Bulios Welcome to Bulios! Unique investing platform combining exclusive content and community. https://bulios.com/ en bulios-article-257178 Fri, 06 Mar 2026 14:50:05 +0100 $2.2B in orders: a solar “turnaround” setup that depends on margin execution Solar demand for large projects is still strong, but investors have learned to stop celebrating revenue growth by itself. For hardware suppliers, the real question is whether higher volume turns into durable profit, or whether tariffs, shipping costs, and regional disruptions wipe out the benefit. That is why this solar-tracker leader is being judged more on its order book and margin path than on last quarter’s sales.

The opportunity comes from asymmetry. The company has visibility from a record backlog, reported a sharp year-over-year revenue jump, and even raised its 2026 outlook. If it can convert the $2.2B order base into deliveries without giving up pricing, the stock can re-rate quickly. If tariffs bite or execution slips, the same backlog can turn into lower-margin work.

Top points of the analysis

  • It's not a question of whether solar farms will be built, but who can deliver the "iron" on time and at margin when tariffs and regional barriers come into play.

  • The key argument for the bulls is visibility: the orderbook is around $2.2bn and the company is also talking about a strong rate of conversion to revenue.

  • The short-term risk is simple: tariffs and their impact on gross margin - the company and the market are sorting out whether it can pass on costs to prices and change the supply structure.

  • The stock is priced as a distressed cyclical supplier (P/S ~0.87), so any evidence of margin stabilization may have more impact than revenue growth alone.

  • This is a title for investors looking for appreciation via margin turnaround and cash flow.

Company Performance

Array Technologies $ARRY is a manufacturer and supplier of solar trackers for large solar farms. A tracker is a mechanical system that rotates solar panels according to the movement of the sun, increasing the total electricity production from the installed capacity. In practice, it is a business that is "on the edge" between industrial manufacturing and project logistics: the customer is typically not buying a product for the home, but a solution for a project of hundreds of megawatts, where price, reliability, ability to deliver on time and service support are decisive.

The company operates globally and its economics are based on two things. The first is volume - trackers are a mass product where fixed costs are spread over large shipments. The second is execution - margins are made in the detail, in the procurement of steel and components, in the management of the supply chain, in how contracts are set up, and in how quickly orders are turned into invoiced sales with no claims and no "cost surprises".

Business

The market for solar trackers tends to be simple on paper: a drive that is expected to last for decades, and the customer wants the lowest price per unit of performance. The reality is more complex, because it is the "simplicity of the product" that makes logistics and reliability a competitive advantage. When the project is in a remote area or in a region with uncertain imports, the developer doesn't just want a cheap tracker - he wants a supplier that can guarantee delivery, has volume strength with subcontractors, and can handle service and claims. This is also why Array repeatedly emphasizes the size of the installed base and the ability to service large customers.

But in the medium term, the most important thing is the shift in product mix. The company reported in recent results that new products make up a significant portion of the orderbook, suggesting that customers see adoption as a value-add, not just "another version of the same thing". For an investor, this is significant because margins are harder to hold on a more commoditised product - with a more differentiated offering, the chance of better pricing power and a more stable gross margin is higher.

Market and addressable potential

For utility-scale solar development (large solar parks), demand is driven by long-term trends: cheaper technology, pressure to decarbonise, expanding the transmission grid and increasing energy security. But at the same time, projects can shift over time - due to permitting, financing, grid connection or changes in tax conditions. This creates an unevenness: in one year there is a "glut of orders", in another some projects are postponed. That's why the orderbook and its conversion into sales is important for tracker suppliers - it shows whether it's just promises or real work.

In this context, a record orderbook signal is important, but not enough. The real opportunity is whether the company can maintain the pace of shipments, accelerate working capital turnover, and improve margins at the same time. After all, the market typically does not just pay for growth with these suppliers, but for the ability to grow "cleanly" - without free cash being lost in inventory, work-in-progress and pricing pressure.

Competition and market position

Competition in trackers is fierce and often on price. The two most important players globally are Nextracker and Array - the former has a reputation for a very strong margin profile and the latter benefits from an installed base and global logistics. The difference between a 'good' and an 'average' supplier often becomes apparent when trade barriers, tariffs or regional disruptions enter the market: those with more flexible supply chains and contracts will maintain margins and backlog conversion.

For Array today, the key is whether it can translate size into consistent profitability. In some years we have seen this, in others the company has slipped into losses due to a combination of cost and project mix. That's why investors focus so much on gross margin and on commentary on the impact of tariffs: for a more commoditised product, gross margin is the quickest "thermometer" to tell whether a company is really in control.

Management and CEO

The CEO is Kevin G. Hostetler.

The firm states: Mr. Hostetler has served as CEO of ARRAY Technologies since April 2022. He has over 18 years of global industrial business leadership experience, having transformed several companies focused on engineered products and services during his career. Prior to ARRAY, Mr. Hostetler served as CEO at Rotork, a FTSE 250 company, where he led the Growth Acceleration Program that led to improved margins, capital efficiency and business excellence.

For an investor, it is not his media profile that is most important, but the discipline in how the company manages capital and risk. Array went through a period when costs and acquisition integration put pressure on results, and the current strategy revolves around three priorities: convert backlog into revenue, stabilize margins despite tariffs, and improve the cash profile through working capital. In recent quarters, the company has announced higher guidance alongside specific adjusted EBITDA targets.

Transparency on tariffs is also essential in terms of management credibility. For energy suppliers, it is often not a question of whether tariffs will appear, but whether the company can change sourcing, pass costs through to pricing, and adjust contracts so that margin loss is not structural. If management shows in the next two to four reports that margins hold up in an environment of uncertainty, that will likely be more important to valuation than revenue growth alone.

Financial performance

The four-year numbers show extreme cyclicality. Revenues in 2022 were $1.64 billion, $1.58 billion in 2023, and plummeted to $916 million in 2024. USD 1.28 billion in 2025, back to USD 1.28 billion, a +40% year-on-year increase. In such a profile, it is key to understand that the problem is not "solar demand" but project timing, regional mix and the ability to deliver at margin.

Even more interesting is the gross margin. This has remained virtually flat in 2025 ($298.6m vs $297.7m in 2024), even though revenues have grown significantly. This suggests that some of the growth has been bought out by margin pressure or cost structure and contract terms. However, there is a shift at the operating level: the operating loss improved from -227mn to -227mn. USD -227 million in 2024 to USD -29 million in 2024. Translated: the company is close to a turning point, but the margin story is not yet complete.

That's where the context from recent reports comes in: in Q3 2025, the firm reported 70% year-over-year revenue growth, along with adjusted gross margin of around 28%, and raised its full-year outlook. This supports the thesis that both volume and traffic management are improving, but investors need to watch whether this translates into steadily positive earnings even after one-off factors subside.

Cash flow and capital discipline

The metrics show an interesting paradox: net debt to EBITDA is deeply negative (implying net cash), but at the same time P/CF comes out high and the operating cash flow ratio is low. This is typical of companies that have high working capital and fluctuating margins - cash is "stuck" in production and inventory one year, and freed up the next. That's why one of the main things to watch at Array is the working capital trend and the ability to convert backlog into billed sales without unnecessarily stretching the cash conversion cycle (the rate at which sales turn into cash).

Capital discipline here is not read through the dividend, but through whether the company is keeping investments "reasonable" and not financing growth destructively. An important signal in recent exits is that the firm is setting specific adjusted EBITDA targets while working with backlog as the main driver of revenue. This is healthy because it shifts the debate from "we will grow" to "we will grow profitably".

Balance sheet and debt

From the metrics, the balance sheet looks relatively reasonable: debt-to-assets ~0.07 and debt-to-equity ~0.41 are not outliers, and the interest coverage ratio of 8.89 suggests that interest is not an immediate concern. On the other hand, an equity ratio of 0.18 and Altman Z-score of 2.10 suggest that the firm is not a "risk-free blue chip" and that financial stability is sensitive to operational fluctuations.

In such a profile, the biggest balance sheet risk is not one-off debt but a prolonged period of weaker margins. If tariffs or pricing pressure squeezed gross margins for several quarters, the company could return to losses even as revenues grow. And that's exactly why it's important for an investor to monitor margins and backlog conversion - on the balance sheet, the problem usually shows up later, but in margins and cash flow it shows up quickly.

Valuation

A P/S around 0.87 says the market doesn't trust the company. This is not uncommon for a solar supply chain: investors have seen several times that high sales have not meant high profits. The valuation is therefore built on skepticism that margins will remain fragile and that profitability will be volatile.

At the same time, however, it is the case that such a valuation can be beneficial if adjusted EBITDA targets are confirmed and margins stabilise. The company itself has communicated adjusted EBITDA of $185-195 million on revenues of $1.25-1.28 billion for 2025, which the market may start to "overvalue" only when it sees that this is not a one-off. When the quality of earnings and cash starts to improve for such a cheaply valued supplier, the price reaction tends to be disproportionately strong - as the valuation regime changes from "survive" to "scale".

Growth catalysts and outlook

The first catalyst is backlog conversion. If the orderbook stays high and the company is able to convert it into revenue without losing margins, the market will start to increase confidence in "visibility." In addition, a new report from the end of February mentions a record orderbook of $2.2 billion, which increases the chance that 2026 will also be a strong year from a revenue perspective.

The second catalyst is tariff mitigation (the ability to reduce the impact of tariffs). This is the biggest short-term "swing factor": once a company shows that gross margins hold up even with tariffs, the market's willingness to pay higher multiples starts to change. Conversely, if the impact of tariffs is prolonged, revenue growth may be devalued by margins and valuations will remain low.

The third catalyst is the integration of the APA acquisition. In past results, integration has been cited as both a growth driver and part of the story that must deliver synergies. If the synergies translate into more stable margins and better order conversion, it will be one of the most compelling pieces of evidence that the company can grow "quality".

Risks

  • Customs and trade barriers: if costs fail to translate into pricing and sourcing adjustments, margins may remain under pressure even as sales grow.

  • Project deferrals: safe harbor and funding shifts can move project execution into later quarters, which squanders cash flow.

  • Product commoditisation: trackers are partly a commodity, so price competition can limit margins in the long term.

  • Operational execution: fast conversion of backlog without complaints and without logistical downtime is key in this business.

  • Lack of dividend: this is an unsuitable title for income investors - returns are based on repricing and profitability turnover.

Investment scenarios

Optimistic scenario

Backlog translates into revenue without stalling, the company maintains adjusted gross margin in a range consistent with recent outlooks, and tariff impacts gradually diminish due to changes in supply chain and contract pricing. In this scenario, Array would become a "normalized industrial supplier" with more stable EBITDA and improving cash. The market would then likely stop valuing the company as a risky bet and start valuing it as a growth supplier, which could mean a significant revaluation from a low P/S.

A realistic scenario

Revenues will remain strong but margins will improve more slowly. Tariffs and regional mix will continue to create volatility between quarters. In this mode, the stock may remain "cheap" longer as the market wants stability and repeatability. An investor in this scenario would be betting on gradual improvement rather than rapid rerating (repricing). The added value is that the orderbook provides some visibility, but returns will be sensitive to when margins actually stabilize.

Negative scenario

Tariffs will worsen or fail to mitigate their impact, some projects will be shelved and the company will be forced to compete on price. Revenue may grow, but gross profit will remain flat - similar to your numbers between 2024 and 2025 - and operating profit will remain around zero or in the red. In such a scenario, the low valuation proves justified and the stock may be a "value trap" for a long time (it looks cheap, but the reasons for cheapness persist).

What to watch next

  • Orderbook / backlog and its conversion to sales (pace quarter by quarter).

  • Adjusted gross margin and commentary on the impact of tariffs (whether they are holding and why).

  • Adjusted EBITDA vs. guidance ($185-195 million) and whether stability between quarters is improving.

  • Working capital: inventory, accounts receivable, cash conversion (whether growth is being driven by "paper sales").

  • APA integration: synergies and their impact on margins and cash flow.

  • Signals from major developers (project shifts, changes in orders).

What to take away from the article

  • The firm has visibility with an orderbook of around $2.2bn and an increased revenue outlook to $1.25-1.28bn.

  • The investment story today is about margins: revenue growth without gross profit growth is exactly what the company needs to break even.

  • The biggest short-term factor is the impact of tariffs and the ability to mitigate it - without that, the stock won't become a "quality rerating" stock, just a volatile cyclical bet.

  • There is no dividend - the return is purely about profitability and cash turnover, which is not the profile for an income portfolio.

  • The low P/S suggests market skepticism, which can quickly turn around if stable EBITDA and backlog conversion are confirmed.

  • The best "KPI discipline" for an investor is to monitor backlog, margins, working capital and tariff trends quarter by quarter.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/257178-2-2b-in-orders-a-solar-turnaround-setup-that-depends-on-margin-execution Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-257176 Fri, 06 Mar 2026 10:56:37 +0100 Novo Nordisk – an update after the drop and one costly lesson in discipline

Ten days ago I wrote here about my largest position in my portfolio – Novo Nordisk $NVO. At that time the stock reacted with a sharp drop to news from clinical trials, and I wrote that I was prepared to endure that volatility because I believe in the company’s long-term growth potential. Since then the situation has developed in an interesting way. And it also reminded me of one very important thing: discipline in investing.

A fair punishment for indiscipline

As we all know, rules should be followed. Especially those we set for ourselves. My investment strategy rests on three simple rules:

- don’t use leverage

- don’t open short positions

- don’t invest in commodities

But with $NVO, after the sharp drop on February 23 I did exactly what I shouldn’t have. I couldn’t resist and opened a new position with 5x leverage. And exactly what often happens when someone breaks their own rules occurred.

The stock continued to fall to about 36.30 USD, where I had a stop-loss set. The position was closed and I exited the trade with a loss. Since then the stock – as sometimes happens – has been fairly calmly making its way back up.

So a simple summary: a fair punishment for indiscipline.

My current strategy:

Despite this experience, $NVO remains my largest position and the long-term investment story, in my view, hasn’t fundamentally changed. The only change is that I was reminded again why I have my three rules.

Therefore I’m returning to my original strategy (until the next costly lesson when I again think I’m smarter than the market):

no leverage + no shorts + no commodities

And above all patience.

What’s your view on Novo Nordisk ($NVO) after the recent news?

Do you still believe in the long-term growth of the obesity drug market, or is the competition starting to become too strong?

The English version of this post is available on my profile on www.etoro.com. If you want to follow me there or copy my USD portfolio, I would be very happy!

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https://en.bulios.com/status/257176 Aisha Rahman
bulios-article-257148 Fri, 06 Mar 2026 10:15:09 +0100 3 ETFs Investors Are Avoiding in 2026: These Funds Are Falling the Most Not every thematic ETF thrives during market turbulence. In 2026, several once-popular innovation funds are significantly underperforming the broader market. Rising interest rates, valuation pressure, and shifting investor sentiment are hitting growth-focused sectors particularly hard. Cloud computing, disruptive technology, and software stocks have become some of the weakest areas of the ETF universe. These three funds show how quickly sentiment can turn against highly concentrated thematic investments.

Meanwhile, 2026 is showing one important thing in equity markets: even popular thematic ETFs are no guarantee of good performance. While indexes like the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite have benefited from the tech boom and investments in artificial intelligence in recent years, many narrowly focused funds have lagged significantly this year. Some of them have written off tens of percent since the beginning of the year and are among the weakest segments of the overall ETF market.

The main reason is a combination of several factors. Thematic ETFs often concentrate capital in a relatively narrow range of companies that have a similar business model, similar interest rate sensitivity or similar cyclical profile. If sentiment towards a given sector deteriorates, the negative developments can ripple through the fund more significantly than with broadly diversified indices.

Changing investor expectations also play a big role this year. After several years of extreme optimism around technology innovation, cloud services or fintech, investors are starting to focus more on profitability, cash flow and real return on investment. The very companies that in years past were valued primarily on the basis of a growth story are now facing the greatest pressure on valuations.

The result is an environment in which some ETFs focused on the technology and innovation segments of the market are among the weakest investments this year. While these are often funds that were among the most popular vehicles for growth-oriented investors just a few years ago, their performance today has significantly underperformed the broader market.

Global X Cloud Computing ETF $CLOU

The Global X Cloud Computing ETF is one of the thematic funds focused on one of the most important technology trends of the last decade, namely cloud computing. The fund invests in companies that provide cloud infrastructure, software as a service (SaaS), data centers or technology platforms that underpin the modern cloud ecosystem. As a result, the portfolio includes companies across the entire cloud chain, from software solution providers to data center infrastructure companies.

Some of the fund's largest positions include Akamai Technologies $AKAM, DigitalOcean $DOCN, Snowflake $SNOW, Zoom Video Communications $ZM, Shopify $SHOP and Twilio $TWLO. These companies represent different parts of the cloud market. They include everything from data infrastructure to SaaS applications to cloud application development platforms.

Overview of the largest positions in the $CLOUETF

A hallmark of the portfolio is the relatively high proportion of mid-sized technology companies, which are significantly more sensitive to changes in sentiment than the largest tech giants.

  • Ticker: CLOU

  • Manager.

  • Date Established: April 2019

  • Expense ratio: 0.68% per annum

  • Assets under management: approximately $215 million

  • Number of positions: 37 companies

Geographically, the fund is heavily concentrated in the United States, which makes up the vast majority of the portfolio. Sector-wise, it is almost purely a technology ETF, which means that its performance is strongly linked to the development of the technology sector, and in particular to companies with high growth expectations.

This structure is also one of the main reasons why the fund is significantly underperforming the broader market in 2026. In recent years, cloud companies have been valued primarily on the basis of expected revenue growth rather than actual profitability. However, as investors begin to focus more on margins, cash flow and return on capital, these are the companies that tend to come under the most pressure. In addition, many of the companies in the $CLOU portfolio are still operating at relatively high valuations while having to invest large amounts of capital in infrastructure and development.

Another issue is the change in investor sentiment towards SaaS companies. After a period of extreme optimism around cloud services, investors are becoming more concerned about whether the growth rates of these companies can justify their valuations over the long term. This effect is even stronger for smaller technology companies, which make up a large portion of the fund's portfolio. While large technology players like Microsoft and Amazon still benefit from investments in AI infrastructure, smaller cloud companies face much more competition and pressure on margins. So it's no surprise that the ETF is down 10.5% this year, and that's only because the price has appreciated 7.05% this week.

Sector breakdown of the $CLOUportfolio

As a result, while this ETF tracks one of the most important technology trends of the day, its narrow sector concentration and high exposure to growth technology companies make it one of the weakest ETFs this year in an environment of higher rates and more cautious investor sentiment.

ARK Next Generation Internet ETF $ARKW

The ARK Next Generation Internet ETF is one of the best-known thematic ETFs of the past decade. Managed by ARK Invest, the fund focuses on companies that benefit from technological innovation, digital platforms, artificial intelligence, fintech, cloud services and cryptocurrencies, according to its investment strategy. Unlike most ETFs, ARKW is an actively managed fund, which means portfolio managers can continually change the composition of the portfolio to suit their own investment view.

The fund's portfolio is fairly concentrated and contains primarily technology companies with high growth potential. Some of the largest positions include Tesla $TSLA, Coinbase $COIN, Roku $ROKU, Shopify $SHOP, Robinhood $HOOD, Block $XYZ, Unity Software $U and Zoom Video Communications $ZM. Companies related to cryptocurrencies or digital payment systems also play a large role in the portfolio, giving the fund significantly higher volatility than traditional technology ETFs.

  • Ticker: ARKW

  • Manager.

  • Cathie Wood

  • Inception date: September 2014

  • Expense ratio: 0.76% per annum

  • Assets under management: approximately $1.83 billion

  • Number of positions: typically 35-55

  • Fund type: actively managed thematic ETF

The structure of the fund is therefore strongly linked to several key technology trends of today, in particular artificial intelligence, the digitization of financial services and the growth of the digital economy. This approach has been able to deliver exceptionally high returns in the past, particularly during the tech boom of 2020 and 2021, when the ETF rose by up to 170%. However, the same strategy also means that the fund is extremely sensitive to changes in sentiment. This year, the fund has already weakened 12.2% and is down 28% since its local peak late last October.

Top positions in the $ARKW ETF

This is the main reason why ARKW is significantly underperforming the broader market in 2026. A large portion of the portfolio contains companies that have been priced primarily based on expected future growth in recent years. As investors begin to question the high valuations of technology companies more or as pressure on profitability increases, these companies tend to be among the first to face significant sell-offs.

Another factor is the fund's high exposure to volatile market segments such as cryptocurrencies or fintech. For example, companies associated with cryptocurrency infrastructure are extremely sensitive to developments in the price of digital assets and the regulatory environment. Once sentiment in this sector deteriorates, it could have a significant impact on the performance of the Fund as a whole.

Portfolio allocation $ARKW

The combination of active management, a concentrated portfolio and a focus on high-growth technology companies makes ARKW one of the most volatile ETFs in the market. In an environment where investors are starting to favor stable cash flow and profitable companies more, this investment style is coming under pressure.

For investors, this makes ARKW an interesting example of how a thematic ETF can benefit greatly from the technology boom, but also fall behind very quickly when market sentiment begins to shift.

SPDR S&P Software & Services ETF $XSW

The SPDR S&P Software & Services ETF is a fund focused on the software sector of the U.S. economy. At first glance, it might seem like an ideal way to invest in one of the fastest-growing segments of the technology market. Indeed, it is software that has benefited in recent years from the digitization of the economy, cloud services and the development of artificial intelligence. However, the structure of this ETF means that its performance can be significantly weaker than other technology funds at certain points in the cycle. And that is what is happening in 2026.

One of the main differences from popular technology ETFs is the equal-weight methodology. This means that individual companies are roughly equally weighted in the portfolio. So the fund is not dominated by a few of the largest technology companies, as is the case with the Nasdaq index or some technology ETFs, for example. Instead, smaller and mid-sized software companies are given more space.

  • Ticker: XSW

  • Manager: State Street Global Advisors (SPDR)

  • Inception date: September 2011

  • Expense ratio: 0.35% per year

  • Assets under management: approximately USD 427 million

  • Number of positions: approximately 139 companies

  • Methodology: equal-weight (equal representation of titles)

Some of the fund's interesting positions include Adeia $ADEA, Onestream $OS, and Riot Platforms $RIOT. These companies represent modern software platforms focused on cloud infrastructure, cybersecurity, data management, or digital enterprise transformation. The hallmark of most of these companies is high revenue growth rates, but at the same time relatively high valuations and often lower profitability. We can check this in the Fair Price Index.

Overview of the top positions in the $XSW ETF

It is this portfolio structure that explains why $XSW is significantly underperforming the broader technology market in 2026 (and quite significantly at that). While the largest technology firms benefit from massive investments in artificial intelligence and data centers, smaller software companies face much more pressure from investors for profitability and efficiency. In addition, many of the companies in the Fund's portfolio operate in the SaaS model, which in recent years has been valued primarily based on growth potential rather than actual earnings.

Another factor is the software sector's sensitivity to interest rates. Higher rates reduce valuations of growth technology companies because their expected future cash flow has a lower present value at a higher discount rate. This effect is most pronounced for companies with high growth expectations and relatively low current earnings, which is precisely the case for much of the $XSW portfolio. These are all reasons that are pulling the value of the ETF down in 2026. Since the beginning of the year, the ETF's price has already fallen 14.4%. It's down 18% since the start of 2025.

Sector breakdown of the $XSWETF

Additionally, the fund's equal-weight structure means the ETF fails to benefit from the growth of several of the largest technology companies as significantly as other technology indexes. For example, if a few large companies are growing strongly, their impact on the fund's performance is limited because they are equally weighted in the portfolio as smaller companies. The ETF thus works differently from, say, the S&P 500, which is influenced most by the firms with the largest market capitalizations.

Thus, while XSW provides broad exposure to the software sector, the ETF's structure makes it one of the weakest ETFs this year in an environment of changing sentiment toward growth technology firms.

Conclusion

The evolution of these ETFs provides a good indication of how quickly investor sentiment toward entire sectors of the market can change. However, once investors begin to focus more on profitability, cash flow and sustainability of valuations, as is currently happening, these particular funds may experience significantly higher volatility than broader indices. Thus, in an environment of higher interest rates and more cautious capital, growth technology sectors tend to be among the first to come under pressure. Conversely, if things calm down again, they could outperform the broader market significantly, as they did in 2020-2021 or, in most cases, 2025.

At the same time, this does not mean that thematic ETFs automatically lose their investment sense. Many of the companies in these funds still operate in segments that may grow faster than the rest of the economy over the long term. Rather, current developments remind investors that thematic investments are often much more sensitive to changes in the market cycle than broadly diversified indices.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/257148-3-etfs-investors-are-avoiding-in-2026-these-funds-are-falling-the-most Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-257124 Fri, 06 Mar 2026 04:20:10 +0100 Nvidia cuts China off from H200: the real winner may be whoever gets the freed TSMC capacity Nvidia stopping H200 production for China sounds like a retreat, but it can also be a business decision. If export uncertainty makes China sales hard to plan, the worst outcome is to “waste” scarce foundry slots on chips that might not ship. Reports say Nvidia is reallocating that manufacturing capacity at TSMC toward its next platform, Vera Rubin, where demand and pricing can be stronger and more predictable.

