Creators often have to parse through charts and dashboards to understand their performance, but with the new AI assistant, they can get quick answers to questions like "When should I post?" and "What are people saying in my comments?"
Creators often have to parse through charts and dashboards to understand their performance, but with the new AI assistant, they can get quick answers to questions like "When should I post?" and "What are people saying in my comments?"
Popular head of the Secret Intelligence Service, MI6, who widened out the recruitment process Sir Alex Younger, the former head of MI6, the Secret Intelligence Service, who has died from pancreatic cancer aged 62, was one of the most engaging and indeed open British spymasters in the service’s 116-year history. As head of the service, which spies on and attempts to combat foreign subversion, from ...
Popular head of the Secret Intelligence Service, MI6, who widened out the recruitment process Sir Alex Younger, the former head of MI6, the Secret Intelligence Service, who has died from pancreatic cancer aged 62, was one of the most engaging and indeed open British spymasters in the service’s 116-year history. As head of the service, which spies on and attempts to combat foreign subversion, from 2014 to 2020, he did not entirely keep to the omertà that characterised many of his predecessors, though he did not compromise security. His gift for colourful phrases was evident in his last BBC interview, at the start of the Iran war in February; speaking of the regime following the replacement of its leadership he said: “The threat of 88 mullahs on Zoom is one that is difficult to comprehend.” Continue reading...
In this article DATABR.FG Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNT (Left to right) Supabase's Paul Copplestone, CEO and co-founder, and Ant Wilson, CTO and co-founder Courtesy: Supabase Inc. Vibe coding needs infrastructure. Supabase is trying to provide it. The startup, which makes backend tools for building artificial intelligence apps, said on Thursday that it raised $500 million at a va...
In this article DATABR.FG Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNT (Left to right) Supabase's Paul Copplestone, CEO and co-founder, and Ant Wilson, CTO and co-founder Courtesy: Supabase Inc. Vibe coding needs infrastructure. Supabase is trying to provide it. The startup, which makes backend tools for building artificial intelligence apps, said on Thursday that it raised $500 million at a valuation of $10.5 billion, the latest sign that venture investors are seeking to pour money into all corners of the AI market that are showing signs of growth. Supabase's valuation has roughly doubled since its last funding round in October, riding the wave of AI-assisted coding , which allows developers and people without technical skills to quickly build apps and programs through simple text prompts. Co-founded by CEO Paul Copplestone, Supabase has been a major beneficiary of the surging popularity of Anthropic's Claude Code and OpenAI's Codex. Those types of tools are now responsible for the majority of databases on Supabase's platform, with Claude Code being the largest contributor in 2026, he said. Read more CNBC tech news Meta is trying to sell AI agents to businesses in latest effort to diversify away from ads SpaceX targets fixed $135 IPO roadshow price at $1.75 trillion valuation, source says OpenAI CEO Sam Altman to meet with lawmakers, Trump officials in D.C. Tesla's China-made EV sales jump nearly 40% in May as domestic market rebounds Supabase uses the popular open-source database Postgres for developers to store data, authenticate users' sign-ups and logins, and to build and more easily scale their apps on the same platform. Copplestone said the idea fell flat when he first pitched it to an investor in 2014. He tried again six years later, after dealing with scaling limits with databases he was using at another startup. "I built some tooling around it, and I put it out into the world," Copplestone said. "It started becoming very popular and, at that point in ti...
The pitch behind the largest U.S. stock market debut in history rests on one number, and it asks investors to suspend a lot of disbelief. Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS), the lead underwriter on the deal, told a potential IPO investor it expects SpaceX’s AI division revenue to climb roughly 100 times by 2030. That projection, reported ... Goldman Sachs Predicts SpaceX Revenue Will Surge 100X By 2030
The pitch behind the largest U.S. stock market debut in history rests on one number, and it asks investors to suspend a lot of disbelief. Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS), the lead underwriter on the deal, told a potential IPO investor it expects SpaceX’s AI division revenue to climb roughly 100 times by 2030. That projection, reported ... Goldman Sachs Predicts SpaceX Revenue Will Surge 100X By 2030
On February 19, 2026, President Donald Trump stood at a rally in Rome, Georgia and told the crowd to “go out and buy a Dell computer.” Nine days earlier, his portfolio had picked up between $1 million and $5 million of Dell Technologies (NYSE:DELL) stock, per a government ethics filing. Retail investors watching did not ... If You Listened to Trump and Bought This ETF in February, You’d Be a Milli...
