Bulios Welcome to Bulios! Unique investing platform combining exclusive content and community. https://bulios.com/ en bulios-article-262682 Thu, 23 Apr 2026 15:35:18 +0200 Boeing’s “other” growth story: satellites quietly scale while jets stay in the spotlight Boeing has been in the headlines in recent years mainly because of the 737 MAX problems, debt and a reputational crisis in commercial aviation. Meanwhile, a part of the company that hardly makes it into mainstream debates - the satellite and space business - is growing in the background. It is now taking on concrete shape: Boeing, along with subsidiary Millennium Space Systems, is launching a new satellite platform, Resolute, and is aiming for 26 satellite deliveries in 2026, which would be the highest output since 2000.

The move is not just a cosmetic announcement of a new product line. It is a combination of two trends: structural growth in demand for satellite infrastructure for defense and internet connectivity, and Boeing's efforts to diversify revenue beyond cyclical aircraft.

Top points of the analysis

  • Boeing plans to deliver 26 satellites in 2026, up from 11 in 2025 - more than double the growth and the highest rate since the beginning of the century.

  • Resolute's new mid-class platform targets the intermediate segment: more powerful than small satellites, but faster and more flexible than traditional "big" programs, which fits well with current defense and communications contracts.

  • Production relies on a combination of Boeing payload/mission know-how and Millennium Space Systems' rapid, modular manufacturing, which uses common products and a repeatable manufacturing architecture.

  • The entire segment is part of the Defense, Space & Security division, which had 2025 fourth-quarter revenues of $7.4 billion but still negative margins due to troubled programs - satellites can help margins gradually lift.

  • Global demand for satellite infrastructure for defense and connectivity is growing: constellation for secure comms, ISR, broadband; Boeing explicitly targets growing backlog in these segments.

  • Importantly for investors, this is relatively more capital efficient growth than rolling out a new generation of transport aircraft - smaller programs, shorter cycle, better risk allocation.

What has changed: from single satellites to a scalable platform

Until recently, the satellite business at $BA was more a collection of individual large projects - from classic geostationary telecommunications satellites to complex defense systems that had multi-year development times and high risk of budget overruns. A typical example is the large 702 series platforms, including the 702MP+ for high performance satellites like ViaSat-3, where Boeing provides a robust but challenging infrastructure for broadband coverage.

Now comes Resolute - a mid-class satellite platform designed to fill the gap between small, rapidly deployable satellites and large, slow programs. The platform is designed for missions that "need more capability than a traditional small sat, but more speed and flexibility than a typical large satellite program." In practice, this means a modular approach: common avionics with flight history, common products from Millennium, the ability to quickly configure for communications, sensing or other missions, and support for multiple orbital paths (LEO, MEO, GEO as needed).

The key change is in the production logic. Boeing and Millennium are investing in production line integration, component standardisation and 'repeatable manufacturing' - this is to enable larger batches of satellites to be produced with shorter lead times and lower unit cost. The goal is to move satellites from a piece-rate custom production mode to one that is more akin to an automobile or aircraft assembly line: fewer unique configurations, more standardised blocks.

From a business point of view, this is a response to a growing backlog of orders. Boeing openly says that the satellite division faces a growing number of orders from the defense sector and from Internet connectivity customers - and that current capacity would not be sufficient without expansion. The focus on Resolute is to help turn backlog into revenue faster: if you can deliver 26 satellites a year instead of ~11, you accelerate contract turnover and, of course, cash flow.

What needs to work for this transition to work

  • In practice, Resolute must offer the promised trade-off: enough performance for more demanding missions, but with shorter delivery times and lower risk than large programs.

  • Integration with Millennium must actually increase capacity and not end up in "powerpoint synergy".

  • Defense and commercial customers must embrace Resolute as the preferred standard for their mid-class programs to meet the 26 delivery plan and continued growth.

Sources of growth and potential numbers

1) Increase in delivery volumes

The basic idea is simple: increase the number of satellite deliveries from 11 in 2025 to 26 in 2026. That's more than double. Even if the average value per satellite is lower than that of the large geostationary platforms, in aggregate this means a significant increase in revenue for the satellite division.

Let's consider a very rough illustration: if the average mid-class satellite (for defence/communications) carries a value in the order of 50-150 Mio. USD 50-150 per unit including integration and services, 26 deliveries means potential annual revenues of roughly USD 1.3-3.9 billion in the satellite segment alone, versus ~USD 0.5-1.5 billion with 11 satellites. The actual numbers will depend on the mix of missions, orbits, and scope of services, but the direction is clear: the satellite business can be a meaningful fraction of the defense and space division, not just a marginal item.

2) Better margins through standardization

The second source is margin potential. The Defense, Space & Security division had 37% revenue growth in Q4 2025, but still a negative operating margin of around -6.8%, due to troubled programs like KC-46A and other fix-price contracts. Resolute-type satellites are by definition based on repeatable products and "flight-proven avionics", which reduces technical and budgetary risk.

Each successive series of satellites produced on a similar platform improves the experience and spreads the fixed costs over a larger volume. If the budget and schedule can be kept, mid-class satellites can achieve decent double-digit margins and pull the entire BDS division out of the red and toward zero and then into the black.

3) The intermingling of defense and commercial contracts

The third driver is the client mix. Boeing explicitly mentions two main sources of demand: defense and Internet connectivity. On the defense side, it's communications and sensor satellites for various branches of the armed forces - here Boeing has long-standing relationships and can offer Resolute as a faster, more flexible next-generation solution. On the commercial side, it's for providers of satellite internet, mobile backhaul networks or specialised data services for which a combination of capacity, low latency and reliability is important.

If Boeing can unify these needs on a single platform in Resolute, it gains scale: the same or similar core hardware can serve both defense and commercial customers, reducing unit costs and improving pricing power. In the short term, this results in a better distribution of risk between the public and private sectors; in the long term, it creates a standard on which other contracts will be layered.

The figures that support this thesis

  • Planned satellite deliveries: 26 in 2026, 11 in 2025.

  • Highest planned number of satellites since 2000.

  • BDS (Defense, Space & Security) backlog: ~$84.8 billion at the end of 2025, satellites are one part of the space portfolio.

  • BDS Q4 2025: revenues of USD 7.4bn, +37% growth but operating loss of -507mn. USD -507%, margin -6.8%.

  • Boeing's total backlog: record ~682 billion USD at end 2025, including more than 6,100 aircraft; satellite business is one of the few segments within BDS where there is currently demand growth without major "legacy" issues.

Interpretation: Boeing has a large backlog in BDS but also negative margins due to several heavy programs. Resolute and scaling satellite production are some of the few steps that can improve the mix in the short term - adding growth that is not automatically associated with billions more in depreciation.

Future potential: how big can the satellite business be

The global satellite market has been changing in recent years from a few mega-projects to hundreds to thousands of satellites in constellations, often in low orbit. From military communications and exploration to broadband internet and IoT, nations and businesses are increasing their reliance on satellite infrastructure. This is creating a long-term, growing addressable market where there is room not just for Starlink-type mega-constellations, but also for "mid-range" modular satellites, just as Resolute is targeting.

Boeing stresses on its website that Resolute is designed for multi-orbit missions and is intended to be "another option" for customers who need neither the smallest cubesats nor giant GEO platforms. This opens the door for it to missions where a combination of performance and speed of delivery is critical - for example, tactical communications networks, radar mapping, regional security projects or specialised commercial services.

From an investment perspective, the potential is twofold:

  • Absolute revenue growth - if Boeing maintains a pace of ~20-30 deliveries per year and an average mid-class satellite value in the tens to low hundreds of millions of USD, the satellite segment could generate units of billions of revenue per year within a few years.

  • "Mix effect" on BDS margins - the satellite business has a chance to have better risk-adjusted margins than some of the problematic fixed-price programs in BDS. As its share of revenues grows, this could move overall BDS margins from negative towards zero and beyond.

Moreover, synergistic opportunities are emerging in the long term: a combination of satellites, communications systems, ground infrastructure and services - a complete "space-enabled" solution for governments and large clients. The more satellites Boeing can deliver quickly and at a reasonable price, the better its chances of winning complex contracts that cover the entire chain from hardware production to operations and service.

How big is the market and how much of it can Boeing bite off

Estimates are that the global market for satellite manufacturing, integration and services will grow to $60-80 billion a year by the end of the decade, if you include defense, communications constellations, Earth observation and specialized data services. Of this, the mid-class segment - that is, satellites larger than cubesats but smaller than traditional GEO "monsters" - may account for about a third, or $20-25 billion per year, as governments and companies move to larger fleets of rapidly deployable satellites.

Boeing does not dominate the satellite market today as it does in transport aircraft, but it has a chance to build a visible share in the mid-class segment. If Resolute and other platforms were to establish themselves such that Boeing would steadily deliver 20-30 satellites per year with an average contract value (hardware + services) of $80-150 million. USD, this would mean satellite revenues in the order of USD 1.6-4.5 billion per year. In an addressable mid-class market of USD 20-25 billion, this would be a market share of somewhere between 6-20%, depending on where the actual numbers hit.

For Boeing as a whole, such a scenario would mean that the satellite business may account for low-to-mid unit percentages of total revenues, but a much higher share of BDS growth as the rest of the division is burdened by troubled programs. For an investor, it is the "mix effect" that is important - even a relatively small but fast-growing segment with better margins can push overall profitability higher than additional units sold in a segment where margins and CAPEX are under pressure.

Competition: who Resolute is up against

Boeing is not trying to conquer an empty field with the Resolute platform. In the mid-class satellite segment, it is up against a combination of traditional defense giants and aggressive "NewSpace" players that have been pushing the standard of modular, rapidly manufactured satellites for several years.

Lockheed Martin $LMT: LM 400 as a direct benchmark

In the mid-size category, Lockheed Martin has its own platform, the LM 400, a configurable, roughly "refrigerator-sized" satellite bus designed for a wide range of missions from tactical ISR to communications and defense applications. The LM 400 is built in accordance with MOSA (modular open systems architecture) and can be produced in larger batches with faster delivery. In addition, Lockheed is massively scaling capacity: its Small Satellite Processing & Delivery Center has six parallel lines and can produce up to 180 satellites per year, which are the backbone of proliferated architectures for the Space Development Agency.

In contrast, Resolute is targeting a similar type of mission - more capability than traditional small sats, but faster and more flexible delivery than a traditional large GEO bus - but on fewer lines and with tighter links to specific defense and commercial contracts. Lockheed has the edge in the mid-class segment today in both capacity and number of programs running, but Boeing enters this league with Millennium's Resolute bet, with the advantage of being able to combine its own large platforms and Millennium's small-sat experience in one portfolio.

Airbus Defence & Space $AIR.PA: modular manufacturing in Europe

On the European side of the market, Airbus is developing its space business with a similar modular philosophy. The production of the second generation Galileo G2 satellites is based on a coordinated programme where panels and subsystems are manufactured in parallel in several plants and three satellites run in assembly at the same time. Airbus declares that under Galileo G2 alone it will be able to deliver six highly complex satellites in less than two years, with a total of over 150 satellites built and launched across a variety of platforms.

Airbus is thus showing how modular manufacturing can work in practice: a running 'pipeline' of satellites that share an architecture but target different programmes (navigation, EO, communications). With Resolute, Boeing is trying to build a similar "assembly line" approach in the US - if it can achieve a similar tact, it can position itself alongside Airbus and Lockheed as the third major pillar of mid-class satellites in the Western world.

NewSpace manufacturers: speed and price as weapons

Alongside these giants, there are pure "NewSpace" players like Maxar, Planet, York Space, ArkEdge and dozens of others building smaller and medium satellites for commercial and government customers. Maxar, for example, has built a reputation on its WorldView Legion constellation, where it designs and builds satellites in-house and offers high-frequency imaging and other services to government and commercial clients. These players often win on speed, flexibility and cost - they can deliver smaller satellites in short cycles and tailor them to a specific mission.

With Resolute, Boeing is exactly in between these worlds: it wants to offer a standardized platform with short lead times and modular architecture, while maintaining its role as a systems integrator that can handle large defense programs, multi-orbit solutions, and complex security or communications networks. This is something that smaller companies often cannot do or do not have sufficient references and certifications.

What to take away from this

  • Boeing is targeting 26 satellite deliveries in 2026, more than double the 2025 level and the highest level since 2000.

  • The new Resolute platform targets the fast-growing mid-class segment between small cubesats and large GEO satellites.

  • Integration with Millennium and standardization of components are expected to enable scaled production and improved margins through "repeatable manufacturing".

  • The satellite business is one of the few segments within BDS where the combination of a growing backlog and potentially better margins can really shift the division's results.

  • For Boeing shareholders, this is a quiet but potentially significant growth pillar alongside commercial aircraft, diversifying revenue and cash flow sources.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262682-boeing-s-other-growth-story-satellites-quietly-scale-while-jets-stay-in-the-spotlight Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-262665 Thu, 23 Apr 2026 15:25:09 +0200 Lockheed’s Q1 looks soft on paper, but the order book tells a different story Lockheed Martin's first quarter of 2026 looks rather unremarkable on the numbers, but strategically it is very strong. Revenues are at $18 billion, the same level as a year ago, operating profit and net income are down year-over-year, and free cash flow is slightly negative. But at the same time, the company is reaffirming its full-year outlook, presenting a backlog at record levels, and entering into framework agreements with the government to triple to quadruple production of key missiles and anti-aircraft systems over the next few years.

It adds a symbolically powerful moment in space. The Lockheed-built Orion capsule successfully completed the Artemis II mission, carrying the crew the farthest from Earth in history and returning them safely, strengthening the company's position in space programs.

Q1 2026 results

Lockheed Martin $LMT reported revenue of $18.02 billion in Q1 2026, virtually unchanged from $17.96 billion in Q1 2025. Meanwhile, analysts were expecting slightly higher revenue of around 18.38 billion, leaving the company slightly behind consensus on the top line.

Segment operating profit (business segment operating profit) was $1.82 billion, down from $2.09 billion a year ago, a drop of about thirteen percent. Total GAAP operating profit (including allocated items) was $2.06 billion, compared to $2.37 billion in last year's first quarter.

Net income was $1.49 billion, which translates to $6.44 per share, compared to $1.71 billion and $7.28 a year ago. Earnings per share are therefore down about twelve percent year-over-year, and the company has roughly met previous expectations that Q1 would be weaker than last year's very strong base.

Cash from operations was just $220 million in the quarter, compared to $1.4 billion last year. Free cash flow after capital expenditures ended negative $291 million compared to positive $955 million a year ago. Management explains this primarily by the timing of billing and working capital, not structural weakness, but in the eyes of investors this is one reason the stock is down several percent after the results.

In the quarter, Lockheed spent about $511 million on capital expenditures, $458 million on its own research and development, paid dividends of about $816 million and paid down $1 billion of long-term debt. In the short term, this puts pressure on cash flow, but in the long term it strengthens capacity and the balance sheet.

Results by segment

Aeronautics

The Aeronautics segment had sales of $6.95 billion, down slightly from $7.06 billion a year ago. The decline was mainly due to lower volumes in classified programs and F-16s.

Revenue from classified programs was about $325 million lower due to lower volumes, and F-16 added approximately $145 million of the decline through a combination of lower production and unfavorable profit rate adjustments. These impacts were partially offset by growth in the F-35, where revenues increased about $325 million due to higher volume, primarily in maintenance and support contracts.

Aeronautics' operating profit fell to $619 million from $720 million, and margins declined to 8.9 percent from 10.2 percent. Profit booking rate adjustments, positive reserves for program profitability, declined. The $125 million negative adjustment on the F-16 was related to production problems and delays, while another $55 million of the unfavorable adjustment went to the C-130 due to supplier problems and delivery delays. In addition, it missed one-time favorable adjustments from last year on a classified program, which at the time lifted profits by about $80 million. This was partially offset by a higher positive adjustment on the F-35 of around $130 million, but the net effect was still negative.

Missiles and Fire Control

Missiles and Fire Control is the only segment to combine revenue and profit growth in Q1. Sales rose to $3.65 billion from $3.37 billion, up about eight percent. This is mainly due to the ramp-up of increased production of integrated air defense (PAC-3, THAAD) and tactical missiles (JASSM, LRASM, PrSM).

Operating profit rose to $500 million compared to $465 million last year, with margins holding around 13.7 percent. Growth reflects higher volumes, no large one-off items mentioned by the segment.

Rotary and Mission Systems

Revenue in the RMS segment fell to 3.99 billion from 4.33 billion, down about eight percent. This is due to lower volume in radar and systems parts and weaker performance in Sikorsky helicopters - particularly the CH-53K, Seahawk and Black Hawk programs.

Sikorsky suffered not only from lower volume but also from negative profitability adjustments due to production problems and delays, which translated into a significant drop in profits. RMS operating profit fell to 423 million from 521 million, and margins fell from 12.0 to 10.6 percent. Part of the decline is also due to the segment's one-time booking of about 50 million positive items from an intellectual property licensing deal in last year's first quarter, which did not recur this year.

Space

The Space segment had revenues of $3.43 billion versus $3.21 billion last year, an increase of about seven percent. The main growth drivers are strategic and missile defense programs, specifically the ballistic missile fleet and the next-generation interceptor NGI program.

But operating profit fell to 281 million compared to 379 million in last year's first quarter, and margins fell from 11.8 to 8.2 percent. This was again due to lower positive earnings adjustments. Last year, Space benefited from the favorable completion of some commercial civil space programs that produced significant one-time gains; nothing similar came this year.

Symbolically, however, the Space segment is boosted by the completion and successful mission of the Orion capsule as part of Artemis II. The Lockheed-built capsule returned a crew after a nearly 10-day mission around the Moon, during which it got farther from Earth than any previous manned mission. This mission reinforces the company's reputation as a key partner with NASA in the human lunar return program and preparations for a flight to Mars.

Management commentary and new framework agreement

In his comments, CEO Jim Taiclet builds Q1 on two pillars: proven capabilities in state-of-the-art defense and space, and new, "commercially inspired" long-term agreements with the government to substantially increase capabilities.

He mentions that the F-35 and F-22 are proving very effective in live deployments in challenging missions, and that the layered air defenses Lockheed is delivering - from radars to Aegis to THAAD to PAC-3 MSE - protect both military targets and civilians.

A key new development is the framework agreements with the U.S. War Department to increase production of munitions, particularly advanced versions of the Patriot, THAAD and PrSM missiles. These are multi-year frameworks that combine commitments for off-take with investment plans to expand production capacity. Taiclet says these agreements will allow production of critical missiles and interceptors to increase to three to four times current levels.

Importantly, from an investor's perspective, these contracts create demand visibility for many years ahead and give Lockheed room to invest in factories, supply chain and workforce with confidence that demand is assured. It's also a model that Taiclet says can become a model for future contracts in other areas - more long-term frameworks instead of short-term piecemeal contracts.

Outlook for 2026

Lockheed Martin's post-Q1 outlook for 2026 is confirmed. The company expects revenue in the range of $77.5 billion to $80 billion, which would represent growth of roughly five percent from $75.1 billion in 2025. Segment operating profit is expected to reach $8.43 billion to $8.68 billion, up roughly 25 percent from last year.

Including the pension FAS/CAS adjustment of about $1.36 billion, amortization of intangible assets and other items, total operating profit should reach about $9.4 billion to $9.7 billion. The company estimates earnings per share in the range of $29.35 to $30.25, up from $21.49 diluted earnings per share in 2025.

Cash from operations is expected to reach $9.15 billion to $9.45 billion, capital expenditures $2.5 billion to $2.8 billion and free cash flow $6.5 billion to $6.8 billion. A Q1 with negative free cash flow is more of a seasonal blip, not a new normal, and the company is counting on a traditionally stronger second to fourth quarter.

Overall, Lockheed says it expects roughly five percent revenue growth in 2026, significantly higher operating profit growth, and stable, very strong free cash flow to fund both investments and dividends and buybacks.

Long-term results

Revenue rises from roughly $66 billion in 2022 to $65.98 billion (technically a slight decline), then to $67.57 billion in 2023, $71.04 billion in 2024 and $75.06 billion in 2025. The growth rate has stabilized at about five percent per year in the last two years after covariance fluctuations, which is consistent with the gradual growth of defense budgets and contract increases, but also shows that this is not "meteoric" growth.

More interesting is the evolution of profitability. Gross profit was about $8.29 billion in 2022, hovered around $8.48 billion in 2023, but fell to $6.93 billion in 2024, only to rise again to $7.62 billion in 2025. This means that even though revenues grew, gross margin fell significantly in 2024, likely due to program mix, input inflation, pricing, and provisions for problems on specific contracts. 2025 then shows a return to better margins, albeit not to 2022 levels.

Operating profit, which for Lockheed equates to gross profit plus relatively small negative operating expenses, increased from 8.35 billion in 2022 to 8.51 billion in 2023, but fell to 7.01 billion in 2024 and returned to growth to 7.73 billion in 2025. Profit before tax, after rising to 8.10 billion in 2023, fell to 6.22 billion in 2024 and 5.92 billion in 2025. Net profit follows this pattern, falling from 6.92 billion in 2023 to 5.34 billion in 2024 and 5.02 billion in 2025.

Earnings per share rise from $21.74 in 2022 to $27.65 in 2023, up more than a quarter, but then fall to 22.39 in 2024 and 21.56 in 2025. Some of the EPS decline is dampened by buybacks as the number of shares gradually declines from roughly 264.6 million diluted shares in 2022 to 231.9 million in 2025.

Overall, Lockheed's revenue growth has been accelerating slightly in recent years, but profitability is flying more due to program mix, one-time profitability adjustments, and macro cost pressures. EPS trend looks like: strong growth in 2023, then a two-year cooling. So the 2026 outlook with expected EPS around $29-30 represents a significant re-acceleration of earnings if it can be met.

Shareholders

Lockheed Martin is a textbook example of an institutionally owned title. Insiders hold only about 0.1 percent of the stock, according to Yahoo Finance, while the institution owns about 75 percent of the stock and free float. In total, over three thousand two hundred institutions hold shares.

The largest shareholders are State Street with about 14.6 percent, Vanguard with 9.2 percent, BlackRock with 7.7 percent, Charles Schwab Investment Management with 3.8 percent and Morgan Stanley with 2.5 percent. That said, the mood around the title is set by a few large houses, which often hold it as a core position in the defensive sector.

Lockheed has traditionally combined dividend and buybacks. In February 2026, it announced the year's first dividend of $3.45 per share payable at the end of March, in line with its history of gradual dividend increases. At a price of around $540 to $560, the dividend yield is in the roughly two to three percent range, plus the effect of buybacks that gradually reduce the number of shares outstanding and support EPS growth.

News and strategic direction

In addition to Orion and the munitions framework contracts, other new developments include air defence contracts. Lockheed was recently awarded a $4.7 billion contract to continue accelerated production of the PAC-3 MSE, which follows a framework agreement with the War Department and is expected to enable a threefold increase in interceptor production over the next few years.

The company is also continuing to invest in upgrading its production lines, digitizing production and expanding capabilities for missiles, radars and other key elements of layered defense. Restructuring within RMS (moving programs into new SEMS and MIC2 lines) is intended to enable faster delivery of integrated solutions to customers and better connect sensors, effectors and command and control.

In the long term, this profiles Lockheed as a company that stands not just on one "flagship" type, the F-35, but on a broader portfolio of systems - from aircraft to missiles to command and control systems to space technologies. Q1 2026 shows that in the short term, profitability may fluctuate depending on the status of specific programs, but demand for major systems is growing and new framework agreements and contracts are creating great visibility for the years ahead.

For the investor, this means that Lockheed today is not a classic growth title, but rather a stable defense mainstay with moderate revenue growth, more volatility in profitability, and very strong cash flow that management is translating into dividends, buybacks, and capacity enhancements in a world where defense budgets are growing rather than shrinking.

Fair Price

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262665-lockheed-s-q1-looks-soft-on-paper-but-the-order-book-tells-a-different-story Pavel Botek
bulios-article-262691 Thu, 23 Apr 2026 14:50:11 +0200 Shares of $AMD yesterday surpassed $300 for the first time in history, which is a significant milestone. I bought my first shares when they were still under $100, and currently $AMD is the largest position in my portfolio. If it keeps up at this pace, we might see $400 this year. I will definitely keep holding the shares as long as the valuation makes sense.

Do you have $AMD in your portfolio? Are you planning to sell, or will you keep holding?

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262691 Freya Thompson
bulios-article-262636 Thu, 23 Apr 2026 10:50:14 +0200 135 Years of Dividends and a $300B Valuation: Is This Giant Still Undervalued? Few companies can match a dividend track record stretching over a century. This industry giant has consistently rewarded shareholders for more than 135 years while maintaining a market cap above $300 billion. In a market chasing growth stories, such stability is often overlooked. The key question now is whether this reliability comes at a discount or if the market is finally pricing it correctly.

Procter & Gamble $PG is not a topic that has generated enthusiasm on investor forums or in the comments below a post about returning growth stocks. Yet the company is one of the key building blocks of defensive portfolios around the world. Toothpaste, shaving products or baby diapers. These are just a small list of products that sell in good times and in crises, at high and low interest rates. It is from this model that the investor premium that the company has built up on the markets over decades has stemmed.

Today, however, the picture is changing. Organic growth is slowing, consumers are becoming more price sensitive and moving to cheaper private labels. Added to this, tariffs have been added as a new cost element and a new generation of leadership has taken over the company in the form of CEO Shailesh Jejurikar from January 2026. The $PG share price has fallen significantly since the 2024 highs and the valuation is below its five-year average. This is when similar defensive titles tend to be most attractive. Is that the case here?

Procter & Gamble $PG

Procter & Gamble is a global consumer goods giant that operates through five major segments. The company's products are sold in approximately 180 countries and used by billions of people every day.

It is this basic everyday consumption that is at the core of P&G's competitive advantage. Brands such as Tide and Pampers are so firmly embedded in the consciousness of millions of households that replacing them with a private label alternative faces a high cost of transient loyalty. In addition, P&G benefits from a global distribution network that gives it an exceptional bargaining position with small and large retail chains around the world. This position cannot be built in a few years; it is the result of decades of consistent investment in marketing, innovation capabilities and relationship management.

Financial results

In its most recent fiscal year, 2025 (which ends in June), the company achieved organic revenue growth of 2%, with core EPS up 4% to $6.83. Operating cash flow for the full year was $17.8 billion, and the company returned over $16 billion to shareholders through dividends (approximately $10 billion) and buybacks ($6.5 billion). Operating profit for 2025 grew by a significant 10% to $20.45 billion.

The return on equity (ROE) is also exceptionally strong at around 31.5%. This is a level that reflects the company's ability to generate high profits with relatively low capital intensity of operations. ROIC (return on invested capital) is around 22%, which is well above the industry average for the consumer goods sector. Free cash flow per share over the past 12 months (TTM) was $6.09, making it easy for investors to gauge the deep cash flow behind this title.

Dividend aristocrat: 69 years of increasing payouts

One of the company's most notable attributes is its so-called Dividend Aristocrat status. P&G has been paying dividends continuously since 1890, representing 135 years without interruption. Moreover, it has increased its dividend every year for the last 69 consecutive years, making it one of the absolute top dividend investments in the world. The current dividend yield is around 3% and the payout ratio is approximately 61%, a sustainable level thoroughly supported by strong free cash flow.

Dividend continuity did not stop in the last fiscal year: the company announced another 5% dividend increase and total cash returns to shareholders reached $16 billion. This consistent pattern of distributing the company's results is a primary attraction for a defensive investor looking for predictable inflows.

The full history of dividend payouts can be found here.

Weaknesses and current challenges

It would be unfair to ignore the challenges of recent quarters. Organic revenue growth for the second quarter of fiscal year 2026 (reported in January 2026) was completely flat. The numbers showed net sales growth of only 1%, while the volume of goods shipped remained flat. All the growth was driven by higher prices and mix, not actual volume expansion. This is a warning sign: if consumers stop buying more premium products, the organic growth thesis is weakened.

Tariffs are also a significant new risk. Management projects approximately $800 million in lost profits from tariffs after taxes in fiscal year 2026. Some of these costs will be passed on to consumers through price increases on approximately 25% of U.S. products. However, the combination of higher prices and a sensitive consumer environment may further accelerate the shift of consumers to private labels, which are playing an increasingly prominent role in European and US retail chains.

Valuation and comparison with the market

Valuation is a key argument for current investor interest. The P/E on a trailing 12-month (TTM) basis is around 21, well below the five-year average of around 25.7 and the 10-year average of around 27.8. This is a decline that is unprecedented in P&G's recent history and is attracting the attention of defensive investors looking for a quality title at a reasonable valuation.

