In this article .NDX Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNT SpaceX headquarters is shown in Hawthorne, California, U.S. June 5, 2025. Daniel Cole | Reuters Elon Musk's rocket and satellite maker SpaceX is leaning toward listing its shares on the Nasdaq for what could rank as the biggest initial public offering of all time, according to four people familiar with the company's thinking. Spa...
In this article .NDX Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNT SpaceX headquarters is shown in Hawthorne, California, U.S. June 5, 2025. Daniel Cole | Reuters Elon Musk's rocket and satellite maker SpaceX is leaning toward listing its shares on the Nasdaq for what could rank as the biggest initial public offering of all time, according to four people familiar with the company's thinking. SpaceX wants early inclusion on the Nasdaq 100 index, making it a necessary condition for a potential listing on the tech-heavy exchange, two of the people said. Its plans could still change, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the discussions are confidential. Reuters has previously reported that SpaceX is planning an IPO, as early as June. The New York Stock Exchange is also competing for the listing, and neither exchange has been informed of a decision either way, multiple people said. The Nasdaq 100, owned by Nasdaq Inc , is seen as a premier blue-chip index by large institutional investors and serves as a barometer for the health of most of the world's biggest publicly traded names, including megacap technology stocks like Nvidia , Apple and Amazon.com . The Nasdaq 100 gained about 21% last year and is slightly lower so far this year. Nasdaq proposed a new rule last month that could potentially speed up the addition of newly listed megacap companies to the Nasdaq 100 index. Nasdaq's new fast-track rule The proposed change, which is not final and could take several months to take effect, is designed to entice richly valued private companies like SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI, among others, to list on the exchange. Under the Nasdaq's proposed "Fast Entry" rule, a newly listed company would be eligible for accelerated inclusion in just under a month if its market capitalization ranks among the index's top 40 current members. SpaceX is seeking a valuation of around $1.75 trillion for the IPO, one of the people said, which would make it the sixth-largest com...
Key Points Filing for Social Security at 62 will reduce your payments by up to 30%. For many retirees, that results in a reduction of hundreds of dollars per month. Before you file, it's wise to consider how claiming early will affect your finances. The $23,760 Social Security bonus most retirees completely overlook › The age you begin taking Social Security will have a profound effect on your ret...
Key Points Filing for Social Security at 62 will reduce your payments by up to 30%. For many retirees, that results in a reduction of hundreds of dollars per month. Before you file, it's wise to consider how claiming early will affect your finances. The $23,760 Social Security bonus most retirees completely overlook › The age you begin taking Social Security will have a profound effect on your retirement, sometimes influencing your benefit amount by hundreds of dollars per month. The average retiree collects roughly $2,000 per month in benefits, but the earlier you file, the less you'll receive. Here's how to determine whether claiming at 62 is right for your retirement. 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 » How your age affects your benefit amount Your benefit amount is based on three main factors: the length of your career, your lifetime earnings, and the age you begin claiming Social Security. To receive the full benefit you're entitled to based on your work history, you'll need to file at your full retirement age (FRA). Your FRA will depend on your birth year, but it's between ages 66 and 67 for everyone. The earlier you file, the smaller your monthly payments will be. Filing at age 62 will reduce your benefits by 30% if you have an FRA of 67. These reductions are permanent, too, so expect to receive smaller checks for the rest of your life if you file early. According to data from the Social Security Administration, the average retiree collects around $592 more per month at age 67 than at 62. At age 70, that difference jumps to $851 per month. Age Average Monthly Benefit Among Retired Workers 62 $1,424 63 $1,436 64 $1,478 65 $1,607 66 $1,807 67 $2,016 68 $2,052 69 $2,097 70 $2,275 This doesn't necessarily mean that claiming early is wrong, as your filing decision will depend on your...
World's Biggest Hedge Funds Crushed By Oil Price Surge We knew something was off when Bloomberg reported yesterday that Balyasny's chief commodities strategist, Damien Courvalin, whom the multi-strat hedge fund poached from Goldman in 2023 after a 16-year span at the bank where he led the bank’s oil research and become one of the most prominent oil analysts on Wall Street, had left the hedge fund ...