On February 19, 2026, President Donald Trump stood at a rally in Rome, Georgia and told the crowd to “go out and buy a Dell computer.” Nine days earlier, his portfolio had picked up between $1 million and $5 million of Dell Technologies (NYSE:DELL) stock, per a government ethics filing. Retail investors watching did not ... If You Listened to Trump and Bought This ETF in February, You’d Be a Millionaire Today | $110K to $1M
saifulasmee chede/iStock via Getty Images Mortgage rates fell after hitting a nine-month high last week, but sellers are said to be pulling off their home listings at the fastest pace since 2020. 30-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 6.48% as of June 4, down from 6.53% last week and 6.85% in the same period a year ago, according to the latest Freddie Mac ( FMCC ) Primary Mortgage Survey. 15-year f...
saifulasmee chede/iStock via Getty Images Mortgage rates fell after hitting a nine-month high last week, but sellers are said to be pulling off their home listings at the fastest pace since 2020. 30-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 6.48% as of June 4, down from 6.53% last week and 6.85% in the same period a year ago, according to the latest Freddie Mac ( FMCC ) Primary Mortgage Survey. 15-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 5.79%, down from 5.87% a week ago and 5.99% a year ago. "The prospect of easing energy prices, given the evolving situation in the Middle East, brought mortgage rates slightly lower last week," according to Joel Kan, Mortgage Bankers Association's vice president and deputy chief economist. "With mortgage rates in the mid-6% range and income growth outpacing home price growth, housing affordability is marginally improving," said Sam Khater, Freddie Mac's chief economist. Meanwhile, Diana Olick, a CNBC reporter on news regarding the housing market, said home delistings are at their highest point in six years. A total of 5.8% of the homes listed were pulled off in April. Delistings in April were up 3.8% month-over-month, CNBC reported. "Sellers are getting frustrated with this spring housing market, and a lot of them are giving up," she remarked. More related to Mortgages Mortgage demand falls 2.5%, refinancing continues to deteriorate Coinbase, Better offer first Fannie Mae-eligible crypto-backed mortgage to Michigan couple in early 30s Freddie Mac to begin accepting mortgage loans assessed through VantageScore 4.0
Welcome to Bloomberg’s Texas Edition — covering all the industries and people driving America’s second-largest economy, from finance and oil to tech and sports. Join us each week for an inside look at Texas through a Bloomberg lens. Sign up here if you’re not already on the list. The heart of Texas’ largest metro area is not having a great week . Downtown Dallas got a one-two punch this week. Firs...
Welcome to Bloomberg’s Texas Edition — covering all the industries and people driving America’s second-largest economy, from finance and oil to tech and sports. Join us each week for an inside look at Texas through a Bloomberg lens. Sign up here if you’re not already on the list. The heart of Texas’ largest metro area is not having a great week . Downtown Dallas got a one-two punch this week. First, the NBA’s Mavericks said they’re moving about 10 miles north . The team plans a new arena on the 104-acre site that once housed Valley View mall. A day after that announcement, the NHL’s Stars signed a non-binding letter of intent to develop a stadium and entertainment district in Plano. (That site is now the Shops at Willow Bend mall, which is still standing). The teams were unhappy co-tenants at American Airlines Center. While economists and politicians disagree about the impact of sports teams, Victory Park will be a lot quieter. And both teams have some marquee sizzle, with valuations of $5.24 billion for the Mavericks and $1.94 billion for the Stars, according to Sportico. Truth be told, downtown Dallas has had its share of not-good weeks lately. The flagship Neiman Marcus store is closing. Fifth Third Bank, which recently acquired Comerica, is leaving Comerica Bank Tower to establish a Texas regional headquarters in North Dallas. AT&T is also heading to Plano. Regional growth is still booming, of course. The Dallas-Fort Worth area is the fourth-largest in the US, surpassing the 8 million mark for population. And both teams are still firmly part of the Dallas area; there’s no they-play-in-another state vibe as with New York’s football teams, or potentially with the Chicago Bears . But moves like the Stars’ and AT&T’s bolster suburban tax bases, not Dallas’. “Make no mistake about it, we are in competition with our neighboring cities for residents, for businesses, and for attractions,” Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson said in a statement. The Fine Line Here are two question...
Joe Raedle/Getty Images News Retail investors are expected to have an unusually broad opportunity to participate in SpaceX's ( SPCX ) upcoming initial public offering, with several major brokerage firms preparing to make shares available to individual customers. Fidelity Investments, Charles Schwab, Robinhood Markets, SoFi Technologies and E*Trade are among the platforms expected to distribute IPO...
