Southwest stopped fuel hedging a year ago.
S&P 500 investors could get exposure to SpaceX.
Timothée Chalamet has upset opera and ballet fans a week before the Oscars
When Salesforce reported earnings last month, it announced a $50 billion share buyback as a show of confidence in its position at a time when investors are questioning AI’s impact on enterprise software. Now, to help fund that buyback, the company is reportedly seeking to sell up to $25 billion in debt — a record sum for Salesforce that could test investor appetite for a more leveraged balance sheet.
Moody’s Ratings called funding the buyback via a bond sale “a material shift in financial policy” and downgraded Salesforce’s credit rating to A2. S&P Global Ratings also lowered its outlook to negative.
Moody’s Ratings called funding the buyback via a bond sale “a material shift in financial policy” and downgraded Salesforce’s credit rating to A2. S&P Global Ratings also lowered its outlook to negative.
One of the esteemed pioneers of generative AI, Yann LeCun has raised $1.03 billion in a seed funding round for his company Advanced Machine Intelligence (AMI) Labs, which is the largest seed round for a European company. This give AMI labs a pre-money valuation of $3.5 billion.
The company said the round was co-led by Cathay Innovation, Greycroft, Hiro Capital, HV Capital, and Bezos Expeditions. Nvidia, Dassault Group, and global investment firm Temasek are also listed as investors.
After recently leaving Meta, LeCun is making a bold bet that “world models” — which understand how physical objects interact with their environment — are the key to AI’s next big breakthrough, rather than large language models.
The EU is eager to build out its own bench of AI startups as it seeks to build a “Euro stack” that lessens the region’s dependence on American tech companies. The Paris-based AMI Labs will instantly become one of the most important tech companies working on AI in the EU.
The company said the round was co-led by Cathay Innovation, Greycroft, Hiro Capital, HV Capital, and Bezos Expeditions. Nvidia, Dassault Group, and global investment firm Temasek are also listed as investors.
After recently leaving Meta, LeCun is making a bold bet that “world models” — which understand how physical objects interact with their environment — are the key to AI’s next big breakthrough, rather than large language models.
The EU is eager to build out its own bench of AI startups as it seeks to build a “Euro stack” that lessens the region’s dependence on American tech companies. The Paris-based AMI Labs will instantly become one of the most important tech companies working on AI in the EU.
Boeing shares dropped on Tuesday following the company’s announcement that it will delay some 737 Max deliveries this month after discovering scratches on wiring within the planes.
According to the plane maker, fixing the issues could take a matter of days for each plane. This could impact March and Q1 delivery figures, but Boeing doesn’t expect yearly totals to be affected.
Boeing is still producing an average of 42 737 Max planes per month, The Seattle Times reported. The FAA raised Boeing’s 737 production cap late last year.
Boeing delivered 51 commercial planes in February, its highest total for the month since 2018. The figure far exceeded the 35 deliveries for Airbus, the company’s European rival.
Boeing is still producing an average of 42 737 Max planes per month, The Seattle Times reported. The FAA raised Boeing’s 737 production cap late last year.
Boeing delivered 51 commercial planes in February, its highest total for the month since 2018. The figure far exceeded the 35 deliveries for Airbus, the company’s European rival.
“It has the makings of a once-in-a-generation market dislocation.”
Nvidia announced a “long-term” partnership with AI startup Thinking Machines Lab, founded by former OpenAI executive Mira Murati.
The deal involves an investment from Nvidia and a commitment to provide 1 gigawatt’s worth of the company’s next-gen Vera Rubin processors to the startup.
Thinking Machines Lab has raised at least $2 billion for a reported valuation of $50 billion.
In January, two of the cofounders of Thinking Machines Lab left for OpenAI, and another left for Meta. The company’s only product is Tinker, a tool that helps developers train AI models.
Thinking Machines Lab has raised at least $2 billion for a reported valuation of $50 billion.