The investor question shifts from “lost China revenue” to “where does the capacity go next.” If the same wafers are redirected to higher-margin products for the US and allied markets, Nvidia can protect average selling prices and margins even with lower China exposure. Meanwhile, Chinese customers still need compute, so the pressure moves downstream: domestic alternatives, smaller approved imports, and slower buildouts until supply becomes clear.

What Nvidia is realistically losing

On paper, the Chinese market looks like a goldmine that no company wants to lose. Nvidia's $NVDA had an order outlook for H200s in the range of over a million units, with Chinese tech firms set to buy its AI chips for roughly $13.8 billion in 2026 alone (up from roughly $11.7 billion in 2025). At roughly $27,000 per H200, that's a potential for sales in the lower tens of billions of dollars per year if the political environment remains calm.

But it is not. Chinese authorities have begun blocking H200 shipments at customs, suppliers in China have halted component production, and the United States, meanwhile, is further tightening export rules for high-end AI chips. Nvidia has therefore concluded that much of these Chinese sales are an illusion - a politically conditioned "pipeline" that cannot be reliably monetized. Thus, from an economic perspective, it "loses" a primarily hypothetical future in a segment where it has no certainty of supply or payment.

How Nvidia will make more money by moving capacity to Vera Rubin

A key move is the redirection of TSMC's $TSM manufacturing capacity from the H200 to a new generation of chips known as Vera Rubin (Rubin R100). These GPUs are to be manufactured on TSMC's advanced 3nm process and use HBM4 memory, representing a significant leap in both performance and efficiency over the H200. So any wafer that doesn't turn into an H200 for insecure China could become a Rubin chip for a hungry datacenter in the US or Europe - and at a higher price and margin.

Nvidia has already surpassed the $100 billion annual revenue mark, with datacenter AI GPUs being the main driver and analysts expecting further growth in 2026. According to management comments, the company has an order book in excess of $500 billion, which it still considers a conservative estimate of demand. So moving capacity from H200 to Rubin is not just a technology upgrade, but a financial decision: to prioritize customers with the highest willingness to pay and lowest political risk, rather than fighting for the complicated Chinese market.

The impact on China and the global AI ecosystem

For China's AI ecosystem, the H200 shutdown is very painful. Big players like Alibaba $BABA, Tencent $TCEHY and ByteDance were planning huge investments in Nvidia infrastructure, as these chips are the standard for training and deploying the largest models. Without access to the H200 (and subsequently the Ruby generation), they will have to rely more on homegrown chips and optimize models on less powerful hardware, which may slow the pace of their AI innovation in the short term.

At the same time, however, this pressure will accelerate China's drive for self-sufficiency in high-end chips. As before in mobile networks and cloud services, limiting access to Western technology may paradoxically strengthen domestic AI processor champions. At the global level, Nvidia's strategy will then further reinforce its dominance in the US and Europe, where Ruby GPUs will form the basis of new AI infrastructure, drawing the attention of regulators concerned that one company holds the "oxygen" for the entire AI economy.

What this means for Nvidia and the market

In the short term, news of the H200 being discontinued for China is making investors nervous - with headlines highlighting the "lost" Chinese market and the potential billions the firm is "passing on" to competitors. But on closer inspection, Nvidia is trading uncertain sales in a politically risky region for a more secure, profitable business in Western datacenters, plus a new generation of products.

For the global market, the effect is twofold: the West will gain priority access to the most powerful AI chips and further deepen its lead in AI infrastructure, while China will be forced to invest even more aggressively in developing its own chips and alternative ecosystems. So while Nvidia is closing the door on one generation of chips in China, it is also opening a much larger vault - one in which the margins and revenues of the new Ruby era are calculated.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/257124-nvidia-cuts-china-off-from-h200-the-real-winner-may-be-whoever-gets-the-freed-tsmc-capacity Pavel Botek
bulios-article-257076 Thu, 05 Mar 2026 17:35:06 +0100 Ben Affleck’s AI startup goes to Netflix: a bet to cut post-production costs Netflix announced it is acquiring InterPositive, a film-technology company founded by Ben Affleck that builds AI tools “by filmmakers, for filmmakers.” The price was not disclosed, but Netflix confirmed the full InterPositive team is joining the company, and Affleck will serve as a senior advisor.

The investment logic is different from a classic media deal. Instead of buying content libraries and taking on heavy integration and regulatory risk, Netflix is buying a capability that can reduce time and cost in post-production and visual effects. Coming just days after Netflix stepped away from the Warner Bros. Discovery process, the timing signals a clear priority: improve production efficiency rather than chase scale through mega-acquisitions.

Why InterPositive fits into what Netflix is already doing anyway

InterPositive is not a "faux movie factory." According to Affleck, the core idea is that the models are not meant to generate a movie "from nothing" but to work with real footage from which filmmakers train their own model for a specific project. This can then help solve typical post-production pains: removing the ropes for stunt scenes, adjusting the composition of a shot, filling in a missing shot, adjusting the lighting or enhancing the background.

An important detail, according to Affleck, is that InterPositive builds "restraints" into the tools to protect creative intent and keep people making decisions. This is exactly the line that Netflix $NFLX has been repeating in recent months: AI as a tool to expand possibilities, not to take over the job of the creator.

And it fits practically, too. Netflix has previously admitted publicly that it used generative AI in the visual effects for the Argentinian series El Eternauta, where, according to the company and in the words of Ted Sarandos, a challenging scene was created significantly faster than the traditional process. At the same time, Netflix published rules for partners on how to use AI in production and when use must escalate for approval.

What Netflix realistically stands to gain and where the money may be hiding

What's most interesting from an investor perspective is that this is an "accelerate core" acquisition. After all, with streaming today, it's not just the quality of content that matters, but the pace at which companies can deliver it and the cost-effectiveness with which they can make premium-looking productions. Meanwhile, post-production and visual effects are often where projects drag on and budgets balloon.

InterPositive is set to deliver in-house tools to Netflix that will be available to creators working for Netflix, and the technology is reported to work alongside third-party tools and Netflix's in-house production innovation(Eyeline). So not a "one model for everything", but rather a new piece of gear for the shop floor that can reduce time and expensive fixes in late stages of production for select types of scenes.

It's fair to say the flip side: nowhere is it confirmed that Netflix will automatically "save billions" with this move, or that InterPositive has a ready-made commercial platform. This is a technology in studio workflow integration mode, where the real impact will usually take quarters and only be seen on specific projects.

Context: Hollywood is arguing about AI, but at the same time starting to license it

Moreover, this move isn't just coming. Hollywood has been dealing with AI in a cycle of resistance and adoption since the disputes over employment contracts and likeness or voice rights. But at the same time, the big players see that controlled adoption is less of a risk than letting the technology grow outside the film ecosystem.

A good illustration is Disney $DIS 's deal with OpenAI: Disney announced a $1 billion investment in OpenAI and a licensing partnership that will allow it to generate short videos in Sora using select characters and environments from Disney, Marvel, Pixar and Star Wars. This shows that part of the industry has already moved into the "license and control" phase rather than just block.

Why this is important for stocks too, not just creatives

For Netflix, it's a signal that the company wants to control some of its key tools, rather than just depend on external suppliers. If AI tools become standard in post-production, in-house know-how can translate into the two things the market values most: the ability to keep budgets in check and the ability to deliver content more smoothly.

Plus, it's a bet on a segment that is projected to grow rapidly. Grand View Research estimates the AI market in media and entertainment at roughly $25.98 billion in 2024 and projects growth to $99.48 billion by 2030, at a rate of around 24% per year. This is an environment where it makes sense to build internal competence before it becomes an expensive necessity.

Risks: rights, unions and the limits of "what can be an automaton"

Risk is not just technological, but also contractual and reputational. Any expansion of AI into production runs into issues of copyright, protection of recording data, likeness and voice rights, and where "help" ends and labor replacement begins. Netflix is trying to prevent this with rules for production partners and an emphasis on approving sensitive uses, but union and public pressure will remain part of the story.

What to watch next

The real test will be simple: how quickly Netflix starts showing concrete examples of InterPositive being used in real productions, and whether that translates into speed of delivery and unit costs for effects-intensive projects. The second signal will be whether Netflix maintains clear boundaries of use, lest the technological lead become a legal issue. And the third is whether other studios and platforms will start copying similar moves - because then "interesting acquisition" will become the new standard of the competitive game.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/257076-ben-affleck-s-ai-startup-goes-to-netflix-a-bet-to-cut-post-production-costs Pavel Botek
bulios-article-257039 Thu, 05 Mar 2026 16:15:12 +0100 Oil risk premium is back: a dividend refiner that can turn volatility into cash Refiners often look boring when markets are calm. Margins move up and down, and investors treat the sector as unpredictable. But when supply routes feel less certain and logistics become a bigger issue, refinery capacity starts to matter more. In those moments, the market pays for flexibility: the ability to source crude, run it efficiently, and deliver clean fuels fast.

The investment logic here is a contrast. The last year showed how quickly profits can fall from peak levels in this industry, yet a high-quality operator can still produce cash and keep rewarding shareholders. This company raised its quarterly dividend in February 2026 to $1.27 per share and continues to prioritize returning capital, while shifting the portfolio toward areas with more stable earnings.

Analysis highlights

  • Dividend now $1.27 per share quarterly ($0.07 increase), payable March 4, 2026.

  • The market is again pricing in a "hedge" against shortfalls: tensions over Iran typically drive up the risk premium in oil first, but can drive up fuel margins even more as transportation and product availability stall faster than actual production.

  • It's not a bet on the oil price, but on margins and logistics: the company has a strong midstream in addition to refineries, so it benefits not only from the margin cycle but also from fee streams in infrastructure - this stabilises cash flow in bad years.

  • The dividend thesis is based on continuity: the increase in the quarterly dividend to $1.27 is a signal that management is confident in its ability to hold the payout beyond the peak of the cycle.

  • The internal catalyst is return of capital: reducing the number of shares in recent years increases earnings per share even in mediocre conditions - often the "quietest" but most important lever in a cyclical company.

Company performance

Phillips 66 $PSX is an integrated downstream energy company built on three pillars: refining, logistics and hydrocarbon processing (midstream), and chemicals through its CPChem joint venture. Importantly for the investor, this is not a pure "bet on refinery margins". While refineries are the most visible source of profits in good years, it is the midstream and chemicals that are supposed to act as a long-term stabiliser when the refining cycle weakens.

In terms of how a company makes money, it is good to separate "volume" and "margin". Refinery revenues look huge because they are flow-through businesses - buy crude, process, sell products. But the margin on processing and the ability to produce the right mix is critical. That's why a company can make over $11 billion in one year and just over $2 billion in another, even though sales shift relatively little.

And the third level is capital allocation. Here, Phillips 66 is a long-term "payout" title: when margins are high, much of the cash goes into dividends and buybacks. At times when margins are low, it remains to be seen whether the dividend policy is built on robust cash or just cyclical luck. Raising the dividend to $1.27 at a time when the refining cycle is not at its peak is a signal that management wants to keep the payout stable beyond the best years.

Business

Refining is the most sensitive and most "headline" part of the business. When geopolitical tensions increase, the market often addresses whether the availability of certain types of crude will deteriorate, whether transportation costs will rise, or whether outages will occur. Refineries then decide who has the technology and configuration to process a wider range of inputs and extract more valuable products from them. In good years, this generates above-average margins; in bad years, it at least reduces the downside.

Midstream is often an undervalued part of the investment thesis because it looks "boring". But that boredom is often the source of quality. Transporting and processing crude oil and especially natural gas liquids (NGLs) generates fee income that tends to be less volatile than refining profits. In recent results, the company highlighted record NGL transportation and fractionation volumes of over 1 million barrels per day, and that's exactly the type of metric that shows why the company wants to continue to invest in midstream.

Chemicals through CPChem is the third pillar to act as another source of value in the longer term. The cycle is different in chemistry than in refining, and it is the combination of different cycles that can smooth out the overall earnings profile over time. This is also important for the dividend: the more stable sources of cash a company has outside of refining margins, the easier it is to keep payouts down.

Market and addressable potential

The refining market is often misunderstood as a "whoever has more capacity wins" market. In reality, it is more about where the capacity is, what product mix it can produce and how well it is connected to logistics. Moreover, in the US and Europe, new refining capacity has long been slow to come on stream and regulatory and capital barriers are high. This means that when there is a shock to supply or demand for fuels, prices adjust faster than physical supply.

Geopolitics comes into play. Tensions in key regions often translate first into oil prices and a 'risk premium', but the second step is often more important: changing flows. As routes and availability change, the value of logistics, storage and the ability to quickly optimise production increases. At such stages in the cycle, downstream firms with good infrastructure connections are in a better bargaining position.

And then there's midstream and NGLs, where the long-term growth of US production plays a role. Reuters described in December 2025 that the firm is planning capital spending of around $2.4 billion for 2026, with a focus on expanding NGL infrastructure and improving refineries, including projects in the Permian Basin and offshore Texas. This is not a short-term "trade on tension," but building capacity for the longer trend of U.S. production and processing.

Why the risk premium in oil is coming back and why it's helping refiners

The risk premium isn't just about making oil "more expensive." It's a premium for the uncertainty of something going wrong with supply, transportation or cargo insurance. When tensions over Iran escalate, the market immediately begins to overestimate two things: the likelihood of disruption to oil and product flows, and the cost of shipping through sensitive routes. This is then written into prices as 'insurance'. But often more importantly, flexibility - the ability to quickly produce and deliver fuel where it is scarce - becomes more expensive.

For refiners, the key is that their economics are not primarily based on the price of oil itself, but on the difference between the price of input and the price of output. When the risk premium disrupts logistics, the market tends to pay a premium for finished products - gasoline, diesel, aviation fuel - because these are "immediately needed" by the economy. At such times, refinery margins often improve even when oil becomes more expensive because products become more expensive even faster or local shortages emerge. In other words, geopolitics often rewards not "oil production" but the infrastructure that can quickly convert oil into fuels and get them to the right places.

This business has the added advantage of not being just a refinery. In addition to production, it has significant logistics and processing operations that act as a stabiliser in times of greater uncertainty. When the market unwinds, some of the value shifts from purely cyclical refining to "toll" infrastructure - and that's important to the dividend thesis. This makes the title a combination: a regular yield today and an option on the risk premium to keep margins above average for a few months to quarters.

To be fair, there is another side to the coin. Should tensions calm quickly, the risk premium can deflate as quickly as it inflated, and the market will take back some of the "geopolitical bonus". So it makes sense to think of the thesis this way: dividend yield and buybacks are the foundation, geopolitics is the amplifier. Not the main pillar.

How to know that the risk premium is really reflected in margins

The simplest test is to distinguish "oil is more expensive" from a situation where refinery economics are really improving. When the risk premium is rising but refinery margins are not responding, it tends to be more of an oil story than a fuel story. Conversely, if the price of finished products is rising faster than the price of oil, refiners typically get a temporary tailwind. In practice, we can see this by the fact that gasoline and diesel prices at the wholesale level start to change rapidly and the difference between input and output prices improves. This is the essence of the whole thesis: it is not just about oil going up, but about the market paying more for 'processing and availability'.

The second signal is logistics. In times of stress, often before companies' results, transport and insurance costs change, delivery times increase and talk of redirecting flows starts. Once this happens, regional fuel price differentials tend to grow and companies with good infrastructure and market access can monetise this. That's also why it's important to keep an eye on the nonrefining side of the business with this title - it's the logistics and processing side that will often show strength earlier and more steadily than the refinery margin itself.

The third signal is purely company-specific and is the most valuable because it is the "hard" data: how the company talks about capacity utilization, downtime, and how finished product yields are trending. In an environment of increased premium, you don't want to see that the refinery is idle or that the company is having technical problems - because that's when the market pays for availability, and those who can produce without interruption have the biggest advantage. With refineries, it's often the case that the best quarters don't come just because of prices, but because operations are running smoothly when others are constrained.

The fourth signal is the broader market context: fuel stocks and their trend. When the risk premium mixes with real supply tightness, finished product inventories often begin to decline or the market begins to price in shortages. In such a situation, margins tend to last more than a few days as it takes time for the fuel flow to rebalance. If, on the other hand, inventories are high and demand is weak, the geopolitical shock may be a brief episode in the oil price without much impact on margins.

And the fifth signal is a company's capital discipline, which determines whether the "geopolitical bonus" turns into something more lasting for shareholders. If a company continues to buy back shares in times of better margins, maintains or increases the dividend while not overinvesting, that's the best combination for the long-term investor. If, on the other hand, it takes advantage of a better period to expand at any cost, it increases the risk of having to put the brakes on the very thing the investor is buying - dividends and buybacks - in the next cycle. In the end, then, what matters in a dividend title is not just that the risk premium helps margins, but that management can translate that tailwind into a return on capital.

Competition and market position

In refining, competition is fierce and cyclical. The closest comparable players in the US are Marathon Petroleum $MARA and Valero $VLO. The key is that in the worse parts of the cycle, results are often weak across the sector because margins are market driven and no one "makes them up". Reuters, for example, recalled that in a period of lower refining margins, some large refiners reported quarterly losses even though they were operationally prepared for demand. This is important context: sometimes it is not about management capability, but about market price.

Where companies differ is the quality of the portfolio and the ability to make money across segments. Phillips 66 has an advantage in that it is not just a refiner. If midstream and chemicals add more stable cash, the company can afford to continue dividends and buybacks even as refining profits fall. In practice, that tends to be why the market sometimes values diversified downstream firms a bit higher than pure refiners.

In addition to "industry" competition, there is also capital competition: investors today compare downstream to other payout titles in the energy sector. Unless a firm can convince that dividends and buybacks are sustainable even at normalised margins, capital will flow elsewhere. That's why investment discipline is so important in this sector: build capacity, but don't overshoot the cycle.

Management and CEO

The company's CEO is Mark E. Lashier.

The firm states: Mark Lashier is Chairman and CEO of Phillips 66, a leading integrated downstream energy provider. As a chemical engineer, he has more than 30 years of experience in leadership positions in the energy and petrochemical industries. Prior to Phillips 66, he was President and CEO of Chevron Phillips Chemical Company LLC, a joint venture between Phillips 66 and Chevron.

With a company of this type, it is important for an investor that management has to play two games at once. In the short term, it optimizes operations, yields and costs because units of dollars per barrel make a difference in refining. But in the long term, he must make capital decisions: where to invest, what to sell, what to integrate, and how to hold the balance sheet so that the company is not forced to cut the dividend at the worst possible moment.

In recent months, this has been compounded by activist pressure and debate about the structure of the company. Reuters described in 2025 that activist investor Elliott was pushing for fundamental changes, arguing that the share price could be significantly higher if restructuring and asset sales were to take place. These situations are a double-edged sword for an investor: they can accelerate unlocking value, but they also carry the risk of a company pursuing a short-term goal instead of long-term robustness.

Importantly for the investment thesis, management is also sending a signal of continuity: increasing the dividend and continuing to invest in midstream and in increasing refinery yields. This shows that the company wants to combine "payout today" and "better business tomorrow," which is usually the safest path for a cyclical title.

Financial performance

The long-term numbers show the cyclicality beautifully. Revenues are in a huge range based on commodity prices: 2021 112 billion, 2022 170 billion, 2023 147 billion, 2024 143 billion. But at the profit level, the cycle is much sharper. Net profit was over US$11bn in 2022, US$7bn in 2023 and just US$2.1bn in 2024. This is a classic refinery profile: margins normalise and profits shrink faster than revenues.

Crucially, the company still remained profitable in a worse year, while continuing to reduce share count. The average number of shares fell by roughly 30 million between 2023 and 2024, increasing each shareholder's share of future profits. This is important in a cyclical business because buybacks in times of weaker valuations often have a greater long-term effect than buybacks in times of euphoria.

At the operating level, we see pressure: operating profit fell to US$2.3bn in 2024 from US$8.3bn in 2023. EBITDA fell to US$6.0bn from US$12.4bn. This is where we get into why it's so important to shift the mix into more stable segments and why the company is highlighting the record performance of some midstream metrics and high operating efficiencies in refining. In Q4 2025, for example, the firm reported very high capacity utilization and record net product yields, exactly the type of "operational advantage" that decides who stays afloat in a down cycle.

Cash flow and capital discipline

For the refinery, the investment thesis breaks down on cash flow, not accounting profit. The moment margins deteriorate, the accounting results fall, but the company can still generate significant operating cash flow through depreciation and the fact that some of the costs are non-cash. In its Q4 2025 results release, the firm said it generated US$2.8bn of net operating cash, of which US$2.0bn was net of working capital changes. Such figures are important because they show the "strength of the engine" even beyond the peak of the cycle.

Capital discipline today can also be read in terms of where a company is directing investments. Reuters reported that the 2026 investment budget is $2.4 billion and that a significant portion is going into midstream and refinery yield and flexibility projects. This is a conservative and sensible strategy: instead of chasing capacity expansion in refining (which could be cyclically risky), the firm is investing in infrastructure and efficiency.

And now the dividend logic. Raising the quarterly dividend to $1.27 is an important signal, but the sustainability of the dividend at the refinery can't be judged from just one year of net income, as 2024 was a weaker year and the P/E comes out artificially high. The proper test is: how the company manages the payout over the cycle and whether it has room to hold it even at normalized margins. The dividend history on the investor site shows that the company has been raising the dividend for a long time, going from $1.05 to $1.15 in 2024 and now to $1.27. That's evidence of continuity, but it also increases the demands on midstream and chemicals to deliver more stable cash when refining cools.

Balance sheet and debt

The balance sheet shows total debt rising to around US$20.1bn in 2024 and net debt rising to US$18.3bn. This is a key metric in a cyclical business as debt is best paid off in good years. Then in bad years, you need to have debt structured so that the company doesn't have to take forced action.

The interest coverage ratio of 3.03 alone suggests that interest is not insignificant and that if margins deteriorate further, the balance sheet could become an issue. On the other hand, Altman's score of 3.60 indicates that the firm is not under acute stress. Rather, the point is that investors will want to see that investing in midstream and efficiency will improve cash flow stability and reduce the risk of debt becoming a drag on dividends.

From a shareholder perspective, one more thing is important: equity has fallen from $31.7 billion to $28.5 billion in 2024. This may be a combination of fluctuations in valuation and equity payouts. For a dividend investor, this is not automatically a bad thing if the company returns capital in a disciplined manner while holding the balance sheet. But in an environment of geopolitical shocks, it is always better to have a "buffer" than to go over the top.

Growth catalysts and outlook

The first catalyst is geopolitics and its impact on margins and logistics. It's not that the company is 'profiting from conflict', but that in a higher risk environment, the value of reliable infrastructure, storage and the ability to optimise the flow of oil and products increases. If tensions persist, the market often holds a higher risk premium for longer, which can support downstream profitability even with relatively stable oil prices.

The second catalyst is the investment program in midstream and NGLs. Reuters described specific projects: the expansion of the Coastal Bend NGL pipeline to 350 thousand barrels per day by the end of 2026, investment in new fractionation, and a decision on a new fractionator in Corpus Christi. These are projects designed to add royalty cash flow and reduce reliance on the refining cycle. In an investment thesis, this is often more important than "how much the refinery will make in one year."

The third catalyst is return of capital: dividend and buybacks. Raising the dividend to $1.27 is a direct and measurable signal. If the company maintains the pace of capital return while reducing the number of shares, earnings per share can grow even in an environment where the company's overall earnings are not a record. And that's exactly what makes a cyclical title a "better cyclical title."

Risks

  • The biggest risk is a prolonged period of weak refining margins: 2024 has shown how quickly earnings can fall off the peak, and that would put pressure on the balance sheet and dividend comfort in the longer term.

  • Debt and interest: an interest cover of around 3 times means that if the cycle worsens, debt can quickly start to "matter" and the market will start to punish it.

  • Regulatory and political risk: refining and fuels are in the regulatory crosshairs and this can increase investment requirements and costs.

  • Activist pressure: can accelerate unlocking value, but can also bring decisions that are good for the short term and worse for the robustness of the cycle.

  • Operational risk: downtime, accidents, logistics problems. For refineries, "flawless operations" is a big part of the economics.

Investment scenarios

Optimistic scenario

Geopolitical uncertainty will remain elevated and the market will price infrastructure and fuel supply capability for longer. Refining will maintain solid margins and midstream will continue to grow in volumes, so cash flow stability will improve. At the same time, the company continues to be disciplined: investments are being directed to projects with clear returns, and capital returns through dividends and buyouts will remain aggressive.

In this scenario, it is realistic that an investor will get a combination of dividend yield, continued share dilution and potential revaluation if the market starts to see the company less as a "pure refiner" and more as an infrastructure downstream platform. The dividend increase to $1.27 is more of a start than a peak in this scenario, as more stable cash flow would create room for further payout growth.

A realistic scenario

Refining margins will remain average and geopolitics will be more "noise" than a permanent tailwind. The company will continue with its strategy: invest in midstream, increase refinery yields and steadily increase the dividend. The yield to the investor will be mainly dividend and buybacks, while the share price will move through the cycle.

In such a scenario, it makes sense to consider the title a "quality payout powerhouse": it won't be a rocket, but with disciplined capital returns, it can offer solid long-term compounded appreciation. The key is that the midstream really adds stability and that debt does not impair the room for manoeuvre.

