Bulios Welcome to Bulios! Unique investing platform combining exclusive content and community. https://bulios.com/ en bulios-article-259326 Mon, 23 Mar 2026 16:15:21 +0100 Alphabet's Wing is coming home to Silicon Valley — and bringing a coast-to-coast expansion with it Wing, Alphabet's drone delivery subsidiary, announced on March 23 that it will begin residential deliveries in the San Francisco Bay Area in 2026, the first time the service will operate in its own backyard since the project launched as part of Alphabet's X "Moonshot Factory" in 2012. Wing did not specify an exact launch date or target cities within the Bay Area, but the announcement arrived alongside a major national expansion: the company is rolling out to 150 additional Walmart stores in 2026, including Los Angeles, St. Louis, Miami and Cincinnati, with a target of 270 locations serving over 40 million Americans by 2027, up from roughly 27 active stores today.

The Bay Area move has both symbolic and strategic weight. Wing has now completed more than 750,000 deliveries globally, operates through partnerships with Walmart and DoorDash, delivers items in as little as 30 minutes and has extended service hours to nighttime in some markets using infrared navigation. Competing directly in the heartland of Silicon Valley, where Amazon is also scaling drone delivery, signals that Alphabet is ready to translate Wing from a proof-of-concept into a logistics platform with real commercial scale — extending the company's ecosystem into the physical world that Amazon, FedEx and UPS have long dominated.

Why the Bay Area

The San Francisco Bay Area is not a random choice. It's one of the most densely populated and technologically advanced places in the U.S., where consumers are accustomed to fast delivery and willing to test new services before the rest of the country. It's also an environment Wing is familiar with - the company not only started here, but starting in 2024, DoorDash is building a logistics infrastructure in the Mission District designed specifically to work with drone systems.

The Bay Area also presents a regulatory challenge. Dense developments, wind corridors from the Bay, high-rise buildings and complex airspace all place high demands on navigation systems. Successfully navigating this environment would open the door for Alphabet $GOOG to dozens of other U.S. metropolitan areas where, until now, drone delivery has hit technical limits.

How delivery works

Wing drones are lightweight, fully automated machines designed to fly directly to a customer's home. Key parameters:

  • Carrying capacity of approximately 2.3kg - ideal for food, medicine, smaller consumer goods or restaurant food.

  • Travel speed up to 105 km/h.

  • Range of approximately 10 kilometres from the dispensing point.

  • Standard delivery time within 30 minutes of order.

The drone does not land - it lowers the delivery on a rope directly into the garden or front of the house, bypassing obstacles such as fences, cars or pets. The whole process is autonomous and does not require a courier.

Partners

Alphabet Wing in the US works with two key players covering different market segments:

  • Walmart $WMT - groceries, over-the-counter drugs, cleaning products and household consumables. In January 2026, Alphabet announced the expansion of the collaboration to 150 additional Walmart stores. In total, the network is expected to cover over 270 locations by 2027, potentially reaching up to 40 million customers across the US.

  • DoorDash $DASH - delivering prepared meals from restaurant chains like Wendy's, Panera Bread or other platform partners. Here, Wing acts as the logistics engine, while DoorDash handles the ordering system and customer relationship.

The combination of the two partners gives Alphabet access to two of the largest quick delivery categories in the U.S. - groceries and food delivery - without having to build its own customer platform from scratch.

Innovation: drone + ground robot

One of the most interesting experiments Wing is currently testing is a collaboration with Serve Robotics, a specialist in autonomous ground delivery robots. The principle is simple but ground-breaking: a Serve ground robot picks up the food directly from the restaurant, moves to a predetermined location and hands the delivery to a Wing drone, which delivers it to the customer by air.

This is the first real connection of two autonomous delivery layers in a commercial operation - from the curb to the air. In doing so, Alphabet is solving one of the key problems in drone logistics: how to get a shipment from source to drone without involving human labor. If this integration proves successful in the Bay Area, it opens the way to fully automated delivery corridors in cities.

What this means for Alphabet and its investors

Wing is proof that Alphabet can take "moonshot" projects into real business - the same path that Waymo took in autonomous driving. Division X, from which Wing emerged, has historically attracted criticism for the high costs and unclear commercial future of its projects. Wing is beginning to refute this criticism with numbers.

The drone delivery market is estimated to be worth about $1.5 billion in 2026, and analysts reckon it could reach between $7 billion and $27 billion by 2031, depending on the pace of regulatory easing. Alphabet holds the technological edge in this segment thanks to integration with Google's AI infrastructure, advanced computer navigation and flight in complex environments - exactly what the dense Bay Area development will test to the fullest.

For now, Wing doesn't represent a standalone fundamental valuation factor for Alphabet stock, but it reinforces a broader narrative: Alphabet is not just a search-dependent advertising firm, but a tech conglomerate capable of building the physical infrastructure of the future. At a time when investors are watching Alphabet diversify its revenue beyond advertising, every Wing success story reinforces this narrative.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/259326-alphabet-s-wing-is-coming-home-to-silicon-valley-and-bringing-a-coast-to-coast-expansion-with-it Pavel Botek
bulios-article-259296 Mon, 23 Mar 2026 15:10:07 +0100 Red Cat Holdings: can 161% revenue growth and an Army contract become a durable defense business? Red Cat Holdings (Nasdaq: RCAT) reported 2025 full year revenue of 40.7 million dollars, a 161 percent increase year on year, with the fourth quarter alone jumping 1,985 percent to 26.2 million dollars, driven by the ramp of its U.S. Army Short Range Reconnaissance programme win and rising international demand for its Black Widow drone systems. The company more than quintupled its production footprint to 254,000 square feet across three facilities, received its first NATO NSPA order for 100 Black Widow drones, secured contracts with two Asia-Pacific allies, beat out Teledyne FLIR for the SRR programme, and launched the FANG FPV combat drone to address attack drone demand generated by the Pentagon's Drone Dominance initiative.

The financial picture is mixed. Cash rose sharply to 167.9 million dollars after 234 million in equity issuances, giving Red Cat runway to keep scaling, but the net loss widened to 72.1 million dollars and the accumulated deficit stands at 196.8 million with no formal 2026 guidance provided, contributing to shares falling roughly 11 percent after the earnings release. About 73 percent of 2025 revenue came from U.S. government contracts, meaning concentration risk is high and any delay or repricing in the SRR programme or Drone Dominance competition could significantly shift the near term revenue picture in either direction.

Top points of the analysis

  • The company's 2025 revenue of $40.7 million, up 161% year-on-year, is driven primarily by a massive expansion of Army orders for the Black Widow system and its first international orders through the NATO catalogue.

  • The company won the US Army's key short-range drone tender in November 2024, displacing the then-dominant Skydio - the July 2025 contract has been progressively expanded to around $35 million and has become the backbone of current revenues.

  • The Black Widow system was added to the NATO purchasing agency catalogue in September 2025, opening the way for orders from allied militaries without the need for individual tenders - the first order for 100 units through NATO came later that year.

  • The company is still loss-making: the net loss for 2025 is approximately $72 million, gross margins are in negative territory, and the accumulated deficit has exceeded $196 million, with management warning that additional capital may be needed.

  • The valuation is aggressive - a market value of about $1.4 billion on $40 million in sales implies a market value to sales ratio of over 33, a bet purely on future growth and the company's ability to turn government contracts into real profitability.

  • Regulatory winds are blowing in the sails: a federal law restricting the use of drones with foreign components (mainly of Chinese origin) took effect immediately upon its promulgation, significantly narrowing the pool of eligible contractors for U.S. government and security contracts.

Company introduction

Red Cat Holdings $RCAT is a U.S. technology firm based in San Juan, Puerto Rico that focuses on the development and manufacture of advanced drones and autonomous systems for military and security applications. The company was formed as a holding structure and through successive acquisitions has assembled a portfolio of specialised technology companies - key ones being Teal Drones as the main manufacturing division, BlueOps specialising in maritime autonomous systems and FlightWave focused on commercial and reconnaissance applications. With 115 employees, it is a small company, but one that has expanded its manufacturing footprint dramatically in the last two years - operating a total of 254,000 square feet of manufacturing and development space at the end of 2025, up from a fraction of that capacity at the start of 2024.

The company is transforming from a research-oriented startup structure to an industrial defense manufacturer starting in 2024 - and this transformation is both the biggest opportunity and the biggest risk. On the one hand, military contracts provide a clear revenue stream and validate that products work under real military deployment conditions. On the other hand, the transition from prototypes to mass production is costly, technically challenging, and historically many promising defense startups have failed in this transition.

CEO

The company is led by Jeffrey Thompson, founder and CEO. Thompson built Red Cat from the ground up, took it through the tough covid years, several pivots of business strategy, and ultimately transformed it into the form that put it in the spotlight of the U.S. Department of Defense. His approach combines technological enthusiasm with the pragmatism of a government customer - the company, under his leadership, gambled that it would design drones based directly on feedback from soldiers in the field, not on what looks good in a lab environment. The result is the Black Widow, a system designed to be operated by a soldier without extensive technical training, and that was exactly one of the key arguments in winning the Army's tender.

The company states: Thompson is an experienced serial entrepreneur (he has founded several successful startups) in the technology space who has had several successful company stories - from startup to sale or going public. He was behind the creation of EdgeNet, a privately held Internet service provider, and co-founded Towerstream, a wireless carrier that went public on the NASDAQ in 2007. Then in 2018, he founded Red Cat, which focuses on the rapidly growing market for drones - both commercial and recreational.

Products - what makes them interesting and why the military buys them

Red Cat isn't a one-product company - it's building a portfolio of systems for different deployment scenarios, each targeting a specific military need.

The Black Widow is the company's flagship product and the reason Red Cat is even being talked about today. It is a small unmanned reconnaissance system weighing less than 1.4 kilograms, capable of flying for over 45 minutes, and equipped with electro-optical and infrared sensors for day and night operations. The key advantage is not the technical performance alone, but a combination of factors: the system is entirely US-origin (no Chinese components), certified for government use, easy to transport and operate in the field, and does not require specialized technical training for the operator. It was selected by the Army as one of two standardized contractors under the Short Survey Program, which assured the company of recurring government contracts for the longer term.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/DYjTRZ1GS_k?rel=1

The FANG is a new type of FPV category drone - it is a fast, cheap and easily replaceable system designed for attack or ambush operations, inspired by the experience of the war in Ukraine where this type of drone proved highly effective and difficult to resist. The company introduced it in 2025 and immediately partnered with AeroVironment, one of the largest US military drone manufacturers, to integrate the FANG system as a payload into its P550 platform. This is a key step - FANG is moving from being a standalone product to being part of a broader ecosystem where major players in the defence industry have chosen Red Cat as their preferred partner for this category.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/7-k0YqkxfCQ?rel=1

Maritime autonomous vessels are the youngest area of development. At Innovation Day in February 2026, the company live demonstrated an unmanned vessel working with a Black Widow drone in an operational scenario, demonstrating the ability to coordinate air and maritime elements in a single mission. The move is strategically important: it expands the firm's addressable market beyond purely airborne operations and continues a global trend where naval forces are looking to autonomous systems for reconnaissance, coastal surveillance and shallow-water operations.

Who's buying, who can buy and how big is the market

Red Cat's customers today are overwhelmingly government entities. Approximately 73% of 2025 sales came from U.S. government contracts, primarily from the military. The key contract is an expanded Black Widow production program for the U.S. Army worth approximately $35 million, and the company is actively competing in the next round of the Gauntlet, the outcome of which could significantly increase future orders.

International customers are beginning to form the second mainstay of sales. The company received an order for Black Widow systems from an allied military in the Asia-Pacific region in December 2025 - the specific country was not disclosed for security reasons - and this is the second customer from that region in short order. The inclusion in the NATO purchasing agency's catalogue in September 2025 is groundbreaking from a commercial perspective: instead of individual tenders in each member country, allies can simply order through a central catalogue, dramatically reducing the time from interest to order.

Potential customers include the full spectrum of government and security entities. On the military side, it is the militaries of allied countries that are looking for certified and safe drones without Chinese components - in addition, the FY25 NDAA prohibits them from purchasing Chinese systems in many cases, narrowing the pool of eligible suppliers significantly. On the security side, these include border guards, police and emergency services looking for drone systems for terrain reconnaissance, personnel searches or critical infrastructure security. The company does not yet operate much in this segment, but the technology and certifications are transferable.

Market and regulatory opportunity

The global market for short- and medium-range military drones is growing faster than the overall defense budget, driven by the experience in Ukraine, where unmanned systems have become a standard part of infantry weaponry, and the growing demand for low-cost, easily replenishable aerial reconnaissance assets. The United States is the largest market, but its demand goes hand in hand with alliance commitments - what the military standardizes for its own use inevitably spreads to the armaments of allies seeking interoperability.

The regulatory environment has become a direct business catalyst. A law passed as part of the 2025 defence budget restricts US government entities from purchasing drones containing components from manufacturers originating in countries designated as security threats, in practice primarily Chinese components. Implementation of this law began immediately, eliminating a number of previously popular systems from government procurement - and Red Cat, as a company with an entirely American manufacturing chain, is one of the few able to fill that gap. As a result, analysts talk about the firm being not just a beneficiary of organic market growth, but a beneficiary of a regulatory "market turnaround" where the supply of eligible suppliers is declining faster than new capacity is being built.

Financial performance - growth without profit

Red Cat's numbers are a combination of exciting and disturbing. Revenues grew 161% to $40.7 million in 2025, with record results in the fourth quarter alone and a full-year growth rate of an astonishing 646% year-over-year in the third quarter thanks to the ramp-up of the Army contract. Production capacity grew 520%, the company expanded three manufacturing facilities, and total square footage reached 254,000 square feet.

On the profitability side, the picture is not so favorable. Gross margins are negative, the company is literally selling below cost of production, while massive spending on research, development and scaling up production pushed the operating loss to nearly $39 million for the most recent reporting period. The cumulative deficit has exceeded $196 million, and management explicitly states in the risk factors that the company may need additional external financing. That's a reality that investors need to consider as much a part of the story as exciting contracts and media attention.

Free cash flow is zero, margins are negative, and return on assets is deep in the red. These metrics are not unusual for a pre-profit company in an expansion phase, but they tell a clear story: if the negative gross margin can be reversed and operating costs brought under control, the company will be a different investment than it is today. Analysts estimate that if revenue growth rates are maintained and gross margins normalize to industry levels of around 20% to 30%, the firm could reach operating profitability sometime in the 2027 horizon, but that depends on continuity of government contracts and success in other tenders.

Balance sheet and liquidity

Paradoxically, Red Cat's current strength is liquidity. A quick ratio of over 11 and a cash ratio of over 11 tell us that the company has significantly more liquidity than its current liabilities. An Altman Z-score of over 66 is statistically high in the safe zone - not because the firm is operationally sound, but because it holds a large proportion of cash and equity relative to liabilities. The firm has likely done a capital raise in the last two years that makes the balance sheet look healthy, but that liquidity will be gradually consumed to cover operating losses if sales and margins don't grow fast enough.

Debt levels are very low - a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.05 and minimal long-term debt tell us that the company is not yet financing itself with external capital to any great extent. Interest coverage of over 10 times confirms that the existing debt burden is not a problem. Thus, the main financial risk is not the debt spiral but the gradual depletion of the cash reserve if profitability cannot be achieved within a reasonable time horizon.

Valuation - the story of the future at today's price

Red Cat trades on a market value to sales ratio of over 33, a market value of over $1.4 billion on sales of $40 million - a valuation that reflects not today's business but a speculation on what the business can be. At today's valuation, the investor is paying on the assumption that the business will become a significantly larger and profitable supplier to the U.S. and allied militaries, that it will win more tenders, that international expansion through the NATO catalog will generate recurring revenues, and that gross margins will move into positive numbers.

If these assumptions come to pass and sales reach, say, $150 million to $200 million over two years with a gross margin of around 20%, the stock could look cheap in hindsight at current valuations. But if contracts hit delays, the Gauntlet tender process goes badly wrong or margins don't move out of negative numbers, today's market value will be difficult to defend.

What might surprise the company and what it plans to do

The biggest potential catalyst is the outcome of the Gauntlet tender. This is an expansion of the Army's short reconnaissance program into more mass production, and the winner or winners will win contracts worth potentially hundreds of times the current volume. Red Cat is actively competing in this competition and has the advantage of an existing supplier and a proven product, but the outcome is uncertain and competition is fierce.

The partnership with AeroVironment $AVAV to integrate the FANG system into the P550 platform is a second strong catalyst. AeroVironment is one of the most respected U.S. military drone manufacturers with extensive government relationships, and the AeroVironment contract brings Red Cat legitimacy, distribution and access to a customer base it would have spent years building its way to independently. If this collaboration grows into recurring contracts, the FANG platform could create a second significant revenue stream alongside Black Widow.

Expansion into maritime autonomous systems is the third pillar of the plan. The company is investing in the development of unmanned vessels and their integration with airborne systems, targeting a completely new market where the US Army and allied navies are only in the early stages of defining requirements and standards. Those who enter early with a proven product can have a big advantage in standards development - and Red Cat, with a live demonstration in February 2026, has done just that.

Risks that cannot be overlooked

For all the exciting dynamics, Red Cat has downsides that cannot be downplayed. Independent research in 2025 warned that the company may have misled investors about the true size of the military contract and that some components may have been sourced from Chinese production - just at a time when the company is presenting its "Americanness" as a key advantage. The company has denied these allegations, but it is a warning signal to investors that management communications need to be monitored with a critical eye.

Revenue concentration is another risk - 73% of revenue from a single customer (the US government) means that a change in defence budget priorities, a delay in approval or the loss of a single programme would leave a significant mark on the firm's results. The company is aware of this risk and international expansion through the NATO catalogue is a direct response to the need to diversify the customer base, but this diversification is just beginning.

Investment scenarios

In a positive scenario, the company wins or succeeds in the Gauntlet programme, military orders expand to volumes in the hundreds of millions of dollars, international orders through the NATO catalogue become regular and gross margins reach 20% as production scales. Revenues in 2027 exceed $200 million, the company is approaching operating profitability, and investors are willing to pay a multiple in the 4 to 6 times revenue range for a proven defense industrial business - in such a scenario, today's share price may look like a favorable entry point.

In the base case scenario, the company is growing, but at a slower rate. The Gauntlet delivers tighter-than-expected orders, international expansion runs into bureaucratic delays, and gross margins hover slightly above zero. Revenues in 2027 are around $100 million to $120 million, the company remains loss-making on a net income basis, but the operating loss is narrowing and the balance sheet is still solid. Valuation is difficult to justify in such a world and the stock is likely to oscillate without a significant move up or down.

A negative scenario occurs if the company loses a key tender, military contracts hit defense budget cuts, or the transition from prototypes to mass production proves more costly and slower than management planned. In such an environment, liquidity would begin to decline significantly, the need for a new capital raise would dilute shareholders, and a market value of over a billion dollars would be difficult to defend on sales in the tens of millions with no prospect of profit.

What to take away from the article

  • Red Cat is a pure bet on the future growth of the defense drone business, not on today's fundamentals - the company is growing at 161% per year, but is selling below cost of production, does not have a positive gross margin, and has an accumulated loss of over $196 million.

  • The key asset is not today's profits, but its position in the military ecosystem: a winner in the U.S. Army's short reconnaissance program, inclusion in the NATO catalog, a partnership with AeroVironment, and an expanding portfolio of systems for air and naval operations create a business position that takes years to build.

  • A regulatory law restricting Chinese parts in U.S. government drones is a direct catalyst - and a company with an all-American manufacturing chain is one of the few eligible suppliers in an environment where demand exceeds the available supply of certified products.

  • A valuation of over 33 times sales has no support in today's numbers - it's speculation on the company becoming an industrial manufacturer with billions in sales and solid margins, and that speculation may or may not come to fruition.

  • For an investor with a high risk tolerance and a long horizon, Red Cat may be an interesting headline in the defense and autonomous systems space - but it requires ongoing monitoring of tender results, gross margin trends and cash position as the most important indicators of progress.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/259296-red-cat-holdings-can-161-revenue-growth-and-an-army-contract-become-a-durable-defense-business Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-259305 Mon, 23 Mar 2026 14:53:30 +0100 56 minutes, 3 trillion dollars: how one Trump post flipped the markets and what it says about the world we invest in

A Monday morning that will go down in the textbooks

Monday, March 23, 2026. 7:04 a.m. Trump publishes a post on Truth Social: the US and Iran are holding productive talks. Strikes on Iranian power plants are postponed for five days.

Within six minutes, by 7:10, the S&P 500 had jumped 240 points. The market capitalization of US equities rose by $2 trillion.

Twenty-seven minutes later Iran denied everything. “No contact with the US took place,” Tehran says.

By 8:00 the S&P 500 had erased half of the gain. $1 trillion in market cap disappeared.

Total swing: $3 trillion in 56 minutes. Just in the S&P 500.

This is not a normal market. This is a market that lives and dies by every post from one man.

What actually happened and why it matters

A minute-by-minute chronology of the wildest morning of the year

The weekend brought an escalation that terrified markets. Trump gave Iran a 48-hour ultimatum—open the Strait of Hormuz or face strikes on your power plants. Iran responded with fresh attacks in the Persian Gulf. Monday morning opened with futures in the red, Asian markets falling, and the KOSPI halting trading.

And then the post came.

7:04: Trump writes about “productive talks” and postpones strikes for five days. Futures explode. Oil collapses from $113 to below $84 per barrel in a single move. S&P 500 futures +240 points, market cap +$2 trillion in six minutes.

7:31: Iran denies the post. “No contact with the US took place.” Oil rebounds. Markets give back some gains.

8:00: S&P 500 is 120 points below the peak of Monday’s move. $1 trillion in market cap gone.

End result for the day: markets still closed significantly higher than on Friday. Dow futures +2.3%, S&P 500 futures +2%, Nasdaq futures +1.9%. The report of postponed strikes was enough to overpower Iran’s denial.

Why oil fell below $84 and what it means

Oil is currently the best barometer of geopolitical tension. Brent traded above $113 before Trump’s post, a historically extreme level. After the post it immediately fell by roughly $29, more than 25%.

That is a huge move in a single asset from a single social-media post.

But note: Goldman Sachs simultaneously raised its oil price targets. Analysts expect Brent to average $85 per barrel in 2026, higher than before the war. Short-term relief hasn’t changed the structural story. Hormuz remains potentially unstable. Iran denies talks. Five days is a very short pause.

Stagflation risk: bonds lost $2.5 trillion

While equities grabbed dramatic attention, an even more frightening number came from the bond market. Since the start of the war with Iran, bonds have lost $2.5 trillion in value—a move analysts compare to 2022.

Stagflation, a combination of high inflation and weak growth, is the worst scenario for central banks. The Fed can’t cut rates because of inflation. But it can’t raise them without choking the economy. It’s a trap with no clean solution.

Gold: the biggest weekly drop since 1983

The paradox of this Monday: at the moment it seemed war tensions were easing, gold plunged more than 4%, with the GLD gold ETF down over 3%. Gold futures traded around $4,388 per ounce.

Why? Because gold had been the main safe haven against geopolitical risk in recent weeks. Once even a hint of de-escalation arrived, investors started selling gold and moving capital back into risk assets. The weekly drop in gold was the largest since 1983.

The social-media market and what it means for me as an investor

This Monday taught me, or rather reminded me, one of the most important investment lessons of recent years.

$3 trillion in 56 minutes. One Truth Social post = one older gentleman with a phone.

This is not a market where the best fundamental analysis always wins. It’s a market where the winner is the one who correctly guesses what Trump will write next. That’s not a strategy, it’s roulette.

What does this mean for me practically? Two things.

1) In an environment of such volatility, positions that require minute-by-minute monitoring are unsustainable. A portfolio built for peace of mind has a huge advantage in this environment. Quality companies with real profits will survive every geopolitical tweet.

2) This volatility creates opportunities—but only for those who are prepared. If you know what you want to buy and at what price, these crazes are your best friend. If you react emotionally to every move, they are your worst enemy.

The social-media market is the new reality. Either you learn to operate in it, or it will continuously surprise you.

What to take away and what to watch out for?

Five days is not peace - Postponing strikes for five days is a diplomatic maneuver, not a structural shift. Iran denies talks. Hormuz remains problematic. The geopolitical premium in oil’s price hasn’t disappeared—just temporarily retreated. If talks don’t progress, we’ll be back to square one in a week.

Bonds are sending a more serious signal than stocks - A $2.5 trillion loss in bonds over the duration of the conflict indicates that professional investors still believe in a stagflation scenario. The equity rally may be short-lived; the bond market is playing a longer game.

Volatility is opportunity, not the enemy - If you have a list of quality companies you want to own at the right price, these environments are your best friends. That’s when assets trade at discounts you wouldn’t see in normal times.

$3 trillion in 56 minutes. The biggest weekly drop in gold since 1983. Bonds down $2.5 trillion. And five days of uncertainty ahead.

This Monday showed what world we invest in today. It’s a world where fundamentals still matter, but where a single social-media post can be stronger than the quarterly results of hundreds of companies combined.

How do you personally react to such swings?

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https://en.bulios.com/status/259305 Jonas Müller
bulios-article-259232 Mon, 23 Mar 2026 10:41:30 +0100 Wall Street's Least Wanted: 4 Billion-Dollar Companies Analysts Are Telling You to Dump A "Sell" rating from Wall Street analysts is rare, and that's exactly what makes it so significant. When the majority of the Street leans bullish, the few companies that earn a consensus sell recommendation are sending a loud warning signal. We've identified four firms, each valued above one billion dollars, that currently sit at the very bottom of analyst sentiment. From shrinking margins to broken growth stories, these aren't obscure penny stocks but well-known names where structural cracks have become too deep to ignore. Here's why Wall Street is walking away from them.

In the stock market, investors naturally focus on companies with a "Buy" or "Strong Buy" recommendation. But they pay much less attention to the opposite end of the spectrum, companies that analysts actively recommend selling. Yet these are the very titles that can provide investors with valuable lessons about what fundamental issues can significantly damage an investment thesis, even for companies with billions of dollars in market capitalization.

"Sell" recommendations are still relatively rare on Wall Street. Most analysts lean toward neutral or positive ratings because negative ratings can damage relationships with corporate management and make access to information difficult. Thus, if a company is in the "Sell" or even "Strong Sell" category , it usually signals that analysts have identified fundamental structural risks that outweigh any potential improvement.

Moreover, the market environment this year has not been friendly to companies with uncertain futures. Higher interest rates, geopolitical tensions and a shift of capital towards quality and profitable companies are creating a mix in which the market is less tolerant of weak fundamentals. Companies that fail to generate stable cash flow or face structural problems in their business model are coming under increasing pressure.

Graham Holdings $GHC

Profile and business model

Graham Holdings is a diversified holding company that was formed from the former The Washington Post Company. The company now operates in the areas of education through Kaplan, television broadcasting, healthcare, manufacturing, and automobile dealerships. The market capitalization is around $4.7 billion and the stock is trading near $1,040 apiece.

Why analysts are hesitant

Although Graham Holdings may look like a value-attractive title at first glance, with a P/E ratio of around 16, the company's conglomerate structure poses a fundamental problem. Diversifying into such distinct segments makes it difficult for investors to accurately value each part of the business. The education segment through Kaplan, while delivering steady revenue, faces increasing competition from online education platforms and pressure on traditional standardized test preparation models.

Thus, while the company is undervalued by the Fair Price Index, this valuation is calculated from DCF and relative valuations. Thus, the analysts' outlook is much tougher for this company and the final verdict, which is negative for the company, looks accordingly. It is thus a beautiful example that even what may appear at first glance to be an interesting investment may not be so.

Revenues for 2025 showed a decline of nearly 6% year-over-year to $213 million in the most recent quarter. Net income for the full year was down 35% to $28 million. In addition, the company announced a $500 million unsecured bond issue in November 2025, increasing the debt burden on its balance sheet.

For NAV-focused investors, Graham Holdings remains a difficult investment thesis where individual segments are difficult to value and the overall trend points to stagnation rather than growth.

Although the stock has hit an all-time high this year, it is now 15.5% away from it.

