Heartland Bank & Trust Co lessened its holdings in NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA - Free Report) by 4.1% in the 3rd quarter, according to its most recent 13F filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission. The firm owned 70,880 shares of the computer hardware maker's stock after selling 3,041 shares during the period. NVIDIA makes up approximately 5.5% of Heartland Bank & Trust Co's portfolio, ...
Heartland Bank & Trust Co lessened its holdings in NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA - Free Report) by 4.1% in the 3rd quarter, according to its most recent 13F filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission. The firm owned 70,880 shares of the computer hardware maker's stock after selling 3,041 shares during the period. NVIDIA makes up approximately 5.5% of Heartland Bank & Trust Co's portfolio, making the stock its 4th largest position. Heartland Bank & Trust Co's holdings in NVIDIA were worth $13,225,000 as of its most recent SEC filing. Several other institutional investors have also modified their holdings of the business. Center for Financial Planning Inc. raised its holdings in NVIDIA by 4.6% in the second quarter. Center for Financial Planning Inc. now owns 8,429 shares of the computer hardware maker's stock valued at $1,332,000 after acquiring an additional 367 shares in the last quarter. Atria Investments Inc grew its holdings in NVIDIA by 3.2% during the 2nd quarter. Atria Investments Inc now owns 942,208 shares of the computer hardware maker's stock worth $148,859,000 after acquiring an additional 29,479 shares in the last quarter. Svenska Handelsbanken AB publ purchased a new stake in shares of NVIDIA in the 3rd quarter valued at approximately $37,316,000. Oak Ridge Investments LLC increased its position in shares of NVIDIA by 2.2% in the 3rd quarter. Oak Ridge Investments LLC now owns 970,860 shares of the computer hardware maker's stock valued at $181,143,000 after purchasing an additional 20,559 shares during the last quarter. Finally, Whalen Wealth Management Inc. raised its holdings in shares of NVIDIA by 20.3% in the 3rd quarter. Whalen Wealth Management Inc. now owns 36,490 shares of the computer hardware maker's stock valued at $6,808,000 after purchasing an additional 6,162 shares in the last quarter. Institutional investors and hedge funds own 65.27% of the company's stock. Get NVIDIA alerts: Sign Up Insider Transactions at NVIDIA In other new...
Lion Street Advisors LLC lowered its stake in shares of NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA - Free Report) by 86.2% during the third quarter, according to the company in its most recent filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission. The fund owned 3,452 shares of the computer hardware maker's stock after selling 21,639 shares during the quarter. Lion Street Advisors LLC's holdings in NVIDIA were wo...
Lion Street Advisors LLC lowered its stake in shares of NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA - Free Report) by 86.2% during the third quarter, according to the company in its most recent filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission. The fund owned 3,452 shares of the computer hardware maker's stock after selling 21,639 shares during the quarter. Lion Street Advisors LLC's holdings in NVIDIA were worth $644,000 as of its most recent SEC filing. Other hedge funds and other institutional investors have also recently added to or reduced their stakes in the company. Center for Financial Planning Inc. raised its holdings in NVIDIA by 4.6% during the second quarter. Center for Financial Planning Inc. now owns 8,429 shares of the computer hardware maker's stock valued at $1,332,000 after acquiring an additional 367 shares during the period. Atria Investments Inc boosted its stake in shares of NVIDIA by 3.2% in the second quarter. Atria Investments Inc now owns 942,208 shares of the computer hardware maker's stock worth $148,859,000 after acquiring an additional 29,479 shares during the period. Svenska Handelsbanken AB publ bought a new position in shares of NVIDIA in the third quarter worth about $37,316,000. Oak Ridge Investments LLC grew its position in shares of NVIDIA by 2.2% during the third quarter. Oak Ridge Investments LLC now owns 970,860 shares of the computer hardware maker's stock worth $181,143,000 after purchasing an additional 20,559 shares in the last quarter. Finally, Whalen Wealth Management Inc. grew its position in shares of NVIDIA by 20.3% during the third quarter. Whalen Wealth Management Inc. now owns 36,490 shares of the computer hardware maker's stock worth $6,808,000 after purchasing an additional 6,162 shares in the last quarter. Institutional investors and hedge funds own 65.27% of the company's stock. Get NVIDIA alerts: Sign Up Analyst Ratings Changes Several equities research analysts have recently issued reports on NVDA shares. DZ Bank reiterat...
