I’ve been digging through the SpaceX S-1 filing for hours, and one number deserves its own spotlight in every TSLA model: Tesla’s beneficial ownership of SpaceX Class A common stock. I’m not going to waste your time with a huge article about this. I thought you needed to know right way, so here are the ... Tesla Owns Nearly 19 Million Shares of SpaceX: What TSLA Investors Need to Know Before the I...
I’ve been digging through the SpaceX S-1 filing for hours, and one number deserves its own spotlight in every TSLA model: Tesla’s beneficial ownership of SpaceX Class A common stock. I’m not going to waste your time with a huge article about this. I thought you needed to know right way, so here are the ... Tesla Owns Nearly 19 Million Shares of SpaceX: What TSLA Investors Need to Know Before the IPO
The recent hantavirus outbreak on a small cruise ship was a reminder of the hidden threats posed by deadly pathogens. Little did we know that at the same time, an outbreak of a strain of the highly fatal Ebola viral disease may have been circulating undetected for several weeks in northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo in central Africa. It is now reported to have killed at least 136, with hund...
The recent hantavirus outbreak on a small cruise ship was a reminder of the hidden threats posed by deadly pathogens. Little did we know that at the same time, an outbreak of a strain of the highly fatal Ebola viral disease may have been circulating undetected for several weeks in northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo in central Africa. It is now reported to have killed at least 136, with hundreds of infections or suspected cases. Early detection of deadly viruses is difficult in regions where malaria, typhoid and other illnesses associated with fever are common, and health systems are stretched thin. After declaring the Ebola outbreak an international public health emergency – the second-highest level of global alert – World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus expressed deep concern about the scale and speed of the epidemic at the World Health Assembly in Geneva. No vaccine or therapeutic treatment exists for the Bundibugyo strain of the Ebola virus responsible for the latest outbreak of the haemorrhagic disease. Advertisement The direct threat of an outbreak in Hong Kong remains low, but the authorities are still applying the lessons of previous pandemics and epidemics. The city has never had a case of Ebola, which has killed more than 15,000 people in Africa in the last half-century, and there are no direct flights between Hong Kong and the DR Congo or Uganda, which has reported at least two cases. Advertisement That said, there are frequent business exchanges between some mainland Chinese cities and central Africa.
In recent weeks, Apple has reported record quarterly results, previewed extensive Apple Intelligence and Siri upgrades, and reshaped its hardware organization as it prepares for a CEO handover to John Ternus later this year. These developments highlight how Apple is trying to pair a growing, high-margin services and AI ecosystem with leadership change and tighter silicon–device integration to rein...
In recent weeks, Apple has reported record quarterly results, previewed extensive Apple Intelligence and Siri upgrades, and reshaped its hardware organization as it prepares for a CEO handover to John Ternus later this year. These developments highlight how Apple is trying to pair a growing, high-margin services and AI ecosystem with leadership change and tighter silicon–device integration to reinforce its competitive position. We’ll now examine how Apple’s accelerated Apple Intelligence rollout and Siri overhaul could influence that existing investment narrative for the company. We've uncovered the 10 dividend fortresses yielding 5%+ that don't just survive market storms, but thrive in them. Apple Investment Narrative Recap To own Apple today, you have to believe its core hardware franchise and expanding, higher margin services plus AI stack can keep reinforcing each other, even as leadership passes from Tim Cook to John Ternus. Recent news around Apple Intelligence, Siri upgrades and record results all feed into that thesis. The key near term catalyst remains successful AI driven upgrades across iPhone and iPad, while the biggest risk is still mounting regulatory and legal pressure on App Store and services economics. So far, this week’s headlines do not materially change that balance. Among the latest announcements, Apple’s wave of Apple Intelligence powered accessibility features is most relevant. It shows how tightly AI is being woven into the device and services ecosystem across iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV and Vision Pro, potentially reinforcing upgrade interest and services engagement ahead of the Siri overhaul. For investors focused on AI as a driver of Apple’s next product cycle, this kind of deep, system level integration is where the near term story increasingly lives. Yet despite the optimism around Apple Intelligence, investors should be aware that growing antitrust scrutiny of the App Store and services fees could... Read the full narrative on Apple (i...
In recent weeks, Apple has reported record quarterly results, previewed extensive Apple Intelligence and Siri upgrades, and reshaped its hardware organization as it prepares for a CEO handover to John Ternus later this year. These developments highlight how Apple is trying to pair a growing, high-margin services and AI ecosystem with leadership change and tighter silicon–device integration to rein...