World's Biggest Hedge Funds Crushed By Oil Price Surge We knew something was off when Bloomberg reported yesterday that Balyasny's chief commodities strategist, Damien Courvalin, whom the multi-strat hedge fund poached from Goldman in 2023 after a 16-year span at the bank where he led the bank’s oil research and become one of the most prominent oil analysts on Wall Street, had left the hedge fund where he oversaw the fimr's central commodities intelligence effort, including implementation in cross-commodity portfolios, after the rollercoaster moves in oil. We are just guessing, but Courvalin may have been just a bit bearish on oil: after all, he led Goldman’s research when the bank predicted, correctly, a price plunge in early 2020, just before oil prices fell below zero. He also covered gold, agriculture, natural gas and commodity asset allocation through his tenure at the bank. There is another reason why Courvalin was likely bearish: according to Bloomberg, his (now former) employer Balyasny Asset Management declined by 3.5% last week after a 0.4% increase in the two months through February. It wasn't just Balysani: according to Bloomberg, some of the world’s biggest hedge funds suffered hundreds of millions of dollars in losses last week after the war against Iran sent oil prices surging and triggered wild market moves, suggesting that short oil was among the most consensus trades within the hedge fund world, something we warned about in late 2025. Between A Dock & A Hard Place: Record Short Oil Positions Squeezed By Sanctions Despite Record Crude Glut On-Water https://t.co/SBIBo0JY5Y — zerohedge (@zerohedge) October 27, 2025 According to the report, Citadel’s main Wellington hedge fund lost 2% last week, with its macro business suffering declines. The fund was up 2.9% through February. ExodusPoint’s multistrategy hedge fund last week gave away all the gains it had notched up for the year; it had been up 2.6% in the first two months. Other multi-strats also got ...
"It allows it to obtain monopoly profits from digital distribution, setting retail prices at what it refers to as its target margin of an excessive and unfair 30% above the level of the digital wholesale prices."
"It allows it to obtain monopoly profits from digital distribution, setting retail prices at what it refers to as its target margin of an excessive and unfair 30% above the level of the digital wholesale prices."
By Sam Tobin LONDON, March 10 (Reuters) - Sony is fighting a London lawsuit worth almost 2 billion pounds ($2.7 billion) that alleges the PlayStation maker's "monopoly position" inflated prices for digital games, in the latest mass consumer case to go to trial in Britain. The Japanese conglomerate is accused of abusing its dominant position by requiring digital games and add-ons for its console...
By Sam Tobin LONDON, March 10 (Reuters) - Sony is fighting a London lawsuit worth almost 2 billion pounds ($2.7 billion) that alleges the PlayStation maker's "monopoly position" inflated prices for digital games, in the latest mass consumer case to go to trial in Britain. The Japanese conglomerate is accused of abusing its dominant position by requiring digital games and add-ons for its console to be bought and sold only via its PlayStation Store, making prices higher than for physical games. Sony says it has "invested years and billions" in an integrated gaming platform that benefits consumers in a competitive market, where rivals Nintendo and Microsoft's Xbox use similar models. Its lawyers also argue the margin Sony earns on sales of games and additional content is not excessive, saying the lawsuit ignores the company's costs and the value of its brand. The case, brought at London's Competition Appeal Tribunal (CAT) on behalf of around 12 million people in the United Kingdom, is the third against a major tech company to go to trial since the start of 2025. SONY ACCUSED OF EXCLUDING COMPETITION Alex Neill, who is leading the case, said in a statement that "gamers have paid too much and they should get some money back". The case was previously valued at up to 5 billion pounds, but has since dropped to 1.97 billion pounds. Her lawyer Robert Palmer told the tribunal: "Sony can and does set the retail prices ... without facing any retail competition for digital content. It allows it to obtain monopoly profits from digital distribution." But Sony, which sold 8 million PlayStation 5 consoles between October and December, says the lawsuit amounts to arguing that third parties should be allowed to set up a store for the PlayStation and "free-ride" on Sony's investments. Other cases relating to app stores are pending. Last year, the CAT ruled against Apple in relation to its App Store, a decision Apple is seeking to appeal. A trial of a lawsuit against Goo...