Negative scenario

Refinery margins fall and stay low for an extended period of time while debt and interest start to become a major issue for the market. Paradoxically, geopolitics can become a negative if it brings outages that increase volatility or if there is regulatory intervention. In such a situation, investors will often pull back, multiples will shrink and the title will trade as highly cyclical even if midstream remains stable.

In this scenario, the pace of buybacks will be questioned first and then the dividend policy. An increased dividend is a positive signal, but sustainability would be tested by whether the company can sustain cash flow in a low-margin environment. If not, the stock could be under pressure for several quarters regardless of the long-term story.

What to watch next

  • Dividend trend: after the increase to $1.27, watch to see if the company maintains its dividend growth rate beyond the peak of the cycle.

  • Operating cash and cash after working capital (indicated $2.0 billion in Q4 2025, excluding working capital).

  • Midstream performance: NGL transportation and fractionation volumes (targeting steady growth above 1m b/d).

  • Investment 2026: actual spending vs. plan and project milestones (pipeline, fractionation, refinery projects).

  • Net debt and net debt/EBITDA: whether the trend is worsening in case of weaker margins.

  • Refinery capacity utilization and net product yield (company communicated 99% utilization and 88% yield in Q4 2025).

  • The pace of share buybacks and share count decline (this is a silent driver of earnings per share growth).

What to take away from the article

  • Earnings are cyclical, but the company remains profitable and continues to reduce share count even in a weaker year.

  • The dividend is growing even off the peak of the cycle: now $1.27 per quarter, which increases the attractiveness to payout investors.

  • The key thesis isn't just about refining: investments in midstream and NGLs are meant to improve cash flow stability.

  • Debt and interest are the main "stress test" - with prolonged weak margins, sentiment can change quickly.

  • Geopolitics may drive up the value of downstream infrastructure in the short term, but in the long term, investment discipline and capital returns are critical.

  • For future quarters, the most important thing to watch is cash, midstream volumes, investment programme and dividend/redemption trends.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/257039-oil-risk-premium-is-back-a-dividend-refiner-that-can-turn-volatility-into-cash Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-257095 Thu, 05 Mar 2026 15:30:40 +0100 Broadcom delivered strong results and the outlook for this year and next is solid, which is crucial for investors, so the shares are up 7% in pre-market trading. $AVGO makes up a large position in my portfolio and it's clear this company is simply a cash machine. You can't really go wrong investing in it.

What are your thoughts on Broadcom? Do you have $AVGO in your portfolio?

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https://en.bulios.com/status/257095 Money Breaker
bulios-article-257025 Thu, 05 Mar 2026 12:00:16 +0100 China’s Tech Giants Are Under Pressure: These 4 Stocks Are Falling in 2026 China’s economic slowdown is beginning to show clear consequences in the stock market. As GDP growth expectations fall toward roughly 4.5–5%, investors are becoming increasingly cautious about Chinese technology companies. Weak consumer spending, property market stress, and geopolitical tensions are putting pressure on some of the country’s biggest internet platforms. Several well-known Chinese tech stocks have already lost double-digit percentages this year as sentiment deteriorates.

Just a few years ago, the Chinese economy was considered one of the main engines of global growth. However, in recent quarters it has become increasingly apparent that the world's second largest economy is facing a number of structural problems that are beginning to have a significant impact not only on the domestic economy but also on global financial markets.

One of the most visible signs of change is the gradual downgrading of the economic growth outlook. The Chinese government has revised GDP growth expectations downwards several times in recent years, and the pace of economic expansion is gradually moving away from the double-digit levels that were common two decades ago. While in the past China was a symbol of rapid growth and dynamic industrialisation, today the economy is facing a much more difficult environment.

In particular, the real estate sector, which has long been one of the pillars of the Chinese economy, remains a major problem. The collapse of several large property developers and the high level of indebtedness of the sector as a whole have led to a significant decline in real estate investment. This has a direct impact on domestic demand, employment and the financial sector.

Weaker consumer confidence is another factor. Chinese households are cutting back significantly on spending after the pandemic and the problems in the property market, preferring to save rather than consume. This trend poses a major problem for technology and e-commerce companies whose business model is closely tied to domestic demand.

In addition, geopolitical factors come into play. Rising tensions between China and the United States, restrictions on the export of certain technologies and pressure on global supply chains are increasing investor uncertainty. The result is an environment in which some global capital tends to avoid Chinese equities.

The combination of these factors is starting to have a significant impact on the performance of Chinese technology companies traded on both the US and Hong Kong stock exchanges in 2026. Indeed, some of the largest internet companies are among the weakest titles in the market this year.

Alibaba $BABA

Alibaba Group Holding has long been one of the largest technology firms in China, as well as one of the most important companies traded on both the U.S. and Hong Kong exchanges. However, its shares are among the weaker titles in the technology sector in 2026, reflecting broader problems in the Chinese economy and the e-commerce market itself.

One major factor is slowing domestic consumption. Indeed, Alibaba is strongly tied to the Chinese consumer sector through its Taobao and Tmall platforms. If households are cutting back on spending or being more cautious with their spending, this translates directly into the volume of transactions on these platforms.

Another issue is the growing competition in China's e-commerce sector. A market that was virtually dominated by just a few large platforms a few years ago is now becoming much more crowded. New players and aggressive competition are forcing companies to invest more in marketing, logistics and customer incentives. This puts pressure on margins and reduces the profitability of the entire industry.

However, despite all this, Alibaba's margins still manage to stay high, but the stock is trailing the rest of the market very significantly in 2026. The price per share of $BABA is already down 11% since the beginning of the year, with the stock weakening 2% this morning before the opening bell. This decline is already factored in the aforementioned 11% depreciation.

At the same time, Alibaba has been undergoing a major restructuring in recent years. The company has been trying to reorganize its various divisions, separating some parts of the business and making its entire ecosystem of services more efficient. These changes are intended to strengthen the company's flexibility in the long term, but in the short term they bring higher costs and some uncertainty about the future structure of the company.

Foreign investor sentiment also plays an important role. Chinese technology firms have been subject to increased regulatory pressure from the government in recent years, as well as geopolitical tensions between China and the U.S. While the situation has stabilized in some respects, some global capital remains cautious about Chinese technology titles.

However, it may be of interest to investors that the recent decline has brought $BABA share price significantly closer to its fair price, which is now only less than 5% lower, according to the Fair Price Index on Bulios, which combines DCF and relative valuations in its calculation.

JD.com $JD

Another company whose stock has weakened significantly this year is JD.com. The company is one of the largest e-commerce players in China and has long profiled itself as a technology and logistics infrastructure for online retail. However, it is its distinct business model that puts it in a more difficult position than some of its competitors in the current economic environment.

Unlike most e-commerce platforms , JD.com runs much of its logistics in-house. The company has invested billions of dollars in warehouses, distribution centers, and transportation infrastructure to be able to offer fast and reliable delivery throughout China. This model has long been considered one of the company's main competitive advantages.

But in a slowing economy, this approach is also becoming a risk. Indeed, high fixed logistics costs mean that operational efficiency declines when order growth slows. If sales volumes do not grow fast enough, these costs start to put significant pressure on margins and profitability. As a result, margins are still quite low, even though the company has managed to increase them steadily over the past few years.

Another factor is the changing behaviour of Chinese consumers. Households today are much more price-sensitive than in the past and are increasingly looking for cheaper alternatives. This trend is playing into the hands of discount platforms and competitors' aggressive pricing strategies, putting pressure on the entire e-commerce sector.

As a result,JD.com is faced with a situation where it must simultaneously invest in infrastructure, maintain competitive prices and protect its margins. For investors, this means a higher level of uncertainty about the company's future profitability, which is reflected in the stock's performance. Its price is already down 11.4% this year and is at its lowest level since August 2024, but this decline creates a very interesting situation from a valuation perspective. According to the Fair Price Index, $JD shares are significantly undervalued.

Baidu $BIDU

Another company whose stock is among the weaker titles in the Chinese technology sector this year is Baidu. The company is often referred to as "China's Google" because its core business has long been built on Internet search and digital advertising. However, it is this segment that has faced significant pressure in recent quarters.

This is because digital advertising is very sensitive to the economic cycle. When companies start to cut marketing budgets or are more cautious about investing in their growth, advertising tends to be one of the first expenses to be cut. Weaker economic activity in China is thus quickly reflected in Baidu's revenue.

The company has been trying to reduce this dependence in recent years, investing heavily in artificial intelligence and cloud technologies. Baidu is one of the major players in China's AI models and is developing its own generative platforms as well as autonomous technologies. These projects have the potential to become an important source of future growth.

However, the problem is the time horizon for the return on these investments. AI projects require high capital expenditure and their monetisation is still at an early stage. Investors thus face the classic dilemma of technology companies: short-term profits versus long-term growth potential.

Unlike $JD, $BIDU is able to use capital efficiently and even reduce debt despite the surrounding pressure. It fell by $13 billion from 2021 to 2024. But in recent years, cash flow has been falling at the expense. Adding to this is growing competition in search, cloud services and AI. China's tech sector is much more fragmented today than in the past, and many companies are looking to develop their own AI platforms, increasing pressure for both investment and innovation.

The result is an environment in which Baidu's stock has weakened significantly this year. This is despite the initial growth this year in the first few days of January, when the stock managed to appreciate by nearly 26%. However, all of this year's growth is lost, and the stock is losing 8.8% of its value compared to the last day of December.

PDD Holdings $PDD

The last company on today's list is PDD Holdings, which is one of the most dynamic companies in the Chinese tech sector in recent years. The company is behind the popular Pinduoduo platform (which operates in China) and global e-commerce app Temu, which has expanded aggressively into Western markets in recent years.

This extremely rapid growth has been one of the main reasons why PDD stock has appreciated significantly in recent years. The company has been able to take advantage of the growing demand for low-cost products and an aggressive pricing strategy that has allowed it to quickly acquire new customers both domestically and abroad. Within a short period of time, the Temu platform has become one of the most downloaded shopping apps in the US and Europe.

However, in 2026, the first signs of slowing growth are starting to appear and investors are starting to reassess expectations. This is because extremely rapid expansion requires massive investment in marketing, logistics and customer incentives. These costs are extremely high in PDD's case, as the company aggressively subsidises product prices and transport to gain market share quickly.

Another factor is the increasing regulatory pressure in some countries. The rapid expansion of Chinese e-commerce platforms into Western markets is attracting the attention of regulators, who are beginning to address more issues of consumer protection, product safety or business practices. Any tightening of regulation could significantly slow the pace of expansion.

However, if we take a closer look at the share price performance we find that despite the decline this year, which currently stands at 10.66% on $PDD stock, the price is trading at the same level as it did in November 2022. But in the meantime, the company has grown many times over and its revenues, margins and overall business has strengthened significantly.

This is one of the reasons why the firm is currently below its fair value, according to the Fair Price Index. And by a wide margin. The FPI points to a potential growth opportunity of up to 47.3%.

For investors today, PDD represents quite an interesting paradox. On the one hand, it is one of the fastest growing e-commerce companies in the world that has managed to build a global platform in just a few years. On the other hand, its business model is extremely expensive and heavily dependent on aggressive marketing spending.

As a result, investors are beginning to look more closely at whether the current model is sustainable in the long term or whether the company will have to gradually adjust its strategy.

Conclusion

The recent performance of Chinese technology stocks reflects the broader challenges facing the world's second-largest economy today. Weaker domestic demand, ongoing problems in the real estate sector, geopolitical tensions and uncertainty around the regulatory environment are creating a combination of factors that are negatively impacting investor sentiment. China's technology sector, which a few years ago was a symbol of rapid growth and innovation, is now in a much more difficult phase of development.

From a global perspective, the current situation thus shows a stark contrast between the Chinese and US stock markets. While US indices have benefited in recent years mainly from the technology boom and massive investment in artificial intelligence, Chinese equities are struggling to cope with slower economic growth and a change in investor sentiment. It is thus the future development of the Chinese economy that will be key not only for domestic markets but also for global investors who are watching whether the world's second largest economy can return to more dynamic growth.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/257025-china-s-tech-giants-are-under-pressure-these-4-stocks-are-falling-in-2026 Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-257061 Thu, 05 Mar 2026 09:04:10 +0100 🚀 TRADE DESK + OPENAI = BULLISH MOVE?

According to the latest report from The Information, OpenAI has held preliminary talks with $TTD about helping them sell ads on the ChatGPT platform.

📈 Right after the report, TTD shares jumped +9.3% and are now up about 14% in pre-market trading.

Why this could be a big deal:

ChatGPT has already started showing ads — the report suggests this could potentially double ad revenue to around $17 billion this year.

The Trade Desk would act as one of the external partners in building the advertising ecosystem.

Of course, nothing is confirmed yet; we’ll have to wait for an official agreement, if one comes at all. 📈

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https://en.bulios.com/status/257061 Oscar
bulios-article-256984 Thu, 05 Mar 2026 04:35:05 +0100 Broadcom earnings Q1 2026: AI demand lifts results, and the next-quarter guide is the bigger surprise Broadcom started fiscal 2026 with a clear split: AI-related semiconductors are doing the heavy lifting, while the rest of the business stays steady. The company delivered a strong quarter and kept profitability very high, which matters because it shows the growth is not coming from “low-quality” revenue.

What investors will focus on most is the outlook. Broadcom expects next-quarter revenue around $22 billion, which implies a much faster growth rate than it just printed. Management also expects to hold similar profitability. That combination is what makes the report feel like a trend, not a one-time boost.

How was the last quarter?

Broadcom built Q1 2026 $AVGO on two pillars: a sharp acceleration in semiconductors and stability in software. Total revenue was $19.311 billion, with the semiconductor division adding 52% to $12.515 billion. Software (infrastructure software) added just 1% to 6.796 billion, but that's what's important to investors: with such strong growth in chips, the software part is not acting as a drag, but rather as a stabilizer.

Profitability is extraordinary by the standards of large technology companies. Adjusted operating profit before depreciation and amortization was $13.128 billion, or 68% of sales. And more importantly, cash: operating cash was $8.260 billion, while investments in assets were only $250 million, leaving free cash at $8.010 billion. This is one of those reports where an investor doesn't have to ask "where's the cash" - there's an extreme amount of it, and it's coming in fast.

From a "what was one-off and what was structural" perspective, the main structural driver is clear: chips and networking for computing centers that build infrastructure for artificial intelligence. The company's self-reported revenue from this area was $8.4 billion and exceeded its own expectations, largely due to demand for custom accelerators and networking components for AI.

Top points of the results

  • Revenue of $19.3 billion, up +29% year-over-year.

  • GAAP net income $7.35 billion, $10.19 billion after adjustments.

  • Earnings per share $1.50, $2.05 after adjustments.

  • Free cash of $8.01 billion, roughly 41% of sales.

  • Semiconductor revenue $12.5 billion(+52%), software almost unchanged(+1%).

  • AI chip revenue $8.4 billion(+106%), outlook for next quarter $10.7 billion.

  • New $10 billion share repurchase program and $0.65 per share dividend.

CEO commentary

Hock Tan commented on the report very directly: the key is the growth in AI semiconductor revenue, which reached $8.4 billion in Q1 and more than doubled year-on-year. The sentence for investors to take away is the outlook for the next quarter: Broadcom expects AI semiconductors alone to reach $10.7 billion. That's a strong signal that the company is seeing orders and shipments in real time, not just "presentation optimism."

CFO Kirsten Spears complemented this with the "quality" of the results: revenue growth and profitability growth go hand in hand, and the company continues to make aggressive returns on capital. In the quarter, it returned $10.9 billion to shareholders (dividends and buybacks), a strategy that has been consistent at Broadcom for a long time: high cash should turn into a return of capital, not lie idle.

Outlook

The outlook for the second quarter is perhaps the most important part of this report. Broadcom expects revenue of around $22 billion, up 47% year-over-year. The company also expects profitability to remain flat: adjusted operating profit before depreciation and amortization of around 68% of revenue. Translated: Broadcom says it can grow faster without having to discount profitability.

What the outlook implicitly says about the structure is also important: since software is growing minimally, the increase to 22 billion is practically a bet on the semiconductor part to continue to accelerate. This is where the market's confidence will be broken: if expectations of 10.7 billion from AI chips are confirmed, it will be a very strong confirmation of the trend.

Long-term results

The last four years of Broadcom $AVGO have shown that it can grow in very different cycles - and that acquisitions and portfolio changes can stir up the cost base in the short term, but increase the company's potential in the long term. Revenues grow from $33.2 billion (2022) to $35.8 billion (2023), then to $51.6 billion (2024) and $63.9 billion (2025). This shift is not just organic growth, but the effect of expanding the software side after the larger deals in previous years, while gradually realigning the semiconductor mix toward compute centers.

On the profitability front, Broadcom's margins are structurally high, but the "shape" of profits changes depending on how hardware and software are mixed and what the depreciation and accounting items are. It is therefore practical for an investor to stick to two things: the ability to generate cash and the ability to return capital. And it is Q1 2026 that shows once again that the cash machine is running at full speed - free cash of 8.0 billion in a single quarter is itself an argument for why the market ranks Broadcom among the "best quality" titles within semiconductors.

News

Two specific news items from the report carry a lot of investment weight. The first is a new $10 billion share buyback program through the end of 2026, a clear signal that the company expects continued very strong cash flow after the investment. The second is the shift in communication around AI: Broadcom is no longer just talking about "general growth" but giving specific revenue numbers from this segment and a specific target for the next quarter (10.7 billion). This both increases transparency and raises the bar - the market will want to see these numbers repeated.

Shareholder structure

Broadcom is a heavily institutionally owned title: the institution holds roughly 79% of the stock, and the largest holders are Vanguard, BlackRock and State Street. That typically means two things: high liquidity and high sensitivity to how large money managers assess the cycle around computing centers and artificial intelligence.

Fair Price

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256984-broadcom-earnings-q1-2026-ai-demand-lifts-results-and-the-next-quarter-guide-is-the-bigger-surprise Pavel Botek
bulios-article-256871 Wed, 04 Mar 2026 17:00:07 +0100 Moderna’s legal overhang fades: a $2.25B cap calms the worst-case fears Moderna shares jumped about 10% after the company reached a settlement that closes a long-running patent fight tied to the lipid nanoparticle delivery system used in its COVID vaccine. Investors reacted less to any change in sales and more to a cleaner risk picture: a lawsuit with open-ended outcomes is hard to price, and this deal puts a defined ceiling on the potential damage.

What matters is how the settlement is structured. Moderna will pay $950 million in mid-2026, while up to $1.3 billion more depends on the outcome of a separate appeal linked to government-contractor protections. The agreement also ends U.S. and international disputes and removes future royalty exposure for the technology, which is why the market treated it as “uncertainty removed,” not “business improved overnight.”

Why this is important to Modern

The deal is structured so that Moderna will pay up to $2.25 billion to $MRNA. The company is to pay $950 million in a lump sum in July 2026 and an additional $1.3 billion only if a particular legal issue in the appeals process turns out unfavorably for Moderna.

More important than the amount itself, however, is the condition that Moderna will not pay any future royalties for the technology in its next vaccines. This is a strategic win for the company, as ongoing fees on new products would act as a permanent "tax" on sales, complicating margins and pricing.

The deal can thus be seen as a trade-off: in the short term, the one-off penalty hurts, but in the long term, the threat of each future batch of vaccines becoming an obligation to divert a portion of revenue to third parties disappears. And it is precisely this difference that the market usually appreciates positively, especially when a company needs to redirect its attention from covide to new areas.

How this changes the investment story: focus returns to oncology, but cash is sensitive

Once the covide wave subsides, the alpha and omega for Modern is something other than revenues from a single vaccine. The company needs to convince the market that it can take covid to the next phase, particularly in oncology and cancer vaccines, where important late-stage trial results are due in 2026. Analysts point to this very point as a reason why removing the legal overhang helps: investors find it easier to address future growth "data reading" when there is no uncertain legal bill hanging over the company.

At the same time, it's not a one-sided rosy story. Some analysts have warned that if contingent payment is triggered, it could reduce the cash cushion considerably. One response noted that cash could fall to the low single-digits of billions of dollars in such a case, which narrows the company's room to maneuver in years when it needs to fund development and wait for key data.

While management has repeatedly communicated target cash levels for this year, the market will now be even more watchful of the rhythm of cash burn and whether pipelines are actually turning into products with commercial potential. So this deal resolves one big uncertainty, but at the same time it puts the spotlight on what was inevitable anyway: whether the company can rebuild a stable growth engine after the cover-up.

What remains open: more patent litigation and a "second front" with Pfizer and BioNTech

The Genevant and Arbutus deal closes one chapter, but Moderna still lives in a legally charged space. Litigation continues with Pfizer $PFE and BioNTech $BNTX over mRNA-related patents, which Moderna initiated back in 2022, and BioNTech additionally countersued with its own lawsuit in February 2026 regarding Moderna's next-generation covide vaccine. This means that legal risk as a topic is not disappearing completely, it is just shifting to a different part of the portfolio.

But the difference from an investor perspective is that the LNP (patent and licensing) litigation was seen as an "uncomfortable" overhang because it was a core delivery technology that touches many vaccines. Its removal therefore acts as a relief, even though other disputes continue. In short, the market appreciated that one of the biggest question marks could be rewritten into a specific number and specific timing.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256871-moderna-s-legal-overhang-fades-a-2-25b-cap-calms-the-worst-case-fears Pavel Botek
bulios-article-256837 Wed, 04 Mar 2026 15:00:17 +0100 A monthly-paying hotel REIT with an 8% annual yield: income is attractive, but cash quality is the real test Monthly dividends feel simple: you get paid regularly and you can plan around it. With hotels, the hard part is that cash flow moves with the cycle. That is why the right question is not “how high is the yield,” but “how steady is the cash that funds it when demand cools.” This REIT is best viewed as a mix of monthly income and operating discipline, not as a pure high-yield bet.

The business is a direct play on the U.S. hotel cycle, but the portfolio is designed to reduce surprises. It focuses on room-driven hotels under strong brands and is spread across many regions. What supports the dividend story is that even in a year when operating metrics softened a bit, the company still generated strong operating cash flow, paid more than $240 million in dividends, and also had room for buybacks and hotel renovations.

Analysis highlights

  • The $0.08 monthly dividend is a confirmed standard: it was 12 payouts of $0.08 each in 2025 (totaling $0.96 per share).

  • In 2025, the company paid about $240.4 million in dividends . The company also generated MFFO of USD 361.1 million. USD 1.2 billion (a cash metric used for hotel REITs), a comfortable cushion for payout sustainability.

  • Operating performance is steady: RevPAR (revenue per available room) for 2025 is down just 1.6%, despite what the firm describes as weaker government travel and disruptive weekday demand.

  • The portfolio is large and diversified: 217 hotels, 29,583 rooms, 84 markets, 37 states + DC, mostly under the Marriott and Hilton brands.

  • The key risk to the dividend is not revenue, but financing: interest coverage by the 1.84 and Altman 0.90 metrics mean you need to watch debt and refinancing as closely as occupancy.

Company performance

Apple Hospitality REIT $APLE is a hotel REIT that owns one of the largest and most diversified sets of "upscale" hotels in the US. What this means in practice is that these are not resorts dependent on a single season, or even the luxury segment, which can fall dramatically in a recession, but hotels built to sell nights in mainstream business and leisure destinations. Management calls it a "rooms-focused" strategy, and the point is simple: to have a product that can be relatively stable across the year, with less sensitivity to whether conferences or major events are doing well.

The business model is classic for a hotel REIT: the company owns the properties, collects the hotel revenues and actively manages the portfolio. It doesn't just play the "rent will rise over time" game. For hotels, the price per night adjusts daily, which is a huge advantage in an inflationary period, but it also increases cyclicality. It matters even more how broad the portfolio is, how good the brands are and how capable management is of optimising mix and costs.

For a dividend investor, it is important that the company pays a dividend monthly, which is relatively rare in REITs. But a monthly payout alone does not guarantee anything. It is only when combined with how the company generates cash in the current year and what room it has on its balance sheet that a "sustainable yield" emerges, not just a high percentage on paper.

Business

The hotel business has one peculiarity that is often the most important for investors: results are not just driven by how many people travel, but by how the mix of demand spills over between weekend and weekday, between leisure and corporate customers, and between regions. In 2025, management describes that leisure travel remained strong, but that there was a temporary deterioration in demand in segments tied to government travel and that this disrupted the trend of gradually improving weekday occupancy.

The second issue is the "product" of the portfolio. Apple Hospitality has a high concentration on major hotel brands: the portfolio consists of 96 hotels under the Marriott brand, 115 under Hilton, a few under Hyatt, and one independent hotel. In practice, this means greater standardization, brand marketing power, and access to loyalty programs, which in worse times is often the difference between "occupancy holds" and "occupancy falls."

The third level is capital maintenance and renewal. Hotels are an asset that must be continually repaired, upgraded and adapted. The company itself reports that it has reinvested over $88 million in capital improvements in 2025. This is fundamental to the dividend thesis: if the REIT skimped on maintenance, it would "improve" its cash in the short term, but in the long term it would hurt its competitiveness and thus its ability to hold payouts. The important signal here is that portfolio investment takes place even when the dividend is stable.

The market and addressable potential

The U.S. hotel market is special from an investment perspective because it can quickly realign on price, but at the same time has "friction" in supply. New hotels are not built overnight, and when demand picks up, hotels can raise prices faster than many other property types. This is the long-term advantage of hotel REITs over segments where rents are fixed for years ahead.