Analyst platform GuruFocus rates $PG stock as slightly undervalued. The average analyst target price is around $171, suggesting theoretical upside potential of around 19% from current levels. The fair price on Bulios is slightly lower than the current price of $PG, so it's definitely a good idea for any investor to do their own thorough analysis.

The forward P/E is around 20.4, which is an attractive level for a dividend aristocrat with an ROE of over 30%. Thus, the forward P/E is at the 25th percentile of its historical range over the past 5 years, which signals that the stock is trading closer to the bottom of its historical valuation than its peak.

Overview

Indicator

Value

Note

Ticker

$PG

Listed on NYSE

Market capitalization

31 billion USD

As of April 2026

P/E TTM

21x

vs. 5Y average of 25.7x

Forward P/E

20,4x

FY2026 estimate

ROE

31,5 %

significantly above sector average

ROIC

22,2 %

average performance

Dividend yield

2,9 %

135 years uninterrupted

Payout ratio

61 %

Sustainable level

Free cash flow (TTM)

USD 14 billion

USD 6.09/share

Core EPS FY2025

USD 6.83

+4% YoY

Organic growth Q2 FY26

0 %

Warning Signal

Loss due to tariffs

USD 0.8 billion (after tax)

main risk

Analysts' target

USD 171

+19% potential

Comparison with competitors

Major competitors such as Colgate-Palmolive $CL or Kimberly-Clark $KMB trade at similar or higher multiples, although P&G has higher ROE, stronger global distribution and a significantly more robust brand portfolio. As a result, P&G's premium valuation has de facto disappeared, although the company's fundamentals remain unique across the sector.

You'll find many more competitorsin the stock detail, along with a table comparing them against each other and $PG.

New leadership: the strategy of Shailesh Jejurikar

One of the overlooked aspects of the current $PG story is the change in leadership. As of January 1, 2026, Shailesh Jejurikar, a 37-year veteran of the company who previously ran the Fabric Care division and held the position of COO (Chief Operating Officer), will take over as CEO. He is the first CEO of Indian origin in the company's history. Former boss Jon Moeller remains as Executive Chairman, ensuring strategic continuity at a critically formative moment.

Jejurikar's mandate is referred to as Constructive Disruption, an effort to leverage digital transformation and artificial intelligence for distribution chain optimization and personalized marketing. This vision comes at a time when P&G has announced 7,000 layoffs, the equivalent of roughly 15% of its non-manufacturing staff.

CEO $PG: Shailesh Jejurikara

Strategic insight

For investors looking for stability and regular dividend income, $PG is more interesting at its current valuation than at any point in the past five years.

A P/E below the sector average and well below its historical equity average offers the defensive investor an attractive entry point. A dividend yield of approximately 3% with a 69-year history of uninterrupted increases allows one to buy the "certainty" of an incoming dividend stream, which is reason enough in itself for some investors.

On the other hand, structural challenges should not be overlooked. Organic revenue growth approaching zero, tariffs as an ongoing cost pressure, and the risk of further consumer spending shifting to private alternatives are all real threats. Should organic volumes fail to stabilise, the return of sentiment may take longer than the market anticipates.

For many, however, this is a classic long-term portfolio foundation. The company is not changing itself, but the environment around it is creating a more favorable entry valuation than in the past five years. The risks are best faced by companies with global distribution, strong brands and consistent cash flow, and these are exactly the attributes of P&G.

What to watch next

  • Q3 fiscal year 2026 results (April 24, 2026): whether organic volume starts to grow again will be key

  • Impact of tariffs on margins: the company expects a 0.8 billion after-tax loss on tariffs in fiscal 2026

  • Private Brands vs. Customer Loyalty: A key indicator from the market will offer a clear warning as to whether P&G is losing customers in important categories.

  • Innovation agenda: Tide EVO and new premium products in the beauty and personal care categories may strengthen pricing power and drive consumers back to the brand from private label alternatives.

  • Dividend Growth: the next annual dividend increase is expected in the spring of 2026.

  • New CEO's performance

Procter & Gamble is a well of contradictions. It is a company that more than others personifies the framework of defensive investing, but right now it is trading at a valuation that is at historically low levels. The market reflects real concerns about slowing organic growth, tariff pressures and the competitive insistence of private brands, and these cannot be underestimated or overlooked.

At the same time, brands such as Pampers, Tide and Gillette will not completely lose their position in the consumer consciousness in a good economic cycle or a bad one. Free cash flow of approximately $14 billion per year, 69 years of dividend growth and ROEs of over 30% are fundamental attributes that the market, in its transitory pessimism, occasionally prizes at inadequate valuations. And it is at such times, when quality assets fall below their historical value, that the defensive investor with a sufficiently long investment horizon finds the most compelling opportunities.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262636-135-years-of-dividends-and-a-300b-valuation-is-this-giant-still-undervalued Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-262624 Thu, 23 Apr 2026 04:20:10 +0200 Tesla’s Q1 shows the new mix: cars are slowing, the platform is getting more complex Tesla has entered 2026 at a stage where it is no longer just a "pure" growth story built on increasing car production, but increasingly a combination of a car company, an energy company and a technology company focused on artificial intelligence, autonomy and robotics. In the first quarter of 2026, it managed to return to double-digit revenue growth while visibly improving profitability. Revenue grew 16 percent to about $22.4 billion, gross margin rose to 21 percent and free cash flow exceeded $1.4 billion.

At the same time, however, the numbers reveal that this is no longer seamless "linear" growth. Car deliveries are only growing in the lower units of percentages, inventories are rising, and parts of the business, especially energy, are having a weaker quarter after an exceptionally strong year. Management openly says that a big part of today's results and future expectations are massive investments in AI infrastructure, FSD (Supervised), robotaxi and the humanoid robot Optimus. This leaves Tesla as a company with huge potential for investors, but also with increasing complexity and dependence on the success of projects that are just beginning their ramp.

Q1 2026 results

Tesla $TSLA delivered a combination of a return to growth and a distinct shift in profitability in Q1 2026. Revenue reached $22.4 billion, up 16 percent year-over-year from $19.3 billion in Q1 2025. Gross profit increased to $4.72 billion and gross margin rose to 21.1 percent from 16.3 percent a year ago.

Automotive sales rose to $16.2 billion, plus 16 percent year over year, boosted by shipment growth, a higher mix of services and FSD and leasing. In contrast, Energy revenues fell 12 percent to about $2.4 billion, as a weaker quarter in Megapack deployments and lower storage volumes from 14.2 GWh to 8.8 GWh, following an exceptionally strong 2025. Services and Other revenues rose 42 percent to $3.7 billion, reflecting growth in Services, Insurance, Superchargers and other ancillary services.

GAAP operating profit was $941 million versus $399 million a year ago, and operating margin rose to 4.2 percent from 2.1 percent. Adjusted operating profit (non-GAAP) was $1.08 billion versus $770 million last year. GAAP net income attributable to shareholders was $477 million, up 17 percent year-over-year, or $0.13 per share. Adjusted net income was $1.45 billion, with adjusted earnings per share of $0.41, up about 52 percent from a year ago and above consensus of about $0.36 to $0.37.

Operating cash flow in the quarter was $3.94 billion, capital expenditures were $2.49 billion and free cash flow was $1.44 billion compared to $664 million in the same period in 2025. Cash and short-term investments rose to about $44.7 billion, $700 million more than at the end of 2025, even though Tesla is simultaneously funding a large investment program in AI, batteries, robotics and manufacturing.

On the volume side, Tesla produced 408,386 cars and delivered 358,023, a year-over-year increase in deliveries of about six percent but a sequential decline against a strong fourth quarter. The gap between production and deliveries of over fifty thousand cars lifted global inventories to 27 days from fifteen at the end of the previous quarter, one of the points the market is watching with caution.

Management commentary and key messages

On the call, management said that it sees the quarter as a confirmation of a return to growth, but also as a period of massive investment in future business. It highlights several points.

First, continued growth in vehicle demand in Asia and South America and a re-acceleration in Europe and North America after a weaker 2025. Tesla talks about how its strategy of affordability and lower operating costs is competitive, especially at a time when fossil fuels are suffering from volatile prices and geopolitics.

Second, management repeatedly mentions massive investments in infrastructure and AI software for Robotaxi and future robotics businesses. In the first quarter, Tesla began ramping up AI computing cluster capacity, rolling out new battery and materials factories, and preparing lines for Megapack 3, Cybercab, and Tesla Semi. It has begun ramping up LFP batteries in Nevada, cathode materials and lithium refining in Texas, and the company itself says battery capacity is still a major constraint on car production growth.

Third , Musk and the team are making it clear that Tesla is moving from a pure car company to one whose future profits are increasingly to be driven by AI, software and fleet services. In Q1 2026, FSD (Supervised) expansion continued, growing the number of active subscribers to 1.28 million, a year-over-year growth of more than fifty percent, and the company is testing new models for monetizing FSD as a standalone product.

The commentary also acknowledges that this strategy means increased investment in R&D, operations and infrastructure, which will put pressure on operating margins in the short term, but is essential to staying ahead in autonomous driving, robotics and energy, according to management.

Outlook and new projects

Tesla doesn't publish detailed EPS guidance in the earnings release like traditional blue-chip companies, but it does outline key targets for 2026.

For cars, Tesla says it will focus on maximizing the use of existing factories and that delivery and installation volumes will depend on aggregate demand, supply chain readiness, and allocation between sales to customers and its own fleet of Robotaxis. In terms of new products, the company confirms that the Cybercab, Tesla Semi and Megapack 3 are on track for mass production during 2026.

AI and software are a big part of the outlook. Tesla says the latest version of FSD (Supervised) 14.3, launched in April, brings revamped reinforcement learning training to handle long-tail situations, an improved visual encoder for worse conditions, and a rewritten compiler and runtime that cuts inference latency by up to a fifth. This is intended to accelerate development towards fully unsupervised operation for both Robotaxi and customer cars.

In Europe, the major news is the approval of FSD (Supervised) in the Netherlands by the Dutch regulator RDW on 10 April, making the country the first European market to have officially enabled FSD (Supervised) under the UN R-171 standard. Both Tesla and analyst commentators say the move paves the way for a relatively rapid expansion into other European Union countries, notably Germany, France and Italy, with the aim of wider coverage by summer 2026.

Robotaxi continues to grow in the US. Tesla reports that paid Robotaxi miles nearly doubled quarter-over-quarter in the first quarter. It has already expanded its unsupervised service area in Austin and in April launched unsupervised rides in Dallas and Houston, while also preparing to enter other major cities including Phoenix, Miami and Las Vegas. Safety remains a priority, and the company says it continues to test and adjust services to meet regulatory and practical standards.

The Megafactory near Houston is set to start production of Megapack 3 for the new Megablock system this year, which is expected to lift annual storage capacity to tens of GWh. Gigafactory New York has begun shipping new solar panels of its own design with multiple zones for better shade performance and faster installation. At the same time, the Supercharger network is expanding, growing nineteen percent year-over-year and adding over 2,200 new racks in the first quarter.

Optimus represents the most ambitious chapter of the outlook. Management says the first large-scale humanoid robot factory will begin to come online in the second quarter of 2026 in Fremont, where the first-generation line will replace the Model S and X production lines and will be sized for a capacity of around one million robots per year. A second generation line is under development in Texas with a target capacity of up to ten million robots per year in the long term.

Long-term business development

The long-term numbers for 2021 to 2024 show how dramatically Tesla has transformed. Revenues grew from $53.8 billion in 2021 to $81.5 billion in 2022, $96.8 billion in 2023, and $97.7 billion in 2024. After extremely strong growth of more than fifty percent in 2022 and nearly nineteen percent in 2023, the pace nearly stalled in 2024, when revenues added less than one percent.

Gross profit in 2021 was about $13.6 billion, jumping to about $20.9 billion in 2022, only to gradually decline to $17.7 billion and $17.45 billion in 2023 and 2024. Thus, gross margin has been gradually declining after a period of extremely high values due to price discounts, new project costs and competitive pressure. Operating profit first more than doubled from 6.5 billion in 2021 to 13.7 billion in 2022, then fell to 8.9 billion in 2023 and further to 7.1 billion in 2024.

Net income rose from $5.5 billion in 2021 to $12.6 billion in 2022 and nearly $15 billion in 2023, only to fall to about $7.1 billion in 2024. Earnings per share follow this pattern, rising from roughly $1.63-$1.87 in 2021 to $3.62-$4.02 in 2022 and $4.31-$4.73 in 2023 to fall to roughly $2.04-$2.23 in 2024.

Results for the first quarter of 2026 fit this story. After a year of stagnation and declining margins, Tesla is showing a return to 16 percent revenue growth and a significant improvement in gross margin and profitability, but it is also clear that this is no longer a simple story of a "pure-play" automaker that just scales one product. Today's numbers are a blend of services growth, FSD, energy, AI and robotics investments, as well as the cost of maintaining and expanding the technology lead.

Shareholders and ownership structure

According to the report, insiders hold approximately 11.1 percent of Tesla's stock, which is a high stake for a large company and reflects strong management and founder involvement. Institutional investors own roughly 44.8 percent of the stock and approximately 50.4 percent of the free float, with more than 5,200 institutions holding some stake.

The largest shareholders are large passive and actively managed fund managers. Vanguard owns about 258.9 million shares, nearly seven percent of the company. BlackRock has about 209.6 million shares, or about five and a half percent. State Street holds about 115 million shares and Geode Capital holds about 65.7 million. The dominance of these players means that the share price is very sensitive to changes in sentiment of large funds towards Tesla as both a growth and technology story.

News and strategic shift

Beyond the numbers, Q1 2026 is about the news that frames the company's future. The approval of FSD (Supervised) in the Netherlands is the first major European breakthrough and, along with intensive pre-regulatory testing and thousands of FSD runs in Europe, paves the way for more widespread deployment across the European Union.

Robotaxi is expanding in the US, where Tesla says that paid miles have nearly doubled from the previous quarter and that it is preparing to roll out the service quickly in other cities once testing is complete and the necessary permits are obtained. In AI computing, the company has launched a Cortex 2 cluster with the equivalent of more than 130,000 H100s, is expanding its own development of Dojo 3 chips, and plans to build a large-scale semiconductor fabrication facility for inference chips in partnership with SpaceX.

At the same time, Tesla is pushing digital products such as its own voice assistant Grok in cars, new safety score functionality linked to insurance, and other infotainment services. On the energy side, it continues to innovate with solar panels and the expansion of Megachargers for Semi tractors, with the first public stations of this type already in California.

Overall, Q1 2026 shows Tesla as a company that is returning to growth after a period of margin pressure while aggressively investing in AI, autonomous driving, robotics and energy. For investors, this means the potential is huge, but it also increases the complexity of the story and the dependence on the success of projects that are just beginning to ramp up.

Fair Price

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262624-tesla-s-q1-shows-the-new-mix-cars-are-slowing-the-platform-is-getting-more-complex Pavel Botek
bulios-article-262558 Wed, 22 Apr 2026 18:37:39 +0200 Boeing surprised Wall Street: Rising deliveries are finally reducing losses $BA

Boeing's results for the first quarter of 2026 finally suggest that the long‑awaited turnaround is starting to have real foundations. The company remains in a loss, but results beat analysts' expectations, mainly thanks to improving production and higher aircraft deliveries. Those deliveries are the key moment when Boeing recognizes most of its revenue.

Revenue reached approximately $22.2 billion, representing solid year‑on‑year growth. This improvement was driven primarily by a higher number of delivered aircraft, which reached 143 units for the quarter. In other words, the company is finally starting to deliver what it has contracted, and its financial results are gradually stabilizing. It’s also the best first quarter for deliveries since 2019, indicating Boeing is gradually returning to pre‑crisis levels.

From a profitability standpoint the situation is somewhat more complicated, but clear improvement is visible here as well. The net loss has narrowed significantly and the company is approaching breakeven. This is important especially because a year ago Boeing was under much greater pressure and its results looked far more problematic. Nevertheless, it must be noted that the company is not yet fully “healthy” and remains in a recovery phase.

Cash flow remains a major issue. Although accounting results are improving, Boeing still burned cash in the first quarter. This shows that the return to a fully functioning and stable business is not yet complete. The reasons are mainly the high costs associated with ramping up production, as well as lingering effects of earlier quality and regulatory issues.

On the other hand, it should be emphasized that demand for aircraft remains very strong. Boeing has a huge backlog of orders worth hundreds of billions of dollars, which means it is not short of customers. The problem therefore lies not on the demand side but in execution. In other words, the key question is not whether Boeing will sell its planes, but whether it can produce and deliver them on time.

This is where the entire investment story hinges. If the company manages to stabilize production, increase deliveries and at the same time move into positive cash flow, Boeing could become an interesting turnaround case. Conversely, any further problems in production or regulation could significantly slow the whole process.

From an investment perspective, Boeing today looks like a classic bet on a turnaround. In the short term it remains a riskier name, but over the long term it offers potential if management can complete the restructuring and return the company to a stable growth trajectory.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262558 Yamamoto H
bulios-article-262532 Wed, 22 Apr 2026 17:25:13 +0200 AT&T’s Q1: a “post‑restructuring” quarter that looks exactly like it should AT&T’s first quarter of 2026 delivered the kind of steady, no‑drama numbers you’d hope to see from a telecom that has spent the past few years simplifying its structure and refocusing on connectivity. Total revenue grew 2.9% year‑on‑year to 31.5 billion dollars, slightly ahead of expectations, driven by a 3.6–4.7% increase in Advanced Connectivity service revenue as wireless and fiber bundles continued to scale. Adjusted EPS came in at 0.57 dollars, up 11.8% from a year ago and modestly above the roughly 0.55‑dollar consensus, helped by 15–16% growth in operating income as the mix shifts away from legacy copper services toward higher‑margin 5G and home internet.

Management reaffirmed its full‑year 2026 guidance: adjusted EPS of 2.25–2.35 dollars, free cash flow of at least 18 billion dollars and a capital‑return plan that calls for more than 45 billion dollars to be returned to shareholders via dividends and buybacks between 2026 and 2028, while gradually bringing net‑debt‑to‑EBITDA down from just over 3x toward a 2.5x target in the following three years. Q1 free cash flow of 2.5 billion dollars was seasonally soft and below last year, but still in the guided 2.0–2.5‑billion range, and the company added 584,000 internet customers (split evenly between fiber and fixed wireless), with nearly 45% of advanced home‑internet users also taking AT&T wireless - a sign that the “advanced connectivity” strategy is doing exactly what it’s supposed to do: grow a sticky, bundled base that can support debt reduction and a high dividend without needing eye‑catching top‑line acceleration

Q1 2026 results

AT&T's consolidated revenue $T reached $31.5 billion in the first quarter, up roughly 2.9 percent from last year's $30.6 billion. The main reason for this is growth in the advanced connectivity and fiber optics segment, fueled in part by newly acquired customers from the Lumen fiber optics acquisition.

Operating profit rose to $6.7 billion from $5.8 billion a year ago and adjusted operating profit to $6.9 billion from $6.4 billion. Net income from continuing operations was $4.2 billion, while diluted earnings per share from continuing operations were $0.54, down from $0.61 last year because last year's figure still included the contribution from the stake in DirecTV. On an adjusted basis, however, earnings per share rose from $0.51 to $0.57, or about twelve percent, easily beating analysts' estimates.

Operating cash flow was $7.6 billion compared to $9 billion last year, with last year's number including about $1.4 billion from DirecTV. Capital expenditures were $4.9 billion, total capital investment including vendor financing repayments was $5.1 billion and free cash flow after those expenditures was $2.5 billion. Total debt at the end of the quarter is $138.4 billion, net debt is $126.4 billion.

Advanced connectivity: a key growth driver

The advanced connectivity segment, which brings together mobile services, fiber optics and fixed wireless, is now the core of AT&T's investment story. In the first quarter, it generated $28.5 billion in revenue, up 4.7 percent year-over-year, while service revenue in this segment grew 3.6 percent to $22.9 billion.

In mobile services, the company added 294,000 new postpaid phone customers and maintained a very low churn rate of 0.89 percent. Mobile service revenues grew around two percent, reflecting a combination of higher client numbers, more expensive tariffs and the unwinding of some promotions.

An even more pronounced shift is seen in fixed internet. Advanced residential and business internet services added a total of 584,000 new connections, with 292,000 on fibre and 292,000 on fixed wireless. The pure residential segment added 512 thousand connections, of which 273 thousand were on fibre and 239 thousand on fixed wireless. Revenues in this segment grew by more than twenty-seven percent, making it the fastest growing part of AT&T $T's business today.

As a result, profitability is picking up. Advanced Connectivity segment operating profit jumped to $6.9 billion, about fourteen and eight-tenths percent growth, and segment operating margin rose to 24.1 percent from 22 percent last year. Adjusted segment EBITDA was $11.6 billion, plus 5.6 percent year-over-year, and EBITDA margin is around 40.6 percent.

The convergence ratio is also an important indicator. Approximately 42 percent of households with advanced Internet from AT&T also have mobile service, and if the new optical customers acquired through the Lumen acquisition are excluded, it's nearly 45 percent. The company says this is the fastest organic convergence growth in history, supporting the thesis that service interconnection increases customer value and profitability.

Legacy business, Latin America and network

On the flip side stands the legacy business, i.e. legacy voice and data services over copper. Here, first-quarter revenues fell to $1.77 billion, a decline of over 25 percent. The segment's operating profit fell to $612 million and margins slid from roughly 43 to 34.6 percent. But AT&T sees that as part of the plan. The goal is to phase out this business and migrate customers to fiber and wireless.

The Mexico segment posted sales of about $1.17 billion, up about twenty-one percent, primarily due to exchange rates and higher customer numbers and equipment sales. However, operating profit fell to $20 million as costs grew even faster.

In terms of infrastructure, AT&T continues to invest massively in fiber optics. The total reach of the optical network exceeds 37 million addresses, including more than four million added by the acquisition of part of the Lumen optical business. The company confirms that it is targeting over forty million optical addresses by the end of 2026 and over sixty million by 2030, in part by structuring optical assets into subsidiaries with outside capital.

Outlook to 2026 and long-term plan

After the first quarter results, AT&T's outlook for 2026 is only confirmed. It expects total service revenues to grow in the low single digits of percent, advanced connectivity service revenues to grow by more than five percent, and legacy revenues in the copper-based segments to decline by more than twenty percent. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to grow at a rate of three to four per cent, with the advanced connectivity segment growing at over six per cent.

Management continues to see adjusted earnings per share in the range of two dollars twenty-five to two dollars thirty-five. Free cash flow should reach at least eighteen billion dollars, even after accounting for higher cash taxes and pension contributions.

Between 2026 and 2028, AT&T plans to return more than forty-five billion dollars to shareholders, through a combination of dividends and share repurchases, while reducing debt to a target net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio of about two and a half. That's the core of the long-term thesis: moderate growth, strong free cash flow, debt reduction, and a stable dividend.

Long-term business development

The last few years have been all about "housekeeping" for AT&T. The company has divested media assets, restructured its portfolio, and started investing aggressively in fiber optics and mobile while pushing down debt. Revenues tended to stagnate to grow modestly after the exit of the media businesses, but the quality of those revenues improved as recurring revenue from connectivity gained more weight.

Operating profit has historically been weighed down by high depreciation and one-off costs, but has gradually stabilised and grown in recent quarters. Free cash flow of around fifteen to sixteen billion dollars a year gives the company room to fund significant capital expenditures, pay down debt and pay a dividend without materially straining the balance sheet.

Today, AT&T looks less like a conglomerate and more like a pure telecom operator with two clear priorities. The first is growth in advanced connectivity via fiber, fixed wireless and mobile, the second is gradual debt reduction and return of capital. From this perspective, Q1 2026 fits neatly into the long-term picture.

Shareholders and capital policy

AT&T's ownership structure is typical of a large dividend player. Insiders hold less than one percent of the stock, according to Yahoo Finance, while the institution owns roughly eighty-four percent of the stock and free float. The largest shareholders are Vanguard, Blackrock, State Street and other large global funds, which together control a substantial portion of the company.

The company pays a dividend of $1.11 per share per year, which at the current share price implies an attractive dividend yield in the higher single digits of percentages. In addition, it plans to buy back more than twenty billion dollars worth of its own shares between 2026 and 2028 as part of a package of more than forty-five billion returned to shareholders.

For investors, AT&T today is more a story of steady cash flow than rapid growth. The first quarter of 2026 shows that the company can grow modestly, lift profits in its core connectivity segment, and hold the outlook while sending much of its free cash flow back to shareholders. This makes sense for those looking for yield and stability, not dynamic revenue growth.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262532-at-t-s-q1-a-post-restructuring-quarter-that-looks-exactly-like-it-should Pavel Botek
bulios-article-262521 Wed, 22 Apr 2026 16:40:06 +0200 The “boring” infrastructure name that quietly compounds double‑digit returns In a market obsessed with AI narratives, there are only a handful of companies sitting directly on top of the physical infrastructure that lets modern life function - power grids, telecom networks and irrigated agriculture - while still earning double‑digit returns on capital with very little leverage. This business makes the kind of hardware that never trends on social media but underpins everything else: steel and concrete poles and structures for high‑voltage transmission, distribution and 5G small‑cell sites, roadway and urban lighting structures, corrosion‑protection coatings and large center‑pivot irrigation systems that keep crop yields viable in increasingly dry regions. After a roughly 24% post‑COVID revenue surge, sales have normalised around 4.1 billion dollars, gross margin sits just above 30%, operating margin above 10%, and over the last year the company has nearly doubled operating and net income while keeping net debt close to zero - a combination that’s rare for a capital‑intensive manufacturer.

Management is leaning into that positioning with a fairly clear long‑term roadmap. They point to multi‑year growth drivers in grid hardening, renewable interconnections, 5G densification and water‑efficient agriculture, backed by a utility‑segment backlog north of 1.25 billion dollars and fiscal‑2026 targets calling for 4.2–4.4 billion dollars in revenue and about 23.5 dollars of EPS, implying another leg up in profitability if execution holds. For an equity portfolio that’s already heavy on “sexy” software and AI, the question isn’t whether a company like this can grow - the demand for electricity, connectivity and food is structurally there - but whether you’re willing to let a diversified, somewhat dull infrastructure compounder sit next to high‑beta tech names and quietly do the job of stability, cash generation and capital discipline over a full cycle.

Top points of analysis

  • Stable revenues, hovering around $4 billion over the last 3 years.

  • Balance sheet is extremely conservative: debt to equity of 0.04, net debt/EBITDA of -0.11, Altman Z-score of 4.8, interest coverage of over 10 times - risk of financial distress is minimal.

  • The business is built on two pillars - infrastructure (70-75% of revenues) and agricultural irrigation (25-30%), which reduces dependence on a single cycle and gives exposure to energy transition and water stress.

  • In utility infrastructure, the firm entered 2025 with a backlog of over $1.25 billion, reflecting a wave of investment in transmission upgrades and renewable connections.

  • For 2025-2026, management projects revenue growth of $4.2-4.4 billion and EPS of around $23.5, while shifting the mix to higher-margin telecom, grid and digital irrigation solutions.

Company introduction

Valmont $VMI isa typical "picks and shovels" player in infrastructure and agriculture. It doesn't make visually appealing consumer products, but structures and systems that are ubiquitous and critical: transmission towers and masts; lighting for roads, cities and sports fields; support structures for cellular networks; galvanizing and coating services for corrosion control; and pivot irrigation systems that irrigate millions of acres of fields around the world.

The business is divided into two main segments:

  • Infrastructure - about 70-75% of sales - includes steel and concrete structures for power transmission, distribution networks, lighting and telecommunications, as well as coating services (galvanizing, coatings).

  • Agriculture - roughly 25-30% of sales - includes the Valley brand, a world leader in mechanised irrigation systems (centre pivot, linear), complemented by digital platforms for precision agriculture and monitoring (e.g. Valley 365, acquisition of Prospera Technologies).

Customers are mainly institutions and enterprises: investor-owned utilities and municipal utilities, government (roads, lighting), telecom operators and tower companies, OEMs needing anti-corrosion services, and farmers and water operators in agriculture. The sustainability of the business is high: products are often tied to long-term capital projects, have a lifespan of decades and require service and expansion - switching to another supplier is costly and risky.

Business and products

In infrastructure, the company manufactures:

  • Transmission towers and towers - high voltage towers, distribution structures and components used in grid modernization, renewable integration and transmission capacity enhancement.

  • Lighting and support structures - poles for public lighting, stadiums, industrial sites, and infrastructure elements for smart city (sensors, cameras).

  • Telecommunication towers and structures - masts and supports for mobile networks, including 5G small-cell infrastructure that requires a large number of smaller support elements in urban environments.

