"I can't believe it," Cox said, as he was handed his rosette. "It's just wonderful for this breed. He's the dog of a lifetime. He's really, really special."
"I can't believe it," Cox said, as he was handed his rosette. "It's just wonderful for this breed. He's the dog of a lifetime. He's really, really special."
Track your investments for FREE with Simply Wall St, the portfolio command center trusted by over 7 million individual investors worldwide. BYD (SEHK:1211) has launched a new ultra-fast charging blade battery designed to reach high charge levels in minutes. The company is pairing the battery rollout with an ambitious plan to deploy thousands of flash-charging stations. The move targets a key pain ...
Track your investments for FREE with Simply Wall St, the portfolio command center trusted by over 7 million individual investors worldwide. BYD (SEHK:1211) has launched a new ultra-fast charging blade battery designed to reach high charge levels in minutes. The company is pairing the battery rollout with an ambitious plan to deploy thousands of flash-charging stations. The move targets a key pain point for electric vehicle users, focusing on shorter charging times and wider charging access. BYD, a major electric vehicle and battery producer, is putting charging speed at the center of its latest push in the EV sector. The new ultra-fast blade battery and planned flash-charging network arrive as automakers look for ways to make EV ownership feel closer to the convenience of refueling a conventional car. For investors watching SEHK:1211, this development is part of broader industry efforts to improve battery technology and charging infrastructure. For investors, the key question is how this charging initiative could influence EV adoption, brand perception and battery supply relationships over time. The scale and execution pace of the planned charging network, along with real-world performance of the new batteries, will be important signals to track as the situation develops. Stay updated on the most important news stories for BYD by adding it to your watchlist or portfolio. Alternatively, explore our Community to discover new perspectives on BYD. SEHK:1211 Earnings & Revenue Growth as at Mar 2026 We've flagged 1 risk for BYD. See which could impact your investment. For BYD, a battery that can move from 10% to 70% charge in about five minutes, tied to a target of 20,000 flash-charging stations, goes straight at two pressure points in the EV sector: charging convenience and infrastructure coverage. This launch also lands just after BYD reported year to date sales volume of 400,241 units versus 623,384 a year earlier, and production of 407,638 units versus 661,988, which ...
Over the past three years, investors identified a major opportunity in the tech space: artificial intelligence (AI) stocks. They piled into these players, betting on this technology's ability to revolutionize how business is done -- the idea is that AI could save companies time and money and supercharge growth. On top of this, investors also cheered a lower interest rate environment -- the Federal...
Over the past three years, investors identified a major opportunity in the tech space: artificial intelligence (AI) stocks. They piled into these players, betting on this technology's ability to revolutionize how business is done -- the idea is that AI could save companies time and money and supercharge growth. On top of this, investors also cheered a lower interest rate environment -- the Federal Reserve began lowering rates in 2024 and continued doing so last year. This is positive for both companies and households, as it reduces their borrowing costs. In the case of households, this leaves them with more money to spend elsewhere, such as on products or services offered by companies. All of this favors earnings strength. Buoyed by all of this, the S&P 500 delivered three consecutive years of double-digit gains and reached multiple record highs in this bull market. But, at the same time, one potential headwind was gradually picking up. Fed chair Jerome Powell spoke of it back in September, and today that warning is ringing out loud and clear. Let's check it out and take a look at what history says may happen next. Continue reading
Find your next quality investment with Simply Wall St's easy and powerful screener, trusted by over 7 million individual investors worldwide. Chewy (NYSE:CHWY) has appointed Christopher S. Deppe as its new Chief Financial Officer. Deppe steps into the role after holding senior finance positions at Chewy and previously at Amazon. The CFO transition represents a material change in Chewy's executive ...