The artificial intelligence boom has minted a new set of corporate titans. But according to one of Wall Street's most famous contrarians, the industry's biggest winner may also be flexing its dominance in ways that could eventually attract regulators. Burry, best known for predicting the housing crash chronicled in The Big Short, accused Nvidia of acting in a "mafia-like" manner in the AI chip mar...
The artificial intelligence boom has minted a new set of corporate titans. But according to one of Wall Street's most famous contrarians, the industry's biggest winner may also be flexing its dominance in ways that could eventually attract regulators. Burry, best known for predicting the housing crash chronicled in The Big Short, accused Nvidia of acting in a "mafia-like" manner in the AI chip market and suggested the company's behavior could become the subject of antitrust scrutiny. Nvidia did not immediately respond to Benzinga’s request for comment. AI Infrastructure Tensions According to Burry, the dispute centered on a planned data-center project linked to OpenAI. He claimed Oracle had borrowed heavily to secure land and order hardware designed around Nvidia's next-generation Blackwell chips. But OpenAI allegedly backed away from the arrangement, arguing that the chips would be outdated by the time the facility was completed. "The chips will be dated before the building is even ready," Burry wrote. He further alleged that Nvidia stepped in and paid roughly $150 million to block AMD from securing the contract tied to the data-center buildout. "This is how NVDA throws its weight around to block AMD use by its customers," Burry said. "It is mafia-like and should be an antitrust case." Antitrust Clouds Over AI Chips Burry also claimed that the U.S. Justice Department has been investigating Nvidia for nearly two years, though he expressed skepticism that the current administration would pursue a case. Neither Nvidia nor the Justice Department has publicly confirmed the claims referenced in Burry's post. While rivals like AMD and Intel have been racing to challenge Nvidia's lead, the company continues to command the largest share of the rapidly expanding AI accelerator market. AI Boom Under Scrutiny Burry suggested the episode may signal broader stresses emerging in the AI infrastructure boom. "This is an absolutely huge deal," he wrote, adding that "the signs are sh...
Joaquin Corbalan/iStock via Getty Images Critical Metals ( CRML ) +5.2% in Tuesday's trading after saying its board approved a $30M program to accelerate the development of the Tanbreez heavy rare earth project in Greenland, one of the world's largest known rare earth deposits. The company said the program will significantly advance drilling, infrastructure, engineering design and metallurgical p...
Joaquin Corbalan/iStock via Getty Images Critical Metals ( CRML ) +5.2% in Tuesday's trading after saying its board approved a $30M program to accelerate the development of the Tanbreez heavy rare earth project in Greenland, one of the world's largest known rare earth deposits. The company said the program will significantly advance drilling, infrastructure, engineering design and metallurgical programs, accelerating Tanbreez towards a target of first ore production in Q4 2028 or Q1 2029, with concentrate export beginning by Q3 2029. Critical Metals ( CRML ) said it believes the program "has the potential to significantly expand and delineate the global resource base, de-risking the path to production while advancing the engineering and feasibility studies required to support future mine development." More on Critical Metals Critical Metals: At The Nexus Of Geopolitics And Heavy Rare Earths Demand Critical Metals: Future Supplier Of REE From Greenland For The Western Sector Critical Metals: Greenland Headlines And A Potential U.S. Stake Could Rerate It
Culture Minister Alessandro Giuli said in a statement that the acquisition was "part of a broader project to strengthen the national cultural heritage that the Ministry of Culture will continue to pursue in the coming months, with the aim of making some art history masterpieces accessible to scholars and enthusiasts that would otherwise be destined for the private market".
Culture Minister Alessandro Giuli said in a statement that the acquisition was "part of a broader project to strengthen the national cultural heritage that the Ministry of Culture will continue to pursue in the coming months, with the aim of making some art history masterpieces accessible to scholars and enthusiasts that would otherwise be destined for the private market".
Stagwell NASDAQ: STGW executives used the company’s fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 earnings call to highlight accelerating organic momentum exiting the year, expanding margins and sharply higher free cash flow, while outlining a 2026 outlook built around a political cycle tailwind, increased new business, and a growing suite of AI-enabled products. Get Stagwell alerts: Sign Up 2025 performance ...
