Democratic Senators Elizabeth Warren and Andy Kim on Monday slammed the Trump administration for potentially allowing advanced American AI chips to be sent to overseas units of Chinese firms, and called on Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick to testify to Congress on the issue, according to a statement. In a surprise move, the Department of Commerce, which oversees US exports, on Sunday issued gui...
Democratic Senators Elizabeth Warren and Andy Kim on Monday slammed the Trump administration for potentially allowing advanced American AI chips to be sent to overseas units of Chinese firms, and called on Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick to testify to Congress on the issue, according to a statement. In a surprise move, the Department of Commerce, which oversees US exports, on Sunday issued guidance to close a potential loophole that may have led companies to export the world’s most advanced...
UiPath’s stronger quarter gives investors a clearer test of whether demand for AI-powered automation is turning into more durable growth and profitability.
UiPath’s stronger quarter gives investors a clearer test of whether demand for AI-powered automation is turning into more durable growth and profitability.
UiPath (NYSE:PATH), an automation platform offering robotic process automation solutions, closed Monday’s session at $13.1, up 11.77%. The stock moved higher after investors reacted to fiscal Q1 2027 results that showed 17% revenue growth, the company’s positive GAAP operating in
UiPath (NYSE:PATH), an automation platform offering robotic process automation solutions, closed Monday’s session at $13.1, up 11.77%. The stock moved higher after investors reacted to fiscal Q1 2027 results that showed 17% revenue growth, the company’s positive GAAP operating in
In this article XPO ARCB Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNT FedEx Freight CEO John Smith said on Monday the company's separation from FedEx will allow it to invest more aggressively in growth initiatives and better compete in the less-than-truckload shipping market. "The things that we are going to be able to control now, especially from a capital and investment perspective, be able t...
In this article XPO ARCB Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNT FedEx Freight CEO John Smith said on Monday the company's separation from FedEx will allow it to invest more aggressively in growth initiatives and better compete in the less-than-truckload shipping market. "The things that we are going to be able to control now, especially from a capital and investment perspective, be able to put dollars into the LTL company that are LTL specific ... That's going to help us leapfrog the competitors," Smith said on CNBC's " Mad Money ." FedEx Freight began trading as an independent company Monday after being spun off from FedEx. The company is the largest less-than-truckload (LTL) carrier in North America, a market that combines shipments from multiple customers onto the same truck, allowing businesses to move freight more efficiently than paying for an entire trailer. Other competitors in the industry include Old Dominion Freight Line , ArcBest , and XPO . Smith said the business often took a backseat while operating inside the larger transportation giant, where it generated roughly $9 billion in revenue compared with FedEx's $90 billion. As a standalone company, however, Smith said FedEx Freight plans to invest heavily in customer-facing technology, expand its dedicated sales force, and improve profitability. " All those things are going to level the playing field and also allow us to leapfrog, we've been working on those very hard for the year," Smith said. The company has outlined a goal of reaching a 15% operating margin by 2029, up from roughly 12% today, though Smith suggested there could be additional upside beyond that target. "That's not the ceiling," he said. Trucking activity is seen as closely correlated to the broader U.S. economy, so Wall Street typically looks to companies within the industry as economic barometers. For the same reason, investors consider their stocks to be economically sensitive. Smith expressed confidence in FedEx Freight's ab...
Good morning. The Iran War’s impact on fertilizer supplies is going to put a big dent in Australia’s wheat crop. Labor’s headaches after its federal budget continue, with the far-right One Nation party surging to an unprecedented poll lead. There’s bad news for overseas travelers: the Australian dollar may be in for another hit . And in Big Tech’s latest mammoth outlay on artificial intelligence, ...