Apple Hospitality's addressable potential is not about "conquering the entire hotel market" but about how well it can leverage its breadth. The portfolio is spread across 84 markets, so the company is not dependent on one destination or one type of demand. In an environment where some segments (such as government travel) may temporarily weaken, diversification acts as a buffer.

The portfolio's ability to outperform the market average is also key. The firm reports that its comparable hotels outperformed industry averages reported by STR for the fourth quarter and full year 2025. This is exactly the kind of detail that makes a hotel REIT "better than average" and increases the chances that the dividend will be stable even in a slightly worse cycle.

Management and CEO

The company's CEO is Justin G. Knight.

The firm states: Mr. Knight joined Apple REIT Companies in 2000 and has served as the Company's Chief Executive Officer since May 2014 and as President from inception until March 2020. Mr. Knight also served as President of all of the former Apple REIT Companies, other than Apple Suites, until they were sold to a third party or merged with the Company.

In a hotel REIT, the quality of management is known less by pretty presentations and more by how it treats the balance sheet and dividend when the cycle is down. Commenting on the results, management emphasizes discipline, "patience" and an emphasis on low leverage and balance sheet flexibility. These are exactly the words that only carry weight in the hotel segment when backed by numbers and decisions.

For 2025, the company is also showing that it can behave like a "payroll title" without ignoring the future: it paid out over $240 million in dividends, repurchased roughly $58 million in stock, and invested over $88 million in the portfolio. For an investor, that's an important combination. If dividends were maintained at the expense of maintenance, risk would grow. If the company reinvested everything and ignored payouts, it would lose some of its identity to income investors. Here we can see a striving for balance.

Financial performance

The long-term numbers show that the firm grew steadily after the pandemic, but 2025 brought a slight weakening. Revenues in 2025 were $1.41 billion, slightly below 2024(-1.3%), while the firm grew 8.5% and 6.5% in 2023 and 2024. Still, net profit remains high: $175 million in 2025, although this is down from 2024(-18%). This is important for the hotel segment because it suggests the company is not "on the edge" - it is in solid profitability mode even with a slightly worse operating year.

EBITDAre and MFFO typically give a better picture than GAAP earnings (book profit) alone for hotel REITs. The company reports Adjusted EBITDAre of $443.6 million in 2025 . USD (-5.1% year-over-year) and MFFO of USD 361.1 million. At the same time, RevPAR for comparable hotels is down only 1. 6%, indicating that the pressure is not dramatic; rather, it is a mix of demand and margin pressure, which is common in hotels during moderate weakness.

The share count is also an important detail for shareholders. In 2025, the average share count is down 1.4%, which means the company is maintaining a "silent" value engine alongside dividends: when buybacks are done in a disciplined manner, they increase future dividend and earnings per share. The results directly state that the firm repurchased 4.6 million shares for about $58 million in 2025. USD 58.

Cash flow and capital discipline

The cash flow numbers make a major point for the dividend thesis: operating cash in 2025 was $370.2 million. Cash flow was USD 370 ,370, down only slightly from 2024(-8.7%). However, free cash flow was up year-on-year from 2024.

Now let's translate that into dividend math to see where the comfort and pressure is. A monthly dividend of $0.08 means $0.96 per year. With an average share count of about 237.8 million, that equates to about 228 million shares . USD 228 million in annual cash needs for dividends. Against a free cash flow of 370 million. The coverage comes out to about 1.6 times . That's a decent cover for a hotel REIT, but it's also not an "infinite cushion". In other words, the dividend is sustainable today, but the investor has to watch that operating cash doesn't drop another tens of percent, because then comfort would quickly thin out.

This is where the company's MFFO ratio is a good one to use, as hotel REITs use it as a standard for payout sustainability. MFFO for 2025 was 361.1 million. USD 240.4 million, while distributions to shareholders were USD 240.4 million. USD. This implies dividend coverage from MFFO of roughly 1.5x, very similar to FCF.

Balance sheet and debt

For hotel REITs, the balance sheet is often what decides the dividend in a recession. The corporate report lists total debt as of 12/31/2025 of roughly $1.545 billion and cash-adjusted debt of $1.537 billion. At the same time, the firm reports net debt to total capitalization of 35.5%. This sounds reasonable as it is not extreme for a hotel REIT.

The metrics show a low Debt/Equity of 0.04, but at the same time a very low current ratio of 0.08 and an interest coverage ratio of 1.84 with an Altman of 0.90. This is exactly the type of "discrepancy" that needs to be explained: a hotel REIT may have relatively low book leverage, but short-term liquidity in these firms often looks weak because the asset structure is long-term and cash is actively used for dividends, investments and redemptions. Therefore, it is key to monitor not just book ratios, but more importantly debt maturities, interest burdens, and whether the firm maintains "flexibility" in credit lines.

Importantly for dividend sustainability, even with a slight decline in RevPAR in 2025, the firm still generated robust MFFO and continued to invest in the portfolio. This suggests that the balance sheet is not yet "pushing the wall". But because hotels are cyclical, the biggest test would come when RevPAR declines more than units of percent.

Valuation

For hotel REITs, "undervaluation" is usually a combination of two things: the market is afraid of the cycle and it also doesn't want to pay a premium for yield unless it is certain of its sustainability. Here it is interesting that the title is trading around a P/B of 0.94, below book value, according to the data.

At the same time, there are multiples that look reasonable from an income investor's perspective: a P/E of around 17 and a P/CF of around 9. But for REITs, P/E is less important than cash flow and MFFO/FFO. Therefore, it is key to the interpretation that the company generated MFFO of $361 million in 2025. USD 240 million and paid out USD 240 million in cash. USD 240. If an investor thinks that the hotel cycle is close to "normalization" and that weekday demand may be improving, it is the discount to book value and high dividend yield that may be the combination that works.

The second part of valuation is psychological: the monthly dividend creates a big "super" effect. An investor sees 0.08 every month and tends to underestimate the cyclicality of hotels. So in this title, it makes sense to think of valuation as a reward for the investor accepting the cycle but wanting to be paid for it in yield and discount. If RevPAR starts to pick up again, the discount can close without dramatically increasing earnings because the certainty of the payout improves.

Growth catalysts and outlook

The biggest catalyst is the return of the "normal" rhythm of demand, especially on weekdays. Management self-describes that government travel and uncertainty in this segment has temporarily hampered demand and that it expects improvement once the environment stabilizes. When this happens, the hotels in the portfolio have leverage: small improvements in occupancy and price often translate more strongly into profit and cash.

The second catalyst is active portfolio management. The company has been selling and buying hotels in 2025, while having other projects in the pipeline. This can increase the quality of the portfolio and improve average performance over the long term. This is because with a hotel REIT, it's not just about "how many hotels you have," but what hotels you have and whether you're investing in those that will be competitive in five years.

The third catalyst is dividends - and ironically the most boring. The stability of a monthly payout of 0.08 is itself an investment product. When the market believes the payout is safe even over an average cycle, it starts to demand less of a discount. So for this title, the catalyst is not "increase the dividend" but "the market will start to see the payout as less risky".

Risks

  • Hotel cycle: if RevPAR were to fall more than units of percent, the comfort of dividend cover (roughly 1.5-1.6x) would quickly thin and the market would start to question the dividend.

  • Interest rate and refinancing risk: low interest rate coverage in the metrics means that higher rates for longer may limit the scope for dividends, redemptions and investments.

  • A high yield can attract capital "just for the sake of interest" - and it is least patient when a weaker quarter comes along.

  • Operational risks: weaker season, weather, regional shocks, competition in specific markets.

  • Underinvestment risk: if the company ever started to maintain the dividend at the expense of maintenance and renewal, it would impair future performance and thus the sustainability of the payout.

Investment scenarios

Optimistic scenario

Weekday demand stabilizes, government travel normalizes, and the hotel market returns to growth that is no longer driven solely by price but also by modest improvements in occupancy. In such an environment, RevPAR could grow again and operational leverage would lift EBITDAre and MFFO faster than revenue. This would strengthen dividend cover and the market would likely close the discount to book value.

The result for the investor would then be a combination of the monthly dividend and capital appreciation, which is often greatest in income REITs just as the "sense of risk" is diminishing. In terms of dividend sustainability, an optimistic scenario would mean that 0.08 per month is not only safe, but would open up room for growth or lump sum payouts over time.

A realistic scenario

The market remains mixed: leisure demand holds, but weekdays improve slowly. RevPAR hovers around zero with slight fluctuations and the company keeps the monthly dividend steady. In such a scenario, the investor primarily collects the yield and some of the return is generated gradually through redemptions and active portfolio management.

The key here is that the firm has managed to pay out $240 million simultaneously even in 2025. USD 240 billion, invest in the portfolio and buy back shares. If it can repeat this over an average cycle, this is a very respectable "income" profile.

Negative scenario

Demand weakens significantly, RevPAR begins to decline for several quarters in a row, and cash dividend coverage comes under pressure. In such a situation, the market usually doesn't wait for the dividend to actually fall - it starts discounting it forward. The share price can then fall even with the dividend still being paid, as investors become concerned about sustainability risk.

In this scenario, management often has to decide what the priority is: dividend stability, balance sheet, or maintaining portfolio quality. Should savings be necessary, the pace of redemptions tends to be the first to go, followed by the dividend. Investors should therefore watch the signals: MFFO, debt development and weekday demand commentary.

What to take away from the article

  • A monthly dividend of $0.08 in 2025 meant $0.96 per year.

  • Sustainability stands on cash: in 2025, the company generated MFFO of $361 million. It generated USD 361mn and paid out USD 240mn in cash. USD 240 million in distributions, a cover of roughly 1.5 times.

  • Operating performance weakens only slightly: RevPAR for 2025 is down 1.6% and the firm remains above the market average.

  • The portfolio is broad and high-quality: 217 hotels, 29,583 rooms, 84 markets, with a preponderance of Marriott and Hilton brands.

  • Valuations below book value and high yield suggest the market is still pricing in cyclical risk for hotels.

  • The biggest risk to the dividend investor is a prolonged RevPAR decline and expensive financing; the best defense is to watch MFFO and balance sheet, not just yield percentage.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256837-a-monthly-paying-hotel-reit-with-an-8-annual-yield-income-is-attractive-but-cash-quality-is-the-real-test Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-256846 Wed, 04 Mar 2026 13:55:50 +0100 Rise or fall?📈📉

Financial markets over the past nearly 40 years have survived almost everything: Black Monday in 1987, the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Asian financial crisis, the bursting of the dot‑com bubble, the September 11 attacks, the global financial crisis of 2008, Brexit, the Covid‑19 pandemic, and the war in Ukraine. Yet the MSCI All Country World index has trended upward over the long term.

This chart nicely illustrates one of the most important lessons of investing: short‑term crises occur regularly, but the long‑term trend in equity markets remains upward.

Each of these events looked like a major problem for the global economy at the time, but markets ultimately managed to recover. It's important to remember that.

And now a bit of history...

At the end of the 1980s markets were hit by the so‑called Black Monday in 1987, when U.S. stocks fell by more than 20% in a single day. The Dow Jones $^DJI lost 22.6% of its value that day. It remains the largest percentage drop in history.

A few years later came Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait and the first Gulf War, which brought significant volatility to commodity and equity markets. In the early 1990s the collapse of the Soviet Union and an economic recession in the United States followed. Each of these events raised concerns about the stability of the global economy at the time.

Another major wave of turbulence arrived in the late 1990s. The Asian financial crisis in 1997 caused sharp declines in currencies and equities across several emerging economies and then spread to global markets. Shortly after came the collapse of the hedge fund Long‑Term Capital Management, which threatened the stability of the financial system. At the turn of the millennium the bursting of the tech dot‑com bubble followed, during which the Nasdaq lost more than half its value over a few years.

The start of the new millennium was not peaceful either.

The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 led to an immediate market drop and significantly increased geopolitical uncertainty.

One of the biggest tests for the financial system was the global financial crisis in 2008. The collapse of Lehman Brothers triggered a chain reaction across financial markets and indices around the world plunged by tens of percent in a short time. At the time there were scenarios predicting a long‑term collapse of the financial system. Nevertheless, markets gradually stabilized in the following years and entered one of the longest bull runs in modern history—which, incidentally, continues to this day. That alone tells us that being pessimistic about equity markets does not pay off in the long run.

The last decade was no calmer. Markets had to react to geopolitical tensions around Russia’s annexation of Crimea, the Brexit referendum, and the Covid‑19 pandemic. The pandemic in 2020 caused one of the fastest market collapses in history. Yet global indices managed to recover in a relatively short time and later reached new all‑time highs.

What matters

The chart shows one of the most important characteristics of equity markets. Short‑term shocks, geopolitical conflicts, or economic crises are a natural part of investing. Each of these events looks like a serious threat to the global economy at the moment, but the long‑term development shows that markets can adapt over time and return to growth.

The current situation—even if the level of conflict were to widen—could easily cause equities to fall by tens of percent. However, history clearly shows that within a few years markets have always recovered and even surpassed previous highs.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256846 Novakkk
bulios-article-256824 Wed, 04 Mar 2026 11:15:19 +0100 5 U.S. Stocks With the Fastest Revenue Growth Right Now Revenue growth remains one of the clearest signals of corporate momentum in today’s market. While many large companies are expanding only modestly, a small group has managed to boost sales by tens of percent in just a single year. From AI infrastructure leaders to energy and fintech disruptors, these firms are capturing massive investor attention. Which companies currently dominate the U.S. market in terms of revenue expansion?

Revenue growth is among the most important metrics that investors track in the stock market. While profitability can be affected in the short term by one-time costs, investments or accounting adjustments, revenue growth often more accurately reflects the true dynamics of demand for a company's products or services. If a company is able to increase sales faster than the rest of the market over the long term, this usually indicates a strong competitive position, a technological advantage or a structural trend that supports its business model.

Moreover, the importance of this indicator has increased in recent years. After a period of cheap capital, when investors often valued primarily story and outlook and future growth, they are now much more focused on real numbers. Companies that can actually generate fast-growing revenues are thus getting significantly more attention from capital than companies whose growth story remains only at the level of expectations.

Another important factor is the current sectoral rotation in the markets. While the technology sector continues to dominate some growth statistics, rapid revenue growth is now also found in energy, infrastructure and financial services.

If we look at the U.S. stock market as a whole, the differences between companies are extreme. While many large companies are only growing at a single-digit rate this year, there are also companies that have been able to increase sales by tens of percent in a single year. It is these companies that are attracting the most attention from growth-oriented investors today, as the high rate of expansion often creates room for valuations to rise further.

Nvidia $NVDA

Nvidia is undoubtedly one of the most impactful stocks of recent years, and its revenue growth is a direct reflection of the current AI revolution. In a short period of time, the company has become a key supplier of data center infrastructure that powers modern AI models. It is the extreme demand for AI accelerators that is the main reason why Nvidia is showing one of the fastest revenue growth in the entire US market.

In the last fiscal year, the company was able to increase its revenue by more than 100%, a rate that is quite exceptional for a company of this size. Total annual revenue for fiscal year 2025 has crossed the $130 billion mark, with the datacenter segment becoming the dominant source of growth. It now accounts for the vast majority of the company's revenue and its momentum far outpaces the rest of the business. Over the last trailing twelve months (TTM), the company's revenue has increased by 65.47%.

This development is mainly due to the massive investments made by tech giants in AI infrastructure. Companies such as Microsoft $MSFT, Amazon $AMZN or Google $GOOG invest tens of billions of dollars a year in building data centers, and a large part of these funds goes to Nvidia's GPU accelerators. These have become the de facto standard for training and running large language models.

Moreover, the growth in sales is also reflected in the company's extreme profitability. The company's gross margin is around 70%. Thus, the combination of technological edge, limited competition, and record investment in AI infrastructure creates an environment in which the company can grow at a pace that is very rare for such large companies.

But the key question for investors remains the sustainability of this pace. The market is well aware that the current momentum is closely linked to the AI investment cycle. If the pace of investment by hyperscalers (large companies that have datacentres for giant computing power) starts to slow, this could have a relatively rapid impact on revenue growth. But so far, there is no indication that demand for AI infrastructure will cool significantly anytime soon.

Amphenol $APH

Amphenol may not be one of the most well-known technology companies, but its revenue growth over the past year has been among the fastest in the entire U.S. market. The company is one of the world's largest manufacturers of connectors, cable systems, and electronic components that are essential to the functioning of modern infrastructure. They are used in both data centers and the automotive industry.

It is this broad scope that has enabled Amphenol to significantly increase its sales. Over the past 12 months, sales have managed to grow by 51.71%, an extremely strong rate for an industrial company. Meanwhile, the company is seeing the most momentum in segments related to cloud infrastructure, 5G technologies and automotive electrification.

The growing demand for data centers and AI infrastructure is creating a huge amount of new investments in hardware. This is where Amphenol plays a key role. Every data center, server rack or network infrastructure needs hundreds to thousands of connectors and cabling systems. As the power and complexity of these systems grows, so does the demand for the company's products.

Interesting Fact: Looking at the chart of $APH over the past year, we can see some similarity to that of the king of AI, Nvidia's $NVDA. While the stock has been able to grow strongly since last April, it has been in more of a sideways trend in recent months. Currently, the price per share of $APH is at the same level as last October.

Amphenol also has the advantage of a very diversified business model. The company supplies components not only to the technology sector, but also to the aerospace, defense, medical devices and industrial automation industries. As a result, its growth is not dependent on just one cyclical segment, making it a relatively stable player even in an environment of economic uncertainty.

The combination of the technology boom, the electrification of industry and the continued digitalization of the economy thus creates a very favorable environment for Amphenol. And although it is a company that stands rather in the background of major technology trends, its financial results show that the infrastructure of the digital economy could be one of the biggest sources of growth in the years to come.

Here too, however, the cyclical nature of the sector must be taken into account, and will sooner or later become apparent. Even though today's stock markets may be in a supercycle phase that lasts longer than a traditional cycle, demand can fall quickly. This is highlighted by the Fair Price Index on Bulios, which is currently glowing red for Amphenol.

Robinhood $HOOD

Robinhood is one of the most visible examples of a company that has been able to dramatically increase its revenue over the past year due to changes in retail investor behavior. The platform, which rose to prominence during the "meme stock" era that revolved around $GME stock in 2021, has once again benefited from growing retail investor activity in the markets in recent quarters.

In the past year, the company has managed to increase its revenue by more than 51%, with total annual revenue surpassing the $1.88 billion mark. Most of this growth has come from trading fees, interest income and the ever-growing cryptocurrency and options activity. It is options trading that has become one of the fastest growing segments of the entire platform.

The changing environment in the financial markets also plays a significant role in this growth. Higher interest rates are significantly increasing the income from cash deposited in client accounts. Robinhood is thus able to generate additional revenue even in periods when trading activity fluctuates in the short term.

Another factor is the gradual expansion of the product portfolio. The firm is expanding its range of financial services, introducing new investment tools and looking to move its platform from a pure trading app towards the wider fintech ecosystem. This shift has the potential to increase revenue stability and reduce reliance on cyclical investor activity. And the firm is succeeding.

Over the past four years, the company has managed to swing from a loss to a significant profit. But $15.6 billion in debt on a capitalization of just under $70 billion may look uncomfortable at first glance. However, it should be taken into account that this is a broker that has various leveraged products and therefore higher debt. By comparison, Interactive Brokers $IBKR, one of the most renowned brokers today, has a market capitalization of $117 billion and operates with $25 billion in debt. However, the relative debt of $HOOD is almost half that of Interactive Brokers, and that is something to keep in mind.

So Robinhood's rapid revenue growth reflects the return of higher retail investor activity, but also the transformation of the platform itself. Whether the firm can maintain this pace in the years ahead will depend primarily on the development of trading activity and its ability to further expand its financial services. However, if the trend of recent years continues, with an increasing number of new traders and investors entering the financial markets, this should not be a problem.

AngloGold Ashanti $AU

AngloGold Ashanti is one of the world's largest gold producers and its revenue growth over the past year has been closely linked to developments in global precious metals prices. Gold is now trading near all-time highs after very strong growth in recent months and this development is directly reflected in the financial results of the mining companies.

Over the past year, the company has been able to significantly increase its revenues, mainly due to a combination of higher gold prices and stable production from its key mines. For mining companies, the price of the commodity is the main factor influencing revenue development. As the gold price rises, producers' revenues often increase much faster than production itself. With the golden precious metal rising 177% since the beginning of 2023, $AU has increased its revenue by 118.29% over the past 12 months (TTM) .

Meanwhile, the current rise in the price of gold, and other precious metals such as silver, is the result of several macroeconomic factors. Geopolitical tensions, rising government debt, and uncertainty about the future path of interest rates are leading investors to take a greater interest in safe-haven assets. Gold in particular has historically acted as one of the main instruments for capital protection in times of heightened volatility in financial markets.

When this market reached a new high above USD 5 000 per gold ounce earlier this year, there was a very strong market selling reaction. For example, silver prices weakened by more than 35% in one day and gold was not much better off. This volatility was also reflected in the share price $AU, but not as significantly. Yesterday, however, the stock experienced a sharper depreciation that dragged its price 10.4% lower.

Interestingly, however, despite the share price rising over 400% YTD, even after yesterday's sharp decline, the stock is still below its intrinsic fair value according to the Fair Price Index on Bulios. And by as much as 30%.

Moreover, AngloGold Ashanti is one of the producers with a globally diversified portfolio of mines in Africa, Australia and the Americas. With this geographic diversification and stable production, the company has been able to benefit from rising gold prices relatively efficiently and generate strong cash flow.

It is thus the combination of macroeconomic uncertainty, a strong commodity cycle and continued demand for safe assets that has created a very favourable environment for gold producers over the past year, which is directly reflected in AngloGold Ashanti's revenue growth.

ONEOK $OKE

The final company on today's list is energy firm ONEOK, which is one of the key players in natural gas and liquid hydrocarbon transportation infrastructure in the United States. We can already reveal that like the previous firm, although it operates in a completely different market segment, this company's stock is well below its Fair Price Index price.

Unlike conventional oil and gas producers, the company's business model is based primarily on transportation and processing capacity, which is essential to the entire energy sector.

The company has seen very strong revenue growth over the past year, supported by a combination of higher gas transportation volumes and an acquisition strategy. Growth over the past 12 months is 54.99%, with the acquisition of Magellan Midstream playing a particularly important role, significantly expanding ONEOK's infrastructure network and contributing to overall revenue growth. At the same time, energy infrastructure is becoming an increasingly important part of the US economy. The United States is now one of the world's largest producers of natural gas, and demand for its exports is growing, particularly in Europe and Asia. This creates a stable environment for companies that operate pipeline networks, terminals and other logistics infrastructure.

This type of business also has the advantage of a relatively stable revenue stream. A large proportion of contracts in the midstream sector are based on long-term capacity agreements, allowing firms to generate predictable cash flow even in an environment of fluctuating commodity prices.

ONEOK's revenue growth thus reflects a broader trend of strengthening energy infrastructure in the United States. In an environment of rising gas production and continued export capacity development, this segment remains one of the key pillars of the energy sector.

Conclusion

The current review demonstrates how different factors may be behind the rapid growth in revenues. In some cases, these are strong technology trends such as artificial intelligence and data centre expansion, while in others they are changes in investor behaviour, commodity price developments or the expansion of energy infrastructure. But the common denominator for these companies is their ability to use the current economic environment to their advantage and turn structural market changes into rapid revenue growth.

At the same time, it is important to remember that revenue growth alone is not the only factor that determines a stock's long-term performance. The pace of expansion can be cyclical in some sectors or heavily dependent on the macroeconomic environment. This is why investors look not only at current earnings momentum when evaluating similar companies, but also at the sustainability of growth, the structure of margins and the ability of companies to turn growing revenues into stable profitability.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256824-5-u-s-stocks-with-the-fastest-revenue-growth-right-now Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-256851 Wed, 04 Mar 2026 10:21:15 +0100 Trump said that the US wants to keep the Strait of Hormuz open at all costs: the administration is set to, through a government agency, offer insurance guarantees for tankers and at the same time prepare the option that the U.S. Navy will escort ships through the strait.

This is seen as an attempt to quickly 'knock down' the risk premium on oil and calm the markets, because once traffic in Hormuz is disrupted, it immediately spills over into energy prices, inflation, and thus interest-rate expectations. The market reacted to the news only partially—the oil price did give back some of its gains, but the skeptics are right about one thing: insurance and escorts are only a technical solution, whereas the problem is political and security-related, and that doesn't get 'rewritten' overnight by a single announcement.

For an investor, this is practically a game of three scenarios. In the best case, escorts and insurance actually restore smooth operations and oil takes back part of the risk premium—this would ease the market and consumption, but at the same time it would take the wind out of the sails of energy stocks that are currently benefiting from the tension. In the middle scenario, shipping would continue but more slowly and at higher cost (insurance, logistics, longer routes, fear of incidents)—oil could then stay higher for longer, which is unpleasant for industry, transport, and the 'consumer' segment of the market. And in the worst case, one larger incident is enough and the market will return to 'first panic, then questions' mode, because the strait is too important to be replaced.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256851 Wolf of Trades
bulios-article-256787 Wed, 04 Mar 2026 04:40:05 +0100 CrowdStrike earnings Q4 2025: demand accelerated, not just renewals In cybersecurity, the cleanest signal is whether customers keep expanding spend, not only renewing contracts. CrowdStrike delivered that type of quarter, with net new recurring revenue hitting a record level. That suggests buying decisions are still active and budgets are not freezing.

