Tesla shares on Nasdaq remained volatile this week as investors weighed recent production and pricing updates from the United States-based EV maker, while regulatory filings continue to show a concentrated ownership structure around Elon Musk and key institutional holders. Tesla, Inc. shares on Nasdaq remained in a choppy trading range this week as U.S. investors continued to digest recent updates...
Tesla shares on Nasdaq remained volatile this week as investors weighed recent production and pricing updates from the United States-based EV maker, while regulatory filings continue to show a concentrated ownership structure around Elon Musk and key institutional holders. Tesla, Inc. shares on Nasdaq remained in a choppy trading range this week as U.S. investors continued to digest recent updates on vehicle pricing, production plans and broader equity-market volatility in the United States electric-vehicle sector, while the company’s latest disclosures keep attention on a tightly held ownership structure around CEO Elon Musk and several large institutions, according to Nasdaq trading data and recent SEC filings. In U.S. trading on the Nasdaq Global Select Market under the ticker TSLA, the stock has seen elevated daily turnover in May 2026 compared with earlier in the year, reflecting persistent debate over the company’s growth prospects, margin trajectory and investments in autonomous driving and energy-storage businesses, according to Nasdaq’s market activity overview as of late May 2026. As of: 05/30/2026 By the editorial team - specialized in equity coverage. At a glance Name: Tesla Tesla Sector/industry: Automotive and energy technology Automotive and energy technology Headquarters/country: Austin, United States Austin, United States Core markets: North America, Europe and China North America, Europe and China Key revenue drivers: Battery-electric vehicles, energy storage systems and related services Battery-electric vehicles, energy storage systems and related services Home exchange/listing venue: Nasdaq (TSLA) Nasdaq (TSLA) Trading currency: USD Tesla, Inc.: core business model Tesla operates as a vertically integrated manufacturer and developer of battery-electric vehicles and energy solutions, with revenue primarily generated from sales of its Model 3, Model Y, premium vehicle lines and grid-scale storage products alongside associated software and services....
Investing.com -- The Strait of Hormuz has emerged as a potential vulnerability for global internet infrastructure, with threats to undersea fiber-optic cables raising concerns among major technology companies and investors, according to a note from Yardeni Research. Recent comments from Iran about imposing fees on internet cables passing through the strategic waterway have highlighted risks to a n...
Investing.com -- The Strait of Hormuz has emerged as a potential vulnerability for global internet infrastructure, with threats to undersea fiber-optic cables raising concerns among major technology companies and investors, according to a note from Yardeni Research. Recent comments from Iran about imposing fees on internet cables passing through the strategic waterway have highlighted risks to a network that carries a significant share of global internet and financial data traffic. Subsea cables running through the Strait of Hormuz handle as much as 20% of global internet and financial data flows, making the route a critical link between Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. Major technology companies, including Amazon, Alphabet’s Google, Meta Platforms, and Microsoft, are assessing potential vulnerabilities tied to the route amid heightened geopolitical tensions in the region. The report said alternatives such as overland fiber routes, Red Sea connections, and new links through Oman and Saudi Arabia would require substantial investment and could take years to develop. The global network of more than 500 undersea cables carries over 95% of international data traffic. Previous disruptions caused by earthquakes, accidental damage, and suspected sabotage have highlighted the infrastructure’s exposure to physical risks. The report noted that concerns over potential cable disruptions could add a new geopolitical risk premium to technology infrastructure investments, similar to the impact geopolitical tensions have had on energy markets. The issue could also complicate efforts by Gulf nations to establish themselves as major artificial intelligence hubs. Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar have invested heavily in AI infrastructure, data centers, and partnerships with global technology firms. Companies including Microsoft, OpenAI, xAI, Nvidia, and AMD have been involved in projects tied to the region’s AI expansion plans. At least seven major cables serving Gul...
