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OpenAI launching Target app in ChatGPT

OpenAI has announced a partnership to integrate Target’s app into ChatGPT and enable a “curated, conversational shopping experience,” according to the press release. The sprinkle of AI fairy dust helped the retail giant to regain most of the losses it saw in premarket trading Wednesday after a disappointing earnings report earlier in the morning.

OpenAI previously announced similar partnerships with Walmart, Shopify, and Etsy.

But per a YouGov survey published this summer, Americans still have reservations about using AI to help them shop.

OpenAI previously announced similar partnerships with Walmart, Shopify, and Etsy.

But per a YouGov survey published this summer, Americans still have reservations about using AI to help them shop.

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Intel hits new 52-week high in early trading

Intel surged to a new 52-week high in early trading, though it gave back a large chunk of the early gains by the afternoon.

There were few headlines that could clearly explain the run-up of gains which peaked around 11%.

Possible candidates included the reflected glow of a deal announcement from Mobileye, the autonomous driving company in which Intel holds a significant stake.

Mobileye initially rose after buying Mentee — an artificial intelligence robotics company — for $900 million of cash and stock in a deal that’s expected to close this quarter.

(Intel spun it off Mobileye in 2022, but retained a controlling stake in the company.)

Another potential driver of the move might be optimism surrounding the company’s unveiling of a new line of processors at the Consumer Electronics Show Tuesday.

Finally, news that Qualcomm was perhaps looking to use contractors outside Taiwan for its next generation chip — though it’s reportedly speaking to Korea’s Samsung for that, not Intel — may be raising hopes that chipmakers looking to diversify away from Taiwan could become customers for Intel’s troubled contract chip-making division.

But again, there’s no clear reason to point to for its outperformance on Wednesday.

Mobileye initially rose after buying Mentee — an artificial intelligence robotics company — for $900 million of cash and stock in a deal that’s expected to close this quarter.

(Intel spun it off Mobileye in 2022, but retained a controlling stake in the company.)

Another potential driver of the move might be optimism surrounding the company’s unveiling of a new line of processors at the Consumer Electronics Show Tuesday.

Finally, news that Qualcomm was perhaps looking to use contractors outside Taiwan for its next generation chip — though it’s reportedly speaking to Korea’s Samsung for that, not Intel — may be raising hopes that chipmakers looking to diversify away from Taiwan could become customers for Intel’s troubled contract chip-making division.

But again, there’s no clear reason to point to for its outperformance on Wednesday.

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GameStop rises after announcing package for CEO Ryan Cohen that completely ties his pay to the company’s value and profits

GameStop is rising in premarket trading after the company announced a long-term performance package for Chairman and CEO Ryan Cohen that completely tethers his financial interests with those of shareholders as well as the company’s operational performance.

Under this plan, Cohen would receive options that enable him to purchase 171.5 million shares of GameStop at $20.66 apiece — but only if the market valuation of the company exceeds certain thresholds and GameStop generates enough cumulative earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA).

So Cohen can’t benefit personally from another meme stock surge in the stock unless that’s combined with a continued increase in profitability.

“Under the award, Mr. Cohen receives no guaranteed pay — no salary, no cash bonuses, and no stock that vests simply over time,” per the press release. “Instead, his compensation is entirely ‘at-risk,’ meaning he will only be paid if the Company achieves significant market and operational goals.”

The package is divided into nine tranches, each with a different market cap and cumulative EBITDA hurdle. The first tranche vests if GameStop clears a $20 billion market cap while the company generates $2 billion in EBITDA under his leadership. Per GameStop, Q1 2026 will be the starting point from which this EBITDA performance hurdle will be tracked.

On a closing basis, GameStop has exceeded this $20 billion threshold only during its 2021 meme stock mania. The milestones for different tranches to vest run in increments of $10 billion (up to $100 billion) for market cap, and $1 billion (up to $10 billion) for EBITDA.

Cohen’s key moves as leader of the retailer have been to lean into collectibles, which have seen massive growth, while pursuing an aggressive cost-cutting campaign to improve its financial position. And, I suppose, doing the bitcoin treasury thing.

This new package is subject to approval by shareholders, a vote that Cohen will recuse himself from.

Mr. Blue Sky

So, just how much could this be worth to Cohen, if he somehow turns the ailing retailer into a profitable machine worth more than Nike? Well, let’s just say he won’t be missing his salary.

At a $100 billion market cap with the current share count, GME’s stock would trade at about $223. That would imply Cohen’s stock options to purchase 171.5 million shares at $20.66 would be worth an eye-watering $34.7 billion.

But that, unfortunately, is too simple. Because each tranche vests in turn, and because GameStop is offering over a third of its current shares outstanding, we have to take the dilution into account, which would impact all shareholders, Cohen included.

Assuming all of the awards were exercised upon being hit — e.g. the first 10% coming after the first tranche, the next 20% after the second, etc. — GameStop’s shares outstanding will soar once again.*

The whole GME pizza will be worth the same, but there’ll be a lot more slices with each tranche — about 17 million more... and they’ll all be owned by Cohen. Here’s a table showing the mechanical impact of each threshold being hit, on a very theoretical (and aspirational) GME share price.

Taking the napkin math above, this would mean Cohen’s 171.5 million stock options would be worth closer to $24 billion.

Of course, what will really break your brain is the fact that markets are forward-looking and traders would be adjusting in real time as each dilutive milestone approached.

*The company made the most of its elevated stock price during its meme stock fame, turning its balance sheet into a fortress.

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D-Wave Quantum agrees to acquire Quantum Circuits for $550 million to boost gate-model development

D-Wave Quantum announced Wednesday that it has struck a deal to purchase Quantum Circuits for $550 million, as the annealing-centric quantum computing company continues its push to bolster its gate-model capabilities.

The company said that $300 million will be paid in D-Wave stock, with the remainder in cash.

D-Wave is the major player in annealing quantum computing, an approach that solves more specialized optimization problems. Gate-based quantum computers, which aim to address even more complex and broad queries, are the dominant approach being pursued by publicly traded quantum computing firms. Gate model developers have also tended to get more interest from government agencies, as their technology is seen as the ultimate end point for quantum computing and therefore more worthy of support.

“By combining the world’s leading annealing quantum computing company with the world’s leading developer of error-corrected gate-model technology, D-Wave will dramatically accelerate the projected time to a scaled, error-corrected gate-model quantum computer alongside and complementary to its commercial annealing quantum systems,” per the press release. “Combining these technologies is expected to facilitate an accelerated commercial gate-model product roadmap that D-Wave believes will enable it to be the first to deliver fully error-corrected, scaled gate-model quantum computing”

Thanks to this acquisition, D-Wave plans to deliver an initial dual-rail gate-model system in 2026.

During the conference call that followed the release of Q3 earnings in November, CEO Dr. Alan Baratz highlighted gate-model development as a priority for D-Wave.

“Up until now, our investment in gate has been light, mostly because we haven’t had the funds to be able to grow that investment all that much. Now with the roughly $830 million in the bank, we have the resources to be able to invest more in that program, both internal investment and through acquisition to accelerate the program,” he told Sherwood News.

“We have one customer who has said, ‘When you have a gate-model system, I want it.’”

This news comes on the heels of the firm’s announcement on Tuesday that it’s solved a key problem when it comes to scaling superconducting gate-model quantum computers: how to keep qubits in the same place without producing too much heat.

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