In January, two of the cofounders of Thinking Machines Lab left for OpenAI, and another left for Meta. The company’s only product is Tinker, a tool that helps developers train AI models.
Shares of telehealth company Hims & Hers climbed Tuesday as analysts upgraded the stock following the Monday announcement of its landmark deal with Wegovy maker Novo Nordisk.
Shares were recently up 12%.
Citi upgraded Hims to “neutral/high risk” from “sell/high risk” in a Monday afternoon note, writing that the deal “significantly de-risks Hims.” Citi analyst Daniel Grosslight wrote:
“Valuation remains tricky for Hims as much hinges on (1) how much compounded GLP-1 revenue/adj. EBITDA remains post-partnership and (2) how much of the hole HIMS can fill with its branded offering.”
Hims also received an upgrade to “neutral” from “underperform” from Bank of America:
“By partnering with Novo Nordisk and transitioning patients to Novo’s branded product, Hims is likely to experience some attrition, but is also likely to gain new members that are looking for a branded drug.”
The deal will see Novo’s Wegovy offered on Hims in its injection and pill forms later this month, priced at the level Novo charges for self-pay. Hims will also offer Ozempic to treat diabetes. Hims won’t advertise compounded GLP-1s, according to Novo Nordisk. A previous deal between the companies last year fell apart in 55 days after Novo accused Hims of “illegal mass compounding and deceptive marketing.”
Meta has acquired the startup Moltbook, which is a viral social network where humans are allowed to read, but only AI agents are allowed to post, according to a report by Axios.
Moltbook’s founders, Matt Schlicht and Ben Parr, will join the Meta Superintelligence Lab, which is run by Alexandr Wang, formerly of ScaleAI.
AI super-users are currently obsessed with OpenClaw (formerly named both Clawdbot and Moltbot), a free tool that lets users run AI agents privately on their home computers that can be interfaced via chat apps, like Slack, WhatsApp, or Telegram. The agents are given wide access to users’ data to allow them to take on a wide variety of tasks like managing emails, organizing files, and controlling home automation. The founder of OpenClaw was recently hired by OpenAI, and the project will be reportedly be open-sourced.
A Meta spokesperson told Axios, “The Moltbook team joining MSL opens up new ways for AI agents to work for people and businesses.”
It’s not clear if Meta plans on actually doing anything with Moltbook, as it may just be an “acquihire.” Before the acquisition, Schlicht and Parr worked together at Octane AI, an AI e-commerce platform, where Schlicht was CEO and Parr was cofounder and president. Integrating AI features into e-commerce — both for customers and online retailers — has been an area of intense focus recently for AI companies, which are hoping that shoppers will hand off purchases to bots and that sellers will integrate agents into their customer service and back-end processes.
AI super-users are currently obsessed with OpenClaw (formerly named both Clawdbot and Moltbot), a free tool that lets users run AI agents privately on their home computers that can be interfaced via chat apps, like Slack, WhatsApp, or Telegram. The agents are given wide access to users’ data to allow them to take on a wide variety of tasks like managing emails, organizing files, and controlling home automation. The founder of OpenClaw was recently hired by OpenAI, and the project will be reportedly be open-sourced.
A Meta spokesperson told Axios, “The Moltbook team joining MSL opens up new ways for AI agents to work for people and businesses.”
It’s not clear if Meta plans on actually doing anything with Moltbook, as it may just be an “acquihire.” Before the acquisition, Schlicht and Parr worked together at Octane AI, an AI e-commerce platform, where Schlicht was CEO and Parr was cofounder and president. Integrating AI features into e-commerce — both for customers and online retailers — has been an area of intense focus recently for AI companies, which are hoping that shoppers will hand off purchases to bots and that sellers will integrate agents into their customer service and back-end processes.
SpaceX is leaning toward listing what’s potentially the biggest IPO of all time on Nasdaq, Reuters reports, contingent on early inclusion on the exchange’s Nasdaq 100 index. Typically companies have to wait up to a year before being considered for inclusion in indexes like the S&P 500 or the Nasdaq 100, but Nasdaq recently proposed a change that could decrease that wait time to under a month for megacap companies.