Find your next quality investment with Simply Wall St's easy and powerful screener, trusted by over 7 million individual investors worldwide. Chewy (NYSE:CHWY) has appointed Christopher S. Deppe as its new Chief Financial Officer. Deppe steps into the role after holding senior finance positions at Chewy and previously at Amazon. The CFO transition represents a material change in Chewy's executive leadership and financial oversight. Chewy's new CFO arrives at a time when the stock has faced sustained pressure, with the share price at $25.43 and negative returns over 1 year, 3 years, and 5 years. NYSE:CHWY is down 23.7% over the past year and 70.3% over five years, which keeps investor attention firmly on how management is running the business and allocating capital. For investors, a CFO change often raises questions about future priorities, from cost discipline to investment in growth initiatives. Deppe's background at both Chewy and Amazon will be important to consider when monitoring any changes in financial practices and internal rigor through upcoming earnings reports and corporate updates. Stay updated on the most important news stories for Chewy by adding it to your watchlist or portfolio. Alternatively, explore our Community to discover new perspectives on Chewy. NYSE:CHWY 1-Year Stock Price Chart Does the team leading Chewy have what it takes? See our full breakdown of the management team's track record and compensation. Quick Assessment ✅ Price vs Analyst Target : At US$25.43, Chewy trades about 43% below the US$44.27 analyst price target. ✅ Simply Wall St Valuation : Shares are flagged as trading 61.4% below the estimated fair value. ❌ Recent Momentum: The 30 day return of roughly 9.2% decline shows pressure on the share price as the CFO change is announced. There is only one way to know the right time to buy, sell or hold Chewy. Head to the Simply Wall St company report for the latest analysis of Chewy's Fair Value. Key Considerations 📊 A new CFO with inte...
Oil rose over $100 a barrel and US stock futures fell as escalating hostilities in the Middle East and widening stress on oil shipping and infrastructure has global investors braced for more turbulence. The dollar gained. West Texas Intermediate surged 22% to as high as $111.24 a barrel at the open after last week added a record 36%. Oil markets faced the prospect of further upheaval this week as ...
Oil rose over $100 a barrel and US stock futures fell as escalating hostilities in the Middle East and widening stress on oil shipping and infrastructure has global investors braced for more turbulence. The dollar gained. West Texas Intermediate surged 22% to as high as $111.24 a barrel at the open after last week added a record 36%. Oil markets faced the prospect of further upheaval this week as the conflict involving Iran entered its second week, with major producers curbing output, storage hubs nearing capacity and traffic through the Strait of Hormuz effectively halted. US equity-index futures tumbled 1.7% at the open. Asian stocks also looked set to fall. The dollar strengthened against all its Group-of-10 peers on Monday. “This is no longer just about Hormuz being effectively shut, it is about supply disruption spreading deeper into the region,” said Dave Mazza , chief executive officer at Roundhill Financial. “That is the kind of shift that can push already-nervous investors to take more risk off the table.” Selling swept across regions and asset classes last week as the geopolitical flareup added fresh stress to markets that are already under pressure from AI disruptions and worries about the potential for cracks in credit markets. The escalating crisis has left investors caught between the risk of renewed inflation stemming from elevated oil prices and signs of cooling in the US labor market that may strengthen the case for monetary easing. On Sunday, Iran pressed attacks on Mideast neighbors, while Israel struck fuel depots in Tehran and threatened the Islamic Republic’s power grid. President Donald Trump warned the US would consider targeting areas that weren’t previously aimed for. The attacks will continue “until they surrender or, more likely, completely collapse!” he said in a social media post. The Cboe Volatility Index, a gauge of implied price swings in the S&P 500 known as the VIX, surged toward 30 on Friday, pushing the spot price above its three...
Oil spiked above $100 a barrel as more major producers curbed production due to the war in Iran, with President Donald Trump threatening to deepen the conflict that’s upended global energy markets. West Texas Intermediate surged as much as 15% to $104.61 a barrel at the open after last week adding a record 36%. Brent climbed above $102. The United Arab Emirates and Kuwait have started reducing out...