  • Surface treatments - electroplating and coatings that protect structures from corrosion and extend their life; in many cases, they are also supplied to external clients outside the in-house construction business.

In the agricultural sector, the Valley brand is key. It is estimated to have over 40% of the global market share for mechanised pivot and linear irrigation systems, making it the world leader. It is not just the iron - the irrigation structures themselves - that is important, but also the digital layer: sensors, control, irrigation scheduling based on satellite imagery, soil and weather data. The acquisition of Israel's Prospera Technologies brought AI and computer vision to the company, which is used to monitor crops and optimize irrigation.

The company's pricing strength comes from a combination of: the critical nature of the products (grid, water, telecom), high barriers to entry (know-how, certification, references, logistics) and long-term customer relationships. Infrastructure projects have long cycles and strict standards - once qualified, a supplier has a high probability of winning further contracts. Moreover, in irrigation, regions with chronic water scarcity come into play - where farmers are willing to invest in systems that ensure yields even in dry years.

Market and addressable potential

The infrastructure business is based on three macro trends:

  1. Electric grid modernization - the aging grid in the US and other developed countries, the need to increase resilience to extreme weather, and the integration of renewables (wind, solar) require massive investment in transmission and distribution infrastructure. A backlog of over $1.25 billion in the utility segment shows that customers are already planning projects several years in advance.

  2. Telecom Networks and 5G - Growing data demand, the 5G and in the future 6G boom, the need for network coverage for IoT and autonomous technologies all mean higher density of small cells and infrastructure that must be physically located somewhere.

  3. Urbanisation and smart cities - development of urban infrastructure, lighting, security systems, monitoring technologies - again with the need for load bearing structures and long term durability (surface treatments).

In agriculture, water stress and efficiency is a major driver. Large commercial farms and water authorities in arid regions are investing in mechanized irrigation and precision agriculture to increase yields and reduce water use. The addressable market here is a combination of new installed base and replacement cycle (replacing older systems with more modern, digitized ones).

Realistically, the game is not a total market share change - there are several large global players in utility structures and a number of regional players; in irrigation, the company is already #1. Therefore, growth comes more from expanding project volumes (more grid, more irrigation) and from a shift to higher added value (digital services, smart management, end-to-end solutions instead of "bare metal").

Competition and market position

On the infrastructure side, competition comes from companies that supply steel structures and components for utilities and telecoms - for example, AZZ $AZZ, Trinity Industries (part of the portfolio), regional mast suppliers and galvanisation. Competition is fierce at the price level, but barriers to entry (certification, references, capacity, ability to deliver large projects) limit the number of players. In many segments, the company is either number 1 or 2 in the world.

In irrigation, direct competitors include Lindsay Corporation $LNN (Zimmatic brand) and several smaller regional players. But here too, through the Valley brand, the company is the clear world leader with more than 40% market share in mechanized systems. The competition is struggling to catch up, particularly in digital services and data integration, but the lead in installed base and service network is significant.

A big advantage against "pure" ag players and "pure" infra players is diversification - if there is a weaker cycle in the ag sector (e.g. due to commodity prices or lower willingness of farmers to invest), public and utility projects are still running in the grid and vice versa. This has been evident in recent years when infrastructure has grown while the agrarian sector has gone through a more volatile phase.

Management and CEO

CEO Avner Applbaum took the helm after a long career inside the company, including finance and operations roles, and profiles himself as an "operator" who emphasizes margin expansion, efficient capital allocation and shifting the mix to higher value-added solutions. Under his leadership, the firm:

  • Strengthened focus on core segments (grid, telecom, irrigation)

  • made acquisitions in the digital ag space(Prospera) and technology platforms

  • Restructured the portfolio, including the exit of certain low-margin solar projects in North America

The capital discipline is evident in the numbers: debt is minimal, free cash flow is consistently positive, capex is holding around $80-100 million per year, and buybacks are more of a complementary tool than an aggressive EPS lever. The dividend has been rather token so far (yielding around 1%), suggesting that management prefers reinvesting in growth and technology solutions to high cash distributions.

Management's strategic priorities for the coming years include: growth in the grid (hardening, connecting RES), expanding the telecom portfolio, and monetizing digital ag solutions as recurring services (software, data, analytics). This should gradually transform the company from a "steel structure manufacturer" to a provider of complex, higher margin solutions.

Financial performance

The years 2021-2024 show a combination of cycle and improving efficiency. Revenues grow from $3.50 billion (2021) to $4.35 billion (2022, +24%), then decline slightly to $4.17 billion (2023, -3.9%) and $4.08 billion (2024, -2.4%), with a range of around $4.3 billion for 2025. While the top line is stagnant, profitability has shifted significantly: gross profit has risen from 883 million (2021) to 1.24 billion (2024), up 40%, while gross margin has improved from around 25% to 30%.

Operating profit was around 433 million in 2022 (margin ~10%), fell to 292 million in 2023 (-33%), but jumped to 525 million in 2024 (margin ~12.9%), a nearly 80% year-on-year growth. Net profit moved from 195 million in 2021 to 251 million in 2022, then fell to 143 million in 2023 to shoot up to 348 million in 2024.

Interestingly, the company was able to increase profitability even in a year when revenues fell slightly - indicating either a better mix and higher margins in infrastructure and agri-digital, or successful cost management. Moreover, the bottom line was supported by a slight reduction in share count thanks to share buybacks (c.21.2m shares in 2021 → 20.1m in 2025).

Balance sheet and debt

The balance sheet is one of the strongest in the sector. Debt represents only about 4% of assets, debt to equity is 0.04, and the equity ratio is 1.00. Net debt/EBITDA is -0.11, meaning net cash and current assets exceed interest-bearing debt. The Altman Z-score of 4.8 indicates a very low risk of financial distress.

Liquidity is decent: current ratio of 2.35, quick ratio and cash ratio of 0.26 - the company holds relatively low cash relative to assets, but the combination of operating cash flow and access to credit lines provides ample cushion. Interest cover of around 10 times means that even with rising rates, it would take a material deterioration in profitability for interest costs to become an issue.

Thus, in a stress scenario - a slump in grid and irrigation investments, pressure on margins, postponement of projects - the biggest risk would not be the balance sheet, but a decline in volumes and profitability. The company would have room to adjust capex, tighten the belt and possibly reduce buybacks without risking funding.

Valuation

On current numbers, the stock trades at a P/E of around 23.9, price to sales of 1.91, price to book of 2.33 and price to cash flow of 16.3. FCF yield is around 6%, dividend yield around 1%. This is not a typical "cheap value", but neither is it an overpriced growth stock - rather a quality industrial that the market is pricing at a premium for the combination of growth and business quality.

Compared to other infrastructure and ag players (e.g. Lindsay in irrigation, some utility equipment companies), the valuation is more in the upper half of the range, but with a better ROE and ROIC profile. ROE of around 16%, ROIC of around 9.2%, gross margin of over 30% and operating margin of over 10% are parameters that are not commonplace in such a business.

A fair value of around $345-346 suggests that from a model perspective, the title is not extremely undervalued or overpriced - rather slightly below fair value under conservative growth assumptions. For "cheap" to turn expensive, there would have to be either a significant slowdown in revenue growth (below 3-4% per year) with stagnant margins, or a decline in ROIC if new investments fail to generate comparable returns to the existing portfolio.

Risks

The first risk is cyclical - investments in grid, telecom infrastructure and irrigation, while supported by structural factors in the long term, are dependent on utility, government and farmer budgets in the short term. A recessionary environment, budget cuts or a change in priorities could lead to project postponements. The signal would be a slowdown in backlog growth, weaker orders and management outlook.

The second risk is competitive and margin risk. If new or existing competitors move more into key segments (grid, telecom, irrigation), pricing pressure could thin margins, especially for less differentiated products. This would translate into gross margins falling below 28-29% and operating margins stagnating below 9-10%.

The third risk is execution in digital. Investing in Prospero and other technologies makes sense, but failing to scale and sell to customers could mean that some capital has been allocated to projects with lower returns. In that case, ROIC could fall and the market would reassess the premium it is willing to pay today.

Investment scenarios

Optimistic scenario

In the optimistic scenario, global demand for grid modernization, telecom networks and efficient irrigation remains strong. Revenues will grow at a rate of 5-7% per year, lifting sales above $4.5 billion within a few years. Gross margin will remain above 30%, operating margin above 12-13%, FCF margin around 12-14% and ROIC in the 10-12% range.

EPS could grow to the $24-26 range in this scenario, with P/E settling around 22-25 and EV/EBITDA around 13-15 - similar to today, but on a higher earnings basis. That would mean a decent return on equity (reflecting EPS growth) plus an FCF yield in the high single digits, partially returned to shareholders in the form of dividends and buybacks. This is a scenario where the title acts as a "compounder" - slowly but surely growing the value of the company.

A realistic scenario

In the realistic scenario, revenue growth stabilizes in the 3-5% per year range, with slight cyclicality between segments. Margins remain relatively stable: gross margins around 29-31%, operating margins 10-12%, FCF margins 10-12%, ROIC 8-10%. EPS stays in the $18-22 range, and the company continues moderate share repurchases and a lower dividend.

In such an environment, P/E is around 18-22, EV/EBITDA 10-13, P/FCF around 12-15 - slightly below or near current levels, depending on sentiment. An investor in this scenario could expect a total return combining mid-single digit price growth (replicating EPS growth) and FCF yield partially paid out in dividends - so maybe 8-10% per annum in total.

Negative scenario

In the negative scenario, there will be a combination of a weaker investment cycle in infrastructure (e.g. due to recession or budget cuts) and weaker demand in the agri segment (lower commodity prices, poorer access to finance for farmers). Revenues stagnate in the 3.8-4.1bn range for several years or decline slightly, gross margins compress to 27-28%, operating margins to below 10%, FCF margins to 8-9% and ROIC to below 8%.

EPS in such a scenario will fall into the $12-16 range, P/E could push to 15-17, EV/EBITDA to 8-10, P/FCF to 10-12. This would put pressure on the share price, which could move down double-digit percentages, partially offset by FCF/dividend yield. For an investor coming in today, this would mean "hold and cash in rather than grow" - possibly waiting for a better phase of the cycle to exit.

What to watch next

  • Revenue growth rate and backlog in infrastructure - especially utilities and telecom segments ($1+B backlog).

  • Gross and operating margin development - keeping gross margin above 30% and operating margin above 10% as a signal of a healthy margin structure.

  • Ag segment growth and profitability - volume of new irrigation installations and adoption of digital solutions (Valley 365, Prospera).

  • ROIC and ROE - maintaining ROIC in the 9-10% range and ROE around 15-16% as a confirmation of good capital allocation.

  • Development of free cash flow - FCF above $400 million per year as a condition for a combination of investments, buybacks and dividends.

  • Valuation multiples (P/E, EV/EBITDA, P/FCF) compared to peer group (Lindsay, AZZ, other infra/ag players).

What to take away from the article

  • The company is a global leader in infrastructure (masts, grid, telecom, coatings) and mechanized irrigation (Valley), segments directly tied to energy transformation and water stress.

  • Revenues have been stable around $4 billion for the last few years, but margins and profitability are growing significantly - operating profit +80%, net profit +143% in 2024.

  • Free cash flow of around $500m, FCF margins of ~12% and very low debt give the company great flexibility and reduce risk.

  • Valuation is not extremely cheap or overpriced - P/E ~24, FCF yield ~6% - the market is paying a premium for the combination of quality, growth and low leverage.

  • Key growth pillars are grid modernization, 5G and precision agriculture; risks are cyclical (utility and farmer investment cycles), competitive and execution in digital.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262521-the-boring-infrastructure-name-that-quietly-compounds-double-digit-returns Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-262553 Wed, 22 Apr 2026 15:14:04 +0200 Portfolio under the microscope: Closing the $AMD position — disciplined profit-taking

I opened the $AMD position at the beginning of December 2025 at $217 with a clearly defined target of $258.

In recent weeks the stock rose significantly and quickly broke through the target level. Momentum was very strong and the price continued even higher. At $273 I therefore actively adjusted the trailing stop-loss (TSL) to the original target level of $258.

The position was closed on April 20, 2026 at $275.

Overall I realized a gain of over 26% in roughly 4.5 months, which perfectly matches my approach and expectations.

How I view the situation now:

The stock will continue to rise — In that case I'm satisfied that I rode at least part of the move. I'm not chasing the absolute top — the key is to stick to the plan.

The stock will undergo a correction — If a decline comes in the following weeks, I'd be happy to re-enter the position at prices below $225.

From my perspective this is a textbook example of disciplined position management: a clearly defined entry, target, use of TSL, and an unemotional exit.

The only real profit is the realized one.

What about you? Are you still holding $AMD, or are you also taking profits?

You can find the English version of this post on my eToro profile. If you'd like to follow me there or copy my USD portfolio, I'd appreciate it!

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262553 Jonas Müller
bulios-article-262497 Wed, 22 Apr 2026 14:45:05 +0200 4 Healthcare Stocks Paying 4%+ Dividends Investors Are Overlooking In a market dominated by AI hype and growth narratives, dividend-paying healthcare stocks are quietly gaining attention. These companies combine stable cash flows with above-average yields, offering a rare mix of income and resilience. With aging populations and rising healthcare demand, the sector has structural tailwinds many investors underestimate. The question is whether this is just stability or hidden upside.

The healthcare sector has traditionally been one of the defensive pillars of many equity portfolios. Stable drug demand, long patent protection and predictable cash flow have historically attracted dividend investors looking for steady income even in turbulent market phases. However, in the last two years, the picture for the pharmaceutical sector has become significantly more complicated. Patent issues, aggressive government negotiations over drug prices and political pressure under the USInflation Reduction Act have created an environment in which traditional blue-chip titles are losing valuation premium and their shares are plunging to multi-year lows.

But this very decline has an interesting side effect: it significantly boosts dividend yields. When the share price falls while the dividend remains nominally unchanged or rises, the yield mechanically rises. Thus, four different pharmaceutical and healthcare titles, each with a different risk profile and business model, now offer yields in excess of 4%. The key question for any investor, however, is not just whether the dividend will "survive" at today's level, but what's behind it in the first place. A high yield can be a reward for patience, or a warning that the market is no longer confident that the company can sustain the payout over the long term.

Pfizer $PFE

Pfizer is one of the largest pharmaceutical companies in the world with a market capitalization hovering around $155 billion. The company has a global presence in oncology, vaccinology, immunology, rare diseases and internal medicine. After the pandemic boom associated with the vaccine Comirnaty and the antiviral Paxlovide, Pfizer has entered a phase of painful transition: revenues from the days of covide are rapidly declining while the company is approaching one of the largest patent cliffs in its history. As a result, the stock has lost a significant amount of value since its pandemic peak and is trading at levels investors haven't seen in years.

Financial results and dividend

Total revenue for fiscal year 2025 was approximately $62.6 billion, with the core business, excluding covid products, showing solid 6% growth. For fiscal 2026, management guided for revenue guidance in the range of $59.5 billion to $62.5 billion and adjusted EPS of $2.80 to $3.00. Thus, the company openly admits that it faces a combined pressure of roughly $3 billion from patent losses and a further decline in covid revenue.

The dividend of $1.72 per share per year provides a yield hovering around 6.3%, with a payout ratio in excess of 100% as measured by GAAP net income. This in itself is not alarming if the company is generating sufficient operating cash flow, but it does signal that any significant shortfall in earnings could call into question the sustainability of the payout.

Pfizer has set a target to save a total of $7.7 billion by 2027. The results to date suggest that cost discipline is indeed working.

Pipeline and strategic pivot

A key element of Pfizer's efforts to transform itself into a precision oncology and metabolic disease company. The $43 billion acquisition of biotech Seagen brought to the portfolio an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) platform that now drives a growing portion of oncology revenues.

Pfizer's recent purchase of Metsera for approximately $10 billion opens the door to the obesity segment, where Pfizer has lagged significantly behind Eli Lilly $LLY and Novo Nordisk $NVO. R&D spending for 2026 is projected to be in the $10.5 billion to $11.5 billion range, with key programs being oncology candidate PF-08634404 and new modalities in immuno-oncology. Patent restrictions coming between 2026 and 2028 will result in an estimated loss of $17 billion to $18 billion in annual revenues from core products including the anticoagulant Eliquis and the oncology Ibrance.

A Stargic view

Pfizer today trades at a very low valuation in the context of its own history and the pharmaceutical sector. The P/E is in the 15-20 range. A dividend yield in excess of 6% is tempting, but a payout ratio of over 100% on a GAAP earnings basis raises legitimate questions about sustainability over the next two to three years, when the wave of patent losses fully hits the company.

Thus, Pfizer now stands at a literal crossroads: if the pipeline can be transformed into new revenues, this could be a classic value opportunity. If the pipeline is delayed or the results of key studies disappoint, the dividend may face downward pressure. For a conservative dividend investor, it is therefore crucial to monitor whether operating free cash flow covers the payout even in the face of rising patent losses.

Bristol-Myers Squibb $BMY

Bristol-Myers Squibb is one of the largest biopharmaceutical companies with a market capitalization hovering around $120 billion. The company is best known for its portfolio in oncology, hematology, immunology and more recently neuroscience.

Revenues for 2025 were $48.2 billion and management estimates a slight decline to a range of $46 billion to $47.5 billion for 2026. The cause is the continued erosion of older products facing generic competition: Revlimid, Pomalyst and Sprycel are losing market share faster than the new generation of drugs can make up the shortfall. Despite this, the core Growth Portfolio comprising Opdivo, Reblozyl, Camzyos, Breyanzi, Cobenfy managed to grow by around 16% in 2025 and now accounts for more than 55% of total revenues.

Financial results and dividend

Bristol-Myers Squibb pays a quarterly dividend of $0.63 per share, or $2.52 per year, with a dividend yield of about 4.2%. The company has increased its dividend for 19 consecutive years, which puts it in the category of so-called dividend aristocrats. The payout ratio on an adjusted EPS basis is around 71%, which leaves enough cushion to maintain the payout even in a declining revenue environment. The forward P/E ratio of around 9.5 times is well below the pharmaceutical sector average.

Pipeline and key catalysts

For Bristol-Myers Squibb, 2026 is an extremely important year in terms of pipeline. The centerpiece is the FDA's decision to approve iberdomide, a new multiple myeloma drug from the CELMoD platform. Approval would mark a key step in building the pipeline to replace the Revlimid shortfall after 2026.

Equally important are the results of the phase 3 clinical trial for milvexian, and other drugs. Cobenfy, an approved antipsychotic for schizophrenia, is potentially entering a much larger indication: clinical trials for Alzheimer's psychosis could yield data by the end of 2026. If Cobenfy succeeds in the Alzheimer's indication, it could generate sales in excess of $3 billion a year and significantly change the company's outlook.

Startegic view

Bristol-Myers Squibb is one of the most polarized stocks in the entire pharmaceutical sector at the moment.

  • On one side stands an extremely low valuation, a strong dividend track record and a growing Growth Portfolio.

  • On the other side stands one of the largest patent cliffs in the company's modern history, with the results of key programs being major events with significant valuation implications in both directions.

For the dividend investor, BMY is of interest precisely because the payout ratio on an adjusted EPS basis leaves the dividend free of immediate threat for now. The key question is whether the Growth Portfolio and new drugs are enough to replace shortfalls before 2030. For now, the market is skeptical of the company's ability to do so, but that is what creates the potential for a repricing in the event of positive news.

Sanofi $SNY

Business model and current situation

Sanofi is a French pharmaceutical group with a market capitalization of around $115 billion, traded on the US market in ADR form under the ticker $SNY. Unlike Pfizer $PFE and Bristol-Myers Squibb $BMY, Sanofi's investment story in 2026 is significantly more optimistic.

The company has undergone a strategic realignment: it has divested its consumer healthcare division Opella for €10 billion and continues to invest in pharmaceutical R&D with the proceeds. The main growth driver is the drug Dupixent (dupilumab), developed in collaboration with the US company Regeneron $REGN, which focuses on the treatment of atopic dermatitis, asthma and other immunologically based diseases. Dupixent achieved sales of €4.2 billion in the last quarter of 2025, up 32% year-on-year, and continues to expand.

Financial results and dividend

Sanofi's total sales for 2025 were €43.6 billion, up approximately 10% year-on-year at constant exchange rates. The company forecasts continued growth for 2026, with earnings per share growing slightly faster than sales.

Sanofi's dividend is paid annually on US ADRs and yields between 4.6% and 4.9% depending on the dollar-euro exchange rate. The payout ratio is conservative and the company's free cash flow comfortably covers the dividend and planned investments in R&D. The net profit to sales ratio is over 16%, with an operating margin of over 28%. These are parameters that indicate a highly efficient business for the pharmaceutical sector.

Pipeline and strategic diversification

Sanofi is in the best strategic position of the four under review for the transition period to the end of the decade. Dupixent will lose market exclusivity only between 2031 and 2033, so the immediate patent pressure is significantly less than for Pfizer $PFE or Bristol-Myers Squibb $BMY. Meanwhile, the company is building a replacement portfolio: amlitelimab for atopic dermatitis is achieving positive Phase 3 results with approval for a dosing frequency of once every three months, Wayrilz has been approved for the rare disease immune thrombocytopenia, and Ayvakit(acquired through the Blueprint Medicines acquisition) is also on track.

Sanofi is also sharply increasing R&D spending and expanding collaborations with external scientific partners, with total investment in business development and acquisitions reaching €52.4 billion.

A strategic view

For a dividend investor, Sanofi is probably the best trade-off between yield and business quality from today's selection. The company is growing, the dividend is well covered by cash flow, the valuation is attractive (P/E around 20 times on a GAAP basis, with forward P/E on an operating profit basis significantly lower) and the patent cliff is still on the distant horizon.

Currency is a risk for US investors, as the dividend is primarily denominated in euros and the dollar-euro exchange rate can affect ADR yields in both directions. Another risk is the over-reliance on Dupixent, which despite the planned diversification still represents a key part of revenues. Analysts at the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference in January 2026 viewed the firm positively, highlighting that Sanofi trades at a discount of around 19% to European pharmaceutical peers.

Embecta $EMBC

Embecta is the smallest and least known title in today's foursome. The company was formed in April 2022 as a spin-off from Becton, Dickinson and Company $BDX and focuses on insulin injection devices, specifically pens, needles and insulin syringes.

With approximately 100 years of history in insulin administration, Embecta is said to be the world's largest manufacturer of insulin injection devices, producing an estimated 8 billion of these devices annually for approximately 30 million patients in more than 100 countries. The market opportunity is well defined: approximately one in ten people in the world have diabetes, with the increasing prevalence of the disease in emerging markets creating sustained demand.

Financial performance and dividend

Embecta generates steady annual revenues of around $1.1 billion with gross margins in excess of 62% and operating margins of over 22%, very solid numbers for a medical supplies manufacturer.

For the first quarter of fiscal year 2026 (ending September 2025), revenue was down slightly year-over-year by 0.3% to $261 million, but the company beat analyst consensus on both EPS ($0.71 vs. estimate of $0.67) and revenue. Annual guidance for fiscal 2026 calls for EPS in the range of $2.80 to $3.00.

A dividend of $0.60 per year ($0.15 per quarter) equates to a yield of about 5.5%. The key positive is the conservative payout ratio of about 37%, which insulates the dividend significantly from short-term earnings fluctuations. The company's debt of $1.38 billion with annual EBITDA of around $300 million is higher, but management plans to reduce it through free cash flow.

Strategic transformation and acquisition of Owen Mumford

For Embecta, 2026 is a watershed year in terms of strategic transformation. The company is leaving its identity as a pure-play manufacturer of diabetic injectables and transforming into a broader supplier of medical consumables.

In March 2026, it announced the acquisition of UK firm Owen Mumford for a price of up to £150m sterling (£100m paid up front, plus up to £50m tied to performance). Owen Mumford brings the Aidaptus biologics delivery platform, global distribution capabilities and revenues in excess of £69 million for fiscal 2025. The transaction, which is expected to close in the third quarter of fiscal 2026, expands Embecta's addressable market far beyond traditional insulin delivery.

Another strategic catalyst is the GLP-1 drug boom: Embecta has already signed agreements to co-package its pens and needles with potential generic GLP-1 therapies, opening up a new revenue stream once generics enter the market.

A strategic view

Embecta is the most controversial headline of the four under review.

  • On the one hand, it has a conservative payout ratio, an attractive dividend yield in excess of 5%, and stable demand for basic diabetes care that is not heavily dependent on the innovation cycle. On the other hand, the company operates in a segment where the long-term structural trend is working partly against it: automated insulin administration systems (insulin pumps, closed-loop systems) are gradually reducing the dependence of some patients on manual injections.

  • The negative return on equity (ROE) resulting from the post-spin-off accounting structure and the debt burden are other factors to bear in mind.

  • The acquisition of Owen Mumford signals the right strategic direction, but the integration risk and temporary increase in debt are short-term burdens.

Comparative table

Ticker

Company

Dividend yield

Payout ratio

Revenue (FY2025)

Forward P/E

Patent issues

$PFE

Pfizer

6,3 %

>100% (GAAP)

$62.6 billion

9x

2026-2028 (high)

$BMY

Bristol-Myers Squibb

4,2 %

71 %

$48.2 billion

9,5x

2028-2030 (very high)

$SNY

Sanofi

4,6-4,9 %

Conservative

€43.6 billion

20x

2031-2033 (remote)

$EMBC

Embecta

5,5 %

37 %

$1.1 billion

3,8x

Structural (GLP-1/pumps)

Overall strategic view

A comparison of these four titles illustrates well how different a seemingly similar situation can be, namely the high dividend yield in the pharmaceutical sector.

  • Pfizer $PFE offers the highest yield, but at the cost of the greatest immediate patent risk and a payout ratio in excess of 100% of GAAP earnings.

  • Bristol-Myers Squibb $BMY combines a robust dividend history with high pipeline risk and a patent cliff that is more distant than Pfizer's, but all the deeper.

  • Sanofi $SNY represents the most favorable ratio of business quality to yield of the group: it is growing, has a conservative payout ratio, and the patent drag is five years away.

  • Embecta $EMBC is a defensive revenue title with a low correlation to the pharmaceutical innovation cycle, but with inherent structural pressure in the form of technology substitution for manual injections.

From a capital allocation perspective, it is important to distinguish between two types of high dividend yield.

  1. A yield that reflects temporary market pessimism about a real strong business is a value opportunity.

  2. A yield that signals market doubt about the firm's long-term ability to sustain its payout is a dividend trap.

What to watch next

  • For Pfizer: revenue development beyond covid and patent loss: if the core business grows above 5% and pipeline programs from Metsery or Seagen yield positive phase 3 data, the dividend valuation will improve dramatically.

  • For Bristol-Myers Squibb, the key date is August 2026, when the FDA will decide on iberdomide.

  • At Sanofi: regulatory trial results for amlitelimab in atopic dermatitis and data from frexalimab in multiple sclerosis as the first indicator of whether the pipeline can actually compensate for the future loss of other drugs.

  • At Embecta: closing of the Owen Mumford acquisition planned for the third quarter of fiscal 2026 and management commentary on synergistic revenue from GLP-1

  • For the sector as a whole: developments in the US Inflation Reduction Act drug price negotiations and the potential impact of tariff measures on pharmaceutical supply chains that could impact margins across the sector.

The pharmaceutical sector is now a source of extraordinary opportunity for the dividend investor, but also an area of hidden risk.

The key differentiator is not yield per se, but how cash flow is covered, what the company's debt burden is, and what the company plans to do in the next two to three years to replace revenues threatened by patent losses.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262497-4-healthcare-stocks-paying-4-dividends-investors-are-overlooking Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-262440 Wed, 22 Apr 2026 04:20:12 +0200 Intuitive Surgical posts “textbook” growth - and the stock still flinches Intuitive Surgical’s first quarter of 2026 checks almost every box you’d want from a high‑quality med‑tech name. Revenue climbed 23% year‑on‑year to about 2.77 billion dollars, driven by a 17% increase in total procedures (around 16% growth on da Vinci and 39% on Ion) and a steadily expanding installed base of both systems. Non‑GAAP EPS jumped to roughly 2.50 dollars, up about 38% versus last year and well ahead of expectations, while recurring revenue from instruments, accessories and services grew in line with the top line and now accounts for roughly 86% of total sales.

The mild pullback in the share price says more about expectations than about the quarter itself. After several years of high‑teens to nearly 20% procedure growth, management is guiding 2026 da Vinci volumes up by about 13–15%, and investors are highly sensitive to any hint that growth is normalizing and that margin headwinds from tariffs and operating‑expense growth in the low‑to‑mid teens could cap upside over the next few years. In that sense, Q1 looks less like a warning sign about the business and more like a reminder about the stock: Intuitive is moving into a more mature phase where it still delivers robust double‑digit growth and expands its robotic footprint, but the valuation is rich enough that even small changes in growth and margin trajectories show up immediately in the price.