SpaceX is reportedly aiming for a staggering $1.75 trillion valuation and could go public as soon as June. Getting into a major index would spark automatic buying from index funds, lifting demand and liquidity while expanding its investor base. The listing would be a major win for Nasdaq, reinforcing its dominance in Big Tech IPOs and driving billions in index licensing and trading revenue.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s rocket company has yet to make a final decision on which exchange it will list on, and the New York Stock Exchange is also competing for the listing, Reuters said.
SpaceX is reportedly aiming for a staggering $1.75 trillion valuation and could go public as soon as June. Getting into a major index would spark automatic buying from index funds, lifting demand and liquidity while expanding its investor base. The listing would be a major win for Nasdaq, reinforcing its dominance in Big Tech IPOs and driving billions in index licensing and trading revenue.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s rocket company has yet to make a final decision on which exchange it will list on, and the New York Stock Exchange is also competing for the listing, Reuters said.
Chinese EV maker Nio jumped in premarket trading on Tuesday after it reported solid top- and bottom-line results, booking its first-ever quarter of positive (non-GAAP) operating profits, some 1,251 million yuan ($179 million), on a quarterly basis.
Nio reported adjusted net earnings of $0.04 per share in Q4, beating the $0.02 loss per share expected by Wall Street analysts (compiled by FactSet).
The company booked $4.95 billion in revenue, also topping the $4.86 billion consensus estimate, and deliveries came in at 124,807, up more than 70% year on year.
Looking ahead, the company says that it expects deliveries of vehicles “to be between 80,000 and 83,000 vehicles” in Q1 — an acceleration in growth, with those figures implying annual rises of 90% and 97% from the same quarter of 2025. However, Bloomberg estimates suggest this figure might marginally disappoint — with analysts currently penciling in 88,700 deliveries for Q1 2026.
Celebrating its first quarter of profits, CFO Stanley Yu Qu cited the company’s “strong delivery and revenue growth, an optimized product mix, and cost reduction and efficiency enhancement initiatives” in its press release.
CEO William Bin Li also added, “Looking ahead to 2026, we will continue to invest decisively in our twelve full-stack core technologies, launch new models, enhance the commercial and operational capabilities of our battery swapping and charging network, and continue upgrading our sales and service network.” Nio shares climbed in late February after it announced that it had reached 1 million battery swaps — its alternative to fast charging — in less than a week amid the Lunar New Year holiday. This month, Nio’s Chinese rival BYD unveiled a fast-charging battery seen as a direct challenge to the EV maker’s swap station network.
Apple manufactured 55 million iPhones — about 25% of its global production — in India last year, Bloomberg reports. That’s up from about 36 million in 2024, as the company has been trying to decrease reliance and avoid tariffs on China.
That share would put the iPhone maker ahead of Wall Street’s schedule. At the start of 2025, analysts predicted Apple’s iPhone production in India would reach 25% by 2027.
“The vast majority of the iPhones sold in the US, or the majority, I should say, have a country of origin of India,” Apple CEO Tim Cook said during the company’s fiscal Q3 2025 earnings call.
Oil prices dropped on Tuesday morning, with front-month crude futures down more than 6%, as traders digested President Trump’s comments late Monday suggesting the US-Iran conflict may soon end — easing fears that have rattled global energy and stock markets over the past 10 days.
On Monday, Trump told CBS News reporter Weijia Jiang in a phone interview that the war is “very complete, pretty much.” He later tempered that somewhat at a separate press conference held at Trump National Doral in Miami, saying the conflict would end “very soon,” though not this week.
Since US and Israeli strikes on Iran began on February 28, markets have been experiencing relentless volatility: Brent crude surged to nearly $120 per barrel during Monday’s trading session, the highest intraday price since the early days of the Russia-Ukraine war in 2022. Gas prices, which largely track crude, even breached the $3.50-per-gallon mark, with analysts and prediction markets eyeing the $4 mark as a real possibility if the conflict drags on.