Stagwell NASDAQ: STGW executives used the company’s fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 earnings call to highlight accelerating organic momentum exiting the year, expanding margins and sharply higher free cash flow, while outlining a 2026 outlook built around a political cycle tailwind, increased new business, and a growing suite of AI-enabled products. Get Stagwell alerts: Sign Up 2025 performance and momentum into 2026 Founder, Chairman and CEO Mark Penn said Stagwell delivered “accelerating ex-advocacy growth,” record net new business, expanding margins, firm cost controls, and “doubled free cash flow” in 2025. He said the company posted 6% growth for the year, driven by 13% growth in digital transformation and 6% growth in marketing services, with organic growth of 9% and 5%, respectively. Penn noted the company’s two-year organic net revenue growth stack in the fourth quarter exceeded 10%, which he described as a sequential improvement that demonstrated momentum entering 2026. CFO Ryan Greene added that the fourth quarter set records for revenue and net revenue, with revenue up 2.4% year-over-year to $807 million and net revenue up 3.4% to $651 million. Greene said that, excluding advocacy, fourth-quarter net revenue was $609 million, up 8.1% year-over-year (4% organically), and that all five segments delivered net revenue growth on both a total and organic basis. He also pointed to strength in integrated creative, performance media, and technology-enabled marketing. Segment highlights: marketing cloud, digital transformation, media and creative Management emphasized rapid growth in the marketing cloud and confidence in continued expansion. Penn said the Marketing Cloud segment exceeded $105 million of revenue in 2025 and grew 34% organically for the full year, including more than 41% organic growth in the fourth quarter. Greene reported that marketing cloud net revenue grew 111.2% in the fourth quarter (41.2% organically) and 230% for the full year (34.3% organi...
Images By Tang Ming Tung/DigitalVision via Getty Images Clorox ( CLX ) is a firm manufacturing and selling household, lifestyle, and health and wellness products globally. The company is a key player in the consumer staples sector, which may make one think that it could be a safe investment in the current macroeconomic landscape. But the fact is that CLX's total return over the past 1-year period ...
Images By Tang Ming Tung/DigitalVision via Getty Images Clorox ( CLX ) is a firm manufacturing and selling household, lifestyle, and health and wellness products globally. The company is a key player in the consumer staples sector, which may make one think that it could be a safe investment in the current macroeconomic landscape. But the fact is that CLX's total return over the past 1-year period was negative 21%, underperforming both the broader market ( SPY ) and the consumer staples sector ( XLP ) as a whole. Data by YCharts The aim of my article today is to look at the firm's latest quarterly report , as well as its valuation, to assess whether this underperformance is likely to last or if it presents an attractive investment opportunity. As Clorox is a mature company that paid dividends for almost 5 decades, I will be using a dividend discount model to estimate its fair value. Earnings In the most recent quarter, Clorox beat revenue estimates by $30 million, reaching $1.67 billion, which represents a decline of 1.2% year-over-year. On the bottom line, the company recorded a miss, however, with EPS coming in at $1.39, $0.04 below analyst expectations. Income statement (Clorox) Sales I do not like these results, especially when we focus on the revenue side. Clorox is a consumer staples company, which should be defensive by nature and which should be selling products that people need even when their financial outlook is unclear. In contrast to this, the demand for CLX's products seems to be declining. But to understand where this is coming from, let us break down the results by segment. Segment results (Clorox) Two of the four reportable segments showed declining revenue in the most recent quarter, namely household and lifestyle. The household segment declined by 6%, driven by lower volume and unfavorable price/mix. The volume decline was driven by lower consumption. This clearly shows that the demand for these products is weakening, and this is not what I would l...
Key Points Uranium Energy lost money in Q2. The uranium miner was still able to sell its uranium significantly above average prices last quarter. 10 stocks we like better than Uranium Energy › Uranium Energy (NYSEMKT: UEC) stock jumped 6.6% through 10:35 a.m. ET Tuesday after reporting in-line earnings this morning -- and by in-line, I mean Uranium Energy didn't earn anything. Analysts forecast th...