Oil spiked above $100 a barrel as more major producers curbed production due to the war in Iran, with President Donald Trump threatening to deepen the conflict that’s upended global energy markets. West Texas Intermediate surged as much as 15% to $104.61 a barrel at the open after last week adding a record 36%. Brent climbed above $102. The United Arab Emirates and Kuwait have started reducing output as the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed and storage fills up. Iraq began shutting in production last week. The war in the Middle East is showing no signs of abating after US and Israeli strikes on Iran more than a week ago. The halt to shipping through Hormuz and attacks on energy infrastructure have driven up prices of crude and natural gas, and traders are now warning that $100 a barrel oil is imminent. More than a dozen countries have been sucked into the fray and the conflict has stoked fears of an inflation crisis. US retail gasoline prices have jumped to the highest level since August 2024, posing a significant challenge to Trump and his party at midterm elections later this year. Still, Trump is pushing ahead with the war, and in a social media post early Saturday, said the US will consider striking areas and groups of people in Iran that were not previously considered targets. The remarks came after Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian vowed not to back down. More major energy infrastructure was threatened over the weekend, with Saudi Arabia intercepting and destroying drones heading to the 1-million barrel a day Shaybah oil field. Last week, the kingdom was forced to halt operations at the Ras Tanura refinery, the country’s biggest, and is seeking to divert barrels to its Red Sea ports for export after the Hormuz closure. US Mulls Idea of Special Operation to Seize Iran’s Uranium Iran Picks Khamenei’s Son as Next Supreme Leader, Fars Says Tehran Engulfed in Fire, Smoke and Acid Rain Following Strikes US Said to Order Diplomats in Saudi Arabia to Leave...
Ford Motor Company has stopped production of several electric vehicles and de-emphasized a former large portion of its growth strategy. In a recent interview, Ford CEO Jim Farley says he would have done things differently. Ford CEO Has Some Regrets Serving as CEO of Ford since October 2020, Farley has guided the company through periods of growth, but also watched profitability hurt by focusing on ...
Ford Motor Company has stopped production of several electric vehicles and de-emphasized a former large portion of its growth strategy. In a recent interview, Ford CEO Jim Farley says he would have done things differently. Ford CEO Has Some Regrets Serving as CEO of Ford since October 2020, Farley has guided the company through periods of growth, but also watched profitability hurt by focusing on electric vehicle unit growth. Farley sees electric vehicles as a future point of growth, but right now, the company is focused on hybrids and gas-powered vehicles and profitability. "I totally would've done it differently. I mean, look, we didn't know what we didn't know," Farley said when asked about the F-150 Lightning not going as planned by Car and Driver. Don't Miss: Farley said Ford had electric vehicles that people loved, but they "were never going to pay the cost we put into the vehicle." The Ford CEO says the COVID-19 pandemic gave automotive companies a "false signal," allowing them to sell vehicles at 30% to 40% higher prices. One key moment for Farley in realizing that Ford had missed on electric vehicles was when he ripped apart a Tesla Inc vehicle with Ford's Chief Officer for EVs Doug Field, who previously worked at the rival automotive company. "I was just absolutely flabbergasted. The Mach-E's wiring harness was 70 pounds heavier and 1.6 kilometers longer." Farley does share some success for electric vehicles during the interview, including the Puma Gen-E, which he said is one of the top-selling electric vehicles in the United Kingdom. That vehicle, though, wouldn't have the same success in the United States, according to Farley, due to its size and price. In the United States, the F-150 Lightning was the bestselling electric pickup truck in 2025 and beat Cybertruck for many months while both were in production. In 2025, Ford sold 27,307 F-150 Lightnings, while Tesla sold 20,237 Cybertrucks. The difference between the two vehicles was likely profitability: ...
"Each time we have reached out to the public, we've been provided with some lines of inquiry to follow up on, but unfortunately none have proven to be the key to finding out who this person is," said Ponting, who was on call the day the man's body was found and has led the case ever since.
"Each time we have reached out to the public, we've been provided with some lines of inquiry to follow up on, but unfortunately none have proven to be the key to finding out who this person is," said Ponting, who was on call the day the man's body was found and has led the case ever since.