Despite Tuesday’s pullback following Trump’s remarks, oil prices remain elevated, up roughly 50% since the start of the year as disruptions continue around the Strait of Hormuz, through which about a fifth of the world’s oil flows.
After turning a deeply red day into a green one yesterday, equity traders continued to breathe a tentative sigh of relief. After the S&P 500, Nasdaq 100, and Russell 2000 closed higher Monday, wiping out steep intraday losses, S&P 500 futures were modestly in the green early on Tuesday, while Europe’s STOXX 600 rallied ~2%.
As of 9:07 a.m. ET, however, S&P 500 futures have dipped 0.22% and oil has pared some of its earlier losses, following Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s warning that today would be the “most intense day of strikes inside Iran.”
Go Deeper: Why extreme oil price volatility sets off alarm bells for markets and the economy
Taiwan Semiconductor ticked higher in premarket trading on Tuesday after the chipmaker reported a 30% jump in sales for the first two months of 2026, compared to the year before.
A key supplier for AI industry giants like Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices, TSMC saw its combined January and February revenue grow to NT$718.9 billion ($22.6 billion), per its monthly revenue report, published early on Tuesday morning.
The company notched NT$317 billion in February alone, growing 22% from a year ago and decelerating from January’s 37% year-on-year growth. For the coming full Q1, analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg are anticipating growth of 33% — suggesting a strong March will be needed to meet that figure.
Charles Shum, a Bloomberg Intelligence analyst, noted that the modest weakness in the first two months is more likely due to softer performance in smartphones and PCs, rather than cooling AI chip demand, as soaring memory prices put pressure on shipments.
On Tuesday, Oracle will announce its third-quarter earnings, and all eyes are on the company’s massive AI data center build-out. Last month, the company told investors that it plans to raise $45 billion to $50 billion to fund its ambitious capex plans.
With so much new spending, the company is reportedly looking to make steep job cuts — thousands of positions across the company — and may be freezing hiring in its cloud division.
Shares of Oracle are down by more than 20% since the start of the year. The stock is down about 56% from its 52-week high of $345.72.
The company’s big bet on AI is causing some concerns among investors, and Oracle has recently seen a wave of lowered price targets from analysts:
Jefferies: to $320 from $400.
Scotiabank: to $215 from $220.
Deutsche Bank: to $300 from $375.
Baird: to $200 from $300.
On Friday, shares dropped sharply on reports that OpenAI had pulled out of a planned expansion of the Stargate data center in Abilene, Texas. But OpenAI has since clarified that the decision to back out of plans for the expansion was just the result of shifting capacity to other data center sites under construction.
The company will announce its earnings after market close on Tuesday.
FactSet’s survey of analysts shows they expect earnings per share of $1.70 and revenue of $16.9 billion for Oracle’s third quarter. Cloud revenue is expected to be $8.76 billion, and all eyes will be on Oracle’s capex, which is expected to be $14 billion.
Shares of air taxi makers Joby Aviation, Archer Aviation, and Beta Technologies are climbing in Monday afternoon trading following the Department of Transportation’s announcement of their inclusion in the eVTOL Integration Pilot Program.
Archer and Joby, which announced their plans to participate in the program back in September, each climbed more than 4% on Monday, while Beta surged more than 12%. Boeing’s air taxi subsidiary, Wisk, was also named in the DOT’s announcement.
The DOT and FAA selected eight projects spanning 26 states to speed up the development of “advanced air mobility.” Operations will begin this summer. According to an Archer press release, the program could mark “a major step toward bringing electric air taxis to market in the United States.”
“These partnerships will help us better understand how to safely and efficiently integrate these aircraft into the National Airspace System,” FAA Deputy Administrator Chris Rocheleau said. “The program will provide valuable operational experience that will inform the standards needed to enable safe Advanced Air Mobility operations.”