Amprius Technologies ( AMPX ) has made agreements with some holders of its public warrants, which allow them to buy shares of the company's common stock at an exercise price of $11.50 each. These public warrants will be exchanged for shares of common stock. The company plans to issue 2.73M shares in return for 7.13M public warrants, leading to 62% fewer shares being issued than if the warrants wer...
Amprius Technologies ( AMPX ) has made agreements with some holders of its public warrants, which allow them to buy shares of the company's common stock at an exercise price of $11.50 each. These public warrants will be exchanged for shares of common stock. The company plans to issue 2.73M shares in return for 7.13M public warrants, leading to 62% fewer shares being issued than if the warrants were fully exercised. The closing of these exchanges is expected on May 18, 2026, pending standard conditions. More on Amprius Technologies Amprius Technologies, Inc. 2026 Q1 - Results - Earnings Call Presentation Amprius Technologies, Inc. (AMPX) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript Amprius: Energy Density As A Weapon System Amprius forecasts at least $130M 2026 revenue while advancing warrant exchange to reduce dilution Amprius Technologies reports mixed Q1 results; updates FY26 outlook
Pakistan has imported its second shipment of liquefied natural gas from the Persian Gulf in a week, showing how Islamabad is leveraging its newfound geopolitical influence to ease an energy crunch. The South Asian country received its latest cargo on Friday, according to ship-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg, after negotiating its passage with Iran. The two shipments totaled about 160,000 tons....
Pakistan has imported its second shipment of liquefied natural gas from the Persian Gulf in a week, showing how Islamabad is leveraging its newfound geopolitical influence to ease an energy crunch. The South Asian country received its latest cargo on Friday, according to ship-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg, after negotiating its passage with Iran. The two shipments totaled about 160,000 tons. No other countries have received LNG that’s passed through the Strait of Hormuz since the start of the Iran war in late February, although there are currently two gas carriers on the way to China and Japan. Pakistan, which is facing severe fuel shortages, appears to have benefited from its role as the key mediator in talks between Tehran and Washington to end the war. The country has used its close ties with Saudi Arabia, Iran, the US and China to provide a communication channel between the parties. “Friendly countries are helping Pakistan,” Petroleum Minister Ali Pervaiz Malik told reporters on Monday. The “highest level of leadership from Pakistan, Qatar, Iran and the US made it possible for Pakistan to get LNG supply via Hormuz,” he said. The near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz — a conduit for a fifth of global LNG exports — has choked supplies of the super-chilled fuel, leading to shortages across Asia. Pakistan has been particularly hard-hit, suffering from blackouts and higher energy costs that have added pressure on an already fragile economy. Read More: Second Qatari LNG Tanker Exits Hormuz After Going Dark Islamabad has also been using its diplomatic sway to secure other types of fuel. Pakistan bought around 6 million barrels of US crude for the first time, Malik said in a statement on Thursday. The country has also arranged diesel shipments from Kuwait routed through Hormuz. Still, the handful of LNG shipments from Qatar is far below Pakistan’s pre-war imports. The country imported 500,000 tons of LNG in February, ship-tracking data shows. The government is maki...
Insight with Haslinda Amin, a daily news program featuring in-depth, high-profile interviews and analysis to give viewers the complete picture on the stories that matter. The show features prominent leaders spanning the worlds of business, finance, politics and culture. (Source: Bloomberg)
Insight with Haslinda Amin, a daily news program featuring in-depth, high-profile interviews and analysis to give viewers the complete picture on the stories that matter. The show features prominent leaders spanning the worlds of business, finance, politics and culture. (Source: Bloomberg)
Ciprian Alexandru/iStock via Getty Images The following segment was excerpted from The Broyhill Q1 2026 Letter. It's hard not to be uber bullish when stocks are enjoying a once-in-a-century acceleration in innovation, resulting in a surge in productivity and corporate profits. But as it turns out, we are actually witnessing a twice-in-a-century acceleration in innovation, as the opening quote of t...
Ciprian Alexandru/iStock via Getty Images The following segment was excerpted from The Broyhill Q1 2026 Letter. It's hard not to be uber bullish when stocks are enjoying a once-in-a-century acceleration in innovation, resulting in a surge in productivity and corporate profits. But as it turns out, we are actually witnessing a twice-in-a-century acceleration in innovation, as the opening quote of this letter was first delivered by Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan in January 2000. As they say, history doesn't repeat, but. . . Top Contributors Valvoline ( VVV ) was our largest contributor in the quarter. While the market spent its days hallucinating about the terminal value of artificial intelligence, Valvoline went on quietly changing oil, opening new stores, while moving more cars through its bays than any other competitor in the industry. Since we've owned it, shares have exhibited significantly more volatility than the business itself, but what matters is that the underlying unit economics are intact, while unit growth, service mix, and price continue moving in the same direction. Honeywell ( HON ) was our second-largest contributor in the quarter. Management accelerated the aerospace spin-off, moving the separation up to the end of June and leaving behind a pure-play automation business. We continue to believe the pieces, including the recently announced Quantinum IPO, are worth meaningfully more than the whole. Upcoming Investor Days are the next chance for the market to do the math. Ball Corporation ( BALL ) rounded out our top three contributors during the quarter. When we initially acquired the position, our thesis centered around the company's post-aerospace-divestiture status, which left it a pure-play packaging company well positioned to return significant capital to investors. As the thesis played out, we sold into the re-rating and redeployed proceeds into more attractive opportunities. Top Detractors IQVIA ( IQV ) was our largest detractor despite fund...