Eight months ago, MP Materials (MP 0.43%) made a giant leap. For years -- decades -- MP Materials and its predecessor companies have worked to bring back rare-earth mining to the continental United States and free the U.S. from dependence on importing rare-earth materials essential to 21st-century technologies such as electric cars, wind turbines, and advanced defense technologies. Success, howeve...
Eight months ago, MP Materials (MP 0.43%) made a giant leap. For years -- decades -- MP Materials and its predecessor companies have worked to bring back rare-earth mining to the continental United States and free the U.S. from dependence on importing rare-earth materials essential to 21st-century technologies such as electric cars, wind turbines, and advanced defense technologies. Success, however, has been hit or miss. The problem with MP Materials is simple. According to recent research from The Motley Fool, "China accounts for roughly 70% of rare-earth extraction and 90% of rare-earth processing, giving it firm control over the rare-earth supply chain." China uses this control to sometimes strangle rare-earth supplies (to punish countries it's displeased with). Other times, China opens the floodgates, drowning the world in rare-earth exports and driving prices down -- so companies like MP cannot earn a profit and must eventually file for bankruptcy (as MP's predecessor company Molycorp did). This stifles international investment in rare-earth metals and preserves China's near-monopoly over the metals. We're from the government, and we're here to help Enter the U.S. government, in the form of the Trump Administration. In July 2025, the Trump Administration Department of Defense announced that, in order "to accelerate American supply chain independence," it would: Invest $400 million in MP Materials preferred convertible stock. Sign a 10-year supply agreement promising to buy MP's Neodymium-Praseodymium (NdPr) rare-earth oxide production for no less than $110 per kilogram. Loan MP $150 million to use for expanding heavy rare-earth separation capabilities and begin construction of a "10X" rare-earth magnet facility, enabling MP to manufacture 10,000 metric tons of magnets annually. And buy any magnets that 10X produces, for which MP cannot find commercial buyers. And now MP is ready to begin. Shovel-ready Last week, MP announced it has chosen to build 10X at a 120-...
Key Points Less than a year ago, the U.S. government promised MP Materials a loan and an investment if it would build a new rare-earth magnet factory. Less than a year later, MP Materials is ready to begin. MP's new factory in Texas will cover a significant fraction of America's rare-earth metals demand. 10 stocks we like better than MP Materials › Eight months ago, MP Materials (NYSE: MP) made a ...
Key Points Less than a year ago, the U.S. government promised MP Materials a loan and an investment if it would build a new rare-earth magnet factory. Less than a year later, MP Materials is ready to begin. MP's new factory in Texas will cover a significant fraction of America's rare-earth metals demand. 10 stocks we like better than MP Materials › Eight months ago, MP Materials (NYSE: MP) made a giant leap. For years -- decades -- MP Materials and its predecessor companies have worked to bring back rare-earth mining to the continental United States and free the U.S. from dependence on importing rare-earth materials essential to 21st-century technologies such as electric cars, wind turbines, and advanced defense technologies. Success, however, has been hit or miss. Will AI create the world's first trillionaire? Our team just released a report on the one little-known company, called an "Indispensable Monopoly" providing the critical technology Nvidia and Intel both need. Continue » The problem with MP Materials is simple. According to recent research from The Motley Fool, "China accounts for roughly 70% of rare-earth extraction and 90% of rare-earth processing, giving it firm control over the rare-earth supply chain." China uses this control to sometimes strangle rare-earth supplies (to punish countries it's displeased with). Other times, China opens the floodgates, drowning the world in rare-earth exports and driving prices down -- so companies like MP cannot earn a profit and must eventually file for bankruptcy (as MP's predecessor company Molycorp did). This stifles international investment in rare-earth metals and preserves China's near-monopoly over the metals. We're from the government, and we're here to help Enter the U.S. government, in the form of the Trump Administration. In July 2025, the Trump Administration Department of Defense announced that, in order "to accelerate American supply chain independence," it would: Invest $400 million in MP Materials pref...