Q1 2026 results

Revenues, performance and systems

In the first quarter of 2026, Intuitive $ISRG achieved revenues of $2.77 billion, up 23 percent from $2.25 billion in the same period of 2025. Growth in excess of twenty percent rests on three pillars. The first is a higher number of procedures on the da Vinci and Ion systems, the second is a higher number of new systems installed, and the third is a growing installed base that generates recurring revenue from instruments, accessories and services.

The number of interventions on Intuitive systems increased globally by approximately seventeen percent. Procedures on da Vinci alone grew around sixteen percent, while Ion is going through an even faster phase, with procedures on that system up around 39 percent. The company placed 431 da Vinci systems in the quarter, compared to 367 a year ago, with the number of new da Vinci 5 systems rising from 147 to 232. The da Vinci installed base increased to 11,395 systems, up 12% from a year ago, and Ion to 1,041 systems, up 22% year-over-year.

Revenue structure and profitability

Tooling and accessories revenue was $1.69 billion in the first quarter, up 23% from $1.37 billion a year ago. The main drivers were growth in da Vinci procedures, changes in customer purchasing behavior and rapidly increasing use of the Ion system. Systems revenue increased to $651 million compared to $523 million a year ago, reflecting a higher number of new systems placed, a higher proportion of rentals and higher average selling prices. Of the 431 da Vinci systems, 243 were placed under operating leases and 118 were placed on a usage-dependent basis, compared to 198 leased and 107 placed on a usage-dependent basis a year ago.

Profitability has improved significantly. Accounting-standard operating profit rose to $855 million versus $578 million in the first quarter of 2025, and adjusted operating profit rose to $1.08 billion versus $770 million. Net income by accounting standards was $822 million, which translates to earnings of $2.28 per share versus $1.92 a year ago. Adjusted net income rose to $901 million and adjusted earnings per share to $2.50, compared with $662 million and $1.81 per share in the first quarter of 2025.

Those numbers mean that adjusted earnings per share are growing at about 38% on 23% revenue growth, and the company has significantly beaten analysts' expectations, who were expecting sales of about $2.62 billion and earnings of about $2.12 per share. Still, the stock is down after the results, as the market is looking not just at the last quarter, but at the outlook for growth rates going forward.

Outlook for 2026

For the full year 2026, Intuitive expects the number of procedures on da Vinci systems to grow by approximately 13.5% to 15.5%. This is still a very respectable pace, but it also marks a slowdown from previous years, when growth was higher and was one of the reasons for the stock's very strong performance. The company also expects adjusted gross margin to be in the range of 67.5% to 68.5% of sales and growth in adjusted operating expenses to be roughly between eleven and fourteen percent.

The impact of customs measures is built into the outlook. The company says directly that it expects the current tariffs to reduce gross margin by about one percentage point. Should tariffs be further extended or tightened, the impact on margins and overall results for the year could be more significant. This is a factor that the market is watching because the company has a global supply chain and most of its manufacturing and components happen outside the United States.

It is the combination of a gradual slowdown in the growth of interventions and the sensitivity of margins to external influences that is one of the reasons why the stock fell in regular trading after an otherwise very good quarter.

The evolution of the business in recent years

Looking at the numbers over the last four years, there is a very clear upward trend. Revenues in 2021 were approximately $5.71 billion. In 2022 they rise to around $6.22 billion, in 2023 to $7.12 billion and in 2024 to $8.35 billion. The growth rate has been between about nine and seventeen percent per year, with growth accelerating in the last two years.

Net income shows a similar pattern. After reaching about $1.70 billion in 2021, it dropped to about $1.32 billion in 2022, only to return to growth in subsequent years. In 2023 it was around 1.80 billion and in 2024 it was around 2.32 billion. Earnings per share, due to a slight decline in the number of shares and growth in net income, rose from about $4.66 to $4.79 in 2021 to about $3.65 to $3.72 in 2022, then to about five dollars in 2023 and to more than six dollars in 2024.

Overall, this means that Intuitive is a long-term growth company with high margins and the ability to grow earnings per share at a higher rate than sales. The brief blip in 2022 was more of an episode than a trend change. The subsequent return to double-digit sales growth and even faster earnings growth shows that the company has been able to switch back into growth mode, and the first quarter of 2026 fits into that picture.

Shareholders and capital structure

Intuitive Surgical's shareholder structure is very similar to other large healthcare titles. According to data from Yahoo Finance, insiders hold roughly one-half of one percent of the stock, while the institution owns approximately eighty-nine percent of all shares and nearly ninety percent of the free float. More than 3,200 institutions hold shares in their portfolios.

Among the largest investors are asset managers, who tend to be the mainstays of large index and actively managed funds. Vanguard holds about 33.6 million shares, about nine and a half percent of the company. Blackrock owns about 30.5 million shares, or roughly eight and a half percent. Other significant positions are held by State Street, T Rowe Price and Geode Capital, which together add another unit of percent. For the investor, this means that the title is heavily in the hands of long-term institutional capital, and short-term price swings are often associated with over-hyped expectations rather than panicked retail moves.

Why the stock is down after earnings despite a strong quarter

At first glance, it would seem that after 23% revenue growth and nearly 40% earnings per share growth, the stock must be rising. Moreover, Intuitive beat estimates on both revenue and earnings and showed another shift in both the number of performers and the size of its installed base. Still, the title lost around three per cent in the regular session and only pulled back some of the decline in post-trade trading.

The reason for this is that the market is looking primarily at the future growth rate for Intuitive. The company itself says it expects growth in da Vinci surgeries in 2026 to be in the range of about thirteen and a half to fifteen and a half percent, down from last year. It also notes that tariffs will continue to put pressure on gross margins and that it must invest in operating costs to maintain its technological edge and relationships with hospitals.

Inversely, Intuitive has had a period of extremely strong growth and some very strong quarters, so some of the positive news has already been priced in. The current quarter confirms that the business is in great shape, but also shows that the growth rate will gradually normalize from very high levels to still decent, but lower levels.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262440-intuitive-surgical-posts-textbook-growth-and-the-stock-still-flinches Pavel Botek
bulios-article-262449 Wed, 22 Apr 2026 03:53:13 +0200 Tim Cook is stepping down as CEO of $AAPL, but what does that actually mean for $AAPL? 🍎

Tim Cook is leaving on September 1. He will be replaced by John Ternus, the current head of hardware. At first glance it’s a calm, logical line of succession. But let’s look beneath the surface.

Who is John Ternus

He’s not an outsider. Ternus is Apple through and through — he understands the products, the culture, and the supply chain. Crucially, the M‑chips were developed under his leadership and are probably Apple’s biggest technological leap in the past decade. Continuity is an advantage here, not a weakness.

Where the problem lies

Cook was more than a CEO. He was the architect of relationships — with China, with suppliers, and with regulators worldwide. That network was built over 15 years and can’t be handed over in a PowerPoint.

And then there’s AI. Siri is an embarrassment compared to competitors in 2026. Apple Intelligence hasn’t convinced yet. $META, $GOOGL and $MSFT are running full throttle on AI; Apple is still figuring out where it fits in this story. But Ternus is a hardware guy. Can he culturally pivot the company toward AI and software?

Valuation leaves no room for mistakes

A P/E around 30 is a premium valuation. For a company that’s growing relatively slowly and whose AI narrative is still taking shape, that’s a lot. The iPhone still makes up roughly half of revenues — without a convincing next big story it’s hard to justify this valuation over the long term.

Ternus is a reasonable choice. But Cook was irreplaceable where business is done off-camera. In the short term I expect volatility; in the long term AAPL will rise or fall based on what they deliver in AI by the end of 2026. Earnings on April 30 will be the first test and, importantly, Cook’s last report as the sitting CEO.

Do you hold $AAPL? How do you view this change?

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262449 Mohammed Khan
bulios-article-262358 Tue, 21 Apr 2026 17:20:15 +0200 Netflix sells off on guidance while quietly becoming a cash‑flow machine Netflix’s Q1 2026 was the kind of print that would normally light a fire under most stocks: revenue grew about 16% year‑on‑year to 12.25 billion dollars, operating margin stayed north of 30% and EPS nearly doubled versus last year. The company also generated roughly 5.1 billion dollars of free cash flow in the quarter including a 2.8 billion dollar breakup fee — and even stripping that out, underlying FCF was around 2.25 billion, an 18–19% margin that’s higher than many mega‑cap tech names manage.

Yet the share price dropped roughly 9% after the earnings release as investors zeroed in on one line: management’s reaffirmed full‑year outlook for 2026, which points to revenue growth slowing from the current ~16% pace toward 12–14% with an operating‑margin target of about 31.5%. For a market still conditioned to trade Netflix on “top‑line acceleration”, that guidance looked like a classic peak‑growth signal.

Top points of analysis

  1. Q1 2026: revenue +16% YoY, EPS and earnings above estimates, operating margin over 30%, strong FCF, but stock has written down -9% due to the outlook for revenue growth slowing to 12-14% for the rest of the year.

  2. Netflix is operating with an operating margin target range of 25-30% today and management confirmed on the call that it wants to stay near the top of that range even if revenue growth slows gradually.

  3. Free cash flow is in the range of $7-8 billion per year, which gives an FCF yield in the low single-digit percentages - but for a company that is still growing at double-digit rates and has dumped CAPEX behind it.

  4. Ad fare is growing faster than the rest of the business, with most new sign-ups in developed countries going to ad-supported or password-sharing plans, while management talks of the ad business as a "multi-billion opportunity".

  5. The outlook for 12-14% revenue growth is being read by the market as "the end of the growth story", but at 30% operating margin, that means very healthy profitable growth - which is exactly what most megacaps have not had for a long time.

  6. Valuation: Netflix is trading at significantly lower multiples than in the days of "subscriber mania," but the business now has higher margins, better content discipline, and a new source of monetization in the form of advertising.

  7. The market still mentally compares Netflix to a 2018-type "growth streaming service" instead of seeing it as an FCF machine with additional optional upside from ads, gaming and IP licensing.

What's changed: from chasing subscribers to profitable streaming with advertising

A few years ago, Netflix $NFLX was a typical "subscriber story": everything revolved around net additions, the market rewarded every strong quarter in new accounts and punished any slowdown regardless of margins. This led to extremely costly race logic - high investment in content, expansion anywhere, anytime, just to keep up the subscriber growth rate.

Today, the structure is completely different. Netflix has delivered several quarters where revenue has grown at double-digit rates, but operating margin has stabilized and exceeds 30% at peak times, which is the exception in the media business. Management openly says it is targeting long-term revenue growth in the low to mid double-digit range and operating margin in the 25%-30% range, which is a typical "rule of 40" configuration for a mature growth company, not a speculative streaming service.

The fundamental is the jump from pure subscriber growth to a mix of ARPU + ads + sharing monetization. Crack-down on account sharing brought another wave of subscriber growth while increasing average monetization per household as a portion of "parasitic" users switched to their own or a shared paid plan. In parallel, Netflix is rolling out an ad plan that has a lower cost per month but openly targets much higher monetization per user through advertising - management is talking about how the ad business could generate billions of dollars per year in a couple of years.

But the market's main reaction to the current results is that revenue growth has accelerated from previous crisis years and is now forecast to decelerate slightly. This is seen as ignoring that the business has moved to a phase where every percentage point of revenue growth generates a multiples contribution to FCF than before, because Netflix no longer has as extreme a CAPEX/cash cost per content as it did in the expansion phase.

What needs to work for this new model to work

  • Netflix needs to maintain double-digit revenue growth without sacrificing operating margin below 25%.

  • The ad business needs to grow to a stable multi-billion size with reasonable margins in a couple of years, not remain a "nice to have" add-on.

  • Content costs need to stay under control so that FCF doesn't fall due to the chase for more subscriber jumps.

How it becomes money: specific sources of cash flow growth

1) ARPU and tariff mix

The first source of growth is a shift in ARPU and tariff mix, not just subscriber numbers. Sharing crack-down has already produced several quarters where revenue per user growth and net additions growth have run concurrently. Management points out that most new sign-ups are coming either on cheaper ad-supported plans or on new sharing plans that generate higher revenue per household than the original "family sharing". This translates directly into higher revenue per member and at 30% operating margin, every extra dollar in ARPU has a very strong impact on profits.

2) Advertising as a second engine

The second driver is the advertising business. The ad tier is more in the external numbers so far, but management is talking about several million active users in ad-supported plans and growth in inventory and CPM. Analyst estimates and management commentary point the way: by 2026, the ad segment could bring in on the order of $3 billion in revenue, with the potential to grow further as geographic reach and integration with large ad platforms expands. Given that the cost base for ads is largely fixed (existing content + tech), every additional ad dollar has an above-average margin.

3) Content discipline and CAPEX

The third source is a more disciplined approach to content. Netflix has shown in recent years that it can spin off global hits and long-form IP without exponential growth in content costs - a combination of local production, licensing, and the longer lifespan of big brands (e.g., series universes). As a result, CAPEX on content is growing slower than revenues and free cash flow is stabilizing at $7-8 billion per year, with potential for further growth unless a massive wave of library investment hits. For shareholders, this means that the combination of 12-14% revenue growth and >25% operating margin gives FCF a profile that is comparable to large technology companies, even after accounting for stock-based compensation.

Figures

  • Q1 2026 revenue growth: approximately +16% YoY, above consensus.

  • Q1 2026 operating margin: around 30% (targeting a range of 25-30% p.a.).

  • EPS and revenue: beating analysts' estimates.

  • FCF trailing: around $7-8bn (depending on definition and year), after years of FCF being volatile.

  • Outlook - 2026 revenue growth: ~12-14% vs ~16% in Q1.

  • Ads business: heading towards multi-billion revenue in a few years, yet rapidly growing share of sign-ups to ad-supported plans.

Interpretation: results show a business that is clearly past the growth "peak" in subscribers, but at the revenue, margin and FCF level is in its healthiest shape ever. The market's reaction is thus to focus on the slowing pace of revenues, rather than appreciating that the combination of high profitability and a new source of monetization (ads) is exactly what investors want in a mature growth company.

Valuation - what's included and what's not

Netflix is trading at significantly lower multiples after this earnings reaction than when it was a pure "tradable subscriber story", yet it has a significantly better mix of growth and profitability. In plain English: the market is not willing to pay the same P/E today, even though EPS and FCF are growing faster and more steadily than when it was euphorically valuing each new subscriber.

If we take a trailing FCF of about $7-8 billion and a market cap in the low hundreds of billions range, we are getting FCF yields in the low single digits of percent, which is not "cheap" on the face of it. But in the context of double-digit revenue growth, 25-30% operating margin and still relatively low ad penetration, this is more of a valuation of a quality growth stock than an overblown bubble.

What the market values

  • Stabilized revenue growth after the covide swing

  • Significantly improved margins and content discipline

  • Visible progress in monetization of sharing and advertising

What the market fears

  • Gradual slowdown in growth to 10-12% with no further growth engine

  • Risks of market saturation and competitive pressure (Disney+ $DIS, Amazon $AMZN, regional players)

  • Possibility of ad business not reaching expected size or margins

In short: the price no longer reflects extreme growth expectations, but it doesn't seem to fully appreciate that Netflix is now in a "slow growth deceleration" phase with high profitability, not a "falling off a cliff" phase.

Future potential: where Netflix may yet surprise

In the short term, it's all about whether it delivers 12-14% revenue growth and 30% margin. But the medium-term potential is broader: management openly says Netflix is only at around 7% of the addressable market so far, if you take into account a combination of time spent on TV and content and ad spend. This means that even if subscriber growth slows, the company has room to grow through higher monetization of its existing user base and through new verticals.

The first and most immediate driver is advertising. It brought in over USD1.5bn in 2025, about 3% of revenue, and management reckons the ad business will roughly double to around USD3bn in 2026. External estimates like Warc/Omdia then talk about how advertising on Netflix could grow to USD8bn a year by 2030, and the firm could capture up to around 10% of global CTV ad spend. If this scenario comes close to reality, Netflix will have a second separate growth pillar within a few years that is not dependent on net subscriber numbers, but on its ability to grow CPMs and share of the ad pie.

The second pillar is live content and sports. Netflix has started to enter live streaming and sports content more systematically because this is where ad formats are most valuable - viewers don't skip ads as much and advertisers are willing to pay a premium. The deal to broadcast WWE RAW for roughly $5 billion over ten years is a big first step, but at the same time management stresses that it doesn't want to replicate the expensive "all-in" models of ESPN or traditional TV. Thus, live sports and events are meant to be select premium hits that pull down viewership, rather than an across-the-board loss-making strategy.

The third layer is gaming and the broader ecosystem around IP. Netflix is gradually building a gaming business, including cloud gaming and bringing its brands to interactive, both on mobile and on TV. The gaming division is now small in absolute numbers, but strategically important: the goal is to pull additional hours of engagement from existing users, strengthen platform loyalty, and open the door to other forms of monetization (branded integrations, in-game collaborations, merchandising). If successful, Netflix may gradually become an "IP and attention platform" rather than a pure video service, which would justify a higher long-term valuation than the market typically gives to media companies.

In summary: while the short-term headlines mainly address whether revenue growth falls from 16% to 13%, the medium-term potential rests on whether Netflix can deliver on three things - making advertising a stable multi-billion engine, monetizing live content and sports without destroying margins, and melding its content library into a broader ecosystem (games, events, branded collaborations). If so, we may look back on today in a few years as a period when the market dealt with deceleration while the company quietly built additional floors above its already strong FCF foundation.

Risks

  1. Macro and advertising - If the global economy slows, advertising is the first place where companies are cutting budgets. This could cut off ad growth just when Netflix needs the ad segment to take over as a second growth engine.

  2. Competitive pressure and content costs - Competition from other streaming services may force Netflix to increase content investment again to maintain share. This would push down FCF and margins, especially if the market starts to become more divided among several large platforms.

  3. Regulation and pricing power - Regulators and consumer pressure may limit Netflix's ability to frequently raise prices. If ARPU growth slows and ADSs don't take over as driver, it will be harder to sustain double-digit revenue growth at current margins.

Investment scenarios

Optimistic scenario

  • Revenue growth stabilizes around 12-15% per annum for several years.

  • Operating margin stays near the upper end of the range (28-30%).

  • Ads business grows to USD 5-7bn over 3-5 years with high margins.

  • FCF grows faster than revenue due to leverage on cost base, FCF yield is internally "cheapening" from today's levels.

In this scenario, a revaluation multiple or at least strong EPS/FCF growth to fill out the valuation makes sense.

A realistic scenario

  • Revenues gradually decelerate towards 10-12% per annum.

  • Operating margin fluctuates in the 25-28% range.

  • Ads business reaches a few billion annually, but at the lower end of optimistic estimates.

  • Netflix generates a steady $7-9 billion FCF per year and uses it primarily for buybacks and selective M&A.

This is a scenario where the current valuation may be fair - the return comes mainly through earnings/FCF growth, not through revaluation.

Pessimistic scenario

  • Revenue falls below 10% growth, ADSs fail to meet expectations and ARPU growth gets stuck.

  • Competition forces Netflix to increase content costs, operating margin falls below 25%.

  • FCF stagnates or declines, the company still generates decent absolute cash, but investors value it as a "mature media" title.

In this scenario, the current valuation would be more of an upper bound, and room for multiples to fall would be real.

What to watch next

  • Quarterly revenue growth vs. outlook - if 12-14% isn't a conservative number.

  • Operating margin development - if it stays at the top of the 25-30% range.

  • Adoption rate of ad-supported tariffs, proportion of new sign-ups on ads vs. standard tariffs.

  • Estimated and reported ad revenues, management comment on medium-term ad target.

  • CAPEX per content vs. revenue, so that FCF is not "disposable".

What to take away from the article

  • The market punished Netflix mainly for weaker revenue growth outlook, not for the Q1 numbers themselves, which were very strong.

  • The company is now in its best shape ever in terms of margins and FCF, though subscriber growth is not as giant.

  • Ads, ARPU and share monetization are gradually taking over as the main growth drivers, not net accounts.

  • Valuation is no longer in "euphoria mode", but it doesn't seem to fully appreciate that this is a stabilized FCF machine with double-digit growth.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262358-netflix-sells-off-on-guidance-while-quietly-becoming-a-cash-flow-machine Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-262345 Tue, 21 Apr 2026 17:05:09 +0200 3M’s Q1: margins tell one story, lawsuits tell another 3M’s first quarter of 2026 neatly captures the split between how the business is running and how the legacy legal mess still hits the P&L. Net sales inched up 1.3% year‑on‑year to 6.0 billion dollars, with organic sales actually down about 1.2–1.4%, but GAAP operating margin improved to 23.2% and adjusted operating margin to 23.8%, roughly 230 and 30 basis points higher than a year ago as pricing and cost cuts flowed through. On an adjusted basis, EPS rose 14% to 2.14 dollars, comfortably ahead of expectations and consistent with a company that has largely stabilised after spinning off its health‑care business.

The headline GAAP numbers look far less flattering. GAAP EPS fell 40% to 1.23 dollars per share, with management again flagging litigation and other one‑offs tied to PFAS contamination and combat earplug settlements as the main drag. Those legal outflows have already cost 3M tens of billions of dollars in recent years and are set to continue weighing on cash flow into the 2030s, which is why full‑year 2026 guidance was reiterated without much top‑line ambition: low‑single‑digit sales growth, high‑teens GAAP margin and mid‑20s adjusted margin. For investors, Q1 underlines the core dilemma: operationally, 3M is starting to look more like its old self on margin; on a reported basis, the stock is still chained to a legal bill that makes the gap between GAAP and “clean” earnings too big to ignore.

Q1 2026 results

Revenues and segments

For Q1 2026, 3M's GAAP revenue was $MMM.0 billion, up 1.3% year-over-year. On an adjusted basis, it's the same number, with organic growth of 1.2%. From the perspective of a cyclical industry giant, this is more of a "stagnation with a slight plus" than a return to double-digit growth.

According to the presentation, the segments were mixed:

  • Safety & Industrial delivered organic growth of around 3% and overall sales were up around 6-7%, which was one of the main drivers.

  • Transportation & Electronics was slightly negative organically (around -0.3%), but overall sales grew slightly due to currencies and mix.

  • TheConsumer segment was down around 1-1.5% organically, but total sales were up slightly due to pricing and currencies.

Regionally, China was the main performer, with sales up around 8-9%, while the Americas saw a decline of around 1-2%. This shows well that 3M's business is still very sensitive to the local industry cycle and consumer demand.

Margins and profitability

The strength of the quarter is the improvement in margins. GAAP operating margin rose to 23.2%, up 230 basis points from a year ago. Adjusted operating margin moved to 23.8%, up 30 basis points year-over-year. Thus, management can rightly claim in the presentation that the "value creation framework" is gradually starting to work at the profitability level.

At the net profit level, the picture is more complex. GAAP EPS fell to $1.23, down about 40% from last year and well below consensus of about $1.97. This is due to a combination of higher non-operating expenses and the revaluation of the stake in the spun-off healthcare company Solventum, which translates into "other expense" and pulls down GAAP net income.

In contrast, adjusted EPS of $2.14 implies 14% year-over-year growth and beating the analyst estimate of around $1.97-2.02. So if you "peel away" the impact of Solventum and other one-time items, Q1 is surprisingly solid in terms of net income - but the market has to decide how much it's willing to trust these adjusted numbers.

Cash flow

On the cash front, things are looking more sober. Q1 operating cash flow was $0.6 billion and adjusted free cash flow was $0.5 billion. It's not disappointing, but with the size of the company and the volume of legal liabilities, it's not even a number where an investor would think the problem is definitively solved.

What the CEO says and what the tone of management is

The same themes are repeated in the presentation and the press release. Chairman and CEO William Brown talks about a "value creation framework" to transform 3M into a stronger and more predictable enterprise.

Brown emphasizes three main points in his comments:

  • An emphasis on fundamentals and execution - better cost management, standardization of processes, and simplification of manufacturing and organizational structure.

  • Portfolio transformation - reducing less profitable or problematic parts, concentrating capital in segments with higher returns and better margins.

  • Long-term goals - a structure to enable "structurally higher growth" and "stronger margin performance", i.e. gradually moving 3M away from a period defined by litigation and restructuring.

At the same time, Brown says the company has had a "good start to the year" and that despite the volatile environment, management remains confident in achieving its 2026 target, both in terms of revenue growth and profitability. So the tone is cautiously optimistic: no big marketing slogans, but an emphasis on discipline and execution.

Outlook for 2026

3M confirms its full-year outlook after Q1 2026. It expects approx:

  • 3% growth in adjusted sales in 2026

  • Adjusted operating margin higher by approximately 70-80 basis points

  • adjusted EPS in the range of $8.50-8.70 per share, which is roughly in line with market expectations.

In addition, the presentation highlights several newer strategic moves and targets:

  • Aiming to launch around 350 new products in 2026 to support organic growth and a better mix with higher margins

  • the company continues its transformation - consolidating production, reducing complexity and thereby freeing up some capital and operating costs

  • 3M wants to remain a large payer of cash to shareholders, but also declares that some of the free cash will be used to invest in growth and strengthen the balance sheet.

Long-term performance

Historically, 3M has been synonymous with steady growth and high margins. However, recent years have brought a combination of stagnant sales and legal issues, which has taken a toll on GAAP numbers as well as valuation and sentiment around the stock.

Analyst reports show that in previous years, sales have averaged declining or stagnant in the low single-digit percentages per year rather than growing. Meanwhile, profitability remained relatively solid on an adjusted basis, but GAAP margins and EPS were roiled by provisions and one-time costs.

Today's Q1 2026 fits the "slowly stabilizing" 3M picture:

  • Revenues no longer declining, but only growing 1-2%

  • margins are gradually improving

  • Adjusted EPS is growing, while GAAP EPS is still under pressure

Not very attractive for an investor looking for a growth story. But for someone looking for steady cash flow, a high dividend, and willing to live with a legal history and slower growth, this could be an interesting value/dividend bet.

Shareholders, dividend and capital policy

3M is a typical institutional title today. According to ownership summaries, large asset managers like Vanguard and BlackRock hold key positions, each with a few percent stake, supplemented by other funds and ETFs. Insiders own relatively little, which is standard for such a large, established firm.

The dividend remains a key part of the investment story. 3M recently approved a quarterly dividend of $0.78 per share, an increase of roughly 7% year-over-year. At the current share price, the dividend yield is in the higher units of percent, well above the index average.

In Q1 2026, 3M returned approximately $2.4 billion to shareholders through a combination of dividends and share repurchases. That's a strong signal toward shareholders, but it also opens up the debate about whether some of those funds should go more aggressively toward deleveraging and further strengthening the balance sheet until the legal past is definitively closed.

What does this imply for the investor

Q1 2026 and the presentation on the results confirm that 3M today is mainly a stabilization and dividend story, not a growth story:

  • Revenue only growing in units of percentages

  • margins are improving and adjusted EPS is rising

  • GAAP numbers are still weighed down by the past

  • the dividend is high and the company is actively returning cash to shareholders

If we're looking for momentum, double-digit organic growth and "clean" numbers without legal noise, 3M still doesn't offer it after Q1 2026. But if we're looking for a large, global industrial company with decent margins, a conservative outlook, a high dividend yield and gradual normalization after a series of tough years, then Q1 and the CEO's comments rather confirm that the story is moving in the right direction - just slowly.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262345-3m-s-q1-margins-tell-one-story-lawsuits-tell-another Pavel Botek
bulios-article-262305 Tue, 21 Apr 2026 12:15:35 +0200 6 Stocks Wall Street Is Quietly Accumulating Right Now While markets remain volatile, top analysts are doubling down on a select group of companies with strong upside potential. These six stocks combine innovation, market momentum, and long-term growth narratives that Wall Street believes are still underappreciated. From AI leaders to disruptive challengers, this list reveals where smart money is heading next. If sentiment turns, these names could move fast.

A Buy rating from a Wall Street analyst isn't just a formal announcement. It's a signal that the big banks and see concrete fundamental reason for optimism in a given stock and are willing to put their reputations behind a public recommendation.

Yet even that consensus doesn't guarantee performance, which is why it's worth looking beneath the surface of each of these six titles. What exactly do analysts see, how strong are those expectations, and where are the biggest risks for investors.

Lam Research $LRCX

Lam Research is one of the key semiconductor equipment companies. The company specializes in the processes of etching, layer deposition, and surface cleaning of silicon wafers, steps without which no modern chip can be created. While the name Nvidia $NVDA or TSMC $TSM resonates more in the public mind, Lam Research stands in the background as a necessary infrastructure of the entire industry.