David Morrissey stars in this tense, shrewd crime drama, as a strange headteacher whose wife has gone missing. It’s a hugely taut show which will totally subvert your preconceptions What is Gone? Easier, perhaps, to list the things that Gone is not, if only to give ourselves something to cling to when the more familiar trappings begin to wobble, fault lines appear and everything starts sliding int...
David Morrissey stars in this tense, shrewd crime drama, as a strange headteacher whose wife has gone missing. It’s a hugely taut show which will totally subvert your preconceptions What is Gone? Easier, perhaps, to list the things that Gone is not, if only to give ourselves something to cling to when the more familiar trappings begin to wobble, fault lines appear and everything starts sliding into a pit of churning unease. So! Some things that Gone is not: a sitcom, a musical, a cooking show presented by sockless men with forearms like hams, a thing about whales, Richard Osman’s House of Games. Yes, George “Hijack” Kay’s six-part series is ostensibly a crime drama about the disappearance of the well-heeled wife of a private school headteacher. But this is merely the sales pitch to get it through the front door; behind the blandishments squirm a multitude of wrigglier, trickier things. Things such as the nature of guilt and co-dependence, the burden of professional expectation, preoccupied schoolboys, the banality of evil and unusually large dalmatians uncovering corpses in glades (“Casper …?! OH GOD”). It is an exceedingly rum do: a huge, confounding and shrewdly elusive thing. Every hideously tense second is weighted with the sense that something Profound and/or Awful is about to rear up from the bracken and thwack us in our preconceptions. Continue reading...
The former Conservative minister Zac Goldsmith is launching a new sports radio station, trkradio, in the run-up to the men’s football World Cup this summer. The Track Radio Corporation is understood to have been granted a licence by Ofcom last week, with Goldsmith and his brother Ben, a financier and environmentalist, the major investors. Trkradio is due to go to air for the first time next month,...
The former Conservative minister Zac Goldsmith is launching a new sports radio station, trkradio, in the run-up to the men’s football World Cup this summer. The Track Radio Corporation is understood to have been granted a licence by Ofcom last week, with Goldsmith and his brother Ben, a financier and environmentalist, the major investors. Trkradio is due to go to air for the first time next month, with the station’s presenters and other financial backers to be confirmed over the next few weeks. Sources involved in the launch told the Guardian that the station will feature a mix of reflective conversation about all sports with ambitions to offer broader content than staple football phone-ins, as well as playing music. The day-to-day running of trkradio will be led by Iain Macintosh, formerly the head of UK audio at the Athletic, and the former LBC commercial director Jonathan Arendt. Trkradio will join a competitive market for sports fans dominated by the BBC’s Radio 5 Live and Radio 5 Sports Extra, and TalkSport, which has operated two channels for the last decade. Zac Goldsmith resigned as a Foreign Office minister in June 2023, over what he described as the “apathy” towards the environment shown by Rishi Sunak’s government. The men’s World Cup, which is being co-hosted by Mexico, the US and Canada, begins on 11 June, with the final on 19 July.
Holliday Grainger’s superlative drama, and its focus on shady digital practices, has never looked more timely. Its latest series is a seriously impressive feat Last month, the Guardian reported on an arrest made by police in Southampton. Automated facial recognition software had identified the likely perpetrator of a burglary 100 miles away in Milton Keynes; the cops had a photo of the robber, and...
Holliday Grainger’s superlative drama, and its focus on shady digital practices, has never looked more timely. Its latest series is a seriously impressive feat Last month, the Guardian reported on an arrest made by police in Southampton. Automated facial recognition software had identified the likely perpetrator of a burglary 100 miles away in Milton Keynes; the cops had a photo of the robber, and now they had found a match. The trouble was, not only was the arrested guy not the real culprit but, apart from them both being of south Asian heritage, the two men didn’t even look alike . Only one had a beard, and they were noticeably different in age. The algorithm couldn’t be trusted. Fans of the superlative BBC conspiracy thriller The Capture might have read the story and let out a dry chuckle. Although it deals with bigger problems than one unfortunate guy unfairly spending time in a cell, the drama exists in a world bedevilled by opaque online systems and unreliable digital imagery. Every day something in our modern reality chimes with it, whether it’s dodgy data firms getting government contracts or your mum’s Instagram being overrun by AI videos of dogs with five legs. It’s a good time for The Capture to come back. Continue reading...