In recent weeks, Apple has reported record quarterly results, previewed extensive Apple Intelligence and Siri upgrades, and reshaped its hardware organization as it prepares for a CEO handover to John Ternus later this year. These developments highlight how Apple is trying to pair a growing, high-margin services and AI ecosystem with leadership change and tighter silicon–device integration to reinforce its competitive position. We’ll now examine how Apple’s accelerated Apple Intelligence rollout and Siri overhaul could influence that existing investment narrative for the company. We've uncovered the 10 dividend fortresses yielding 5%+ that don't just survive market storms, but thrive in them. Apple Investment Narrative Recap To own Apple today, you have to believe its core hardware franchise and expanding, higher margin services plus AI stack can keep reinforcing each other, even as leadership passes from Tim Cook to John Ternus. Recent news around Apple Intelligence, Siri upgrades and record results all feed into that thesis. The key near term catalyst remains successful AI driven upgrades across iPhone and iPad, while the biggest risk is still mounting regulatory and legal pressure on App Store and services economics. So far, this week’s headlines do not materially change that balance. Among the latest announcements, Apple’s wave of Apple Intelligence powered accessibility features is most relevant. It shows how tightly AI is being woven into the device and services ecosystem across iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV and Vision Pro, potentially reinforcing upgrade interest and services engagement ahead of the Siri overhaul. For investors focused on AI as a driver of Apple’s next product cycle, this kind of deep, system level integration is where the near term story increasingly lives. Yet despite the optimism around Apple Intelligence, investors should be aware that growing antitrust scrutiny of the App Store and services fees could... Read the full narrative on Apple (i...
Several States Contest Federal Orders Keeping Coal-Fired Power Plants Open Authored by John Haughey via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours), A three-judge federal appeals panel is expected to issue a decision by year’s end on a lawsuit challenging Energy Secretary Chris Wright’s May 2025 emergency order that prevented a Michigan utility from closing a 64-year-old coal-fired power plant. The R.M. Schah...
Several States Contest Federal Orders Keeping Coal-Fired Power Plants Open Authored by John Haughey via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours), A three-judge federal appeals panel is expected to issue a decision by year’s end on a lawsuit challenging Energy Secretary Chris Wright’s May 2025 emergency order that prevented a Michigan utility from closing a 64-year-old coal-fired power plant. The R.M. Schahfer Generating Station’s two-coal fired electricity generators in Wheatfield, Indiana, built in 1983 and 1986, were scheduled to close on Dec. 31, 2025, but remain operating under emergency orders issued by Energy Secretary Chris Wright. Northern Indiana Public Service Company How the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia rules in Michigan v. DOE after hearing May 15 oral arguments could prove precedential in deciding three similar cases–including two before the same court . It could also resolve a May 9 lawsuit filed in Seattle’s U.S. District Court by 16 Democratic state attorneys general who claim the emergency that President Donald Trump declared in his January 2025 National Energy Emergency executive order doesn’t exist. Wright has issued five 2025 emergency orders under Section 202(c) of the Federal Power Act mandating that decades-old coal-fired generators in Michigan, Washington, Indiana, and Colorado, slated to be shut down by utilities, must continue operating or, at least, remain operable. This would assure that regional transmission electrical grids have the baseload capacity to provide enough power during extreme winter and summer weather stresses, the orders say. The secretary maintains he has the authority to do so under the president’s National Energy Emergency declaration and his April 2025 executive orders supporting the coal industry and strengthening the nation’s electrical grid. Wright, in public comments and in Fiscal Year 2027 budget hearings, maintains that the orders—90-day emergency mandates he’s repeatedly reissued—have prevented the ...
(RTTNews) - The Japanese stock market has finished lower in five straight sessions, plunging almost 3,400 points or 5.8 percent in that span. The Nikkei sits just above the 59,800-point plateau although it may finally catch a break on Thursday. The global forecast for the Asian markets is broadly positive, thanks to sinking crude oil prices and support from the technology sectors. The European and...