Polestar Automotive $PSNY

Swedish challenger to Tesla in trouble

Polestar is a Swedish manufacturer of premium electric vehicles that went public through a SPAC transaction in 2022. The company operates under the umbrella of China's Geely Group and offers a range of models from the Polestar 2 sedan to the Polestar 3 and 4 SUVs to the upcoming Polestar 5 sport grand tourer. At first glance, it's an attractive story of a premium EV manufacturer with a Volvo design background, but the reality is quite the opposite.

The SPAC transaction is a way to take a private company public without a traditional IPO, and works on the principle of the so-called "empty company". First, a group of investors or executives form a SPAC, which is a company that has no business of its own and its only goal is to buy another company in the future. This SPAC then goes public and raises capital from the investors, which is held in a trust. Investors at this stage are essentially not betting on a particular firm, but on management's ability to find a quality acquisition target.

Deep structural problems

The reality is much harsher. The consensus rating from analysts is "Sell" with an average target price of $15 per share, with the current price around $16.5. Barclays $BCS reiterated an "Underweight" recommendation in January 2026, and Cantor Fitzgerald downgraded the rating to "Underweight" in February after being disappointed with the company's 2026 outlook. The main problem is the massive cash burn, which has amounted to negative operating cash flow of $1.13 billion over the past 12 months.

Revenues for 2024 are down 14% to $2.03 billion and losses have widened 73% to $2.05 billion. The company's gross margin is negative, specifically -32.7%, meaning Polestar is losing money on every vehicle sold. The company had to do a 1:30 reverse stock split in December 2025 to avoid being delisted from Nasdaq. At the same time, it has repeatedly raised new capital injections, most recently $400 million from Sumitomo Mitsui and $300 million from BBVA and Natixis, to maintain liquidity. The firm's Altman Z-Score of minus 4.77 clearly signals a high risk of bankruptcy.

Alexander's $ALX

New York REIT under pressure

Alexander's is a REIT owning five properties in the New York metropolitan area. The best known of these is the building at 731 Lexington Avenue, which houses Bloomberg's headquarters. The firm is managed through Vornado Realty Trust and has a market capitalization of about $1.22 billion. The dividend yield of 7.52% may look tempting at first glance.

Declining fundamentals and a concentrated portfolio

The analyst consensus at Alexander's is "Sell" with a target price of $190, down about 22% from current levels around $240. Financial results for 2025 confirm analysts' concerns. Revenue fell nearly 6% to $213 million, net income fell 35% to $28 million, and FFO (Funds From Operations) for the fourth quarter fell from $20.8 million to $12.5 million year-over-year.

The main risk is the extreme concentration of the portfolio. The company owns only five properties and its income is heavily dependent on a few key tenants. Dividend coverage has recently declined to approximately 90%, which raises questions about the sustainability of the current dividend level given the continued trend of declining earnings. In March 2026, the company announced the sale of the Rego Park I property to Northwell Health for $202 million, which, while providing one-time income, will further narrow an already very small portfolio.

JinkoSolar $JKS

Chinese solar giant in price war

JinkoSolar is one of the largest solar module manufacturers in the world, with an integrated annual capacity of 130 GW. The company is based in Shangrau, China, and its ADR (American Depository Receipt. This is a financial instrument that allows investors to trade shares of foreign companies on a U.S. exchange without those companies having to be directly listed in the U.S.) are traded on the NYSE. Despite being one of the technology leaders in the solar industry, the analyst consensus is a clear "Sell" with an average target price of $20.33.

Overcapacity and margin pressure

The solar industry is going through a period of massive overcapacity, which has driven panel prices to historic lows. For JinkoSolar, this means a dramatic impact on profitability. Revenues for 2024 are down 22% to CNY92.3 billion and profits have virtually evaporated, falling more than 98% to just CNY55 million. The firm's ROE is negative at minus 16.6%, clearly showing that the firm is destroying shareholder value in the current environment.

Another problem is the US and European tariffs and trade restrictions that are complicating Chinese solar manufacturers' exports to key markets. While JinkoSolar is responding by building manufacturing capacity outside of China, these investments are further weighing on the company's balance sheet.

The debt-to-equity ratio of 1.38 is quite high for a manufacturing firm, and a net debt position of minus $2.56 billion limits financial flexibility. Despite a dividend yield of around 4.7%, the investment thesis remains weighed down by the risk of continued pressure on solar panel prices and uncertainty over supply normalization in the industry.

Comparison of key metrics

Company

Ticker

Mkt Cap ($ billion)

Consensus

YTD (%)

Key Issue

Graham Holdings

$GHC

4,52

Sell

-5,6 %

Fragmented business model

Polestar

$PSNY

1,54

Sell

-23 %

Cash burn, negative margins

Alexander's

$ALX

1,22

Sell

+10 %

Slowing business, concentrated portfolio

JinkoSolar

$JKS

1,18

Sell

-9,3 %

Overcapacity, losses

Strategic view

When looking at this selection of companies, it's important to note that a "Sell" recommendation from Wall Street doesn't always mean the stock will immediately fall. Rather, it is a signal that analysts are identifying significant risks that they believe outweigh the potential returns.

Each of these companies faces a different type of problem.

Polestar represents the most extreme case, where the very viability of the company is uncertain due to negative margins and massive cash burn. JinkoSolar faces a cyclical overcapacity problem in the solar industry, but one that may last much longer than investors expect. Alexander's is an example of a concentrated REIT portfolio where declining fundamentals are eroding the dividend thesis. Graham Holdings suffers from conglomerate discounting, the absence of a clear growth catalyst, and fragmented attention.

What these companies have in common is that none of them can offer investors a compelling growth story in the current environment. At a time when capital is migrating towards high quality, growing and profitable companies, it is the absence of a positive catalyst that poses the greatest risk to valuation.

What to watch next

  • Graham Holdings will report next earnings in May 2026. Investors will be watching to see if the revenue decline can be arrested and if the company indicates any structural changes to the portfolio.

  • For Polestar, watch for cash flow developments and the company's ability to achieve at least positive gross margins. Any delay in the ramp-up of Polestar 3 and 4 models could trigger additional capital needs.

  • Alexander's is completing the sale of Rego Park I. Watch how the company handles the proceeds from the transaction and whether it affects dividend policy.

  • JinkoSolar publishes Q4 2025 results in the last week of March. The key will be whether the margin decline can be arrested and what guidance management sets for 2026.

Conclusion

Stocks with a "Sell" recommendation from Wall Street represent a valuable warning to investors, not an automatic sell signal. Each of the listed titles faces a specific set of challenges: from negative margins and cash burn to cyclical overcapacity and stagnation in a saturated market. Investors should pay close attention to whether there is a real catalyst that could reverse the negative trend.

At the same time, some of these companies may surprise with positive developments in the future. The solar industry has historically moved in cycles, and capacity normalization may return JinkoSolar to profitability, and the likes of Polestar may benefit from the eventual consolidation of the EV market. But the key is to distinguish between mere outlook and fundamental reality. You can analyze each of these stocks yourself using the tools on Bulios according to your own metrics.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/259232-wall-street-s-least-wanted-4-billion-dollar-companies-analysts-are-telling-you-to-dump Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-259347 Mon, 23 Mar 2026 08:27:34 +0100 Musk over the weekend officially announced Terafab – a joint project of Tesla $TSLA, SpaceX and xAI estimated at $20–25 billion, which is set to build chip factories in Austin the likes of which the world has not yet seen. One line will produce chips for Tesla cars, robotaxis and Optimus robots, the other will make specially hardened chips for SpaceX’s satellite data center in low Earth orbit – and the entire complex is expected to eventually produce 1 terawatt of computing power per year, roughly twice the current capacity of the entire US.

Key motivation: on Tesla’s Q4 earnings call, Musk admitted that TSMC, Samsung and Micron have hit the ceiling of their expansion and his companies will surpass them in 3–4 years – so Terafab is, in his view, a necessity rather than an option. That’s a reasonable argument, but at the same time this is a project where Musk has no background in chip manufacturing, he hasn’t released any production timeline and the announcement so far lacks a clear start date – which is nothing new for him.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/259347 Wolf of Trades
bulios-article-259216 Mon, 23 Mar 2026 04:20:06 +0100 Chubb and the DFC's $20 billion bet: can a public‑private insurance backstop reopen the world's most critical oil route? The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively closed since late February 2026, when U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran, including the killing of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, triggered retaliatory missile and drone attacks and an IRGC warning prohibiting vessel passage. Tanker transits collapsed by more than 80 percent in the first days of March, Iran has since carried out more than 21 confirmed attacks on merchant ships, and roughly 1,000 vessels remain stranded in the Persian Gulf with about 25 billion dollars of cargo on board, disrupting approximately 20 percent of the world's daily oil supply.

Into that vacuum, the Trump administration announced the most ambitious public‑private maritime insurance program since the Cold War. The U.S. International Development Finance Corporation named Chubb as lead underwriter for a 20 billion dollar war‑risk reinsurance facility designed to restore insurability for ships willing to transit the strait. Chubb will set pricing and terms, issue policies and handle all claims for qualifying vessels, covering war hull risk, war protection and indemnity and cargo, while the DFC will coordinate a consortium of American reinsurers and define the government eligibility criteria ships must meet before accessing coverage. The scheme is unprecedented in modern peacetime: Washington has decided the geopolitical risk is too large and too systemic for private insurance markets alone to absorb, so a government guarantee sits behind every policy that Chubb writes.

Why the Strait of Hormuz is so critical

The Straitof Hormuz is a narrow sea lane between the Persian Gulf and the open ocean through which roughly 20-25% of the world's seaborne oil traffic flows. Tankers from Saudi Arabia, Iraq, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and elsewhere pass through it and it is considered the most important 'energy neck' of the planet.

The US-Israeli conflict with Iran has changed the situation dramatically:

  • Iran has declared the strait closed and has been attacking or intimidating ships attempting to pass through since March 4, 2026.

  • The US attack on an Iranian war tanker off Sri Lanka further escalated the situation.

  • The U.S. further attacked Iran's Kharg oil export terminal, Iran's key export hub for oil.

The result is transport paralysis, oil price spikes and a threat that goes far beyond the Middle East: those who need Gulf oil must pay significantly more or look for alternative sources and routes.

How wartime marine insurance works

Standard marine insurance covers the usual risks - accidents, weather, piracy. War risk is explicitly excluded from these policies and must be bought separately, usually at significantly higher premiums.

In calm times, war insurance premiums for Hormuz passage are a minimal affair. Today it is different:

  • Gulf and Strait war insurance premiums have skyrocketed and are effectively unaffordable for many ships.

  • Without insurance coverage , the shipowner, the bank financing the ship, and the cargo carrier bear the risk of hundreds of millions of dollars in losses in the event of an attack or seizure.

  • Insurance and reinsurance companies such as Lloyd's of London do offer insurance, but with increasingly stringent conditions and rising prices.

The result: even if the war doesn't physically close the Straits, commercial ships without affordable insurance aren't going anywhere. Thus, the insurability of shipping is as important as the physical security of the passage itself.

What Chubb and DFC offer

The U.S. government agency DFC (U.S. International Development Finance Corporation), in partnership with the Treasury Department, announced a $20 billion marine reinsurance plan in early March to make insurance coverage for ships in the Straits effectively available again. Chubb $CB has been selected as the lead underwriter - it will issue the policies, assume the risk and manage all claims.

The structure of the program looks like this:

  • Chubb, as direct underwriter, issues policies for eligible ships.

  • Chubb is backed by a consortium of US reinsurers as a second layer of risk.

  • behind the consortium is DFC as the final safety net, covering losses up to $20 billion on an ongoing basis.

Coverage includes:

  • war hull and engine room riskinsurance.

  • War P&I insurance (protection and indemnity, covers third party liability, crew, etc.).

  • war cargo insurance (war cargo insurance).

The whole scheme is a public-private partnership: the government brings a volume of guarantee that the private market could not handle on its own, and Chubb brings insurance expertise and contractual infrastructure.

Terms and uncertainties

The fundamental question is what Chubb and the DFC mean by "certain conditions" for accessing insurance. The information available so far suggests that:

  • ships must meet eligibility criteria set by the US government.

  • the US government plans to provide sea escorts for qualified ships.

  • The program will initially focus mainly on tanks and cargo ships carrying energy and commercial goods.

The ambiguity around the conditions is an investment issue: if the pool of eligible ships is too narrow or the conditions too stringent, the program may not effectively unlock passage through the Strait, even if it is formally available. One source says bluntly that the program will work "only after the Strait opens" - i.e., that insurance coverage alone will not allow passage unless military tensions ease.

Why the Trump administration is betting on insurance coverage

On 3 March 2026, President Trump publicly pledged that the US would provide political risk cover for ships carrying oil and gas from the Middle East at a "very reasonable price". This was in direct response to the escalation of the conflict and the beginning of the shipping paralysis.

From Washington's point of view, this approach makes strategic sense:

  • Restoring the flow of oil pushes down energy prices and eases inflationary pressures at home.

  • Insurance guarantees are cheaper than a direct military escort of each ship.

  • With a U.S.-government guarantee, Washington seeks to maintain the flow of shipments without the need for a definitive military solution to the conflict with Iran.

It is also a geopolitical signal: the US is signaling that it will not let Iran effectively shut down the global oil market without immediately escalating a direct military conflict.

Impact on markets and the energy sector

The Hormuz crisis is one of the most significant market risk factors today:

  • Oil prices have risen sharply following the closure of the Strait, and analysts speak of the potential to reach levels not seen since the oil shocks of the 1970s.

  • Energy firms with production outside the Gulf - particularly US oil and gas producers(ExxonMobil $XOM , Chevron $CVX , ConocoPhillips $COP , Pioneer) - are indirectly advantaged by the crisis.

  • In contrast, Asian economies heavily dependent on Middle East oil (Japan, South Korea, China) are under significant pressure.

  • Shipping companies and tankers such as Frontline $FRO , Euronav or Nordic Tankers $NAT are balancing between extremely high war premiums and potentially very high transit costs in times of crisis.

It is also an extremely exposed project for Chubb itself. As a major underwriter, it bears direct insurance risk, albeit covered by a government reinsurance program. If there are massive losses (billions of dollars worth of ships sunk or seized), the level of compensation and the speed of claims payments will be a major test for the entire structure.

What to watch next

  • Whether there will actually be a military lull or a diplomatic breakthrough that actually opens the Strait - without that, insurance cover is just ready-made infrastructure with no use.

  • How quickly Chubb and the DFC will publish the specific terms of access to the insurance policy and who will be eligible.

  • how oil prices evolve - if the Strait opens and supplies are released, prices could plummet, affecting the entire energy sector.

  • whether the scheme will attract other large insurance and reinsurance companies as added partners, which would increase the capacity of the scheme and the credibility of the cover.

The Strait of Hormuz has been closed or heavily restricted multiple times in history - during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s, or in various escalations in recent years - but each time it has eventually reopened. The question is not just whether it will happen again, but how quickly and at what cost - to the oil market, to global trade and to the insurance companies that have just bet a total of $20 billion on the survival of this passage.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/259216-chubb-and-the-dfc-s-20-billion-bet-can-a-public-private-insurance-backstop-reopen-the-world-s-most-critical-oil-route Pavel Botek
bulios-article-259355 Sun, 22 Mar 2026 17:34:57 +0100 AI partnerships as a key to growth: the case of SentinelOne

Cybersecurity company $S has in recent months significantly strengthened its strategy through partnerships focused on artificial intelligence.

The latest step is an expanded collaboration with $NET, which links Cloudflare's global network and edge infrastructure data with SentinelOne's Singularity AI platform.

This integration is intended to enable more advanced real-time threat detection and create a unified security ecosystem that combines network data, endpoint protection and AI analytics. In other words, it's not just a product upgrade but a move toward a platform model of cybersecurity.

Strategic significance: a shift toward “platformization”

The partnership with Cloudflare is important primarily from a positioning perspective. SentinelOne is not trying to compete solely as a standalone endpoint security vendor, but as part of a broader infrastructure.

This trend mirrors a broader development in the industry, where players like Palo Alto Networks or Microsoft dominate by building integrated platforms. For smaller firms, it's therefore key to "plug into" existing ecosystems rather than try to build everything independently.

From an investment point of view, this means reduced risk of product isolation and a higher likelihood of long-term adoption by enterprise customers.

AI as the main growth driver

SentinelOne's entire strategy rests on the belief that the future of cybersecurity is AI-native. The company is developing products like Singularity and Purple AI that automate detection and response to attacks without the need for manual intervention.

Growth in this segment is also supported by structural trends—an increasing complexity of attacks and an expanding "attack surface" due to cloud computing and generative AI. The cybersecurity market is expected to grow at a double-digit pace, and AI plays a key role in product differentiation.

Moreover, the partnership with Cloudflare adds another layer of data (network telemetry), which improves the quality of AI models and their ability to detect threats.

Investment interpretation: positive, but not without risks

From an investor's perspective, AI partnerships are clearly a positive signal. They indicate that SentinelOne is capable of integrating into a broader ecosystem and increasing the value of its product.

At the same time, partnerships alone are not "game changers." The market tends to react moderately because competitors are taking similar steps and AI is gradually becoming a standard rather than a differentiator.

Additionally, the company faces strong competition from major players and pressure on margins. Recent results showed a cautious profitability outlook, signaling that monetizing AI innovations is not immediate.

Key risk: commoditization of AI in cybersecurity

One of the biggest structural risks is the gradual commoditization of AI tools. Once AI capabilities become a standard component of products (e.g., at Microsoft), there may be downward pressure on prices and a reduction in the competitive advantage of smaller players.

This means that SentinelOne's long-term success will depend not only on technology but also on the ability to create a comprehensive platform and retain customers within its ecosystem.

Conclusion: evolution, not revolution

SentinelOne's AI partnerships represent an important step in the right direction, but not a fundamental breakthrough. The company is shifting from a purely product-focused firm to a platform player, which is necessary in the current environment.

For investors, this means a mildly positive signal—confirmation of the right strategy and the ability to keep pace with the market. At the same time, key questions remain about competition, monetization of AI and the sustainability of growth in an environment where AI is rapidly becoming the standard.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/259355 Ethan Anderson
bulios-article-259179 Sun, 22 Mar 2026 10:20:26 +0100 Trump's federal AI framework: a light touch for industry and a direct line from Silicon Valley to Washington On March 20, the White House released its long awaited national AI legislative framework, calling on Congress to pass a single federal standard that would preempt the growing patchwork of state AI laws, including those in California, Colorado and New York. The document outlines six guiding objectives for lawmakers: protecting children online, preventing AI enabled scams, streamlining data center permitting so facilities can generate on site power, limiting AI developer liability, preventing government use of AI for censorship and giving the workforce AI training, all framed explicitly as pro-innovation priorities. Crucially, the framework recommends against creating any new federal regulatory body for AI, calling instead for sector specific oversight through existing agencies like the FTC and FCC.

The direct link between the framework and Big Tech lobbying is visible in the numbers. Meta, Alphabet, Nvidia, Amazon, Microsoft and others collectively spent more than 100 million dollars influencing U.S. government AI policy in 2025, the first time that threshold was ever crossed, and the results have been tangible: relaxed chip export controls toward China, fast tracked data center permitting and now a federal framework that explicitly tells Congress not to burden AI developers. Critics, however, point out that the framework leaves some of the most contested questions, including how copyright law applies to AI training data, to the courts rather than Congress, and warn that without clear liability rules the resulting legal vacuum could create uncertainty that ultimately slows enterprise AI adoption and hurts the very companies the policy aims to protect.

What the framework specifically proposes

The White House has structured the framework into six pillars:

  • Protecting Children and Empowering Parents: Congress should create better tools to manage children's digital presence, especially in the context of AI content and interactions.

  • Preventing censorship and protecting free speech: the state must not force technology providers to block or edit content based on a political or ideological agenda.

  • Data centre construction: simplify permitting processes and allow on-site power generation to accelerate the expansion of AI infrastructure.

  • Fighting AI fraud: strengthening legal tools against AI deepfakes, identity theft and fraudulent schemes using AI.

  • Fostering innovation and US dominance in AI: removing unnecessary barriers, access to testing environments, and accelerating AI deployment across sectors.

  • Education and AI-ready workforce: investing in retraining and new jobs in the AI economy.

The most important point is federal preemption of state laws: Congress should prohibit states from regulating the development of AI models, prevent them from holding developers accountable for third-party misuse of their models, and replace the "patchwork of fifty misaligned rules" with a single national standard.

Copyright: the biggest unresolved issue

One of the most closely watched areas is the framework's stance on training AI on copyrighted content. The administration's position is clear: training AI models on copyrighted material does not, in its view, infringe copyright. But the Framework also says that Congress should not intervene in this dispute and should leave the decision to the courts.

This is in direct conflict with Senator Blackburn's current Senate "TRUMP AMERICA AI Act" proposal, which would make training on protected content a fair use violation. For companies like OpenAI, Google $GOOG (Gemini), Anthropic, Meta $META (Llama), and Microsoft $MSFT, this issue is existential: if the courts or a later law determined that training on text, images, and videos without the authors' consent is illegal, these companies would either have to pay massive licensing fees or completely rethink what data they train models on.

The framework also supports the creation of collective licensing platforms where rights holders could negotiate with AI firms as a whole without the risk of antitrust lawsuits. This could lead to a compromise where AI firms pay collective fees for access to content but are not exposed to thousands of individual lawsuits.

What this means for specific companies

Nvidia $NVDA is the biggest direct beneficiary of relaxed AI regulation as a whole. The faster AI data centers grow and the less AI development is hampered by regulation, the more GPUs Nvidia will sell. The streamlining of data center construction and federal preemption of state rules directly removes barriers that may have hindered Nvidia customers from expanding capacity.

Microsoft and OpenAI directly benefit from the framework in two areas: the end of fragmented regulation reduces compliance costs across states, and the stance on copyright (letting the courts decide, not legislatively prohibiting training) gives them room to continue their existing access to training data. Microsoft in 2025 has invested heavily in lobbying for just these positions.

Google, Meta, and Amazon benefit from preemption of state laws that nullifies the situation where they had to pursue dozens of different regulatory environments. Meta in particular has welcomed the stance on open-source model development, as the framework does not explicitly recommend restricting access to model development or imposing liability on developers for how third parties use their models.

Anthropic is in a more delicate position. The company has long profiled itself as a proponent of responsible AI development, and its affiliated group Public First Action has directly criticized the framework as hollow and unresponsive to the technology's actual risks. At the same time, Anthropic lost a contract with the Pentagon precisely because of its refusal to comply with all DoD requirements - in an environment where the White House says "less regulation," Anthropic's position as a "responsible" player is more complicated.

The impact on valuations and numbers of AI companies

As such, the framework is not law and has yet to pass Congress, so the direct impact on companies' financial results is indirect. But it is important for AI sector valuations for several reasons:

  • It reduces the regulatory risk premium: investors in AI firms had some risk built in that strict regulation (like the EU AI Act) may limit AI deployment and monetization. If the US goes in the opposite direction, this premium shrinks.

  • Accelerates data center construction: simplifying the permitting and power situation for data centers directly opens up space for faster CAPEX growth for cloud players and higher demand for GPUs and infrastructure.

  • Eliminates compliance costs: companies operating in multiple states don't have to pay for compliance with 50 different regulatory frameworks.

  • Opens up commercial AI in regulated sectors: sector-specific regulation (healthcare via FDA, finance via SEC, etc.) is more predictable and will allow AI firms to enter areas such as healthcare, insurance or financial advisory more quickly.

On the negative side, the ambiguity around copyright remains as a "hanging sword" over the whole sector: until the courts decide, companies live in legal uncertainty about the validity of their training data. If a future ruling determines that training on protected content without consent is illegal, it could lead to billions in damages and forced changes in data strategies for some companies.

What to watch next

For investors watching the AI sector, the following signals are key:

  • How quickly Congress translates the framework into concrete legislation and whether it can get it done before the election.

  • How the courts rule in ongoing cases around copyright and AI training - particularly the cases against OpenAI, Meta and Google.

  • whether simplifying data center construction will lead to accelerated CAPEX for AWS $AMZN, Azure, Google Cloud and Nvidia.

  • how the framework will affect the international competitiveness of US AI firms vis-à-vis the EU, which has taken the opposite approach - tighter regulation via the AI Act.

The most important variable is whether Trump's light regulatory approach will actually help US AI firms in the global race with China, and whether today's framework will become a workable law or remain a political signal with no real legislative force.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/259179-trump-s-federal-ai-framework-a-light-touch-for-industry-and-a-direct-line-from-silicon-valley-to-washington Pavel Botek
bulios-article-259192 Sat, 21 Mar 2026 22:17:42 +0100 🎰 VICI Properties: Quality REIT with a 6% dividend $VICI

If we look at the real estate sector, VICI Properties is among the most interesting companies you can find in the US. For those who don’t know the firm, it’s a REIT that owns the land and buildings of the most famous casinos in Las Vegas, such as Caesars Palace, MGM Grand, and The Venetian. It’s important to understand that VICI does not operate gambling and doesn’t risk money at the gaming tables. It acts as an owner that leases premises long-term to large operators and essentially just collects rent reliably.

However, the current market situation is not exactly favorable for real estate funds. The main reason is high interest rates, which generally make financing new purchases and debt more expensive for REITs. Additionally, when rates are high, investors often flee dividend stocks to government bonds that offer a similar yield with almost no risk. Given the current tensions in Iran and across the Middle East, we can’t expect rates to fall soon. Oil prices remain elevated, which keeps inflation "sticky" and gives central banks little reason to loosen monetary policy. And I personally think this environment will stay with us at least through this year.

Despite these macroeconomic pressures, VICI has one big advantage: the quality of their lease agreements. These are the so-called "triple-net leases," where the tenant pays not only rent but also all taxes, insurance and maintenance. Moreover, their contracts are structured so they are partially protected against inflation, so the company’s revenues naturally grow with rising prices. Looking at the chart, it’s also visible that the stock is currently at a fairly strong support. The trend of how the price has developed in recent years and bounces off certain levels is quite clear and stable.

From my point of view, this is a great long-term opportunity to add a quality REIT with a nice dividend to a portfolio.

I don’t currently own any other REIT companies, but as additional "anchors" of my portfolio I also have $BRK-B and $WM.

What about you? Do you own any REITs?

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https://en.bulios.com/status/259192 Linh Nguyen
bulios-article-259097 Fri, 20 Mar 2026 15:25:20 +0100 Super Micro co-founder arrested for smuggling Nvidia AI chips to China: stock plunges The U.S. Department of Justice unsealed an indictment on March 19 charging three people tied to Super Micro Computer with conspiring to illegally export at least 2.5 billion dollars worth of high performance AI servers packed with Nvidia GPUs to China in violation of export control laws. Co-founder, board member and senior vice president Yih-Shyan "Wally" Liaw, 71, was arrested in California and later released on bail, while Taiwan sales manager Ruei-Tsang "Steven" Chang remains a fugitive and third party contractor Ting-Wei "Willy" Sun was also taken into custody. The alleged scheme, which ran through 2024 and 2025, used a Southeast Asian front company to place purchase orders with Super Micro, fabricated shipping documents and staged dummy servers to pass export compliance audits before routing the technology to Chinese buyers.

Super Micro said it is cooperating with the investigation, suspended Liaw and placed another employee on administrative leave while terminating a contractor, and stressed that the conduct described in the indictment "contravenes the company's policies and compliance controls". The stock fell as much as 27 percent on the news, adding to a long list of reputational shocks that have hit the company since its accounting controversy in 2024, and raises fresh questions for investors about whether the compliance and governance weaknesses that allowed this alleged scheme to reach 2.5 billion dollars in diverted sales are isolated individual failures or something more structural.

What exactly does the US government claim

The indictment accuses Liaw, as well as Ruei-Tsang "Steven" Chang and Ting-Wei "Willy" Sun, of conspiring to smuggle U.S. AI servers into China without the required licenses from the Commerce Department. Super Micro is one of the key manufacturers of servers equipped with Nvidia chips, which are prohibited from being exported to China without government approval for national security reasons.

According to the indictment, the defendants used a combination of:

  • false documents claiming the servers were destined for other customers.

  • fake "dummy" servers to deceive inspectors during inspections.

  • complex transshipment routes through third countries to conceal the true destination of shipments.

The DOJ reports that through this scheme, Super Micro generated at least $2.5 billion in revenue between 2024 and 2025.

Super Micro $SMCIResponse

Super Micro issued a statement emphasizing that the company itself is not a defendant in the indictment and that it is cooperating with authorities. Two employees named in the case have been suspended, and the contractor has been fired.