Professor Pan Guang has spent decades focused on Jewish studies, the Middle East and its ties with China. Among his many roles, Pan is founding director of a research centre on the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation For other interviews in the Open Questions series, click here Amid recent events in Iran, how do you assess the impact on China? Will China’s “petroyuan” settlement encounter problems, ...
Professor Pan Guang has spent decades focused on Jewish studies, the Middle East and its ties with China. Among his many roles, Pan is founding director of a research centre on the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation For other interviews in the Open Questions series, click here Amid recent events in Iran, how do you assess the impact on China? Will China’s “petroyuan” settlement encounter problems, and what of the risks to the Belt and Road Initiative ’s infrastructure assets? Advertisement Overall, the strikes on Iran do have some impact on China, but the impact is limited. There will be no changes regarding oil trade settlement in yuan . On the contrary, it could be increasingly favourable to China. There is little the US can do about this. Countries need to spend money to buy goods, and there is no way to prevent that. As for belt and road risks, the greater concern lies with the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor . Pakistan and Afghanistan are in serious conflict , and that is what worries me most. As for Iran, once the fighting ends, it ends; there will not be much impact. The US will not occupy Iran. There will be no impact on the port of Haifa in Israel, the refinery in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, or the metro project in Tel Aviv.
Xi Hints At More Top Purges, Issues Warning To 'Corrupt Elements' In Chinese Army One of the big themes to come out of China over the past several months (and even years) has been Chinese President Xi Jinping's (apparently ongoing) sweeping purge of PLA military command ranks on the basis of "corruption" - or rather what is most probably perceived disloyalty . Already there's been several top dism...
Xi Hints At More Top Purges, Issues Warning To 'Corrupt Elements' In Chinese Army One of the big themes to come out of China over the past several months (and even years) has been Chinese President Xi Jinping's (apparently ongoing) sweeping purge of PLA military command ranks on the basis of "corruption" - or rather what is most probably perceived disloyalty . Already there's been several top dismissals including the firings of multiple members of the Central Military Commission (CMC) and dozens of generals - some even placed under house arrest, as well as a broad purge of the Chinese Communist Party. Xi this weekend hinted there could be more to come , freshly warning Saturday during a speech to delegates from the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) and the People’s Armed Police that disloyalty to the party - or else selfish dealings and corruption - will not be tolerated . "There must be no place in the military for those who are disloyal to the party, nor any place for corrupt elements," Xi said . He then called for strict oversight in "key areas such as fund flows, the exercise of power, and quality control" during the country's next five-year plan which is set to be approved later this month . Here's more of what he said via Chinese state sources : It is essential to fully strengthen the Party's leadership and Party building in the military, and make Party organizations at all levels even stronger, Xi said, stressing the need to translate the Party's leadership strength into development momentum. It is important to consolidate the ideological foundation that ensures officers and soldiers follow the Party and its guidance , and ensure that modern weaponry and equipment are placed in the hands of politically committed personnel , Xi said. A former CIA analyst who follows Chinese elite politics, Christopher K. Johnson, recently told the NY Times of the ongoing purge trend : "This move is unprecedented in the history of the Chinese military and represents the total anni...
Weeks ago, a group of Kazakh bankers traveled to Hong Kong to lay the groundwork for a series of yuan-denominated bond deals that could take place later in the year. The cohort met with Chinese investors and made presentations, according to people familiar, who asked not to be identified discussing private matters. The meetings in early 2026 have coincided with plans by Chinese bankers to launch b...