Analysts hailing Lam Research as a "strong buy" build their argument on simple logic: as long as hyperscalers like Microsoft $MSFT, Amazon $AMZN or Google $GOOG invest massively in AI data centers, someone has to make the chips for these infrastructures. And the production of those chips depends on devices from Lam Research. The company posted revenue of over $18 billion in its most recent fiscal year, a year-over-year increase of over 23%.

Analyst sentiment and outlook

Of the 25 analysts covering $LRCX, the consensus rating gives it a Strong Buy, with an average target price of around $243. B. Riley recently raised the price target to $330 and Deutsche Bank moved the target to $300, indicating that the bullish sentiment of the analyst community persists. Total revenue for fiscal year 2026 is estimated by analysts to be approximately $22.9 billion.

Exposure to China, which has long accounted for around 35% of the firm's revenue, remains a key risk. Export restrictions and geopolitical tensions around technology shipments to China could threaten this revenue. At the same time, any slowdown in the investment cycle at large customers such as TSMC, Intel $INTC or Samsung $SSNLF would quickly spill over into Lam Research's orders.

The main competitors are Applied Materials $AMAT and ASML $ASML, (more on them in the stock detail) with each of these companies dominating different segments of the manufacturing process. Lam Research is particularly strong in etching technologies, where it has hard-to-contest know-how. The barriers to entry in this segment are extremely high because customers do not like to change equipment suppliers in the middle of a production line.

GE Aerospace $GE

The GE Aerospace story is one of the most impressive U.S. market turns in the last decade. After years of complex restructuring, as parent General Electric spun off its medical division and energy business, GE Aerospace has established itself as a player in aircraft engines and services. And analysts agree: the company has entered a harvest phase after years of costly investments.

In the fourth quarter of 2025, the company reported revenue of $11.87 billion, up 20% year-over-year and well ahead of analysts' estimates. Adjusted earnings per share came in at $1.57. For 2026, management reaffirmed adjusted EPS guidance in the range of $7.10 to $7.40 and targets operating profit between $9.85 billion and $10.25 billion, $1 billion higher than the original guidance.

Growth engine: LEAP and aftermarket service

The company's key asset is its LEAP engine program, which powers Boeing 737 MAX and Airbus A320neo aircraft. The volume of service visits for these engines grew 27 percent in 2025, and the installed base is expected to approximately triple by 2030. Aftermarket service, i.e. spare parts sales and MRO services, is the segment with significantly higher margins than engine sales alone. The company entered 2026 with a backlog of $190 billion.

18 of the 20 analysts covering GE Aerospace give it a buy or outperform rating, with an average target price of around $351. The company's ROE is exceptionally high at nearly 46%, with operating margins of over 20%. The company plans to invest $1 billion in U.S. manufacturing and add 5,000 jobs in 2026.

Key risks include supply chain difficulties that have constrained commercial production in recent years and margin pressure from ongoing investments in MRO capacity. Analysts also note that the current valuation, with a P/E ratio of around 37.7, leaves little room for error. Should aftermarket pricing slow or rising R&D spending, which is expected to reach $3 billion per year in the foreseeable future, push margins lower, valuations could normalize or decline relatively quickly.

Applied Materials $AMAT

Applied Materials is the world's largest semiconductor equipment and process company by market share. While Lam Research $LRCX dominates in etching and $ASML dominates in lithography, Applied Materials covers the broadest range of manufacturing processes, from material deposition to material modification to inspection and diagnostics. It is this breadth of coverage that is a source of competitive advantage and structural defense against cyclical variation.

In the first quarter of fiscal year 2026, the company reported revenue of $7.01 billion, with adjusted EPS of $2.38 beating analyst estimates by more than 7%. The Applied Global Services segment posted record results with revenue of $1.56 billion, up 15% year-over-year. Meanwhile, CEO Gary Dickerson forecasts semiconductor equipment revenue growth of more than 20% for the full calendar year 2026.

HBM, gate-all-around and advanced technology positions

Applied Materials has established itself as the clear leader in the high-bandwidth memory and supply segment for 3D chiplet-stacking. For gate-all-around technologies for future logic nodes, the company expects a market share of over 50%. Revenues from e-beam technologies are expected to double to more than $1 billion in 2026. Project EPIC, a new research center in Silicon Valley, further strengthens the technology lead.

Consensus ratings from 43 analysts point to a bullish outlook with an average target price of around $424 and 81% of analysts on the buy side. Revenue for Q2 FY2026 is estimated to be $7.65 billion, with semiconductor systems accounting for approximately $5.8 billion. The company's ROE is over 38% and operating margin is around 30%, an exceptional result for an industrial business of this complexity.

China has traditionally accounted for around 27-30% of total revenue, but in Q1 2026, this segment saw a 7% year-on-year decline. The US government's export restrictions and the pressure to supply advanced technologies to China are therefore an existential risk for Applied Materials, not a marginal note. The company is offsetting this risk with record demand from other customers in the US, South Korea and Taiwan.

Citigroup $C

Citigroup is one of the world's largest banks with operations in more than 160 countries, but its story over the past three years has been defined largely by a major restructuring under CEO Jane Fraser. The bank is shedding underperforming markets, simplifying its operational structure and focusing on five key segments: services, markets, banking, wealth management and US retail.

Results for Q1 2026 showed that the restructuring is delivering tangible results. Revenues rose 14% year-over-year to $24.6 billion, and net income increased to $5.8 billion, or $3.06 per share. Yet the stock trades around $132, a slight premium to tangible book value, but still well below where its competitors like JPMorgan $JPM are trading.

Discount to competitors and potential for revaluation

It is this discount that is the central argument of analysts recommending a purchase. Morgan Stanley $MS has set a price target of $144 with an Overweight rating and Goldman Sachs $GS has raised its target to $137. The average target price from 16 analysts is around $135. Even according to the Fair Price Index on Bulios, $C stock is currently still below its intrinsic value.

The full-year 2026 outlook calls for net interest income growth of 5% to 6% and targets an effective ratio of around 60%. Analysts estimate EPS for 2026 to average $10.49, with a peak estimate of over $11. For 2027 and 2028, the forecasts are even more ambitious.

Citigroup remains one of the most complex and difficult-to-read institutions in the global market. Large exposure to volatile segments such as markets and investment banking adds to the erratic nature of results. Regulatory concerns in recent years have resulted in fines and compliance pressures that have cost the bank enormously. Moreover, the 2026 ROA forecast of 0.85 percent is still below the industry average of 1.39 percent, showing how far the bank is from reaching its full operating potential.

Arista Networks $ANET

Arista Networks has established itself as the most important network player in the AI era in 2026. While GPUs and chips drive computing power, it is Arista's high-speed Ethernet switches that enable thousands of GPUs to communicate as a single system. Without a reliable, low-latency network infrastructure, the computing power of data centers would dramatically decrease in practice.

The company reported revenue of $9 billion for fiscal year 2025, a 28.6% year-over-year increase. Operating margin was 42.8%, with the firm surpassing $1 billion in quarterly profit for the first time in its history. For 2026, management raised the AI networking revenue target to $3.25 billion, with total revenue expected to reach approximately $11.25 billion. AI revenue is expected to approximately double in 2026 compared to 2025.

Transition from InfiniBand to Ethernet

A key catalyst for this year's performance (28% growth) is the industry's shift away from the proprietary InfiniBand, long dominated by Nvidia $NVDA, towards open Ethernet architectures. As AI clusters grow from thousands to millions of GPUs, InfiniBand networks are running into both structural limits and cost disadvantages. Arista's Etherlink products are becoming the standard for these massive infrastructures, and the company has further strengthened its position by joining Nvidia's NVLink Fusion ecosystem, giving it access to additional opportunities.

16 out of 24 analysts are recommending Strong Buy, with an average price target around $167 and top estimates reaching $185. The valuation, with a forward P/E of around 50x, is significantly more premium than competitors, but analysts say it is justified by the giant operating leverage: the company is increasing revenue by 30% without proportionately increasing costs.

Arista's risk profile is mainly defined by its concentration in key customers. Hyperscalers such as Microsoft, Meta or Google account for a large part of revenues and any change in their capex plans would quickly become apparent. In addition, export restrictions and customs policies add a geopolitical dimension, as the global supply chain for networking hardware is complex and vulnerable. Valuation at a forward P/E of 50x also leaves little room for market disappointment. While analysts still see potential in the stock, the Fair Price Index on Bulios is already glowing red here.

NextEra Energy $NEE

NextEra Energy is a defensive company on the surface: it operates Florida Power and Light, one of the largest regulated distribution utilities in the U.S., and has over 28,000 megawatts of installed capacity. But in 2026, the company's story changes fundamentally. Management is transforming NextEra from a pure-play energy player to a data center era energy platform, with the company targeting 15 to 30 GW of new capacity interconnected to data center customers by 2035.

In 2025, the firm reported adjusted EPS of $3.71, meeting its guidance with year-over-year growth of +8.2 percent. For 2026, management reiterated guidance of $3.92 to $4.02 per share and targets annual EPS growth of more than 8 percent through 2035. Renewables backlog reached 30 GW, with the Energy Resources segment adding over 13.5 GW of new projects in recent quarters. Analysts estimate Q1 2026 revenue of around $7.16 billion.

Data centres as a new growth engine

Exposure to data centers adds a whole new dimension to the NextEra story. Data centers that run AI infrastructure are extremely energy-intensive, and NextEra is actively courting them by supplying electricity directly from renewable sources. Meanwhile, Florida Power and Light is seeing steady additions of new customers thanks to reasonable tariff prices and Florida's dynamic economic environment.

20 analysts give the stock a buy rating, with only two recommending a hold. The average price target is around $93 to $95. UBS moved the March 2026 target to $104 and Morgan Stanley maintains a buy rating. The dividend yield is 2.71%. The firm also raised $2.3 billion in February 2026 funding through equity units.

The main risks for NextEra are related to the regulatory environment and political priorities. A reduction in federal support for renewable energy could affect the economics of new projects. The premium valuation, with a P/E of 27.87, is above average for the energy sector and leaves less cushion for negative surprises.

Overview

Company

Ticker

Rating

Average Target

Reasons for growth

Main risk

Lam Research

$LRCX

Strong Buy

$243

Investment cycle in NAND/DRAM

Exposure to China

GE Aerospace

$GE

Buy / Outperform

$351

LEAP aftermarket service

Supply Chain

Applied Materials

$AMAT

Strong Buy

$424

HBM, gate-all-around, AGS

Chinese export restrictions

Citigroup

$C

Buy

$135

Re-rating after restructuring

Low ROA vs. peers

Arista Networks

$ANET

Strong Buy

$167

AI Ethernet networking

Valuation, customer concentration

NextEra Energy

$NEE

Buy

$93

Renewable Energy + Datacenters

Political risks, regulation

What to watch next

  • $LRCX: Q3 FY2026 results and management commentary on order trends from Korea, Taiwan and Japan

  • $GE: backlog development in the defense segment

  • $AMAT: revenue from HBM and advanced supply segment in Q2 FY2026 and demand indications for the second half of the year

  • $C: net interest income generation rate

  • $ANET: Q1 FY2026 earnings on May 5, 2026 and management commentary on AI networking pipeline development at hyperscalers

  • $NEE: Q1 2026 earnings on April 21, 2026 and an update on the regulatory process in Florida

Six stocks with Wall Street buy ratings in four different sectors.

The common denominator is neither sector nor valuation level, but one thing: the analyst community sees each of these companies as a specific catalyst for outperformance of the broader market over a 12-month horizon.

Still, it is important to read the recommendations in context. A buy rating from analysts at a major bank is a starting point for analysis, not a substitute for it. For each of these six stocks, there is a scenario in which the expected growth does not materialize and valuations come under pressure.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262305-6-stocks-wall-street-is-quietly-accumulating-right-now Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-262356 Tue, 21 Apr 2026 08:15:36 +0200 🚨APPLE CEO IS LEAVING

Tim Cook has led Apple since 2011 and is set to step down on September 1 this year. However, Cook isn’t leaving the company entirely and will move into the role of executive chairman of the board. The new CEO will be John Ternus, who has so far led hardware development. Personally I don't have any specific expectations, so I'll wait to see which direction the company goes. The company is currently doing well; its products are, in my view, excellent, and I hope that continues.

Do you think the new leadership will bring major changes? Do you have shares of $AAPL in your portfolio?

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262356 Mateo Silva
bulios-article-262250 Tue, 21 Apr 2026 04:25:20 +0200 Apple’s next chapter: a hardware chief at the top, AI and China on his to‑do list Tim Cook is stepping away from day‑to‑day management after more than 13 years as Apple’s CEO, moving into the role of executive chairman of the board and handing the reins to John Ternus, the long‑time head of hardware engineering who has overseen iPhone, iPad and Mac development since 2013. Ternus, 50, has spent over two decades at Apple and is widely seen inside the company as the continuity candidate: calm, operations‑savvy and deeply embedded in Apple’s global supply chain – a leadership profile much closer to Cook’s managerial style than to Steve Jobs’ product‑vision persona.

What investors will focus on now are the problems he inherits, not just his résumé. Analysts highlight a cluster of strategic challenges that will define his tenure: closing Apple’s perceived AI gap versus rivals after years of under‑investment, navigating rising regulatory and geopolitical pressure around China and antitrust actions, stabilising iPhone unit and revenue growth in a saturated premium market, finding the next meaningful hardware or services growth driver after mixed results with devices like Vision Pro, and managing a broader leadership transition while keeping Apple’s massive capital‑return programme attractive to shareholders. In other words, Ternus takes over a company that is still hugely profitable but faces harder questions about where the next wave of growth comes from than it did at the start of the Cook era – and his first years as CEO will be judged on whether he can turn Apple’s hardware and silicon strengths into a more convincing AI‑first, post‑iPhone story.

Tim Cook is handing over a company in extraordinary shape: Apple $AAPL is worth about three trillion dollars, has a strong balance sheet and a giant base of loyal users, but it also faces slowing growth, pressure in artificial intelligence and more regulation. So John Ternus, who has worked his way up at Apple from engineer to hardware chief to new CEO, will not just "stay the course" but must take the company through another major change in direction.

Unlike Steve Jobs - the visionary - and Tim Cook, the supply chain master, Ternus is first and foremost a product and technical details man. That's why his first few years at the helm of Apple will be defined mainly by three areas: how quickly Apple can catch up with its AI backlog, how it keeps key products attractive, and how it handles pressure from politicians and regulators on both sides of the Atlantic.

What are the challenges ahead?

Catching up with the AI backlog

The biggest issue is artificial intelligence. While Microsoft $MSFT, Google $GOOG, Meta $META or Nvidia $NVDA are investing tens of billions of dollars in generative AI, Apple is seen as lagging behind in this wave. The company shelved a major update to its Siri voice assistant last year and had to reshuffle the leadership of its AI division, with a veteran from Google replacing the old boss.

Apple plans to launch a new version of Siri this year built on Google's Gemini model, which is expected to vastly improve natural speech understanding and context work. Ternus will need to ensure that "Apple Intelligence" appears across products in a way that makes sense to everyday users - that is, that AI actually saves time and improves how you work with your iPhone, Mac and other devices, not just impresses with technical demonstrations.

Dependence on China and tense geopolitics

Another big challenge is the supply chain. Apple has long manufactured much of its products in China, and this makes it vulnerable to trade disputes, tariffs and political tensions. President Donald Trump's administration has kept in place some tariffs on Chinese goods and added new export controls on chips and technology, complicating electronics makers' plans.

Cook has begun shifting some production to India, Vietnam and other countries, and Ternus will need to continue that strategy without compromising quality and production capacity. The challenge is to diversify more into final assembly of products, but also protect the development and production of key components - such as Apple's own Silicon chips - that are at the heart of the company's competitive advantage.

Keeping iPhone as Apple's engine

The iPhone still accounts for the largest portion of Apple's revenue and is a major gateway to other products and services. But sales growth has slowed in recent years, leaving investors wondering where the next wave of demand will come from. The iPhone 17 may be selling well, but Apple faces pressure to deliver more compelling news than just camera and performance improvements.

As the "hardware" boss, Ternus has a good understanding of what else can be wrung out of the iPhone - whether it's better AI integration, longer battery life, new types of photo/video features, or better connectivity with other products. His challenge will be to strike a balance between technological innovation and margins so that Apple doesn't overspend while losing its appeal to users who today often replace their phones after three or more years.

New products and the "next big thing" after the iPhone

Apple has been searching for several years for the next big product that could even partially build on the success of the iPhone. AirPods and the Apple Watch are successful, but they are far from replacing the iPhone in sales and profits. The Apple Vision Pro headset was supposed to be a ticket to the world of spatial computing, but so far it is more of an expensive device for enthusiasts and professionals.

Ternus will have to decide how much further to bet on Vision Pro and similar projects and whether it makes sense to accelerate the development of other forms of wearable devices, such as smart glasses. At the same time, he's expected to have a clearer plan for where the company will take the iPad, Mac and other devices so that it doesn't appear fragmented and so that users know exactly what each product is for.

Reassure investors and keep the stock attractive

Finally, there's shareholder relations. Tim Cook has been very successful in the eyes of Wall Street - under his leadership, Apple's market value has increased manifold, the company has generated huge free cash flow, paid dividends and bought back its own stock in large numbers. John Ternus comes at a time when growth is not so obvious, competition in AI is growing, and some investors are nervous that Apple has "slept through" the new technology wave.

The new CEO will need to present a compelling story - how he plans to jumpstart innovation, where he will grow in the coming years, and how he will maintain high profitability in the process. His first big moves, whether on AI, products or working with capital, will set the tone for the "John Ternus era" and show whether Apple can remain one of the major winners in the tech sector in a post-Tim Cook era.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262250-apple-s-next-chapter-a-hardware-chief-at-the-top-ai-and-china-on-his-to-do-list Pavel Botek
bulios-article-262247 Tue, 21 Apr 2026 00:17:28 +0200 Netflix $NFLX is down another 3% today. Are you buying? 🤔

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262247 Omar Abdelaziz
bulios-article-262187 Mon, 20 Apr 2026 16:20:05 +0200 UniCredit turns up the volume in its Commerzbank campaign UniCredit on Monday significantly stepped up its efforts to take over Germany's Commerzbank. In a presentation, the bank described Commerzbank's standalone strategy as "overpriced" and "unprepared for the future" and said the German bank is "writing a story of operational underperformance" and is overvalued given its fundamentals. UniCredit chief Andrea Orcel said a merger of the two banks would send a "clear signal" and create a "country leader" and a "European benchmark" capable of competing with US and Chinese giants.

The reaction of the stock exchange has so far been mixed. Shares in UniCredit in Milan fell by around 2.3% to 68.5 euros, while Commerzbank in Frankfurt added around 0.9% to around 36.4 euros. Thus, the market perceives that Italy is increasing pressure on the target bank, but at the same time, the likelihood is growing that Commerzbank shareholders will demand a higher price, if they agree to the transaction at all.

The €35 billion bid

UniCredit made a formal bid for Commerzbank $CBK.DEin March worth around €35bn, which it constructed to push its stake slightly above 30% without formally gaining full control. The Italian bank already holds around 26% of the shares, and controls another 4% or so through total return swaps, so it is de facto just below the threshold that triggers a mandatory bid under German law.

UniCredit criticises that Commerzbank's management overestimates its own 'Momentum' growth plan. It claims that the 2025 results actually mask a miss on cost targets by about €200m, which has been replaced by higher net interest income of about €500m. The Italian bank also points out that loan growth outside the key markets of Germany and Poland has reached 24%, while in Germany itself it has only reached about 1%, which it says points to an "overly staggered" and riskier international model.

As part of its own "Commerzbank Unlocked" proposal, UniCredit $CRIN.DE promises that it would be able to increase Commerzbank's return on tangible equity to above 19% by 2028, compared to its current target of 15%. It would like to reduce the cost-to-income ratio to around 40% (compared to 47% in the Momentum plan) and increase the bank's net profit to around €5.1bn, compared to the expected €4.5bn. However, Orcel said this would require an investment of about €1.7bn in the transformation and the creation of additional loan loss provisions of about €500m.

Combination with HypoVereinsbank: a "German-Italian giant" by 2030

Another part of the plan envisages that Commerzbank would eventually merge with HypoVereinsbank (HVB), the existing German subsidiary of UniCredit. In the so-called "combination" scenario, UniCredit aims for the merged group to have a net profit of around €21 billion and a cost-to-income ratio of around 30% by 2030 - parameters that are close to the most efficient European banks.

At the same time, UniCredit assures that Commerzbank would operate separately and under its own name for the first 18 months after gaining control, before deeper integration with HVB. On jobs, the bank promises that about 60% of the projected cost savings are to come from areas outside its direct staff in Germany - i.e. its international network and support activities - and the overall reduction in staff in Germany over five years should be less than half of the 15,000 positions speculated by some critics.

Commerzbank: no "added value", we stick to 2028 targets

However, Commerzbank's management is making it clear that it is not interested in the transaction in its current form. Already on 7 April, the bank announced that, following discussions with UniCredit, it "does not see the basis for a mutually agreed value-adding transaction" and that the Italian side had failed to show additional shareholder benefits compared to Momentum's current strategy.

In an interview with Bloomberg TV, CEO Bettina Orlopp said that while there had been some discussions with UniCredit, the views of the two sides were "fundamentally different" on the valuation and share exchange ratio itself. Commerzbank therefore confirms its targets for 2028: a return on tangible equity of 15%, a cost/income ratio of 50%, a CET1 capital ratio of 13.5% and a net profit of around €4.2 billion.

For 2024, the bank generated a net profit of EUR 2.63 billion (after EUR 2.68 billion in 2023), despite restructuring costs. Net profit before these costs rose by around 13% to a record €3bn, which Commerzbank presents as proof that Momentum works and there is no need to undergo a controversial cross-border merger.

German state opposes: 'hostile attack' on key bank

The German government, which holds a stake of around 12-13% in Commerzbank following the bank's rescue during the financial crisis, has also taken a completely negative stance. According to the German media and statements by politicians, the cabinet sees UniCredit's move as a "hostile attack" because it considers Commerzbank a key domestic institution for financing SMEs and exports.

The Social Democratic Party, which is part of the ruling coalition, is reportedly opposed to the sale of the bank into foreign hands, despite earlier talk of a gradual reduction of the state's stake. The government is now one of the most vocal opponents of the takeover, even though it was its participation and capital injection that opened the way for UniCredit to gradually increase its stake.

Next steps: bid in May, market and regulators to decide

UniCredit's formal offer is due to be launched at the beginning of May, with around four weeks for Commerzbank shareholders to decide whether to accept it. The Italian bank has called an extraordinary general meeting for 4 May to seek approval for the capital increase needed to issue new shares for the exchange.

If UniCredit manages to acquire a stake of over 30% and convince a sufficient number of shareholders, the transaction would face a complex approval process by European and domestic regulators. In an optimistic scenario, UniCredit envisages a settlement in the first half of 2027, once all approvals have been obtained.

For now, however, what is clear is that the battle for Commerzbank is heating up: UniCredit is stepping up public pressure and painting a picture of a supposedly "underperforming and overpriced" German bank, while Commerzbank's management and the German state are fighting back and betting on their own Momentum plan. How UniCredit's aggressive strategy ultimately plays out will now depend largely on the patience of investors, the attitude of regulators and the willingness of German politicians to allow the country's second largest bank to come under the wing of an Italian competitor.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262187-unicredit-turns-up-the-volume-in-its-commerzbank-campaign Pavel Botek
bulios-article-262169 Mon, 20 Apr 2026 15:15:19 +0200 When a luxury car stock is priced like a cyclical, but pays you 5% to wait On the surface, this European premium automaker looks like just another victim of the EV transition and Chinese competition: revenue has only slipped modestly in recent years, but operating profit is down by almost a third and return on sales has fallen from a comfortable 12–13% to about 8.1% as electrification costs, discounting, fleet sales and tariffs chew through what used to be a textbook luxury margin. Underneath that, however, you have a balance sheet and cash‑flow profile that doesn’t look like a struggling mass‑market OEM at all: in 2024 the group generated about €9.2 billion of free cash flow from its industrial business, maintained industrial net liquidity above €31 billion, proposed a dividend of €4.30 per share (roughly a 5–6% yield at today’s price) and approved a share‑buyback programme of up to €5 billion over 24 months.

The valuation reflects the earnings slump more than the cash engine. On current numbers the stock trades at roughly 10× earnings, with a price‑to‑sales ratio well below 0.4× and price‑to‑book around 0.6× – multiples the market usually reserves for mid‑cycle volume manufacturers, not a global luxury badge with an A‑rated balance sheet. Management’s “Next Level Performance” plan is explicitly aimed at closing that gap: the roadmap calls for at least a 10% adjusted return on sales in the core cars division over the mid‑term, a 10% cut in production costs and further reductions in material and fixed costs by 2027, while keeping a capital‑allocation framework where free cash flow beyond a roughly 40% payout ratio is systematically returned to shareholders via buybacks. Put together, that leaves investors with a classic tension: the headline P/E and 5–6.5% dividend could be the front door to a value trap if margins never re‑rate above high single digits – but if the brand can defend pricing power through the EV shift, the combination of strong free cash flow, disciplined buybacks and still‑depressed multiples offers a rare chance to buy a premium franchise at a “regular automaker” price.

Top points of the analysis

  • Electric vehicle (BEV) sales fell 23% to around 185k units, total deliveries in China fell 7%, while the entire German premium segment in China faced a decline of around 12%.

  • 2 years of sales decline (2024,2025), net profit down for the third year.

  • Valuation is low: P/E around 10, price to sales of 0.39 and price to book of 0.56 puts the title at the lower end of the global auto makers, despite a premium brand and FCF margin of around 11%.

  • The Next Level Performance program envisages a 10% reduction in production costs per car, 10% in fixed costs and 8% in material costs by 2027, with more aggressive targets in China.

  • The medium-term margin target range of 8-10% is lower than the earlier 10%, suggesting that management accepts structurally lower profitability than in the post-covide boom era.

Company performance

The company is one of the best-known passenger car manufacturers in the world and has long profiled itself as a premium brand targeting the higher end of the market. Over the past two decades, it has transformed itself from a historic manufacturer of luxury sedans, limousines and sports cars into a global automotive conglomerate with an extensive portfolio ranging from compact models and SUVs to top-of-the-line limousines and highly profitable sub-brands such as Maybach and AMG. The brand benefits from a reputation built over more than a century of design, comfort and technical innovation.

The business model is built on a combination of high prices, a broad product range and the ability to monetise the brand across regions and segments. The European and US markets have traditionally acted as a strong base, but over the past two decades the focus of growth has shifted significantly to China, where premium European brands have long benefited from the aspirational demand of a growing middle class. This has been changing in recent years, with local competition and changing preferences pushing margins and volumes.

Business sustainability relies on three elements: brand, service ecosystem (service, financing, leasing) and customer experience. Once customers buy a premium car, they often tend to stay within the brand because they are used to a particular ergonomics, infotainment and service network. While switching manufacturers is not technically difficult, it is a psychological and comfort 'cost', which helps the company maintain repeat sales and a high proportion of fleets, leases and pre-paid service packages.

Business and products

The core of $MBG.DE s portfolio is made up of the Cars division's passenger cars: compacts (A-Class, CLA), midsize (C-Class, GLC), upper midsize and luxury (E-Class, S-Class, GLS), and specialized SUV and coupe models. Above this are the luxury sub-brands Maybach (luxury versions of the S-Class and SUV) and AMG (high-performance sports derivatives). It is the top models and sub-brands that carry the highest margins - combining high unit prices with relatively limited volumes and high customer willingness to pay for customisation and equipment.

In recent years, the company has invested heavily in electrification. In addition to electric versions of existing models (EQS, EQE, EQS SUV), it is developing a new MMA modular architecture on which to base a new generation of compact and midsize models, including the new CLA from 2025. But electric cars cannot yet deliver comparable margins to the combustion high-end - partly because of higher production costs (batteries, new platforms) and partly because of strong competitive pressure and discounts.

In addition to cars, the group has other pillars: financial services (leasing, financing, insurance) and commercial vehicles (vans, light trucks) - while not as profitable as premium passenger cars, these contribute to diversifying revenues and create additional customer touch points. The business thus does not rely purely on car sales, but on the entire lifecycle of mobility services.

Market and addressable potential

In recent years, the global automotive market has been transformed by three structural trends: electrification, digitalisation and geopolitics. In Europe and partly in the US, regulation is pushing emissions reductions and encouraging a shift to EVs, while in China, electromobility is growing organically through a combination of government support, a local technology ecosystem and aggressive competition from domestic brands. The premium segment in which the company operates has long been considered relatively cycle-proof, with customers there being less price-sensitive and more brand and quality-sensitive.