The company claims that the actions of these individuals violated company policies and compliance systems. However, this is a phrase that investors hear repeatedly with Super Micro - the company also went through a forced suspension of results over accounting irregularities and the threat of delisting from the stock market in recent years before it stabilised its situation.

Why Super Micro is in the spotlight again

Super Micro is one of the largest AI server manufacturers in the United States, and its products power the infrastructure of large hyperscalers and AI companies. It's this role that makes it an attractive target for those looking to bypass US export controls, as its servers equipped with Nvidia chips are among the most powerful platforms available for training and running AI models.

The case fits into a broader trend: the US government has stepped up its fight against illegal AI technology exports to China, and indictments for smuggling Nvidia GPUs are now relatively common. But so far, most of the cases have involved outside players - resellers, shippers and brokers. The Super Micro $SMCI case is more sensitive because the accused are people with direct ties to the manufacturer itself, and one of them is even a co-founder of the company.

Impact on Nvidia and the AI server ecosystem

While Nvidia $NVDA is not charged in the case and is cooperating with the authorities, the case inevitably casts a shadow on it as well. Super Micro is one of its key partners and distribution channels for GPUs into AI servers, and any tightening of controls or shutting Super Micro out of part of the market will affect Nvidia's chip flows.

At the same time, Nvidia itself is under pressure over export controls: CEO Jensen Huang has repeatedly criticized the restrictive policy as economically damaging, estimating that in a single quarter Nvidia lost approximately $2.5 billion in H20 revenue due to the ban on advanced chip sales to China. While the Super Micro case shows that chips are making their way into China despite the controls, it is also a reminder to Nvidia that allegations of "leakage" of its GPUs through third parties may increase political pressure for even tighter regulation of its distribution channels.

Impact on stocks and investment risks

The immediate market reaction - a 14.6% drop in Super Micro - reflects a combination of concerns:

  • Legal risk: even if the company as a whole is not charged, investigations may bring additional costs, penalties or restrictions.

  • Reputational risk: For a company that has only recently settled an accounting case, each new scandal is a major blow to customer and partner confidence.

  • Operational risk: temporary staff suspensions and possible widespread investigations can disrupt business operations.

  • Regulatory risk: the US Department of Commerce may tighten the conditions under which Super Micro operates or exports.

Super Micro is in a delicate position: it is a key link in the AI infrastructure supply chain, so any restriction on its operations would affect customers who rely on its servers. If the investigation widens or the company loses certifications and licenses, it could also affect the performance of existing contracts.

Wider context: AI chip smuggling as a growing issue

The Super Micro case is not unique in the US justice space. In the past year, multiple groups have been charged or arrested for illegally exporting Nvidia GPUs to China:

  • Operation Gatekeeper in late 2025 uncovered a network of AI chip smugglers and led to the seizure of more than $50 million worth of GPUs.

  • In November 2025, the DOJ charged three Chinese nationals with smuggling Nvidia chips through Malaysia and Thailand.

  • In August 2025, two Chinese nationals were arrested in Los Angeles for exporting Nvidia GPUs through a network of transshipment companies.

The pattern is similar in all cases: false documents, third-country brokerage firms, and efforts to conceal the final destination of the shipment in China. This suggests that demand for US AI chips in China is so strong that it motivates systematic and well-organized attempts to circumvent controls, and that the US government has intensified its monitoring of these flows.

What to watch next

For investors watching both Super Micro (SMCI) and Nvidia (NVDA), the following questions are key:

  • Whether the Justice Department will extend the indictment to the company itself or other employees.

  • How Super Micro will operationally manage the loss of two key employees and the potential reputational impact on business relationships.

  • whether the case will prompt U.S. authorities to tighten export licensing terms for AI server makers.

  • what signal it sends to the entire AI server sector regarding compliance and supply chain controls.

Super Micro has been through several crises over the past two years and has managed to bounce back each time due to strong demand for AI infrastructure. This time, however, the challenge is qualitatively different: it's not just about accounting, but about allegations that people running the company knowingly orchestrated the circumvention of US export laws, with proceeds from the scheme exceeding $2.5 billion. How much this affects the trust of partners, customers and regulators will be a crucial question for the future of Super Micro.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/259097-super-micro-co-founder-arrested-for-smuggling-nvidia-ai-chips-to-china-stock-plunges Pavel Botek
bulios-article-259080 Fri, 20 Mar 2026 14:25:11 +0100 Tanker title with 24% undervaluation, a clean balance sheet and room for further growth Tanker stocks usually only attract attention at the extremes of the cycle: when rates are flying to the stars, or when the sector is drowning in losses. But today, there is a player that has managed to use the last super-cycle to almost completely deleverage, sitting on record cash, trading at around 6 times earnings, while still benefiting from a tight midstream tanker market whose orderbook remains near historic lows.

Even after rate normalisation, it has had several years of exceptional results, double-digit EPS, very high margins and is now starting to return capital to shareholders in the form of dividends and other payouts without sacrificing the safety of its balance sheet or the potential for further growth. For the investor looking for a combination of undervaluation, a strong balance sheet and exposure to the mid-size tanker cycle, this is a name that may pleasantly surprise in the years ahead if the tight market holds longer than the market is pricing in today.

Top points of analysis

  • The firm's revenues have fallen from a peak of US$1.47bn in 2023 to around US$0.95bn in 2025, reflecting the normalisation of tanker rates - yet net margins remain around 37% and the firm generates strong cash flow even in a 'worse' year.

  • The firm trades at a valuation of around 6 times trailing P/E and an EV/EBITDA below 4, with the data suggesting a current fair value of $78.92 per share - the stock is therefore roughly 24% undervalued relative to fundamentals.

  • The balance sheet is one of the strongest in the sector: debt-to-equity of just 0.03, debt-to-assets of 0.02 and an Altman Z-score of over 8.7 - the company has virtually no net debt and is sitting on a record cash position, with enterprise value well below market cap.

  • The orderbook of mid-size tankers is below 6% of the existing fleet near historic lows, roughly a quarter of the fleet will reach 20 years of age by 2026, and the yards have capacity filled 90% by vessel types other than tankers - creating a structurally tight market for the next few years.

  • The dividend yield is around 3% with a very low payout ratio, and the company has room to supplement the base dividend with special payouts or buybacks in good years due to its strong FCF and net balance sheet.

  • The firm belongs to the Suezmax and Aframax/LR2 tanker segment, where it has achieved the best spot rates in the last 15 years - averaging USD 26.5k/day for Suezmaxes and USD 38.8k/day for Aframaxes - illustrating the strength of the business strategy and the tightness of the market.

Company performance

Teekay Tankers $TNK was formed in 2007 as a spun-off tanker "pure play" from the broader Teekay Corporation group, which since the 1970s has evolved from a regional shipper to a global carrier of crude oil, LNG and other energy commodities. The aim was to give investors direct exposure to the volatile but potentially highly profitable market for the ocean transportation of crude oil and products without mixing with the group's less cyclical segments. Today, TNK is based in Hamilton, Bermuda, is listed on the NYSE and is a major player in the mid-sized tanker segment.

In terms of fleet, TNK's main focus is on Suezmax and Aframax/LR2 tankers, ships of around 80-160k DWT that are more flexible than giant VLCCs and serve a wide range of routes between key export regions and customers. These vessels carry crude oil and refined products between the US, Latin America, West Africa, Russia, the Middle East, Europe and Asia, and changes in geopolitics and sanctions in recent years have significantly lengthened some routes and increased tonne-miles. Additionally, TNK operates ship-to-ship transfer services, particularly in the U.S. Gulf and Caribbean, which generate fee income and increase fleet utilization.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/4MszJuCJAyw?rel=1

What this business really profits from is primarily the spot and short-term charter market. Teekay Tankers keeps much of its fleet "open" to spot and short contracts, allowing it to quickly capitalize on periods of high rates and regularly report top mid-size spot rates.

In terms of its financial profile, TNK has changed significantly in recent years: it has transformed from a company that carried higher debt in earlier cycles to one with minimal debt, a high equity ratio and record cash. Ratios such as debt-to-assets of around 0.02, debt-to-equity of around 0.03 and Altman Z-score of over 8 indicate an exceptionally strong balance sheet, especially for a sector as cyclical as tankers. Management is leveraging this strength for disciplined capital allocation: instead of aggressively ordering new ships through the cycle, TNK is selectively upgrading the fleet, reducing structural risk while opening up room for shareholder payouts.

The market and the cycle in which TNK plays

The global tanker market is defined by a balance between fleet size and the demand for oil and product transportation in tonne-miles. In recent years, these parameters have swung in a direction that favours tanker companies: demand for oil carriage has stabilised after covide, geopolitics has lengthened some routes, while at the same time the orderbook of new ships has remained very low. Teekay has repeatedly stressed in his market updates that mid-size tanker market fundamentals remain positive, although short-term rate fluctuations are inevitable.

For the mid-size segment, which is TNK's focus, it is key that the orderbook is at a level below 6% of the existing fleet. This means that there will not be a large amount of new capacity entering the market in the next few years, even if companies start ordering new ships today. At the same time, around 11% of the mid-size fleet is over 20 years old and another 14% will reach that age between 2024 and 2026, meaning that almost a quarter of the fleet will soon face either scrapping or costly upgrades due to emissions and safety requirements.

The situation in shipyards is also an important detail. According to data presented by TNK, the global forward cover of shipyards is around 3.5 years, with around 90% of the vessels ordered being non-tanker types. Shipyards thus have orders for containerships, LNG and other segments and do not have unlimited capacity to benefit from any late "rush" for tankers. The combination of a minimal orderbook, an aging fleet and busy yards creates an environment in which even a relatively moderate rate of growth in tonne-mile demand can keep rates above the long-term average for a longer period than is typical of past cyclical periods.

Growth potential - where can it come from and how big can it be

The growth potential for TNK is not in being a classic growth company, but in a combination of three things: a low valuation, a strong market and room for capital returns.

The first source of growth is valuation alone. With earnings per share of around $10 in 2025 and a price that implies roughly 6-7 times trailing P/E, TNK is valued lower than many other cyclical companies with similar or worse balance sheets. If earnings settle in the range of, say, $6-8 per share after rate normalization, and the market is willing to pay 8-10 times earnings for a more stable business, that implies room for tens of percent share price appreciation versus today, purely from a re-pricing multiple.

The second source of growth is the extended mid-size tanker cycle. A low orderbook of under 6% of the fleet and aging ships (roughly a quarter of the fleet in the mid-size segment will reach 20 years of age by 2026) suggest that the favorable environment for rates may last longer than just one or two seasons. Even if rates fall from extreme peaks, they may still remain above levels that correspond to the "old normal", which would allow TNK to hold margins higher than the market currently models.

The third source is capital allocation. A strong balance sheet and cash position give management the ability to combine several actions: continue to renew the fleet at attractive prices, return capital to shareholders through dividends and buybacks, and possibly take advantage of weakening competitors to drive acquisitive growth. If these steps can be taken during a period when valuations are still low, TNK can increase value per share not only through earnings, but also through NAV per share growth and share count reduction.

Management and CEO

The current management of Teekay Tankers is led by Kenneth Hvid, a long-time manager of the entire Teekay group. He has more than two decades in various roles at Teekay - from managing specific segments to the entire group - and thus has experience of several complete tanker cycles, including the high rate period before the 2008 crisis, the subsequent downturn and the current super-cycle.

His approach manifests itself mainly in three areas. The first is debt and risk. After previous years when parts of the group were more leveraged, TNK has moved under his leadership to a structurally low debt position, with debt-to-asset and debt-to-equity ratios well below the sector average. The second area is disciplined capex - the company has not used the recent strong years to aggressively order large numbers of new ships, but rather to selectively renew and modernise its fleet. The third area is the flexibility of capital returns: the dividend was only reinstated when the balance sheet could bear it, and is now set to be extended in the future with special payouts or buybacks if results are good and valuations are low.

Importantly for the investor, this is management that has seen both sides of the cycle and seems to prefer long-term capital return over short-term "chasing" fleet size or dividend yield. In an environment where it is easy to succumb to the temptation to go into debt to order new ships, this is a plus rather than a minus.

The market in which TNK operates - outlook and expectations

Teekay Tankers operates in the global marine transportation market for crude oil and products, with its centre of gravity in the midstream segment. Demand for these services is driven by the volume of crude oil transported, the length of routes and the structure of trade flows. Sanctions on Russian crude oil, growth in exports from the US and Middle East and changes in refining capacity around the world have led to the extension of a number of routes in recent years, thereby increasing tonne-miles.

The medium-term outlook for tanker shipping demand is rather positive, although not linear, according to Teekay and independent analysis. Global oil demand is expected to hover close to current levels in the coming years, possibly rising slightly depending on economic developments and energy policy. At the same time, it will not be easy to scale up the fleet quickly with new ships, as shipyards have contracted production for several years ahead and most slots are occupied by other vessel types.

TNK itself has repeatedly stated in its market updates that the fundamentals for the mid-sized tanker market remain positive. Management anticipates that while rates will remain volatile between quarters, the low orderbook and aging fleet will support solid average rates over the next few years. In addition, in Q4 2025 Teekay indicated that it expects rates to remain strong in Q1 2026 due to seasonal factors and continued tonne-mile demand, which combined with the state of the fleet suggests that it does not view recent strong quarters as a one-off anomaly.

What may surprise the company in the future

The scope for pleasant surprises in the years ahead lies mainly in what TNK can do beyond the baseline scenario.

  • It can accelerate capital returns if it maintains high free cash flow and low debt.

    • That could mean a more stable/higher ordinary dividend, more frequent special dividends, or more aggressive buybacks in periods when the P/E remains low.

  • Can profitably renew and optimize the fleet.

    • By selling older ships at times when the value of second-hand vessels is elevated, and buying younger units when opportunities arise, TNK can increase value per share even without growth in the number of ships.

  • It can take advantage of any weakening of competition.

    • If some of the less disciplined players come under pressure in the next cycle due to debt, Teekay's clean balance sheet gives it the opportunity to buy quality ships or entire portfolios in forced sales.

  • It can benefit from the fact that regulation and ESG pressures will accelerate the phasing out of old ships faster than the market now expects.

    • If older units are scrapped earlier due to emissions standards, supply tensions may intensify, which would support rates and profitability for longer.

Results and figures

On a results level, Teekay Tankers has had a very strong couple of years. It has sales of around $1.47 billion in 2023, around $1.23 billion in 2024 and around $0.95 billion in 2025, reflecting the normalisation of rates after an extremely strong period, but still levels well above historical averages. Gross margins are around 27-28%, operating margins around 27% and net margins for 2025 around 37%, which is very attractive for a capital intensive, cyclical business.

Net income for 2025 was about $351 million, compared to $404 million in 2024 and $520 million in 2023. EPS for 2025 is around $10 per share, after two previous years of $11-15, with a relatively stable share count of about 34.5 million. This, coupled with very low debt, leads to a valuation of around 6 times trailing earnings, which remains conservative even with expected profitability normalization.

The cash flow picture is similarly strong. TNK has generated robust operating cash flow in recent years, which, combined with relatively moderate capex, has led to high free cash flow and double-digit FCF growth over time. This has allowed it to virtually eliminate net debt, fund its fleet renewal program, and at the same time begin regular payouts to shareholders. In Q4 2025, the company reported a record cash position and emphasized that its capital strategy will continue to combine prudent fleet investment with disciplined capital returns to shareholders as valuations and market conditions permit.

Dividend and capital allocation

Dividend at TNK is an add-on to the cyclical story, not its main axis. After a period when the priority was clearly on reducing debt and stabilising the balance sheet, the company has restored the dividend in recent years and gradually increased it. It currently pays about $0.25 per share per year, which at the current price represents a dividend yield of about 3%.

The payout ratio is very low given the high EPS, so the base dividend represents only a small portion of earnings, leaving the firm with wide leeway. Moreover, Teekay is not dogmatically focused on just regular quarterly payouts - in periods of exceptionally strong performance, management has the option to supplement the base dividend with special payouts.

Capital allocation is guided by several priorities: maintaining a very strong balance sheet, prioritizing returns over growth at all costs, continuously rejuvenating the fleet, and only then increasing direct payouts to shareholders. This means that in a period of high rates, an investor need not expect an extreme dividend yield of 10-15%, but rather a combination of a reasonable base dividend, potential special payouts and growth in the value of the company through an improving fleet and balance sheet. In a weaker market, TNK is then likely to take the dividend flexibly and possibly adjust it to protect the balance sheet - but the main difference from the past is that today's balance sheet gives it much more room to manoeuvre.

Balance sheet and valuation

Teekay Tankers' balance sheet is one of the strongest in the sector. The debt to assets ratio is around 2%, the debt to equity ratio is only 0.03 and the Altman Z-score of around 8.7 is well above the point where an investor would need to worry about solvency or restructuring. Moreover, the company holds a large amount of cash, so its enterprise value is well below its market capitalization, which in practice means that shareholders have both fleet value and a liquidity "cushion".

From a valuation perspective, the stock trades at roughly 6-7 times trailing P/E, with EV/EBITDA around 3-4 times and P/B near 1.1. Analysts in the "deep value" community point out that with this combination of balance sheet and profitability, it is still an undervalued title, even though some of the good news is already in the price. The analyst consensus sees room for further upside in TNK's price target, though it warns of cyclical risks and the possibility of earnings normalizing to lower levels in the coming years.

The key argument for undervaluation is therefore the difference between how the market values current profits (as highly cyclical and temporary) and how long the fundamentals suggest the favourable conditions of an ageing fleet and low orderbook can last. If it turns out that the "new normal" of rates is higher than in the past, and that TNK retains some of today's margins longer than the market expects, the stock has the potential to combine rerating multiples with continued high cash flow generation.

Investment Scenarios

In a positive scenario, the tanker market for the mid-size segment will remain tight for most of the next decade. The orderbook will remain constrained, an aging fleet will accelerate the scrapping of old ships, tonne-miles will be supported by geopolitical factors and global oil demand will remain close to current levels. In such an environment, Teekay Tankers will maintain a portion of today's rates, continue to generate high FCF, upgrade the fleet and increase payouts to shareholders; the stock has room for a combination of solid dividend yield and significant capital appreciation.

In the base case, rates gradually normalize to levels that are below today's levels but still above the long-term average as the orderbook and aging fleet keep the market in a relatively healthy balance. TNK's EPS will fall from today's double digits to mid-single to low double digits, but the company will retain flexibility, a reasonable dividend, and the ability to continue fleet renewal due to its strong balance sheet. In such a world, the stock could move from "deep value" status to a valuation closer to mid-cycle multiples without an investor having to rely on extreme scenarios.

A downside scenario would combine a steeper decline in oil demand, changes in export flows that shorten routes and reduce tonne-miles, and a potential freeing up of yard capacity leading to a wave of new tanker orders. Rates could fall near or below levels that cover fully loaded cash breakeven, EPS would thin significantly, and the company would have to realign the dividend and pace of investment. A strong balance sheet should allow it to weather such a period in better shape than weaker competitors, but for shareholders it would be a classic cyclical "drawdown" where undervaluation could persist for some time.

What to take away from the article

  • Teekay Tankers is a pure play on the mid-size tanker cycle, not a dividend title or a defensive position - investors need to be prepared for cyclical volatility as earnings will move significantly over time as rates move.

  • The company is entering the rate normalization phase from an exceptionally strong position: near-zero debt, record cash, an Altman Z-score of over 8, and an enterprise value below market cap are a rare combination for the tanker sector, giving the investor a safety margin that is not the norm for cyclical stocks.

  • Valuations around 6 times trailing P/E and EV/EBITDA below 4 may look like a trap as the market factors in rapid earnings normalisation - but the key question is whether an orderbook below 6%, an ageing fleet and busy yards will keep rates above the "old normal" for longer than consensus models.

  • According to the data, the stock is currently undervalued by about 24% against a fair value of $78.92, and this discount is not due to poor business quality but cyclical pessimism - a material difference for a value investor with a longer horizon.

  • Management, led by Kenneth Hvid, has so far shown that it prefers capital discipline to expansion at any cost - that's a plus, but it's also true that the main "test" will come when rates actually fall and the company has to demonstrate its ability to counter-cyclically allocate capital.

  • For an investor who understands the tanker cycle and is willing to follow the evolution of rates, orderbook and capital allocation as closely as quarterly earnings, TNK may be an interesting medium-term bet on a combination of re-rating multiples and continued FCF - but for an investor looking for stable passive income or a defensive position, it will be too cyclical a profile.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/259080-tanker-title-with-24-undervaluation-a-clean-balance-sheet-and-room-for-further-growth Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-259089 Fri, 20 Mar 2026 12:15:44 +0100 Do you find the space sector interesting? Are you investing in any stocks from this industry?

Personally, I find this sector quite attractive, but I haven't invested in it yet and I'm looking for a suitable stock. So far I'm most interested in $RKLB and $ASTS. SpaceX could also be interesting once it goes public.

I don't understand this sector very well yet, so I'd appreciate your opinions, tips, or warnings about any potential risks.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/259089 Natalia Ivanova
bulios-article-259065 Fri, 20 Mar 2026 11:05:06 +0100 These 3 American Oil Giants Are Printing Money While the World Holds Its Breath The closure of the Strait of Hormuz sent shockwaves through global energy markets in early 2026, pushing Brent crude to levels most analysts had dismissed as a worst-case fantasy just weeks before. With roughly 20% of the world's oil supply suddenly rerouted or halted, the spotlight turned sharply to American producers and three companies in particular proved they were built exactly for moments like this. While geopolitical chaos rattled portfolios across the board, these oil majors turned rising prices and supply disruptions into record-breaking profits. Here's who came out on top.

The energy market in 2026 is going through one of the most turbulent periods since the oil shock of the 1970s. Coordinated US and Israeli military strikes on Iranian infrastructure in late February triggered an avalanche of events that completely redrew the global oil market map. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which around 20% of the world's oil production normally flows, drove prices to levels that analysts were talking about as an unlikely extreme scenario just six weeks ago.

According to the latest data from the International Energy Agency, Brent futures reached over $114 per barrel in the short term during March 2026, while the EIA revised its March outlook for the average Brent price for the full year 2026 to $78.84 per barrel, up from its original estimate of $57.69. At the end of the trading session on 19 March, Brent was trading around USD 108 and WTI near USD 96 per barrel.

The war premium, which Goldman Sachs $GS estimates at around $18 per barrel, remains firmly anchored in prices and will most likely be present throughout the first half of 2026.

This macroeconomic context creates an exceptional environment for oil producers and refiners outside the Gulf. US energy companies, which are benefiting from higher oil prices without direct exposure to the logistical turmoil in the Strait of Hormuz, are now enjoying increased investor interest.

Occidental Petroleum $OXY

Company profile and market position

Occidental Petroleum is one of the largest oil and gas producers in the United States with a strong concentration in the Permian Basin, the most productive oil basin in the world. At the same time, the company is building a unique strategy combining traditional production with Direct Air Capture (DAC) carbon capture and storage technologies, making it a player with an asymmetric profile towards different energy transition scenarios. Revenues for fiscal 2025 reached $21.6 billion.

The most significant move of 2025 was the sale of OxyChem's chemical division, completed on January 2, 2026, which immediately reduced the company's debt by $5.8 billion. This brought total debt down to $15 billion, down from nearly $40 billion in 2019 after the Anadarko acquisition. This structural shift significantly improved the company's financial resilience and flexibility just as the energy market entered a phase of extreme volatility.

Key financial indicators

Indicator

Value

Revenue FY2025

USD 21.6 billion

Free cash flow (FCF) FY2025

USD ~3.2 billion

Daily Production (Q4 2025)

1,481 Mboed (record)

Net Debt (Q1 2026)

USD ~15 billion

Adjusted EPS Q4 2025

USD 0.31 (vs. estimate of USD 0.17)

Quarterly dividend

USD 0.26/share

Breakeven oil price

below USD 38/barrel

Breakeven oil price - the minimum price per barrel of oil where the company is covering all of its costs

Berkshire Hathaway and the geopolitical premium

The presence of Berkshire Hathaway as the largest shareholder remains a key stabilizing factor for investors. Warren Buffett has repeatedly reaffirmed this position, buying up shares of $OXY on every major downturn. This institutional anchor significantly limits downside volatility and signals long-term confidence in the firm's business model even in an environment of price shocks.

In addition, Occidental is benefiting from one of the current oil shocks. While Gulf producers face direct production constraints caused by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, US production in the Permian Basin continues uninterrupted. Meanwhile, a breakeven price below $40 per barrel means that even with a significant cooling of the geopolitical premium, the company will remain strongly profitable.

The STRATOS project and the long-term outlook

The second pillar of OXY's long-term strategy is CO2 capture technology through the STRATOS project, the world's first commercial DAC station, which is expected to be fully operational by mid-2026. This investment is strategically interesting for two reasons: first, it opens up access to premium-priced carbon neutrality credits from large corporate customers, and second, it builds a platform that can make OXY a relevant player even in the tougher regulatory environment of the future. Analysts point to the launch of STRATOS as a key catalyst for potential share repricing in the second half of the year.

Shares of $OXY have already gained 45% this year.

Phillips 66 $PSX

From a single refiner to a diversified energy player

Phillips 66 has undergone one of the most significant transformations in its industry over the past two years. The company, traditionally viewed as a pure refining colossus dependent on volatile crack spreads (the difference between the price of crude oil (input) and the price of refined products like gasoline or diesel (output)), has been systematically repositioning its business model toward a more diversified and stable source of revenue. In the words of CEO Mark Lashier, 2025 was "a year of transformation" and the fourth quarter results confirm this assessment.

Revenue for the full year 2025 was $132.19 billion, with net income up more than 108% year-on-year to $4.39 billion. In Q4 2025, the company reported adjusted earnings per share of $2.47 versus the consensus estimate of $2.14. Shares of $PSX have appreciated approximately 24% since the beginning of 2026 and are now trading at an all-time high of just under $180.

Key Financial Highlights

Indicator

Value

FY2025 Revenue

USD 132.4 billion

Net profit FY2025

USD 4.39 billion (↑108% YoY)

Adjusted EPS Q4 2025

USD 2.47 (vs. estimate of USD 2.14)

Operating cash flow FY2025

USD 5.0 billion

Returned to shareholders FY2025

USD 3.1 billion (50%+ CFO)

Net NGL transportation/fractionation capacity

Record over 1 MMBD

Net product yield (refining)

Record 88%

CapEx 2026 (plan)

USD 2.4 billion

Refinery recovery and structural improvements

The refining segment, which was the company's biggest weakness a year ago, is undergoing a significant turnaround. Phillips 66 achieved a record net product yield (88%) in Q4 2025 and operated at 99% of refining capacity. A key factor is the ability to process Canadian heavy crude at a significant discount to the WTI benchmark, and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz will widen this differential further in favor of US refiners.

The Midstream segment complements the refining business with steady revenues from NGL transportation and fractionation. The acquisition of a 50% stake in WRB and the takeover of Coastal Bend have strengthened the company's competitive position, and management has signaled EBITDA guidance of $4.5 billion by the end of 2027. Goldman Sachs $GS recently raised the target price to $186.

LA refinery closure as a strategic move

One controversial but strategically logical move was the plan to close the Los Angeles refinery. Although the company booked $239 million of accelerated depreciation in Q4 2025, it is getting rid of one of the most costly and regulatory-intensive assets in the portfolio. The result is a portfolio with higher average margins and lower environmental liabilities, consistent with the strategy to optimize capital allocation to the most profitable segments.

ConocoPhillips $COP

World's largest independent oil and gas producer

ConocoPhillips is the world's largest independent oil and gas company by production and is one of the few players in the industry whose portfolio diversification includes both premium Améric assets (Permian Basin, Eagle Ford, Bakken) and a global presence in Canada, Norway, Qatar and other regions. The Marathon Oil integration, completed in 2024, added high-quality oil reserves and management reports achieving double the originally planned synergies in the acquired regions.

Fourth quarter 2025 delivered mixed results, with revenue of $14.19 billion, adjusted EPS of $1.02 (slightly below consensus of $1.08) and operating cash flow of $4.3 billion. The main negative factor was lower average realized oil prices, USD 42.46/bbl vs. USD 52.37 in the same period in 2024. Production, on the other hand, surprised positively: total output in Q4 2025 reached 2,320 Mboed (thousand barrels per day), up 137 Mboed year-on-year.