Joe Raedle/Getty Images News Retail investors are expected to have an unusually broad opportunity to participate in SpaceX's ( SPCX ) upcoming initial public offering, with several major brokerage firms preparing to make shares available to individual customers. Fidelity Investments, Charles Schwab, Robinhood Markets, SoFi Technologies and E*Trade are among the platforms expected to distribute IPO shares, The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday. The number available to retail buyers will depend in part on demand from institutional investors and wealthy clients, who traditionally receive the largest allocations in public offerings. Historically, large retail allocations have sometimes been interpreted as a sign of weak institutional interest. Market observers say that dynamic may not apply in SpaceX's ( SPCX ) case given the anticipated scale of the offering and Elon Musk's stated preference for broad individual investor participation. Brokerages are already collecting indications of interest from customers, a process that helps them estimate demand and negotiate for larger share allocations from underwriters. Investors considering participation should be aware that newly public stocks often experience significant price swings after they begin trading. While some IPOs surge immediately, others struggle after their debut. Meta Platforms ( META ), then known as Facebook, spent more than a year recovering from losses that followed its 2012 public offering. Eligibility requirements vary by brokerage. Charles Schwab requires customers to maintain at least $100,000 in brokerage assets to participate. Fidelity, which has previously required balances ranging from $100,000 to $500,000 for certain IPOs, is lowering its minimum requirement to $2,000 for the SpaceX offering. Robinhood, SoFi and E*Trade don’t currently impose minimum portfolio thresholds. Customers interested in purchasing shares must first submit a nonbinding indication of interest specifying how many shares t...
SolStock/E+ via Getty Images Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has initiated an investigation into Celsius Holdings ( CELH ) over allegations the company uses playful and colorful packaging to sell its Alani Nu energy drinks to young adults despite containing a level of caffeine that is dangerous for children and adolescents. Paxton argues that each can of Alani Nu contains 200 mg of caffeine, a l...
SolStock/E+ via Getty Images Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has initiated an investigation into Celsius Holdings ( CELH ) over allegations the company uses playful and colorful packaging to sell its Alani Nu energy drinks to young adults despite containing a level of caffeine that is dangerous for children and adolescents. Paxton argues that each can of Alani Nu contains 200 mg of caffeine, a level medical professionals have deemed unsafe for consumption for teens and children. Despite the dangers, Celsius ( CELH ) packages Alani Nu in “colorful packaging, playful design elements, and youth-oriented branding strategies that appeal directly to younger consumers, raising serious questions about whether the company is deliberately marketing a potentially harmful product at an at-risk population,” Paxton argues. Alani nu strawberry sunrise (Google.com) Paxton cites the case of a 17-year-old Texan who died from an enlarged heart allegedly caused by excessive caffeine consumption from drinking Alani Nu. The parents’ lawsuit claims the company failed to provide adequate warnings about the caffeine content of its beverage. The investigation seeks to determine if Celsius ( CELH ) is in violation of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act. As recently as last month, Celsius Holdings ( CELH ) credited record Q1 sales to the explosive popularity of its Alani Nu energy drink. By expanding distribution to the PepsiCo ( PEP ) distribution system, Alani Nu generated record revenue and accounted for nearly half of all Celsius’ ( CELH ) total sales. Unfortunately for Celsius, comments from CEO John Fieldly during the company's most recent earnings call may have helped the AG's case. “Alani Nu is expanding our reach with a differentiated consumer base and a meaningful runway and channels where it remains underpenetrated,” Fieldly said, a statement that could prove problematic for the company and feature prominently in Paxton’s investigation. Shares are down more than 5% at midday, ...
X-Energy on Thursday reported its first quarterly earnings as a public company after its stock debut on April 24. XE stock dived to a record low on a wider loss than Q1 a year ago as nuclear stocks continue to cool off.
X-Energy on Thursday reported its first quarterly earnings as a public company after its stock debut on April 24. XE stock dived to a record low on a wider loss than Q1 a year ago as nuclear stocks continue to cool off.
IURII KRASILNIKOV/iStock via Getty Images Shares of Iovance Biotherapeutics ( IOVA ) climbed on Thursday after the Therapeutic Goods Administration of Australia granted conditional approval for the company’s cell therapy, Amtagvi, as a late-line option for the skin cancer, melanoma. The first FDA-approved T cell therapy for a solid tumor indication, Amtagvi, will therefore be available in Australi...
IURII KRASILNIKOV/iStock via Getty Images Shares of Iovance Biotherapeutics ( IOVA ) climbed on Thursday after the Therapeutic Goods Administration of Australia granted conditional approval for the company’s cell therapy, Amtagvi, as a late-line option for the skin cancer, melanoma. The first FDA-approved T cell therapy for a solid tumor indication, Amtagvi, will therefore be available in Australia for adults with previously treated unresectable or metastatic melanoma, the San Carlos, California-based biotech said in a statement on Wednesday. The company also announced plans to receive authorization for its first Amtagvi treatment center in Australia, the country with the highest prevalence of melanoma in the world, with 17,000 new patients diagnosed annually. “This approval in Australia is our third marketing authorization for Amtagvi and marks a significant step forward for Iovance in the country with the highest rate of melanoma globally,” added interim CEO Frederick Vogt. More on Iovance Biotherapeutics Iovance Therapeutics: Q1 Earnings Miss May Have Created A Buying Opportunity Iovance Biotherapeutics, Inc. (IOVA) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript Iovance Biotherapeutics: Buy, Because Short-Term Competitor Is Out Iovance outlines $350M-$370M 2026 revenue, while guiding Q2 total revenue to $86M-$88M Iovance slips after Q1 miss amid in-line 2026 outlook