A Hong Kong court has denied bail to internet personality “Mr Ho” after he pleaded guilty to stabbing his 45-year-old wife “Mrs Ho” in a domestic violence dispute that escalated into a criminal case. The District Court on Wednesday heard that Ho Huen, 79, pleaded guilty to attacking his 45-year-old wife Ye Xiuding, known as Mrs Ho, with a folding knife as she was leaving their home for mainland Ch...
A Hong Kong court has denied bail to internet personality “Mr Ho” after he pleaded guilty to stabbing his 45-year-old wife “Mrs Ho” in a domestic violence dispute that escalated into a criminal case. The District Court on Wednesday heard that Ho Huen, 79, pleaded guilty to attacking his 45-year-old wife Ye Xiuding, known as Mrs Ho, with a folding knife as she was leaving their home for mainland China. Both Mr and Mrs Ho were charged with unlawfully and maliciously wounding each other during a fight at the lobby of a public housing estate on May 30 last year. Advertisement Judge Stanley Chan Kwong-chi said before a public gallery packed with observers that a custodial sentence was unavoidable, revoking Ho’s bail until June 3 for sentencing, pending a psychological report. The couple’s relationship entered the public eye after they appeared on a prime-time television programme in 2024, sharing their love story and displaying luxurious gifts, which sparked debate over their eligibility for public housing. Advertisement The internet-famous couple married in March 2024, but their relationship deteriorated as they became involved in domestic disputes that allegedly turned violent, with Mrs Ho repeatedly expressing her wish for a divorce.
Ирина Мещерякова/iStock via Getty Images In a market environment driven predominantly by a small group of large-cap growth and technology companies, the Alps Sector Dividend Dogs ETF ( SDOG ) offers investors a more defensive, income-focused alternative by investing in high-yield, lower-valuation blue chips. While the fund offers investors attractive income generation, lower valuations, and reason...
Ирина Мещерякова/iStock via Getty Images In a market environment driven predominantly by a small group of large-cap growth and technology companies, the Alps Sector Dividend Dogs ETF ( SDOG ) offers investors a more defensive, income-focused alternative by investing in high-yield, lower-valuation blue chips. While the fund offers investors attractive income generation, lower valuations, and reasonable risk-adjusted returns through its Dogs of the Dow methodology, the strategy's defensive composition and limited exposure to secular growth drivers continue to constrain long-term upside potential. Given other available dividend ETF options that provide a better overall return profile at a lower expense ratio, I currently assign a 'Hold' rating to SDOG. Dogs of the Dow Theory The Dogs of the Dow Theory (abbreviated herein as DOTD) was popularized in the 1991 book Beating the Dow , by Michael B. O'Higgins. In its simplest form, the strategy involves buying the highest dividend-yielding stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average ( DJIA ) at the start of a given year. The idea is that the blue-chip companies selected are considered to be "dogs" due to recent underperformance, leading to lower prices and, as a result, higher dividend yields. Contrarian in nature, the thinking is that these current out-of-favor underperformers will recover and outperform over the long term. This strategy has historically been attractive during periods of elevated valuations and market uncertainty, as the methodology naturally tilts towards more mature, cash-generating companies trading at lower-valuation multiples. According to O'Higgins , "[DOTD] was intended to help nonprofessionals to have investment success by spending less than fifteen minutes a year reconfiguring their portfolios and spending the rest of their time at their professions." While there are both proponents and skeptics of the theory, there have been periods in which the strategy has proved effective. For a more in-depth cr...
MoMo Productions/DigitalVision via Getty Images Investment thesis Stryker ( SYK ) reported a disappointing quarter after a cyberattack temporarily disrupted manufacturing and shipments, leading investors to fear that growth was deteriorating. However, the weak Q1 results were more operational than structural, as management maintained full-year guidance and emphasized that demand remains healthy. T...
MoMo Productions/DigitalVision via Getty Images Investment thesis Stryker ( SYK ) reported a disappointing quarter after a cyberattack temporarily disrupted manufacturing and shipments, leading investors to fear that growth was deteriorating. However, the weak Q1 results were more operational than structural, as management maintained full-year guidance and emphasized that demand remains healthy. That said, while I believe the post-earnings selloff initially created an attractive opportunity, much of that weakness has already been recovered, and the current valuation looks more reasonable than compelling. I'd prefer to wait for a more attractive entry point before becoming more bullish on the stock, as I believe the brief pullback toward $280 offered a very compelling IRR, but it didn't last long. More than medical devices Stryker sells medical devices that hospitals use daily, from orthopedic implants and surgical equipment to hospital beds and robotic-assisted surgery systems. This seems key to me because it creates very high switching costs for its customers, as they end up having the entire hospital ecosystem integrated with Stryker products. Like Apple for hospitals, if you want to look at it that way. Segments (Stryker) At the most recent Bank of America Healthcare conference, management caught my attention with its "Smart Hospital" strategy, where products like hospital beds, communication software, and operating room equipment are all connected (hence my analogy with Apple). This shows that the company is trying to deepen customer relationships beyond traditional devices to become almost irreplaceable. We call it Smart Care, the smart hospital. So you're bringing workflow technology and ambient visualization together ... When you think of you walk in an operating room, the lights, the table, all the products around it, it's all Stryker. And we want to connect that ecosystem, sharing that data and providing that information for better care. Spencer Stiles, Pre...
