Photo: VCG Trip.com Group Ltd.’s profit nearly doubled in 2025 as the Chinese online travel giant notched strong gains from all of its business segments. The company posted a net profit attributable to shareholders of 33.3 billion yuan ($4.8 billion) last year, representing a year-on-year increase of about 95%, according to its latest earnings report. The surge was primarily due to the gain from i...
Photo: VCG Trip.com Group Ltd.’s profit nearly doubled in 2025 as the Chinese online travel giant notched strong gains from all of its business segments. The company posted a net profit attributable to shareholders of 33.3 billion yuan ($4.8 billion) last year, representing a year-on-year increase of about 95%, according to its latest earnings report. The surge was primarily due to the gain from investments in the amount of 19.9 billion yuan.
More on Baidu Baidu's AI Initiatives Are Exciting, What About Search And The Rest? Baidu: A Dividend Giant In The Making Baidu: AI Chip Unit IPO A Major Catalyst Baidu Non-GAAP EPADS of $1.52 beats by $0.12, revenue of $4.68B misses by $50M Baidu Q4 Preview: EPS seen halving as AI monetization takes center stage
More on Baidu Baidu's AI Initiatives Are Exciting, What About Search And The Rest? Baidu: A Dividend Giant In The Making Baidu: AI Chip Unit IPO A Major Catalyst Baidu Non-GAAP EPADS of $1.52 beats by $0.12, revenue of $4.68B misses by $50M Baidu Q4 Preview: EPS seen halving as AI monetization takes center stage
Thomas Barwick/DigitalVision via Getty Images Gladstone Commercial ( GOOD ) is paying a well-covered monthly dividend from a growing portfolio of industrial U.S. properties. However, total returns for the REIT are negative at -11% over the last 1 year, even as the ticker has partially joined
Thomas Barwick/DigitalVision via Getty Images Gladstone Commercial ( GOOD ) is paying a well-covered monthly dividend from a growing portfolio of industrial U.S. properties. However, total returns for the REIT are negative at -11% over the last 1 year, even as the ticker has partially joined
Salesforce ( CRM ) declares $0.44/share quarterly dividend , 5.8% increase from prior dividend of $0.42. Forward yield 0.92% Payable April 23; for shareholders of record April 9; ex-div April 9. See CRM Dividend Scorecard, Yield Chart, & Dividend Growth. More on Salesforce Salesforce, Inc. (CRM) Q4 2026 Earnings Call Transcript Salesforce, Inc. 2026 Q4 - Results - Earnings Call Presentation Salesf...
Salesforce ( CRM ) declares $0.44/share quarterly dividend , 5.8% increase from prior dividend of $0.42. Forward yield 0.92% Payable April 23; for shareholders of record April 9; ex-div April 9. See CRM Dividend Scorecard, Yield Chart, & Dividend Growth. More on Salesforce Salesforce, Inc. (CRM) Q4 2026 Earnings Call Transcript Salesforce, Inc. 2026 Q4 - Results - Earnings Call Presentation Salesforce's SaaS Is Not Dead, But More Profitable With AI (Earnings Preview) Salesforce targets $63B revenue by FY30 while expanding Agentforce and $50B buyback Salesforce slips as earnings outlook lands just below estimates; Benioff projects $63B revenue by FY30
Indra Sistemas SA shares soared the most in nearly six years after the company reported earnings that beat expectations and said its order backlog had more than doubled. The stock rose as much as 17% on Thursday, approaching record highs reached in January. It’s the biggest intraday gain since March 2020, during the volatile early days of the Covid-19 pandemic. Indra said its backlog had reached €...
Indra Sistemas SA shares soared the most in nearly six years after the company reported earnings that beat expectations and said its order backlog had more than doubled. The stock rose as much as 17% on Thursday, approaching record highs reached in January. It’s the biggest intraday gain since March 2020, during the volatile early days of the Covid-19 pandemic. Indra said its backlog had reached €16 billion ($18.9 billion), up from €7 billion a year earlier. More than a third of that came from Spain’s increased defense spending. The Madrid-based company is leveraging the continent’s rearmament to reposition itself into a pillar of Spain’s ambitious plan to become a bigger player in defense. As government budgets grow, Madrid has elevated Indra’s role in areas from radar and electronic warfare to armored vehicle production. As part of its defense push, Indra last year created two units dedicated to vehicles and ammunition. While the company had previously considered options to divest Minsait, the IT business that drives the largest chunk of revenue, Chairman Angel Escribano has been repositioning the unit to enhance its role in defense. Indra also is in talks to acquire Escribano Mechanical & Engineering , a maker of components such as turrets that is owned by Indra’s chairman and his family. The deal has led to criticism over potential conflicts of interest but also drawn support from activist investor Third Point LLC , which has called it “value-enhancing.” Read More: Third Point Builds Indra Stake, Urges Board to Pursue M&A Indra said it would invest €400 million in cumulative capital expenditures through 2027 to increase its industrial footprint. As part of this plan it will open five new factories in Spain, focusing on radars, drones and anti-drone systems. The company is also planning to build factories in the US and in the Arab Emirates.
