief this week when Trump withdrew the threat of using military force in Greenland and said he would not impose tariffs on opponents of his plans in the Arctic, the US no longer seems like a reliable partner. An editorial in the Chinese newspaper the Global Times made Beijing’s pitch clear: headlined “Europe should seriously consider building a China-EU community with a shared future”, the state media article said the world risked “returning to the law of the jungle” and that China and the EU should cooperate in building “a shared future for mankind”. No country can afford to cut ties or truly antagonise the world’s biggest economy. But in the search for stability, US allies are turning to the country that many in Washington see as an existential threat: China. “With US policy again looking unpredictable – underscored by tensions and tariff threats over Greenland – European leaders are making sure to keep channels with Beijing open,” says Eva Seiwert, a senior analyst at the Mercator Institute for China Studies. “The risk is that this approach sustains or even deepens existing dependencies on China at a moment when Europe’s stated goal is de-risking.” Mark Carney, elected as Canada’s prime minist...
I’m not psychic. During the six months I spent working as a telephone psychic, my only supernatural gift was the ability to sound fascinated by a stranger’s love life at 2.17am. Yet for hundreds of billable hours, I sat on my living room floor wearing plaid pyjamas and a telemarketing headset, charging callers by the minute for insights into their lives. Perhaps this made me a con artist, but I wa...
I’m not psychic. During the six months I spent working as a telephone psychic, my only supernatural gift was the ability to sound fascinated by a stranger’s love life at 2.17am. Yet for hundreds of billable hours, I sat on my living room floor wearing plaid pyjamas and a telemarketing headset, charging callers by the minute for insights into their lives. Perhaps this made me a con artist, but I wasn’t a dangerous one. When it started, I’d recently quit my job as an editor at a publishing company to write a novel while doing telemarketing shifts from my kitchen table. Instead of knocking off a bestseller, I found myself cold-calling strangers about energy bills while gripped by writer’s block and an inconvenient yearning to have a baby. “Work from home!” an ad popped up one day among remote data entry and content moderation jobs. “Use your intuition to help others find clarity!” The phone psychic description claimed there was a rigorous application process and demonstration of skill was required. I lay awake that night wondering how a psychic job interview would play out. Did candidates need to commune with the interviewer’s dead relatives? When I sent in the application, I was probably looking for meaning just like the people who called the hotlines. My psychic interview the next day was a two-minute conversation with a man in accounts who asked if I had fast wifi, then sent me a contract to sign. There was no trial call, certainly no verification of skill or communion with the dead. Almost as an afterthought, he did ask which method of clairvoyance I would be using. It was not entirely a lie when I claimed a decade of experience reading tarot: but I bought the tarot cards age 12 at Waterstones on Hampstead High Street. I logged on the next morning, nervous about any confusion that may arise from selling magical prophecies and economical energy packages simultaneously. I needn’t have worried. With no testimonials and a stock photo of the moon as my psychic profile p...