Profitability also moved in the right direction. The company reported a positive GAAP net income for the quarter and kept an upbeat tone for FY2026, implying it expects growth to continue rather than fade. For investors, it reads as a business that is scaling and starting to show more “real” earnings.

How was the last quarter?

The fourth quarter stands to show that CrowdStrike $CRWD did not slow down, but instead "stepped on the gas" in the metric that best describes the health of the business: in net additions to recurring annual revenue. The company added $331 million, a record, while pushing total recurring annual revenue to 5.25 billion. In practice, this means that CrowdStrike not only retained existing customers, but was able to expand them while adding new contracts at a record pace.

Revenue in the quarter rose to $1.31 billion, with subscriptions accounting for $1.24 billion. Subscription margins remain very high: 79% on an accounting basis and 81% after adjustments. That's important because at that margin, every additional dollar of revenue quickly increases operating profit as long as the company keeps costs under control.

Profitability is visibly shifting. Under accounting rules, operating profit is only slightly negative (loss from operations of $6.9 million), but net income is already positive at $38.7 million. After adjustments, the company generates a very solid operating profit of 325.8 million and a net profit of 289.1 million. This is an important transition for investors: the company remains growth, but at the same time the "quality" of growth through earnings and cash increases.

Cash is almost as important as recurring revenue in this report. Operating cash was $497.9 million and free cash was $376.4 million. There's $5.23 billion of cash on the balance sheet, which gives the company room to continue making acquisitions and buying back stock (the company has already bought back about $50.6 million worth of stock after year-end).

CEO commentary

George Kurtz frames 2026 as the best year in the company's history and backs that up with specific milestones: 5.25 billion in annual recurring revenue and 1.01 billion in full-year net income. Importantly from an investment perspective, management explicitly links continued growth to how companies are adopting artificial intelligence to increase the attack surface and security requirements across the infrastructure.

CFO Burt Podbere goes even further, saying that the combination of accelerating growth, rising profitability and record cash ranks the firm as an outlier in the software market. He also adds a specific "target beacon": a long-term goal of 20 billion in annual recurring revenue by 2036. For an investor, this is important mainly because such a target assumes that the firm believes in a long-term expanding market and its own ability to maintain its leadership position.

Outlook

The Q1 outlook calls for revenue of $1.360 billion to $1.364 billion and recurring annual revenue of roughly $5.502 billion. For the full year 2026, the company expects sales of 5.868 to 5.928 billion and recurring annual sales of 6.466 to 6.516 billion. Reuters notes that the revenue outlook is above market estimates.

Interpretation: the firm is allowing itself to maintain a high growth rate while pushing earnings after adjustments - the earnings per share after adjustments outlook of $4.78 to $4.90 is well above what would be consistent with a "pure growth" firm without discipline. Another important detail is that the firm expects continued strength in the business stack into Q1 2026, suggesting that the acceleration in Q4 was not a one-off.

Long-term results

CrowdStrike shows the classic trajectory of a firm that grows quickly but also hints at how much it invests in expansion. Revenue has moved from $2.24 billion (2023) to $3.06 billion (2024), $3.95 billion (2025) and $4.81 billion (2026) in four years. The rate of growth is gradually slowing from the high thirty percent towards the low twenties, which is natural with a growing base, but it is still an above-average rate within big software.

Gross profit is growing along with sales (3.59 billion in 2025), but the long-term issue is operational efficiency. Under accounting rules, operating profit is still negative and is even worse in 2025 than in 2024, which is related to the cost structure and what is included in the accounting results. That's why investors at CrowdStrike typically look at earnings after adjustments and cash flow first and foremost. This is where the picture is significantly more positive: free cash flow for 2025 was 1.24 billion, higher than the previous year (1.07 billion). In other words: even though the income statement looks "worse" by accounting rules, the company is generating more cash - and that is crucial in this model.

Another long-term trend is "customer expansion". The firm discloses what proportion of customers use six or more modules, seven or more modules, eight or more modules. This is practically a metric that explains why recurring revenue can grow faster than the number of customers: customers are gradually buying more features and moving more parts of security onto the platform.

News

The most significant thing from operations is that the company is pushing to extend the platform into identity and browser (the SGNL and Seraphic Security acquisitions) while expanding sales through partner channels (expanded collaboration with Microsoft through the marketplace). It is adding new regional cloud deployments in the Middle East and Asia. These moves make strategic sense: security is shifting from "endpoint" to identity, browser, data and cloud traffic.

Shareholding structure

The institution holds around 75.7% of the shares and the insider share is around 3.3%. The largest holders include Vanguard, BlackRock, State Street and Morgan Stanley. In practice, this means high liquidity as well as sensitivity to how large funds read the outlook for recurring revenue growth and cash margin.

Analyst expectations

Post-earnings summaries are showing mostly positive sentiment. Investopedia reports that most analysts have a "buy" recommendation and mentions a consensus target price of around $542 (before the post-earnings updates). TipRanks post-report lists a consensus "slightly positive" and an average target price of around $510, with estimates to be updated after earnings.

Fair Price

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256787-crowdstrike-earnings-q4-2025-demand-accelerated-not-just-renewals Pavel Botek
bulios-article-256700 Tue, 03 Mar 2026 17:29:45 +0100 Palantir surges as Wall Street turns bullish with fresh buy ratings and AI growth momentum Palantir Technologies commanded investor attention this week after multiple Wall Street firms upgraded the stock, reflecting renewed confidence in the company’s strategic positioning within artificial intelligence and government tech spending. The rally gained steam after a major rating upgrade lifted Palantir shares, signaling that institutional investors may be viewing the name as a buy on valuation reset and accelerating AI adoption. This shift comes after a period of consolidation and relative underperformance, suggesting that sentiment toward data analytics platforms may be evolving amid broader market rotation into differentiated tech stories.

Palantir’s government contracts underpin stable recurring revenue

One of Palantir’s longest-standing competitive advantages is its durable base of government contracts, which provides predictable recurring revenue and deep data integration within defense, intelligence, and public sector ecosystems. The company renewed and expanded several multimillion-dollar contracts in recent months, reinforcing confidence that core government business remains resilient even in periods of fiscal uncertainty. Analysts point out that durable bookings and renewals give Palantir a strong foundation from which to expand commercial AI ventures without sacrificing revenue stability.

These government relationships often serve as a springboard for broader enterprise adoption, especially as data processing and AI orchestration become more prominent priorities among Fortune 500 corporations.

Commercial AI growth accelerates as enterprises shift spend

Beyond its government franchise, $PLTR is increasingly winning business from large enterprises eager to operationalize artificial intelligence and advanced analytics. Companies across industries including healthcare, financial services, and manufacturing are adopting Palantir’s Foundry platform to unify disparate data sources, accelerate machine learning initiatives, and drive predictive insights at scale. This growing commercial momentum is visible in Palantir’s recent earnings commentary, where the company cited double-digit growth in commercial bookings and expansion of enterprise deployments.

Investors have taken notice, with some analysts elevating growth forecasts based on accelerating adoption curves and higher average contract values. If Palantir continues to convert pilots into long-term enterprise agreements, its revenue trajectory could shift toward more predictable and scalable growth.

AI integration and platform stickiness create competitive differentiation

Palantir’s strong share price performance reflects its emphasis on building an integrated AI stack that combines proprietary data modeling with real-time operational intelligence. The platforms support mission-critical workloads that are not easily replaced or replicated, endowing Palantir with high customer stickiness and long contract lifecycles traits that are attractive to investors looking for durable tech franchises. Analysts note that this architectural depth positions the company well relative to peers that may offer point solutions but lack end-to-end integration.

This depth of integration can lead to expanding total contract values over time as customers deepen usage and deploy Palantir tools across broader business units.

Valuation trends reflect shifting investor psychology

Part of the recent bullishness centers on valuation reappraisal. After a multi-quarter period where high valuation tech names were out of favor, Palantir’s share price now reflects a blend of growth opportunity and more disciplined spending outlook. Investors appear willing to pay a premium for sustainable revenue streams underpinned by defense and enterprise demand rather than speculative expansion alone. Brokerage buy ratings have underscored this shift, with revised price targets suggesting meaningful upside from current levels if growth continues on its recent trajectory.

This valuation comfort contrasts with earlier periods of extreme multiples and investor skepticism, highlighting how sentiment can evolve as business fundamentals strengthen.

Macro and tech sector rotation fuels renewed interest

Broader market dynamics are also helping lift Palantir’s stock. As capital rotates out of mega AI platform names into more specialized and profitable software franchises, investors are allocating to companies with clearer paths to free cash flow and sustainable growth. Palantir’s improving operating metrics have captured this attention, especially as software subscriptions and services contribute a larger share of revenue.

The macro backdrop including stable interest rate expectations and a slight resurgence in growth stock appetite has provided an added tailwind for technology companies viewed as having differentiated offerings and less correlation to cyclical hardware spend.

Risks and execution hurdles remain on the horizon

Despite the bullish tone, risks remain. Palantir’s government business depends on continued defense and public sector spending, which can be influenced by budgetary shifts and political cycles. On the commercial side, competitive pressures from cloud providers and data infrastructure specialists create ongoing execution challenges. Investors will be watching closely whether Palantir can sustain its commercial growth acceleration and navigate margin pressures as it scales.

Furthermore, as Palantir adds more AI capabilities to its platform, it must balance innovation pace with profitability metrics to maintain confidence among risk-aware institutional holders.

Outlook: Palantir at the intersection of data, ai, and durable growth

In summary, Palantir’s renewed bullishness reflects a convergence of strong government contract durability, accelerating enterprise AI adoption, and shifting investor psychology that values integrated software platforms with sticky customer relationships. The recent wave of buy ratings and share price strength suggest that the market is recognizing Palantir as more than just a defense tech play it’s emerging as a versatile AI-oriented enterprise platform with sustainable growth potential.

For watchers of tech stocks and AI infrastructure leaders, Palantir’s evolving story embodies the industry’s shift from speculative hype to data-driven revenue execution and platform leverage a theme likely to drive investor interest and valuation narratives in the months ahead.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256700-palantir-surges-as-wall-street-turns-bullish-with-fresh-buy-ratings-and-ai-growth-momentum Bulios News Team
bulios-article-256681 Tue, 03 Mar 2026 16:20:13 +0100 Target earnings Q4 2025: sales fell, but margins improved and 2026 guidance points to stabilization Target closed out the fourth quarter 2025 with results that accurately depict the company's current phase. On the one hand, we can see that demand for non-daily necessities remains soft and overall sales are down year-over-year, while on the other hand, the quality of the business is improving: gross margins were up in the quarter and the company is talking about better trends in home and core assortment compared to the third quarter. In addition, what Target has been building as a complementary engine over the past few years - revenue outside of actual merchandise sales, particularly from memberships, advertising and marketplaces - is accelerating. That's exactly the mix that can lift earnings faster than sales when demand stabilizes.

Management says 2025 has been a challenging year, but the company already says it saw "healthy, positive" sales growth in February, which sounds like an important turnaround in their communications. The outlook for 2026 is cautiously constructive: Target expects about 2% revenue growth, a slightly higher operating margin, and earnings per share in a fairly wide range of $7.50 to $8.50. In other words, it's not expected to rocket, but to return to growth mode and gradually improve profitability.

How was the last quarter?

Target $TGT generated $30.453 billion in revenue in the fourth quarter, down 1.5% from a year ago. That's the key fact: the quarter didn't deliver a return to growth at the level of overall sales, but the company also says the result was in line with expectations and that sales and traffic accelerated in the last two months of the quarter. Meanwhile, the sales structure is more important than the number itself: the food and beverage, cosmetics and toy categories grew, and management points out that trends in the core assortment and home were better than in the third quarter.

Comparable sales were down 2.5%. This figure also explains why Target relies so heavily on digital and on revenue outside of actual merchandise sales. Sales in brick-and-mortar stores were weaker year-over-year (-3.9%), while the digital portion grew (+1.9%). In practice, this means that Target continues to shift to a model where delivery and pickup volumes are growing, but brick-and-mortar operations can't yet keep pace. The company reports that same-day delivery, supported by Target's Circle 360 membership, grew more than 30%.

At the quarter's profitability level, that doesn't look bad. Operating profit was $1.380 billion, down 5.9% year-over-year, but gross margin rose to 26.6% from 26.2%. There are specific reasons investors are interested: lower inventory losses, lower logistics and digital fulfillment costs, and growth in advertising and other services revenue. This was countered by higher costs of goods and imports and general pressure from trading activities.

Earnings per share were $2.30, compared with $2.44 after adjustments. An important detail is that the difference is $0.15 of one-time transformation costs. Thus: even though earnings per share were down slightly year-over-year, the company is trying to show that "under the surface" work is already underway to improve efficiency and prepare for a return to growth.

Highlights of the results

  • Fourth-quarter revenue of $30.5 billion, -1.5% year-over-year.

  • Comparable sales in the quarter -2.5%: stores -3.9%, digital +1.9%.

  • Earnings per share $2.30 on an accounting basis; $2.44 after adjustments (includes $0.15 of one-time transformation costs).

  • Operating profit in the quarter $1.38 billion, -5.9% year-over-year.

  • Gross margin in the quarter of 26.6% (from 26.2%), due to lower inventory losses, lower logistics costs and growth in advertising and other services revenue.

  • Full year 2025: sales of $104.8 billion(-1.7%) and net income of $3.7 billion(-9.4%).

  • FY 2025 dividend $4.54 per share, +1.8%; Q4 buybacks 0 and still $8.3 billion of authorized capacity remaining.

  • Full presentation with results.

CEO commentary

CEO Michael Fiddelke' s commentary is not about triumph, but about turnaround and readiness. He says bluntly that 2025 was a challenging year, but the team is focused on serving customers while positioning for profitable growth in 2026 and beyond. A key phrase is the mention of "healthy, positive" revenue growth in February - management is signaling to investors that the trend may be breaking. And it also lists four pillars Target wants to play on: stronger authority in merchandise offerings, a better shopping experience, faster adoption of technology, and continued investment in employees and communities. This is typical language from a company that doesn't want to promise miracles, but wants to show that it has control over what it can influence.

Outlook

Target expects revenue growth of about 2% in 2026. Importantly, management says it wants revenue growth in every quarter of the year, and that more than one percentage point of growth is to come from new stores and revenue beyond just merchandise sales. This means that the company is betting on complementary "high-margin" areas - membership, advertising, marketplaces - and does not want to depend solely on the consumer returning to make more merchandise purchases.

On margins, management promises only a modest improvement: operating margin should be about 0.2 percentage points higher than the 2025 adjusted operating margin of 4.6%. That sounds modest, but in retail, even a small margin improvement on stable sales often has a significant impact on earnings per share. The company estimates earnings per share for 2026 of $7.50 to $8.50. The range is wide, and management is implicitly saying that the biggest uncertainty is in the timing of costs and how quickly demand and traffic will actually improve. The company also expects the first quarter to be more "spot on" profit-wise, with stronger earnings growth to come later in the year.

Long-term results

Target's long-term picture is one of a company that has experienced significant volatility in profitability in recent years, even as sales have remained relatively stable around the $100 billion mark. In 2022, it had sales of roughly 106.0 billion, but profitability was significantly higher (earnings per share of over $14), while in 2023 on similar sales (109.1 billion), earnings per share fell to six dollars. The year 2024 brought a return to better profitability (earnings per share around $9) and 2025 was slightly weaker profitably, although sales remained in a similar range. This shows that the key variable is not "how many sales" but what the mix is, what the discounts are, the cost of imports and logistics, and how much money is lost on inventory.

In 2025, sales dropped to $104.8 billion (-1.7%) and net income to $3.705 billion (-9.4%). Operating profit dropped to $5.117 billion (-8.1%). This doesn't look dramatic at first glance, but in retail, it quickly translates to earnings per share. Crucially, the company itself cited pressure from higher discounts and costs associated with order cancellations in 2025, while lower inventory losses and growth in advertising and other services revenue were positive.

Capital discipline is the second long-term theme. The share count has declined only slightly in recent years, and the company did not buy any shares at all in the fourth quarter of 2025, although it still has $8.3 billion in authorization. At the same time, the dividend remains stable, which was $4.54 per share in 2025, up 1.8% year-over-year. Thus, shareholder returns are primarily based on the dividend and whether the company will return to buybacks when it has more certainty about growth and margins.

News

The most interesting development in the report is the growing importance of revenue outside of traditional merchandise sales. The firm reports that these revenues grew by more than 25%, membership more than doubled year-over-year, advertising platform Roundel grew double digits, and marketplaces grew by more than 30%. These are exactly the sources of growth that can lift overall profitability in the years ahead, as they typically carry a higher margin than normal merchandise sales.

Shareholding structure

Target is a highly institutionally owned company: institutions hold roughly 86% of the stock and insider ownership is low. The largest holdings are Vanguard (about 12.9%), State Street (8.3%), BlackRock (7.7%) and Charles Schwab Investment Management (3.8%). This typically means high liquidity and sensitivity of the stock to how large funds view the consumer outlook, retail margins and interest rates.

Fair Price

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256681-target-earnings-q4-2025-sales-fell-but-margins-improved-and-2026-guidance-points-to-stabilization Pavel Botek
bulios-article-256657 Tue, 03 Mar 2026 15:00:23 +0100 Greg Abel’s first Berkshire letter: continuity stays, but the message on performance is sharper Berkshire is not presenting a new ideology. Abel’s first shareholder letter reads like a promise that the core method will not change: financial strength, patience, and decisions made for the long term. The difference is the tone. He puts more focus on execution inside the group and says clearly that some businesses have room to perform much better, because the gap versus top competitors is too large to ignore.

The second theme is capital discipline. Abel treats liquidity as a tool, not as a comfort blanket. He points to cash and U.S. Treasury holdings above $370 billion as “ready capital” for the next cycle. That is both an advantage and a burden: in calm markets it can drag on returns, but in a stress moment it can let Berkshire buy assets when others cannot.

Top points of the analysis

  • The strategy is built on continuity, but the tone is tougher: an emphasis on closing performance gaps and disciplined execution across the conglomerate.

  • Cash and U.S. Treasuries are above $370 billion, which creates room for big trades and buybacks, but also increases pressure for meaningful capital deployment.

  • Insurance remains core and the float is $176bn at the end of 2025; Abel is also preparing investors for weaker premium growth due to a weaker market in 2026.

  • The dividend is unchanged: Berkshire is not planning one and historically has not paid one if it can reinvest capital more profitably.

  • Buybacks remain, but are not a liability: buybacks are only available below the intrinsic value estimate and there were none in 2025.

Abel's framework: culture as the "operating system" of the company

The most important part of the letter is not about what Berkshire $BRK-A $BRK-B will buy or sell. It's about how the company should behave to protect and grow intrinsic value per share over the long term. Abel builds a strategy on the fact that culture and values are not a "corporate brochure" but an operating mechanism: partnership with shareholders, emphasis on integrity, financial strength, risk management, long horizon, and decision making without pressure for short-term goals. He puts it bluntly: shareholder capital is "blended" with management capital, but it does not belong to management; their role is stewardship.

Importantly for the investor, Abel does not come with an ambition to "optimize the conglomerate" in the style of modern holdings. Rather, it endorses a model where there are minimal layers of management, no quarterly targets from above, and high autonomy for the CEO of each business - and clear accountability: each business has to close performance gaps and improve fundamentals. This is precisely the point where the distinction between "Berkshire as a great asset club" and "Berkshire as an improvement machine" is naturally born. Abel signals that the second part needs to be more pronounced than in recent years.

Capital discipline: what does liquidity above $370 billion mean

Abel's priority is very clear in the letter: liquidity is not just a defense, but a weapon. He refers to the over $370 billion in cash and treasuries as a resource that allows one to act when others are cautious and stand firm when financial stress comes. At the same time, he says some of that liquidity is "mandatory" for insurance companies and extreme scenarios, but some is really free ammunition for opportunities.

From an investment perspective, this creates two parallel interpretations. The positive: Berkshire is one of the few firms in the world that can buy a big business without financing, or enter the megadeal as a preferred investor with very favorable terms when the market breaks. The critical one: this much liquidity is a performance drag in normal times, because Treasuries typically don't match the return on a high-quality business or equity portfolio. That's why Abel also adds a phrase that Berkshire investors want to hear: over the long term, he wants to own productive businesses, not accumulate Treasuries.

What does this imply for the years ahead?

Berkshire will not "chase the next deal" just to spend cash. Abel explicitly sticks to Buffett's framework: invest in what he understands, with long-term economics, with managers of high integrity; concentrate capital in a few high-conviction ideas; and don't sacrifice reputation or resilience. This is important because it limits the range of acquisitions, but increases the likelihood that when Berkshire does something, it will be big and long-lived.

Insurance as an engine: $176 billion float and preparedness for a worse cycle

Abel is surprisingly specific in how he understands insurance: it's not just about underwriting profits. It is a combination of underwriting discipline, the ability to hold giant risks and float as investment capital. In the letter, he says the float at year-end reached $176 billion, up from $171 billion at the end of 2024 and from $88 billion at the end of 2015. That's one of Berkshire's most important long-term metrics for investors because float is "cheap capital" that boosts investment returns over time.

At the same time, Abel openly prepares investors for the fact that the growth of the insurance business will not be linear. He describes more capital entering the market, prices in reinsurance (insurance for insurance companies) falling and claims inflation outpacing pricing for some segments. The upshot: Berkshire will be patient and would rather get less business than mispriced risk. In the letter, it directly expects headwinds for primary business in 2026 and potentially beyond, and for reinsurance it mentions pressure leading to lower volumes.

This is a major nuance for investors who expect Berkshire to "always grow." Abel actually says: insurance will sometimes grow more slowly because the cycle won't allow it, but the long-term strength is that Berkshire doesn't have to chase premiums. It can wait for the right price because it has the capital and can pay claims without hesitation.

Non-insurance businesses: decentralisation, yes, but with pressure on performance

In the letter , Abel describes the non-insurance part of Berkshire (rail, energy, manufacturing, retail, services) as a group of strong businesses without "corporate floors". He leaves autonomy, but changes the tone of expectations: each CEO is to close performance gaps and push for operational excellence, with capital allocation for these businesses going through the Berkshire CEO.

This has two investment implications. First: Abel is likely to be tougher on where growth capital goes and who gets "more money" within Berkshire. Second: a greater emphasis on closing gaps may improve the long-term cash flow profile even without acquisitions. Reuters describes Abel, for example, as calling BNSF's performance gap with top competitors too large and talking about "self-inflicted" problems (self-inflicted damage) at some businesses.

To give you an idea of how Berkshire works in practice: Abel reports that BNSF generated $8.1 billion in net operating cash in 2025 and sent Berkshire $4.4 billion in dividends. This shows why pressure on performance is so important: even small improvements in efficiency on such large assets have a direct impact on dividends "inside Berkshire" and thus on capital that Abel can redirect to other opportunities.

Buybacks and dividends: what really changes

Two points are quite clear in the letter and the report. First: a dividend is not on the table until Berkshire believes that the reinvested dollar will create more than a dollar of value for shareholders. Abel acknowledges this framework, and the report reminds us that Berkshire has not declared a cash dividend since 1967.

Second: buybacks are a tool, not automatic. The program is set up so that the company can buy back when the price is below a conservatively determined intrinsic value. Governance is an important detail: the program was modified in 2025 so that repurchases can be made by the CEO in consultation with the chairman of the board. And even more important is the brake: Berkshire will not repurchase shares if doing so would reduce the combination of cash, equivalents and Treasury bills below $30 billion. And there were no buybacks in 2025.

To an investor, this is readable: Abel is keeping open the possibility of buybacks, but putting financial resilience first. It also says that buybacks will be more occasional and will come when the market offers a significant discount to intrinsic value.

Risks and vulnerabilities that Abel implicitly acknowledges

The biggest risks in the text are not the investment portfolio. It is a combination of regulatory and legal risks in the energy sector. Reuters mentions the pressure on PacifiCorp due to wildfire claims and Abel's argument that the utility is not supposed to be "deep pocket" for any damages the market assigns. The report includes detailed passages on litigation and that bonding requirements may be challenging for liquidity in the future.

The second risk is the insurance cycle: Abel himself says that conditions may be weaker in 2026 and that Berkshire will prefer to earn fewer premiums. That's healthy from a long-term economics perspective, but in the short term it may hamper operating earnings growth and make investors more sensitive to "what Berkshire does with cash."

The third risk is "cash drag." Liquidity above $370 billion is great in a crisis, but if the market stays in a high valuation mode for a long time and without major dislocations, Berkshire can relatively underperform the index. Abel basically acknowledges this by saying that liquidity must be deliberate and deployment disciplined.

"The CEO is the Chief Risk Officer": the most important sentence of the letter for the next decade

There is one phrase in Abel's letter that may be more important to Berkshire shareholders than any consideration of acquisitions: the CEO is effectively the Chief Risk Officer, he says, and "there is no more important duty." That's not an empty sentence of caution. It's a definition of what Berkshire will look like in a crisis. What Abel is saying is that his first job is not to maximize returns in good times, but to ensure that Berkshire doesn't lose its ability to act in bad times. When a conglomerate is sitting on extreme liquidity, has dozens of companies and a giant insurance balance sheet, poor risk management doesn't translate into a "weaker quarter." It will manifest as a loss of reputation, a regulatory problem, or a forced sale of assets at the worst possible moment.