But we can see from the 2024 and 2025 data that even premium brands are not immune. Total group sales have fallen, despite price increases in recent years, suggesting that both volumes and mix are deteriorating. In China, one of the key markets, sales are declining, and the entire German premium segment has seen a decline of around 12% due to pressure from domestic electric competitors and customer preferences. This is crucial, as China was until recently the main source of growth and high mix.

The addressable market for the company is not limited - there is still demand for mobility and premium cars in emerging economies, but the competitive map has changed. Where it used to compete primarily with other European and Japanese premium brands, it now faces new players, particularly Chinese EV manufacturers that combine aggressive pricing, advanced technology and strong local support. Thus, the realistic scenario is not "world conquest", but rather maintaining share in Europe and the US, stabilizing in China and growing selectively in other regions.

Competition and market position

The main competitors include the traditional premium brands BMW $BMW.DE and Audi (Volkswagen Group $VWAGY), on a global level also manufacturers like Tesla $TSLA in the EV segment, Stellantis $STLA in the broader mass segment and growing Chinese players like BYD $BY6.F, NIO $NIO, Li Auto $LI. Compared to BMW today, the company has lower margins - BMW's is around 11.9%, while here it's 8.1% - and lower return on capital, even though both target similar customer segments and price levels.

Compared to Stellantis, which has margins of over 12%, the situation looks even less flattering: a premium brand generates lower profitability than a broad concern with many mass brands. Tesla remains a special case - its P/E multiples of over 25-30 are in a different league - but in the premium EV segment it competes directly for the wallets of customers who are choosing between a "pure" technology EV and a traditional premium manufacturer in an electrified version.

The perceived quality and status of the brand is still the company's strong point - for a certain segment of customers, the logo on the bonnet is a decisive factor and the traditional German "three stars" still have a high value in their eyes. The weakness is that in an electrified world, some of this advantage is being erased - customers are more concerned with software, range, charging infrastructure and integration into the digital ecosystem. There, tech and Chinese competitors often have the upper hand, and a premium brand no longer automatically guarantees technological leadership.

Management and CEO

Ola Källenius is at the helm, having taken over with the ambition to streamline the group, simplify the portfolio and move the company towards a "luxury & tech" position. Since then, several strategic moves have been made: the separation of the truck division (Daimler Truck), the simplification of the model range, an emphasis on high-margin models (S-Class, G-Class, Maybach) and significant investments in electrification and software.

The capital discipline is twofold. On the one hand, we see a company with strong free cash flow, a robust dividend stream and large buybacks; on the other hand, the leveraged balance sheet (debt to assets around 0.4, debt to equity 1.12) and Altman Z-score of 1.4 show that this is not a debt-free "cash cow" giant, but a cyclical company that needs to manage investments and capital distribution very carefully. The decision to cut the dividend in response to weaker years shows some caution and a willingness to adjust payouts to reality.

Management's priorities for the next few years are clear: reduce the cost base (Next Level Performance), deliver a full electric generation of key models (MMA platform, new CLA, electric versions of SUVs and sedans) and stabilize margins in the 8-10% range. This makes sense strategically - but investors will judge whether the targets are realistic in an environment where competition is evolving perhaps faster.

News and strategic moves in recent years

The last three years have been a combination of records and setbacks for the company. In the post-Covid years 2021-2022, it benefited from an extremely tight supply of new cars - limited production capacity and a shortage of chips allowed it to hold prices high, cut discounts and refocus the mix on more expensive versions, which pulled revenues to around €150bn and operating profit to €18bn with a margin of around 12%. This was the foundation on which management began to build the ambition of double-digit margins "forever" and rapid electrification.

But from 2023 onwards, a more sober phase came. The company gradually admitted that the transition to electro-mobility was not going as fast as it had planned, and in 2024 it officially adjusted its strategy: instead of the original goal of being virtually all-electric by around 2030, it talks about "Ambition 2039" - a combination of 50-60% electrified sales in Europe by 2030 and maintaining premium internal combustion engines beyond that horizon. The reason is simple: demand for clean BEVs is growing more slowly, while investment and production costs are high.

On the product side, the company has also launched the biggest model offensive in its history. It plans to launch over 40 new models by 2028, including around 15 pure electric models, with 16 new or significantly upgraded models coming in 2026 alone - including electric versions of the GLB, GLC, C-Class, "Baby G" SUV, new AMG GT variants and a split of the V-Class into a luxury VLS and mid-premium VLE. From a production perspective, a major modernisation of European plants is underway under the banner of "Next Level Performance / Production" at a cost of more than €2 billion, with the aim of reducing operating costs by around 10% by 2027.

At the same time, the portfolio strategy is being adjusted: production of the A-Class, which was originally considered for discontinuation, has been extended to 2028 but moved to Hungary to free up capacity in Germany for more profitable models. The company is also gradually revising its body version range - the electric C-Class, for example, will focus only on the sedan - and concentrating investment in models where it sees either high margins or strategic importance for electrification.

What the market looks like for Mercedes today: demand trends and adaptation

The market situation today is considerably more complex than in the post-covid boom era. At a global level, new car sales remain relatively high, but the demand structure is changing: some customers are postponing purchases due to higher tariffs and economic uncertainty, some are confused between combustion and electric drives, and some - especially in China - are consciously preferring local brands and new technology players.

For Mercedes in particular, this means:

  • Europe - the market is saturated and heavily regulated, but the company has a deep customer base here. Demand for luxury models (S-Class, G-Class, Maybach) remains relatively stable, but the mainstream segments suffer from a combination of high prices, competition and uncertainty around future powertrains. The modernisation of key models (S-Class facelift, new engines, interior digitisation) should maintain appeal even as customers are more likely to consider whether to buy another premium car or stay longer with their current one.

  • The US - represents a relatively strong pillar where premium European brands are able to maintain higher margins, especially in the SUV segments and for AMG/Maybach models. The company therefore explicitly mentions in its 2026 strategy that the "top-end" segment and regions such as the US and other overseas markets will remain a growth priority - the aim is to increase sales of the most expensive models by more than 15% and to strengthen market share in segments where customers have a higher willingness to pay for the brand.

  • China - the former 'goldmine' has become the biggest question mark. In recent years, there has been a noticeable cooling in demand for European premium cars, while Chinese EV brands have grown rapidly and aggressively. Mercedes' sales in China are down units of percent, but even worse is the pressure on pricing - to maintain volume, the company has to discount more, which squeezes margins. In response, it is directing part of its savings program to its Chinese operations, with the aim of cutting costs by more than 20% and tailoring the range to local preferences, including specific EV models and software features.

The overall trend in orders and bookings reflects this combination: after a period of overhang in demand, when there was a months-long wait for cars, things are back to normal - delivery times are shorter, warehouses are filling up and customers have a choice again. The company itself admits in recent conference calls that the "pricing discipline" it could afford in 2021-2022 is no longer a given; fleet sales are returning in some segments to maintain volumes.

Looking ahead, the carmaker is adapting in three main directions:

  1. Recalibrating its electrification strategy - instead of a clear commitment to "all EVs by 2030", it now talks about a flexible mix: 50-60% electrified sales in Europe by 2030, keeping premium combustion engines where they make economic sense, and an aggressive electric offensive in segments where EV customers want them (urban and mid-range, SUVs, top-end performance).

  2. A product offensive in key segments - a complete portfolio rebuild by 2028, including the electric CLA, GLC, C-Class, "Baby G" and others - is designed to appeal to a new generation of customers looking for a combination of premium branding and modern EV/hybrid. At the same time, upgrades to flagship models (S-Class, G-Class) and the expansion of luxury versions (Maybach, AMG) are intended to maintain the high-margin top-end.

  3. Tough cost-cutting - The Next Level Performance / Production program is a frank admission that the company's cost structure was set for a world of higher margins than the market allows today. The targets of 10% savings in manufacturing and fixed costs (and more in China) are aggressive, but if achieved will allow the company to generate double-digit returns even in a more realistic environment of lower prices and more competition.

Financial performance

The four-year income statement shows a "peak" for 2021-2022 and a gradual weakening. Revenues rise from €133.9bn in 2021 to €150bn in 2022 (+12%), hover around €152.4bn in 2023 (+1.6%) and decline from 2024. Gross profit was around 30.7 billion (2021), 34 billion (2022), 35 billion (2023) and then dropped to 28.6 billion in 2024 and then slightly in 2025.

Operating profit peaked in 2022 (€17.9 billion, margin around 11.9%), fell slightly to €17.5 billion in 2023 and then fell to €12.3 billion in 2024 (margin around 8.4%). Net profit shows a similar picture: 23 billion in 2021, 14.5 billion in 2022, 14.3 billion in 2023 and 10.2 billion in 2024. EPS follows this trajectory: around 21.5 euros (2021) → 13.55 (2022) → 13.46 (2023) → 10.19 (2024).

So we see two things: first, a strong post-covide "peak" in profitability, which the company used to raise prices and optimize the mix in a time of car shortages; second, a subsequent normalization where volumes and mix deteriorate but the cost base (especially EV investment) remains high. The number of shares outstanding is slightly declining (1.07 billion in 2021 → 1.07 in 2022 → 1.06 in 2023 → 1.00 in 2024), which means that buybacks are helping to at least partially counter the decline in EPS.

Balance sheet and debt

The balance sheet is a mixed picture. On the one hand, there is solid liquidity - current ratio 1.27, quick ratio 0.83, cash position around 14.5 billion and working capital around 21 billion. On the other hand, a relatively high debt ratio: debt to assets around 0.40, debt to equity 1.12, long-term debt to total capital around 0.33.

The Altman Z-score of 1.4 is low - in theory, this means that according to this synthetic indicator, the company is in a zone where the risk of financial problems cannot be ignored. But for large automotive concerns, this ratio is traditionally lower due to capital intensity, lease books and asset structure, so it should be read with caution. Still, it's a reminder that this is not a "risk-free bond replacement" but a cyclical firm with significant leverage.

In a stress scenario - deeper recession in Europe, continued pressure in China, EV sales issues - the combination of lower EBIT and fixed costs could push the balance sheet into an uncomfortable position, especially if the company wants to continue to hold high dividends and buybacks.

Valuation

Valuation is the main argument in favour. A P/E of around 10, price to sales of 0.39, price to cash flow of 3.5 and price to book of around 0.56 mean that the market is valuing every euro of sales, cash flow and book value very conservatively. An FCF yield of around 11-12% (according to the latest data) and a dividend yield of around 5% are numbers we expect to see more from a cyclical commodity producer than a brand that still sells S-Classes and Maybachs.

Compared to the competition: BMW trades at a P/E of around 7-8, but with higher margins and ROE; Tesla has a P/E well above 25 and price to sales several times higher; Stellantis has a lower P/E but a less premium mix. So here we get a mix - cheaper than the "growth" EV story, more expensive than the cheapest European car companies, but with a proprietary brand and FCF mix.

Internal models and conservative DCF, show a fair value of around €57-61 per share, while analyst consensus sees the price around €62-63, a few percent above current levels. This is not a "50% upside value play", but rather a bet that the market is pricing the margin and China problem too pessimistically today. For "cheap" to turn into expensive, either the market would have to swing into euphoria about EVs and premium margins, or earnings would have to fall further without the share price reacting.

Growth catalysts and outlook

A key catalyst is the success of the Next Level Performance program. This is set to deliver a 10% reduction in manufacturing cost per car, 10% in fixed costs and 8% in material costs by 2027, with even more aggressive targets in China (20%). If these savings can be realised, it could lift EBIT margin by several percentage points even on flat sales and offset some of the pressure from pricing and mix.

Another trigger is the product offensive on the new MMA platform - starting with the CLA 2025 - and the upgrade of key models (S-Class 2026, electric GLC and C-Class). If the new models can convince customers in Europe and the US, and at least stabilize the situation in China, the mix may shift again towards more profitable configurations and high-end models.

The macro catalyst may be the eventual normalisation of geopolitical pressures (tariffs, regulations) and a softer tariff environment, which would support demand for more expensive cars in Europe and the US. Among the measurable KPIs, investors will mainly be looking at: EBIT margin (heading towards 8-10%?), volumes and margins in China, EV sales and profitability vs. ICE, FCF development and buyback pace.

Investment scenarios

Optimistic scenario

In the optimistic scenario, the company successfully implements Next Level Performance, reduces manufacturing and fixed costs as planned, and manages to at least stabilize sales in China. EBIT margins will return to the 9-10% range in 3-4 years, sales will stabilize around €145-150 billion and net profit will move back into the €12-15 billion range, with EPS around €12-15 billion.

With such profitability, the market could afford to price the title at a P/E of 12-13, EV/EBITDA of around 7-8 and price to book of around 0.8-1.0 - so at some premium to cyclical carmakers but below EV growth stories. That would imply a potential price range of somewhere between €70-90 per share, which represents an interesting upside from current levels, especially if you add in the dividend yield.

A realistic scenario

In a realistic scenario, margins stabilise in the new target range of 8-10%, but more towards the lower end. Revenues fluctuate slightly in the €140-150bn range, China remains problematic but not catastrophic, EV portfolio sells but does not match combustion high-end margins. Net profit is around 9-11 billion euros, EPS around 9-11 euros.

In such an environment, the market will maintain a P/E around 8-10, EV/EBITDA around 5-7 and P/B between 0.5-0.7. In practice, this means that the capital return on the share price will be rather limited (a range of ±20% around today's levels), but the investor will get a stable dividend yield of 5-6.5% p.a., plus a possible doubling of the yield on redemptions. This is a "bond-like equity" scenario - the title as the income component of the portfolio, not the growth star.

Negative scenario

In the negative scenario, the growth of Chinese competition and regulatory pressure on EVs combine to form the "perfect storm". Sales in China will continue to decline, BEV margins will remain low, the savings program will fall short and EBIT margins will settle around 5-7%. Revenues may fall below €140bn, net profit below €7bn and EPS into the €6-8 range.

The market may then value the title as a pure cyclical carmaker - P/E 6-7, EV/EBITDA 3-5, P/B 0.3-0.5. This implies a price band somewhere between 30-45 euros per share. The dividend would likely have to be cut in such an environment to allow the balance sheet to sustain lower profitability as well as investment. An investor buying today would indeed collect a decent return for some time in this scenario, but the equity component could wipe out much of that income.

What to take away from the article

  • This is a premium carmaker that went through peak margins in the post-covid era and is now struggling to return to double-digit profitability.

  • The years 2024-2025 show a combination of a slight decline in sales and a significant drop in EBIT and net profit, mainly due to margin pressure.

  • Electric mobility is not yet a source of growth, but a problem - BEV sales are down more than 20% and profitability is lagging.

  • Yet the company generates strong free cash flow, funds high dividends and significant buybacks, but has a relatively volatile balance sheet on the back of this.

  • Valuation is low - P/E ~10, P/B ~0.6, FCF yield around 11% - the market values the brand as a cyclical carmaker rather than a premium brand.

  • The key to the investment thesis is whether management can actually cut costs, stabilize China and make the EV portfolio a source of margins, not just a regulatory-enforced expense.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262169-when-a-luxury-car-stock-is-priced-like-a-cyclical-but-pays-you-5-to-wait Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-262143 Mon, 20 Apr 2026 10:55:06 +0200 3 Small-Cap Stocks Under $2B That Could Become Tomorrow’s Market Leaders Small-cap companies often sit outside the spotlight but that’s exactly where the biggest opportunities can emerge. With valuations under $2 billion, these firms combine early-stage growth with market inefficiencies that large funds often overlook. While volatility is higher, the upside can be significantly greater for investors willing to dig deeper. This selection highlights three companies that could benefit from structural trends and future capital inflows.

Small and mid-sized companies with market capitalizations of less than $2 billion are probably the least explored space in the U.S. stock market. Large institutions often ignore them and liquidity is lower. However, this is precisely what can be an advantage for investors who can identify these companies before their market capitalization begins to rise steeply.

Each of the three selected companies operates in a radically different segment. Axogen is a manufacturer of surgical products. Polestar is a Swedish electric car manufacturer struggling to survive in a price war. And Okeanis Eco Tankers is a Greek tanker operator benefiting from the geopolitical restructuring of global oil flows.

Axogen $AXGN

Axogen is an American company headquartered in Alachua, Florida, that specializes entirely in surgical technologies for restoring peripheral nerve function. It is not a broadly diversified company. Axogen does only one thing, but it does it with such breadth that it is not easy to compete.

The core of the portfolio is the Avance Nerve Graft, a processed human nerve allograft that serves to grow severed nerves. The difference from the traditional method is that the patient does not need a second surgical procedure to harvest the autologous graft, which reduces mortality and recovery time. Other products include Axoguard Nerve Connector, Axoguard Nerve Protector and Axoguard HA+ Nerve Protector.

In December 2025, Avance received BLA approval from the U.S. FDA as a biological product. This approval is a major turning point in the company's history. Axogen also estimates that it would take at least eight years for another market participant to develop and approve a direct competitive product. The regulation then grants protection to the reference product for at least twelve years from the approval of the BLA, effectively creating a significant regulatory moat.

Financial results and growth dynamics

For the full year 2025, the Company reported preliminary revenues of approximately $225.2 million, representing a year-over-year increase of 20.2%. Gross margin exceeded 74%.

In the third quarter of 2025, revenue grew 23.5 percent to $60.1 million and Adjusted EBITDA reached a positive $9.2 million, signaling that the company is slowly moving toward operational profitability.

The company still reported a net loss of $3.8 million in the first quarter of 2025. The path to consistent profitability is gradual but measurable. Cash, equivalents and investments were approximately $45.5 million at December 31, 2025, an increase of $6 million from 2024

Axogen's key financial metrics

Metrics

Value

FY 2025 Revenue (preliminary)

~225.2 million. USD

Revenue growth (FY 2025 vs 2024)

+20,2 %

Gross Margin (FY 2025)

>74 %

Cash and Investments (FY 2025)

45.5 Mio. USD

Market capitalization

USD 1,95 billion

FDA BLA approval Avance

December 2025

Opportunity and competition

Axogen operates in three main groups:

  1. Peripheral nerve injuries in the extremities (Extremities),

  2. Oro-Maxillofacial and Craniofacial Surgery (OMF and Head and Neck)

  3. breast reconstruction after mastectomy

A key procedure in this third group, called Resensation, allows for the restoration of sensation after breast removal, and it is this segment that is experiencing the fastest growing penetration.

Direct competition is limited. A new nerve drug (treatment) would need to go through full clinical development and receive its own BLA approval, which the company estimates will take at least eight years. Axogen's products are then protected by a dedicated twelve-year protection period from the date of approval. As the lead registered product in the category, Avance has a significant regulatory barrier to entry and protection until at least 2037.

Indirect competition lies in autologous nerve grafting, where the patient's own nerve is harvested from elsewhere in the body. However, this method carries significant drawbacks for the donor and the second surgery, which plays into Axogen's hands.

Risks

Axogen still does not have a consistently profitable operation, and the cash reserve of around $45 million does not allow it to fund its extremely rapid growth without external financing or further equity issuance. The business model is also dependent on the process of educating surgeons who must change established procedures and adopt new techniques. The pace of adoption is real. The stock has also historically reacted strongly to clinical and regulatory news, adding volatility to the brand.

Polestar $PSNY

Polestar is a Swedish electric vehicle brand with roots in Volvo Cars and Geely that targets the lower end of the premium EV segment. With its emphasis on design and sportiness, the company has four models in its lineup, the Polestar 2, 3, 4 and the newly launched 5, with more on the way. Globally, it has operations in 28 markets, and its dealer network has grown by more than 50 percent to 230 locations by 2025.

In 2025, the company achieved record sales of 60,119 vehicles, a 34 percent increase over 2024. Full-year 2025 revenue was $3.058 billion, up 50 percent. Compared to 2024, when sales dropped to $2.03 billion from an earlier $2.37 billion, this seems like a dramatic turnaround. Adjusted EBITDA loss improved by $297 million to $783 million and gross loss narrowed to just $22 million.

The structural problem: negative margins and cash burn

Despite impressive revenue growth, Polestar remains fundamentally unprofitable. The net loss for 2025 was $2.357 billion, much of which was non-cash asset losses of about $1.1 billion. Gross margin remains in negative numbers. In Q1 2026, Polestar reported sales of 13,126 vehicles, a 7% growth rate from Q1 2025.

Polestar's key financial metrics

Metrics

Value

FY 2025 Revenue

$3.058 billion (+50%)

FY 2025 Vehicle Sales

60,119 units (+34%)

Gross loss (FY 2025)

-22 Mio. USD

Adj. EBITDA (FY 2025)

-783 mil. USD

Net loss (FY 2025)

USD -2,357 billion

Cash

USD 1.18 billion

Market capitalization

USD 1,69 billion

Threat of capital dilution

Polestar has a complex capital structure. Funding from Geely, Volvo Cars, investors and new equity offerings add pressure on existing shareholders.

In January 2026, the company made another equity issue for $130m. In December 2025, it raised $300 million through a PIPE and a $600 million loan from Geely.

The company also faces a Nasdaq requirement to maintain listing standards, adding another layer of legislative pressure.

Position relative to competitors

In the global EV market, Polestar faces a battle on two fronts. In Europe, it is being squeezed by German brands moving to full electrification as well as nearly unbeatable Chinese price competition led by BYD. In the US, it's tariff barriers and the loss of tax incentives for EV purchases. Polestar's strengths remain design, technology and branding in the premium segment. Weaknesses are dependence on external financing and lack of autonomous profitability.

Okeanis Eco Tankers $ECO

Okeanis Eco Tankers is a Greek company founded in 2018 that owns and operates 16 crude tankers, namely eight Suezmax and eight VLCC (Very Large Crude Carriers). The fleet is modern with an average ship age of just six years. Okeanis was founded with a clearly focused strategy: to build a portfolio of energy efficient ships that can deliver higher TCE rates due to lower operating costs and better technical specification compared to older ships in the market.

The spot oil market is the predominant business model for OET, with all ships deployed on short-term or spot voyages. This strategy maximises exposure to rate rises but also increases yield volatility. It is a conscious and consistent management decision that offers investors direct leverage on spot oil market price movements.

Financial profile and dividend policy

For 2025, the company reported revenues of $391.55 million, about the same level as in 2024. However, net income increased by 12.94% to $122.95 million, representing a net profit margin of 31.4%.

In Q4 2025, the company reported EPS of $1.78, beating the consensus of $1.30 by almost 37%. The total VLCC TCE rate for Q4 2025 was around $91,300 per day, while Suezmax was around $50,800 per day.

A key consideration for investors is the generous dividend policy. The company declared a dividend of $1.55 per share in Q4 2025. The company is actively expanding its fleet: in January 2026, it conducted a $130 million equity issue to finance four new Suezmax ships from a construction site in South Korea. Two of these were delivered in January 2026 and the other two are expected in Q2 2026

Okeanis Eco Tankers key financial metrics

Metrics

Value

FY 2025 Revenue (TTM)

391.5 Mio. USD

Net profit FY 2025

122.9 million USD (+12.9%)

Net profit margin

31,4 %

EPS Q4 2025

USD 1.78 (estimate: USD 1.30)

VLCC TCE rate Q4 2025

91,300 USD/day

Suezmax TCE rate Q4 2025

50,800 USD/day

P/E (TTM)

13,3

Market capitalization

USD 1.98 billion

Cycle and macroeconomic context

The oil tanker market has entered a new phase of the cycle as of summer 2025. Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and a change in Venezuelan oil flows have caused spot rates to rise. CEO Aristidis Alafouzos described the situation at the Q4 2025 earnings call by saying that as of August 2025 the large tanker market has entered a cycle that the company has been preparing its business for for years.

For Q1 2026, the company has already locked in 67% VLCC spot at an average rate of $104,200 per day and 64% Suezmax at $84,600 per day. Analysts at B. Riley Securities raised the target price to $55 in February 2026, and Clarksons upgraded the recommendation to Buy in January 2026.

Risks: cyclicality and debt

The tanker business is fundamentally cyclical. Rates can fall as fast as they rise, depending on global oil demand, the pace of new ship deliveries from construction sites, geopolitical developments and OPEC+ decisions.

In addition, Okeanis is undertaking a fleet expansion with debt ($605 million), which greatly reduces operational flexibility in a slowing cycle. In addition, the stock is dually listed on both the NYSE and Oslo Stock Exchange.

Strategic view

Comparing these three companies clearly shows how different investment theses can be found in small market cap companies.

  • Axogen$AXGN) is a de facto monopolist in its narrow segment with strong regulatory protection, growing revenues and a gradual transition to operational profitability. The investment thesis is clear and understandable: the market for nerve regeneration is small. The main risks are the need for additional capital before consistent profitability is achieved and the dependence on the pace of adoption by surgical teams.

  • Polestar$PSNY) is the most complex case. Revenues are growing, but profitability is a matter for the future, into which the company must capital finance itself. Shareholder dilution is systemic and recurring. The price war, the outflow of tax incentives in the US, and the dependence on Geely, including its conversion of receivables into shares, are factors that an investor must assess directly and soberly.

  • Okeanis Eco Tankers$ECO) is the most straightforward case. A modern fleet, high TCE rates in the growth phase of the cycle, and a generous dividend policy make for an attractive combination for investors willing to accept cyclicality. A P/E of around 13 and a double-digit dividend yield are strong incentives not easily found elsewhere. However, the inevitable risk is the debt structure and further equity issuance as the fleet expands.

What to watch next

  • $AXGN: Avance's first commercial shipments as a biologics product (Q2 2026) and the evolution of margins towards higher levels

  • $PSNY: Full FY 2025 results (April 17, 2026)

  • $PSNY: Q2 2026 sales momentum following new model launches and dealer network expansion

  • $ECO: Deliveries of remaining two new ships from Korea in Q2 2026

  • $ECO: Oil price developments and geopolitical tensions affecting trade lanes and tanker demand

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262143-3-small-cap-stocks-under-2b-that-could-become-tomorrow-s-market-leaders Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-262185 Mon, 20 Apr 2026 06:37:42 +0200 This weekend was a textbook example of how chaotic this “war-not-war” around Iran and the Strait of Hormuz is. On Friday Trump reported that a deal was “almost done” and sent Vance, Witkoff and Kushner to Islamabad, but on Sunday he announced that the US Navy had stopped and fired on an Iranian cargo ship in the Gulf of Oman — the first visible strike as part of the blockade of Hormuz — and threatened to “destroy every power plant and bridge in Iran” if talks collapse. Tehran meanwhile denies having agreed to key points, refuses to attend a meeting with the US in Islamabad and accuses Washington of violating the ceasefire and of “excessive and changing demands,” which is reflected in practice in Hormuz as well: a brief hint of reopening is followed by another stop; by the start of the week the strait is de facto closed again.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262185 Sakura Kobayashi
bulios-article-262136 Mon, 20 Apr 2026 04:30:29 +0200 Mizuho says STM trades like a value stock, grows like a compounder STMicroelectronics’ share price jumped roughly 10–11% last week after a bullish note from Japanese investment bank Mizuho argued that the stock is mis‑priced relative to its earnings trajectory. Analysts point out that STM currently changes hands at about 20× projected earnings, yet on their numbers earnings per share could surge around 123% year‑on‑year in calendar 2026 and a further 71% in 2027 as margins recover and new design wins ramp, especially in AI data‑center power management and silicon photonics. Put together, that leaves the price/earnings‑to‑growth ratio – the classic PEG metric – at roughly 0.3×, which Mizuho flags as unusually attractive for what they frame as an “analog‑heavy” chip play with structural growth drivers.

On a relative basis, the call is just as aggressive. Using the same 2027 estimates, Mizuho notes that Texas Instruments and NXP are expected to grow EPS at about 21% and 19% respectively, but trade on similar or higher earnings multiples, implying PEG ratios comfortably above STM’s. For investors hunting for growth in semis, the message behind the 123% and 71% EPS lines isn’t just that STM’s profit rebound could be sharp coming out of the down‑cycle; it’s that, on these assumptions, the market is charging a lower multiple for each point of earnings growth than it does for some of the sector’s more established U.S. peers.

Strong link to AI data centres

One of Mizuho'smain arguments is that $STM has favorably stacked revenues by industry. Approximately 15 percent of revenue comes directly from equipment for AI-focused data centers, where demand for powerful yet cost-effective power and control chips is growing. Analysts estimate that the value of STMicroelectronics ' components on each new gigawatt of power for these data centers is now approaching $230 million and is set to continue to grow, particularly for new high-voltage server enclosures for Nvidia $NVDA.

In addition, the company announced in March that it was ramping up mass production of its own silicon photonics technology, chips that transmit data inside data centers using light instead of electricity. These components are important for fast optical interconnects between servers and graphics accelerators in artificial intelligence clusters. STMicroelectronics manufactures them on 300-millimeter wafer lines, allowing it to rapidly increase capacity; the company plans to more than quadruple production by 2027, with capacity largely secured by long-term contracts with large customers.