(RTTNews) - The Japanese stock market has finished lower in five straight sessions, plunging almost 3,400 points or 5.8 percent in that span. The Nikkei sits just above the 59,800-point plateau although it may finally catch a break on Thursday. The global forecast for the Asian markets is broadly positive, thanks to sinking crude oil prices and support from the technology sectors. The European and U.S. markets were sharply higher on Wednesday and the Asian bourses are expected to follow that lead. The Nikkei finished sharply lower on Wednesday following losses from the financial shares, automobile producers and technology companies. For the day, the index tumbled 746.18 points or 1.23 percent to finish at 59,604.41 after trading between 59,292.25 and 60,567.27. Among the actives, Nissan Motor dipped 0.14 percent, while Mazda Motor skidded 1.17 percent, Toyota Motor shed 0.51 percent, Honda Motor perked 0.04 percent, Softbank Group crashed 6.01 percent, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial tumbled 2.51 percent, Mizuho Financial collected 1.39 percent, Sumitomo Mitsui Financial slumped 1.01 percent, Mitsubishi Electric plunged 4.53 percent, Sony Group surrendered 3.06 percent, Panasonic Holdings cratered 4.35 percent and Hitachi sank 0.73 percent. The lead from Wall Street is strong as the major averages opened slightly higher on Wednesday but accelerated throughout the day, ending at session highs. The Dow spiked 645.47 points or 1.31 percent to finish at 50,009.35, while the NASDAQ jumped 399.65 points or 1.54 percent to end at 26,270.36 and the S&P 500 climbed79.36 points or 7,432.97. The rally on Wall Street came on a steep drop by treasuries yields, which pulled back sharply, with the yield on the benchmark ten-year note plunging from its highest levels in well over a year. The sharp drop in crude oil prices also contributed to the rise on Wall Street, thanks to increasing diplomatic measures to secure an agreement to end their hostilities between the United States and Iran....
"We have examples of cases where a case has been struck out [because] the judge has said it's no longer possible to have a fair trial. My real concern is whether cases are going to be struck out because of the delays themselves."
"We have examples of cases where a case has been struck out [because] the judge has said it's no longer possible to have a fair trial. My real concern is whether cases are going to be struck out because of the delays themselves."
If you hold a tokenized share of Amazon through Ondo Finance, you can now vote in Amazon's shareholder meetings directly from your crypto wallet. That was not possible six months ago. It is the kind of parity with traditional markets that the tokenized equity space has been promising for years, and ...
If you hold a tokenized share of Amazon through Ondo Finance, you can now vote in Amazon's shareholder meetings directly from your crypto wallet. That was not possible six months ago. It is the kind of parity with traditional markets that the tokenized equity space has been promising for years, and ...
In mid-May 2026, a proposed class-action lawsuit was filed in federal court in Seattle alleging Amazon unlawfully passed on later-invalidated IEEPA tariffs to customers on imported goods bought between February 2025 and February 2026, while separate investor advocates urged votes against four Amazon directors over the exclusion of shareholder proposals on issues including AI governance. At the sam...
In mid-May 2026, a proposed class-action lawsuit was filed in federal court in Seattle alleging Amazon unlawfully passed on later-invalidated IEEPA tariffs to customers on imported goods bought between February 2025 and February 2026, while separate investor advocates urged votes against four Amazon directors over the exclusion of shareholder proposals on issues including AI governance. At the same time, Amazon is pushing deeper into AI-enabled cloud and logistics with rapid expansion of its Amazon Now 30‑minute delivery service and new AWS partnerships, sharpening the contrast between its growth initiatives and mounting legal and governance scrutiny. With this context, we’ll examine how the tariff lawsuit and ultra-fast Amazon Now rollout could reshape Amazon’s cloud-and-retail investment narrative. AI is about to change healthcare. These 30 stocks are working on everything from early diagnostics to drug discovery. The best part - they are all under $10b in market cap - there's still time to get in early. Amazon.com Investment Narrative Recap To own Amazon today, you need to believe its cloud and AI engine can keep compounding profits while ultra fast logistics deepen its retail moat. The new tariff class action and governance pushback around AI oversight highlight legal and reputational overhangs, but do not currently alter the core near term catalyst, which is AWS’s AI driven growth, or the primary risk, which is the capital intensive, highly competitive cloud build out. Against that backdrop, the rapid rollout of Amazon Now 30 minute delivery across major US cities is especially relevant, because it ties the legal scrutiny over pricing and consumer treatment directly to Amazon’s most visible fulfillment upgrade. For investors, Amazon Now sits at the intersection of the logistics efficiency catalyst and the key risk that rising labor, infrastructure and automation costs could compress margins if efficiency gains and higher quality revenue do not keep pace. Yet ev...