The second part of this logic is that Abel explicitly acknowledges that risk management is not a centralized "program." It is decentralized and tailored to each business, but it guards the same three things: reputation, financial strength, and the ability to take advantage of opportunities over the long term. This is a practical guide for the investor. As soon as we see Berkshire going into something that could damage reputation or raise systemic risk, it will mean the DNA of the company is changing. Abel, on the other hand, is signaling not to change.

The new 'internal management' structure: why Adam Johnsonis more than just another name

One of the most underrated parts of Abel's letter is that he subtly shows us how he wants to run a huge conglomerate without turning it into a classic corporation with three levels of management. He mentions the role of Adam Johnson, who is in charge of a group of 32 companies in the consumer products, service and retail segments. Abel doesn't bring him up by accident: he builds on him as an example of how the "Berkshire way" of improving performance is supposed to work - through personal accountability, tough execution and a culture free of alibis.

The key takeaway for investors is that this may be Abel's answer to a weakness at Berkshire that parts of the market have been addressing for years: the conglomerate has great assets, but some have long underperformed their potential. Abel writes directly there that the CEOs of the individual businesses have to relentlessly close performance gaps and that the capital allocation for those businesses ultimately lies with him. In other words, "autonomy" becomes an explicit contract: autonomy, yes, but results must be measurable.

This change is also important for the 2026-2028 outlook, as the "next big acquisition" may not occur for years, while improving performance within existing firms can lift cash flow on an ongoing basis. What Abel is really saying is: even if there is no big deal, there is an internal path to higher capital productivity.

Cash interest rates: why T-billsare a "hidden profit" today and what happens when rates fall

Berkshire is in a unique situation: a giant cash position is both an asset and a liability, but in a higher rate environment it also becomes an income engine. The report shows how huge this number is in practice: short-term investments in U.S. Treasury Bills alone are ~$321.4 billion, and on top of that Berkshire holds tens of billions in cash and cash equivalents. This means that even "parking cash" generates massive interest income in absolute terms and increases the resilience of operating earnings when just some companies slow down.

But there is a flip side to this, which is crucial for the 2026-2028 outlook. Once US interest rates start to fall, the interest yield on these T-bills will gradually decline. And since hundreds of billions are involved, the impact on the absolute dollar amount may be visible even if the business behaves as it does today. In other words, some of the "comfort" of recent years was not just the result of operating profits, but also an environment of higher rates.

There is a very specific pressure here for Abel: if rates come down, it will be all the more important to either (a) accelerate internal subsidiary performance to compensate for the lower interest contribution, or (b) use liquidity to buy productive assets, as he says in the letter - that he wants to own productive businesses rather than Treasuries. This is one of the most "mathematical" reasons why Abel's emphasis on foreclosures and closing gaps is not just a managerial platitude.

A post-Buffett investment portfolio

At Berkshire, the investment portfolio is often synonymous with "Buffett" to the public. But Abel makes two things clear in the letter and in the media context: first, he wants to stick to the logic of concentrated bets on quality companies "for the long haul"; second, who gets more scrutiny changes as Abel assumes greater visibility in portfolio decisions. The media also mention that Abel is now to oversee the vast majority of investment decisions and Buffett remains active as chairman, but the day-to-day expectations will increasingly relate to Abel.

Importantly for shareholders, Abel also indirectly defines the "core" to be held for the long term. The framework of the "forever" group appears in the letter - typically Apple $AAPL, American Express $AXP, Coca-Cola $KO, Moody's $MCO and also Japanese trading houses. This is handy because it tells you what type of business Berkshire wants to own: strong brands, high return on capital, stable cash flow and a long-term story.

Investment scenarios for the years ahead

Optimistic scenario: large deal or extremely profitable investment + improved performance in the businesses

Liquidity will enable a deal that is not "just another acquisition" but a long-term productive asset with high returns, while Abel pushes operational improvements at large businesses like BNSF. Insurance will go through a cycle and Berkshire will take advantage of moments when the market gets cheaper. In this scenario, not only will absolute results improve, but so will the market's willingness to pay a premium for "better execution" under Abel.

Realistic scenario: continuity, slow efficiency improvements, no capital revolution

Berkshire continues to maintain intrinsic value through operating earnings and investment returns, insurance will fluctuate cyclically and Abel will be tougher on performance. Cash will be used gradually: smaller acquisitions, selective equity, buybacks only at significant discounts. Investors will get "Berkshire as a stable compound return" but without much revaluation.

Pessimistic scenario: weaker insurance market for longer + legal risks in utilities + cash drag

Insurance will earn fewer premiums and profitability will be weaker, PacifiCorp will continue to weigh on sentiment, and cash position will remain high because suitable deals won't come along or will be too expensive. In such a scenario, Berkshire may be a relative laggard even though it would remain extremely financially resilient.

What to take away from the article

  • Abel's strategy is "same framework, tougher execution": the culture and decentralization remain, but there is a growing emphasis on closing performance gaps.

  • Liquidity above $370bn is both an advantage and a challenge: it is an option to crisis and big deals, but also a potential drag on returns without good opportunities.

  • Insurance remains core and the float is $176bn, but Abel is preparing investors for weaker premium growth in 2026.

  • Dividend is unchanged, buybacks remain occasional and uncommitted; there were none in 2025.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256657-greg-abel-s-first-berkshire-letter-continuity-stays-but-the-message-on-performance-is-sharper Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-256616 Tue, 03 Mar 2026 11:15:27 +0100 Mega-Caps With ROE Above 20%: The Elite Club of Capital Efficiency Companies that can sustain ROE above 20% while maintaining a market cap above $300 billion are exceptionally rare. These firms typically combine strong pricing power, scalable business models and disciplined capital allocation. In today’s environment, investors are increasingly rewarding this mix of size and efficiency. Which giants currently stand out the most?

There are many fast-growing companies on the stock markets, as well as a number of stable giants with huge market values. But only a very small group of companies can meet both conditions simultaneously over the long term, i.e. maintaining a return on equity above 20% while operating at the scale of hundreds of billions of dollars in market capitalisation.

The reason is mostly structural. As companies grow, they typically face downward pressure on capital efficiency. Business expansion, increased investment in infrastructure, or acquisitions often lead to ROEs gradually declining. Therefore, sustaining high returns with a massive balance sheet size requires a very strong competitive position, pricing power and disciplined capital allocation.

This is why investors monitor ROE closely. This ratio measures how efficiently a company uses shareholder capital to generate profits. If the value stays above 20% over the long term, it usually signals a business with above-average profitability, high margins or a structural advantage over competitors. Combined with a market capitalization of over $300 billion, then, it is a fairly exclusive club of global leaders.

Moreover, the current market environment is adding renewed importance to this metric. After a period of "cheap money" (a period of low interest rates) and aggressive growth, investors are more focused on earnings quality, return on capital and the ability of companies to generate cash even in the current higher rate environment. Which companies are they?

Amazon $AMZN

Amazon is, on the face of it, a specific case. It is a company that has historically sacrificed short-term profitability for years in favor of future growth and infrastructure building. That's why the current level of return on equity is extremely attractive to investors. This is because Amazon has moved from a phase of aggressive investment to a phase of monetization of its ecosystem in recent years, which is starting to be reflected strongly in ROE.

Amazon's ROE is above 20%, which is a very strong signal given its huge capital base. It's important to note that this is happening even as the company announced a $200 billion investment to develop AI infrastructure in 2026 (CapEx). It's investments this high this year that are dragging down hypercarrier stocks as investors worry about future returns. But Amazon has a very strong business behind it that allows it to afford these massive investments.

The company is benefiting mainly from a combination of AWS' cloud business, where it has very high margins, the growing profitability of its advertising segment and the gradual cost optimization in e-commerce logistics. It is the mix of these three pillars that allows Amazon to generate higher net profit without having to proportionally increase its equity.

In terms of market capitalisation, Amazon safely meets the second condition. The company has long been well above $300 billion and is one of the largest companies in the world. Its current market capitalisation is USD 2.24 trillion. In this case, size is not an obstacle to efficiency, but rather a source of competitive advantage. The huge infrastructure, the global logistics network and the dominance of AWS create high barriers to entry for competitors.

The key question for investors remains the sustainability of the current ROE. In the short term, Amazon's continued growth in cloud services and advertising, which have significantly higher margins than traditional retail, plays into its hands. On the other hand, it is still a capital-intensive business that requires high CapEx investments in datacenters, AI infrastructure and logistics. Thus, the future evolution of ROE will largely depend on whether Amazon can maintain cost discipline while continuing to scale its most profitable segments.

However, in the context of large technology companies, Amazon is currently one of the companies that has been able to translate its size into an effective ROE. And that's exactly why it's on the radar of investors focused on quality mega-cap titles. Indeed, many investors see this year's stock decline as a buying opportunity. However, the current heightened geopolitical situation is not good for stocks and it could well be that prices will fall further in the weeks ahead.

Walmart $WMT

Walmart is often perceived by investors primarily as a defensive retail colossus, not as a company with superior capital efficiency. In recent months, it has also been among increasingly mainstream investors who are astonished by the multiples at which the giant trades.

Unlike pure technology companies, the extremely efficient operating model, discipline in handling capital, and a highly optimized supply chain are behind the current return on capital.

A strong bargaining position vis-à-vis suppliers is essential. Walmart has long operated with low net margins, but compensates with huge sales volume and fast inventory turnover. This model allows the company to generate robust net income while using equity relatively efficiently, which translates directly into high ROE. In addition, the company benefits from the huge scale of its business.

Moreover, Walmart's profitability mix has been changing in recent years. The e-commerce segment, the retail media business and the Walmart+ membership program are growing significantly, which have higher margins than traditional brick-and-mortar sales. It is the retail media segment (Walmart's advertising business) that is gradually becoming an important source of highly profitable revenue, which can help maintain ROE at above-average levels even in an environment of pressure on consumer spending. At the same time, digitalisation is increasing the efficiency of inventory and logistics.

The company's market capitalization has surged above $1 trillion in recent weeks. In fact, the stock has managed to appreciate 40% since the beginning of 2025 and is currently trading around $126 apiece. This growth has been significantly aided by the shift of capital from software and SaaS companies this year. But as we mentioned at the outset, for more and more investors, Walmart is now very expensive. Its P/E ratio is more than double Nvidia's $NVDA. The Fair Price Index is also glowing red.

Walmart's ROE sustainability is less on cyclical growth and more on operating execution. The key will be whether the company can continue to increase store productivity, monetize digital assets while maintaining cost discipline. Margin pressure remains a risk in an environment of retail price competition and potential cooling of consumer demand. However, if any segment starts to deteriorate, due to the high valuations, the stock may experience high volatility and thus any price decline could be very rapid.

Micron Technology $MU

Micron represents the most cyclical case of today's selection, and therefore its high ROE needs to be interpreted differently than Walmart or Amazon. The memory industry has historically been characterized by sharp swings in profitability that translate very quickly into ROE. The current ROE level of over 20% is therefore closely tied to the phase of the memory supercycle that the company is now in, thanks to AI demand.

The current leap in profitability is mainly due to the dramatic recovery in DRAM and NAND memory prices, which has been supported by strong demand from datacenter, AI infrastructure and server solutions in recent quarters. The memory business has extreme operating leverage, and even relatively small changes in memory prices can lead to multiples in margins and net profit. It is this effect that is now driving Micron's ROE significantly higher.

Also playing a big role is the shift in product mix towards high-bandwidth memory (HBM) and server DRAM, which have significantly higher value-added than traditional consumer RAM. In addition, the AI boom is increasing the memory intensity of modern computing systems, creating a structurally stronger demand environment than in past cycles. If this trend continues, the memory cycle could behave less volatile than historically.

The company only broke above the $300 billion mark last year thanks to strong share price growth. In fact, the stock has appreciated 550% since the beginning of 2025, and the latest estimates suggest that growth won't stop for some time. Moreover, Micron's return on capital has historically tended to fluctuate significantly depending on the balance of supply and demand in the memory industry. And that can change rapidly.

A key factor in the years ahead will be the pace of capacity additions in the industry. Should competitors begin to aggressively expand production, current memory market tensions may gradually ease and price dynamics would normalise. Conversely, if CapEx in the industry remains disciplined and AI demand continues to accelerate, Micron can maintain above-average profitability longer than in past cycles.

Palantir Technologies $PLTR

Palantir is one of the most watched companies of the current AI boom. Just a few years ago, the company's story was built primarily on revenue growth and contract expansion in the government segment. In recent quarters, however, the profitability profile has changed significantly and the company has moved into a phase where it is starting to generate returns on capital in excess of 20%, a very significant milestone for a fast-growing software company with a market capitalization of over $300 billion.

The improvement in ROE is primarily due to the high operating leverage typical of the software model. Once the platform is built and fixed development costs are absorbed, each incremental increase in revenue translates into profit significantly more efficiently than in capital-intensive industries. In this regard, Palantir is benefiting from the growing adoption of its AI platform AIP and accelerating commercialization in the enterprise segment. It is the combination of higher margins and relatively low capital intensity that is pushing up ROE.

But Palantir has also not been above a $300 billion market cap for long. Like Micron $MU, it has risen above that mark thanks to steep price increases in recent years. This is especially important because maintaining high ROEs at this size tends to be challenging for fast-growing technology companies. Palantir, meanwhile, benefits from a relatively capital-light model that doesn't require massive investments in physical infrastructure, a significant advantage over hardware-oriented AI firms.

A key question for investors is the sustainability of the current momentum. In the short term, the company's continued adoption of AI solutions in the commercial sector and stable government contracts play into its hands. However, the risk is the high market expectations and the sensitivity of valuation to growth rates. Should growth in the commercial segment slow or margins come under pressure, ROE could normalize relatively quickly.

Thus, Palantir today represents an interesting case of a company that has been able to combine rapid growth with high capital efficiency, a combination that the market values highly in the current AI era. Whether the company will be able to maintain this position in the years ahead will depend primarily on the pace of adoption of its platform and its ability to further scale its high-margin software model.

Conclusion

The current market environment once again demonstrates the value of companies' ability to generate high returns on capital even with huge market capitalizations. In an era of higher interest rates and capital reallocation, investors are increasingly focused on the real quality of earnings, balance sheet efficiency and the true ability of companies to monetize their business model. Thus, it is the combination of high ROE and massive market capitalization that acts as a filter separating companies with a real competitive advantage from those whose growth has been driven largely by cheap capital and often by hype.

At the same time, however, the ROE number itself always needs to be read in the broader context of the business model and cycle phase. For some industries, this may be a structural advantage arising from their business model or strong pricing power, while elsewhere returns may be heavily influenced by the cyclical evolution of margins.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256616-mega-caps-with-roe-above-20-the-elite-club-of-capital-efficiency Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-256723 Tue, 03 Mar 2026 10:29:00 +0100 The CEO of SoFi, Anthony Noto, bought 56,000 shares of his company at an average price of $17.88 per share. The stock hasn't reacted much to this news so far, but for me it's great news because it shows that management believes in further growth of the company and that the shares are currently trading at an attractive price.

What do you think about this news? Are you planning to buy shares of $SOFI?

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256723 Mateo Silva
bulios-article-256667 Tue, 03 Mar 2026 08:11:30 +0100 🚨 Hey colleagues, I’ve been following Ouster $OUST for a while and recently opened a new position in my growth portfolio.

✅ I really like its business, the sector it operates in, and the software-hardware technology it offers.

In short, it develops digital LiDAR sensors and AI software that enable machines, robots, and cars to "see" and move autonomously in the real world. (a bet on a new megatrend)

🚨 It just reported Q4 2025 results and surprisingly announced a net profit and record revenues, confirming growing demand for LiDAR technologies.

️ Highlights:

🟢 Revenues: in Q4 2025 it had 62 million USD, +107% (compared to Q4 2024).

🟢 Full-year revenues: For 2025 it had 169 million USD, +52% YoY

🟢 Profitability: Ouster recorded in Q4 a NET PROFIT (GAAP) of 4 million USD (0.06 USD per share), significantly beating analysts' expectations, which had predicted a loss.

🏆 Record number of sensors delivered in Q4 — 8,100 units. For the full year it was over 25,000 units (an increase of 47%).

🟢 Gross margin: GAAP gross margin in Q4 rose to 60% (versus 44% the previous year), mainly driven by licensing fees and manufacturing efficiency.

🟢 Bookings related to software more than doubled in 2025 and accounted for over 15% of all sensors delivered.

👉 Acquisition of StereoLabs: The company recently completed the acquisition of StereoLabs, strengthening its position in "Physical AI" and computer vision.

👉 Balance sheet: Ouster closed the year with a strong cash position — it has 211 million USD in cash and no debt.

🔭 Outlook for 2026 (Guidance)

A long-term target set for year-over-year revenue growth in the range of 30% to 50% for 2026.

It plans to continue integrating AI into its solutions and to expand its presence in robotics, industrial automation, and smart infrastructure sectors.

It’s still a small, volatile, and risky company, but with huge potential — I want to allocate a small portion of my portfolio to it❗️

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256667 Malik Diallo
bulios-article-256581 Tue, 03 Mar 2026 04:45:18 +0100 Qualcomm’s chip is moving beyond phones as “invisible” AI devices quietly gain traction The next wave of consumer tech may not look like a new smartphone at all. It may be small, worn on the body, and used without a screen. Qualcomm is positioning its chips for devices like smart glasses, AI pins, pendants, and wristbands that promise an AI assistant always available. The opportunity is clear, but so is the risk: products that listen and see more of the real world raise privacy concerns and can face backlash.

There are early signs this category is growing. Counterpoint Research reported global smart-glasses shipments jumped 139% in the second half of 2025. Qualcomm is using that momentum to push a new chip called Snapdragon Wear Elite, built for continuous on-device AI, phone connectivity, and long battery life. Big brands like Google, Samsung, and Motorola could bring more scale. But success is not automatic. Humane, founded by former Apple employees, failed with its AI Pin and later sold parts of the business to HP, which shows how easy it is to misjudge product-market fit.

What phones can't do - and why it works now

Qualcomm's new $QCOM chip addresses the pain points of current wearables: power consumption while constantly recording with a camera or microphone, and the ability to let local AI models run without the cloud. Ziad Asghar, head of wearables and personal AI at Qualcomm, points out that demand has exceeded expectations thanks to the success of the glasses. "We've seen demand for smartglasses defy our 2025 prediction," he says, pointing to applications such as instant translation during a conversation - right in your ear or field of view, without having to reach into your pocket.

These devices make smart use of the context of the environment through sensors. Cameras track where you're looking (e.g. in retail for better merchandising), microphones listen, and AI delivers personalized responses. Asghar sees potential in stores, where gadgets analyze customer behavior in real time. Unlike smartphones, which are passive, these innovations actively enrich reality - from navigating foreign countries to discreet fitness coaching. Google's prototype Gemini AI glasses have already shown how close we are to forgetting the phone.

But success is built on trust. Qualcomm's chip powers not just watches, but experimental pins and pendants where stealth is key. If they can do tasks like translation or object identification more efficiently than apps, they can break through. While Humane failed due to low utility and cost, larger players have the advantage of scalability and integration with existing ecosystems.

The race of the giants: from Meta to Apple

Meta $META leads with Ray-Ban smart glasses that answer questions about the environment thanks to AI; Google $GOOG, Samsung $SSNLF and Amazon $AMZN (with the Bee wristband for Alexa) follow. Apple $AAPL is ramping up work on glasses, pendants and even camera AirPods for the AI era, according to Bloomberg. OpenAI is planning a smart speaker, and startups like Friend AI Pendant and Plaud Pin are already churning in the early stages. "At the end of the day, it's about whether it outperforms existing devices," says Google's Bjørn Kilburn, who doesn't rule out expansion beyond phones and watches.

This race isn't just about hardware - it's about data and AI. On-body devices collect richer context than a static phone, enabling advanced features like predictive assistance. Amazon sees the Bee as the key to the future of Alexa, Meta is investing in social interactions. Apple, with its 2 billion devices, has the biggest moat: integration could bring billions of users to new formats without friction.

Yet the market is full of past lessons. Google Glass in 2013 sparked a wave of fear of "Glassholes" - subtle snooping. Today, companies are betting on LED recording indicators, but women's complaints about men recording them with Meta Glasses without consent show the risks. Kilburn admits: "We have a huge responsibility for privacy, so we're moving more slowly."

Privacy as an Achilles heel

The biggest threat is not the battery, but trust. Devices without screens that constantly shoot increase the risk of unwanted surveillance - just forget to turn off the LED. Meta insists on responsive use, Google emphasises "positive and negative use cases". History shows: privacy failures can kill a product before it gets off the ground.

Regulators in the EU and US are already putting pressure on tech firms; if AI gadgets don't address privacy from the ground up (local processing, opt-in recording), they're in for a backlash. Conversely, a successful solution - like encrypted processing on a chip - could set the standard. Consumers need to see the added value of out-of-this-world features, not just another flashlight around their necks.

For the tech industry, it's liquidation or survival. If Qualcomm and partners succeed, they will open the era of "always-on AI". Otherwise, they will remain an experiment that will reinforce smartphone dominance. Practicality and ethics will decide - at a time when privacy is the new currency.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256581-qualcomm-s-chip-is-moving-beyond-phones-as-invisible-ai-devices-quietly-gain-traction Pavel Botek
bulios-article-256507 Mon, 02 Mar 2026 17:19:44 +0100 Berkshire’s billion-dollar reality check: Profit slides, $373 billion cash mountain rises, and a New era begins Berkshire Hathaway’s latest financial release delivered a powerful mix of numbers that surprised many market observers. In the fourth quarter of 2025 Warren Buffett’s final quarter as CEO the conglomerate reported operating profit of about $10.2 billion, down roughly 30 percent from $14.5 billion a year earlier as insurance underwriting income softened and investment gains fluctuated. This decline, detailed by multiple financial outlets, marked one of the most significant year-over-year drops in recent history for the company’s operating earnings while also underscoring how much weight insurance profits carry in Berkshire’s overall results.

Insurance woes and writedowns drove the decline

A closer look at the numbers reveals that insurance underwriting profits fell sharply, with property and casualty operations such as GEICO and reinsurance seeing pretax earnings tumble as pricing pressures and higher accident claims squeezed margins. Lower interest rates also reduced investment income on Berkshire’s massive cash reserves, compounding the earnings hit. On top of this, the company recorded a multi-billion dollar writedown on long-held investments in companies including $OXY and $KHC, which further weighed on consolidated results for the period.

Net income held up better but still edged lower

Despite the drop in operating profit, Berkshire’s net income remained relatively resilient, falling only modestly compared to the sharp operating earnings decline. The company reported net income of roughly $19.2 billion for the quarter, a slight decrease from $19.7 billion in the same period a year earlier, illustrating how investment performance including unrealized gains can buffer headline profitability in volatile markets. This divergence between operating and net income highlights a structural feature of Berkshire’s results: profit driven by stock market valuations can offset near-term operational weakness.

Full-year 2025 shows broader earnings pressures

On an annual basis, Berkshire’s operating earnings for 2025 totaled about $44.5 billion, down from approximately $47.4 billion in 2024, reflecting the cumulative impact of softer insurance markets and cyclical headwinds in key segments. Net earnings for the year also slid significantly a roughly 25 percent decline compared with 2024 partly driven by lower overall investment gains and the writedown charges mentioned earlier. These full-year figures paint a picture of a company navigating both cyclical pressure points and a changing macroeconomic backdrop as it transitions leadership.

Cash reserves remain huge, giving new CEO strong firepower

One of the standout numbers from the release was $BRK-B's cash and short-term investments position about $373.3 billion at year-end, among the largest war chests in corporate America. That enormous liquidity base provides incoming CEO Greg Abel with extraordinary optionality for acquisitions, strategic investments, or opportunistic deployment in periods of market dislocation. Abel and company leadership have repeatedly emphasized that they are prepared to put this cash to work where it will create long-term value for shareholders, even as share buybacks remain suspended and no dividends are planned.

Segment performance reveals mixed strength across the conglomerate

Berkshire’s sprawling business portfolio delivered a mixed set of results in the quarter. While insurance profitability stumbled, other segments showed resilience. The BNSF railroad reported solid profit performance, and manufacturing, services, and retail businesses posted modest growth. Energy operations saw a slight decline, reflecting broader commodity price and demand trends. Some well-known consumer brands within Berkshire’s umbrella including Duracell and select retail holdings faced weaker demand, reflecting softness in end-market spending patterns. These variations illustrate the diversified nature of Berkshire’s earnings base, where one segment’s weakness can be counterbalanced by another’s relative strength.

Source:https://www.berkshirehathaway.com/news/feb2826.pdf

Investment gains and losses tied to equity holdings remain significant drivers of Berkshire’s bottom line, and the 2025 results were no exception. While the conglomerate saw net realized and unrealized gains in select holdings, significant impairment charges on others particularly that large Occidental stake moderated overall performance. Because Berkshire reports investment gains and losses in net income but excludes them from operating profit, the reported net results can sometimes mask underlying operational trends, a nuance that investors should consider when interpreting quarterly performance.