Mizuho says that large cloud operators such as Amazon Web Services $AMZN, and optical module maker Innolight are expected to be among the customers for the silicon photonics. Analysts estimate that if growth is successful, this business could reach annual revenues of around $500 million in 2029.

Other growth pillars: automotive and satellites

In addition to data centers , Mizuho mentions two other interesting segments:

  • Automotive - although it expects slightly weaker demand for 2026, STMicroelectronics is benefiting from the growth in the number of electronic components in electric cars, especially in China. Each new electric car contains more power electronics, sensors and control chips, increasing the value of supply per car.

  • Low Earth Orbit (LEO) and Satellite Networks - Mizuho estimates that the market for chips for low earth orbit satellites could reach an annual value of around $1.6 billion by 2029, at an average growth rate of around 20 percent per year. STMicroelectronics already operates in this segment, and analysts expect the accelerating pace of satellite launches to be another source of growth for the company.

Summing up, Mizuho says STMicroelectronics has several well-distributed growth engines - data centers for artificial intelligence, silicon photonics, automotive and the space business - yet it trades on a valuation that doesn't match the pace of expected earnings growth. This is what was behind the sharp rise in the share price following the publication of this analysis.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262136-mizuho-says-stm-trades-like-a-value-stock-grows-like-a-compounder Pavel Botek
bulios-article-262097 Sun, 19 Apr 2026 14:55:10 +0200 Micron turns HBM into the new AI chokepoint Micron is stepping out of the commodity DRAM shadow and into the critical path of Nvidia’s next AI platform. The company has moved its 36 GB, 12‑high HBM4 stacks into high‑volume production in Q1 2026, shipping volume parts for Nvidia’s Vera Rubin accelerators with pin speeds above 11 Gb/s and bandwidth north of 2.8 TB/s per stack – roughly 2.3× the throughput of Micron’s own HBM3E at the same capacity and more than 20% better power efficiency. That combination of higher bandwidth and lower energy per bit is exactly what large‑context, multimodal AI models need as they push more parameters and tokens through each GPU without blowing out power budgets in hyperscale data centers.

Just as important as the specs is the scarcity. Micron says its entire high‑bandwidth memory output for calendar 2026 is already fully committed under long‑term, binding contracts, locking in all of next year’s HBM4 supply and most of its premium HBM capacity before many AI projects have even left the whiteboard. That “sold‑out before it ships” status gives Micron unusually high revenue visibility in what used to be a brutally cyclical business and underlines a simple reality of the current AI infrastructure race: for at least the next couple of years, it’s not just who designs the fastest GPU that matters, but who can actually secure the stacks of ultra‑fast memory to feed it.

HBM4: 36 GB today, 48 GB tomorrow and 2.8 TB/s per stack

The HBM4 36GB 12-Hi (12H) is built on Micron's 1-beta DRAM process and uses a wider 2048-bit bus that enables throughput greater than 2.8 TB/s per stack at pin rates above 11 Gbps. Compared to the previous generation HBM3E in the same 36GB 12H configuration, this is roughly a 2.3X increase in throughput and more than 20% improvement in power efficiency according to Micron's internal $MU metrics.

In addition to the 36GB variant, the company also demonstrated a 16-layer HBM4 48GB 16H version, which it is already shipping in sample form to select customers. Adding four layers means a roughly 33% increase in capacity per HBM "location" over the 36GB 12H while maintaining high throughput, which is key for accelerators looking to maximize both memory space for giant models and data access speed.

In terms of the Vera Rubin architecture, Micron points out that it is the first manufacturer to simultaneously mass-produce a trio of key components for this platform: the HBM4 36GB 12H, the Micron 9650 PCIe Gen6 SSD, and the 192GB SOCAMM2 module. This positions the company as a "full-stack" memory and storage partner for the next wave of GPU clusters.

Micron shares at record highs

The market took the HBM4 news as confirmation that Micron is one of the major structural winners of the AI cycle. Following the announcement of a mass production HBM4 36GB 12H for Nvidia at GTC 2026, the stock jumped and has continued to rise since. Then on Tuesday, the share price reached $465.

But even more important than the short-term price movement is the outlook. Micron confirmed that all HBM production for the full calendar year 2026 has already been pre-sold under long-term contracts, giving the company unprecedented revenue and margin visibility. Analyst commentary points out that such a sell-through means a de facto locked-in business for 22 months ahead, including pricing and volumes, and moves the memory segment from its traditionally cyclical phase to one where demand for AI memory exceeds supply over the long term.

By some estimates, Micron plans to invest up to around $200 billion in expanding DRAM and HBM capacity over the next few years to capture long-term demand for AI infrastructure. Some analysis suggests that with HBM capacity fully sold, gross margin around 68% and EPS over $8 in fiscal 2026, the stock may still be conservatively valued given its growth profile.

Tough fight: SK Hynix, Samsung and the race for HBM4

But Micron is not alone in the HBM4 race. SK Hynix in particular dominates the market, followed by Samsung $SSNLF, and the HBM4 market for Nvidia $NVDA is quickly turning into a fierce battle for every wafer. According to UBS and South Korean media, SK Hynix could capture around 70% of the HBM4 supply share for NVIDIA's Rubin platform by 2026, with Micron and Samsung as smaller but fast-growing players.

Counterpoint Research's data for the HBM market in the third quarter of 2025 shows SK Hynix holding around 53-55% of the market, Samsung 27-35% and Micron around 11%. Samsung, meanwhile, has announced plans to increase HBM capacity by around 47-50% by the end of 2026, to around 250k wafers per month, up from around 170k currently, and highlighted that customers praise the competitiveness of performance and power efficiency in its HBM4 chips.

According to TweakTown and other sources, Nvidia has asked all of its key suppliers - SK Hynix, Samsung and Micron - to supply 16-Hi HBM4 chips by the fourth quarter of 2026, with mass shipments of 12-Hi HBM4 to kick off in early 2026. The outcome of this selection will affect how HBM4 shares are split between the three firms in the second half of the decade.

What's next?

Micron is already looking beyond the HBM4 horizon. The company said it plans to sample HBM4E in the second half of 2026, a generation that should further increase both throughput and power efficiency and push the standard for GPU and AI accelerators even higher. In parallel, development of 16-Hi HBM4 modules is accelerating - as indicated by requested sample shipments by the end of 2026 - which will push stack capacities further above today's 48GB.

In addition to HBM, Micron is also expanding its portfolio for AI infrastructure:

  • Micron 9650 PCIe Gen6 SSD - the first PCIe 6.0 datacenter SSD in volume production, with up to twice the sequential read performance of Gen5, 100% better efficiency per watt, and optimization for agent-based AI workloads on NVIDIA BlueField-4 STX architecture.

  • 192GB SOCAMM2 - A low-power, high-density server memory module designed for AI inference and other data-intensive applications, also now in volume production.

This combination of HBM4, high-end SSDs and server modules means Micron is profiling itself as a key supplier of not just "raw memory" but the entire memory and storage tier of AI datacenters, from GPU modules to storage.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262097-micron-turns-hbm-into-the-new-ai-chokepoint Pavel Botek
bulios-article-262132 Sat, 18 Apr 2026 15:42:27 +0200 Lockheed Martin secures a new contract

Another contract in the chain of defense agreements

Lockheed Martin announced a contract modification with the U.S. Army worth approximately $101.6 million. At first glance this is not a major sum compared with the company’s billion-dollar projects, but the market sees it as further evidence of steady demand for defense services.

The contract includes technical support, maintenance, testing and service operations that are key to the long-term operation of military systems.

Emphasis on long-term contracts

The project will take place in New Jersey and is scheduled for completion in 2029, underscoring the long-term nature of revenues in the defense sector. Part of the funding comes from the U.S. Army’s research and development budget, which suggests this is not just routine servicing but also support for technological development. The combination of maintenance and innovation is key for Lockheed Martin, as it ensures stable cash flow and future growth.

Wider context: rising defense spending

This contract fits into the broader trend of increasing military budgets. $LMT has secured several large contracts in recent months, including billion-dollar deals for the production of missile systems and F-35 fighter jets.

Even smaller contracts like this play an important role because they ensure the operation and support of these systems throughout their lifecycle. This creates a stable and predictable business model that investors appreciate.

Stability over rapid growth

For investors, it’s important to understand that Lockheed Martin is not a typical growth stock. The company grows more slowly than technology firms but offers a high degree of stability thanks to long-term government contracts. This week’s contract is therefore not about size, but about confirming the trend. The defense sector remains one of the most predictable market segments, especially in times of geopolitical uncertainty.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262132 Sakura Kobayashi
bulios-article-262014 Fri, 17 Apr 2026 16:00:12 +0200 Gucci bets on “luxury AI glasses” to reboot the brand Kering is trying a different kind of turnaround play for Gucci – instead of just swapping creative directors and running new campaigns, it is wiring the brand directly into Google’s hardware roadmap. At its Capital Markets Day in Florence, CEO Luca de Meo said Kering aims to launch Gucci‑branded AI smart glasses in partnership with Google “probably next year, 2027,” built on the Android XR platform and positioned as one of the first true luxury entries into the AI‑powered eyewear space. The device is expected to combine cameras, microphones and speakers with on‑device Gemini‑class AI and multimodal processing, putting Gucci in direct competition with Meta’s Ray‑Ban line from EssilorLuxottica rather than just with other handbags in a duty‑free store.

On paper, the move fits where Kering is actually making money. Group results show that while Gucci’s sales continue to fall – down roughly high single digits to low teens in Western Europe and parts of Asia – Kering Eyewear just delivered its best quarter ever, with revenue around 489 million euros and mid‑single‑digit comparable growth, and jewelry is also hitting record highs. Tying the first generation of Gucci x Google glasses to that fast‑growing eyewear division gives Kering a way to lean into a category that is structurally healthier than ready‑to‑wear, while trying to reposition Gucci as a brand that belongs in the “AI wearable” conversation, not only in fashion shows – a gamble that could either give the house a new product pillar or go down as another expensive attempt to mix tech hype with luxury heritage.

Weak quarter: Gucci pulls Kering down, Eyewear up

The smart eyewear announcement came at the same time as unpleasant numbers for the first quarter of 2026. Kering $KER.PA reported sales of 3.56-3.57 billion euros, down about 6% in reported terms and flat on a comparable basis. Gucci remains the biggest problem: sales of the flagship brand fell to around €1.34-1.35bn, down 14% on a reported basis and 8% on an organic basis - worse than the -6% expected by analysts.

Regionally, the situation varies: Western Europe fell by around 7%, Asia-Pacific by 4% and Japan by 3%, while North America managed to grow by around 9%. However, Gucci still accounts for more than 40% of group sales and around 60% of operating profit, so any decline for this brand immediately drags down the entire group.

The exception to the gloomy picture is Kering Eyewear. This division achieved record sales of around €489m in the first quarter, which means around 3% growth on a reported basis and 7% organically - in an environment where the rest of the portfolio is struggling, this is one of the few truly growing assets. It is on Eyewear that de Meo is now building part of its "ReconKering" strategy: it is not to remain an add-on, but to become a full-fledged growth pillar.

Google, Android XR and AI eyewear as the "new Ray-Ban Meta"

The $GOOGL partnership with Google isn't news out of nowhere - it follows a May 2025 agreement between Kering Eyewear and Google to develop AI glasses built on Android XR. Android XR is a new platform designed for glasses and headsets with integrated Gemini AI, focusing on spatial computing and an "in-eye assistant": a camera, microphones, speakers and an optional in-lens display for messaging, navigation, photography or real-time translation.

Google is also working in parallel with Warby Parker and Gentle Monster, with Warby Parker committing up to $150 million - half in product development, the other half as an equity investment, according to fashion media. The model is clear: Google will supply the technology platform and the underlying hardware, while brands like Gucci, Warby Parker and Gentle Monster will bring design, distribution and branding.

Kering is thus essentially copying the successful recipe of its competitors. Meta $META and EssilorLuxottica's Ray-Ban Meta glasses sold more than 7 million units in 2025, more than triple the cumulative 2 million in 2023-2024. These glasses - in a price range of roughly $299-800 - have become one of the main drivers of EssilorLuxottica's wholesale growth and have shown that a mass market for "AI glasses" exists. In addition, Bloomberg and other media outlets have reported that Meta and EssilorLuxottica are considering ramping up production to 20 million units by the end of 2026 due to demand exceeding expectations.

The luxury Gucci variants will likely aim for a higher price point than Meta's Ray-Ban, but the goal is similar in effect: to combine the everyday wearability of the glasses with the added value of an AI assistant, and to capitalize on both hardware and image and ancillary services.

It's the prototypes of Google's Android XR glasses that hint at what the underlying hardware might look like before Gucci strings its own design codes onto it.

"ReconKering": double margins and a Gucci reboot

Luca de Meo took the helm at Kering in September 2025 and at April's Capital Markets Day unveiled a "ReconKering" plan to more than double the group's recurring operating margin (roughly 11.1% in 2025) and push return on equity above 20% over the medium term.

In practice, this means a combination:

  • a radical overhaul of the retail sector - refurbishing or relocating two-thirds of Gucci boutiques, reducing selling space by around 20% and reducing outlets by a third

  • a €1 billion reduction in inventories over the next year

  • a stronger emphasis on the classic Gucci aesthetic codes and less on the "fads" of Alessandro Michele's hyper-creative period

For him, smart eyewear is both a symbolic and practical tool: both an extension of the Eyewear division and a way to redefine "next luxury", that is, combining high fashion with useful, human-centric technology. De Meo talks openly about the fact that the old one-size-fits-all model of global luxury no longer works, and that we can no longer rely on bags and logos alone - we need to create products that make sense in everyday life while carrying a clear brand signature.

Valuations under pressure: high P/E, falling price

Despite the technological ambitions, the market is still focused on hard numbers. According to GuruFocus, Kering has a market capitalization of around $35 billion and a consolidated P/E in the hundreds (the analysis puts it at around 460 times), reflecting the earnings slump in recent years at a still relatively robust stock price.

Following the release of the first quarter results, the stock reacted by falling around 9% to around 254 euros as investors re-priced the risk of a slow Gucci turnaround and the group's sensitivity to geopolitical tensions in Europe, Asia and the Middle East. It is Gucci - more than 40% of sales and over 60% of operating profit - that is the Achilles heel that smart glasses alone will not save, but may be a visible signal that the brand is finding its way to relevant modern luxury.

From an investor's perspective, the Gucci x Google smart glasses project is thus not an immediate solution, but part of a broader experiment: whether fashion, eyewear as a traditionally strong category and AI technology can be combined in a way that will bring not only publicity but also a tangible contribution to Kering's sales and margins over the next three to five years.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262014-gucci-bets-on-luxury-ai-glasses-to-reboot-the-brand Pavel Botek
bulios-article-262012 Fri, 17 Apr 2026 15:39:46 +0200 Which stocks do you currently have on your watchlist and find interesting?

A few days ago I added $HOOD to my watchlist, because the stock has fallen more than 50% from its all-time high. The drop was largely caused by the decline in $BTCUSD and also by lower trading activity from investors. It still carries risks, but personally I think the valuation is already very interesting. In addition, investor activity is increasing again, which could help the company and the shares to grow further. I’m not buying anything yet, but it’s one of the interesting stocks I’m watching right now.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262012 Diego Navarro
bulios-article-261991 Fri, 17 Apr 2026 15:10:10 +0200 A silver miner priced like software, betting on a structural shortage At first glance this looks like the kind of “expensive mining stock” value investors instinctively skip: earnings multiples that wouldn’t look out of place on a good SaaS name and a dividend yield close to zero. Under the surface, though, you’re looking at a producer that has almost doubled revenue in two years, swung from losses to more than 320 million dollars of net income, is throwing off over 300 million dollars in free cash flow and carries effectively no net financial debt – all while delivering record silver output of around 17 million ounces a year from long‑life, high‑grade mines in the U.S. and Canada.

The combination of record production of around 17 million ounces of silver in 2025, high-grade mines in the US and Canada, declining costs per ounce, and plans for capital investment to ensure mine life into the 40s add up to a profile that moves from a cyclical "commodity bet" closer to silver market infrastructure.

Top points of the analysis

  • Revenues grow from about $719 million in 2022 to $929 million (2023) and $1.423 billion (2025), up more than 53% between 2024 and 2025 alone.

  • Net income turns from -$84 million in 2023 to +35.8 million (2024) and 321.7 million in 2025, with net margins of over 30%.

  • The balance sheet is exceptionally strong: low debt, net debt/EBITDA of -0.43, equity ratio of 73% and Altman Z-score of 7.5 indicate minimal financial stress.

  • The three key silver mines (Greens Creek, Lucky Friday, Keno Hill) produced around 17 million ounces of silver in 2025, all meeting or exceeding guidance, and expectations for 2026 are 15.1-16.5 million ounces at very competitive costs.

  • The global silver market is heading into its sixth year of deficit, with a global shortfall of around 67 million ounces estimated for 2026 alone, creating support for the silver price.

  • Valuation is high: P/E of 39, EV/EBITDA of 22.5, P/S of over 9 and P/B of almost 5 - the market is already partially pricing in continued high margins and strong silver prices.

Company performance

Hecla Mining Company $HL is one of the largest silver producers in North America and has been building its position for a long time - its roots go back to the 19th century and its mining operations are deeply tied to regions such as Alaska and Idaho. Today, it operates key silver mines at Greens Creek in Alaska, Lucky Friday in Idaho and Keno Hill in Canada's Yukon, supplemented by gold and base metals (lead, zinc) as by-products. Unlike some of its competitors, it has become largely a "pure" silver player after selling non-core gold assets - about three-quarters of its revenues come from silver, the rest from other metals.

The business model is a classic mining one: the company invests in geological exploration, mine development and infrastructure, mines the ore, processes it in treatment plants and sells the metal to refiners and customers in the industrial and financial sectors. High operating leverage means that small changes in the price of silver or in mining costs translate strongly into profits - a rise in the price of metal at stable costs can help profits multifold, just as the opposite movement can knock margins down very quickly.

Business sustainability is different in mining than in software, for example, but it is significant: capital-intensive mines with long lifetimes, permitting processes in safe jurisdictions (US, Canada), infrastructure and know-how mean high barriers to entry for new players. While buyers are not tied to a specific mine, the global supply of silver is limited and any large mining unit that generates stable production in a safe country has de facto "semi-infrastructure" value to the market.

Business

The most important asset is Greens Creek on Admiralty Island, Alaska, one of the most profitable underground silver mines in the world. It produced approximately 8.7 million ounces of silver and 59,000 ounces of gold in 2025, slightly above the previous year due to higher grade ore. Thanks to by-products (gold, base metals), unit silver costs after these credits are factored in are kept low - the outlook calls for cash costs near zero or in the small negative range per ounce and all-in sustaining costs(AISC) in the $15-16.25 per ounce range.

The second pillar is Lucky Friday in Idaho, a mine with a very long history that produced a record 5.3 million ounces of silver in 2025, up about 8% from 2024, thanks to higher flows and better ore grades. In recent years, the mine has undergone significant investments - a new tailings pile, cooling system and underground development - to increase capacity and extend the life of reserves to more than 17 years. Lucky Friday is also important for diversification - when Greens Creek has an operational problem, it can make up some of the shortfall.

The third silver engine is Keno Hill in the Yukon, which is ramping up production and gradually approaching target volumes. It is complemented by the Casa Berardi gold mine in Quebec, which, following restructuring and a change in strategy, is operating more as a "by-product" for overall margins. The company's pricing power is not that it can dictate the price of silver, but that it can profitably mine even at relatively low metal prices, thanks to high grade deposits and by-products, and translates almost all of the price growth into margin in periods of higher silver prices.

Market and addressable potential

The global silver market is undergoing a structural shift. Beyond its traditional "monetary" role and jewellery, an increasing proportion of demand is shifting to industrial applications - notably photovoltaic panels, electronics, semiconductors, high-voltage infrastructure and the growing data centre and AI segment, where silver is used in contacts, solder and other components. Organizations monitoring the silver market (such as the Silver Institute) estimate that 2026 will be the sixth consecutive year of global shortages, with talk of a shortage of around 67 million ounces for 2026.

This creates an environment in which low-cost, stable producers from safe countries have an advantage. Hecla is profiling itself as a major silver player in North America following the divestment of non-core assets: it produced around 17 million ounces of silver in 2025 and guidance for 2026 envisages 15.1-16.5 million ounces at very competitive costs. This means it has direct leverage on the silver price, but is not as vulnerable to short-term downturns as high-cost producers.

The addressable market for the company is not the "bigger slice of the pie" in terms of tonnes - it is not realistic that it would take a significant share from large Latin American or Asian producers. Rather, it's about being able to incrementally increase capacity at existing mines, extend their life by investing in infrastructure (e.g. Greens Creek tailings expansion to 2045), and potentially add smaller acquisitions in safe jurisdictions. In an environment of structural silver shortages, even a relatively small increase in own volume makes an interesting contribution to earnings.

Competition and market position

Direct competitors include other silver mining companies such as Coeur Mining $CDE, but also large diversified mining houses such as Freeport-McMoRan $FCX, BHP $BHP or RIO $RIO, which, although not pure silver players, compete for investor capital in the metals segment. Across the group, you can see that the multiples vary significantly: while Rio Tinto, for example, trades on an EV/EBITDA of around 4.3 and a P/E of around 7.3, Hecla has an EV/EBITDA of over 22 and a P/E of over 39 - a valuation premium that reflects silver's upside potential and a cleaner exposure to the metal.

Compared to Coeur Mining, which has an EV/EBITDA of around 17 and a P/E of around 22, Hecla looks more expensive on EBITDA but similarly expensive on P/E, both of which have similar returns on invested capital of around 17-18%. Compared to the giant diversified players (BHP, Vale, Rio Tinto), Hecla has a significantly worse valuation on the face of it, but they have a lower growth profile and much higher exposure to cyclical segments such as iron ore or coal.

Hecla's competitive advantage is a combination of: a high silver revenue share, safe jurisdictions, mines with relatively low costs and long lives, and near-zero debt. The weaknesses, on the other hand, are the concentration on a few assets - Greens Creek and Lucky Friday are critical to overall performance - and the fact that in an environment of falling silver prices and weaker demand, there is "nowhere to run" if investors start shedding silver producers as a class.

Management and CEO

The company is led by Robert L. Krcmarov, who joined as President and CEO after a career in the mining industry with a focus on technical and operational roles. His background is not that of a typical "financial engineer", but rather an operations person, which in the mining industry often means an emphasis on efficiency, safety and life-of-field planning. Combined with a team that is experienced in finance, this creates a fairly balanced mix.

Meanwhile, the capital discipline can be seen in the numbers: after years of higher debt, the company has gradually paid down its long-term debt and now has virtually zero interest-bearing liabilities, interest coverage of over 10 times and a very high Altman Z-score. It is funding its significant investments in mine development (about $250-280 million per year in capex) primarily from operating cash flow, not aggressive debt.

Management's priorities are fairly clear from recent updates: maximize silver production in safe jurisdictions, reduce unit costs through operational improvements and by-products, invest in extending the life of key mines (tailings to 2045, underground development, cooling) while keeping the balance sheet strong to prepare the company for potential recessionary periods and acquisition opportunities. From an investor's perspective, this strategy makes sense - you're paying a high multiple, but for a very disciplined managed business.

Financial performance

The four-year series shows exceptional turnaround. In 2022, sales were about $719 million, gross profit was $116 million, operating loss was about $12 million, net loss was $37 million, and EPS was -0.07. A year later, sales rose slightly to 720 million, but due to higher costs and lower margins, gross profit was only 113 million and net loss widened to 84 million, EPS -0.14.

The turning point came in 2024: sales shot up to 930 million (+29%), gross profit rose to 198 million and operating profit to 106 million, still relatively low but already solid operating margins. Net income turned positive to $35.8 million, EPS $0.06. Then in 2025, the company "caught up" fully on a combination of higher metal prices, higher volumes and lower costs: sales jumped to 1.423 billion (+53%), gross profit to 622 million (+214%), operating profit to 515 million (+384%) and net profit to 322 million, EPS $0.49.

Thus, the operating margin and net margin in 2025 will be approximately 36% and 30% respectively, while return on assets will be over 12% and return on invested capital will be 17.4%. It's important to note that some of this jump is cyclical - the miner is benefiting from high silver prices and a favourable spread to costs - but at the same time, the numbers show the effect of completed mine investments that are enabling higher volumes and more efficient operations.

Cash flow and capital discipline

Cash flow confirms the turnaround picture: in 2022, operating cash flow generated around 90 million, falling to 75 million in 2023, but jumping to 218 million in 2024 and 563 million in 2025. Capex has been in the range of $210-250 million per year in recent years, meaning free cash flow was negative in 2022-2023, slightly positive in 2024 (about $3.8 million), and already robust in 2025 - around $310 million.

This is a key shift: the firm has moved from "invest and hope" mode to "invest while generating significant free cash flow" mode. With a market capitalization of around $13 billion, that translates to an FCF yield of around 1.8-2%, which matches the number you have in your overview. It's not a value bomb, but in light of silver's debt-free balance sheet and growth profile, it's a decent combination.

The dividend so far is token - about $0.0038 per share, with virtually zero dividend yield. Management clearly prefers to reinvest cash flow into mine development and exploration, rather than aggressively increase payouts and risk having to cut them again at a worse stage of the cycle. If there were to be a significant dividend increase, it would be more of a signal that the company is entering a more mature phase or that management expects a sustained higher silver price level.

Valuation

On current numbers, the valuation clearly looks like a "growth" mining stock. A P/E of around 39.4, EV/EBITDA of 22.5, P/S of 9.1 and P/B of 5 place the company at the upper end of the value spectrum within the metals miners. It looks extremely expensive against miners like BHP or Rio Tinto with P/Es of 7-11 and EV/EBITDA of 4-6, but they operate in different commodities and at different stages of the cycle.

A more meaningful comparison is with other silver and "EV/AI metal" players. Coeur Mining has an EV/EBITDA of around 17 and a P/E of around 22, Southern Copper has a P/E of around 35.5 and an EV/EBITDA of around 21.7, Freeport-McMoRan has a P/E of around 43.7 and an EV/EBITDA of 10.5. Hecla is thus straddling the line between "premium pure silver" and general commodity growth - the market gives it a premium for its combination of safe jurisdictions, high leverage to silver and strong balance sheet.

Whether it's expensive or cheap depends on two things: how long the high margins last and how high the long-term silver price is. If silver stays in a range where an all-in sustaining cost of $15-16 stands against a price well above $20, the company can generate double-digit returns on capital over the long term, and a P/E of around 25-30 might not be unreasonable. However, if the silver price were to return to lower levels and margins were to fall, the current P/E of 39 would quickly become unsustainable.

Growth catalysts and outlook

The near-term catalysts are primarily operational: confirmation that the company can deliver 15.1-16.5 million ounces of silver in 2026 at cash costs of between $1.50 and $1.25 per ounce (after by-product credits) and AISC of $15-16.25, and that capital expenditure of around $255-279 million will further strengthen the mine's infrastructure position into the 40s. The next trigger may be if the global silver deficit continues to be confirmed and prices remain in a range that allows for high margins.

Measurable KPIs to watch: annual silver production volumes (around 15-17 million ounces), AISC per ounce (target range $15-16.25), operating cash flow (above $400 million per year), free cash flow (above $250-300 million), ROIC (hold around 15-20%) and debt ratio. If these metrics remain strong in an environment of slightly fluctuating prices, the argument for a premium in valuation will continue to hold.

The narrative around industrial silver may also play a strategic "soft" catalyst role - as more is said about silver as an essential metal for energy transformation and data infrastructure, Hecla may become the "go-to" name for investors who want pure exposure to this story in safe jurisdictions. This can support multiples even in periods when metal prices oscillate in the short term.

Risks

The first and most obvious risk is commodity - if the silver price were to fall significantly below the levels the company is planning for (for example, a combination of lower demand from PV and normalising industrial demand), margins would quickly thin and a P/E of 39 would become untenable. The signal would be the confluence of a falling silver price and a declining outlook for margins.

The second risk is operational and technical. Mines like Lucky Friday and Greens Creek are complex underground operations where accidents, outages or permitting issues can significantly impact production. A heavy concentration on a few assets means that a failure at one mine is felt in the overall numbers - a signal would be a repeated lowering of production estimates at a particular mine or a failure to meet guidance.