Investing.com -- U.S. equities may be showing resilience in the face of macro shocks, but parts of the market are beginning to look increasingly vulnerable, according to BTIG strategist Jonathan Krinsky. Krinsky notes that the S&P 500 has held up better than expected despite a sharp surge in oil prices and a weak labor market reading. “If you told us a week ago that WTI crude was going to go from ...
Investing.com -- U.S. equities may be showing resilience in the face of macro shocks, but parts of the market are beginning to look increasingly vulnerable, according to BTIG strategist Jonathan Krinsky. Krinsky notes that the S&P 500 has held up better than expected despite a sharp surge in oil prices and a weak labor market reading. “If you told us a week ago that WTI crude was going to go from $67/bbl to $92/bbl and nonfarm payrolls would print -92k vs. 55k consensus, we would have said SPX would be firmly below 6,700. Yet it held up fairly well after two downside tests of 6,700,” he wrote in a Sunday note. Still, confidence that the index can continue holding that level has diminished, Krinsky says. A decisive break below 6,700 could open the door to a test of the 200-day moving average near 6,582, implying roughly another 3% downside. Energy markets have also moved to extremes, which could carry broader implications for equities. “WTI crude at one point on Friday was 45% above its 200 DMA,” Krinsky notes, a level that has only been reached during a handful of periods in the past four decades, including the Gulf War and the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Both instances proved to be short-lived rallies. Elsewhere, in credit markets, investment-grade spreads have widened to their weakest levels since last spring, while private credit jitters are also increasing, developments that could coincide with a break lower in the S&P 500 if they continue to deteriorate. Within equities, Banks have managed to hold their 200-day moving average, though Krinsky says the broader financials sector “is clearly weaker” due to exposure to insurance and private credit businesses. At the same time, software stocks have shown relative strength, with the IGV (NYSE:IGV) software ETF rallying more than 7% last week and potentially having room to move toward the $95–$100 range. Semiconductor stocks, by contrast, appear to be losing momentum after a strong rally, and Krinsky expects software to o...
They wowed the Edinburgh fringe with whip-smart sketches about Nasa engineers and what their audience were thinking. Now the slacker troupe are back on stage – but a long way from TV screens When a “New York cult favourite sketch group” (as per the blurb) visits the UK, we may imagine we are getting the next big thing. But by the end of a transatlantic video call to three-quarters of the four-piec...
They wowed the Edinburgh fringe with whip-smart sketches about Nasa engineers and what their audience were thinking. Now the slacker troupe are back on stage – but a long way from TV screens When a “New York cult favourite sketch group” (as per the blurb) visits the UK, we may imagine we are getting the next big thing. But by the end of a transatlantic video call to three-quarters of the four-piece Simple Town, I am disabused of such naivety. “We meet sometimes with UK production companies,” says one of their number, Sam Lanier, “who see us and think: ‘These guys could be a great bridge to the American market.’ But what they don’t know is that no one fucks with us in America. All the people who work in development in American comedy already know about us, and they’ve all said ‘no’.” “We don’t make a living doing Simple Town at all,” he adds. Reader, don’t let the status of Saturday Night Live – or recent Netflix hit I Think You Should Leave – fool you: sketch comedy isn’t a golden ticket in the US either. And Simple Town, such lovable debutants at the Edinburgh fringe last summer, are in the same boat as their UK counterparts: holding down day jobs, making films as well as live sketch, just about keeping their team-comedy show on the road. But “we really believe in it,” says Felipe Di Poi. “We believe the work we’ve done together is the best work any of us has done, that it’s way bigger than anything we could have made by ourselves.” You can deny them TV gigs, you can stymie their professional development, but – by all the collaborative gods! – you can’t keep a good sketch troupe down. Continue reading...
Although earnings season tends to get most of the glory, the quarterly filing of Form 13Fs with the Securities and Exchange Commission is an equally important event for investors. A 13F provides investors with a detailed snapshot of which stocks Wall Street's savviest fund managers purchased and sold in the latest quarter. Feb. 17 marked the deadline for institutional investors with at least $100 ...