Good morning. The Iran War’s impact on fertilizer supplies is going to put a big dent in Australia’s wheat crop. Labor’s headaches after its federal budget continue, with the far-right One Nation party surging to an unprecedented poll lead. There’s bad news for overseas travelers: the Australian dollar may be in for another hit . And in Big Tech’s latest mammoth outlay on artificial intelligence, Google parent Alphabet Inc. is raising $80 billion. — Angus Whitley, Global Business Reporter What’s happening now Australia’s winter wheat crop is expected to fall by more than a quarter due to unusually dry weather , low global prices and higher input costs resulting from the war in the Middle East. Australia is one of the world’s largest wheat exporters and a major supplier to the growing economies of Southeast Asia and the Middle East, as well as China. Activist investor Elliott Investment Management has built a stake worth more than A$1 billion in Northern Star Resources and is pushing for a strategic review and leadership changes at the Australian mining company. Elliott said that the company has “world-class” gold mining assets but has underperformed due to operational missteps, cost overruns and inconsistent strategic direction. The Australian dollar may have further scope to fall against the kiwi as traders unwind bearish positions in New Zealand’s currency, analysts said. Interest-rate differentials between the two economies appear to have peaked, while any easing in Middle East tensions may give the kiwi an additional tailwind, Goldman Sachs said. Far-right One Nation surged past Australia’s ruling Labor party to lead a nationwide opinion poll for the first time, highlighting voter disappointment with last month’s budget. The surge in polls for Pauline Hanson’s One Nation also mirrors the rise of the populist right in the UK and Europe, as voters turn away from the traditional post-World War II parties that form government. Workers at Inpex’s Ichthys LNG export p...
The SailGP championships, in which national teams of sailors compete in high-speed races at iconic locations around the world, have become one of the sport’s most exciting contests. Featuring identical catamarans propelled by the wind and capable of reaching speeds of more than 100 km per hour, the races have grown rapidly in stature and popularity since the first event in 2019. The choice of Hong...
The SailGP championships, in which national teams of sailors compete in high-speed races at iconic locations around the world, have become one of the sport’s most exciting contests. Featuring identical catamarans propelled by the wind and capable of reaching speeds of more than 100 km per hour, the races have grown rapidly in stature and popularity since the first event in 2019. The choice of Hong Kong as the venue for the opening race of the 2027 season, in January, is therefore a coup for the...
Alphabet Raising $80BN In Equity To Fund Capex, Including $40BN ATM Offering And $10BN Deeply Discounted Deal With Berkshire As we have discussed ad nauseam in the past years, perhaps the biggest mystery surrounding the entire AI supercycle, is where will the hyperscalers find the funds to pay for the trillions in projected capital spending now that most of their Free Cash Flow is flat or negative...
Alphabet Raising $80BN In Equity To Fund Capex, Including $40BN ATM Offering And $10BN Deeply Discounted Deal With Berkshire As we have discussed ad nauseam in the past years, perhaps the biggest mystery surrounding the entire AI supercycle, is where will the hyperscalers find the funds to pay for the trillions in projected capital spending now that most of their Free Cash Flow is flat or negative (with the exception of Microsoft). And while many are forced to resort to aggressive debt issuance with Morgan Stanley estimating that credit markets will fund $1.5 trillion of global data center spending through 2028... Source ... or participating in murky rating-boosting SPV deals, which as we discussed recently indicate an unwillingness to exhibit AI related assets on their balance sheets something others are also catching up to... Source ... others opt to sell stock instead. That's what Google parent Alphabet did after the close today when it announced it was raising $80 billion in equity offerings, including an investment deal with Berkshire Hathaway, to help fund its massive AI capex plans. The offering includes a $40 billion so-called at-the-market (ATM) program, traditionally reserved for short-squeezed meme stocks selling directly to retail for which there is no clear institutional demand, to sell shares from time to time beginning in the third quarter, according to a statement Monday. The company will also offer $30 billion in underwritten offerings of shares and mandatory convertible preferred stock, as well as a $10 billion private placement with Berkshire. “AI is driving an expansionary moment for Alphabet,” the company said in the statement. “By scaling its investments, the company seeks to expand its foundational infrastructure to support the significant growth opportunity ahead.” Alphabet intends to use the proceeds from the various offerings for "general corporate purposes, including capital expenditures to scale AI infrastructure and global compute." Rema...