Transition leadership under Abel maintains Buffett legacy with a cautious outlook

The earnings release coincided with the transition to Greg Abel as CEO, a milestone in Berkshire’s storied history after Warren Buffett’s six-decade leadership. Abel’s first annual letter to shareholders reinforced the company’s traditional investment discipline and decentralized operating model, while underscoring confidence in Berkshire’s long-term prospects despite short-term earnings pressures. The combination of record cash reserves, diversified business segments, and a commitment to value-focused capital allocation sets the stage for how Berkshire may navigate the next chapter balancing legacy with strategic opportunity. (Greg Abel’s leadership message reinforces continuity.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256507-berkshire-s-billion-dollar-reality-check-profit-slides-373-billion-cash-mountain-rises-and-a-new-era-begins Bulios News Team
bulios-article-256501 Mon, 02 Mar 2026 16:40:30 +0100 Anthropic pushed out of Pentagon work: the real question is who fills the gap The Trump administration has told federal agencies and defense-linked contractors to stop using Anthropic and to remove Claude from defense systems within six months. The Pentagon also labeled Anthropic a “supply chain risk,” a tag normally reserved for vendors seen as a security concern. In this case, it is aimed at a U.S. AI company after a public dispute about how the military may use the model.

For investors, the practical impact is not only on Anthropic. Defense budgets will still buy AI tools. The spending will shift to providers willing to accept “lawful use” terms and faster deployment. Reports already point to OpenAI moving quickly to sign Pentagon work. Other large AI and defense software players will also try to step in through contractors and cloud platforms. The market now has a clearer race: who becomes the default vendor for military AI when strict private guardrails are rejected.

What Anthropic and the Pentagon have been arguing about

The crux of the dispute is simple: the Pentagon wanted the ability to use Claude "for all lawful purposes"; Anthropic retained two red lines - a ban on use for fully autonomous weapons systems and a ban on mass surveillance of American citizens. Anthropic claims that the "risk to the supply chain" designation is legally untenable and that it will challenge it in court.

Also important from a practical defense perspective is that Claude was already running on classified networks and Anthropic had a contract with the Department of Defense with a cap of up to $200 million. Cutting off a tool that has already found a user base within the agency is painful for the government as well - which is why the Pentagon is also openly talking about quickly replacing it with other contractors.

Why this is not just an Anthropic problem, but a signal to the entire sector

This episode sends a stark message to the market: if AI companies want to sell models to the military, "ethics policies" alone may not be enough. For investors, it raises the risk premium for companies that build part of their growth on government contracts, while creating room for competitors that can offer a compromise model of "insurance" without the Pentagon seeing the constraints as a barrier to operations.

Beyond the short-term shock, there is also a long-term play: whoever sets the standard for "safe" AI in the government sector will gain not only revenue, but also a reputational stamp that can be leveraged in the commercial sphere. That's why conflicts like this are watched so closely - it's not just one contract, but a precedent.

Who of the 'Magnificent 7' is connected to Anthropic and what it could mean for the stock

Amazon's $AMZN is the most visible in the story: it has long deepened its relationship with Anthropic and has sent billions of dollars to the company, according to its own materials and public reports, with AWS a key partner for Anthropic for operations and training. This means that any pressure on Anthropic's business may indirectly impact the growth of computing power consumption in the cloud - and conversely, if Anthropic shifts some of its business from defense to commercial, AWS may continue to benefit.

Alphabet (Google) $GOOG also has a significant economic footprint in Anthropic. Both Bloomberg and Reuters have previously described Google's multibillion-dollar investment in Anthropic and strong connections through its computing infrastructure. For Alphabet, this creates a twofold effect: on the one hand, exposure to Anthropic's valuation and growth, and on the other hand, potential "spillover" of government demand towards its own models if the Pentagon starts looking for alternatives.

Microsoft $MSFT and Nvidia $NVDA have also entered Anthropic through investments and strategic agreements. This is material to the market because these are companies that monetize AI primarily through infrastructure (cloud, chips, platforms). If the Pentagon and defense contractors redirect budgets away from Anthropic to other models, the winners may be those who supply the replacement "stack" - computing power, hardware, and integration tools. At the same time, however, escalating the conflict increases the political risk for the entire AI sector: if one company falls so hard today, pressure may come on others tomorrow if they get into a similar dispute over terms of use.

Who stands to gain from cutting Anthropic off

In the short term, OpenAI is the most frequently mentioned, as it quickly announced a deal with the Ministry of Defence and stressed that it can offer "layered fuses" for use on classified networks. If the Pentagon is going to try to minimize transition costs, it makes sense to reach for a vendor that already has a finished product, security framework and staffing.

The other set of potential winners are integrators and defense contractors who will need to reconfigure internal workflows and applications. This is where Palantir $PLTR s name often comes up (because of its role in defense data systems) and the big arms houses that will be rewriting processes, not just "replacing the chatbot." The longer the transition, the more work (and budgets) will flow into integration.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256501-anthropic-pushed-out-of-pentagon-work-the-real-question-is-who-fills-the-gap Pavel Botek
bulios-article-256478 Mon, 02 Mar 2026 15:10:13 +0100 From a price-taker to a price-setter: how a “simple” food product became a premium business Most food producers live and die by commodity pricing. This company is trying to escape that trap by doing something basic but powerful: it sells a product people trust, then protects that trust with consistency. When shoppers repeatedly choose the same brand, the retailer relationship changes too-price becomes less of a negotiation and more of a shared interest.

The past year suggests the strategy is working. Revenue expanded sharply, profits grew even faster, and the company kept its financial position strong. That combination matters because it gives management options: invest to grow capacity and distribution without leaning heavily on debt, while keeping the premium positioning that supports margins.

Top points of the analysis

  • Revenue 2024: €606.3m USD 662.6m(+28.5%), gross profit USD 229.9m ( +28.5%), gross profit USD 229.9m (+28.5%). USD (+41.6%).

  • Margin shift: gross profit grows faster than revenue, EBITDA 81.6mn. USD 81.6 (+99.6%).

  • Valuation: P/E 16.75, P/S 1.39.

  • Dividend policy: dividend is not paid, priority is growth and investment in capacity.

Company performance

Vital Farms $VITL is a U.S. food company that primarily sells out-of-home-access eggs and is gradually building a broader portfolio of "premium staple foods." The key is that it does not stand out as an anonymous commodity supplier, but as a brand: the product has clear shelf positioning, a consistent visual identity and an origin story. In grocery, this is not a cosmetic detail - it is a tool to differentiate from the private labels of supermarket chains and to maintain price over the long term.

The revenue model is built on the company selling to retail under its own brand and building distribution across the US. In official materials, it says its products are sold in more than 24,000 stores and that eggs are also available at hundreds of foodservice operations. This is an important metric because it shows that this is not a narrow "specialty" segment, but a mass scale that can continue to grow.

What makes the business compelling is the combination of two layers. On the consumer side, it is the confidence that the quality is stable and that the brand has value beyond a single price action. On the chain side, it's the speed of sale and the ability to bring customers into the category who are willing to pay a premium. When a brand raises the value of an entire category, the chain has less incentive to displace it.

Business

The core of the business is eggs and butter, but the key is how the company sells them. In the conventional egg market, producers compete primarily on price and delivery. Vital Farms tries to compete more on trust, traceability and the story of how they are raised. In practice, this means that growth is not just based on "higher prices" but on increasing domestic penetration - that is, how many households buy the brand on a regular basis. This is where the long growth 'runway' comes into play: with premium food, customer switching tends to be slow, but once a habit is formed, it sticks.

In addition to eggs, the company sells butter and eggs in processed forms, such as hard-boiled and liquid whole eggs. These products are important strategically: they move the company from "one item" to a broader shopping basket, while expanding opportunities in retail and foodservice. The company itself has long stressed that its biggest runway is still in eggs, and that it wants to enter other categories cautiously so as not to break focus on its main growth engine.

But the most important part of the product is not just "what it sells", but how it secures the supply. For this type of brand, the supply network is a key asset. The company works with an extensive network of family farms; it is reported to work with nearly 600 family farms. This is critical for an investor because growth for a premium egg is not just about marketing - it's about the ability to add capacity so that the brand doesn't lose quality and the unit economics don't fall apart.

Market and addressable potential

For eggs, at first glance, the market appears saturated. But there is a structural shift under the surface: a growing proportion of eggs are coming from farms that the consumer perceives as a 'better choice' - whether because of the way they are reared, traceability or simply because they are willing to pay extra for quality. An expert source, based on company presentations, reports that the outdoor eggs segment has increased its share of the U.S. market from 5.7% to 13%. This is no small shift - it is a change in category structure.

For Vital Farms, the addressable market is virtually defined by two axes: how many customers it will pull from conventional eggs into the "premium" segment and how much shelf space it will gain. An important detail is that the company itself does not see its main struggle as a direct price war with the industry's largest producers, but rather competition within the premium segment. This is both good and bad at the same time: good because the premium segment can grow over the long term and is not so commoditized; bad because the growth space has to be redeemed by marketing, branding and perfectly managed logistics.

The third layer of the market is capacity. For this company, it's not just about "how many people would want to buy" but how much it can realistically produce and distribute. This is why the expansion of processing capacity enters into the investment thesis: the company is open about the fact that it needs new equipment in order to be able to increase volume in the coming years without losing control over quality. In its latest outlook for 2026, for example, it cites capital expenditure of EUR 140-150 million. The company is planning to spend USD 140 million in the next two years, mainly due to the construction of the Vital Crossroads facility in Indiana to support long-term capacity on the way to its target of USD 2 billion in net sales by 2030.

Competition and market position

Competition in eggs takes two very different forms. The conventional segment is dominated by industrial production, where price, efficiency and the ability to supply in bulk are critical. A typical representative of this world is Cal-Maine $CALM, which describes itself as the largest producer and distributor of fresh shell eggs in the US. This is "volume" competition that can be extremely tough, but at the same time is often not a direct competitor to a premium brand, as long as the brand can maintain a price premium and differentiation.

In the premium segment, branded rivals like Happy Egg or Pete & Gerry's are more relevant. Here it is no longer just about price, but about who can build trust, who can get a better shelf position and who can supply the chains steadily without disruption. It is in this space that Vital Farms benefits from having a widely available brand and from keeping distribution under control. The company also states that it does not consider traditional industrial producers as primary competitors, and that it is focused on competing with other "pasture-raised" brands.

There is a third, silent dimension to the competition: the private labels of the supermarket chains. If the premium category expands, chains eventually want to 'internalise' part of the margin and offer their own alternative. The defence against this is either an extremely strong brand or an on-shelf performance that private label cannot replicate. So for Vital Farms, the key is that growth is not just "demand in a good year" but translates into long-term loyalty and sales velocity.

Management and CEO

The company's CEO is Russell Diez-Canseco. The important thing for an investor with this company is that it is not a management that builds strategy on financial gimmicks. The whole story is based on the "boring" stuff: expanding the farm network, building capacity, maintaining quality, consistent marketing and execution at retail. That's exactly the type of business where bad decisions show up quickly - either in product quality, or ability to deliver, or margins.

At the same time, management shares a clear long-term framework: a target of $2 billion in net sales by 2030 and profitability as measured by adjusted EBITDA margin (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization on an adjusted basis) of 15%-17% by 2030, with gross margins of "35% or more" over the 2025-2030 period. These targets are important to investors because they provide measurable milestones - and set the bar for the market to check in the years ahead.

So the key credibility issue is not whether management has a nice story. It's whether it can grow over the long term without the unit's economics falling apart and without the company having to finance expansion with expensive debt or shareholder dilution. Today's balance sheet is strong in this regard - and gives management room to invest in capacity when demand is growing.

Financial performance

The numbers over the past four years show a textbook case of scaling. Revenues have risen from €260.9m to €260.9m. USD (2021) to USD 362.1m (2022), USD 471.9m (2023) and USD 606.3m (2023 ). USD 606.6 MILLION (2024). This is a growth of approximately +133% over three years. More important than the revenue growth itself, however, is that gross profit is growing faster: in 2024, it is 229.9 million. In 2024, sales grew by +28.5%, or +41.6% year-on-year. This is a signal that the company is improving mix and efficiency.

Operating leverage (a situation where profits grow faster than sales as fixed costs are spread out) is already very clearly visible here. Operating profit has jumped from 33.3m to 33.3m. USD 63.6 million (2023) to USD 63.6 million (2023). USD 63 (2024), a +91% increase. And net profit went from 25.6 million (2024) to 25.6 million (2023). USD to USD 53.4 million. USD, up +109%. In other words, the company has moved into a phase where volume growth and brand growth are starting to flow more strongly into profitability.

At the same time, we need to be honest about one thing: the share count is growing. The average number of shares was 42.85 million in 2024 versus 41.19 million in 2023. This is natural for companies that use stock awards, but an investor must want profit and margin growth to trump this effect over the long term. So far, the numbers bear this out - earnings per share have risen to $1.25 in 2024 from $0.62.

Balance sheet and debt

From the metrics, the balance sheet comes out as one of the strongest parts of the story. The debt-to-equity ratio is 0.17, debt-to-assets is 0.12, and enterprise value is even below market value, a typical sign of net cash. Add to that an Altman score of 6.60, and we get a profile that is very comfortable for a fast-growing consumer company.

This is investment relevant for two reasons. First, the firm can weather short-term fluctuations in costs, input prices, or promotional pressure from chains without being forced to take crisis action. Second, when a large investment in capacity comes along, the investor does not have to worry that it will be financed by debt at any cost. Instead, a combination of cash and conservative financing can be expected.

Thus, the balance sheet risk is more indirect: if a firm invests too aggressively in capacity and demand slows for some reason, the return on investment could deteriorate. In other words, the balance sheet is strong today, but capital discipline will be tested in the years ahead.

Valuation and valuation interpretation

At first glance, the valuation looks "sobering" for a company that is growing by tens of percent and improving margins. A P/S of 1.39 means the market is paying roughly 1.4 times annual sales, which is relatively low for a brand with 28-39% growth in recent years. A P/E of 16.75, then, for a company with earnings that have doubled year-over-year doesn't look overdone - even knowing that food can be cyclical in margins due to input and promotional activity.

The second layer of valuation is about what needs to happen to turn "cheap" into expensive. For this company, it's simple: the market needs to believe that growth is not a one-time effect (egg prices, temporary demand), but a long-term shift in the category and the company's ability to grow volume without losing its premium position. Once it is confirmed that investment in capacity leads to growth without weakening margins, multiples tend to rise.

At the same time, it is fair to say that a portion of the market will always have "natural skepticism": eggs are a product where investors instinctively expect commodity behavior. Therefore, the investment thesis must be based on concrete brand evidence - distribution, speed of sale, ability to hold price and volume growth. Here, the fact that the company is already in over 24,000 stores is very important - that's evidence of scaling, not just a story.

Growth catalysts and outlook

The biggest catalyst is capacity. This company has long operated in an environment where demand for premium quality is strong, but growth is limited by how much it can deliver. That's why the plan to build Vital Crossroads in Indiana is key: it's not "just another project," but an infrastructure lever to unlock years of growth and help meet its goal of $2 billion in net sales by 2030. When the company itself says it's investing $140-150 million in capacity, it's both a promise and a commitment: it needs to capitalize on volume, not just cost.

The second catalyst is the structural growth of the premium end of the market. If the outdoor-access egg segment grows from 5.7% to 13% of the market, then even if the economy slows, the long-term trend may continue to work - people won't necessarily always buy premium, but the proportion of those who get used to it may increase. For a company that is one of the most visible brands in this segment, it's a "wind at its back" that reduces the need to push the market through marketing alone.

The third catalyst is distribution expansion and "shelf space" with existing partners. The company openly says in official materials that retail will continue to be the largest source of revenue and that it sees the runway in getting more shelf space, higher sales velocity and greater breadth of products at existing chains. This is important because the cheapest growth tends to be with existing distribution: the logistics are already running and the brand is already known.

Risks

  • The biggest operational risk is capacity expansion execution: if a new facility is delayed, becomes more expensive, or does not deliver the expected volume, it can worsen margins and the growth story.

  • Input risk: feed, logistics, animal health, and egg price fluctuations can drive margins in the short term, even for a premium brand.

  • Competitive pressure in the premium segment: if chains expand private label "premium" eggs, promotional pressure can rise and price premiums can fall.

  • Reputational risk: the premium brand is built on trust. Any dispute over the definition of 'pasture-raised' or supplier standards may have a greater impact than for an anonymous commodity.

  • Dilution: the number of shares is growing, so the investor must ensure that profit growth outweighs this effect over the long term.

Investment scenarios

Optimistic scenario

The company manages the capacity expansion without major losses and starts to increase sales volume faster without having to discount its premium position. The structural growth of the "better choices" segment continues and the brand gains additional shelf space. In such a scenario, it is realistic that sales will continue to grow in the high teens for several years in a row and that margins will remain healthy as higher volume spreads fixed costs.

Valuations could look "too cheap" in this scenario even in hindsight. If the market starts to believe that the target of 2 billion by 2030 is achievable and that profitability will move towards long-term adjusted EBITDA margin targets of 15-17%, there is usually a growing willingness to pay higher multiples. The key point is that this is not a "eggs will be expensive" story, but a story about the company selling more premium branded units.

A realistic scenario

Growth will remain strong, but will fluctuate based on capacity tilts and how the chains handle promotions. Margins may have weaker quarters as the company will invest in marketing and in developing its farm network. In such a scenario, the story is more likely to "muddle through" and the investor will get a return through a combination of earnings growth and gradual repricing, but without the euphoria.

In this scenario, the most important discipline is to hold on to earnings growth, while keeping an eye on costs and not over-investing to the point where the return on capital falls apart. A strong balance sheet and absence of debt stress plays a big role here, as the company has room to make small-scale mistakes without getting into trouble.

Negative scenario

Demand slows down before new capacity is fully in place, and the firm is forced to compete more on price and promotions. This could worsen gross margins and turn operating leverage in the opposite direction: sales would grow more slowly but costs would remain high. The biggest risk would be if it turned out that some of the growth of recent years was temporary and that customers, under budget pressure, "trade-down" (switch to cheaper alternatives) more than the company expected.

In such a scenario, the market usually pulls back multiples quickly, as the story is rewritten to "normal food company" for consumer brands when growth slows. On the positive side, the balance sheet is strong today, so a negative scenario would more likely mean a loss of momentum and valuation, not existential risk.

What to take away from the article

  • Growth has been very consistent so far: 2021-2024 revenues +133%, profitability is accelerating and operating profit has almost doubled in 2024.

  • The key driver is not the "more expensive egg" but the combination of brand and volume expansion in the fast-growing premium segment.

  • The biggest catalyst is capacity: investment in Vital Crossroads and the ability to "unlock" supply to grow towards the $2 billion target by 2030.

  • The balance sheet is very strong and the company is not being squeezed by debt, which increases the chance of getting through the investment phase without unpleasant surprises.

  • The dividend is not paying: the return is purely about growth and whether the margin shift can be sustained.

  • The biggest risk is the execution of the expansion and the potential erosion of the premium price should chains push for discounts or private labels.

  • Investors should mainly monitor: sales, gross margin, capacity investment, distribution growth and stock dilution trends.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256478-from-a-price-taker-to-a-price-setter-how-a-simple-food-product-became-a-premium-business Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-256532 Mon, 02 Mar 2026 13:24:31 +0100 BofA says that the "easy money" on AI stocks may be over, because the market is beginning to treat AI as a double-edged sword: it will lift profits for some, take away margins from others, and accelerate business obsolescence. Therefore they expect up to -15% on EURO STOXX 600 futures by Q2 2026 and warn that valuations are built on an overly optimistic earnings outlook (the market seems to be pricing in very high EPS growth for years to come).

From their point of view the main risk is that companies will have to invest heavily in AI just to keep up, but the returns may not materialize quickly. That's why they give semiconductors "underweight" (RATING) and as a "shelter" prefer defensive areas like food and beverages, telecoms and chemicals. They still believe in software, especially where a company owns the data and is deeply embedded in customers' workflows.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256532 Samuel Kim
bulios-article-256487 Mon, 02 Mar 2026 12:21:39 +0100 The war in Iran is bringing uncertainty to the U.S. stock markets. 🇮🇷/🇺🇸

But what should we actually be worried about, and how do I think this whole situation will play out?

Shares of companies that manufacture combat drones, such as $ONDS, $AVAV, $UMAC, $RCAT or even $DPRO, are rising by several percent, some even by 10% or more.

It’s important to understand the perception and significance of the Strait of Hormuz. More than 20% of the world’s oil volume flows through this strait, which will push oil prices higher.

Oil is currently trading between $70–75 per barrel. The largest investment banks warned of prices rising to as much as $120 per barrel in the event of a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. 🚢

Oil prices are rising and stocks are falling. Why? 📉

Oil prices rise in cases of political crisis, especially when the tension occurs where oil production is highly concentrated.

Stocks fall accordingly because the market fears higher diesel and gasoline prices, which would increase costs for all companies, as we saw at the start of the war in Ukraine. 🇺🇦

Which assets are considered so-called safe havens? ⚓️

Money flows into safe havens in moments of uncertainty, when the market is scared.

Long-term, safe-haven assets are those that retain their value, enjoy high investor confidence, and—most importantly—are not directly dependent on economic growth. 🚀

The most typical safe haven is gold. It has served as a store of value for thousands of years. When there is war, inflation, or panic, investors typically buy gold. 🔱

Another category is global currencies like the Swiss franc, the U.S. dollar, or the Japanese yen. The reason is a strong and stable economy combined with investor confidence.

Government bonds of strong countries—most commonly U.S., German, or Swiss government bonds. Investors trust that these countries will not default despite the crisis and will repay their debts.

And how does it work with stocks? 📊

Stocks tend to be quite volatile and often lose value in times of uncertainty. But some sectors are less volatile and more stable. For example, healthcare, since medicines are needed even during war or crises. Companies like $JNJ or $LLY. 💊

The sector that probably benefits most from war is the defense sector. Shares of companies like $LMT, $PLTR or $BA. 🛡️

Then there are other defensive equity sectors—consumer staples or utilities. ⚡️

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256487 Giulia Bianchi
bulios-article-256462 Mon, 02 Mar 2026 11:35:06 +0100 Middle East Tensions Shake Markets: These Sectors Are Surging Rising geopolitical risk in the Middle East is once again reshaping global markets. Energy stocks, tanker companies and uranium plays are attracting fresh capital as investors reposition for uncertainty. History shows that conflicts in this region often create clear sector winners. The key question now is whether this move has only just begun.

Financial markets were hit by news in late February that immediately put geopolitics back in the spotlight for investors. On 28 February, US President Donald Trump announced in a video message the launch of large-scale strikes against Iran, citing Iran's nuclear programme, missile capabilities and military infrastructure as the main targets.

The operation, which Washington and Israel are conducting under the name "Operation Epic Fury", is one of the largest coordinated military campaigns in recent years, according to the White House. At the same time, Trump has openly acknowledged that the conflict could bring American casualties and could last several weeks, which immediately put markets into heightened caution mode.

The situation escalated further after the US administration announced the elimination of key Iranian officials, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, in joint US-Israeli strikes. This move significantly increased the risk of a wider regional escalation and prompted an immediate reaction from Tehran, which responded with attacks on US targets in the region.

The first direct repercussions were not long in coming. The U.S. military confirmed the death of three soldiers and the wounding of five others in Iranian retaliation, moving the conflict from the phase of pre-emptive strikes to a more open confrontation. For the financial markets, this means one thing: geopolitical risk is once again a major factor in 2026.

And it is at moments like this that history repeatedly shows that capital is rapidly shifting to a few very specific sectors. In particular, energy, tanker transport and strategic commodities. So the next developments will not only be important for geopolitics, but also for sectoral rotation in global markets.

History shows us a fairly consistent pattern. When conflicts in the Middle East escalate, usually:

  • the price of oil rises

  • energy companies strengthen

  • tanker rates rise

  • and often the interest in uranium and energy security

Oil is the first to react

The energy market tends to be the most sensitive to geopolitical shocks, and the current situation is no exception. Investors in particular are watching closely:

  • the risk of supply disruptions

  • the security of the Strait of Hormuz (up to 20% of the world's oil flows through the Strait; if it is closed for a long time, this is a significant problem and oil prices could continue to rise significantly)

  • and the potential OPEC+ response (yesterday oil producing countries agreed to increase production by 200,000 barrels per day)

Even relatively small disruptions to the flow of oil through the Middle East have historically had a significant impact on prices. The reason is simple: the region is a key global supply hub.

But what is even more important for investors is the stock market's reaction. Energy companies tend to react to oil price movements. If oil rises by units of percent, producers' profits often rise many times faster thanks to operating leverage.

This is why capital typically moves to large integrated oil companies in times of stress.

The tanker market is starting to revive

A less watched but historically very sensitive segment is tanker shipping. As geopolitical risk increases in key shipping lanes, it grows:

  • the risk premium

  • ship insurance

  • and often the freight rates themselves

Tanker companies can thus profit even when global oil demand is not growing dramatically. Increased uncertainty in logistics is enough.

This is precisely the mechanism we have seen repeatedly in past conflicts in the region, and the first signs of a similar dynamic are beginning to emerge now.