Key financial indicators

Indicator

Value

Revenue Q4 2025

USD 14.19 billion

Net profit Q4 2025

USD 1.44 billion

Adjusted EPS Q4 2025

USD 1.02

Operating cash flow Q4 2025

USD 4.3 billion

Production Q4 2025

2,320 Mboed

Production outlook 2026

2,230-2,360 Mboed

Projected CapEx 2026

~12 billion USD

Dividend Q1 2026

USD 0.84/share

Return of capital target 2026

45% CFO

Cost reduction program and path to free cash flow

Management's most significant commitment for 2026 is to reduce capital expenditures and operating expenses by more than $1 billion compared to 2025. CEO Ryan Lance has repeatedly called this a "margin improvement initiative" and the company has already shown measurable progress. Well productivity in the Permian is up 8% year-over-year in 2025 in terms of oil production per foot of well length, and 7% in the Eagle Ford. These internal efficiencies allow the company to maintain production at a lower CapEx.

Four large projects, Willow in Alaska (scheduled to begin production in 2029), LNG projects in Qatar, the Surmont expansion in Canada and the Permian Basin development, are the backbone of the plan to double free cash flow by the end of the decade. Management estimates incremental free cash flow from these projects of $7 billion by 2029 compared to a 2025 base year. The Willow project, approximately 50% complete, alone should add approximately $4 billion of annual free cash flow.

The current geopolitical premium in oil prices significantly improves the near-term outlook. With Brent prices above USD 90 per barrel, COP is generating significantly stronger cash flow than the original forecasts for 2026. At the same time, the company has one of the lowest breakeven points in the industry, at around USD 40 per barrel, giving it exceptional resilience even in the event of a rapid price decline following de-escalation of the conflict.

Comparison of key indicators

An overview of key metrics for a quick comparison of companies:

Parameter

$OXY

$PSX

$COP

Market segment

E&P + DAC

Downstream/Midstream

E&P (Global)

Production (Q4 2025)

1,481 Mboed

Processes crude oil only

2,320 Mboed

Breakeven (USD/barrel)

<40

~45-50

~40

Dividend (Q1 2026)

$0,26/Q

$1,27/Q

$0,84/Q

Geographic exposure

USA (Permian)

US + UK + DE

Global (15 countries)

Strategic view

All three companies are direct beneficiaries of increased prices due to the current geopolitical shock, but for different reasons and with different risk profiles.

Occidental $OXY offers the purest exposure to oil price movements in the DAC technology space. The drastic reduction in debt eliminates the existential risk that accompanied the company after the Anadarko acquisition and opens up the space to return capital more aggressively to shareholders. An investor who believes in a continued war premium in oil prices or a future regulatory premium for carbon emissions will find an asymmetric risk/reward ratio in $OXY.

Phillips 66 $PSX provides a different type of exposure. As a refining and midstream company, it benefits from a wide differential between the price of heavy oil and the resulting products, and the ability to process Canadian heavy oil from discounted sources is a distinct competitive advantage in the current environment. A diversified model with five segments (refining, midstream, chemicals, marketing and renewable fuels) reduces dependence on a single price driver and stabilizes earnings. The combination of record efficiency, strong cash flow and strict capital discipline makes $PSX an attractive choice for investors seeking energy exposure with lower commodity volatility.

ConocoPhillips $COP represents the "strength and discipline" category. It is the company with the broadest global diversification, the deepest inventory of drilling locations in the United States, and a clear plan to double free cash flow by the end of the decade. The goal of returning 45% of cash flow from operations to shareholders in 2026 while maintaining an ambitious investment program is an exceptional commitment in the industry. Lower near-term sensitivity to oil price movements (versus $OXY) remains a key risk as some production comes from regions with lower realized prices.

What to watch next

Key factors to focus on in the coming months:

  • The length and intensity of the Hormuz crisis: each week the Strait is closed means approximately 10 billion barrels less oil transported. The length of the disruption will determine whether oil companies benefit from a short-term shock or a longer-term restructuring of supply chains.

  • Launching STRATOS ($OXY): the first DAC station is expected to begin operations in mid-2026. Its operational results will test whether OXY can monetize carbon credits at commercial scale.

  • Refining Margins and Crack Spreads ($PSX): Crack spreads (the difference between the price of crude oil and the resulting petroleum products) remain a key indicator for Phillips 66. In an environment of supply disruptions from the Middle East, they could continue to rise.

  • Willow development ($COP): the Alaska project represents the company's largest single generator of future cash flow. Any regulatory or environmental complications could rewrite the outlook.

  • OPEC+ moves and production easing: the eight OPEC+ members agreed in March 2026 to add 206k b/d from April. If the geopolitical premium subsides faster than the market expects, there could be a rapid correction in oil prices and thus energy company valuations.

  • De-escalation of conflict and opening of the Strait of Hormuz: Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu's March 19 statements about helping to reopen the Strait signal a possible de-escalation that could significantly reduce the war premium in oil prices. Investors should watch these diplomatic negotiations very closely.

Is the era of the oil giants beginning?

The year 2026 reminds investors that the energy sector remains an indispensable part of the global economic system and that geopolitical events could completely redraw the investment map in a matter of weeks. Occidental Petroleum, Phillips 66 and ConocoPhillips are three companies with different business models and risk profiles, but they share one common characteristic: a distinct ability to generate free cash flow even in a lower oil price environment.

A key factor in the future course of all three will be the length and intensity of the geopolitical disruption in the Persian Gulf and the ability of management to maintain capital discipline no matter which way oil prices go.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/259065-these-3-american-oil-giants-are-printing-money-while-the-world-holds-its-breath Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-259036 Fri, 20 Mar 2026 04:05:38 +0100 Apple beats a shrinking China market while a memory price shock threatens the whole industry Apple's iPhone sales in China jumped 23 percent year on year in the first nine weeks of 2026 according to Counterpoint Research, even as the broader Chinese smartphone market fell 4 percent over the same period and government subsidies failed to revive sluggish consumer demand. Apple's gains were helped by e‑commerce discounts, the base iPhone 17 model's eligibility for state subsidies and, crucially, its tight supply chain control, which lets it absorb rising memory costs without passing them on to buyers the way many Android competitors are doing.

The backdrop is a sector wide memory crisis. Mobile DRAM prices surged 70 percent quarter on quarter and 151 percent year on year in Q1 2026, while NAND flash costs jumped 80 percent quarter on quarter and 360 percent year on year, forcing OPPO, vivo and other Chinese Android brands to announce price hikes on existing models. Jefferies now forecasts global smartphone shipments to fall 31 percent to 867 million units in 2026, and IDC expects a roughly 13 percent decline, with both firms noting that Apple and Samsung are structurally better positioned than Chinese OEMs to weather the crunch because of their premium pricing power and financial strength.

How Apple is growing against the market in China

Counterpoint data shows that China's smartphone market weakened 4% year-on-year from January to early March 2026, despite new government subsidies earlier this year. Cautious consumers and longer upgrade cycles are holding back demand, especially for cheaper Android brands.

But Apple $AAPL has been able to increase the volume of iPhones sold by roughly 23% in this environment, for several reasons:

  • The basic iPhone 17 qualifies for government subsidies.

  • E-commerce platforms offered aggressive discounts and promotions, often combined with subsidies.

  • Apple's strong supply chain control has not yet forced it to price it across the board, unlike some of its competitors.

Counterpoint's commentary points out that Apple is better equipped to absorb some of the pressure from rising memory chip prices without having to immediately pass the entire cost on to customers, thanks to its bargaining power with suppliers and cost optimization. This allows it to keep prices stable where OPPO and vivo have already announced price increases for some models.

Pressure on competition: price increases and the search for balance

Rising memory prices are already being reflected in the pricing policies of Chinese brands. According to Caixin and SCMP:

  • OPPO and vivo have announced the price hikes of selected models, citing the "steep and sustained rise in memory chip costs".

  • Memory component costs rose more than 50% quarter-on-quarter in the first quarter for DRAM and over 90% for NAND in some categories.

  • This drove total manufacturing costs up by 11-25% for many models, and by $100-150 per unit for premium devices.

Counterpoint also points out that Huawei has a partial cushion due to a larger share of domestic memory suppliers charging lower prices than large global manufacturers. This allows Huawei to more aggressively target the lower and mid-range segment with less pricing, which mainly threatens other Chinese brands in this band.

Global picture: memory shock and 31% drop in shipments

In its report, Jefferies portrays 2026 as a memory crisis for the entire smartphone market. Analyst Edison Lee states that:

  • Global smartphone shipments are likely to fall 31% this year to about 867 million units.

  • The original estimate was -12%, the revision is in response to the unexpected rate of memory price increases.

  • Mobile DRAM LPDDR5 prices rose 70% QoQ and 151% YoY in 1Q.

  • NAND prices added 80% QoQ and 360% YoY, and another 50%+ QoQ growth is expected in 2Q.

According to Jefferies, this means that the cost of memory components:

  • for the average Android phone will increase roughly 3.6 times YoY.

  • For Apple devices, approximately 4.2 times, as Apple uses higher capacities and more demanding configurations.

Manufacturers are thus forced to choose between three unpopular options: get more expensive, cut specifications, or sacrifice margin. In an environment of weaker demand, each of these is risky.

Who should emerge stronger from the crisis?

Jefferies expects the memory shock to favor Samsung and Apple at the expense of Chinese brands:

  • Samsung, thanks to its own memory business and guaranteed access to DRAM and NAND

  • Apple due to a less price-sensitive customer base and a strong brand.

The bank estimates that these two players will gain around 7 (Samsung) and 5 (Apple) percentage points of market share in the global market, while Chinese OEM volumes will fall significantly. For example:

  • Xiaomi could reduce shipments by 55% in 2026, partially offset by a 31% increase in average selling price (ASP), according to Jefferies.

  • Other brands such as OPPO, vivo and Transsion are set to face volume declines of 45-52%.

What this means for the investment view of Apple

For the investor who follows Apple, several things can be gleaned from these two reports:

  • Relative strength in China: Apple is able to grow volumes in a weak market and rising cost environment, suggesting it can gain share in key regions even in tougher years.

  • Brand resilience: even as memory costs rise, Apple has more room to manoeuvre - it can absorb some of the costs, pass some on in pricing, and lean on user loyalty and the ecosystem.

  • Structural share shift: if the Jefferies scenario comes to pass, the global market may shrink, but Apple can slice a larger share of it - especially at the expense of Chinese OEMs in the mid- and high-end segment.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/259036-apple-beats-a-shrinking-china-market-while-a-memory-price-shock-threatens-the-whole-industry Pavel Botek
bulios-article-259046 Thu, 19 Mar 2026 21:39:43 +0100 🚨 Great news for $UBER shareholders❗️

⭐️ I’ve been talking about Uber non-stop for almost 2 years as an investment I fully trust, and so far I don’t see any signs of slowdown or disruption to its business model.

🟢 On the contrary, it’s closing exclusive partnerships with companies like $NVDA $LCID $GOOGL $NBIS $AMZN..

..and just a few hours ago announced a NEW partnership with Rivian for $1.25 billion $RIVN 🎉

🚨 A look at $UBER and its “dying business model”:

🟢 41 million rides daily

🟢 202 million monthly users

🟢 70 countries / in 15,000 cities

✅ +30% higher ride frequency via AVs

✅ One of the TOP network effects

✅ Exclusive partnerships

This doesn’t even remotely look like a sinking business. The opposite is true.

On the stock and as a company, I’m still BULLISH on UBER and the fundamentals confirm it:

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https://en.bulios.com/status/259046 Diego Navarro
bulios-article-258962 Thu, 19 Mar 2026 16:20:17 +0100 Alibaba’s Q4: cloud and AI shine while profit takes a hit from heavy investment Alibaba’s latest quarter makes the split inside the group very clear. Overall revenue grew only modestly, but operating profit fell more than 70 percent and non‑GAAP net income dropped by roughly two thirds as the company poured money into instant retail, user experience upgrades and AI and cloud infrastructure. Cloud and AI were the bright spots: Alibaba Cloud revenue rose about 36 percent year on year to more than 43 billion yuan, while AI related product revenue delivered its tenth consecutive quarter of triple digit growth and management highlighted its MaaS platform as a new engine for the business.

For investors, the picture is a classic trade off between near term earnings pressure and long term growth. China e‑commerce is focused on stabilising users and monetisation but is seeing margins squeezed by subsidies and quick commerce competition, while cloud and AI are growing fast and could become a much larger share of group revenue by the end of the decade if current trends hold. The quarter therefore looks weak on short term profit metrics, yet it sketches a framework in which heavy spending on instant commerce and AI could pay off over time, provided the industry avoids another price war and Alibaba can translate its AI and cloud leadership into durable, higher margin cash flows.

How was the last quarter?

Total revenue for the quarter was CNY284.843 billion (about USD40.7 billion), up roughly two percent year-on-year; excluding the Sun Art and Intime retail businesses, it would have been roughly nine percent growth on a comparable basis. Operating profit, on the other hand, fell to CNY10.645 billion (about USD1.5 billion), down about 74 per cent year-on-year.

Adjusted operating profit (Adjusted EBITA) fell 57 percent to CNY23.397 billion (about USD3.3 billion) as Alibaba significantly increased investment in quick commerce, customer experience and technology, only partially offset by better cloud performance and savings in other parts of the group. Net profit attributable to shareholders was CNY16.322 billion (about USD2.3 billion), while total net profit was CNY15.631 billion (about USD2.2 billion), down by about two-thirds. Adjusted net profit was CNY16.710 billion (about USD2.4 billion), also down 67 percent year-on-year.

Earnings per share fell accordingly: diluted earnings per American Depository Receipt (ADS) were CNY5.93 (about USD0.85) and adjusted earnings per ADS were CNY7.09 (about USD1.01), down about 67-71 percent from a year ago. Operating cash flow dropped to CNY36.032 billion (about USD5.15 billion) from about CNY70.9 billion previously, while free cash flow fell to CNY11.346 billion (about USD1.6 billion) - mainly due to heavy investment in quick commerce. On the other hand, the group remains very liquid, with cash and liquid investments of around CNY560.2 billion (about USD80.1 billion).

Segments and AI + cloud

Chinese e-commerce(Alibaba China E-commerce Group) generated sales of about CNY159.347 billion (about USD22.8 billion), up about six percent year-on-year. Of that, customer management (advertising, commissions) brought in CNY102.664 billion (about USD14.7 billion), up just one percent from a year ago, as transaction activity was weaker and the one-time effect of software deployment fees wore off. Quick commerce (mainly renamed Ele.me, now Taobao Instant Commerce), on the other hand, grew rapidly, with sales increasing to roughly CNY20.842 billion (about USD3.0 billion), up about 56 percent year-on-year, while gradually improving unit economics through growth in average order size and more efficient logistics.

Alibaba International Digital Commerce Group (AIDC) had sales of around CNY39.201 billion (about USD5.6 billion), up four percent year-on-year. Retail international e-commerce (AliExpress, Lazada, Trendyol, etc.) grew three percent, wholesale grew ten percent, while AIDC's losses were significantly reduced year-on-year, mainly due to optimized logistics and more efficient use of marketing spend. The AliExpress Choice business improved unit economics and the "Brand+" program accelerated brand recruitment, which boosted sales.

The most important growth driver is the Cloud Intelligence Group. Its sales reached CNY43.284 billion (about USD6.19 billion), up about 36 percent year-on-year. AI product revenue grew at a triple-digit rate for the tenth consecutive quarter, and the Model-as-a-Service (MaaS) platform is becoming the new cloud driver. Alibaba Cloud is also strengthening reputationally: according to Gartner and IDC, it is the leader in databases, generative AI in Asia and financial cloud in China, with a share of around 43 percent in infrastructure for the financial sector.

Management commentary

In the results, CEO Eddie Wu highlighted that Alibaba continues to invest heavily in its two pillars - AI and consumption - and that AI will be one of the main growth drivers. He noted that Cloud Intelligence Group revenue is up 36 percent and that AI products are showing triple-digit growth for the tenth consecutive quarter, with MaaS already acting as a new cloud engine; on the consumer side, he highlighted the integration of user scenes into the Qwen app, which has reached over 300 million monthly active users. The tone is confident on the AI and cloud side, but between the lines he admits that the price for this strategy is significant pressure on current profits.

CFO Toby Xu commented on the rapid growth of the AI+cloud business as a reason why he is not afraid to ramp up investment, while noting that Quick Commerce is scaling while improving unit economics. He emphasized that strong liquidity and resilient cash flow generation give the company room to sustain high strategic investments. The CFO's tone is consistent with a "growth before short-term profit" strategy, emphasizing that the current decline in profitability is a conscious decision, not just the result of weak demand.

Outlook

Alibaba itself did not present a detailed numerical outlook for the quarter ahead in the press release itself, but several important lines can be gleaned from management's words. First, cloud and AI are set to continue to grow faster than the whole - management expects AI products and MaaS to continue to drive double-digit cloud growth and be even more integrated with the e-commerce ecosystem.

Second, quick commerce (Taobao Instant Commerce) will remain a priority - the company expects continued growth in volume and average order value, as well as continued investment, so the group's profitability will remain under pressure in the coming quarters. Thirdly, the Qwen app is becoming a horizontal interface for many services (Taobao, Tmall, Amap, Fliggy, Alipay) and is set to increase user engagement and generate transactions across the platform in the long term - the outlook thus rests on the assumption that AI-assisted shopping will become a common shopping tool.

Long-term results

For the twelve months ending 31 March 2025, Alibaba achieved revenue of CNY996.347 billion (approximately USD139.3 billion, at an exchange rate of around CNY7.15/USD), up nearly six percent year-on-year from CNY941.168 billion (approximately USD131.5 billion) in the previous period. In 2023, sales were about CNY868.687 billion (about USD121.0 billion) and in 2022 about CNY853.062 billion (about USD118.8 billion) - showing that sales growth has been more in the mid-single digits in recent years, although the absolute volume is huge.

Gross profit reached CNY398.062 billion (about USD55.6 billion) in the latest year, a double-digit growth against CNY354.845 billion (about USD49.4 billion) in the previous year. Thus, gross margin is gradually improving as the mix shifts towards higher value-added (cloud, AI, services) while the firm keeps a lid on the growth in cost of goods sold. Operating expenses were CNY257.157 billion (roughly USD35.9 billion), versus CNY241.495 billion (about USD33.6 billion) a year earlier - rising but slower than gross profit, which allowed operating profit to rise to CNY140.905 billion (about USD19.7 billion) from CNY113.350 billion (about USD15.8 billion).

Pre-tax profit jumped to CNY161.421 billion (about USD22.6 billion) from CNY93.861 billion (about USD13.1 billion), mainly due to the improvement in operating profit and other items; after-tax net profit remained CNY130.109 billion (about USD18.1 billion) compared to CNY80.009 billion (about USD11.3 billion). Thus, earnings per share grew faster than revenue in the past year: from roughly CNY31.6 (about USD4.4) to CNY55.1 (about USD7.9), and diluted EPS from CNY31.36 (about USD4.4) to CNY53.6 (about USD7.6). This is helped by a gradual reduction in the number of shares outstanding from roughly 2.69 billion in 2022 to 2.43 billion in 2025.

EBIT increased to CNY147.710 billion (about USD20.6 billion) from CNY119.507 billion (about USD16.7 billion), EBITDA to CNY182.672 billion (about USD25.5 billion) from CNY164.011 billion (about USD22.9 billion). Thus, over the long term, Alibaba is showing solid profitability growth on a full-year basis, but quarterly numbers (including this December one) can fluctuate significantly depending on the investment cycle, restructuring, and how aggressively the company pushes new quick commerce and AI projects.

Shareholder Structure

Alibaba has a very low official insider stake, around 0.01 percent of the stock, while the institution holds approximately 11.9 percent of the stock and free float. This is a relatively small institutional stake compared to U.S. technology titles, reflecting both regulatory and political risks and the fact that some shares are held through various structures and depositories.

The largest institutional investors include JPMorgan Chase (holding around 0.9 per cent), Primecap Management (around 0.8 per cent), UBS Group (around 0.45 per cent) and FMR (Fidelity) with a holding of just over 0.4 per cent. Most of the shares are therefore held by a broad base of smaller investors and various structures outside of traditional funds, which means greater sensitivity to market sentiment and news of regulation in China, but also room for potential future increases in institutional holdings if the risk profile improves.

News and strategic shift

  • Integration of Qwen app into the consumer ecosystem (Taobao, Tmall, Taobao Instant Commerce, Amap, Fliggy, Alipay) - AI chat is becoming a "layer" on top of Alibaba's services that can arrange shopping, transportation and travel in one go; the goal is to make Qwen the main gateway to shopping and services.

  • Qwen's rapid growth - consumable Qwen has surpassed 300 million monthly active users, the campaign around Chinese New Year has brought tens to hundreds of millions of first-time AI shoppers; AI is thus becoming not only a marketing tool but also a driver of real orders.

  • Developing its own AI infrastructure - T-Head' s chip division has mass-produced its own GPUs for training and deploying models, compatible with major AI frameworks; combined with Qwen and the cloud, Alibaba has more control over computing capacity and costs, which is key in the era of expensive GPUs.

  • Strengthening global cloud footprint - Alibaba Cloud operates 92 availability zones in 29 regions and holds a leading position in China in financial and hybrid cloud, according to IDC and Gartner; while expanding outside China to offer AI and database services to international clients.

  • Growth of quick commerce and rebranding of Ele.me - the service has been renamed Taobao Instant Commerce and more closely integrated with both Taobao and the Qwen app; quick delivery of food and goods is set to become an important growth pillar, even at the cost of weaker margins in the short term.

  • Expanding international partnerships - as part of the AIDC, Alibaba is expanding its collaboration with Shinsegae in South Korea and bringing more brands to AliExpress and other platforms through the "Brand+" program; the goal is to make international business build on stronger brands, not just anonymous cheap goods.

Fair Price

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258962-alibaba-s-q4-cloud-and-ai-shine-while-profit-takes-a-hit-from-heavy-investment Pavel Botek
bulios-article-258931 Thu, 19 Mar 2026 13:50:09 +0100 Generative AI in One Medical: Is Amazon birthing a third growth pillar alongside cloud and e-commerce? Amazon has been trying to break into healthcare for years, but for investors, this segment has remained more of a nebulous addition alongside cloud and e-commerce. Buying One Medical and building Amazon Health Services hasn't yet shown a clear "aha moment" to see the billion-dollar investment in primary care become a concrete business that has a chance to shift the entire Amazon story.

The launch of a generative AI assistant right in the One Medical environment changes the game by bringing AI deep into real primary care processes for the first time. It's no longer just a chatbot, but a tool that works with medical records, lab results, prescriptions, and can suggest a type of care, book a patient, and help with follow-up.

Top points of the analysis

  • Amazon has launched a generative AI assistant in One Medical that works directly with patient charts, lab results and medications, and can book and explain.

  • This shifts the focus from "health chat" to AI connected to patients, which opens up the topic of regulation, HIPAA, privacy, and an algorithmic approach to care.

  • If AI assistant takes hold, it can increase physician productivity, reduce time on routine agendas, lift office utilization, and increase revenue per One Medical member.

  • Synergies with Amazon Pharmacy and logistics mean AI can feed more prescriptions and drug orders into its own ecosystem over the long term.

  • The healthcare industry is regulated and has high barriers to entry, so successfully integrating AI over One Medical can give Amazon a hard-to-imitate position in primary care.

  • The main risks are regulatory (when AI crosses the "support" threshold into the diagnosis area), reputational (erroneous or dangerous recommendations) and execution (adoption by patients and physicians, real impact on numbers, not just PR effect).

Amazon's healthcare story

Until now, Amazon's $AMZN healthcare story was made up of several pieces, but together they didn't act as a clear growth engine. The purchase of One Medical brought a network of primary care practices and a subscription model, Amazon Pharmacy added a distribution channel for drugs, but lacked the digital layer to tie it all together and bring a visible advantage over conventional care providers.

The generative AI assistant in One Medical brings exactly that layer. It can read and explain medical records, interpret the results in a clear way, suggest the appropriate type of care (online chat, video, office, urgent care), and offer booking with a specific doctor right away. What this means for the patient is that they get the answer to "what should I do next" in one app and don't have to wait for someone to call them back.

The impact mechanism looks like this: The AI assistant takes over some of the communication and pre-preparation (collecting symptoms, summarizing the history, explaining findings), the doctor gets more structured input and can spend more time making decisions rather than on administration. This can increase the number of patients per physician, reduce waiting times, and at the same time raise the number of interactions per member (more consultations) without a linear increase in staff costs.

Because the AI runs directly within the One Medical environment and is designed to be HIPAA-compliant, Amazon can work with detailed data about the care process, but must also adhere to strict boundaries around security and consent. This differentiates it from freely available symptom checkers, which don't have access to the actual patient chart and don't carry comparable regulatory liability.

Strategically, it's important that the AI layer is not built "next to" One Medical, but within. This makes it an integral part of the product that increases the allowance per member (ARPU), improves retention, and may enable more differentiated pricing or packages for employers and payers over time.

What needs to work for this to work

  • High enough adoption of AI assistant among members for the improvement to show up in aggregate numbers.

  • Demonstrable improvements in physician and nurse productivity, not just shifting work from one spreadsheet to another.

  • No major regulatory interventions that would limit key functions.

  • Visible synergies with Amazon Pharmacy and other healthcare services that bring in additional revenue.

  • A compelling story for employers and insurers that the combination of One Medical + AI delivers better care for similar money.

How it becomes money

1) Higher revenue per One Medical member

One Medical operates on a member fee plus reimbursement model for care provided. AI assistant can increase ARPU by:

  • Increasing the number of relevant interactions per member (more consultations, check-ups, preventive inquiries).

  • Improves adherence to treatment (patients better understand instructions.

  • generates more appropriate office visits instead of unnecessary emergency room visits.

In practice, this means that the same network of physicians can serve more "economically active" contacts over time, with fixed infrastructure costs being budgeted for higher volumes of care.

2) Better use of capacity and margins

Primary care is expensive in terms of human time. AI assistant takes the routine activities out of it (explaining basic findings, asking about symptoms, scheduling) so that doctors and nurses can spend a greater proportion of time on what is truly most medically and economically valuable. If the number of patients per doctor can be increased while wage costs are not rising too fast, the operating margins of this part of the business will also increase.

Moreover, from Amazon's point of view, it is not just about the margin within the healthcare segment. Each member of One Medical is also a deeper part of the Amazon ecosystem and has the potential to generate additional revenue in other segments (pharmacy, possibly other medical products, services tied to Prime).

3) Cross-sell into Amazon Pharmacy and other services

An AI assistant that understands specific medications, dosing, and patient history is an ideal place to tie into Amazon Pharmacy. After explaining a finding or adjusting a medication, the system can offer to order the medication, set reminders, or suggest switching to another form of distribution (such as home delivery).

Each such step increases the likelihood that the patient will fill their prescriptions through Amazon rather than a competitor. For Amazon, this means higher prescription volume, better use of logistics, and the ability to offer more relevant services around adherence and chronic disease over time.

The numbers that support this thesis

Because Amazon's healthcare segment does not break out earnings in full detail, an investor must work with what is available and what can be reasonably estimated. More important than the absolute number is the trend and direction.

  • One Medical has a network of dozens of clinics in the U.S. and a membership base in the hundreds of thousands to low millions, and is expanding into other states.

  • Amazon has been emphasizing the growth of the healthcare segment in recent years and has restructured Amazon Health Services to have clearer accountability and reporting.

  • The Pharmacy business is growing at a double-digit rate and forms a logical channel to cross-sell from One Medical.

  • Investments in AI within AWS and its own products suggest that AI will not be a one-off project but a consistent part of the strategy across segments.

From a cash flow perspective, healthcare is still a small player within Amazon as a whole, but it has a characteristic that e-commerce does not: more stable, cycle-independent demand and relatively high barriers to entry. If AI can improve margins, today's "tiny" could become a more visible pillar within a few years.

How much of the market can Amazon capture

The market for digital assistants in healthcare today is in the hundreds of millions of dollars in size and is set to grow to roughly $1.5 billion by 2030 at an annual growth rate of around 14%. The broader digital health market is even more ambitious - roughly $200-300 billion today with a view to more than $500 billion by 2030 according to various estimates.

