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Luke Kawa

Wall Street is scrambling to get up to date about the TD Cowen note on Microsoft

One way you can tell that Wall Street is rushing to get caught up on the TD Cowen note about Microsoft being potentially oversupplied on data centers: they’re flooding to the bio page of Michael Elias, the lead analyst on the note.

The Bloomberg Terminal is the top-of-the-line data analytics, trading, and communication software used by financial professionals. The MVP <GO> function gives you a list of Most-Viewed People on the day. As of a little past 8:30 a.m. ET, here’s what today’s looks like:

Michael Elias MVP
Source: Bloomberg Terminal

Heck, he’s got more views than Mesut Ozil (the former German soccer star who’s entering Turkish politics) or JRR Tolkien, who once wrote something about small creatures who walked around with a piece of jewelry.

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Netflix rises on announcement of its 10-for-1 stock split

Netflix’s subscription prices keep rising, but its shares are about to get a bit cheaper.

On Thursday, the streamer announced it’ll perform a 10-for-1 forward stock split. On November 17, traders who own a single Netflix share will own 10 shares, though the company’s underlying value will remain the same.

Netflix shares have surged about 270% over the past three years to $1,089 as of today’s close, as the streamer has captured more of the streaming market share. The stock rose roughly 3% in after-hours trading on Thursday following the announcement.

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