Key Points Uranium Energy lost money in Q2. The uranium miner was still able to sell its uranium significantly above average prices last quarter. 10 stocks we like better than Uranium Energy › Uranium Energy (NYSEMKT: UEC) stock jumped 6.6% through 10:35 a.m. ET Tuesday after reporting in-line earnings this morning -- and by in-line, I mean Uranium Energy didn't earn anything. Analysts forecast the uranium miner would lose $0.03 per share in its fiscal Q2 2026, and that's exactly what happened. On sales, Uranium Energy generated $20.2 million from uranium sales at an average price of $101 per pound. 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 » Uranium Energy Q2 "earnings" Uranium spot prices averaged $80.76 per pound in Q2, and are sitting at $85.90 per pound today, according to data from TradingEconomics.com. Uranium Energy, however, got prices better than either of these numbers by selling its uranium at times of its choosing, unhedged. Looking at the chart, I'm guessing most of its sales took place on Jan. 29, when uranium prices briefly passed $101 per pound before immediately plunging to... right about where the price is today. What's curious about Uranium Energy is that the company has a low-cost production strategy. According to management, it costs Uranium Energy only about $44.14 to produce a pound of uranium, and it produced 45,743 pounds of the stuff last quarter. Can Uranium Energy earn a profit? What's more, its costs are falling -- and production is increasing. Uranium Energy produced most of its uranium from just two "header houses" (also known as a wellhead house -- the place where leached uranium is extracted from a mine) last quarter. Uranium Energy has four more header houses built now, and is working on three more. It's also cooperating with its engineering contractor, Fluor...
14-inch WUXGA (1920x1200) 16:10 display with touch and pen support (MPP 2.0) AMD Ryzen 200 Series processors paired with AMD Radeon graphics for responsive multitasking and content workflows Durable dark blue aluminium alloy chassis designed to pass MIL-STD-810H methodologies, backed by Dynabook durability testing Wi-Fi 7 and 1 Gigabit Ethernet (RJ-45) for fast, confident connectivity in offices, ...
14-inch WUXGA (1920x1200) 16:10 display with touch and pen support (MPP 2.0) AMD Ryzen 200 Series processors paired with AMD Radeon graphics for responsive multitasking and content workflows Durable dark blue aluminium alloy chassis designed to pass MIL-STD-810H methodologies, backed by Dynabook durability testing Wi-Fi 7 and 1 Gigabit Ethernet (RJ-45) for fast, confident connectivity in offices, classrooms, clinics and government facilities FHD webcam with digital privacy shutter, dual microphones, and collaboration-ready audio A security-forward foundation that includes features such as TPM and Microsoft Pluton, plus optional features like smart card on build-to-order configurations Dynabook Americas, Inc., the gold standard for long-lasting, professional-grade laptops, today announced the new Portégé X45W, a premium 14-inch 2-in-1 convertible laptop designed to deliver productivity and flexibility across modern work environments. The Portégé X45W expands Dynabook's AMD-powered portfolio of mobile computing products, giving customers more choice with AMD Ryzen processing and integrated AMD Radeon graphics."Portégé X45W reflects Dynabook's commitment to delivering professional-grade devices that people can count on, while continuing to expand AMD processor options across our portfolio," said James Robbins, General Manager, Dynabook Americas, Inc. "With a versatile 2-in-1 design, strong everyday performance, and a security-forward foundation, Portégé X45W is built to help organizations standardize on a flexible device that supports productivity and collaboration across business, education, healthcare and public sector environments."The Portégé X45W-M feature AMD Ryzen 200 Series processors with up to 8 high-efficiency cores and integrated Radeon graphics, delivering responsive performance for everyday multitasking, collaboration, and data analysis. Select configurations include an integrated NPU to accelerate on-device AI experiences like smarter conferencing, local...
The US FDA has issued Novo Nordisk a warning letter accusing the company of not complying with reporting requirements for postmarketing adverse event drug reports. The agency conducted an investigation from January-February 2025. Although Novo responded with written responses on several occasions, "it appears that you did not adhere to the applicable statutory requirements...and applicable regulat...