The third risk is valuation. The market is now putting a premium on the company - P/E, EV/EBITDA and P/B are all well above the sector average - and this means that any disappointment, however temporary, could lead to a sharp compression in multiples even with relatively stable fundamentals. The signal would be a downgrade or a series of quarters where production, margins or cash flow fall short of expectations - in such a situation, pricing may overreact.

Investment scenarios

Optimistic scenario

Indeed, in the optimistic scenario, silver profiles as a strategic metal for energy transformation and data infrastructure in the coming years. The global deficit persists, prices stay at elevated levels or continue to rise, and Hecla takes full advantage of its projects - silver production stays around 16-18 million ounces per year, AISC remains in the $14-16 range, ROIC around 20%, and free cash flow steadily above $300 million.

In such an environment, EPS could rise gradually towards $0.60-0.80, while maintaining high margins. The market could value the company at a P/E of 30-35, EV/EBITDA of 18-20 and P/B of 5-6, which implies a potential share price in the $18-22 range (vs. today's levels) on NAV growth. An investor would benefit from a combination of profitability growth, expansion and sector rerating. The dividend could gradually rise, but the main driver would be capital appreciation.

A realistic scenario

In a realistic scenario, silver remains in a range where an AISC of around $15-16 still allows for decent margins, but prices are not consistently extremely high. Production stays in the 15-17 million ounce range, AISC is in the target range, free cash flow hovers around 250-300 million per annum and ROIC remains in the 15-18% range.

EPS is around $0.45-0.60, the market is gradually "flattening" multiples to less extreme but still above average levels - P/E 20-25, EV/EBITDA 12-16 and P/B 3-4. This means that even with stable or slightly rising earnings, there may be some compression in multiples, so the capital return won't be as glowing, but the investor will still get a combination of decent value growth and a low but rising dividend stream. The total expected return can be single digits to low double digits annually depending on the starting price.

Negative scenario

In a negative scenario, silver turns out to have been an overvalued story. Global demand will calm (e.g. due to technological changes in PV or slower infrastructure growth), prices will fall significantly, for example to a range where they are significantly closer to AISC, and the company will remain profitable but with very low margins. Output stagnates or declines slightly, costs rise, ROIC falls into single digits, and free cash flow thins significantly.

EPS in such a scenario could fall back into the $0.20-0.30 range, P/E would approach standard mining multiples - around 10-15, EV/EBITDA 6-8 and P/B 1.5-2.5. That means the share price could fall somewhere in the $6-9 range, even without the company being in the red - it would be more of a revaluation from a "premium growth" to a normal cyclical miner. The dividend in such a case would likely remain nominal or be raised only cosmetically.

What to watch next

  • Annual and quarterly silver production - whether it is holding in the 15-17 million ounce range or trending lower.

  • AISC per ounce of silver - whether it stays in the $15-16.25 target range or moves significantly higher.

  • Free cash flow - maintaining FCF above $250-300 million per year as a signal that the company is generating "excess" cash even after investments.

  • Balance sheet condition - in particular, whether the firm retains a net cash position or begins to significantly increase debt.

  • The evolution of the global silver deficit and the trend in industrial demand (PV, electronics, data centers).

  • Capital investment in mine life extensions (tailings, underground development) and their returns.

  • Valuation multiples - whether they are holding high or starting to fall towards normal mining levels.

What to take away from the article

  • This is one of the major silver producers in North America with key mines in safe jurisdictions and high leverage on the silver price.

  • The company has turned losses in the hundreds of millions into net income of over $320 million and free cash flow of over $300 million in two years, with almost zero debt.

  • The global silver market is heading into another year of deficit, supporting prices and margins for low-cost producers.

  • Valuations are high: a P/E of nearly 40, EV/EBITDA of over 22 and P/B near 5 mean investors are paying a premium for a growth story and safe exposure.

  • The strong balance sheet and low costs provide protection against a worse phase of the cycle, but valuation risk is real - a disappointing silver price or traffic could see a sharp compression in multiples.

  • The title makes sense as a growth bet on silver and industrial demand, not as a "value" miner - entry price and holding horizon are therefore key.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/261991-a-silver-miner-priced-like-software-betting-on-a-structural-shortage Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-262007 Fri, 17 Apr 2026 14:25:53 +0200 $TSLA sold Cybertrucks to its own companies. This isn't a problem with the car, this is a problem with the whole company.

In the fourth quarter of 2025 $TSLA registered 7,071 Cybertrucks in the U.S. A number that went into reports, headlines, and investor presentations.

But of those 7,071 units, 1,279, that is over 18%, were bought by SpaceX. Musk's rocket company. Same owner, different pocket. Add another 60 vehicles purchased through xAI, The Boring Company and Neuralink and you reach 19% of all Cybertruck registrations coming from connected companies.

Without these "sales" Cybertruck registrations would have fallen quarter-over-quarter by 51%.

This smells a bit like an accounting trick.

Musk's promise

In 2019 Musk promised that the Cybertruck would be the best-selling pickup in America. He predicted sales of 250,000 units per year by 2025.

Reality? In the entire year 2025 $TSLA sold approximately 20,300 Cybertrucks. That's 8% of the original promise.

Original price? Musk said less than $40,000. Today's base price? $72,235. An increase of 81% compared to his own promise.

And now the most important part: the real sales pace, after subtracting inter-company purchases, is according to analysts closer to 20,000 units per year. Total, not just for one quarter.

Vojta's thoughts

I'm not making money on $TSLA. And honestly, I don't want to.

The Cybertruck was a meme project from the start. A blocky piece of stainless steel that promised a revolution and delivered a premium pickup at the price of a German sedan.

When the company sells 19% of production to itself so the numbers don't look catastrophic.

$TSLA has real problems. Sales are declining for the third year in a row. $BY6.F has overtaken it as the largest seller of electric vehicles in the world. Margins are under pressure. And a brand that three years ago was synonymous with innovation and aspiration is today toxic in half of the world's markets because of the political activities of one person.

Q1 2026 results come out on April 22. I'm waiting for them with popcorn, not a buy order.

Tesla is a meme stock. It trades on stories, on a tweet, on promises. Fundamentals take a back seat. And that's the biggest risk, because meme stocks can go much higher than you think, but they can also fall much faster and deeper than anyone admits.

The Cybertruck isn't a story about a bad car. It's a story about a company that stopped telling the market the truth and is relying on the market not to find out.

Does anyone hold shares of $TSLA? If so, I'll pray for you on Sunday. ✝️

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https://en.bulios.com/status/262007 Liam Smith
bulios-article-261957 Fri, 17 Apr 2026 10:28:11 +0200 4 ETFs Riding the AI and Semiconductor Boom That Investors Should Watch Artificial intelligence is no longer just a buzzword it’s a structural shift reshaping entire industries. Behind this revolution are semiconductor companies powering the infrastructure. These four ETFs offer diversified exposure to both AI leaders and chip manufacturers, helping investors capture long-term growth while reducing single stock risk.

The investment boom around AI and semiconductors has grown into one of the most significant structural trends in global capital markets since 2023.

Hyperscalers such as Microsoft $MSFT, Amazon $AMZN and Google $GOOG are increasing capital spending on building data centers every year, which directly drives demand for GPU accelerators, memory, fiber optics and other components of the semiconductor value chain.

For investors who want to benefit from this trend without having to pick and choose individual titles, ETFs represent a logical path.

But not all semiconductor and AI funds are the same. Some offer narrow exposure to the 25 largest chipmakers, while others cover the entire value chain from chip design to manufacturing equipment to robotics and autonomous systems. Key differences can be found in the number of positions held, the weighting of the largest positions, geographic diversification and fee structure. It is these parameters that can significantly affect the real return on investment in the long run.

Moreover, the current market environment adds further layers of complexity. Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, new export restrictions on chips, and the question of the sustainability of the current investment cycle of hyperscalers are all factors that can significantly impact the performance of these funds. That is why it is important to understand what each of these ETFs actually contains and what risk factors they entail.

VanEck Semiconductor ETF $SMH

The VanEck Semiconductor ETF is one of the most popular semiconductor funds on the market and one of the largest ETFs in the entire technology segment. The fund tracks the MVIS US Listed Semiconductor 25 index, which includes the 25 largest chip companies listed on U.S. exchanges. It is this high concentration that is both the fund's greatest strength and potential risk.

The largest positions include Nvidia $NVDA with a weighting of approximately 19%, followed by TSMC $TSM with a weighting of around 11% and Broadcom $AVGO with approximately 8.5%. The top 10 positions thus account for more than two-thirds of the fund's total assets. This structure means that $SMH s performance is strongly tied to a narrow group of dominant chip players. If Nvidia grows, the fund grows with it. If it weakens, it shows up in a big way.

Performance and key parameters

Since the beginning of 2026, the fund has earned appreciation in excess of 26%, making it one of the best performing ETFs in the technology category. Over the past year, then, the total return has exceeded 120%. The fund's total net assets exceed $51.5 billion, making it by far the largest semiconductor ETF in the world.

Parameter

Value

Ticker

SMH

Manager

VanEck

Expense ratio

0.35% per annum

AUM

approx. USD 52 billion

Number of positions

25 companies

Performance YTD 2026

+25,5 %

Founded

December 2011

An expense ratio of 0.35% places the fund among the most affordable products in its category. For investors seeking concentrated exposure to the largest chip companies with Nvidia's dominant role, $SMH represents a primary choice. However, one must account for higher volatility, which is directly related to the level of portfolio concentration.

iShares Semiconductor ETF $SOXX

BlackRock'siShares Semiconductor ETF is the second-largest semiconductor ETF in the market with around $26.9 billion in assets. Unlike $SMH, the fund offers a broader portfolio with 3ch positions . The key difference, however, is the distribution of weightings across the titles with a cap, which limits the dominance of any one stock in the portfolio.

The largest positions in the portfolio are Broadcom $AVGO with a weighting of around 8.6%, followed by Micron $MU, Nvidia $NVDA and AMD $AMD, each with a weighting between 6 and 8%. In addition, the fund holds significant positions in Texas Instruments $TXN, Analog Devices $ADI or NXP Semiconductors $NXPI. This structure means that $SOXX is not as heavily dependent on the performance of a single firm as $SMH.

Structure and fees

Parameter

Value

Ticker

SOXX

Administrator

BlackRock (iShares)

Expense ratio

0.34% per annum

AUM

approx. USD 27 billion

Number of positions

34 companies

Founded

July 2001

Expense ratio of 0.34% is almost identical to the $SMH fund, which means that investors make their choices primarily based on portfolio structure and concentration levels, not fees. $SOXX is a much smaller fund, however, which may result in lower liquidity during periods of increased volatility. Morningstar rates the fund four stars over three and five-year periods and five stars over 10-year periods.

For investors who prefer a more balanced exposure across the entire semiconductor value chain, including chip equipment manufacturers and analog chip makers, $SOXX may be a better choice than the heavily concentrated $SMH. The fund also offers a longer history, allowing investors to better evaluate its behavior in different market conditions.

Global X Artificial Intelligence & Technology ETF $AIQ

The Global X Artificial Intelligence & Technology ETF differs fundamentally from the previous two funds in its investment focus. While $SMH and $SOXX are pure semiconductor funds, $AIQ covers the broader ecosystem of artificial intelligence and big data. The fund tracks the Artificial Intelligence & Big Data Index and invests in companies that develop or use AI technologies, including companies that provide hardware infrastructure for big data analytics.

The fund's portfolio is significantly more diversified than pure semiconductor ETFs. With 84 positions and the top 10 firms making up roughly 35% of assets, the fund spreads risk across a larger number of companies. Some of the largest positions include SK hynix $HY9H.F, Apple $AAPL, Alphabet $GOOG, TSMC $TSM and Netflix $NFLX. The fund thus combines tech giants with companies that are actively implementing AI into their business processes.

Global reach and performance

Parameter

Value

Ticker

AIQ

Administrator

Global X (Mirae Asset)

Expense ratio

0.68% per annum

AUM

USD 8.26 billion

Number of positions

84 companies

Geographical exposure

USA 66.4%, South Korea 7.4%, other countries 26.2%

Founded

May 2018

Over the past year, the fund has delivered a total return in excess of 58%, a remarkable result for a thematic ETF with such broad diversification. Geographic diversification is also an important aspect, as approximately one-third of the portfolio is outside the United States. The fund thus captures AI developments not only in the US, but also in developed markets in Europe and Asia.

The higher expense ratio of 0.68% is the trade-off investors pay for the thematic focus and broader coverage of the AI ecosystem. For those who want to bet not just on the chips themselves, but on the entire AI infrastructure, including software platforms and companies implementing AI into their services, $AIQ represents an interesting alternative to pure semiconductor funds.

Global X Robotics & Artificial Intelligence ETF $BOTZ

TheGlobal X Robotics & Artificial Intelligence ETF represents the most different fund in today's selection.

While the previous three ETFs focus on chips or the broader AI software ecosystem, $BOTZ targets companies that benefit from the increased adoption of robotics and artificial intelligence in industrial applications. This includes industrial automation, collaborative robots, autonomous vehicles and healthcare robots.

The fund's portfolio is comprised of 62 positions and is distinctly global in nature. The largest positions are Nvidia $NVDA, ABB $ABBNY, Fanuc $FANUY, Keyence $KYCCF and Intuitive Surgical $ISRG. It is the latter company, a leader in robotic surgery, that illustrates the breadth of the fund's coverage. Sector-wise, the fund allocates approximately 45% of its assets to industrials, 33% to technology and approximately 11% to healthcare.

Global diversification with an emphasis on Japan

Parameter

Value

Ticker

BOTZ

Administrator

Global X (Mirae Asset)

Expense ratio

0.68% per annum

AUM

USD 3.3 billion

Number of positions

62 companies

Sector composition

Industrial 44%, Tech 33%, Healthcare 11%

Founded

September 2016

Geographically, the fund allocates approximately 34% to the US, approximately 27% to Japan and 9% to Switzerland. It is the high proportion of Japanese companies such as Fanuc, Keyence and SMC Corporation that gives the fund unique exposure to global leaders in industrial automation that are virtually absent in other AI funds.

The fund's total return over the past year is over 37%, significantly lower than pure semiconductor funds. However, this reflects the different portfolio structure, which is less focused on the chip series and more on physical AI applications. For investors who believe that the next wave of the AI boom will shift from chips to robotics, autonomous systems and industrial automation, $BOTZ may represent an interesting strategic portfolio component.

Fund Comparison

$SMH

$SOXX

$AIQ

$BOTZ

Expense ratio

0,35 %

0,34 %

0,68 %

0,68 %

AUM (USD billion)

52

26,9

8,2

3,3

Number of positions

25

30

84

62

Top positions

$NVDA 19 %

$AVGO 8.7%

$HY9H.F 4.5%

$ABBNY 8.5%

Focus

Semiconductors

Semiconductors

AI + Big Data

Robotics + AI

Geography

Mainly USA

USA + International

US 67% + Global

US 34% + Japan 26.6% + China 21.7%

Selecting the best ETF

Each of the four funds covers a different part of the AI and semiconductor ecosystem, and that's where the main value of this comparison lies.

  • $SMH is a tool for investors who want the most concentrated bet on the dominant chip companies, led by Nvidia. But the high concentration means the fund is highly sensitive to sentiment around AI investments and any changes in capital spending by hyperscalers.

  • $SOXX offers similar exposure but with a more balanced distribution. Investors gain access to the entire semiconductor value chain, including analog chip, sensor and chip equipment manufacturers. This can reduce volatility during periods when the market rotates from growth to value semiconductor companies.

  • $AIQ is an option for investors looking to capture the broader AI trend including software companies, companies using AI in their services and global players outside the US. The higher fees of 0.68% are a trade-off for thematic breadth of coverage. The fund is also less correlated to the chip cycle itself.

  • $BOTZ then brings a completely different exposure, focused on physical AI applications. The high proportion of Asian and European industrial companies makes this fund an interesting position for investors who believe in the next wave of robotics adoption. With the advent of humanoid robots and advanced manufacturing automation, this segment could be the next growth driver.

What to watch next

  • Hyperscalers' capital spending pace on AI infrastructure in the second half of 2026, which directly impacts chip demand

  • The impact of new export restrictions on semiconductors, particularly towards China

  • Developing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and its impact on the supply of key materials for chip manufacturing

  • Accelerating adoption of humanoid robots and industrial automation as a catalyst for $BOTZ

  • Valuation of the entire semiconductor sector, which is trading around 22 times forward P/E after this week's gains

  • Semiconductor companies' quarterly earnings season and guidance for Q3/Q4 2026

Choosing the right ETF fund with a focus on AI and chips depends primarily on what part of the ecosystem an investor wants to cover and what level of concentration they are willing to accept.

The $SMH and $SOXX funds offer direct exposure to the core of the chip industry with low fees, while $AIQ and $BOTZ bring a broader thematic scope including the AI software layer and physical applications in robotics.

The current market environment is favorable for the processor and AI sector, with demand for AI infrastructure remaining strong and hyperscaler capital spending continuing to grow.

At the same time, however, there are risks that include geopolitical tensions, regulatory changes in chip exports, and the question of whether current valuations reflect an already fully optimistic scenario. This is why it may be prudent to consider diversifying across multiple funds with different focuses, rather than concentrating all exposure in one product.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/261957-4-etfs-riding-the-ai-and-semiconductor-boom-that-investors-should-watch Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-261921 Fri, 17 Apr 2026 04:15:12 +0200 Netflix: great quarter, guidance hangover Netflix delivered very strong results in the first quarter of 2026. Revenue is growing at a double-digit pace, operating margins are above 32%, and earnings per share are nearly double last year's. In addition, the company significantly raised free cash flow thanks to an extraordinary payment from the pending Warner Bros. transaction. Discovery and confirms that it is targeting around 12-14% revenue growth and an operating margin of around 31.5% in 2026.

Still, the stock lost more than 9% in the aftermarket after the results were announced. The reason is not the weak quarter, but the earnings structure and a more cautious outlook for the second quarter. Investors see that much of the jump in net profit is one-off and that margins and earnings per share in Q2 will be weaker than they have managed to paint after a very strong Q1.

Q1 2026 results

Netflix's $NFLX revenue in the first quarter was roughly $12.25 billion. That's a 16% growth year-over-year, and about 14% after adjusting for currency effects. Revenue growth is on three legs: continued subscriber growth, higher average revenue per user due to price adjustments, and a growing share of advertising revenue. The company itself says revenue was "slightly above plan" precisely because of higher-than-expected subscriber growth and favorable currency.

Operating profit in Q1 was about $4 billion, up about 18% from the same period last year. Operating margin moved to 32.3%, compared to 31.7% in Q1 2025. This means that Netflix was able to not only increase revenue, but also keep costs under control enough to improve margins slightly. For a company that just a few years ago was burning much of its cash flow into content and expansion, this is confirmation of a transition into a "profitable" growth phase.

At the net profit level, the numbers look even better. Netflix earned about $5.3 billion versus about $2.9 billion a year earlier. Diluted earnings per share rose from $0.66 to $1.23, up roughly 86%, while market expectations were around $0.75-0.80. Thus, the company significantly beat estimates in terms of net income and EPS.

The important thing is why EPS jumped so dramatically. In the first quarter, Netflix collected $2.8 billion as a fee for the cancellation of a planned deal with Warner Bros. Discovery, which was part of a broader deal with Paramount. The amount is a one-time charge, appearing on the books as "interest and other income" and artificially inflating net income and earnings per share. Without it, EPS would still be solidly above estimates, but the difference from consensus would not be nearly as spectacular.

The significant impact of this payment can also be seen in cash flow. Net operating cash flow increased roughly year-over-year from $2.8 billion to $5.3 billion and free cash flow from $2.7 billion to $5.1 billion. As a result, Netflix adjusted its free cash flow estimate for 2026 from roughly $11 billion to $12.5 billion. It also reiterates that it wants to keep the ratio of cash spend on content to its book amortization around 1.1 times, so it intends to continue to invest heavily in content despite strong cash flow.

Overall, then, Q1 2026 in terms of revenue, operating profit and cash flow confirms that Netflix can grow at double-digit rates while generating high margins. However, much of the jump in net profit is one-off and the market is not forgetting that when interpreting the results.

Outlook and why the stock is falling after the results

For the full year 2026, Netflix leaves its own outlook unchanged. It still expects revenues in the range of $50.7 billion to $51.7 billion, which equates to roughly 12-14% growth, and an operating margin of around 31.5%. That's up about two percentage points from 29.5% in 2025. The company thus confirms that it sees itself as a steady double-digit growth business with improving profitability and strong free cash flow.

So where is the problem? In the detailed outlook for the second quarter. Netflix itself says that content cost growth this year will be mainly concentrated in the first half of the year and that it is the second quarter that will have the highest year-on-year growth in content amortisation. This means that even with double-digit revenue growth, operating margins will deteriorate year-on-year in Q2. The company expects Q2 operating margin to be roughly 32.6%, compared to 34.1% in Q2 2025.

At the same time, the market is sensitive to the Q2 earnings per share estimate. Based on the numbers Netflix is reporting, Q2 EPS should be around $0.78, which is less than what most analysts were counting on. After a first quarter where EPS significantly beat expectations thanks to a combination of higher operating profit and a one-time charge from Warner/Paramount, investors were hoping for a more aggressive tone in the months ahead. The reality is more cautious: the second quarter will be more cost-intensive, and so earnings per share are unlikely to be as strong as would be consistent with the post-Q1 "euphoria."

Add to that the psychological equation around the failed acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery. Netflix explains in a letter to shareholders that Warner would be a nice accelerator to the strategy, but only at a price it considers reasonable. The company stresses that it has multiple avenues to fulfill its ambitions - in-house production, licensing, partnerships - and that it would rather focus on disciplined capital management and organic growth than a "deal at any price." But part of the market was clearly hoping for a big leap forward through acquisition, and with it more flagship brands in the library. Instead, there's a one-time revenue of $2.8 billion, no Warner in the catalog, and the prospect of "only" 12-14% revenue growth annually.

The result is a typical scenario where short-term players react to the combination of inflated one-time earnings and a less optimistic short-term outlook by realizing gains. That's why we see the stock fall more than 9% in the aftermarket, even though the quarterly numbers themselves are very good and the full-year outlook remains stable.

Long-term results

If we look at the last four years, we can see how Netflix has gradually transitioned from a "grow at any cost" phase to a model that combines a decent revenue growth rate with high profitability.

Revenues in 2022 were roughly $31.6 billion. By 2023, they have moved to 33.7 billion, a growth rate of about seven percent. In 2024, they reached $39 billion, and in 2025, more than $45.2 billion. This corresponds to roughly sixteen percent growth in two consecutive years. After a slower year in 2023, when the streaming market took a breather after the covid boom, Netflix was able to return to double-digit growth thanks to paid account sharing, pricing adjustments, and the rollout of an advertising plan.

Gross profit increased faster than revenue during this period. It was around $12.4 billion in 2022, $14 billion a year later, $18 billion in 2024 and around $21.9 billion in 2025. The improving gross margin confirms that Netflix can get more out of every dollar of revenue, whether by better managing content costs or monetizing users more effectively.

Operating profit grew from roughly $5.6 billion in 2022 to $7 billion in 2023, $10.4 billion in 2024 and $13.3 billion in 2025, more than doubling in three years. Net profit has moved from $4.5 billion in 2022 to $5.4 billion in 2023 and $8.7 billion in 2024 to about $11 billion in 2025. Profits are growing faster than sales, which is exactly the shift you want to see from a more mature but still growing business.

A looser but important figure is EBITDA. This was around $20.3 billion in 2022, $21.5 billion in 2023, $26.3 billion in 2024, and around $30.2 billion in 2025. This makes Netflix a company that is not only growing fast, but also generating very high operating cash flow on a steady basis. It is Q1 2026, with free cash flow of over $5 billion, that fits into this picture, even if part of that increment is due to a one-time payment.

Shareholders

Netflix is now a classic big blue chip, with institutional ownership playing a major role. Management and other insiders hold less than one percent of the shares, while institutions own more than 80% of the total number of shares and free float. The largest shareholders are global asset managers such as Vanguard, BlackRock, Fidelity and State Street, each with a few percent stake. This means that short-term price swings are very sensitive to the mood of a few dozen large funds - when they decide to reduce exposure after earnings for a more conservative earnings outlook, the stock can react very quickly, even if the company's fundamental story doesn't change much.

In terms of capital deployment, Netflix continues to pursue a strategy of prioritizing investment in content, technology and any smaller acquisitions, before returning excess cash to shareholders through share buybacks. During the period when the potential transaction with Warner Bros. Discovery, the buyback program was temporarily suspended, but resumed in full swing following the withdrawal from the deal and the collection of the break-up fee. In the first quarter, Netflix repurchased roughly 13.5 million shares for about $1.3 billion, leaving it with several billion dollars of room on its existing program. The company is not yet paying a dividend, and the priority is to continue to build its content and technology base, and to do so by gradually reducing the number of shares outstanding.

Strategic directions and news

Strategically, Netflix is looking to expand its role from "just" a streaming platform to the broader entertainment ecosystem. It is adding video podcasts, games and live streaming alongside its core series and movies. In the first quarter, it broadcast over 70 live events, including the World Baseball Classic in Japan, which attracted over thirty million viewers and became the most-watched program in Netflix's history in that market. Similarly, a live stream of a BTS band event brought in tens of millions of viewers worldwide and topped the charts in many countries.

In games, Netflix is developing several categories ranging from narrative titles to party and puzzle games to children's games. The new Netflix Playground app specifically targets children's users, and the company says it's already seeing early promising signs - roughly ten percent of children's profiles are at least trying out games, and nearly half of children's profiles watch Netflix on mobile and tablet devices, where games can be easily integrated.

Technologically, Netflix is betting on the next wave of personalisation and the use of artificial intelligence. AI is meant to help both in recommending content and customizing the user interface, as well as in the creation and post-production of the content itself. This shift includes a redesign of the mobile app and tests of new formats such as vertical video.

In terms of governance, the important news is the formal departure of co-founder Reed Hastings from the board. Hastings had previously stepped down from the role of co-CEO and moved into the role of executive chairman. He has now announced that he will no longer run for the board and wants to focus more on philanthropy and other projects. In practice, this only completes the handover of the reins to the current leadership, but it symbolically closes a chapter in Netflix's history and confirms that the future of the company rests on the duo of Greg Peters and Ted Sarandos and the culture that Hastings helped build.

Fair Price

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https://en.bulios.com/status/261921-netflix-great-quarter-guidance-hangover Pavel Botek
bulios-article-261930 Fri, 17 Apr 2026 00:36:30 +0200 -8.29% in 5 minutes📉🔴

Yes, this happens on equity markets—even on days when stock indices trade at all-time highs. Netflix $NFLX just showed us that live.

Q1 2026 results beat expectations

Netflix reported first-quarter revenue of $12.25 billion versus the market estimate of $12.17 billion.

Adjusted earnings per share reached $1.23 versus the consensus of $0.76.

For comparison, in the same quarter last year the company reported revenue of $10.54 billion and earnings of $0.66 per share, so that’s roughly a 16% year‑over‑year revenue increase and nearly double EPS.

Yet the stock is plunging after the results!

Guidance for Q2 disappointed. Netflix expects revenue of $12.57 billion, while Wall Street was modeling $12.64 billion. The EPS outlook of $0.78 missed the $0.84 consensus, and operating income of $4.11 billion was well below the Street consensus of $4.34 billion. Shares are down as much as 9.72% in after-hours trading.

Founder departure

Reed Hastings, the company’s co‑founder, announced he will leave the board in June. Hastings stepped down as co‑CEO in January 2023, then moved to executive chairman, and last spring shifted to a non‑executive chairman role. This is his final farewell to the company he built from scratch. Day‑to‑day leadership is handled by co‑CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters.

Lost battle for Warner Bros $WBD

This is also the first report after the unsuccessful bid to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery $WBD. The offer was ultimately won by Paramount Skydance $PSKY, and Netflix ended up with a breakup fee of $2.8 billion, which analysts say could be invested in content and advertising infrastructure.

Advertising is becoming a second growth engine. Ad revenue in 2025 grew more than 2.5x to $1.5 billion, and management is targeting a doubling to $3 billion in 2026.

Price increases as a sign of strength

Netflix $NFLX raised prices across all subscription tiers in March. The ad‑supported Standard tier rose by $1 to $8.99 per month, while the ad‑free Standard and Premium tiers rose by $2 to $19.99 and $26.99. These price adjustments were expected to bring roughly $1.5 billion in additional revenue in 2026.

How are the shares performing?

Shares of $NFLX traded around $107.71 before the results. Year‑to‑date they were up about 15%, but after the recent drop due to the weaker outlook they’re trading below $100.

Do you have $NFLX in your portfolio, or do you find it too expensive at these levels?

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https://en.bulios.com/status/261930 Daniel Costa