In mid-May 2026, a proposed class-action lawsuit was filed in federal court in Seattle alleging Amazon unlawfully passed on later-invalidated IEEPA tariffs to customers on imported goods bought between February 2025 and February 2026, while separate investor advocates urged votes against four Amazon directors over the exclusion of shareholder proposals on issues including AI governance. At the sam...
In mid-May 2026, a proposed class-action lawsuit was filed in federal court in Seattle alleging Amazon unlawfully passed on later-invalidated IEEPA tariffs to customers on imported goods bought between February 2025 and February 2026, while separate investor advocates urged votes against four Amazon directors over the exclusion of shareholder proposals on issues including AI governance. At the same time, Amazon is pushing deeper into AI-enabled cloud and logistics with rapid expansion of its Amazon Now 30‑minute delivery service and new AWS partnerships, sharpening the contrast between its growth initiatives and mounting legal and governance scrutiny. With this context, we’ll examine how the tariff lawsuit and ultra-fast Amazon Now rollout could reshape Amazon’s cloud-and-retail investment narrative. AI is about to change healthcare. These 30 stocks are working on everything from early diagnostics to drug discovery. The best part - they are all under $10b in market cap - there's still time to get in early. Amazon.com Investment Narrative Recap To own Amazon today, you need to believe its cloud and AI engine can keep compounding profits while ultra fast logistics deepen its retail moat. The new tariff class action and governance pushback around AI oversight highlight legal and reputational overhangs, but do not currently alter the core near term catalyst, which is AWS’s AI driven growth, or the primary risk, which is the capital intensive, highly competitive cloud build out. Against that backdrop, the rapid rollout of Amazon Now 30 minute delivery across major US cities is especially relevant, because it ties the legal scrutiny over pricing and consumer treatment directly to Amazon’s most visible fulfillment upgrade. For investors, Amazon Now sits at the intersection of the logistics efficiency catalyst and the key risk that rising labor, infrastructure and automation costs could compress margins if efficiency gains and higher quality revenue do not keep pace. Yet ev...
While the majority of children are either fostered, adopted or placed in legal children's homes, local authorities have struggled to find homes for children with the most complex needs - who are often the most expensive to care for. And in around 800 cases in England, councils have turned to unregistered homes, despite the ban on them, according to the Public Accounts Committee.
While the majority of children are either fostered, adopted or placed in legal children's homes, local authorities have struggled to find homes for children with the most complex needs - who are often the most expensive to care for. And in around 800 cases in England, councils have turned to unregistered homes, despite the ban on them, according to the Public Accounts Committee.
Following recent sell-offs, Micron (MU +4.60%) stock saw a day of strong rebound trading on Wednesday. The company's share closed out the day up 4.8% and had been up as much as 5.3% earlier in the session. The S&P 500 index's level ended the day up 1%, and the Nasdaq Composite closed out the day up 1.5%. On the heels of bearish pressures for the broader market, stocks saw a strong rebound in today...
Following recent sell-offs, Micron (MU +4.60%) stock saw a day of strong rebound trading on Wednesday. The company's share closed out the day up 4.8% and had been up as much as 5.3% earlier in the session. The S&P 500 index's level ended the day up 1%, and the Nasdaq Composite closed out the day up 1.5%. On the heels of bearish pressures for the broader market, stocks saw a strong rebound in today's trading. Bullish momentum for the semiconductor trade resumed today, and Micron's share price climbed in conjunction with general market trends. Micron regains ground Semiconductor stocks have been at the center of the broader market's bullish momentum over the last couple of months. While bullish momentum for chip stocks has wavered in recent sessions, investors bought back into top chip stocks in today's session. To put things in perspective, Micron is up roughly 156% year to date -- but it's still down 9% from its lifetime high. Expand NASDAQ : MU Micron Technology Today's Change ( 4.60 %) $ 32.12 Current Price $ 730.86 Key Data Points Market Cap $788B Day's Range $ 700.70 - $ 735.40 52wk Range $ 90.93 - $ 818.67 Volume 1.5M Avg Vol 45M Gross Margin 58.54 % Dividend Yield 0.07 % What's next for Micron? As the strongest player in the high-performance memory chip market, Micron has become one of the most important tech stocks when it comes to shaping momentum for the broader market. The demand outlook for the company's high-bandwidth-memory (HBM) chips for use in conjunction with AI processors remains very promising, but investors should understand that the chip specialist's valuation could face pressures if bullish momentum in the broader chip space falters.