German Rheinmetall MAN tactical military transport vehicles parked in the Edvard Peperko military barracks. Luka Dakskobler | Lightrocket | Getty Images European defense stocks enjoyed a bumper 2025, fueled by a sharp increase in state military spending targets in response to growing geopolitical instability. This year, however, the sector's fortunes have plateaued somewhat, with the Stoxx Europe ...
German Rheinmetall MAN tactical military transport vehicles parked in the Edvard Peperko military barracks. Luka Dakskobler | Lightrocket | Getty Images European defense stocks enjoyed a bumper 2025, fueled by a sharp increase in state military spending targets in response to growing geopolitical instability. This year, however, the sector's fortunes have plateaued somewhat, with the Stoxx Europe Aerospace & Defence index down 1.2% year-to-date, compared with a 4.8% return in the broader Stoxx 600 index. But analysts see 2026 as a period of consolidation for the sector, in which bullishness over Europe's increased defense spending is replaced by greater scrutiny of individual companies' performance and fundamentals. "Investors are becoming very picky and very selective," said Loredana Muharremi, equity analyst at Morningstar. "What investors want to see now are earnings and cash flows, and we believe that we're going to see some upside towards the second part of the year when the orders come, when the down payments from governments come, when the deliveries come — but it will definitely take a while for stock prices to get back to where they were." Shares of defense companies initially held up well after the U.S. and Israel launched attacks on Iran on Feb. 28, as concerns emerged that the conflict would escalate into a full-blown war engulfing the entire Middle East region. watch now VIDEO 3:54 03:54 Aerospace & defense sector to dominate IPO listings: Euronext CEO Squawk Box Europe But since then, gains for the industry's biggest names have been muted. Vehicles such as the WisdomTree Europe Defence ETF and the iShares Europe Defence ETF , as well as the more globally-tilted VanEck Defense ETF , all sit below their pre-war levels. Sentiment weakened further in the spring after a set of underwhelming first-quarter earnings reports. Missed earnings estimates from industry bellwether Rheinmetall led investors to start questioning the potential for further upside in the...
When my mum was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, one remark in Jilly Cooper’s romp made me realise how much my happiness is tied to her wellbeing As a longtime Jilly Cooper fan, I lapped up the TV adaptation of Rivals. There were so many fantastic moments: Maud O’Hara arriving at her own party dressed up to the nines, riding on a camel; David Tennant, as TV mogul Tony Baddingham, smashing up the Corini...
When my mum was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, one remark in Jilly Cooper’s romp made me realise how much my happiness is tied to her wellbeing As a longtime Jilly Cooper fan, I lapped up the TV adaptation of Rivals. There were so many fantastic moments: Maud O’Hara arriving at her own party dressed up to the nines, riding on a camel; David Tennant, as TV mogul Tony Baddingham, smashing up the Corinium Studios set when his arch enemy Rupert Campbell-Black scores a key point in their rivalry. My most memorable scene, however, had nothing to do with shoulder pads and parties. First, some backstory. My mother was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease in January 2025, though for the previous few months it had become clear to me that she had some form of dementia. It came on fast, triggered by a bowel illness. Suddenly she sounded confused on the phone, though it was hard to tell even this because she stopped calling so often. She and I had been accustomed to speaking daily, phoning just to chat, check a recipe, gossip – but now she stopped initiating those calls. Her WhatsApp messaging became so erratic on a family group chat that my cousin offered to go round after work to check Mum’s phone for a virus. Continue reading...
A professor at a private university in South Korea ’s Daejeon has been disciplined and removed from all teaching duties after allegedly making sexually inappropriate remarks to students during class. According to the university on Friday, the school’s foundation recently finalised disciplinary measures against the professor, identified only by the surname B. The university said B has been barred f...