Uranium and energy security back in play

Alongside oil, another issue is coming back to the fore: energy security. Geopolitical tensions have long fostered states' interest in diversifying their energy sources, which has historically benefited the nuclear sector.

The reason is structural. In an environment of heightened geopolitical risk, governments:

  • invest more in domestic energy sources

  • increase the emphasis on stable energy supply

  • and strengthen strategic fuel supplies

This creates a supportive environment for the entire uranium chain, which was marginalised by investors just a few years ago.

Market reaction

While the market's initial reaction to tensions in the Middle East is often short-lived and emotional, recent developments show something a little different and perhaps surprising. The US indices are trading at a loss today, the first trading day since the conflict was declared, but only around 1%.

  • The S&P 500 is writing off 0.78% this morning and the NASDAQ 1.15%. In fact, both indices have been reversing earlier losses in recent hours.

At the same time, implied volatility in commodity futures is rising and market sensitivity to any new geopolitical news from the region is increasing.

It is also important to observe that the current tensions come at a time when the global energy infrastructure is not significantly oversized. After years of relatively restrained investment in upstream and production capacity, supply remains more sensitive to any disruption. This increases the likelihood of sharper price reactions should there be a real supply shortfall or logistical constraint in key routes.

In addition to oil itself, secondary segments are also starting to move. Tanker rates are showing the first signs of strain and investors are once again eyeing companies with exposure to crude oil transportation, which have historically acted as a leveraged bet on geopolitical risk. Similarly, the energy security theme is coming back into play, fueling interest in the nuclear fuel cycle and companies connected to the uranium market.

Which stocks are in investors' sights

In an environment of growing geopolitical uncertainty, there is a relatively narrow set of potential winners that has historically been a recurring theme. Investors typically look for companies that meet at least one of three conditions: direct exposure to the oil price, leverage to tanker rates, or a structural link to energy security. It's in these segments that names like Cameco $CCJ, Exxon Mobil $XOMFrontline $FRO are now most commonly found.

Exxon Mobil $XOM is a classic big oil company with global exposure to both the upstream and downstream segments. It is this integrated model that gives the company high sensitivity to oil price increases, but also some cash flow stability. In periods of geopolitical tension, such giants are often the first destination for institutional capital because they combine liquidity, size and a relatively predictable response to commodity movements.

The price of a barrel of oil is trading 7% higher today than at the end of last week. It should be noted that this is not an extreme change for such an escalated conflict. However, the room for further growth is open and will depend on the escalation of the war's impact.

The $XOM stock itself is directly benefiting from this reaction. Their price is already trading around $160 in the premarket phase. This corresponds to a 4.6% rise and a new absolute peak.

The other frequently mentioned company that does not move in the investment mainstream is tanker operator Frontline $FRO. This segment tends to be extremely cyclical, but that is why it often reacts most strongly to geopolitical shocks. As uncertainty around shipping routes or ship insurance grows, tanker rates can jump very quickly. Yet history shows that tanker stocks tend to react with significant leverage to changes in the shipping market.

And this is borne out today in the pre-trading phase of the market. Shares of $FRO, which have already gained 73% year-to-date last week , are up less than 5% today, pushing them to the $40 per share mark. They are trading at their highest since 2012.

Canada's Cameco $CCJof the largest publicly traded uranium producers and its shares tend to be sensitive to any shift in the energy security narrative. Indeed, in an environment of geopolitical tensions, there is increasing pressure for energy diversification and stable production, which has historically fueled interest in nuclear power. Thus, Cameco is not a direct "war winner" like the oil companies, but rather a secondary beneficiary of energy policy change.

Thus, the current situation has so far had the least impact on the share price $CCJ of the companies mentioned. The price is even 1.4% below Friday's closing price today before the start of trading.

Also worth noting are the defense companies led by $LMT. This firm is up 6.6% today before the market opens, and one share is trading above $700 for the first time ever. Thus, the largest US arms company is up 41% since the beginning of the year in the form of its shares. However, other companies in the same sector are also rising, such as $RTXEuropean $RHM.DE, which has written off much of its gains in the first hours of trading.

Conclusion

The current tensions in the Middle East are once again reminding investors how quickly the priorities of financial markets can change. After a period of technology dominance, macroeconomic and geopolitical factors are coming back to the fore. These are energy security, supply stability and geopolitical risk. It is these variables that have historically been able to redirect capital between sectors in a very short period of time.

Developments to date suggest that the market is gradually starting to incorporate geopolitical risk into asset prices, but not yet to such an extent. Energy companies are showing relative strength, the tanker segment is responding to increased uncertainty in logistics and the nuclear energy theme is regaining relevance in the context of long-term energy security. Should tensions in the region persist or escalate further, this sectoral rotation could intensify.

However, the trajectory of the conflict itself remains a key factor for further developments. Markets typically react most sharply when geopolitical risk turns into a real disruption of physical commodity flows or transport routes. Until then, volatility often manifests itself primarily in sentiment, risk premia and relative sector performance.

For investors, the current environment is thus a reminder that even in the era of artificial intelligence and technological megatrends, geopolitics remains one of the most powerful drivers of markets. Moreover, events change from hour to hour, so it is important to react now and be prepared for high volatility.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256462-middle-east-tensions-shake-markets-these-sectors-are-surging Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-256418 Mon, 02 Mar 2026 04:15:06 +0100 Netflix walked away from WBD, but still collected $2.8 billion Netflix did not buy Warner Bros. Discovery, yet it still ended up with a large cash payment. The reason is simple: Netflix had an earlier agreement linked to WBD, and when WBD switched to a higher offer from Paramount Skydance, the contract triggered a termination fee. That fee was $2.8 billion.

The interesting part for investors is what this says about negotiating power. Netflix did not take on integration risk, debt risk, or regulatory fights. It stayed focused on its core business and still got paid for being a credible bidder. Reports also say the fee was covered by Paramount Skydance as part of the improved package, rather than coming out of Netflix’s pocket or requiring Netflix to build anything new.

How it became a "win" for Netflix

The basic mechanics are simple. Netflix $NFLX had a deal with Warner $WBD to buy its studio and streaming assets at a price Warner deemed fair until Paramount came in with a higher offer. Netflix refused to bid up to Paramount's level and walked away from the fight. Warner then, by contract, had to terminate the original deal - triggering the $2.8 billion breakup fee that is key to the whole puzzle.

Paramount took on that fee and paid it directly following the termination of the deal. In other words: Netflix didn't get "damages" because it was wronged, but because the deal was written so that Warner couldn't simply walk away without a price for changing partners. And because Paramount needed to convince Warner to take its offer, it paid that extra bill as well.

For Netflix, this is an extra win in two layers. The first is cash and immediate. The second is strategic: Netflix avoided taking on the integration risk, debt burden, and regulatory wrangling associated with one of the biggest media mergers of the decade - but still benefited from the escalating prices in this auction. Even analysts in the media are framing this as Netflix "jacking up the price" of the Warner war by design, and it is the new Paramount-WBD conglomerate that will have to foot the final bill to defend the financing and synergies.

Why this is an expensive joy for Paramount and Warner in turn

The winner of the acquisition now has a whole different world to deal with. The deal is worth roughly $110 billion (equity value of around $81 billion), according to the companies, and targets a close in the third quarter of 2026. Paramount and Warner are promising more than $6 billion in savings, but those synergies aren't "free" - in practice, they usually mean big changes in organization, technology and costs, which often translate into restructuring costs and political pressures in the early years.

At the same time, financing shows how tough a discipline this will be. According to Reuters, it is a combination of about $47 billion in capital from investors and $54 billion in debt obligations from banks and other partners, plus a planned rights offering. That's exactly the kind of environment where every extra billion - including the breakup fee for Netflix - adds pressure for synergies to really kick in and for the new company to be able to stabilize cash flow quickly.

That's where regulation and politics come in. In the US, there is already advance talk of a tough review in California, and there are concerns about further concentration in Hollywood, including criticism from unions. At the same time, there is commentary that Paramount has strong political ties, which may be seen as an advantage - but it also increases the visibility of the deal and the risk of it becoming a symbolic battle for media power.

What this means for investors and what to watch next

For Netflix, the bottom line is straightforward: the company takes home cash from the whole episode while confirming that it can play hardball in M&A chess without having to complete the transaction itself. The key will be how Netflix handles such one-time revenue and how the market "clears" it when looking at long-term margins and cash flow - because one-time fees are not a repeatable business, but they can improve flexibility in content investments or buybacks.

For Paramount-WBD, on the other hand, it's a test of execution. Investors will be looking at three things: how quickly the promised 6+ billion in savings start to materialize, how the regulatory process sets the terms (and potentially how expensive they will be), and how much the company's debt sensitivity to rate and ad market developments will rise post-merger. In that optic, the 2.8 billion almost seems like a detail for Netflix - but for the buyer, it's another reminder that the price of winning the Warner war is not paid in one sum, but in a series of "mandatory surcharges" along the way.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256418-netflix-walked-away-from-wbd-but-still-collected-2-8-billion Pavel Botek
bulios-article-256403 Sun, 01 Mar 2026 13:32:02 +0100 OpenAI strengthens safety defenses as Microsoft deepens strategic AI alliance OpenAI has revealed a comprehensive set of new safety measures designed to govern how its advanced generative AI systems are trained, deployed, and monitored. These “layered protections” are intended to minimize risks such as misuse, hallucinations, and unintended harmful outcomes while preserving rapid innovation momentum. The update underscores how seriously AI leaders now take ethical guardrails as both research and commercial applications scale dramatically.

Stronger AI safeguards and accountability are now core to competitive business strategy

These protections include enhanced monitoring of model outputs, stricter access controls for sensitive use cases, periodic safety audits, and improved incident response protocols. As AI models become more powerful and integrated into business workflows, safety and accountability have moved from academic concerns to central pillars of competitive strategy especially for commercial platforms powering productivity, search, and enterprise automation.

Microsoft’s strategic AI investment deepens with broader implications

OpenAI’s safety initiatives arrive in a backdrop of an evolving and deepening partnership with Microsoft. Since Microsoft made a multibillion-dollar investment in OpenAI and integrated AI models into its Azure cloud business, the alliance has helped accelerate both product innovation and enterprise adoption. Microsoft’s Azure OpenAI Service has become a cornerstone of its push to deliver AI-enhanced applications, tools, and services to corporate clients worldwide.

The partnership is synergistic: OpenAI benefits from Microsoft’s infrastructure scale and go-to-market reach, while Microsoft gains exclusive advantages in deploying cutting-edge models across productivity, security, and developer toolchains. The Microsoft-OpenAI relationship has reshaped the competitive landscape, raising the bar on what enterprise AI capabilities look like at scale.

Safety as a competitive differentiator in the AI era

While generative AI remains one of technology’s most powerful growth trajectories, safety concerns have also escalated from misinformation to model abuse and unintended societal impacts. OpenAI’s layered protections signal to enterprise clients, regulators, and the public that responsible AI deployment is not an afterthought. In doing so, OpenAI sets a benchmark for accountability in a space where ethical lapses can trigger regulatory scrutiny and brand risk.

This dynamic also creates competitive differentiation as companies that can demonstrate robust safety frameworks may earn stronger adoption among risk-averse enterprises. Microsoft in particular leverages this by embedding OpenAI’s safeguards into Azure’s enterprise compliance protocols and security posture.

Market reaction: elevated expectations for enterprise readiness

The broader market has reacted to recent developments with increased optimism about the commercial viability of advanced AI solutions. Financial markets are interpreting the heightened focus on safety as a signal that enterprise adoption may accelerate, particularly among Fortune 500 companies that prioritize governance, privacy, and compliance. Microsoft’s stock performance has reflected this narrative, benefiting from both Azure growth and its strategic alignment with the evolution of generative AI offerings.

Investors are also paying attention to how safety protocols can mitigate downside risk for long-term AI deployment, which in turn may bolster confidence in subscription-based revenue models tied to Azure and AI service usage.

Regulatory context adds urgency to safety commitments

Generative AI companies are operating under growing regulatory scrutiny globally, with governments and standards bodies pushing for clearer guardrails around data usage, explainability, and systemic risk. OpenAI’s disclosure of its layered protections may preemptively address some regulatory concerns by demonstrating transparency and proactive governance. As the European Union and U.S. regulators continue to debate AI policy frameworks, companies with robust safety postures may enjoy smoother market access and reduced exposure to punitive enforcement actions.

This regulatory backdrop influences strategic positioning for both OpenAI and Microsoft as they expand into global markets.

Microsoft’s AI service expansion amplifies the ecosystem effect

$MSFT has integrated OpenAI models across a spectrum of products including Office 365 Copilot, Dynamics 365 AI, and GitHub Copilot, driving stickiness among enterprise customers. This broad footprint amplifies the impact of OpenAI’s safety enhancements because the models underpinning these services now benefit from higher levels of oversight and governance. As businesses increasingly look to embed AI into mission-critical workflows, trust and reliability become decisive purchasing criteria.

The scaling of AI services across productivity and business process automation strengthens Microsoft’s recurring revenue base and positions it well against competitors scrambling to build comparable enterprise AI suites.

Investor implications: growth with guardrails

For investors, the twin narratives of innovation and safety governance create an intriguing risk-reward profile. On the one hand, the market opportunity for AI services is monumental, with enterprises budgeting for AI-enabled transformation and cloud providers capturing infrastructure and service revenue. On the other hand, governance failures could trigger backlash, regulatory clampdowns, or client hesitancy.

OpenAI’s layered protections help de-risk portions of this equation, enhancing confidence in the durability of AI deployments a favorable signal for long-term investors and allocators interested in tech disruption tempered by responsibility.

Looking forward: AI strategy, execution, and collaboration

As the AI landscape evolves, OpenAI and Microsoft’s alignment combining world-class model research with enterprise-ready infrastructure and safety protocols positions them at the forefront of commercial AI adoption. Traders and longer-term holders alike will monitor execution on safety commitments, integration depth across Microsoft’s product suite, and emerging policies that could shape competitive dynamics. Together, these developments suggest that the AI era is shifting from proof of concept to governed, scalable deployment and the companies that master both innovation and risk management are poised to lead the next chapter of technology growth.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256403-openai-strengthens-safety-defenses-as-microsoft-deepens-strategic-ai-alliance Bulios News Team
bulios-article-256381 Sun, 01 Mar 2026 08:30:06 +0100 Berkshire ends 2025 with softer operating profit and record cash, keeping its options wide open Berkshire’s quarterly headlines can be misleading because net income moves with stock prices in its investment portfolio. A better way to judge the business is operating profit, which reflects what the group’s companies actually earned in insurance, rail, energy, and industrial operations. In Q4 2025 that measure was weaker, with after-tax operating profit falling to $10.2 billion from $14.5 billion a year earlier.

At the same time, Berkshire enters 2026 with unusual financial strength. Reports pointed to cash near $373 billion at year-end. The company still is not buying back its own shares and remains careful with new investments. For investors, the message is straightforward: results can move up and down, but the balance sheet gives Berkshire the ability to wait and act when better opportunities appear.

How was the last quarter?

Berkshire $BRK-B reported net income of $19.199 billion in Q4 2025, but this number is misleading for Berkshire because it includes a large component of investment gains and losses. The firm says it outright in the press release: investment results in individual quarters "typically say nothing" about the performance of the business and can be confusing to less experienced investors. In Q4 2025, after-tax investment gains were $13.494 billion, but at the same time, write-downs on investments in Kraft Heinz and Occidental ($4.495 billion) squeaked into the results.

Therefore, it makes more sense to stick with operating profit, i.e. the result "excluding the impact of investment revaluation" and selected one-off items. Q4 operating profit fell to $10.200 billion from $14.527 billion a year earlier. The biggest negative contribution came from the insurance industry: insurance underwriting fell to 1.561 billion from 3.409 billion and insurance investment income fell to 3.072 billion from 4.088 billion.

Outside of insurance, the picture was mixed but less dramatic. BNSF railroads lifted operating profit to 1.347 billion (from 1.278 billion), energy (Berkshire Hathaway Energy) was slightly lower at 691 million (from 729 million) and industrials, services and retail rose to 3.370 billion (from 3.262 billion). In other words: "real businesses" held up, but insurance companies didn't generate as strong a surplus this time as last year, and that dragged the entire quarter down.

Top points of the results (quarter + full year)

  • Q4 after-tax operating profit: $10.2 billion (up from $14.5 billion).

  • Net income attributable to shareholders in Q4: $19.2 billion (virtually unchanged).

  • Q4 includes, among other things, a $4.5 billion after-tax write-down of the value of investments in Kraft Heinz and Occidental combined.

  • Full-year 2025 operating profit: $44.5 billion (down from 2024).

  • Full-year net income 2025: $67.0 billion (down from 2024).

  • Insurance "float" at the end of 2025: about $176 billion (+$5 billion year-over-year).

  • Full presentation with results.

Management commentary

"The amount of investment gains (losses) in a given quarter is typically meaningless and provides earnings per share data that can be very misleading to investors who have little or no knowledge of accounting rules."

From the letter to shareholders: Management positions Warren Buffett as a key pillar of Berkshire's entire investment identity. It recalls that his "engine" was not just stock selection, but building the insurance business and working with the so-called insurance "float," the capital Berkshire holds through insurance and can invest over the long term. At the same time, the text works with comparisons to baseball legend Ted Williams to emphasize the style of decision-making: patience, picking the right opportunities, and then making a decisive move when the "right pitch" comes along.

Long-term results

At Berkshire, the long-term view is always about what is "corporate performance" and what is "accounting noise" from the stock portfolio. That's why the company itself tries to pitch operating earnings, not net income, to investors. In the 2025 numbers, the difference is starkly visible: full-year net income of $66.968 billion carries investment gains of $30.737 billion, but also write-downs on selected investments of $8.255 billion. The operating profit of 44.486 billion thus comes out as a more "realistic" picture of how the core group fared.

The structure of operating profit for the full year 2025 shows where Berkshire is earning steadily: insurance investment income 12.513 billion, insurance underwriting 7.258 billion, BNSF 5.476 billion, energy 3.979 billion and industrial/services/retail 13.647 billion. If an investor wants to understand Berkshire, this is the "engine map" that is more important than quarterly swings in net income.

The other long-term axis is capital discipline. The public summaries show that Berkshire continues to do no buybacks of its own stock despite its huge cash hoard and remains a net seller of stocks in the portfolio, consistent with a "don't buy at any price" philosophy. This is a factor that may hinder short-term performance against the market, but over the long term it is a mechanism that protects against overshooting in an expensive market.

Shareholding structure

Berkshire is a distinctly institutional title: the institution holds roughly 67% of the stock and the largest holders are Vanguard, BlackRock, State Street and Geode. For the average investor, the conclusion is simple: this is a highly liquid and "fund-owned" stock where sentiment is driven more by the market's view of value, interest rates and investing discipline than by short-term news.

Analysts' expectations

Berkshire's analyst coverage tends to be surprisingly limited and target prices vary across sources. For example, Investing.com lists a consensus "buy" with an average target price of about $526 for the Class B stock, while MarketWatch mentions an average target price of about $533 and an average recommendation of "hold." It's fair to read this to mean that Berkshire's analytical models differ mainly in their work with portfolio value, insurance revenue expectations, and how the market values the giant cash.

Fair Price

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256381-berkshire-ends-2025-with-softer-operating-profit-and-record-cash-keeping-its-options-wide-open Pavel Botek
bulios-article-256392 Sat, 28 Feb 2026 21:38:10 +0100 SpaceX IPO valued at up to $1.75 trillion as early as March?

According to the latest information, we could actually see another of Musk’s companies go public.

SpaceX plans to file for an IPO in March. The actual listing is therefore estimated for the beginning or during the summer months.

The IPO could raise up to $50 billion for the company. At that size, SpaceX would surpass the current record-holder, Saudi Aramco, which raised $29 billion when it went public in 2019.

That would correspond to the sale of roughly 3% of the company's shares.

At that valuation, SpaceX would also be the sixth-largest company on the exchange. Based on current values, only the companies $AAPL, $NVDA, $MSFT, $AMZN and $GOOG would be larger.

Would you invest in this before the IPO?

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256392 Oliver Wilson
bulios-article-256366 Sat, 28 Feb 2026 16:13:09 +0100 Buffett’s bold Oracle bet ignites Wall Street buzz: is this the final masterstroke of a legendary investor? Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway has once again made headlines with a significant addition to its Oracle stake, prompting fresh investor interest in one of tech’s most enduring enterprise software names. According to recent reports, the conglomerate boosted its Oracle holdings for a third consecutive quarter, raising questions about whether this might be Buffett’s final major stock move before shifting focus for a new generation of allocators. The narrative captures the imagination because Buffett historically cautious on traditional technology stocks has been steadily increasing exposure to Oracle at scale, and this week’s activity reinforces that strategic bet.

Oracle’s cloud evolution and enterprise software dominance

Oracle has transformed dramatically over the past decade, shifting from legacy on-premise database software to a cloud-centric enterprise platform provider. Revenues from $ORCL Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) and SaaS applications have grown sequentially, contributing to stronger recurring revenue streams that appeal to value-oriented investors such as Berkshire Hathaway. Analysts note that Oracle’s multi-cloud strategy with a focus on enterprise applications, autonomous databases, and hybrid cloud deployments has gradually shifted market perception from aging legacy provider to modernized enterprise tech contender.

This evolution aligns with Buffett’s preference for stable earnings, repeat customers, and predictable free cash flow, and suggests that Oracle now fits more comfortably within Berkshire’s traditional investment philosophy despite its tech identity.

Buffett’s tech exposure: from Apple to Oracle

Buffett’s Oracle investment is often discussed in the broader context of his technology holdings. $AAPL remains Berkshire’s largest public equity position by far, and it has been one of the best-performing tech stocks in the S&P 500. The addition of Oracle signals that Buffett sees value in enterprise software and database solutions areas that historically offered recurring revenue and pricing power even in competitive markets.

Some analysts view Oracle’s recurring revenue base and large enterprise footprint as reminiscent of the economic moats that Buffett has historically prized. This perspective coupling hardware-agnostic software dominance with predictable cash flows helps explain why $BRK-B continues to build its stake as markets digest broader tech valuations. For context on Buffett’s Apple position and philosophy, see ongoing analysis.

Market reaction: valuation meets value investing blueprint

The market’s response to Berkshire’s Oracle accumulation has been notable. Oracle’s share price rebounded on the news, reflecting investor confidence that a marquee institutional buyer sees long-term upside. This contrasts with recent sentiment turning cautious around many high-growth software names that lack predictable earnings paths. Oracle’s stable earnings and strategic clarity particularly in cloud migration scenarios have positioned it as a relative safe-harbor among enterprise tech equities.

Analysts emphasize that while Oracle’s growth rate may not rival high-flying SaaS peers, its profitability and cash flow profiles make it attractive in a macro environment where investors are increasingly prioritizing earnings stability and quality over unbridled expansion.

Oracle’s monetary discipline and shareholder returns

Part of Oracle’s appeal to value investors like Buffett is its demonstrated capital allocation discipline. The company has consistently returned cash to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases, supporting total return even when multiples contract in broader markets. In contrast to some software firms that reinvest all free cash flow into aggressive expansion, Oracle’s blend of capex discipline and shareholder returns aligns with traditional value investment doctrines.

Combined with the company’s strategic cloud investments, this financial stewardship gives long-term holders a compelling earnings and income story a blend of growth and return that can underpin durable returns over economic cycles.

Why Berkshire may view Oracle as a “final tech anchor”

One intriguing angle emerging from this week’s reports is how Oracle might serve as a final foundational tech holding for Buffett. After decades of avoiding traditional tech, Berkshire has embraced Apple’s consumer ecosystem prominence and now appears to be anchoring part of its enterprise software exposure with Oracle’s enduring business lines.

This does not necessarily imply Buffett is moving aggressively into broader tech rather that he may be focusing selectively on companies that combine technological relevance with durable earnings power and strong competitive positioning.

Long-term investment themes resonate amid market uncertainty

Oracle’s current narrative captures several long-term investing themes that have resonated with institutional buyers: predictable subscription revenue, deep enterprise adoption, recurring license agreements, and a transition to cloud that enhances customer stickiness. In markets where macro uncertainty and valuation skepticism have dampened enthusiasm for speculative tech bets, Oracle’s profile offers clarity and financial consistency.

While not immune to cyclical pressures, its business model demonstrates resilience even during periods of slowed IT spending, making it a preferred pick for investors seeking exposure to software growth without excessive volatility.

What this means for investors watching the Buffett blueprint

Warren Buffett’s expanded Oracle position underscores a broader investment axiom: durability and clarity of earnings can outweigh headline growth. For patient investors, Oracle represents a compelling intersection of technology adoption and value investment principles. Whether this is truly Buffett’s “final major tech investment” or simply the next chapter in his evolving portfolio, the market’s reaction and broader context highlight why Oracle’s narrative has shifted from legacy software provider to strategic enterprise growth story.

Going forward, investors will be watching not only Oracle’s execution on cloud expansion but also how this stake influences Berkshire’s overall tech allocation strategy particularly as new AI-related capex waves and macro conditions continue to reshape risk and return dynamics across sectors.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/256366-buffett-s-bold-oracle-bet-ignites-wall-street-buzz-is-this-the-final-masterstroke-of-a-legendary-investor Bulios News Team