Private credit is way too exposed to the software industry, according to Marathon Asset Management LP Chairman Bruce Richards , but there is little risk of contagion to the wider market. The problems in software were “a train coming down the tracks that you could see from some distance,” he said in an interview with Bloomberg Television, pointing out that software companies in the private credit m...
Private credit is way too exposed to the software industry, according to Marathon Asset Management LP Chairman Bruce Richards , but there is little risk of contagion to the wider market. The problems in software were “a train coming down the tracks that you could see from some distance,” he said in an interview with Bloomberg Television, pointing out that software companies in the private credit markets are about 10 times levered. The default rate in direct lending might be as high as 5% to 6% over the next few years, but will be dominated by the software segment where it could reach 15%, he said. Richards warned in June last year that private credit lending to software firms was not “intelligent” and that some borrowers would struggle to adjust to AI, leading to “creative destruction.” That proved prescient as markets have been roiled in recent weeks by concerns about the $1.8 trillion industry’s exposure to technology firms and lending standards more broadly. “It wasn’t a matter of if, it was just a matter of when. The markets have just woken up,” he said on Thursday. “Annual recurring revenue allowed companies to trade at way too high a multiple,” he said, adding the high leverage mean some will face a struggle rolling over their debt. Richards likes lending to physical infrastructure at the moment, particularly where it relates to the re-industrialization of the US. “Lending to that makes for a great opportunity,” he said. The New York-based asset manager, founded in 1998 by Richards and Lou Hanover, oversees more than $24 billion with a team of roughly 190 global professionals, according to its website. Alternative investment firm CVC Capital Partners Plc agreed to buy Marathon last month as it seeks to grow its US credit market footprint. The cash and equity deal values the company at as much as $1.2 billion.
In this article NVDA Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNT VIDEO 15:35 15:35 Watch CNBC's full interview with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang after earnings and guidance beat Nvidia stock is up 1.3% in pre-market trading on Thursday, as investor concerns around the AI infrastructure boom dampened enthusiasm about its better-than-expected earnings. Revenue for its fiscal fourth-quarter hit $68.13...
In this article NVDA Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNT VIDEO 15:35 15:35 Watch CNBC's full interview with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang after earnings and guidance beat Nvidia stock is up 1.3% in pre-market trading on Thursday, as investor concerns around the AI infrastructure boom dampened enthusiasm about its better-than-expected earnings. Revenue for its fiscal fourth-quarter hit $68.13 billion, ahead of analyst estimates of $66.21 billion, according to LSEG. Total revenue climbed 73% from the figure Nvidia reported a year ago and guidance also came in ahead of expectations. "The debate has shifted away from near-term results and toward the sustainability of AI capex spending, amid concerns around its quantum, monetisation and potential cashflow degradation," Richard Clode, portfolio manager at Janus Henderson Investors, told CNBC by email. Stock Chart Icon Stock chart icon Nvidia stock over the past year. Investor AI concerns Hyperscalers saw more than $1 trillion wiped from their market caps at the start of February, before paring those losses in recent weeks. Semiconductor AMD fell 17% after reporting guidance that topped expectations for many analysts earlier this month, though some had predicted a stronger outlook. "The market is currently fighting broad-based AI concerns," said Dan Hanbury, global strategic equity co-portfolio manager at Ninety One. "What is weighing heavy on investors' minds is how Nvidia can maintain its phenomenal growth rate now its core customers — the hyperscalers — are mostly depleting their cash flows, spending on AI-related capex." Data centers fuel growth Nvidia's data center unit, which houses its market-leading chips, fuelled its revenue boom, bringing in 91% of sales. Data center revenue came in at $62.3 billion for the quarter, ahead of expectations for $60.69 billion, according to StreetAccount. Nvidia issued an upbeat guidance with revenue for the fiscal first-quarter to be $78 billion, plus or minus 2%, well above a...