A professor at a private university in South Korea ’s Daejeon has been disciplined and removed from all teaching duties after allegedly making sexually inappropriate remarks to students during class. According to the university on Friday, the school’s foundation recently finalised disciplinary measures against the professor, identified only by the surname B. The university said B has been barred from teaching classes, providing academic counselling and performing other student guidance duties. The professor was also ordered to complete anti-recurrence training through the university’s human rights centre to help prevent further incidents. Advertisement The controversy began in November last year when a post criticising the professor’s classroom comments appeared on the university’s online community forum. Students later conducted their own survey and submitted a formal complaint to the school in December. According to students, the professor made comments including, “eight in 10 women in Korea have probably earned spending money through prostitution”. Advertisement The professor was also accused of making remarks that could infringe on students’ personal dignity and rights.
A society of residents funded by the council could “destroy Soho’s reputation on the international stage” as London’s entertainment district by ferociously objecting to all new bar and restaurant licences, operators in the area have said. The Soho Society, a group of residents established in 1972 aimed at “preserving the character of Soho”, voted in its AGM on Thursday for a new licensing mandate,...
A society of residents funded by the council could “destroy Soho’s reputation on the international stage” as London’s entertainment district by ferociously objecting to all new bar and restaurant licences, operators in the area have said. The Soho Society, a group of residents established in 1972 aimed at “preserving the character of Soho”, voted in its AGM on Thursday for a new licensing mandate, meaning it will challenge all new applications for bars and restaurants in the area, including renewals of existing licences. It will also object to any venue that wishes to open beyond “core hours”, which Westminster council decrees end at 11pm. The society claims the area in central London has seen an intensification of nightlife and unacceptable noise, as well as crime and litter caused by a proliferation of late-night revellers. The new mandate means it will be very difficult for businesses to open or expand in the area. The society is part-funded by Westminster city council and has a formal consultative role in relation to all planning and licensing applications in Soho. Rupert Power, the owner of Sophie’s, a steak restaurant, and the underground jazz bar Jack Solomons, both on Great Windmill Street, chairs the Soho business alliance, which is made up of 150 small companies. “Soho is renowned internationally for its creative activity and it is a melting pot of socialising,” he said. “It would be a shame if that international reputation was trashed by a few residents.” He said other cities such as Paris and New York were able to maintain more of a late-night culture than central London. Some members of the Soho Society said they felt intimidated into not voting against the mandate, because an email said any votes would be seen by the chair of the society. View image in fullscreen China Town in Soho. The Soho Society is estimated to represent about 10% of the district’s residents. Photograph: Kevin Gorton/Getty Images “Every time they [the society] contest a licence, no...
For four years, Vitalina Martynovska and her team had been working on a complete transformation of Kyiv’s National Chornobyl Museum. The new sleek displays were designed to tell a fresh story about the reactor explosion of 26 April 1986 – the most serious nuclear accident in history, a factor that contributed to the collapse of the Soviet Union, and an event that continues to shape Ukraine’s ident...
For four years, Vitalina Martynovska and her team had been working on a complete transformation of Kyiv’s National Chornobyl Museum. The new sleek displays were designed to tell a fresh story about the reactor explosion of 26 April 1986 – the most serious nuclear accident in history, a factor that contributed to the collapse of the Soviet Union, and an event that continues to shape Ukraine’s identity today. The museum was to be devoted not just to the extraordinary work of the “liquidators” who did the initial cleanup after the explosion. It was also the story “of all the people whose lives changed after the disaster”, said Martynovska, the museum’s director. It reopened to visitors on 26 April, 40 years to the day since the nuclear disaster. Then, less than a month later, on the night of 23 May, a shock wave from a Russian missile engulfed the museum’s handsome historic building, a former fire station. Five days later, a still profoundly shocked Martynovska was standing among the museum’s charred remains. Firefighters toiled amid the absolute destruction of everything she and her team had worked so hard to create. View image in fullscreen Vitalina Martynovska, director of the National Chornobyl Museum. Photograph: Julia Kochetova/The Guardian “There is practically no room in the museum that has not suffered damage,” she said. “The building itself sustained significant damage, the roof was destroyed, the floor between the second and third storeys was destroyed, and collapsed; the exhibition rooms and the museum laboratory were affected.” About 40% of the irreplaceable artefacts on display, according to early assessments, were destroyed. Martynovska first heard that her building was on fire around 5am on 24 May. Through the night, Russia sent 60 missiles and 600 drones to Ukraine, most of which were targeted at the capital. The attack killed two people and injured 90 more and significantly damaged many of Kyiv’s museums and culturally significant buildings. “Twenty m...