Weeks ago, a group of Kazakh bankers traveled to Hong Kong to lay the groundwork for a series of yuan-denominated bond deals that could take place later in the year. The cohort met with Chinese investors and made presentations, according to people familiar, who asked not to be identified discussing private matters. The meetings in early 2026 have coincided with plans by Chinese bankers to launch bond offerings for entities in Kazakhstan and other Central Asian nations, the people said, pointing to a broader shift. The events underscore how years of diplomatic engagement, alongside a boom in trade, are intensifying capital flows between China and Central Asia. In a milestone for financial ties, Kazakhstan — the region’s biggest economy — is planning to sell its debut yuan panda bonds as early as next month and may seek to raise the equivalent of $500 million. President Xi Jinping launched the sprawling Belt and Road infrastructure initiative in Kazakhstan more than a decade ago. But Beijing started to make deeper inroads into the region as sanctions sidelined Russia after its invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and as China sought out new markets during the trade spat started by US President Donald Trump. China’s foreign direct investment in the mineral- and energy-rich Central Asian region has surged over 10 years to nearly $36 billion, according to a December 2025 report from the Eurasian Development Bank. Kazakhstan remains the largest recipient of Chinese FDI at $11.4 billion. As the US-Israeli war against Iran threatens to disrupt the supply of Middle Eastern oil to the broader Asian region including China — the world’s biggest buyer — there’s increased focus on other exporters that ship the fuel. Albeit a small player, Kazakhstan is one among them. A deepening financial relationship matters for both sides. It dovetails with Xi’s longer-term push to internationalize the yuan and could help China tighten its grip on strategic resources such as uranium, and rare earths — ...
If you're a Lucid Group (LCID 0.71%) investor, how you feel about last year could depend on whether you're a glass-half-full person or a half-empty person. The half-empty types would note that Lucid slashed its workforce after a difficult year that involved supply chain struggles and production ramping slower than anticipated, amid a volatile electric vehicle (EV) market. The half-full types would...
If you're a Lucid Group (LCID 0.71%) investor, how you feel about last year could depend on whether you're a glass-half-full person or a half-empty person. The half-empty types would note that Lucid slashed its workforce after a difficult year that involved supply chain struggles and production ramping slower than anticipated, amid a volatile electric vehicle (EV) market. The half-full types would point out that Lucid managed to set its eighth consecutive quarter of record deliveries and grew full-year deliveries more than 50%. If you're a glass-half-full person, a little more good news just got reported. Lucid is managing some production woes In 2025, Lucid struggled with accelerating the production of its Gravity until later in the year, facing supply chain disruptions as well as rising costs as tariffs and policy changes pressured the industry. Despite the struggles, Lucid managed to produce roughly 18,300 vehicles in 2025, which was more than double the prior year's output. Unfortunately, for investors, despite accelerating Gravity production later in the year, Lucid expects its production growth to slow during 2026. It's important that investors note the difference between production declines and production growth slowing. Lucid expects to produce between 25,000 and 27,000 vehicles in 2026, with the highly anticipated Gravity making up the majority. That means investors can expect production growth of about 40% to 50%, much slower than the prior year's growth. The good news for Lucid On the bright side, Lucid is poised to get a sales boost from Tesla's discontinuation of its Model S sedan and Model X crossover during the second quarter. Those models compete respectively with Lucid's Air sedan and Gravity crossover. "I think we are the natural successor of those two vehicles and we are certainly seeing an uptick in customer inquiries from Model S and Model X owners," interim CEO Marc Winterhoff said, according to Automotive News. A little more good news is that ...
In 1999, Mojtaba went to Qom, a holy city which is considered an important centre of Shia theology, to continue his religious studies. It is notable that he did not wear clerical clothing until this time, and it is unclear why he decided to attend a seminary at 30, as it is more usual to do so in one's younger years.
In 1999, Mojtaba went to Qom, a holy city which is considered an important centre of Shia theology, to continue his religious studies. It is notable that he did not wear clerical clothing until this time, and it is unclear why he decided to attend a seminary at 30, as it is more usual to do so in one's younger years.