Amazon is no longer entering this from scratch. It has its own One Medical network, Amazon Pharmacy, and now Health AI, a combination that the pure software players don't have. If Amazon manages to monetize a few percent of the expected market for digital assistants and part of digital primary care within One Medical and its own telehealth alone, this gives a revenue potential of hundreds of millions to units of billions of USD per year over 5-7 years, with a trend of increasing margins due to automation.

Theoretical numbers

To get an idea of the potential, let's build a smaller model:

  • Let's assume One Medical serves 2-3 million members (including employer programs and Medicare) over the long term.

  • Each member generates X number of visits, telehealth contacts, and prescriptions annually.

  • Health AI can:

    • Reduce "dead" administrative work by Y%.

    • Enable physicians to handle 10-20% more clinically relevant contacts.

    • Raise ARPU by a few percentage points.

Even if Health AI only brings 5-10% extra to revenue per member at similar or slightly better margins, we're talking about hundreds of millions of dollars in additional revenue per member per year at One Medical alone. Additionally, the combination of higher productivity and better capacity utilization can gradually lift the operating margin of the healthcare segment by several percentage points, which will translate into a multiple of Amazon's overall EPS once the healthcare portion becomes larger.

Position in the race for "health AI agents"

The race for AI assistants for healthcare is not just big tech companies, but also specialized startups and traditional healthcare companies that are testing their own tools for education and decision support. Amazon has three key advantages in this race:

  • Integrated intervention - One Medical (clinical care), Amazon Pharmacy (pharmaceuticals), Health AI (digital layer) and AWS/Bedrock (infrastructure), all under one roof.

  • Actionable AI agent - Health AI is not just a conversational chatbot, but an agent capable of taking specific actions (book appointments, suggest urgent care, connect to telehealth, prepare documentation for doctors). This puts it just behind regular symptom-determining doctors and gives Amazon a head start in "real" patient flow automation.

  • Rapid scale-out capability - once the model has proven itself within One Medical, Amazon can replicate a similar principle in other environments:

    • Extending the AI assistant beta within the Amazon Health site to non-members.

    • Greater integration with pay-per-visit telehealth services.

    • Partnerships with payers or employers to offer "AI triage + One Medical + pharmacy" as a package.

If Amazon manages to stay ahead in "agent-based" AI for primary care, it may become the de facto standard for a portion of the population (especially in urban areas), much like AWS is the standard for a portion of cloud infrastructure today.

Valuation - what's included and what's not

Today's Amazon valuation is primarily based on two pillars: cloud (AWS) and e-commerce with advertising. The healthcare part is implicitly included in the price, but more as an "option" than as a main driver.

This has two effects:

  • if the AI in One Medical and the broader health strategy fails, the market will likely absorb it without a dramatic valuation rewrite because the core story is elsewhere.

  • If, on the other hand, it can show that healthcare can make a visible contribution to revenue and margin growth, it will be a positive surprise for valuations.

So for an investor, today's AI move in One Medical is more of an asymmetric option. The upside may add a new growth pillar, the downside for now mainly adds execution and reputational risk, but that doesn't threaten Amazon's core business model.

Macro and the market

Primary care and digital health are areas where three pressures have been cumulating for a long time: an aging population, rising costs, and a shortage of medical staff. This is creating a structural demand for solutions that increase efficiency and allow physicians to handle more work without compromising quality.

Amazon is not alone in trying to take advantage of these trends, but is one of the few to combine a real-world network of clinics, a pharmacy business, logistics, cloud infrastructure and proprietary AI tools. This gives it the chance to cover a bigger chunk of the value chain than is common with pure software or, conversely, pure healthcare players.

Risks

The first major risk is regulatory. Once an AI tool makes a triage decision and a recommendation for the next step of care, regulators may conclude that it is a form of diagnostic tool that should fall into a more stringent category. This would mean additional certifications, longer approvals for changes, and potential limitations on features.

The second risk is reputational. One badly handled case where an AI assistant underestimates a serious symptom can have major PR implications, especially when Amazon as a well-known brand is involved. Reactions could come from patients, regulators or partners.

The third risk is enforcement. Just because AI looks good in a presentation doesn't mean doctors and patients will want to use it. If doctors see the system as a burden rather than a help, or if patients prefer to call the practice directly rather than write AI, the real impact on numbers will be much less than PR suggests.

Investment scenarios

Optimistic scenario

In the optimistic scenario, the AI assistant becomes a standard part of care at One Medical. Adoption is high, patients use it, and physicians see it as an aid. Amazon's healthcare segment grows at a double-digit rate, margins improve, and management gradually starts giving more detail in reporting.

For an investor, this means Amazon is gaining a third visible pillar alongside AWS and e-commerce, which can support valuation growth even if some other parts of the business slow down.

A realistic scenario

In a realistic scenario, AI assistant is useful but not revolutionary. It will improve some processes and increase satisfaction for some patients and doctors, but the impact on numbers is spread out and incremental. Healthcare will remain an interesting addition to the Amazon story, but the market will continue to see it as an option rather than a core.

Investors benefit indirectly through better diversification and less dependence on one sector rather than through dramatic rerating.

The pessimistic scenario

In the pessimistic scenario, the AI assistant faces low adoption, regulatory options, and possibly negative incidents. Amazon has to cut back on some features, there is no real improvement in productivity, development and compliance costs rise, and the healthcare segment remains small and problematic on the books.

The market reacts to this with more relief that the core business is elsewhere, but confidence in Amazon's ability to expand into other sectors may suffer as a result.

What to watch next

  • How quickly and widely AI assistant will spread among One Medical members.

  • Comments from Amazon executives on the impact of AI on productivity and satisfaction in the health segment.

  • Visible signs of synergies with Amazon Pharmacy (prescription volume, new features).

  • Regulators' reaction, potential investigations or recommendations on AI in primary care.

  • Whether Amazon will add the healthcare segment more prominently to its presentations and investor materials.

  • Potential expansion of AI features beyond the One Medical app (e.g., integration into the main Amazon app or voice assistants).

What to take away from the article

  • Amazon is shifting AI in healthcare from chatbots to a tool that actually works with the patient's chart and influences the primary care workflow.

  • This builds a layer that can increase physician productivity and revenue per One Medical member if high adoption succeeds.

  • Synergies with Amazon Pharmacy and other healthcare services are key to making AI not just a "nice to have" feature, but a revenue driver.

  • Regulation, reputation and enforcement are the three main risks that can slow the whole story down significantly.

  • For Amazon's valuation today, AI is more of an option at One Medical, but in a successful scenario, it can help create a third growth pillar.

  • An investor holding Amazon for the long term should watch the healthcare segment not for the short-term effect on EPS, but for how it expands sources of growth and reduces dependence on individual industries.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258931-generative-ai-in-one-medical-is-amazon-birthing-a-third-growth-pillar-alongside-cloud-and-e-commerce Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-258953 Thu, 19 Mar 2026 13:40:14 +0100 💾 Micron reported meteoric growth and nearly tripled revenue!

The company Micron Technology $MU posted results that show how strongly artificial intelligence can transform an entire industry. Revenue nearly tripled year-over-year and the firm significantly beat analysts' expectations.

📊 Results for the most recent quarter

Adjusted earnings per share: $12.20 (estimate $9.31)

Revenue: $23.86 billion (estimate $20.07 billion)

A year ago, revenue was about $8 billion.

📈 What is driving the growth?

The main driver is extreme demand for memory chips related to the artificial intelligence boom.

Each new generation of GPUs—especially from Nvidia—requires more memory, which creates supply pressure. The result is a combination of:

memory shortages (DRAM, NAND)

rising prices

significant margin improvement

The company's gross margin rose to as much as 74%, which is an exceptionally strong level in this segment.

📊 Outlook also well above expectations

Micron expects growth to continue in the coming period:

Revenue estimate: about $33.5 billion

EPS estimate: about $19.15

This significantly exceeds market consensus, confirming that demand for memory remains extremely strong.

📦 Where is the biggest growth?

cloud memory: +160% (to about $7.75 billion)

mobile and client segment: a significant jump from about $2.2 billion to $7.7 billion

At the same time, production capacity is shifting toward HBM (High Bandwidth Memory), which is key for AI chips and offers higher margins.

🏗️ Massive investments in capacity

Micron is responding to demand by aggressively expanding production:

The company announced new plants in Idaho and New York, involving investments in the tens of billions of dollars. Production start-up is expected in 2027–2028. Capital expenditures are set to increase significantly in the coming years.

📈 Stock performance

Micron shares are experiencing extraordinary growth:

Year 2025: more than +300%

Year-to-date: approximately +60%

After the results announcement they are currently down more than 4% in pre-market trading!

What is your view on Micron and its current valuation? Do you think the current growth is a long-term trend or just a cyclical phase?

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258953 Novakkk
bulios-article-258866 Thu, 19 Mar 2026 10:10:06 +0100 The Fed's Most Consequential Meeting in Years: Rates on Hold as Iran War Reshapes the Outlook Jerome Powell stepped before the cameras on March 18, 2026, with more on his plate than at any FOMC press conference in recent memory. The Fed left rates unchanged at 3.50–3.75% in an 11-to-1 vote, but the decision itself was never the real story. What rattled markets were the updated economic projections, the first this year to fully account for the Iran war shock, and Powell's cautious tone on inflation. Major U.S. indices closed deep in the red, and investors are now recalibrating how much room the Fed actually has to cut in 2026. This is the meeting that could define monetary policy for the rest of the year.

But for investors, it wasn't the actual rate decision that the market was expecting that was key. Much more attention was drawn to Fed Chairman Jerome Powell's press conference and updated economic projections, which for the first time this year reflected the impact of the war in Iran on the US economy. It was Powell's comments on inflation, the oil shock and the future direction of monetary policy that provoked a strong reaction in the markets and pulled the major US indices into the red.

FOMC decision and new economic projections

The Fed held rates unchanged for the second meeting in a row after four rate cuts. In a statement after the meeting, the committee did not significantly change its view on the economy, but added an important sentence, "The effects of developments in the Middle East on the U.S. economy are uncertain." It is this recognition of the uncertainty associated with the war in Iran and its impact on energy markets that is a key signal to investors.

Summary of Economic Projections (dot plot)

Along with the rate decision, the Fed released the first update to economic projections this year. The median FOMC member continues to expect one rate cut in 2026 and another in 2027, unchanged from the December projection.

But what is important is what has changed in the details. Seven of 19 participants now expect rates to remain unchanged this year, one more than in December. Meanwhile, the range of opinion within the commission is extremely wide. For 2027, one member expects a rate increase, three expect no change, four expect one reduction, six expect two, three expect three and one even five reductions. This dispersion clearly shows how little consensus currently exists within the Fed.

Key changes in the projections include:

  • Inflation (PCE) for 2026: raised to 2.7% from December's 2.5%, in both headline and core measures

  • GDP growth for 2026: raised slightly to 2.4%, for 2027 to 2.3%

  • Unemployment: unchanged at 4.4% at the end of 2026

  • Long-term neutral rate: slightly raised to 3.1% from 3.0% in December

Higher inflation projections combined with slightly stronger GDP growth suggest that the Fed is counting on the economy's productivity to partially offset inflationary pressures. Powell confirmed this, saying that the higher growth outlook is related to expected gains in productivity.

Powell's press conference: key messages

The press conference that followed the announcement of the decision was the main catalyst for the market reaction. Powell faced dozens of questions on the oil shock, the inflation outlook and the future direction of rates. His answers painted a picture of a central bank that is fully aware of the complexity of the current situation but deliberately refuses to react prematurely.

Inflation: slower progress than the Fed had hoped for

The strongest signal of the entire press conference was Powell's admission that the Fed was not making as much progress in fighting inflation as he had expected. Headline PCE(Personal Consumption Expenditures) rose 2.8% over the past 12 months and core PCE, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, was up 3.0%. Powell pointed out that the elevated readings mainly reflect inflation in goods, which is being boosted by the impact of tariffs. At the same time, short-term inflation expectations have risen in recent weeks, likely related to the sharp rise in oil prices.

Meanwhile, Powell said that a key factor the Fed is waiting for this year is progress in goods disinflation as the one-off price effects of tariffs gradually work their way through the economy. If that progress does not materialize, the announced rate cut is unlikely to materialize. He literally said that the forecast rate cut is contingent on the evolution of the economy, and if there is no progress in inflation, the cut will not happen.

The oil shock and the war in Iran: maximum uncertainty

Powell's comments on the oil shock were among the most candid expressions of uncertainty we have heard from a Fed chief in recent years. He answered repeated questions from reporters about the impact of the war in Iran on the economy with marked caution. He stressed that no one knows what the economic impact will be, and that it may be smaller but also much larger than anyone expects. Several FOMC members reportedly suggested that if they were ever to skip publishing economic projections, this would be an appropriate meeting, because the degree of uncertainty is so high that any numerical estimates are of limited predictive value.

In terms of inflation, Powell acknowledged that higher energy prices would translate into higher headline inflation in the short run. Brent crude oil was trading near $107 a barrel on Wednesday, up nearly 50% since the conflict began. US gasoline prices averaged $3.84 a gallon, an increase of 92 cents in a single month. These factors will push March inflation significantly higher. But Powell also suggested that the Fed's conventional approach to energy shocks is to treat them as one-off price increases that should be absorbed gradually. The problem is that the Fed is also waiting for the inflationary effects of tariffs to wear off, and the two price pressures now overlap, making it difficult to distinguish between temporary and permanent inflationary factors.

Chart of Brent crude oil prices from 2022 - weekly

Stagflation? Powell rejects this term

One of the most watched moments of the press conference was Powell's response to the question of whether the US economy is approaching stagflation. Powell categorically rejected this term. He recalled that stagflation was a concept from the 1970s, when unemployment was in double digits and inflation was much higher. The current situation, with unemployment close to its natural level and inflation one percentage point above the target, was fundamentally different, he said. Yet analysts at Oxford Economics describe the current oil shock as a stagflationary shock because it has the potential to simultaneously weaken growth and raise inflation. While America is not in stagflation in the classic sense, the combination of a weak labour market, persistently elevated inflation and rising energy prices creates an extremely complicated situation for the Fed.

Dual mandate under pressure

Powell has been very candid in describing the stresses facing the Fed. On the one hand, the risks to the labor market are to the downside, which would justify a rate cut. On the other hand, the risks to inflation are pointing up, which would require keeping rates at current levels or raising them.

February's labour market data showed a surprising 92,000 drop in employment and unemployment rose to 4.4%. Powell, meanwhile, pointed out that the slowdown in job growth partly reflects lower immigration and lower labor force participation, not just weaker demand for labor.

It is this stalemate, with the two goals of the Fed's mandate pushing in opposite directions, that is why the Fed is choosing a wait-and-see strategy. Powell has reiterated several times that monetary policy has no pre-determined course and decisions will come on a data-driven, meeting-by-meeting basis. The bar for a rate cut has been raised, which was confirmed by analysts watching the press conference.

Powell's future at the head of the Fed

Powell also weighed in on the question of his future tenure. President Trump has nominated former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh for his post, but his confirmation by the Senate is complicated by Republican Senator Thom Tillis, who is blocking the nomination pending the resolution of the investigation into the reconstruction of Fed headquarters led by Washington Attorney General Jeanine Pirro.

Federal Judge James Boasberg last week brushed off subpoenas issued as part of that investigation, saying the government has presented virtually no evidence of wrongdoing and that the entire action serves as a tool to pressure Powell to lower rates. Powell has confirmed that he will not leave office until the investigation is concluded. If Warsh is not confirmed by the end of Powell's term on May 15, Powell will remain in office as chair pro tem, or interim chair, until his successor is officially confirmed.

Market reaction: stock sell-off, oil above $107

The markets reacted clearly negatively to Powell's words. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 768 points to close at 46,225, hitting a new low for 2026 and falling below its 200-day moving average. The S&P 500 index weakened 1.36% to 6,625 points and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell 1.46%. Wednesday's producer price index(PPI) report for February, which showed a 0.7% increase, more than double the consensus expectation of 0.3%, also contributed to the deepening sell-off. Year-on-year, the core PPI rose to 3.9%, the highest reading in more than a year.

In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year US Treasury note rose slightly to 4.23%. The two-year yield strengthened nearly 4 basis points to 3.71%. The dollar index gained 0.6% after Powell's comments. Brent crude closed at $107.38 a barrel, its highest level since July 2022, after Israel announced the killing of an Iranian security official and Iran attacked a gas field in the United Arab Emirates.

Traders after the press conference began pricing in zero rate cuts by the end of the year, despite the Fed's median projection still calling for one cut. This divergence between the dot plot and market valuation shows how much investor confidence in a rate cut this year was shaken after Powell's comments.

Micron $MU: A bright spot amid the sell-off

Amid the negative market sentiment, memory chipmaker Micron Technology delivered a positive surprise when it posted fiscal second-quarter results after the markets closed. The company's revenue nearly tripled to $23.86 billion, well ahead of the consensus estimate of $20.07 billion. EPS was $12.2 (32.8% above estimates).

CEO Sanjay Mehrotra said that the entire HBM(High Bandwidth Memory) production capacity for 2026 is already sold out. The board of directors approved a 30% dividend increase, and the third-quarter outlook of $33.5 billion in revenue significantly beat analysts' estimates of $22.5 billion. Still, Micron's shares weakened 4% in the aftermarket.

A strategic view

Yesterday's Fed meeting brings several key implications for investors. The Fed is in wait-and-see mode and the bar for further rate cuts has been raised. Powell has clearly indicated that without visible progress in disinflation, a cut will not happen. This means that a higher for longer rate environment remains the baseline scenario for the remainder of 2026.

This has several implications for equity markets. Growth technology companies with high valuations and low current earnings will continue to be under pressure as higher discount rates reduce the present value of their future cash flows. Conversely, firms with real profits, strong cash flow and pricing power should be relatively more resilient. The energy sector remains a direct winner in the current environment of rising oil prices.

The big unknown remains the conflict in the Middle East and its impact on oil prices. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz is turning transportation disruption into a real global supply loss, as Morgan Stanley has pointed out. If the conflict prolongs or escalates, inflationary pressures could worsen significantly and the Fed will face a scenario in which it will have to choose between fighting inflation and supporting a weak labour market. In such an environment, a rate hike cannot be ruled out, although this is not yet the baseline scenario.

The impending change in Fed leadership is also an interesting factor. Kevin Warsh, whom Trump nominated for the chairman position, has historically preferred lower rates. If he is confirmed and takes over the Fed leadership in the coming months, he could bring a shift in communication and approach to monetary policy. But this also creates another layer of uncertainty for markets.

What to watch next

  • Oil price developments and the situation in the Middle East: Any easing of the conflict could significantly reduce inflationary pressures and open up room for rate cuts. Conversely, further escalation would further complicate the Fed's situation.

  • March inflation data: headline inflation is expected to rise significantly due to rising energy prices. Core PCE will be key to show whether inflationary pressures are spreading to other categories.

  • Labor Market Data: After a surprising drop in employment in February, March's payrolls numbers will be key in assessing whether this is a trend or an anomaly.

  • Kevin Warsh Confirmation: If Senator Tillis continues to block the nomination, Powell will remain in office beyond his term, which could reassure markets but also extend the period of policy uncertainty surrounding the Fed.

  • Earnings season: Corporate earnings for the first quarter of 2026 will show how rising energy prices and lingering tariffs are affecting corporate margins and outlooks. Micron $MU set the bar high for the entire technology sector.

What the session brought to the markets

The Fed's March meeting confirmed that the US central bank is in one of its most difficult periods since the start of the post-pandemic inflation cycle. The combination of persistently elevated inflation, the oil shock caused by the war in Iran, a weak labour market and political pressure on the Fed's leadership creates an environment in which any decision is risky. Powell has adopted a strategy of maximum caution and waiting, which is probably the most responsible approach in the current situation.

For investors, the main message is that the era of higher rates for longer continues and a rate cut is not certain in the foreseeable future. Markets need to adjust to a reality in which the Fed has no room to act preemptively and where every decision hinges on data that could be fundamentally affected by unpredictable geopolitical developments within weeks. In such an environment, the quality and fundamental strength of the portfolio becomes more important than ever.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258866-the-fed-s-most-consequential-meeting-in-years-rates-on-hold-as-iran-war-reshapes-the-outlook Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-258948 Thu, 19 Mar 2026 09:28:27 +0100 BYD $BY6.F is slowly approaching the North American backyard. According to the Globe and Mail, it’s working on a network of roughly 20 dealerships in Canada — starting in the Greater Toronto Area, then Vancouver, Montreal and Calgary — and is using the new Canadian quota of 49,000 Chinese electric vehicles per year with a reduced tariff of 6.1% instead of the original 100%.

Canada thus becomes a gateway: BYD does not officially sell passenger cars in the US today, and high tariffs plus regulations on "smart" cars effectively shut the door there, but it is simultaneously considering either its own factory in Canada or the acquisition of a weakened legacy automaker, which would give it a stronger position across the North American region in the future.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258948 Ahmed Saleh
bulios-article-258842 Thu, 19 Mar 2026 03:15:05 +0100 Micron’s AI supercycle: record profit reshapes how investors view memory In fiscal Q2 2026, Micron reported results that underline how deeply the AI boom is reshaping the memory market, with revenue surging to about 23.9 billion dollars and profit in the mid teens billions as prices and volumes for data center memory jumped together. Gross margin expanded into the mid 50s and beyond on the back of scarce high bandwidth memory capacity and strong DRAM pricing, pushing earnings to levels that would have looked unrealistic just a few quarters ago.

From an investment perspective, Micron still operates in a highly cyclical industry that historically swings between acute shortages and painful oversupply, but the current phase looks like a full blown “supercycle” powered by AI workloads, with most forecasts showing demand exceeding supply through at least 2026. The key question for shareholders is how long the mix of strong AI driven demand and disciplined industry supply can last before new megafabs in the U.S., Korea and Taiwan come online and start to normalise margins and returns.

What was Q2 2026 like?

Revenue in the second fiscal quarter of 2026 was $23.86 billion, up from $13.64 billion in the previous quarter and $8.05 billion a year ago. This puts quarter-on-quarter growth at over 70%, and year-on-year revenue nearly tripled - the result of a combination of sharp growth in memory prices and very strong uptake, particularly in AI-related segments.

Gross profit jumped to $17.76 billion with a gross margin of around 74-75%, compared to less than 37% a year ago. GAAP operating profit was $16.14 billion, which equates to an operating margin of about 68%; adjusted operating profit of about $16.46 billion implies an even slightly higher margin. Meanwhile, a year ago, Micron $MU was around 22-25% operating margin - so this is a significant shift, driven primarily by the extraordinary pricing environment.

GAAP net income was $13.79 billion, adjusted net income was $14.02 billion. Earnings per share were $12.07 (GAAP) and $12.20 (adjusted), compared to $4.60-$4.78 in the prior quarter and only about $1.41-$1.56 a year ago.

Operating cash flow was $11.90 billion, up significantly from $8.41 billion in Q1 and $3.94 billion a year ago, and adjusted free cash flow was $6.9 billion. Capital expenditures after accounting for government incentives are roughly $5 billion, a high number, but in the context of booming demand and plans to expand production, this is consistent with efforts to "lock in" capacity for AI generation. At the end of the quarter, Micron had about $16.7 billion in cash and investments, so net debt is well manageable given the size of earnings and cash flow.

The company also announced a quarterly dividend of $0.15 per share, payable in April 2026 to shareholders of record at the end of March. While this is a relatively small amount in the context of current earnings, management frames it as a signal of confidence in the sustainability of the cycle, which may be an important psychological factor for some investors.

Segments.

The Cloud Memory Business Unit generated revenue of roughly $7.75 billion, up from $5.28 billion in Q1 and $2.95 billion a year ago. The segment's gross margin was around 74% and operating margin was around 66% - exceptionally high figures, driven by a combination of industry-leading AI server products and limited capacity availability across the industry.

The "Core" datacenter division had sales of about $5.69 billion, versus $2.38 billion in Q1 and $1.83 billion a year ago, with a gross margin of about 74% and an operating margin of about 67%. This shows that demand for server memory (not just pure AI, but high performance computing in general) is very strong and customers are willing to pay significantly higher prices for reliable supply.

The Mobile and Client Business Unit (MCBU) segment had revenues of approximately $7.71 billion, up from $4.26 billion in Q1 and $2.24 billion a year ago. The gross margin here is around 79% and the operating margin is around 76%, which is a huge turnaround from just one percent operating margin a year ago. This is related to both the recovery in demand for phones and PCs, and the shift to higher density and performance memories where Micron can collect premium prices.

The automotive and embedded segment generated sales of around $2.71 billion, up from $1.72 billion in Q1 and $1.03 billion a year ago. Gross margin was about 68% and operating margin was about 62%, up significantly from about six percent a year ago - the automotive world is rapidly filling up with memory and storage for assisted driving, infotainment and other smart features, and with the current capacity shortage, this is another source of very profitable growth.

Management comment

Sanjay Mehrotra, CEO and Chairman, termed the Q2 results as new records in sales, gross margin, earnings per share and free cash flow and stressed that he expects similar records in the third fiscal quarter as well. The key message is that the combination of a "strong demand environment, tight supply within the industry and good execution" has created an extremely favorable environment in which memory is becoming a strategic asset for customers in the AI era.

Mehrotra also mentions that Micron is investing in its global manufacturing base to meet growing demand, and that the 30 percent dividend increase reflects confidence in a "consistently strong" business. The tone is very confident, but management also refers to the risks in materials for the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), noting the traditional cyclicality of the memory business and other potential factors that could slow the current boom.

Outlook

For the third fiscal quarter of 2026, Micron expects revenue of around $33.5 billion, with a tolerance band of plus or minus $750 million. This marks another significant increase from an already record Q2, and confirms the company's confidence in the continuation of an extremely strong demand cycle, particularly from AI datacenters.

Gross margin is expected to be around 81%, even higher than Q2, and operating expenses are expected to be around $1.6 billion on a GAAP basis and $1.4 billion on an adjusted basis. Earnings per share are expected to be approximately $18.90 ± $0.40 on a GAAP basis and $19.15 ± $0.40 on an adjusted basis. At a diluted share count of around 1.14-1.15 billion, this is an extraordinary level of profitability, approaching the levels of the most profitable semiconductor companies in history.

Management notes in its outlook comments that this scenario is based on continued strong demand for AI memories, disciplined supply in the industry, and the assumption that there will be no sudden overheating of customer investments.

Long-term results

Over the past four fiscal years, Micron has gone through the classic memory boom-bust-boom cycle. It had sales of around $30.76 billion in 2022, dropped to around $15.54 billion a year later, recovered to $25.11 billion in 2024, and shot up to $37.38 billion in 2025. Gross profit even went slightly negative in 2023 (a loss at the gross profit level) as memory prices fell below fully allocated costs; by 2024, gross profit was already around $5.61 billion and jumped to $14.87 billion in 2025.

Operating profit was very strong in 2022, fell into a large loss in 2023, returned to a modest profit of around $1.30 billion in 2024, and jumped to $9.77 billion in 2025. Thus, net income went from a negative $5.83 billion in 2023 to $0.78 billion in 2024 to $8.54 billion in 2025, with earnings per share rising from about $5.34 to $0.70 and then to $7.65.

The number of shares has increased slightly over time (around 1.11-1.12 billion diluted shares), so the EPS growth is primarily driven by a turnaround in profitability, not financial engineering. EBITDA was about $16.74 billion in 2022, dropped to about $2.21 billion in 2023, rose to about $8.94 billion in 2024, and reached about $9.77 billion in 2025. Combined with the current quarterly results, it is clear that Micron has entered a new, extremely strong phase of the cycle - but history reminds us that this phase is not permanent.

Shareholder Structure

Insiders (management and directors) hold only a small proportion of shares, around 0.3 percent. The institution owns about 82-83 percent of the shares, with the rest going to retail and other investors. The largest institutional shareholders include Vanguard Group with about 9.5 percent, BlackRock with about 9 percent, Capital World Investors with about 5 percent, State Street with about 4.7 percent, and FMR (Fidelity) with more than 3.5 percent.

Such strong dominance by large funds means that Micron is a "core" holding in many index and sector funds focused on semiconductors. The stock is very liquid and its performance is sensitive to both specific memory market news and overall sentiment towards technology titles. For the retail investor, this means that it rides with the big pension and index players - but also that if sentiment towards AI and chips changes, movement can be very rapid in either direction.