In this week’s newsletter: Yes, it’s technically still spring, but with garage already pumping out and the 00s legends making a comeback, it’s time to celebrate the often-overlooked women who defined the genre • Don’t get The Guide delivered to your inbox? Sign up here Hello everyone. I’m Coco Khan, covering for Gwilym this week, and I’m officially calling it. Summer is here. No, I’m not a meteoro...
In this week’s newsletter: Yes, it’s technically still spring, but with garage already pumping out and the 00s legends making a comeback, it’s time to celebrate the often-overlooked women who defined the genre • Don’t get The Guide delivered to your inbox? Sign up here Hello everyone. I’m Coco Khan, covering for Gwilym this week, and I’m officially calling it. Summer is here. No, I’m not a meteorologist or an astronomer – rather, I rely on a measure I’ve developed over many summers: the UKG Index. The more UK garage you hear – through passing car windows, pumping out of festivals, or floating on the breeze from a nearby barbecue – the more likely the mercury is climbing. And this year the sound of summer has arrived early, and with some exciting news: a Mis-Teeq reunion. Continue reading...
Gluten-free versions of everyday staples such as bread and biscuits are becoming a luxury, with shoppers complaining that a “decent” small loaf now costs nearly £4. Consumers have always paid a premium for these specialist foods, making any price increases a source of concern, particularly for people who follow a gluten-free diet for medical reasons. While a standard 800g loaf of supermarket white...
Gluten-free versions of everyday staples such as bread and biscuits are becoming a luxury, with shoppers complaining that a “decent” small loaf now costs nearly £4. Consumers have always paid a premium for these specialist foods, making any price increases a source of concern, particularly for people who follow a gluten-free diet for medical reasons. While a standard 800g loaf of supermarket white bread can still be bought for less than £1, a smaller (550g) gluten-free equivalent typically costs about £1.90. Branded products are even pricier: a 480g Promise gluten-free loaf is now £3.90 in many shops. “A decent gluten-free loaf now regularly costs about £4,” says Alison Peters, who runs the website Coeliac Sanctuary. “Promise bread is now £3.90 in Tesco and Sainsbury’s. Even the supermarket own-brand [gluten-free bread] is often about £2 a loaf.” Before the Iran war started, UK food price increases were slowing down after a jump following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The cost of food and drink rose at about 3% in the year to April, but the economic disruption from the war could see this figure reach almost 10% by the end of the year. Peters, who has coeliac disease herself and whose website offers advice and resources for sufferers, fears that gluten-free food is “becoming a luxury rather than an essential medical diet for managing a lifelong autoimmune disease”. “If you have children with coeliac disease or multiple coeliacs within one household, which is common due to genetics, the costs add up incredibly quickly,” she says. “A family could easily go through several loaves of bread a week alone.” Peters has noticed brands such as Promise and Doves Farm becoming costlier. Today a loaf of gluten-free bread typically costs £3.12, which is 17p – or nearly 6% – more than in May 2025 (based on a basket of 40 products), according to Trolley.co.uk, a UK grocery price comparison service. For gluten-free flour (based on 17 products) the increase is more ...
Javier Bardem and his co-star are brilliant as the duelling pair at the heart of a dread-packed psychological drama – where evil lurks in plain sight The 1991 revenge thriller Cape Fear boasts many famous moments. A teddy bear rigged with fishing wire. A drowning man speaking in tongues. But the image I cannot shake is the back of a sailboat, piloted by a lawyer who is being hounded by Max Cady, a...