Although earnings season tends to get most of the glory, the quarterly filing of Form 13Fs with the Securities and Exchange Commission is an equally important event for investors. A 13F provides investors with a detailed snapshot of which stocks Wall Street's savviest fund managers purchased and sold in the latest quarter. Feb. 17 marked the deadline for institutional investors with at least $100 million in assets under management (AUM) to file a 13F, including billionaire Chase Coleman, who oversees nearly $30 billion in AUM at Tiger Global Management. According to Tiger Global's 13F, the fourth quarter of 2025 marked the first time in 13 quarters (since Sept. 30, 2022) that Meta Platforms (META 2.33%) or Microsoft (MSFT 0.43%) wasn't Coleman's No. 1 holding. Billionaire Chase Coleman is paring down his fund's exposure to Meta and Microsoft Coleman is a huge fan of the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution and the "Magnificent Seven." Many of the 54 stocks held by Tiger Global are influenced by AI and/or have clear competitive advantages. Nevertheless, billionaire Chase Coleman was a seller of shares of Meta Platforms and Microsoft in the December-ended quarter. Tiger Global's boss dumped 1,073,621 shares of Microsoft (a 16% reduction) and 68,386 shares of Meta (a 2% cut). Expand NASDAQ : META Meta Platforms Today's Change ( -2.33 %) $ -15.42 Current Price $ 645.15 Key Data Points Market Cap $1.6T Day's Range $ 636.23 - $ 649.45 52wk Range $ 479.80 - $ 796.25 Volume 928K Avg Vol 15M Gross Margin 82.00 % Dividend Yield 0.33 % Profit-taking may explain why Coleman sent shares of these Magnificent Seven giants to the chopping block. Although his fund has held shares in both companies since the fourth quarter of 2016, Coleman averages a hold time of 10.8 quarters (about two years and eight months). Shares of both companies have significantly outpaced the benchmark S&P 500 since being added over nine years ago. However, Tiger Global's chief investor may also be concer...
Jackson Grant Investment Advisers Inc. increased its position in shares of Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT - Free Report) by 9.4% during the 3rd quarter, according to the company in its most recent 13F filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The institutional investor owned 18,078 shares of the software giant's stock after acquiring an additional 1,546 shares during the period. Micr...
Jackson Grant Investment Advisers Inc. increased its position in shares of Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT - Free Report) by 9.4% during the 3rd quarter, according to the company in its most recent 13F filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The institutional investor owned 18,078 shares of the software giant's stock after acquiring an additional 1,546 shares during the period. Microsoft comprises 3.1% of Jackson Grant Investment Advisers Inc.'s investment portfolio, making the stock its 6th biggest position. Jackson Grant Investment Advisers Inc.'s holdings in Microsoft were worth $9,363,000 at the end of the most recent quarter. Get Microsoft alerts: Sign Up A number of other hedge funds and other institutional investors also recently bought and sold shares of MSFT. Siligmueller & Norvid Wealth Advisors LLC grew its holdings in shares of Microsoft by 203.7% in the third quarter. Siligmueller & Norvid Wealth Advisors LLC now owns 5,594 shares of the software giant's stock valued at $2,900,000 after purchasing an additional 3,752 shares in the last quarter. Personal CFO Solutions LLC boosted its position in Microsoft by 5.1% in the 3rd quarter. Personal CFO Solutions LLC now owns 34,677 shares of the software giant's stock valued at $17,961,000 after buying an additional 1,674 shares during the period. Stevens Capital Management LP boosted its position in Microsoft by 288.7% in the 3rd quarter. Stevens Capital Management LP now owns 29,494 shares of the software giant's stock valued at $15,276,000 after buying an additional 21,906 shares during the period. Darden Wealth Group Inc grew its stake in shares of Microsoft by 0.6% in the third quarter. Darden Wealth Group Inc now owns 17,841 shares of the software giant's stock worth $9,241,000 after acquiring an additional 112 shares in the last quarter. Finally, Hillsdale Investment Management Inc. raised its stake in shares of Microsoft by 13.4% in the third quarter. Hillsdale Investment Management Inc. ...