Everyone should save money for retirement, since programs such as Social Security aren't meant to replace workers' entire income and face potential cuts. Building a big nest egg for your post-work life by buying stocks is very possible, but it requires patience, investing in the right companies, and a disciplined buy-and-hold approach. Which stocks should you consider that could help you grow your...
Everyone should save money for retirement, since programs such as Social Security aren't meant to replace workers' entire income and face potential cuts. Building a big nest egg for your post-work life by buying stocks is very possible, but it requires patience, investing in the right companies, and a disciplined buy-and-hold approach. Which stocks should you consider that could help you grow your wealth to several million dollars by the time you retire (assuming a 30-year investment horizon)? Let's consider one biotech company that's worth a second look: Vertex Pharmaceuticals (VRTX 0.86%). Why Vertex can pull it off Now, assuming an initial investment of $100,000, it would take a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 10.5% to grow it to $2 million in 30 years. Maintaining a CAGR of that size over three decades is no easy feat, but buying a stock like Vertex Pharmaceuticals, which has excellent prospects, is a good start. Consider the company's commercial opportunity over the next 13 years or so. Vertex dominates the market for drugs treating a rare disease called cystic fibrosis (CF), which causes thick mucus to build up in the lungs and disrupts breathing. The biotech company's most important products in this niche, Trikafta and Alyftrek, will lose patent exclusivity in 2037 and 2039, respectively. True, CF is a rare disease with only about 112,000 patients in the geographies Vertex targets. However, those patients are now living longer, partly thanks to the company's breakthroughs, and they typically take medicine for their entire lives, so they remain in Vertex's ecosystem. And there are still quite a few patients Vertex can target through new approvals and label expansions. Expand NASDAQ : VRTX Vertex Pharmaceuticals Today's Change ( -0.86 %) $ -3.97 Current Price $ 456.85 Key Data Points Market Cap $116B Day's Range $ 450.94 - $ 459.72 52wk Range $ 362.50 - $ 519.68 Volume 59K Avg Vol 1.4M Gross Margin 86.32 % Before the sun sets on Vertex's vast CF opportuni...
Key Points Intellia Therapeutics is getting around a recent major regulatory setback. However, the stock still faces several potential issues. 10 stocks we like better than Intellia Therapeutics › Cathie Wood, the CEO of the investment management firm Ark Invest, is known for focusing on companies with significant innovative potential. One of her firm's picks, Intellia Therapeutics (NASDAQ: NTLA),...
Key Points Intellia Therapeutics is getting around a recent major regulatory setback. However, the stock still faces several potential issues. 10 stocks we like better than Intellia Therapeutics › Cathie Wood, the CEO of the investment management firm Ark Invest, is known for focusing on companies with significant innovative potential. One of her firm's picks, Intellia Therapeutics (NASDAQ: NTLA), fits the bill. Intellia is a mid-cap biotech company specializing in gene editing and developing medicines for diseases for which few exist. The drugmaker has already performed exceptionally well this year, with shares up 47%. Should investors consider purchasing shares of Intellia Therapeutics after this run? 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 » Why Intellia's shares are soaring Intellia Therapeutics' two leading pipeline candidates are lonvo-z and nex-z. The former is an investigational treatment for hereditary angioedema, a rare condition that causes painful episodes of swelling across the body, including on the limbs and face. Nex-z targets transthyretin amyloidosis, a genetic disease that results in the malfunctioning of the transthyretin protein and can cause a range of life-threatening cardiovascular issues. Last year, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) put two phase 3 studies for nex-z on clinical hold after a patient died in one of them due to liver failure. Here's the good news: The FDA has now lifted these clinical holds and allowed Intellia Therapeutics to move forward with its clinical studies. Since the stock fell following these negative developments last year, it's not surprising to see it bounce back while the biotech takes a giant step toward putting these issues in the rearview mirror. Reasons to be cautious about Intellia Therapeutics Despite the good news, there a...