Javier Bardem and his co-star are brilliant as the duelling pair at the heart of a dread-packed psychological drama – where evil lurks in plain sight The 1991 revenge thriller Cape Fear boasts many famous moments. A teddy bear rigged with fishing wire. A drowning man speaking in tongues. But the image I cannot shake is the back of a sailboat, piloted by a lawyer who is being hounded by Max Cady, a rapist he once sent to jail. The boat is called Moana. It makes sense – throughout Polynesia, moana means “ocean”. However, watching now, I can’t help but wonder if the Rock is going to appear and save the day with his magical pec tattoo. Martin Scorsese’s classic was a remake of a 1962 film, which was based on a 1957 novel. Recycling IP can feel depressing, but Cape Fear always stirs the pot. The 60s film, starring Gregory Peck as a morally upright man tormented by a senselessly evil one, had a Book of Job mystery to it. Scorsese’s version introduced sympathy for the devil, and a jaundiced view of its protagonist: a lawyer who buries evidence that might exonerate his client, whom he believes should go to jail. The high-water mark, though, is probably Cape Feare , the Simpsons parody featuring Sideshow Bob. (Best. Episode. Ever.) Continue reading...
From Akkadian and Babylonian to ‘ancient, morbid and toxic’, test your knowledge with the Saturday quiz 1 The UK’s video recorders were reset in 1997 in advance of what? 2 Which tree is described by the Woodland Trust as “ancient, morbid, toxic”? 3 Which Midwest university has the biggest sports stadium in the US? 4 Henry and Edward are the title characters of what 1886 novella? 5 Which Hollywood ...
From Akkadian and Babylonian to ‘ancient, morbid and toxic’, test your knowledge with the Saturday quiz 1 The UK’s video recorders were reset in 1997 in advance of what? 2 Which tree is described by the Woodland Trust as “ancient, morbid, toxic”? 3 Which Midwest university has the biggest sports stadium in the US? 4 Henry and Edward are the title characters of what 1886 novella? 5 Which Hollywood star couldn’t abide wire hangers? 6 In 1413, whose body was moved from King’s Langley Priory to Westminster Abbey? 7 Which races are held over the 37-mile Snaefell Mountain Course? 8 Which soft drink was originally launched as Pickup’s Appetiser? What links: 9 Cecily stained glass; Meiping vase; Rodin’s Thinker; Temple Pyx fragment; Wagner garden carpet? 10 The King and I; Boy on a Dolphin; My Fair Lady; West Side Story? 11 Fátima; Guadalupe; Knock; La Salette; Walsingham? 12 Sumerian; Akkadian; Babylonian; Assyrian? 13 Bayern’s Müller and WBA’s Brown; middleweight Graham; Air Marshal Harris? 14 I Am Maximus; Tiger Roll; Reynoldstown; Poethlyn? 15 Archaea; Bacteria; Eukarya? Continue reading...
Five multiple-choice questions – set by children – to test your knowledge, and a chance to submit your own junior brainteasers for future quizzes Submit a question Molly Oldfield hosts Everything Under the Sun , a podcast answering children’s questions. Do check out her books, Everything Under the Sun and Everything Under the Sun: Quiz Book , as well as her new title, Everything Under the Sun: Al...
Five multiple-choice questions – set by children – to test your knowledge, and a chance to submit your own junior brainteasers for future quizzes Submit a question Molly Oldfield hosts Everything Under the Sun , a podcast answering children’s questions. Do check out her books, Everything Under the Sun and Everything Under the Sun: Quiz Book , as well as her new title, Everything Under the Sun: All Around the World . Continue reading...