News and strategic moves

  • Dividend increase of 30 percent - the board approved a quarterly dividend of $0.15 per share, a significant jump from the previous level and a signal that management believes in a longer duration of the current earnings cycle, not just a short-term "shock."

  • Massive expansion of AI manufacturing capacity - Micron confirms that it is significantly ramping up investment in its global manufacturing base (new and expanded factories in the US, Asia, and especially for HBM and advanced DRAM) to meet demand from datacenter and AI platforms; this keeps capex high in the short term, but should ensure long-term revenue from its most profitable products.

  • Use of government incentives - the company continues to draw significant support from the US CHIPS Act and other programs (billions for new US fabs), which lowers net investment costs and improves project returns, but also ties the company to meeting capacity and technology commitments to governments.

  • Strengthening its position in Asia - In addition to US projects, Micron is doubling down on its bet on Asia (especially Taiwan and Singapore) with new or expanded manufacturing plants, diversifying geographic risk and bringing production closer to key customers, but remaining exposed to geopolitical tensions in the region.

Fair Price

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258842-micron-s-ai-supercycle-record-profit-reshapes-how-investors-view-memory Pavel Botek
bulios-article-258750 Wed, 18 Mar 2026 16:10:06 +0100 Netflix: Citi sees more upside as margins, pricing and buybacks improve Citi has resumed coverage of Netflix with a Buy rating and a 115 dollar price target, which implies roughly 5 to 17 percent upside over the next 12 months. The call rests on three pillars: room to lift profitability, more use of pricing power in core markets and a step up in capital returns via buybacks.

Rather than betting on a new narrative, Citi points to the gradual shift in Netflix’s model from pure subscriber growth to a focus on operating margins, revenue per user and free cash flow. In its updated post Q4 2025 model, the bank raises revenue and EBIT margin assumptions and expects 2026 operating margins to come in above the Street, while remaining conservative on long term advertising revenue and treating ads as an additional upside lever, not the foundation of the thesis.

How Citi views today's Netflix

Citi $C sees Netflix $NFLX as a streamer that has entered a new phase: the pace of user growth is no longer the main driver, but the company finally has the scale to monetize its catalog and platform to the fullest. Crucially, after years of massive investment in content and global expansion , the numbers are starting to work more in favour of margins.

Citi's commentary highlights three pillars:

  • The opportunity to raise EBIT guidance for 2026.

  • Room for price appreciation in the US in 4Q26.

  • And higher returns on capital due to the absence of large acquisitions and strong cash flow.

The bank sees advertising as an important complement, but not the only valuation driver. This is why it can afford to have an advertising scenario more conservative than consensus and still stick with a "buy" recommendation.

3 reasons to buy:

1) Higher profitability than the market expects

The first reason is to look at operating margins and EBIT. Citi expects Netflix to be able to increase its EBIT for fiscal 2026 and that the actual margin will be about 40 basis points above current consensus.

It relies on:

  • Stabilizing content costs - Netflix has already made its largest investments and experiments.

  • Better catalog utilization across regions.

  • Greater efficiency in marketing and distribution, with the company "burning" less on chasing each new user and benefiting more from its existing base.

Higher margins are key to valuation because even a relatively small shift of a few tenths of a percentage point in operating margin translates into billions of extra in operating profit for a company the size of Netflix.

2) U.S. price appreciation as a revenue catalyst

The second catalyst is expected price appreciation in the U.S. in the fourth quarter of 2026. Citi projects that Netflix still has pricing power, especially in the U.S., where:

  • It is one of the main "must-have" services.

  • Has a high rate of daily usage.

  • and offers a broad mix of series, movies and live content.

Slight price increases in a key market:

  • goes virtually entirely to revenue.

  • only minimally increases variable costs.

  • and, with good timing and communication, may not significantly increase churn (subscriber attrition).

For Citi, it's a clear "mechanical" catalyst - even without dramatic subscriber growth, Netflix can move revenue and profitability higher just by asking a little more for a product that users already consider standard.

3) More cash for shareholders

The third reason is capital policy. Citi points out that Netflix hasn't made any big acquisitions recently, which frees up room for higher returns on capital - especially share buybacks.

The bank argues that:

  • Netflix'scash flow is strong enough today.

  • The company does not have "transformational" M&A (stock splits) on the table.

  • and can afford to increase buybacks and other forms of distribution without jeopardizing content and technology investments.

In an environment where investors increasingly value a combination of growth and disciplined capital management in large technology titles, a stronger buyback program is a clear plus. For Netflix, moreover, buybacks are directly accretive to earnings per share if margins and revenues can be kept on an upward trajectory.

Advertising as a risk, not as a core thesis

Citi also points out that the long-term outlook for advertising revenue is a risk on the expectations side. Consensus reckons Netflix will build an advertising business of around $11bn a year by 2030. Citi is more skeptical and sees a more realistic scenario around $9 billion, with annual growth of about $1.5 billion, not $2 billion, from 2027 onward.

One point that is important for investors: Citi is building its positive thesis to hold up even in a weaker ad scenario. The main drivers it is banking on are margins, pricing and capital discipline, not just an optimistic advertising revenue curve.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258750-netflix-citi-sees-more-upside-as-margins-pricing-and-buybacks-improve Pavel Botek
bulios-article-258728 Wed, 18 Mar 2026 15:10:05 +0100 Power utility with 4% yield and an AI data center tailwind OpenAI has struck a partnership with Amazon Web Services that lets it deliver its AI models to U.S. defense and civilian agencies for both classified and unclassified work. The tie up builds on OpenAI’s recent agreement with the Pentagon, under which its models will run inside classified Defense Department networks and replace Anthropic after the Trump administration labeled that rival a “supply chain risk” over a dispute on AI use in mass surveillance and autonomous weapons.

Because AWS is already deeply embedded across federal systems and operates GovCloud and classified regions, the alliance gives OpenAI rapid access to agencies it could not easily serve on its own without building certified secure infrastructure. OpenAI says it will still choose which models are offered and can insist on extra safeguards for sensitive deployments, while the Pentagon deal explicitly includes technical and contractual limits meant to keep its models away from domestic mass surveillance and fully autonomous lethal weapons, a stance the company argues also reassures large corporate customers watching how its technology is used by governments.

Top points of the analysis

  • The company pays a dividend of around 4% with an annual amount of around $1.78 per share and has had several years of gradual dividend growth, albeit from a relatively low base.

  • Revenues have grown steadily, from roughly $12.5 billion to $15.1 billion in four years, net income has been around $1.0-1.3 billion annually, and EPS has fluctuated between $0.7-1.9.

  • The firm expects peak demand on its grid to grow 45% from roughly 33.5 GW to 48.5 GW by 2035, with virtually all of the growth to come from data centers and large loads.

  • The investment plan calls for tens of billions of dollars of investment, including about $1 billion just to connect large loads, and up to 18% annual growth in the transmission base through 2030.

  • Leverage is high: debt to equity of about 2.1, net debt/EBITDA of about 11.9 and Altman Z-score of about 0.8, implying significant leverage and sensitivity to financing conditions.

  • The story for an investor stands on a combination of: a stable regulated business, a visible dividend yield and structural consumption growth through AI, balanced against balance sheet risk and the vestiges of a past corruption scandal that the company has been gradually closing in recent years.

Company performance

FirstEnergy $FE is a holding company for several regulated electric utilities headquartered in Akron, Ohio, which today serves more than 6 million customers in six states in the Northeast U.S. - primarily Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, West Virginia, Maryland and parts of New York. Its primary role is to provide transmission and distribution of electricity in industrially important regions that fall within the PJM Interconnection, one of the largest regional transmission systems in the U.S.

The company was formed in 1997 by the merger of Ohio Edison and Centerior Energy, creating one of the largest investor-owned systems in the U.S.; Ohio Edison itself followed a pattern of consolidation of smaller electric companies since the 1930s. In 2002, FirstEnergy acquired GPU, Inc., expanding its footprint into Pennsylvania and New Jersey and significantly increasing the number of customers and the length of the grid. In the following years, the company combined acquisitions and organic growth, but after the bankruptcy of its former subsidiary, FirstEnergy Solutions (a competitive generation company), it strategically refocused on purely regulated transmission and distribution activities and began systematically divesting competitive generation assets.

Today, FirstEnergy's business is divided into three major segments: Distribution, Integrated and Stand-Alone Transmission. The Distribution segment provides electricity to end-use customers in Ohio and Pennsylvania, where earnings depend on retail rates approved by state regulators and the volume of MWh withdrawn. The Integrated segment combines distribution with limited generation in some areas where the company still has its own resources or long-term contracts; however, its share of earnings has become progressively smaller as management has pushed its emphasis toward the more infrastructure-oriented part of the business. A separate transmission segment manages high-voltage lines and other transmission assets subject to federal regulation (FERC) and typically a relatively attractive regulated rate of return - this is where much of the current investment story related to AI data centers and grid upgrades is taking place.

In terms of where FirstEnergy makes the most money today, regulated infrastructure is the key - the return is based on the size of the regulated asset base (rate base) in distribution and transmission and the allowed return approved by regulators at the state and federal level. In recent years, the company has significantly expanded and updated its network investment program - known as Energize365 - which includes large-scale projects to modernize distribution networks, strengthen transmission, digitize, and improve reliability, among other things, specifically to address the skyrocketing energy demands of AI data centers. This strategy has a twofold effect: responding to regulatory and customer pressures (reliability, resilience, RES integration) while building a larger rate base to which future regulated revenue is tied - a major source of profitability improvement.

At first glance, FirstEnergy's products and services are "boring" - electricity supply, grid operations, new customer connections and related customer services; however, the role of infrastructure partner for large customers such as data centres, industrial parks and manufacturers who need high reliability and capacity is increasingly being promoted within the company. This includes specialised interconnection projects for large loads, where the company designs and builds new transmission and distribution lines tailored to the specific project, and these investments are then regulated for value. As part of its long-term strategy, FirstEnergy profiles itself as a "forward-thinking electric utility" that wants to be the "backbone" of the regional economy in an era of electrification and digitalization - the exact trend that AI is accelerating.

CEO

The company has been led by CEO Brian X since 2023 . Tierney, an executive with nearly 30 years of experience in energy and infrastructure. Prior to joining FirstEnergy, he led Portfolio Operations & Asset Management at Blackstone's Infrastructure Group and before that spent 23 years at American Electric Power (AEP), one of America's largest utilities, where he served as Chief Financial Officer (CFO) and later Executive Vice President of Strategy, among other roles for more than 11 years. That means he brings to FirstEnergy a combination of deep utility business knowledge, capital markets experience and a large investment program - just what the company needs as it launches tens of billions of dollars in grid upgrades and forges relationships with AI players and data centers.

Why is the company interesting?

Our analysis builds a central thesis that FirstEnergy is well positioned to benefit from AI-driven electricity demand growth because part of its grid lies in regions where the bases of new hyperscale data centers are concentrated. It mentions that the company expects system peak load to grow by 15 GW by 2035, from roughly 33.5 GW to 48.5 GW, with virtually all of the growth to come from data centers and other large customers.

The second key thesis is the investment plan - FirstEnergy has increased its five-year capex plan from $28 billion to $36 billion, with a focus on transmission and distribution infrastructure, which is subject to regulated payback. If the investments can be made on time, adjusted EPS could grow at a rate of 6-8% per year, plus a dividend of around 4%, for a total return potential of around 10-12% per year.

Where FirstEnergy operates and what market it serves

FirstEnergy serves about six million customers in Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, West Virginia, Maryland and parts of New York, where it operates a combination of distribution and transmission networks. This is an area that falls within the PJM Interconnection regional transmission system - one of the largest and most liquid power systems in the U.S., where much of the new industrial and data center projects are clustered.

The PJM region has been under pressure in recent years as demand for electricity from data centers, industrial electrification and the shift of manufacturing back to the U.S. has grown faster than originally anticipated. Studies and grid operators warn that without massive investments in transmission, grid reinforcements and new capacity, the grid may approach limits at some nodes - creating an opportunity for companies like FirstEnergy to invest in "bottlenecks" and then receive regulated returns on those assets.

In addition to residential customers, a key segment for FirstEnergy is the wholesale sector - industry, commercial clients and data centres in particular, which have high demand at a single location and require a robust and reliable connection to the network. Specific interconnection projects are being developed for these clients, which include the construction of new lines, substations and reinforcement of existing infrastructure, with a significant portion of the cost ultimately dissolved in tariffs.

AI data centres and demand growth

FirstEnergy forecasts that the peak load on its grid will grow from roughly 33.5 GW to 48.5 GW, or 45% , by 2035, and itself states that AI data centres and other large electricity-intensive projects are the main drivers of this growth. This is a very significant number by utility standards - historically, electricity demand growth in developed regions has tended to be low units of percent per year or stagnant.

In this context, data centers are different from ordinary consumers in that they represent a long-term, relatively predictable demand, but also a concentrated risk - they typically need hundreds of megawatts at a single location, and connecting them is technically and regulatorily challenging. For FirstEnergy, this means significant investment in specific network sections and connection projects, but also the chance to increase returns in the transmission segment, which often carries a higher approved ROE than pure distribution.

From an investor's perspective, it is also important that this demand growth is not just theoretical - the pipeline of data centers in PJM and surrounding regions has grown significantly in recent years, and transmission operators are openly talking about "AI being the new big electricity customer." If this trend is confirmed in the medium term, FirstEnergy will gain a long-term growth vector that is the exception rather than the rule for utilities.

Management's investment plan and outlook

At the Q4 2025 results, FirstEnergy announced that it is increasing its investment plan for the 2026-2030 period to $36 billion from the original $28 billion, with the largest portion going into transmission and distribution. Investment in transmission is expected to increase from about $14 billion to $19 billion, reflecting the need to strengthen the grid specifically for large customers, including data centres.

Management targets this investment wave to lead to rate base growth at around 10% per year through 2030, thereby enabling 6-8% annual growth in adjusted EPS. The key mechanism is a combination of FERC formula rates in transmission (where the return is automatically based on the invested base) and incremental rate cases at the state level in the distribution side of the business.

At the same time, the company has announced that it will not only fund such a large capex with internally generated cash, but also through higher debt and equity issuance to keep the rating in the investment grade range. This is a crucial point for the dividend: the more FirstEnergy relies on external capital, the more important it will be that regulation and AI demand actually enable the projected EPS growth, otherwise the legs below the 4% dividend will start to wobble.

The business and AI-story

At the heart of the business are the wireline networks and distribution systems that carry electricity from generators to homes and businesses. Revenues come primarily from regulated transmission and distribution tariffs, which are set to cover costs and deliver a reasonable return on invested capital.

The AI story comes through datacenters and large loads. FirstEnergy expects peak demand on its grid to grow 45% by 2035, from 33.5 GW to 48.5 GW, with virtually all of the growth to come from datacenters and associated industrial load. This implies not only higher electricity supply, but more importantly the need for massive investment in transmission, strengthening the grid and connecting large consumers. The company itself talks of 18% annual growth in transmission rate base by 2030 and allocates roughly $1 billion of investment just for interconnection projects for large customers.

For investors, this means:

  • A long-term visible investment plan.

  • Growth in the regulated rate base on which the approved revenue is calculated.

  • and the potential for AI datacenters to "overload" transmission system capacity for several years, strengthening the utilities' bargaining position.

Market and addressable potential

Globally, electricity consumption by datacenters is expected to grow 50-165% by the end of the decade and could account for 6-12% of all electricity consumption in the U.S. by 2030. FirstEnergy's network is in regions where much of the industry and data infrastructure is concentrated, making it one of the direct beneficiaries of this trend.

FirstEnergy's advantage is defined by its licensed area and transmission system, not by free competition across the country. Addressable market growth is therefore not about winning customers from competitors, but about load growth (more MWh) and network investment, which the regulator translates into tariffs. If the projection of 45% growth in peak demand by 2035 comes to pass, FirstEnergy may be one of those "filling the cables" for the AI boom, with the yield being approved and relatively predictable.

Dividend: history, level, sustainability

FirstEnergy pays a quarterly dividend of around $0.44-0.47 per share, which gives a dividend yield of roughly 3.8-4.2% based on the current price. The dividend growth rate is moderate: in recent years, the dividend has increased at a rate of around 1.8-4% per year, and the company has had about 4 consecutive years of increases.

The payout ratio is relatively high: around 75% of earnings. This means the dividend is not ultra-safe like some other lower leveraged utilities, but it is sustainable for now, if:

  • EPS remains at least in the range of around $1.7-1.8.

  • The investment plan will be largely funded by debt and cash flow.

  • and there is no significant drop in profitability or increase in financing costs.

The company has had a problematic episode (corruption scandal and downgrade to "junk" rating around 2020), during which the dividend was maintained but further aggressive growth did not take place. In recent years, the profile has stabilized: profitability is growing, and investors are once again looking at the company as a dividend utility with a structural growth story thanks to its datacenters.

Financial performance

Revenues have grown from roughly US$12.5bn to US$15.1bn over the last four years, which equates to average growth of around 3-5% per annum, with the last year above 12% due to higher loads and tariffs. Operating profit has risen from roughly US$1.9bn to US$2.83bn, with operating margins holding around 14-15%.

Net profit is in the range of USD 0.4-1.3 billion, EPS between USD 0.7-1.9, showing some volatility, but the trend is gradually increasing, especially in recent years. Beta around 0.6 confirms that the stock is behaving more defensively than the market.

The free cash flow margin is around 15%, which is a decent level for a utility, given that a significant portion of cash flow goes into grid investments. Combined with a payout ratio of 70-100%, this gives room to maintain the dividend, but less room for aggressive buybacks or rapid debt reduction.

Balance sheet and debt

The balance sheet is the weaker part of the story. Debt to equity around 2.1, net debt/EBITDA around 11.9, Altman Z-score around 0.8 and very low short-term liquidity ratios (current ratio/quick ratio almost at zero due to the structure of short-term liabilities).

On the other hand, for a regulated utility, debt is not perceived in the same way as for a cyclical firm: investments go into long-term infrastructure, where the cost of capital enters into tariffs. The key is to maintain a relationship with regulators and rating agencies so that funding remains available and tariffs reflect the real cost of the network.

A historic corruption scandal (HB6, allegedly bribing political officials in Ohio over energy legislation) led to a downgrade in ratings and fines, but the company has been making deals with the SEC and putting new controls in place in recent years. For the dividend investor, the bottom line is that the biggest reputational blow has already taken place, but the "memory of the market" and ratings has not yet been completely erased.

Key numbers and valuations

FirstEnergy's net income and EPS have been growing in recent years, but not linearly - 2025 adjusted EPS is around $2.55, which was near the high end of the company's guidance and above analyst consensus, and the company has raised guidance for the next period. This supports the narrative that the investment plan and AI-demand are already partly reflected in financial results, not just presentations.

On valuation, FirstEnergy trades with a dividend yield of around 3.7-4%, a P/E in the higher "utility" multiple range, and an EV/EBITDA that reflects both the regulated nature of the business and increased debt and growth expectations. Compared to more defensive utilities without significant AI exposure, the investor is partly paying a premium for a structured growth story - but they are still buying a regulated business, not a pure growth tech name, so valuation remains within the sector, not outside of it.

Importantly, from a dividend perspective, the combination of a yield of around 4% and a targeted 6-8% EPS CAGR is - if it comes to fruition - attractive; but at the same time, the high payout ratio and sizeable capex increase sensitivity to any disappointment in the numbers. FirstEnergy is thus not a classic "safe bond proxy", but rather a utility that trades some safety for higher AI-linked growth potential.

Valuation

At current levels, FirstEnergy trades at a P/E of around 29, EV/EBITDA of over 25 and P/S of around 2, with a dividend yield of around 4%. These are not pure value multiples, but need to be read in context:

  • A regulated business with a lower beta.

  • Visible long-term investment and growth plan thanks to AI and datacenters.

  • And historic penalties due to scandal and balance sheet.

From a pure "dividend yield" perspective, FirstEnergy is not extremely cheap, but the combination of a 4% dividend and potential rate base growth due to AI may be interesting for a long-term investor. Purely for valuation reasons, it's not a "no-brainer", but within regulated utilities with AI exposure, it's one of those that has a pure growth story to tell.

Risks

  • Balance sheet risk: high debt, low Z-score, sensitivity to interest rate environment and rating agencies.

  • Regulatory risk: the need to continually defend network investments and tariffs so that customers don't pay too much while funding is sustainable.

  • Reputational risk: despite dealing with scandal, further legal or political developments may affect the perception of the company.

  • AI hype risk: if the datacenter boom develops more slowly or some capacity goes outside the FirstEnergy region, the expected load growth may not materialize fully.

Investment scenarios

In a positive scenario, AI datacenter expectations come to fruition - projects in the region materialize, peak load actually grows towards +45%, regulation remains predictable and allows FirstEnergy to put most of the capex into rate base with attractive returns. In such a world, it is realistic for adjusted EPS to grow near the upper end of the target (around 8% per year), the dividend to continue to grow in the low single-digit percentage range, and the combination of earnings growth and a 4% yield to offer a double-digit total return over the long term.

In a realistic scenario, the AI pipeline slips in part - some datacenter projects are delayed, others reduce parameters, but electricity demand still grows faster than in the past. EPS sticks more to the lower end of the target (around 6% per year), the regulatory framework remains favorable, but the company needs to consider more the timing of investments and financing to keep the balance sheet under control; the dividend runs further and grows only slowly, the total return is more in the higher single digits.

The downside scenario assumes AI data centers don't meet expectations - some projects run into resistance from regulators and the public due to energy and water consumption, some move to other regions or countries, and global electricity demand grows less than current capex projects. Into this could come a tougher stance by regulators on tariff increases or higher financing costs, which would put pressure on margins and EPS growth; in which case FirstEnergy would have to put the brakes on investment or consider a more conservative dividend policy to protect its balance sheet. In an extreme negative scenario, a capex as high as the one planned today would bring more problems than benefits.

What to take away from the dividend perspective

  • A yield of around 4% is attractive in an environment of low volatility and regulated business.

  • The dividend history is relatively stable, with recent years of modest growth, but the payout ratio is high, so the dividend is not "untouchable."

  • AI and datacenters give FirstEnergy a real growth engine that is not typical of any utility, but will be redeemed by higher investment and debt load.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258728-power-utility-with-4-yield-and-an-ai-data-center-tailwind Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-258727 Wed, 18 Mar 2026 14:31:35 +0100 PPI came in worse than the market expected. And the Fed is watching it very closely.

The number nobody wanted to see

February PPI, the US producer price index, came in at +3.4% year-on-year. The market consensus expected +2.9%. A 0.5 percentage-point difference looks like a small detail at first glance. Unfortunately, in today's situation it is not.

PPI is a precursor to inflation. It shows what producers and wholesalers pay for goods today, and what customers will pay on the shelves tomorrow.

What the number actually means

PPI measures the prices that producers receive for their products — costs that have not yet reached the consumer. It acts as a leading indicator for CPI with a lag of roughly one to three months.

+3.4% year-on-year tells us three things at once:

1) Inflationary pressure isn't just demand-driven. It's not that consumers are spending more. The pressure comes from costs like energy or transportation. And that's the kind of inflation central banks find harder to suppress.

2) The Fed doesn't have the case for quick rate cuts. Throughout the first quarter the market had been pricing in one to two cuts in 2026. After today’s number, that bet is much diminished. Every new inflation surprise extends the period of expensive money.

3) The oil shock from the Strait of Hormuz has not yet been fully reflected in the numbers. February's data captures the world before the escalation in the Middle East. The March figures, which will arrive in a month, could be even more worrying.

The market wants cheap money. Reality isn't cooperating.

The entire year of 2025 was built on one narrative in the markets: inflation is falling, the Fed will cut soon, cheap capital will return. Valuations rose. Sentiment was optimistic.

PPI at +3.4% is a sobering splash. Not a total catastrophe, but a reminder that inflation is not a linear story with a guaranteed happy ending. It's something that returns. And each time it returns, it costs investors more than before, because valuations have meanwhile risen on the assumption that it wouldn't come back.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258727 Noura Al-Mansouri
bulios-article-258759 Wed, 18 Mar 2026 12:07:17 +0100 The endless carousel continues — just a few days ago there were reports of halting H200 production for China due to regulations and shifting capacity to Vera Rubin, and now a reversal: Nvidia $NVDA has licenses from both the US and Beijing and Chinese companies have been given the green light to buy H200s at scale. According to Reuters, players like ByteDance, Alibaba and Tencent earlier received approval for hundreds of thousands of units, total orders exceed 2 million chips, and Jensen Huang at GTC confirms that H200 production for China is ramping up again and that licenses for "many customers in China" are finalized.

The whole story around export restrictions therefore looks more like a politically controlled faucet than a definitive stop — freeze for a while, redirect capacity, then allow "limited volumes" with conditions (including that the US wants a share of the revenues) while the queue of Chinese companies that urgently need these chips for their own AI grows. For NVDA the stock-wise implications are another piece of the puzzle: China is shifting from a simple growth engine to a regulation-filtered market, but it doesn’t yet look like Nvidia has completely lost it as a source of demand — trade will likely be more complicated, slower and possibly more profitable per unit due to pressure on subscriptions and special terms.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258759 Viktor Petrov
bulios-article-258780 Wed, 18 Mar 2026 10:54:39 +0100 Micron $MU, Sandisk $SNDK and other memory manufacturers are again at new highs.

Micron has gained 62 % year-to-date, Sandisk is up 203 %...

Sure, AI is unstoppable and, thanks to massive CapEx investments by the biggest companies and the never-ending demand, which this week was again confirmed by $NVDA CEO Jensen Huang himself, it looks like these companies will enjoy high margins for a long time.

But we mustn't forget that we're operating in a very cyclical market. Similar, sometimes even larger, rallies were seen in Micron $MU back in 2000 or 2018. A sobering correction always followed.

How do you view this segment of the market now? Are you buying? I personally don't want to jump on this speeding train anymore; if I already owned the shares, I would hold them, but from my perspective opening new positions seems rather risky.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258780 Becker
bulios-article-258654 Wed, 18 Mar 2026 10:00:09 +0100 These 11 Large-Cap US Stocks Move Harder Than Anything Else on Wall Street Not all blue chips behave like safe havens. Some of the biggest names on the American stock market carry a Beta so high that they amplify every index swing into an outsized move, turning ordinary trading sessions into roller-coaster rides. We identified eleven large-cap stocks whose sensitivity to the S&P 500 dwarfs the rest of the market. For aggressive traders, these names spell opportunity. For the unprepared, they can mean devastating drawdowns in a matter of days. Here is what makes them so explosive and whether the reward truly justifies the ride.

Stock markets are inherently volatile, but the degree of volatility varies dramatically from one title to the next. While some companies move more or less in line with the broader market, others react to each index move with significantly greater amplitude. It is this characteristic that is measured by the Beta indicator, which is one of the fundamental tools of modern investment analysis and an integral part of the Capital Asset Pricing Model(CAPM).

What is Beta and why is it important

Beta expresses the sensitivity of a stock to movements in the broader market, with the S&P 500 Index, whose beta is exactly 1.0, serving as a reference point. If a stock has a beta of 1.5, it means that its price has historically moved 50% more strongly than the index itself. So if the S&P 500 has risen by 10%, that stock has appreciated by 15% on average. But the same principle applies in the other direction. When the index falls by 10%, such a stock has typically weakened by 15%.

Thus, stocks with a beta above 1.0 are more volatile than the market. The higher the beta, the more pronounced the price fluctuations of the stock relative to the benchmark. In contrast, stocks with a beta below 1.0 exhibit lower volatility. Typically, these are defensive sectors such as utilities, healthcare, or consumer staples.

It is important to understand that beta only measures systematic risk, that is, the risk associated with overall market movements. It does not capture firm-specific risks such as product failure, regulatory intervention or management change. Therefore, investors always use it in combination with other metrics such as standard deviation or maximum drawdown.

The beta calculation is based on historical data, typically over a five-year period (5Y Monthly Beta). This is the methodology used by most analytics platforms. However, it is important to keep in mind that historical beta does not necessarily predict future volatility, especially if a company's business model or market environment fundamentally changes.

