Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ: SMCI) has surged more than 460% over the past five years. However, it hasn't come without stomach-churning volatility along the way. That's at least partly due to the company's tendency to find itself embroiled in controversy. Most recently, the U.S. Justice Department indicted three company employees, including one of the company's co-founders, on charges of conspiri...
Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ: SMCI) has surged more than 460% over the past five years. However, it hasn't come without stomach-churning volatility along the way. That's at least partly due to the company's tendency to find itself embroiled in controversy. Most recently, the U.S. Justice Department indicted three company employees, including one of the company's co-founders, on charges of conspiring to smuggle $2.5 billion in Nvidia GPU artificial intelligence (AI) chips to China, in violation of the Export Control Reform Act. Sometimes, a short-term crisis can become a buying opportunity for long-term investors. Is this one of those moments? Here is what the evidence could be trying to tell you. Continue reading
The war in Iran is testing the dollar’s role as the currency for global oil trade, with one long-term consequence being a potential shift to using more Chinese yuan, according to Deutsche Bank . “The conflict could be the catalyst for erosion in petrodollar dominance and the beginnings of the petroyuan,” Mallika Sachdeva , a strategist at the German lender, wrote in a note on Tuesday, citing media...
The war in Iran is testing the dollar’s role as the currency for global oil trade, with one long-term consequence being a potential shift to using more Chinese yuan, according to Deutsche Bank . “The conflict could be the catalyst for erosion in petrodollar dominance and the beginnings of the petroyuan,” Mallika Sachdeva , a strategist at the German lender, wrote in a note on Tuesday, citing media reports that Iran is allowing the passage of ships through the Strait of Hormuz if oil payments are made in yuan. China, a long-time partner of Iran, is also the nation’s biggest oil customer. Further fault lines in the petrodollar regime could have “significant downstream effects” to the dollar’s use in global trade and savings, as well as its role as the world’s reserve currency, according to the research report. China meanwhile has accelerated its efforts to boost the yuan’s global profile, challenging the dominance of the dollar in global trade and finance. The petrodollar arrangement can be traced back to 1974, when Saudi Arabia agreed to price oil in US dollars and invest surpluses in dollar assets, in exchange for security guarantees from Washington. Saudi Arabia, however, now sells four times as much oil to China as to the US. Gulf countries have also been experimenting with forms of non-dollar payment infrastructure such as Project mBridge. The near-halt to ship transits via Hormuz — through which about a fifth of the world’s oil and gas, along with vast amounts food, metals and other materials are shipped every day — has sent the prices of vital commodities soaring. Iran has said foreign ships are allowed to cross the Strait of Hormuz, as long as they aren’t supporting acts of aggression against the country and follow regulations put in place by Tehran.
Fortescue Executive Chairman Andrew Forrest is urging the US and Iran to find an off-ramp quickly to end the war in the Middle East. He speaks to Bloomberg's Stephen Engle at the annual Boao Forum for Asia in Hainan. (Source: Bloomberg)
Fortescue Executive Chairman Andrew Forrest is urging the US and Iran to find an off-ramp quickly to end the war in the Middle East. He speaks to Bloomberg's Stephen Engle at the annual Boao Forum for Asia in Hainan. (Source: Bloomberg)
A father of seven is in jitters as loans taken from illegal moneylenders in Malaysia by his ex-wife led to loan sharks knowing details of his entire family. “What’s most concerning is that they have information on all my children, including my six-month-old baby,” said the man who only wished to be known as Tang, 33. He believes that his 28-year-old former wife had debts of about 130,000 ringgit (...
A father of seven is in jitters as loans taken from illegal moneylenders in Malaysia by his ex-wife led to loan sharks knowing details of his entire family. “What’s most concerning is that they have information on all my children, including my six-month-old baby,” said the man who only wished to be known as Tang, 33. He believes that his 28-year-old former wife had debts of about 130,000 ringgit (US$32,871) with loan sharks. The couple, who divorced seven years ago, have five children. “Four of...