Lindisfarne and Bamburgh, Northumberland Day one Circular walk of Lindisfarne (4 miles) Day two Budle Bay to Bamburgh to (5 miles) The first swallows are swooping round the headland as I follow the coast path along the western side of the Holy Island of Lindisfarne. There are ringed plovers on the beach and a couple of grey seals bobbing out at sea. A barefoot guy is splashing along the tidal Pilg...
Lindisfarne and Bamburgh, Northumberland Day one Circular walk of Lindisfarne (4 miles) Day two Budle Bay to Bamburgh to (5 miles) The first swallows are swooping round the headland as I follow the coast path along the western side of the Holy Island of Lindisfarne. There are ringed plovers on the beach and a couple of grey seals bobbing out at sea. A barefoot guy is splashing along the tidal Pilgrim’s Way, an ancient post-marked path across shining sands. Lindisfarne is only accessible when receding tides uncover this path and the curving causeway road nearby. The original 62 miles of Northumberland coast path, which opened 20 years ago, bypassed the island, so I’ve been looking forward to walking this stretch of the England coast path, which opened two years ago. Very few of us will walk the full 2,700 miles of the King Charles III England coast path, which was inaugurated in March, but a four-mile stroll around Holy Island is an adventure in itself, a shifting landscape of wader-foraged mudflats, dunes, beaches, whinstone cliffs and a reedy blue-and-gold lough. Waymarked posts lead through grassy sand dunes, freckled with cowslips. Skylarks and stonechats clack and chirrup, while courting lapwings tumble over the fields. Gertrude Jekyll’s little walled garden, on the hillside facing the clifftop castle, is bright with marigolds and purple rock cress. double quotation mark From the ramparts of Lindisfarne Castle, a telescope shows the seal colony near two obelisks guiding boats into the harbour Edward Hudson, founder of Country Life magazine, bought Lindisfarne Castle in 1901 and hired architect Edwin Lutyens to turn it into a home. Inside the craggy fortress, there are four-postered bedrooms and an elegant drawing room in the old gunpowder store. From the ramparts, a telescope shows the seal colony near two obelisks guiding boats into Holy Island harbour. Just over the fields are the red sandstone arches of Lindisfarne Priory; these ruins date from the 12th centu...
Venture capitalists and industrial giants in China are aggressively backing developers of dexterous robotic hands – the toughest bottleneck in the global humanoid hardware arms race – in a funding blitz that is rapidly driving up start-up valuations. The latest capital injection was announced on Friday by Xynova. The Hangzhou-based start-up said it had completed a series A round from investors inc...
Venture capitalists and industrial giants in China are aggressively backing developers of dexterous robotic hands – the toughest bottleneck in the global humanoid hardware arms race – in a funding blitz that is rapidly driving up start-up valuations. The latest capital injection was announced on Friday by Xynova. The Hangzhou-based start-up said it had completed a series A round from investors including the venture arms of smartphone maker Xiaomi and electric vehicle giant Li Auto , bringing total capital raised to nearly 1 billion yuan (US$148 million). The announcement came just two months after Xynova’s previous round, underscoring the frantic pace at which larger players in the sector are securing capital. The sheer speed of these transactions reflects a structural shift in how hard-tech start-ups are being financed in China. Advertisement AgiLink, backed by Chinese robotic star AgiBot, recently completed a funding round that propelled its valuation past the US$1 billion mark, according to reports last week by The Paper and several other state-run media. AgiLink did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Friday. The start-up has made industry history by completing four funding rounds since it was spun off from humanoid robot manufacturer AgiBot in January. A robot threads a needle at the World Intelligence Expo 2026 in Tianjin, north China, on May 28. Photo: Xinhua “Achieving unicorn status in less than 150 days is unprecedented in the humanoid component sector,” said Wu Meimei, senior analyst at ITJuzi, which tracks China’s venture-capital market.