The following table summarizes the 11 U.S. stocks with the highest beta, ranked from most volatile

Ticker

Company

Beta (5Y)

Sector

$NVDA

Nvidia

2,37

Semiconductors/AI

$TSLA

Tesla

2,19

EV / Autonomous driving

$AMD

AMD

2,02

Semiconductors

$LRCX

Lam Research

1,78

Semiconductors

$NFLX

Netflix

1,71

Streaming/Media

$PLTR

Palantir

1,69

Software / AI

$AMAT

Applied Materials

1,68

Semiconductors

$ORCL

Oracle

1,65

Cloud/Enterprise SW

$CAT

Caterpillar

1,56

Industry / Engineering

$MU

Micron Technology

1,54

Memory chips

$ASML

ASML Holding

1,43

Semiconductors

Nvidia $NVDA

Why Nvidia is the most volatile large-cap stock on the market

Nvidia clearly has the highest beta of any title at 2.37, making it one of the most volatile mega-cap stocks in the entire U.S. market. This extreme value is primarily due to the company's position at the epicenter of the AI revolution. Nvidia is a dominant supplier of GPU accelerators for data centers, training large language models, and the entire AI infrastructure. Any change in sentiment towards AI investing, whether positive or negative, is immediately and significantly reflected in the stock price.

What drives extreme swings

Nvidia's volatility is amplified by a combination of several factors. The company exhibits extremely high valuation multiples, with a P/E of around 37 and a market capitalization in excess of $4.4 trillion. At such multiples, even a relatively small change in growth expectations can trigger massive price movements. At the same time, Nvidia is exposed to geopolitical risks associated with export restrictions on chips going to China, which adds another layer of uncertainty to the price. Thus, Nvidia's high beta primarily reflects the fact that it is a stock around which a huge amount of speculative and institutional capital is concentrated.

Tesla $TSLA

A narrative-driven stock

Tesla, with a beta of 2.19, has long been one of the most volatile stocks in the US market. Unlike Nvidia, where volatility is primarily driven by the AI cycle, a combination of multiple factors play a key role in Tesla. The company operates at the intersection of electric mobility, autonomous driving, energy and now, increasingly, robotics. Each of these segments brings its own set of risks and opportunities that overlap in share price.

Politics, Musk and sentiment

Tesla CEO Elon Musk plays a significant role in Tesla's volatility, with his public activities and political engagement directly impacting investor sentiment. Thus, Tesla shares historically react not only to financial results, but also to tweets, controversies, and regulatory decisions. In an environment of high media attention, Tesla has become a stock where daily trading volume is often well above average, amplifying short-term price swings. For investors with a higher risk tolerance, Tesla presents an opportunity, but it requires significantly stronger nerves than most other mega-cap titles.

AMD $AMD

Nvidia's eternal challenger

Advanced Micro Devices, with a beta of 2.02, is the second most volatile semiconductor stock. AMD has established itself in recent years as a key competitor to Nvidia in the AI accelerator segment, as well as Intel in the server processor market. It is this position as a challenger on two fronts that is the source of the high volatility. Each new order, partnership with a hyperscaler or, conversely, loss of market share will have a much stronger impact on the price than for companies with a dominant position.

AMD recently signed significant contracts with both Meta Platforms and OpenAI to supply its Instinct GPUs, and EPYC processors hold approximately 24% of the server x86 chip market. Still, AMD's market capitalization is significantly smaller than Nvidia's, which means the percentage impact of each news item on the stock price is proportionately larger. Investors who believe in a continued AI boom but are looking for an alternative to Nvidia with potentially higher upside often head to AMD.

Lam Research $LRCX

The cyclical nature of semiconductor equipment

Lam Research, with a beta of 1.78, is one of the world's largest manufacturers of semiconductor chip fabrication equipment, specifically etch and deposition systems. The high beta here is a direct result of the extreme cyclical nature of the entire semiconductor wafer fabrication equipment (WFE) segment. Chipmakers' investments in new manufacturing capacity tend to come in waves, and it is these waves that are strongly reflected in the earnings and valuations of companies like Lam Research.

Currently, Lam Research is benefiting from a massive investment cycle driven by demand for HBM memory and advanced chip packaging for AI infrastructure. Revenues for the latest quarter are up 22% year-over-year and the stock has appreciated more than 185% over the past 12 months. But it's growth this fast that also increases sensitivity to any negative news, be it tightening export restrictions or signals of a slowdown in the investment cycle.

Netflix $NFLX

Streaming giant with surprising volatility

Netflix, with a beta of 1.71, may surprise with its presence in this review. It is, after all, an established streaming platform with a predictable subscription-based revenue model. But Netflix's volatility stems from other sources. The stock has historically reacted extremely strongly to quarterly results, particularly new subscriber figures. All it takes is for a number to deviate from consensus by units of one percent, and a stock price can move 10 to 20% in a single trading day.

In recent quarters, Netflix has been expanding its portfolio to include an advertising model, live streaming of sporting events and gaming. While these new segments diversify revenue, they also bring uncertainty about the success of their monetization. With a market capitalization in excess of $400 billion and a P/E of around 37, Netflix is valued at a level where the company is expected to continue to grow, and any disappointment could lead to a sharp decline.

But the biggest volatility of recent weeks has clearly been brought to this stock by the scramble to buy Warner Bros Discovery $WBD. The stock rallied sharply after Netflix didn't outbid a competitor's highest bid and abandoned the acquisition.

Palantir Technologies $PLTR

With a beta of 1.69, Palantir is one of the most followed stocks of the current AI boom. The firm supplies analytics and AI platforms to government institutions and the commercial sector, and its AIP platform has seen a significant acceleration in usage in recent quarters. Palantir's volatility stems primarily from the extreme disconnect between its high growth momentum and valuation, which is one of the highest in the entire market. The trailing P/E exceeds 200 and the forward P/E is above 100.

At such a tight valuation, every quarterly result becomes a binary event. If the company beats expectations, the stock could rise sharply. If results fall only slightly short, the market reacts by selling off. Moreover, Palantir generates a significant portion of its revenue from government contracts, which are subject to political decisions and budget cycles, adding another layer of unpredictability.

PS: Shares started shorting Michael Burry this year and are down 18% since his announcement.

Applied Materials $AMAT

A key supplier for chip manufacturing

Applied Materials, with a beta of 1.68, is the world's largest materials engineering firm for the semiconductor industry. Similar to Lam Research $LRCX, Applied Materials is subject to the cyclicality of the WFE market, but exhibits slightly lower volatility due to its broader product portfolio that includes deposition, etching, metrology and services. The company is benefiting from the increasing complexity of its manufacturing processes, where AI chips require significantly more manufacturing steps per wafer than previous generations.

Exposure to the Chinese market remains a risk for Applied Materials, which has exceeded 25% of total revenue in recent quarters. Tightening export controls by the US government may significantly impact this revenue stream. It is the uncertainty regarding Chinese export regulations that is keeping the Applied Materials beta above 1.5, despite being a stable and profitable company from a fundamental perspective.

Oracle $ORCL

Cloud transformation increases volatility

With a beta of 1.65, Oracle is undergoing one of the most ambitious transformations in its segment. The company is investing massively in building cloud infrastructure (OCI) to compete with AWS, Azure and Google Cloud in the rapidly growing AI cloud services market. In the past 12 months alone, Oracle has invested over $48 billion in capital expenditures, far exceeding the company's free cash flow and generating negative FCF.

It is this aggressive investment strategy that increases the stock's volatility. Investors are continually flip-flopping between an optimistic scenario where Oracle gains significant share in the AI cloud market and a pessimistic scenario where massive CapEx fails to deliver sufficient returns. The stock has already weakened 55.3% since its 52-week high of around $345, illustrating how quickly sentiment towards transformation stories can change.

Caterpillar $CAT

An industrial giant with a surprisingly high beta

Caterpillar, with a beta of 1.56, is the only truly "non-technology" company in this review. As the world's largest manufacturer of construction and mining equipment, Caterpillar is directly exposed to the global economic cycle. When the economy grows, demand for heavy equipment rises and the stock appreciates significantly faster than the market. Conversely, in recessionary periods, Caterpillar is one of the first victims of the selling wave.

Recently, Caterpillar's beta has increased due to several factors. The company is benefiting from massive infrastructure investments in the U.S. funded by federal programs, from rising demand for mining equipment driven by the commodity boom, and from the recovery of the industrial cycle. At the same time, it faces risks from geopolitical instability, a potential slowdown in the Chinese economy and rising materials costs. The stock has gained nearly 110% over the past 52 weeks. Thanks to this bull run, which has clearly been one of the strongest in the company's history, the stock's volatility has also risen significantly.

Micron Technology $MU

Memory supercycle and cyclical volatility

Micron Technology, with a beta of 1.54, is a prime example of an extremely cyclical company. The memory industry has historically been one of the most volatile segments of the semiconductor market, where DRAM and NAND prices fluctuate based on the balance of supply and demand. Currently, Micron is in one of the strongest supercycles in its history, driven by demand for HBM (High Bandwidth Memory) for AI accelerators.

The stock is up more than 360% in the past 52 weeks and the company has sold out its entire HBM production for 2026 under contract. Gross margins are around 68%, which is an extraordinary level for a memory company. Historically, however, it is when the memory cycle seems to be strongest that the risk of a turnaround is highest. If competitors start aggressively ramping up capacity or demand from AI infrastructure slows, Micron's beta could quickly backfire.

ASML Holding $ASML

Monopoly position mitigates volatility

ASML, with a beta of 1.43, has the lowest relative value of all the titles tracked, yet is well above the market average. The firm holds a de facto monopoly on the production of EUV lithography systems, without which the most advanced semiconductor chips cannot be produced. This unique position provides ASML with significant pricing power and high visibility of future revenues through multi-year contracts.

ASML's volatility stems primarily from geopolitical factors. The company is based in the Netherlands and its technology has become subject to international export restrictions, particularly in relation to China. Any new regulatory decision by European or US authorities could significantly affect the company's outlook. Yet it is precisely the monopoly position and the irreplaceability of EUV technology that ensure that ASML exhibits considerably lower volatility than other companies in the semiconductor equipment segment.

Volatility comparison across sectors

Looking at the whole picture, it is clear that high beta is not the preserve of any one sector. Semiconductor firms dominate the top of the list (Nvidia, AMD, Lam Research, ASML, Applied Materials, Micron), but we also find streaming (Netflix), enterprise software (Oracle, Palantir), automotive (Tesla), and heavy engineering (Caterpillar).

The common denominator is rather the nature of the business: high beta firms typically operate in industries with rapid technological change, strong cyclicality or high valuation multiples.

It is also worth noting the distinction between "high-quality" and "dangerous" volatility. For companies like Nvidia or ASML, high beta reflects a strong position in a growing market where volatility acts as a tax on extreme growth. Conversely, for some firms undergoing transformation, such as Oracle, a high beta may signal genuine uncertainty about the future direction of the firm.

A strategic view

For active investors, high beta stocks can be a tool to boost portfolio returns in a bull market. If an investor expects continued positive sentiment and rising demand for AI infrastructure, an allocation to titles like Nvidia, AMD or Micron can allow a portfolio to significantly outperform the benchmark. In a bear market, however, these same stocks generate deep losses and investors must be prepared for drawdowns in excess of 30% to 50% from the highs.

We have seen this happen several times with Micron $MU, for example. Like in 2000 or 2018.

More conservative investors can use volatile titles selectively, for example by buying on significant corrections when valuations become more attractive. Many experienced investors also combine high betas with hedging strategies such as protective put options or other strategies that limit potential losses in exchange for a reduction in maximum profits. But this is how the really professional traders or large funds work with volatility, not the gentle stock investor.

The key is to view beta not as an absolute measure of quality or risk, but as one tool that helps an investor understand how a given stock is likely to behave in different market regimes. A high beta is not in itself a reason to buy or sell. It always depends on the context of fundamentals, valuation and the investor's position within the overall portfolio.

What to watch next

  • Evolution of the AI investment cycle: any signs of a slowdown in CapEx spending by hyperscalers could significantly impact the semiconductor segment

  • Geopolitical tensions and export regulations: in particular, decisions regarding chip restrictions against China directly impact ASML, Lam Research, Applied Materials and Nvidia

  • Fed rates and discount factors: higher rates are pushing up valuations of growth companies with high multiples, which increases volatility of titles like Palantir or Tesla(Fed meeting will take place tonight - but the market does not expect a rate cut).

  • The memory cycle: the balance of supply and demand in DRAM and HBM memory will determine the sustainability of the supercycle for Micron and other memory companies

  • Quarterly results: for companies with high beta, earnings reports tend to generate above-average price movements, so it is advisable to monitor the earnings calendar and adjust positions ahead of the report if necessary

So is beta bad or good?

High beta is a double-edged weapon. In a rising market it increases gains, in a falling market it deepens losses. The eleven stocks in this review are among the most volatile titles on the U.S. stock market, yet in most cases they are companies with real competitive advantages, strong fundamentals, and exposure to the key megatrends of the day. Thus, volatility in these titles is not a sign of weakness, but a reflection of how much opportunity and, at the same time, how much risk the market sees in these firms.

Combined with thorough fundamental analysis, an understanding of cyclical patterns and responsible position size management, high beta can be an asset rather than a threat.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258654-these-11-large-cap-us-stocks-move-harder-than-anything-else-on-wall-street Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-258615 Wed, 18 Mar 2026 04:50:14 +0100 OpenAI’s AWS deal opens a fast lane into the U.S. government after the Pentagon swap with Anthropic OpenAI has struck a partnership with Amazon Web Services that lets it deliver its AI models to U.S. defense and civilian agencies for both classified and unclassified work. The tie up builds on OpenAI’s recent agreement with the Pentagon, under which its models will run inside classified Defense Department networks and replace Anthropic after the Trump administration labeled that rival a “supply chain risk” over a dispute on AI use in mass surveillance and autonomous weapons.

Because AWS is already deeply embedded across federal systems and operates GovCloud and classified regions, the alliance gives OpenAI rapid access to agencies it could not easily serve on its own without building certified secure infrastructure. OpenAI says it will still choose which models are offered and can insist on extra safeguards for sensitive deployments, while the Pentagon deal explicitly includes technical and contractual limits meant to keep its models away from domestic mass surveillance and fully autonomous lethal weapons, a stance the company argues also reassures large corporate customers watching how its technology is used by governments.

How OpenAI replaced Anthropic

Anthropic won a contract with the Pentagon for up to $200 million last year, supplying the Claude model for classified military and intelligence systems through Palantir $PLTR and AWS $AMZN. But the relationship broke down this February. Anthropic refused to remove restrictions on select deployments - particularly domestic surveillance and potential use for autonomous weapons - and the Pentagon formally designated the firm a "supply chain risk" after a series of warnings and decided to phase out the collaboration over six months.

Shortly thereafter, OpenAI announced that it had won a contract to supply ChatGPT and other models to roughly 3 million DoD employees for both classified and unclassified work. According to The Information, the contract is expected to bring in "only" a few million dollars over 15 months, a fraction of OpenAI's estimated $30 billion in 2026 revenue. But the strategic value is elsewhere: OpenAI has entered the nation's critical infrastructure where a competitor has been a major player.

Why the AWS deal is key for OpenAI

The partnership with AWS moves OpenAI beyond the Pentagon itself. Amazon's cloud has deep roots in many federal agencies, and AWS has agreed to offer OpenAI products across its government clientele, according to sources. So OpenAI is gaining.

  • Access to a broad base of agencies through existing AWS contracts.

  • The ability to deliver AI for both classified and unclassified environments without having to build its own certified infrastructure.

  • a strong signal of confidence to large enterprise customers who often see government deployments as a test of reliability.

The deal is also made possible by an adjustment in the relationship with Microsoft. Following OpenAI's move to a for-profit structure, the contract was updated in 2025 so that Microsoft would not have a pre-emption right on all compute for OpenAI and so that OpenAI could provide APIs to government and security customers regardless of the cloud. So OpenAI's first products continue to run on Azure, but the company is now free to use other providers - including AWS - for specific segments such as national security.

The impact on Amazon and the "cloud war" on government

For Amazon, the partnership with OpenAI is a welcome counterpunch at a time when Microsoft $MSFT had a strong marketing argument for Azure thanks to its exclusive relationship with OpenAI. AWS can now offer OpenAI models to governments alongside its own services and those of other partners, strengthening its position as an AI "neutral marketplace".

Moreover, the cloud is strategically important to government:

  • It generates long-term stable revenue from multi-year contracts.

  • Increases reputational capital with corporate customers.

  • gives providers deeper insight into specific security and regulatory requirements, which they can then monetize in the commercial sphere.

This gives AWS the argument that it can be a platform for a variety of top models - from custom to Anthropic (where allowed) to OpenAI - and that it can respond quickly to changes in Pentagon or other agency policies.

Risks and open questions

On the Anthropic side, the dispute with the Pentagon may spill over into the legal arena. The company has previously indicated that it will challenge the DoD's actions, and the outcome of the dispute may affect future rules for AI purchases across federal agencies. At the same time, President Donald Trump's decision to have authorities phase out other models to replace Claude within six months creates room for OpenAI, xAI and other competitors that have already tapped into classified networks.

For OpenAI and Amazon, the main risk is political and reputational. The national security segment is lucrative but also sensitive - work on classified projects, questions around surveillance and autonomous weapons, and public debate about where AI has limits in defense. If controversial deployments emerge, pressure to regulate and limit cooperation with some contractors could quickly increase.

Financially, the new contracts do not yet represent a major part of OpenAI's revenue - a Pentagon contract of "a few million dollars" over 15 months is more of a pilot project than a major source of profit at the scale of a company with an expected $30 billion in revenue in 2026. More important is how quickly it can expand AI services to more agencies through AWS and other channels, and what volume of contracts it can pick up after Anthropic's final exit.

What to watch next

In the coming months, the key:

  • What specific agencies other than the Pentagon will begin using OpenAI over AWS.

  • How Anthropic's dispute with the Pentagon will play out, and whether it will lead to new rules for AI in government.

  • whether OpenAI will begin to list larger government contracts as a significant revenue segment, or whether national security will remain a strategic rather than financial pillar.

  • how Microsoft, Google and others in the government AI solutions space will respond.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258615-openai-s-aws-deal-opens-a-fast-lane-into-the-u-s-government-after-the-pentagon-swap-with-anthropic Pavel Botek
bulios-article-258487 Tue, 17 Mar 2026 16:20:10 +0100 Elizabeth Warren targets Big Tech layoffs and Trump era tax breaks Senator Elizabeth Warren is pressing major employers including Meta, Amazon, Microsoft, UPS and Target to explain why they are cutting thousands of jobs while enjoying large corporate tax breaks from Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. In letters sent to their CEOs, she asks them to detail by March 30 how big a tax windfall they received in 2025 and how they reconcile that with decisions to shed workers.

Warren argues that record profits, very low effective tax rates and big layoff waves are “another example of unrestrained corporate greed” made easier by the current tax code. Meta $META stands out in her criticism: analysis from the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy estimates its effective federal tax rate in 2025 at just over 3.5 percent, while reports say the company is weighing cuts of up to 20 percent of its workforce to offset surging AI infrastructure costs. Similar moves at Amazon and UPS, which have announced plans to cut around 16,000 and 30,000 jobs respectively, turn the link between tax relief, layoffs and public reputation into a new political risk investors will have to watch.

What exactly is Warren calling for

In her letters, Warren asks that individual companies provide:

  • An accounting of the tax breaks and other benefits they received in 2025 thanks to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

  • Information on whether they expect to receive a refund of tariffs or other one-time benefits.

  • a summary of the number of layoffs in recent months, broken down by segment and location.

  • An explanation of how layoffs relate to investments in AI, automation and other productivity measures.

Meta is cited in the letter as an example of a company that generated a record $79 billion in U.S. revenue in 2025 while paying only about $2.8 billion in federal tax, an effective rate of just over 3.5%, an all-time low since going public in 2012. At the same time, according to Reuters, the company is considering laying off up to a fifth of its workforce to offset the cost of massive investments in AI infrastructure and to prepare for higher productivity through automation.

At Amazon, Warren is following up on earlier criticism of billions of dollars in tax breaks and simultaneous layoffs, with the company cutting red tape and slimming corporate structures while leaning on the growth of e-commerce, cloud and AI services. UPS is mentioned in the letter in the context of shedding 30,000 positions in a year when it is reshaping its relationship with Amazon and the company is optimizing delivery volumes.

Why the topic is sensitive right now

On aggregate numbers, some may argue that the layoff rate is low and the economy is holding up relatively well after the pandemic. But the situation is different for an individual layoff.

  • Few new jobs are being created.

  • People are less likely to leave voluntarily because they are afraid they won't find anything better.

  • Experienced professionals are also applying for entry-level and mid-level positions, so competition is tougher.

Against this backdrop, a series of big layoff announcements - often justified by "efficiency" or "better productivity through AI" - look much worse in public when accompanied by information about extremely low tax rates and record profits. Politically, this opens up space for the argument that tax breaks for big business do not lead to job retention, but rather to enhanced margins and shareholder rewards.

What this means for Meta, Microsoft, Amazon and others

In the short term, Warren's letters may mainly mean reputational and political pressure. The questions themselves do not change the tax regime or dictate to companies how to manage headcount. But when combined with media coverage and other campaigns (e.g., unions, think tanks like the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy), the issue can become the basis for.

  • Proposals to limit some tax breaks.

  • making future incentives conditional on employment or investment commitments.

  • Stricter monitoring of AI-conditional layoffs in policy debates.

Meta is a typical symbol here. The company is investing tens of billions in AI infrastructure while planning perhaps the largest layoffs since the "year of efficiency" 2022-2023. From an investment perspective, this may improve margins in the short term, but politically it becomes an easy target: low taxes, massive buybacks, high AI CAPEX, and thousands of people out of work are powerful ammunition for Senator Warren and other critics.

Microsoft and Amazon, meanwhile, feature less specifically in the text, but they are in the same category: benefiting from tax changes, investing heavy billions in cloud AI while downsizing in some segments. This may attract more attention in the future, especially if pressures for more "efficiency rounds" increase.

Risks for investors

In the short term, the main concern is reputational. Warren's "declaration of war" on large companies in her letters will not in itself change the numbers in the next quarter, but may add to stock volatility on any further news of tax changes or large layoffs.

In the medium and longer term, it is more important whether initiatives like these turn into concrete legislative proposals:

  • Revisions to portions of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act related to tax breaks for large technology companies.

  • Conditioning tax benefits on maintaining a certain level of employment in the US.

  • New obligations regarding transparency of tax rates and planned AI-contingent layoffs.

What this could mean for shareholders:

  • Higher effective tax rates for companies like Meta, Amazon, Microsoft.

  • Less room for aggressive buybacks and other capital operations.

  • Pressure for slower or more sensitively communicated layoffs if they are associated with AI efficiencies.

What to watch next

For investors holding or considering titles like Meta, Microsoft, Amazon, UPS, Target, the key to watch will be:

  • Whether the companies respond publicly to the Warren letters at all, or let everything happen quietly.

  • Whether the issue makes it to the broader congressional hearings (finance, labor, technology committees).

  • how the media and analysts are handling numbers like the 3.5% effective rate of the Met and the planned 20% layoffs.

  • whether similar criticism will spread to other big tech stocks that benefit greatly from AI and Trump's tax changes.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258487-elizabeth-warren-targets-big-tech-layoffs-and-trump-era-tax-breaks Pavel Botek
bulios-article-258461 Tue, 17 Mar 2026 15:05:15 +0100 Alphabet’s Gemini powers Atlas: can Google build a robotics growth pillar without owning the hardware? Alphabet has spent years showing world class robotics research while its actual revenue stayed concentrated in cloud, ads and pure software AI. The new partnership between Google DeepMind and Boston Dynamics, which brings Gemini Robotics AI into the latest Atlas humanoid, is the first time Google’s models become the “brain” of industrial robots that are meant for factory work at scale, not just stage demos. Gemini Robotics is designed as a multimodal vision language action layer, so the same AI can perceive, reason and act across different robot bodies, which makes Atlas an early flagship but not the only hardware this software can eventually run on.

For Alphabet shareholders, the important point is that the company is not trying to build its own humanoid plants, but to position itself as a kind of Android for robots, licensing a standard intelligence layer into machines built by partners like Boston Dynamics and, via Intrinsic, a wider set of industrial manufacturers. If this strategy works, Google could tap into data flows from fleets of robots to train better Gemini models and capture high margin software and cloud revenue from robotics without the capital burden of hardware, though the scale of that opportunity and the speed of adoption remain open questions that this article will unpack in more detail.

Top points of the analysis

  • Google DeepMind integrates Gemini Robotics AI into Humanoid Atlas and other Boston Dynamics platforms as a "brain" layer that translates vision and language into specific motion commands.

  • In doing so, Alphabet is testing its "intelligence without hardware" strategy - it wants to become the horizontal standard for robotic AI across manufacturers (Boston Dynamics, Apptronik, Agility and others), much like Android in the mobile world.

  • Data from pilot deployments of Atlas in Hyundai factories and other industrial plants will be tuned to the real world by Gemini Robotics, which can create a strong data advantage over competitors that don't have such deep access to physical robots.

  • Monetization can come through licensing and "usage-based" models of Gemini Robotics that will run through Google Cloud, expanding the addressable cloud market and adding a new type of enterprise customer in robotics.

  • If Gemini Robotics establishes itself as the default intelligence for multiple robotics platforms, Alphabet gets network effects - every robot in the world that uses Gemini improves the model for others.

  • The risk is dependence on partners who must actually scale the hardware, and uncertainty about how quickly companies will be willing to pay for AI layers in robotics, which is still in its early commercial phase.

What has changed (from Google's perspective)

$GOOG has been doing robotics research for years ( Everyday Robots, for example), but standalone hardware projects have ended without much commercial impact. In the latest wave, DeepMind decided on a different strategy: instead of building its own robots, it's focusing on creating generic Gemini Robotics models and deploying them on partners' hardware.

Gemini Robotics 1.5 and Gemini Robotics-ER are models that combine vision, language, and action - combining the ability to understand a visual scene, plan multiple steps ahead, and generate motor commands for specific robots. Boston Dynamics brings "athletic intelligence," the ability of robots like Atlas or Spot to navigate challenging environments, but until now has lacked a sufficiently versatile cognitive layer for adaptive tasks.

The partnership announced at CES 2026 therefore seems like a logical move for Google: instead of making its own humanoids, the company will "piggyback" on the brand and engineering of Boston Dynamics and Hyundai and deliver what it does best - a foundation model and orchestration of how the robot should behave. At the same time, Google stresses on the blog and in Gemini Robotics materials that the same intelligence is to run on other partners like Apptronik, Agility and others, confirming its ambition to become the "Android for robotics".

What this means for Alphabet

  • Every Boston Dynamics robot with Gemini is a live data sensor for model improvement.

  • Google does not have to bear the capital-intensive risk of a manufacturing company, but collects licensing and cloud fees.

  • If Boston Dynamics and other partners succeed, Google is "in" on every robot sold, regardless of the specific brand.

How this becomes money for Alphabet

1) Licensing and usage-based revenue from Gemini Robotics

Gemini Robotics is designed as a foundation model delivered via API and cloud. For Alphabet, this means multiple layers of monetization:

  • A licensing fee for each robot that uses Gemini (per-device license).

  • Usage-based fees for the computing resources in Google Cloud that the robot consumes in perception, planning, and decision-making.

  • Alternatively, higher enterprise tariffs for large customers (Hyundai, logistics companies, manufacturers) who deploy larger fleets of robots.

The market for humanoid robots themselves will be relatively small in the first phase (hundreds to thousands of units per year), but the key point is that Gemini Robotics is also intended to run on quadruped robots (Spot), mobile platforms, and other types of robots - so potentially tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of devices over several years.

Even if Google generates "only" the low hundreds of dollars per year in net AI fees per robot in the early years (a combination of license and compute usage), with tens of thousands of robots, that already means revenues in the low hundreds of millions of dollars per year, which, moreover, will likely run through a high-margin cloud business.

2) Expanding the addressable market for Google Cloud

Every robot with Gemini Robotics is also a cloud customer. Physical robotics therefore expands the addressable market for Google Cloud to include a segment that has been virtually non-existent until now - industrial robots, logistics, manufacturing and service robotics.

These businesses typically need:

  • Access to models.

  • Storage for data and logs from robots.

  • Analytics tools and MLOps for custom debugging and monitoring.