TLDRs; Microsoft shares fell as rising Treasury yields pressured high-growth AI and tech valuations across markets. Strong Azure cloud expansion and AI demand continue, but investor sentiment is weakened by higher rates. Heavy AI infrastructure spending raises concerns about near-term margins despite long-term revenue optimism. Microsoft remains a key AI trade proxy as markets balance growth poten...
TLDRs; Microsoft shares fell as rising Treasury yields pressured high-growth AI and tech valuations across markets. Strong Azure cloud expansion and AI demand continue, but investor sentiment is weakened by higher rates. Heavy AI infrastructure spending raises concerns about near-term margins despite long-term revenue optimism. Microsoft remains a key AI trade proxy as markets balance growth potential against macro pressure. Microsoft shares edged lower in Tuesday trading as a broader selloff in technology stocks unfolded amid rising U.S. Treasury yields. The stock slipped around 1.4% during the session, reflecting growing caution among investors who are increasingly sensitive to interest rate movements. The 10-year Treasury yield climbed to its highest level since early 2025, intensifying pressure on high-growth equities. Rising yields typically reduce the present value of future earnings, a dynamic that disproportionately impacts large-cap technology firms like Microsoft that are valued heavily on long-term growth expectations. Broader markets also weakened, with the Nasdaq Composite, S&P 500, and Dow Jones all closing lower as rate concerns overshadowed corporate earnings optimism. Azure Growth Remains a Key Driver Despite the stock’s decline, Microsoft’s underlying cloud business continues to show strong momentum. Azure, the company’s flagship cloud platform, is still expanding at a robust pace, driven by rising enterprise demand for AI computing power and cloud infrastructure. Microsoft Corporation, MSFT Microsoft has increasingly positioned itself as a central player in the global AI buildout. Its cloud ecosystem, including Azure and AI-driven tools like Copilot, continues to attract large-scale enterprise adoption. Analysts note that Azure’s growth remains one of the strongest pillars supporting Microsoft’s long-term valuation narrative. The company’s revenue base has also continued to expand, with its cloud division representing a significant portion of over...
Nvidia Corp (NASDAQ:NVDA) is scheduled to report its first-quarter earnings on Wednesday. A top analyst said that investors are increasingly focused not on whether the chipmaker beats expectations, but whether CEO Jensen Huang can convince Wall Street that the AI infrastructure boom still has years of growth ahead. AI Supercycle Faces Its Biggest Test Yet In a statement to Benzinga, Daniel Newman,...
Nvidia Corp (NASDAQ:NVDA) is scheduled to report its first-quarter earnings on Wednesday. A top analyst said that investors are increasingly focused not on whether the chipmaker beats expectations, but whether CEO Jensen Huang can convince Wall Street that the AI infrastructure boom still has years of growth ahead. AI Supercycle Faces Its Biggest Test Yet In a statement to Benzinga, Daniel Newman, CEO of The Futurum Group, said Nvidia's upcoming earnings report is "the most consequential print of the AI cycle," arguing the company's guidance and commentary now matter more than the quarter itself. "The market has priced the company as the central nervous system of the AI economy," Newman said, adding that investors are now watching whether the AI spending surge can continue into fiscal 2028 and beyond. Wall Street expectations have climbed above Nvidia's own guidance for the first time in this AI cycle, with analysts looking for roughly $80 billion in quarterly revenue and about $86 billion in the second-quarter guidance. According to Newman, "A clean $80B+ print is necessary. It is not sufficient." Read Also: Ross Gerber Says 'Pay Attention' To Nvidia And Micron As Jensen Huang Predicts AI Explosion Blackwell, Rubin And China In Focus Investors are also closely monitoring Nvidia's transition from its Blackwell AI platform to next-generation Rubin systems. Newman said the key risk is whether customers delay Blackwell purchases while waiting for Rubin, potentially creating a temporary slowdown in orders. However, he noted Nvidia's annual product cadence is designed to avoid such disruptions. The analyst also highlighted China as a major wildcard after reports suggested Washington earlier this month cleared limited H200 chip sales to some Chinese firms. "Any language on the call about timing, framework, or unit economics for a China re-entry path is the single biggest variable for the stock," Newman said. Why Nvidia Earnings Could Move The Entire AI Market The analyst ...
Co-Diagnostics ( CODX ) announced a private placement agreement with institutional investors to sell 1.65M shares of common stock, or pre-funded warrants in lieu of shares, along with warrants to purchase up to 3.29M additional shares. The accompanying warrants carry an exercise price of $1.571 per share, are exercisable immediately and expire after five years. The gross proceeds are estimated to ...