Vachilavit Sanameang/iStock via Getty Images Market overview U.S. Treasury yields were relatively stable to open the quarter and drifted lower in early February, as the market appeared to view the U.S. Federal Reserve as maintaining a tilt toward at least modest policy easing. The tone shifted at the end of February with the onset of the U.S.-Iran conflict, which disrupted Middle East shipping and...
Vachilavit Sanameang/iStock via Getty Images Market overview U.S. Treasury yields were relatively stable to open the quarter and drifted lower in early February, as the market appeared to view the U.S. Federal Reserve as maintaining a tilt toward at least modest policy easing. The tone shifted at the end of February with the onset of the U.S.-Iran conflict, which disrupted Middle East shipping and drove sharp increases in crude oil and fertilizer prices. Inflation expectations moved higher, and the outlook for Fed interest-rate cuts was called into question. After successive cuts in September, October and December of 2025, the Fed held its benchmark rate steady at both its January and March meetings, leaving the federal funds target rate in the 3.50%–3.75% range. In its March commentary, the Fed cited solid economic growth, somewhat elevated inflation and heightened uncertainty stemming from Middle East developments as supporting a stable policy stance. The Treasury yield curve finished the quarter higher and flatter, with shorter maturities experiencing the most significant increases. The bellwether 10-year Treasury yield rose 12 basis points (bps) during the quarter, moving from 4.18% to 4.30%. (A basis point is 1/100 of one percent.) The broad U.S. investment-grade taxable bond market returned -0.05% for the quarter, as gauged by the Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index. U.S. Treasuries returned -0.04% (Bloomberg US Treasury Index), while corporate bonds returned -0.54% (Bloomberg US Corporate Bond Index) as credit spreads moved modestly wider late in the period. Securitized assets posted a small positive return of 0.40% (Bloomberg US Securitized Index), although mortgage-backed securities were not immune to March's broad market weakness. Top holdings (% of net assets): as of March 31, 2026 Columbia Quality Income Fund 28.97 Columbia High Yield Bond Fund 9.04 Columbia Dividend Opportunity Fund 8.01 Columbia Floating Rate Fund 7.02 Columbia Emerging Markets Bond Fund...
(Bloomberg) -- A $25 billion Danish pension fund that earlier this year made headlines by ditching Treasuries as Donald Trump was threatening to seize Greenland now says it won’t touch SpaceX.Most Read from BloombergSingapore Hands Byju's Founder His First Ever Jail TermStrait of Hormuz Ship Transits Are Rising Thanks to Help From USCVS Returns Zepbound to Drug Plans After Lilly Slashes PriceApple...
(Bloomberg) -- A $25 billion Danish pension fund that earlier this year made headlines by ditching Treasuries as Donald Trump was threatening to seize Greenland now says it won’t touch SpaceX.Most Read from BloombergSingapore Hands Byju's Founder His First Ever Jail TermStrait of Hormuz Ship Transits Are Rising Thanks to Help From USCVS Returns Zepbound to Drug Plans After Lilly Slashes PriceApple to Overhaul iOS 27 Siri, AI Features: Here's a First PeekSpaceX Said to Cut IPO Value Goal to at Le
oonal/iStock via Getty Images Trillions of dollars fly by so fast they’re hard to see. By now, 11 US companies have a market value of $1 trillion or more. Combined, they have a market cap of $29 trillion. Walmart ( WMT ) was already in the $1 trillion club for a few weeks, if barely, but recently fell off the wagon. If we add Walmart back into it, the 12 US companies have a market cap of $30 trill...