The US FDA has issued Novo Nordisk a warning letter accusing the company of not complying with reporting requirements for postmarketing adverse event drug reports. The agency conducted an investigation from January-February 2025. Although Novo responded with written responses on several occasions, "it appears that you did not adhere to the applicable statutory requirements...and applicable regulations," according to the FDA. "As an application holder of products with active ingredients including semaglutide, liraglutide, nedosiran sodium, and estradiol, [Novo] is required to develop written procedures for the surveillance, receipt, evaluation, and reporting of postmarketing ADEs to FDA." the agency's letter states. "You developed written procedures that failed to ensure that you, and your contractor acting on your behalf, complied with all applicable PADE regulations for the surveillance, receipt, evaluation, and reporting of postmarketing ADEs." Semaglutide is the active ingredient in Wegovy and Ozempic, while liraglutide is the active ingredient in Victoza and Saxenda. More on Novo Nordisk Novo Nordisk: Buying The Dip Before Volume Dominance CagriSema Incident: The Surprise Winner And What It Means For The Novo-Lilly Rivalry Pricing Pressure And Panic: What The Market May Be Missing In Novo Nordisk Novo’s China obesity drug posts positive mid-stage trial results Novo Nordisk board proposes DKK 7.95 final dividend for 2025, initiates DKK 15B buyback
The family of a child critically injured one of Canada’s worst mass shootings is suing OpenAI, arguing the technology company could have prevented the attack on a school last month. The lawsuit comes days after the head of OpenAI said he would apologize to the families of a remote Canadian town after violence shattered the tight-knit community. Eight people – including five school students, aged 1...
The family of a child critically injured one of Canada’s worst mass shootings is suing OpenAI, arguing the technology company could have prevented the attack on a school last month. The lawsuit comes days after the head of OpenAI said he would apologize to the families of a remote Canadian town after violence shattered the tight-knit community. Eight people – including five school students, aged 12 to 13, and a 39-year-old teaching assistant – were killed by an 18-year-old shooter in the mountain town of Tumbler Ridge on 10 February. It later emerged that the shooter, Jesse Van Rootselaar, who died of a self-inflicted injury, had described violent scenarios involving guns to ChatGPT over several days in June, which an automated review system flagged, according to the Wall Street Journal. But OpenAI, which owns the chatbot, said it felt the account activity did not identify “credible or imminent planning” and so banned Van Rootselaar’s account, but did not notify authorities in Canada. The company later said it found a second account linked to the shooter after the first was suspended. On Monday, Cia Edmonds filed a lawsuit against the company on behalf of herself and her two daughters, Maya and Dahlia Gebala, both of whom were present during the shooting. “The purpose of this lawsuit is to learn the whole truth about how and why the Tumbler Ridge mass shooting happened, to impose accountability, to seek redress for harms and losses, and to help prevent another mass-shooting atrocity in Canada,” the law firm Rice Parsons Leoni & Elliott LLP, which is representing the family, said in a statement. The allegations have not been tested in court. Maya, 12, was shot three times. One bullet entered her head above her left eye and another hit her neck. A third bullet grazed her cheek and part of her ear, the lawsuit says. She remains in hospital after suffering a catastrophic traumatic brain injury, permanent cognitive and physical disability, right-sided hemiplegia, scarrin...
TLDR TSMC reported combined January–February 2026 revenue of NT$718.91 billion, up ~30% year-over-year. February revenue alone hit NT$317.66 billion — down 20.8% from January but up 22.2% from a year ago. AI chip demand from Apple, Nvidia, and AMD continues to drive growth. TSMC approved a quarterly dividend of NT$6.0 per share and authorized ~$45B in capital spending. The company said it sees no ...