This is exactly where Google Cloud is looking to grow and where it can leverage synergies with AI - a similar story to what we see today with Microsoft (Azure + Copilot) or AWS (Bedrock + customer models). This makes Gemini Robotics not just a product in itself, but an acquisition channel for new cloud customers in the industry.

3) Data advantage and "moat" in embodied AI

The biggest value for Google in the short term may not be licensing revenue, but data. Gemini Robotics-ER is designed as an embodied reasoning model that orchestrates robot actions based on environmental perception and planning. Every Atlas or Spot that runs at a Hyundai factory or other customer generates real data:

  • How the robot reacts to unexpected situations.

  • What mistakes it makes.

  • what strategies lead to successful task completion.

This data may be anonymized and aggregated, but for training and debugging Gemini Robotics, it represents a powerful data source that competitors without similar partnerships won't have. This is similar logic to mobile - Android generates usage data (under privacy rules) that helps Google tune its products, and thus build further leads.

Growth potential: what can be in it for Alphabet $GOOG

1) Robotics as an extension of AI TAM, not a new core business

Analyst estimates for the "digital assistants in healthcare" market put the size at around $1.5 billion by 2030, but the market for digital robotics and humanoids will be orders of magnitude larger - combining hardware, software, and services in industry, logistics, and perhaps even the home.

For Alphabet, the point is not to own the hardware, but to get the AI part of the value chain. If it can make even "just" $1-3 billion a year in licensing and cloud usage associated with robotics (across partners, not just Boston Dynamics) over 5-10 years, at typical cloud margins, this would represent an additional high-margin segment alongside the existing Google Cloud and AI services.

This is a small part compared to Alphabet's revenues today, but important from a valuation perspective - the market today values mainly Search, Cloud and general AI. Robotics can be seen as a new growth vector that is not directly dependent on advertising and has a tangible "physical" impact.

2) The "Android model" in robotics

DeepMind's key strategic bet is that Gemini Robotics will become the horizontal standard for the "brain" of robots:

  • A partnership with Boston Dynamics (Atlas, Spot).

  • Apptronik (Apollo).

  • Agility Robotics (Digit) and others.

  • And the ability to offer Gemini Robotics via API to other manufacturers.

For the investor, this means an asymmetric bet - if one robot manufacturer succeeds, Google is there; if more succeed, network effects and standardization will further strengthen its position.

3) Branding and defending against competition

The partnership with Boston Dynamics also has a symbolic level. Boston Dynamics is seen as one of the icons of robotics, Hyundai as a major industry player. With Gemini and Google DeepMind branding sticking to their humanoid Atlas, it reinforces the perception of Alphabet as a leader in "embodied AI" as well, not just in text and images.

In a competitive landscape where Microsoft is betting on Copilot and OpenAI, Tesla on its own Optimus, and Nvidia on an AI stack for automotive and robotics, these partnerships help Google present itself as a company that has a clear role in the world of physical AI systems as well.

Alphabet vs Tesla vs others in robotics

Alphabet / Google DeepMind

  • Strategy: be the "brain" of robots via Gemini Robotics - a universal AI layer for various hardware partners (Boston Dynamics, Apptronik, Agility, etc.).

  • Strengths: high-end models (Gemini), cloud, and ability to learn from data across partners without bearing the cost of making robots.

  • Weakness: dependence on partners to actually manage to produce and sell robots in bulk; Alphabet does not have its own "flagship" robot brand.

Tesla $TSLA

  • Strategy: end-to-end approach with humanoid Optimus - Tesla does hardware, software, manufacturing, data and deployment in its own factories, all "in-house."

  • Strengths: extreme integration (AI from autopilot, custom chips, automotive manufacturing experience), clear opportunity to deploy tens of thousands of robots internally first.

  • Weakness: high capital requirements, technology and security risk, dependence on one company - if Optimus fails, there is no "plan B" on other partners.

Others (Figure, Agility, others)

  • Strategy: build a "Tesla-like" approach on a smaller scale - own humanoid + own AI, often with support from large partners (e.g. Amazon at Agility).

  • Strengths: agility, single product focus, rapid experimentation with business models (robot-as-a-service, specific verticals).

  • Weakness: limited capital, less access to data, high risk of ending up as an acquisition target or being rebuilt by big players.

What this means for an investor in Alphabet

  • Alphabet is betting on a horizontal role - it doesn't want to be the "Tesla of robotics" but rather the Android and Google Cloud for the robot world. This reduces capital risk and increases the chance of being with multiple winners at once.

  • If Tesla or one of the "small" ones succeeds but takes another stack as the AI brain, Alphabet will lose some of the opportunity - which is why partnerships like Boston Dynamics are key to securing a "seat at the table".

  • For Alphabet's valuation, robotics is small for now, but strategically important - it can show that Gemini and Google Cloud can make money outside of traditional software and advertising.

Risks for Alphabet

  • Dependence on partners - unless Boston Dynamics and other manufacturers can scale robots, Gemini Robotics will remain marginal in robotics.

  • Pace of adoption - enterprises may be cautious about deploying humanoids and AI agents in mission-critical operations, which will slow monetization.

  • Competing AI stacks - Microsoft, Nvidia and others may offer alternative solutions for robotic AI, reducing the chance of an "Android moment" in robotics.

  • Regulation and Safety - Incidents with AI-driven robots may lead to regulations that will require costly adjustments to models and systems.

Investment scenarios for Alphabet

Optimistic scenario

Gemini Robotics will become the de facto standard for multiple robotics platforms. Alphabet earns hundreds of millions to units of billions of USD annually from licensing and cloud usage in high-margin robotics. The market will start to reflect this as another growth pillar alongside cloud and general AI, which will support rerating multiples, especially if data advantage and network effects also come into play.

A realistic scenario

Gemini Robotics establishes itself with several major partners (Boston Dynamics, Apptronik, Agility), but the market will remain fragmented. Alphabet makes a "nice" hundred million USD a year in robotics, which is supported by Google Cloud, but it's not a game changer for the group. Robotics is helping to strengthen the perception of technical leadership and diversification rather than dramatically changing the financial profile.

Pessimistic scenario

Robotics turns out to be a smaller and slower-growing business than the videos and presentations suggest today. Hardware partners struggle with costs, regulation and low demand. Gemini Robotics will remain a cool technology with limited commercial impact. For Alphabet shareholders, this is more of a cosmetic issue - the core AI and cloud story remains, but the "third pillar in robotics" will not materialize.

What an investor in Alphabet should take away

  • The partnership with Boston Dynamics gives Gemini Robotics a physical body and access to real industry data without Alphabet having to build its own hardware.

  • Google is looking to replicate the Android model in robotics: be the standard AI layer on top of various robots, collect data and charge for cloud and intelligence.

  • In the short term, these will be more like small contributions to revenue, but in the long term, robotics may become another high-margin segment beyond Search and cloud.

  • The risk to shareholders is limited - the core business remains elsewhere - but the potential upside if the horizontal strategy in robotics succeeds is intriguing.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258461-alphabet-s-gemini-powers-atlas-can-google-build-a-robotics-growth-pillar-without-owning-the-hardware Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-258451 Tue, 17 Mar 2026 13:50:37 +0100

CrowdStrike announced a global partnership with Nebius aimed at integrating the Falcon platform directly into the Nebius AI Cloud and bringing unified enterprise cybersecurity to new, high-performance AI environments. The joint solution offers unified visibility and AI-powered detection and response across infrastructure and runtime environments, enabling companies to scale AI without disrupting existing security architecture.

The integration is intended to allow customers to extend existing security policies and response procedures to AI workloads running in Nebius. For investors, this means strengthening CrowdStrike’s position in the rapidly growing AI infrastructure security segment, with the potential for access to new customers and greater adoption of the Falcon platform.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258451 Ananya Sharma
bulios-article-258470 Tue, 17 Mar 2026 12:25:44 +0100 LVMH $MC.PA is again below €500

The company of billionaire Bernard Arnault is trading 47% below its 2023 high.

The decline is due to a combination of factors. LVMH reported 2025 revenue of €80.8 billion, a 5% year-on-year decrease. The key Fashion & Leather Goods division, which includes brands like Louis Vuitton and Dior, recorded an organic 5% drop in revenue and operating profit fell by 13%. The group's net profit plunged 13% to €10.9 billion.

Demand in Asia remains weak. This is compounded by consumer fatigue from repeated price increases and a shift of younger customers toward brands like Prada or Miu Miu.

The positive news is growth in selective distribution thanks to Sephora and stabilization in the watches and jewelry segment.

CEO Arnault, however, warned that 2026 will be challenging.

Do you hold shares of this fashion giant in your portfolio, or is it a no-go for you?

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258470 Daniel Costa
bulios-article-258395 Tue, 17 Mar 2026 10:45:19 +0100 Warning Signs Are Flashing: Could the S&P 500 Be Heading for a 30% Crash? The S&P 500 hit an all-time high of 7,014 points in late January 2026, but since then, the index has been sliding. What might look like a routine pullback on the surface could be something far more serious. A cluster of technical and fundamental warning indicators are lighting up simultaneously, a pattern that has historically preceded major market selloffs. Stretched valuations, tightening financial conditions, and a slowing economy are converging at the same time, and some analysts are now openly discussing the possibility of a decline as steep as 30% from the peak.

The S&P 500 index, which reached its all-time high of 7,014 points on 28 January 2026, has been losing ground since then. As of 17 March, it is trading around 6 700 points, a decline of approximately 4.7% from its peak. On the face of it, this is a standard correction that normally takes place in the markets. However, a closer look at both technical and fundamental indicators shows that the current situation may herald a much deeper decline than most investors currently expect.

In fact, several warning signs that have repeatedly appeared in history before significant declines are meeting in the market at the same time. From extremely stretched valuation indicators to technical patterns on the charts to the geopolitical shock of the Iranian conflict that has driven oil prices above $100 per barrel. It is this combination that is creating an environment in which a 30% decline scenario, while still a less likely option, is certainly not unrealistic.

The upper trend line of the S&P 500: a technical signal that cannot be ignored

One of the most obvious warning signals is the behaviour of the S&P 500 index against the long-term upper trend line of the rising channel that has been forming since 2018. The index touched resistance in the region of around 7,000 points in January 2026, which corresponds to the upper limit of this channel. Historically, the market has repeatedly bounced down from this line and significant corrections have followed.

Chart of the S&P 500 index - weekly

Source.

What the historical bounces from the upper trend line say

Technical analysis shows that the S&P 500 has been respecting a rising channel pattern since 2018. Each time the index has approached the upper trend line of this channel, a decline has followed. In January 2022, contact with the upper boundary preceded a bear market in which the index wrote off over 25%. A similar scenario has played out in previous cycles. Currently, the index is in a zone where selling pressure has historically outweighed buying interest.

Moreover, the index has fallen below the lower boundary of the medium-term uptrend channel, which technical analyses interpret as a signal of slowing growth momentum. Key support lies around the 6,130-point level, while resistance is located at 7,000 points. At the same time, the RSI (Relative Strength Index or RSI) indicator shows a downtrend, which tends to be an early precursor of a price decline.

Buffett indicator: record 230%

One of the most followed valuation indicators, the so-called Buffett Indicator, is currently at 230%. This indicator measures the total market capitalisation of US stocks relative to US gross domestic product. The long-term average is around 80% to 100%, with values above 115% traditionally indicating an overvaluation of the market. Warren Buffett himself has stated in the past that this is probably the best single metric for assessing market valuations.

The current level of 230% is a record high in the history of this metric and far exceeds the values achieved before the bursting of the tech bubble in 2000 or the bear market in 2022. The key point is that in all three previous instances where the Buffett Indicator was within two standard deviations of its historical trend, the S&P 500 Index followed a decline of at least 25%. The 1968 decline was over 30%, the 2000 tech bubble was followed by stocks losing over 50%, and the 2022 bear market followed in 2021.

Source: Current Market Valuation

Shiller CAPE ratio: second highest in history

Another warning sign is the Shiller CAPE ratio, invented by Nobel Prize winner Robert Shiller. This ratio measures the current price of the S&P 500 index relative to average inflation-adjusted earnings over the past 10 years. Currently, the CAPE ratio is around 37 to 40, while the long-term average is about 17. The only time in history that this ratio has been at a comparable or higher level was during the technology bubble at the turn of the millennium.

Historical data show that after reaching a CAPE above 39, the S&P 500 index declined by an average of 20% in the following two years and 30% in the following three years. Moreover, the index has never generated a positive three-year return in such a situation. This does not mean that the downturn has to come immediately, but the probability of below-average returns over several years is very high from a historical perspective.

Source: Multpl

A critical look at valuation indicators

It should be added, however, that valuation indicators have their limits. Some analysts point out that structural changes in the economy, such as the expansion of high-margin technology companies, share buybacks or the globalization of corporate earnings, may justify consistently higher valuations than in the past. According to these arguments, indicators such as the CAPE ratio or the Buffett indicator systematically overshoot in a pessimistic direction because they do not take into account changes in the profitability of U.S. firms over the past 30 years. Even so, current valuations are at extreme levels even after accounting for these structural shifts.

Midterm election year: historically the weakest phase of the presidential cycle

The year 2026 is a midterm (midterm) election year for the US Congress, and historical data shows that these are among the most volatile years from a stock market perspective. There have been 17 midterm cycles since the inception of the S&P 500 index in 1957. In 12 of them, approximately 70% of the time, the index has fallen into correction territory, i.e. down 10% or more. The average maximum intra-year decline was approximately 18%.

Midterm elections create uncertainty because the party in power almost always loses seats in Congress. Investors do not know whether current policies on taxes, regulation or trade will continue. Financial markets react negatively to uncertainty. In 2026, this effect is amplified by President Trump's tariff measures and geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, which add additional layers of risk to the standard cyclical pattern.

On the other hand, historical data also show that the six months following the midterm elections, from November to April, are among the strongest periods of the entire four-year presidential cycle. The S&P 500 Index added an average of 14% during that period. But the key is to weather the volatility until then, and that is where the main risk for investors lies.

Geopolitical shock: war with Iran and oil shock

Adding to the fundamental and technical warning signs since the end of February 2026 has been the acute geopolitical factor. US and Israeli military operations against Iran have led to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which around 20% of the world's oil supply passes under normal conditions. Brent oil prices have exceeded USD 100 per barrel for the first time since 2022.

The oil shock fundamentally complicates the Federal Reserve's position. Higher energy prices increase inflationary pressures while slowing economic growth, a combination known as stagflation. Stagflation was a major factor behind the dramatic stock market declines of the 1970s, when the S&P 500 index lost over 40% during the OPEC oil crisis of 1973. The Fed thus finds itself in a situation where it cannot simply cut rates to support the economy, because to do so would risk further unleashing inflation.

We will learn more at tomorrow's Fed meeting and in the commentary that follows.

Why the market hasn't reacted more strongly so far

Despite the closure of the Strait of Hormuz (which is now only open to select countries) and the sharp rise in oil prices, the S&P 500 has only fallen about 4.7% so far since its January high. Investors seem relatively calm and are betting that the conflict will be short-lived.

Moreover, the US is one of the world's largest oil producers, which reduces its direct dependence on imports. However, it is important to remember that oil prices are global and any increase in them will be reflected in the costs to companies and consumers, regardless of the level of domestic production. If the conflict persists longer than the market expects, the current relative calm could quickly turn into panic.

Market concentration and extreme sentiment

Another factor that increases the risk of a significant downturn is the extreme concentration of the U.S. stock market. Just five companies, Nvidia $NVDA, Microsoft $MSFT, Apple $AAPL, Google $GOOG and Amazon $AMZN, account for almost 30% of the entire S&P 500 index. This level of concentration is reminiscent of the situation before the tech bubble burst, when a narrow group of stocks pulled the entire index up while the rest of the market lagged.

Moreover, investor sentiment is extremely bullish. The NAAIM survey shows that institutions are allocated to stocks at levels corresponding to the 78th to 96th percentile of all historical values. Retail investors hold minimal cash and are heavily invested, according to the AAII survey.

It is this combination of high allocation and low cash that historically has repeatedly occurred prior to major market peaks. A Natixis survey of 515 institutional investors managing nearly $30 trillion in assets showed that 79% expect a market correction in 2026, with 49% predicting a 10% to 20% decline and 20% anticipating an even deeper decline.

Forecast comparison: from a slight correction to a 40% decline

Analyst houses differ significantly in their estimates of the potential downturn. On one side of the spectrum stands Goldman Sachs $GS, which estimates a 25% probability of a recession with a potential 15% drop in the index. On the other side, BCA Research considers a 60% probability of a recession and projects a drop in the S&P 500 to the 4,200 to 4,500 point range, which would represent a drop of around 35% to 40% from current levels.

The options market data adds further perspective. S&P 500 put option prices as of the end of 2025 imply an 8% probability that the index will fall 30% or more during 2026. This may seem low, but for context it should be added that this is well above average and includes a risk premium to reflect market uncertainty.

Overview of warning signs

Indicator

Current value

Historical context / signal

Buffett indicator

~230 %

Record high; average 80-100%; above 200% always followed by a 25%+ decline

Shiller CAPE ratio

~37-40

Second highest in history; average 17; above 39 historically a 20-30% decline

Forward P/E

~22

Significantly above both 5-year and 10-year averages; comparable to dot-com and COVID era

S&P 500 upper trend line

Intersected in January

Since 2018, contact with upper channel boundary has preceded corrections

Midterm cycle

70% correction

Average decline of 18%; 12 of 17 midterm years have produced a correction above 10%

Oil shock (Brent)

Above 100 USD/barrel

Closure of the Strait of Hormuz; risk of stagflation

Market concentration

Top 5 = 30% of S&P

Reminiscent of the situation before the dot-com bubble burst

Institutional sentiment

79% expect a correction

Agencies expect 10-20% decline, 20% expect deeper decline

Strategy

The current market situation resembles a classic scenario in which multiple risk factors meet at the same moment. Extreme valuations, geopolitical shock, the cyclical pattern of the mid-year and high investor sentiment create an environment in which the scope for further upside is limited and the risk of a significant downside is above average.

For investors, several practical conclusions follow. Building a cash position in a portfolio can provide room to buy in the event of a sell-off. Holding only high-quality stocks with strong fundamentals reduces the risk of permanent capital loss. Diversifying outside of U.S. stocks into areas that are not as extremely valued can help mitigate the impact of a potential correction.

At the same time, it is important to remember that the mere existence of warning signs does not mean that a 30% decline is inevitable. Valuation indicators have a limited ability to predict the exact timing of corrections and markets may remain overvalued for longer than most analysts would expect. Should the Iranian conflict be resolved quickly and oil prices fall back, one of the main catalysts for risk could weaken significantly. Similarly, if US corporate profitability remains strong, high valuations could remain justified at current levels.

What to watch next

  • Developments in the conflict with Iran and oil prices: if Brent exceeds $120 per barrel and stays above that level, the likelihood of a stagflation scenario increases significantly

  • Fed interest rate decision: the market currently expects the first rate cut in September 2026 at the earliest, but the oil shock could push this date even further out

  • Earnings season for Q1 2026: if companies start lowering their outlook due to higher energy costs, it could trigger a revaluation

  • Market breadth: if the downturn starts to spread from tech giants to the broader market, this is a strong signal of a deeper correction

  • VIX index: current readings around 25 to 30 do not yet indicate panic, but a rapid rise above 35 would signal a significant increase in market stress

  • Midterm elections in November 2026: historically, markets stabilize after political clarity, and the six months following the midterm elections are among the strongest of the cycle

Possible future developments

The scenario of a 30% decline in the S&P 500 index is not the baseline scenario of most analysts, but it cannot be described as unrealistic. The combination of historically extreme valuations, a technical rebound from the upper trend line, geopolitical shock in the form of the Iranian conflict, a cyclical pattern of mid-years, and extremely bullish sentiment creates an environment that has repeatedly preceded significant corrections throughout history.

The key for investors is to remain rational and not succumb to either over-optimism or panic. Markets have always recovered from downturns and investors who have maintained a long-term perspective and had sufficient liquidity to buy during sell-offs have typically emerged from crises stronger. However, the current environment clearly requires greater caution and a more thoughtful approach to portfolio management than the last three years of unprecedented growth.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258395-warning-signs-are-flashing-could-the-s-p-500-be-heading-for-a-30-crash Bulios Research Team
bulios-article-258477 Tue, 17 Mar 2026 09:01:54 +0100 With all the talk today about Nvidia $NVDA being a "bubble", that becomes harder and harder to believe when you look at what the company actually shows at GTC and the outlook it gives. Jensen Huang isn't just tossing out vague AI dreams—he talks about concrete generations of chips (Blackwell, Vera Rubin, the next GPUs after 2027), the whole ecosystem of software and datacenters, and he adds an estimate of up to $1 trillion in cumulative orders for new AI systems by 2027, which is double what he said a year ago.

Moreover, GTC is turning from a conference show into something like an "annual reckoning for AI"—watched not only by investors but also by companies building their businesses on Nvidia hardware, from cloud providers to telcos and biotech. Every new chip and platform (Blackwell, Rubin, DGX, new AI servers) is tied to specific projects and contracts with major players, so it's not just a "story" but a pipeline of real investments into datacenters with a multi-year horizon.

The question for an investor now isn't just "is it a bubble?", but rather: will those who already own Nvidia keep buying more based on successive bullish theses from GTC, or is the current growth pace and valuation more a reason to "just hold" and wait to see that trillion-dollar outlook translate into revenue and EPS numbers in the coming years? How about you—are you more in buy-on-catalyst mode, adding on these catalysts, or are you just holding and watching to make sure it doesn't become too large a weight in your portfolio?

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258477 Diego Navarro
bulios-article-258346 Tue, 17 Mar 2026 04:30:11 +0100 Nvidia’s GTC 2026: new Groq 3 chip, Vera CPUs and a trillion dollar AI demand call At GTC 2026, Nvidia laid out how it wants to stay ahead in AI beyond the first wave of generative models. Jensen Huang introduced the Groq 3 inference processor, part of the Rubin platform and designed to push more tokens per watt for large language models, alongside the new Vera CPU systems that target AI agent workloads and expand Nvidia’s role beyond GPUs. He also highlighted the Vera Rubin Space Module concept for orbital data centers and new software like NemoClaw for AI agents, and raised Nvidia’s estimate of addressable AI chip demand to about 1 trillion dollars through 2027, roughly double last year’s 500 billion view through 2026.

On the commercial side, Nvidia is deepening ties with hyperscale buyers. AI cloud provider Nebius signed a five year deal with Meta worth up to 27 billion dollars, built around one of the first large scale deployments of the Vera Rubin platform, with 12 billion dollars of dedicated capacity and up to 15 billion in additional compute Meta can claim if Nebius does not sell it to other customers. At the same time, reports suggest Meta is weighing layoffs of around 20 percent of its workforce to help fund an AI infrastructure budget that could reach 600 billion dollars by 2028, underlining the double edged nature of this boom: huge orders for Nvidia and its partners, but intense efficiency pressure on the buyers footing the bill.

Groq 3 and five new racks: how Nvidia is putting together an AI datacentre

A key product innovation is Groq 3, a dedicated chip for inference, i.e. running AI models in production. Nvidia's $NVDA follows it up with an acqui-hire: it struck a licensing deal with Groq and poached founder Jonathan Ross, president Sunny Madra and other key people in a roughly $20 billion package. Groq 3 complements Nvidia's classic GPUs so that the company has a dedicated inference chip for a time when the market's center of gravity is shifting from training to deployment models.

In parallel, Nvidia unveiled five new server racks based on the Rubin platform. The latter combines six key chips - Vera CPU, Rubin GPU, NVLink 6, ConnectX, BlueField and Spectrum 6 - to reduce training and inference costs by up to a tenth compared to the previous Blackwell generation, thanks to greater efficiency and fewer GPUs per system. From an investor's perspective, this means Nvidia wants to be not just a supplier of individual chips, but the architect of an entire AI datacenter, which strengthens its negotiating position with both clouds and hyperscalers.

Space as the next frontier: the Vera Rubin Space Module

GTC also brought a symbolic innovation: Vera Rubin Space Module, a modular platform for on-orbit datacenters, geospatial intelligence and autonomous operations in space. Nvidia is building on the success of startup Starcloud, which brought the H100 GPU into orbit in 2025 and launched Google Gemini and NanoGPT-based models on it.

According to Nvidia, the Ruby GPU is expected to offer up to 25 times more AI performance for "space-based inference" compared to the H100, paving the way for real-world processing of large volumes of data directly on satellites. The Vera Rubin Space Module platform will also be complemented by IGX Thor and Jetson Orin systems for other types of orbital tasks. From a business perspective, this is not a high-volume segment like traditional datacenters in the short term, but a high-margin, technologically prestigious showcase that reinforces Nvidia's brand in the space and geointelligence industry.

AI agents, NemoClaw and the fight for "desktop"

At the software level, Nvidia announced NemoClaw, a security and control layer for the OpenClaw platform that enables AI agents to operate on users' desktops. Originally listed as Clawd, then renamed Moltbot and finally OpenClaw, OpenClaw allows agents to operate over various AI models and act on behalf of the user in WhatsApp, Discord, Slack and other applications.

The problem with OpenClaw is privacy and security concerns, as the agent can control the computer and access personal data. NemoClaw aims to address these concerns by adding a set of tools for rights management, auditing and security sandboxes. Nvidia is also positioning its GeForce RTX, RTX Pro Station, DGX Station and DGX Spark platforms as the preferred hardware to run these agents, bridging the consumer and professional segments.

Uber, Lyft and others: AI chips as the brains of robotaxi networks

There was also news from the autonomous mobility sector at GTC. Nvidia announced that Uber will begin deploying a fleet ofLevel 4 autonomy vehicles based on its Drive Hyperion platform in Los Angeles and San Francisco in 2027. This is a follow-up to a previous agreement to acquire up to 100,000 vehicles on the platform, this time with specific timelines and locations.

In addition to Uber, Lyft, Bolt and Grab are also using Nvidia's systems for their self-driving projects. From Nvidia's perspective, it's further confirmation that its chips and software are making inroads into autonomous transportation, diversifying revenue beyond traditional datacenters while creating a long-term chip business directly in the automotive sector.

Nebius - Meta: 27 billion contract as an advertisement for Vera Rubin

The biggest financial number around GTC came not directly from Nvidia, but from its ecosystem. Cloud partner Nebius announced a five-year deal with Meta Platforms for up to $27 billion to deliver AI infrastructure based on Vera Rubin. The structure of the contract is two-tiered:

  • $12 billion of firmly contracted dedicated capacity across multiple sites.

  • Up to $15 billion of optional capacity, which Nebius initially offers to other customers and Meta will buy if it remains unused.

Nvidia has announced a $2 billion investment in Nebius, underscoring its interest in developing the partner and using it as a showcase for Ruby. At the same time, Meta's AI strategies talk about possible AI CAPEX of up to $135 billion in 2026, so the Nebius deal is just part of a broader move to an "asset-light" model of buying capacity. What's important to Nvidia investors is that Rubin is getting into large production deployments in the first wave, and that Nvidia is participating in this both through chip supply and through an equity stake in Nebius.

How big can Nvidia's contribution to growth be

Huang's new outlook of $1 trillion in AI chip demand by 2027 builds on last year's figure of $500 billion for the period through 2026. The company also revealed in its Q4 results for fiscal year 2026 that data center revenue reached $62.3 billion in the quarter and accounted for over 90% of total revenue. GTC 2026 is meant to signal to investors that growth is not just about one generation of GPUs, but the entire product and software layer from data center to automotive to edge and orbit.

The contribution of each news item can be summarized as follows:

  • Groq 3 and Ruby ensure that Nvidia has the hardware for the next phase of AI (agent systems, massive inference) and can continue to push the price per token down.

  • NemoClaw and OpenClaw open up a new area of software revenue and strengthen the link to end users and businesses.

  • Uber and other transportation partners are expanding Nvidia's presence in the auto sector.

  • Vera Rubin Space Module shows new segments with potentially high added value.

  • Nebius - Meta contract demonstrates that big players are willing to tie tens of billions of dollars to infrastructure based on Nvidia's new platform.

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https://en.bulios.com/status/258346-nvidia-s-gtc-2026-new-groq-3-chip-vera-cpus-and-a-trillion-dollar-ai-demand-call Pavel Botek