oonal/iStock via Getty Images Trillions of dollars fly by so fast they’re hard to see. By now, 11 US companies have a market value of $1 trillion or more. Combined, they have a market cap of $29 trillion. Walmart ( WMT ) was already in the $1 trillion club for a few weeks, if barely, but recently fell off the wagon. If we add Walmart back into it, the 12 US companies have a market cap of $30 trillion – roughly 43% of the total market capitalization of all S&P 500 stocks. During that little dip from January 28 to March 6 this year, the combined market value of these 12 companies dropped by $1.8 trillion. Over the 58 trading days since then, their combined value jumped by $4.9 trillion. Over the past six years, market value exploded from $6 trillion to $30 trillion. These are generational gains (data via YCharts): Micron Technology ( MU ) became the latest entry into that club. Since the low of April 3, 2025, the stock exploded by 1,315%, and its market capitalization exploded from $72 billion to just over $1 trillion. And it did the second half of that trip, from $500 billion to $1 trillion in just 48 trading days, an all-time record — creating another WTF AI Mania Chart . The 11 US companies in the Trillion Dollar Club: NVIDIA ( NVDA ): $5.11 trillion Apple ( AAPL ): $4.58 trillion Alphabet [ GOOG / GOOGL ]: $4.57 trillion Microsoft ( MSFT ): $3.34 trillion Amazon ( AMZN ): $2.91 trillion Broadcom ( AVGO ): $2.12 trillion Tesla ( TSLA ): $1.64 trillion Meta Platforms ( META ): $1.61 trillion Micron Technology ( MU ): $1.09 trillion Eli Lilly ( LLY ): $1.04 trillion Berkshire Hathaway [ BRK.A / BRK.B ]: $1.02 trillion Walmart ( WMT ): $922 billion Eli Lilly is threatening to fall off the wagon. It wouldn’t take much for Micron to fall off the wagon either – just a minor day-to-day squiggle would do it. These are volatile stocks at this point. $30 trillion used to be a huge amount. Not long ago – only four years ago exactly – the entire debt of the US government was $...
Jose Mourinho's return to Real Madrid was always going to get people talking. Among the many questions surrounding his reappointment, one stands out: How will he manage his relationship with Vinicius Junior? It will be one of the most closely watched aspects of Mourinho's second spell in charge at the Bernabeu. Mourinho has signed a three-year deal to return to Real, but the 63-year-old's contract...
Jose Mourinho's return to Real Madrid was always going to get people talking. Among the many questions surrounding his reappointment, one stands out: How will he manage his relationship with Vinicius Junior? It will be one of the most closely watched aspects of Mourinho's second spell in charge at the Bernabeu. Mourinho has signed a three-year deal to return to Real, but the 63-year-old's contract will only be valid if current president Florentino Perez wins the presidential election on 7 June. The Portuguese coach was at Benfica when they faced Real in the Champions League in February. After the first leg of the knockout phase play-off, Mourinho faced criticism for comments he made about Vinicius Jr's behaviour. The Brazil forward had alleged that Benfica winger Gianluca Prestianni had racially abused him. Prestianni strongly denied the accusation. Mourinho will now coach not only one of the best talents in football, but also one of the most scrutinised players in the world. He is a manager whose success has often been built on trust, loyalty and a connection with his players. But his relationship with Vinicius could become a defining narrative of his second spell in charge.
This interactive model has a limit on the number of drivers that can be modified in a single scenario. When the limit is reached those drivers not yet modified become disabled for modification. Your options are: Create new scenarios to try different combinations of driver modifications Reset one of your driver modifications in this scenario in order to modify another driver
This interactive model has a limit on the number of drivers that can be modified in a single scenario. When the limit is reached those drivers not yet modified become disabled for modification. Your options are: Create new scenarios to try different combinations of driver modifications Reset one of your driver modifications in this scenario in order to modify another driver
This interactive model has a limit on the number of drivers that can be modified in a single scenario. When the limit is reached those drivers not yet modified become disabled for modification. Your options are: Create new scenarios to try different combinations of driver modifications Reset one of your driver modifications in this scenario in order to modify another driver
This interactive model has a limit on the number of drivers that can be modified in a single scenario. When the limit is reached those drivers not yet modified become disabled for modification. Your options are: Create new scenarios to try different combinations of driver modifications Reset one of your driver modifications in this scenario in order to modify another driver