TLDR TSMC reported combined January–February 2026 revenue of NT$718.91 billion, up ~30% year-over-year. February revenue alone hit NT$317.66 billion — down 20.8% from January but up 22.2% from a year ago. AI chip demand from Apple, Nvidia, and AMD continues to drive growth. TSMC approved a quarterly dividend of NT$6.0 per share and authorized ~$45B in capital spending. The company said it sees no meaningful impact from U.S.-Israel-Iran tensions and is monitoring the situation. 💥 Find the Next KnockoutStock! Get live prices, charts, and KO Scores from KnockoutStocks.com , the data-driven platform ranking every stock by quality and breakout potential. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSM) kicked off 2026 with a strong two-month revenue report, fueled by relentless AI infrastructure spending from its biggest clients. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited, TSM TSMC said combined revenue for January and February 2026 reached NT$718.91 billion — a jump of roughly 30% compared to the same period last year. That’s a number that speaks for itself. February revenue came in at NT$317.66 billion. That’s down about 21% from January’s figure, but still up 22.2% compared to February 2025. The month-over-month dip isn’t unusual. January tends to run higher due to order timing, and the year-over-year comparison is what analysts pay closer attention to. TSM stock rose about 1% in early Tuesday trading following the release, with customers Nvidia (NVDA) and AMD (AMD) also ticking higher — up 1.53% and 1.21% respectively. Apple (AAPL) gained 0.51%. The revenue growth reflects continued demand for advanced chips used in AI servers and data centers. TSMC manufactures for some of the biggest names in tech, and those clients have not been pulling back on orders. Capital Spending and Dividends In February, TSMC’s board approved a quarterly dividend of NT$6.0 per share — a move that signals confidence in its financial position. The company also authorized approximatel...
Backed by TPG Rise Climate, Climate Adaptive Infrastructure, and Greenbelt Capital Partners, IPX debuts with 4.4 GW solar and 8.8 GWh storage portfolio SAN FRANCISCO, March 10, 2026--(BUSINESS WIRE)--IPX Power, an independent power producer that develops, owns, and operates some of the largest clean energy resources in the U.S. today announced its formation as an independent company. IPX was carve...
Backed by TPG Rise Climate, Climate Adaptive Infrastructure, and Greenbelt Capital Partners, IPX debuts with 4.4 GW solar and 8.8 GWh storage portfolio SAN FRANCISCO, March 10, 2026--(BUSINESS WIRE)--IPX Power, an independent power producer that develops, owns, and operates some of the largest clean energy resources in the U.S. today announced its formation as an independent company. IPX was carved out from Intersect Power following the sale of Intersect to Google. IPX owns a large portfolio of clean energy assets serving utilities and other customers across California and Texas, including 4.4 GW of solar PV and 8.8 GWh of battery storage in construction or operation. Within the portfolio, IPX is constructing one of the largest battery storage systems in the world. The team has a multi-gigawatt pipeline of solar and battery storage across several high-quality projects in various stages of development. IPX and its mission continue to be supported by existing investors, including a majority investment by TPG Rise Climate, Climate Adaptive Infrastructure, and Greenbelt Capital Partners. David L. Brochu, an accomplished industry CEO and former senior advisor for Intersect, has been appointed Chief Executive Officer. "I am incredibly proud to stand alongside this world-class organization, whose grit and expertise have created a true powerhouse in the energy sector," said David Brochu, IPX Power CEO. "Building on this foundation, we are on track to construct and bring to operation billions of dollars in new assets, including the world’s largest battery energy storage system, and gigawatts of new generation." "Under the new IPX brand and with the existing team, the company continues to be well positioned to meet rapidly growing power needs across the country," said Ed Beckley, Managing Partner of TPG Rise Climate. "IPX has become a differentiated IPP with some of the largest clean power assets in the U.S. We look forward to continuing our support of IPX as it brings online...
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) may be one of the most recognized names in technology, but the stock’s dramatic run from near $24 a year ago to about $46 today has outpaced underlying reality. Short sellers appear to agree. The latest short interest data shows another increase, and the stock remains the most shorted Dow Jones industrial. ... Why Short Sellers Are Betting Against Intel (INTC), the Most Shorte...
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) may be one of the most recognized names in technology, but the stock’s dramatic run from near $24 a year ago to about $46 today has outpaced underlying reality. Short sellers appear to agree. The latest short interest data shows another increase, and the stock remains the most shorted Dow Jones industrial. ... Why Short Sellers Are Betting Against Intel (INTC), the Most Shorted Dow Stock