Co-Diagnostics ( CODX ) announced a private placement agreement with institutional investors to sell 1.65M shares of common stock, or pre-funded warrants in lieu of shares, along with warrants to purchase up to 3.29M additional shares. The accompanying warrants carry an exercise price of $1.571 per share, are exercisable immediately and expire after five years. The gross proceeds are estimated to be ~$3M. The offering is expected to close on or about May 21, 2026. The stock price jumped about 11% on Tuesday during after-market hours of trading. More on Co-Diagnostics Co-Diagnostics, Inc. (CODX) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript Co-Diagnostics, Inc. (CODX) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript Co-Diagnostics anticipates filing FDA 510(k) in the third quarter as CoSara expands TAM to approximately $13B Co-Diagnostics GAAP EPS of -$4.06 misses by $0.31, revenue of $0.15M misses by $0.01M Seeking Alpha’s Quant Rating on Co-Diagnostics
Nvidia (NVDA 0.79%) has held the title of world's most valuable company for nearly a year now, after first claiming it in June 2024 and then trading places with Apple and Microsoft. That's a testament to both the power of the AI boom and Nvidia's own success in dominating the market for data center GPUs, the chips that have been the building blocks for the AI revolution. In fiscal 2026, which ende...
Nvidia (NVDA 0.79%) has held the title of world's most valuable company for nearly a year now, after first claiming it in June 2024 and then trading places with Apple and Microsoft. That's a testament to both the power of the AI boom and Nvidia's own success in dominating the market for data center GPUs, the chips that have been the building blocks for the AI revolution. In fiscal 2026, which ended in January, Nvidia reported 65% revenue growth to $215.9 million, and 65% profit margins, equal to a $120.1 billion net income. No company this big has ever grown revenue this fast, with such high profit margins. Nvidia is no longer the top-performing AI stock. That mantle has been passed to memory chip stocks like Micron and Sandisk, and CPU makers like Intel and AMD, who are set to benefit from the era of agentic AI. However, Nvidia is still easily beating the S&P 500 this year, and the stock recently topped $5.5 trillion in market cap, though it's since pulled back slightly from there. Nvidia will report first-quarter earnings after hours on Wednesday, and with the company's current market cap at $5.34 trillion, a strong enough reaction could drive the stock past the $6 trillion mark. What to expect from Nvidia's Q1 Remarkably, Nvidia's revenue has accelerated over the last two quarters, underscoring the strength of demand for its chips and dispelling any notion of an AI bubble. In the first quarter, Wall Street analysts see its revenue growth to 79.6% to $79.1 billion, and adjusted earnings per share more than doubling from $0.81 to $1.77. That may seem like a high bar to top, but commentary from CEO Jensen Huang and reports from its peers have made it clear that business remains brisk. There are now multiple bottlenecks across the AI supply chain, which are both driving prices higher and showing that demand is rapidly growing. Nvidia also sees gross margin improving to 74.9%-75% in the first quarter, reflecting higher prices. Nvidia has a strong track record of beati...
Richard Newstead | Flickr | Getty Images U.K. inflation eased to 2.8% in April, preliminary data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed on Wednesday. Economists polled by Reuters had expected the inflation rate to drop back to 3%, cooling from 3.3% in March, largely due to an energy price cap introduced by the U.K.'s energy regulator Ofgem on April 1. Consumer prices are expected to ...
Richard Newstead | Flickr | Getty Images U.K. inflation eased to 2.8% in April, preliminary data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed on Wednesday. Economists polled by Reuters had expected the inflation rate to drop back to 3%, cooling from 3.3% in March, largely due to an energy price cap introduced by the U.K.'s energy regulator Ofgem on April 1. Consumer prices are expected to continue to increase, however, as higher energy costs due to the Iran war continue to materialize. "There was a notable fall in annual inflation led by lower electricity and gas prices. This was due to the Government's energy bill support package reducing variable and fixed tariffs, along with lower global wholesale energy prices before the conflict in the Middle East, which fed through to the reduction in the Ofgem cар," Grant Fitzner, chief economist at the ONS, commented on X on Wednesday. Smaller rises in water and sewage bills and road tax than were seen last year also helped pull the rate down, Fitzner said. Food prices, particularly for chocolate and meat products, and the price of package holidays drove inflation down further. "These were only partially offset by a further increase in petrol and diesel prices, and an uptick in the cost of clothing and footwear," he said. watch now VIDEO 6:47 06:47 UK inflation slows, but is it only a brief respite? Squawk Box Europe The government has come under pressure for not doing more to mitigate higher energy costs in the U.K., a net energy importer, and for not fully exploiting remaining oil and gas reserves in the North Sea. Chancellor Rachel Reeves is expected to announce sweeping reforms to give parliament authority to approve critical energy schemes, the U.K.'s Treasury said early Wednesday, Reuters reported. BOE in focus The Bank of England is keeping a close eye on price rises, as well as so-called "second round" effects, such as workers demanding higher wages and businesses raising costs for consumers, and has said it ...