Obviously it is beyond difficult giving out buy ideas in a market that flushes every day.. these two from this Monday I think still hold water--:: H.C. Wainwright says Novo results support Viking obesity potential » 09:45 VKTX, NVO BUY VKTX @ $29.40 Sealsq signs new distribution, sales agreement across EMAE » 08:47 LAES BUY LAES @$2.58 UPDATE- LAES is actually somehow up. and Viking I think is the right Bio now. VKTX-Viking Therapeutics, Inc. $29.72 +3.20(+12.07%)10:10 AM 03/12/25 NASDAQ |$USD |Realtime
Posturing nice- BYRN Byrna Technologies Inc.- do not own yet! Seems frivolous & I want to buy different sort of names/// $20.14 0.39(+1.97%)10:18 AM 03/12/25 NASDAQ |$USD |Realtime
All about the eggs dummy. I love how when Biden is in charge food inflation is so hugely important and now suddenly we are supposed to ignore Egg prices soar 59% to far outpace inflation
The shorts will beat the hell out of it like they did when it hit $6.70. I learned the difference between ultra wealthy and the poor rich Did you short the gap?
Apparently European space stocks are rapidly climbing as the next Musk Co to go down will be Space X. They are losing many contracts I imagine with Europe as Musk is shown doing these Nazi salutes and what not-- it's a bad look in Europe where they remember what happened to the Jews. So TSLA down the tubes Space X next and who picks up the business???// Interesting there was a company I heard was going to replace the Starlink hook up in Ukraine so he'll lose that as well.. but who in Europe benefits from Space X fall... That we have to figure out. Blowback against Elon Musk has lit a rocket under Europe’s besieged space sector, as countries rethink their reliance on Starlink, the satellite system of President Donald Trump’s favoured tech billionaire. In Italy, a proposed $1.5bn contract with Starlink for secure military communications has run into opposition. Canada’s Ontario has already ripped up its $100mn deal. In Ukraine, European governments fret that a key plank of campaign warfare — battlefield communications and drone connectivity — is reliant on Starlink and are in talks with four large satellite operators about providing back-up. Two of these are Luxembourg’s SES and French satellite operator Eutelsat. The latter’s shares virtually quadrupled last week — off a low base — while SES of Luxembourg was up by a quarter. As things stand, the pair were in a tight spot. Legacy satellite operators have to contend with the rise of new communication services from low Earth orbit, while traditional cash cows such as satellite broadcasting — making up half of Eutelsat’s revenues — face structural decline. It is expensive to build and maintain a constellation of satellites. Eutelsat is earmarking a €2bn-€2.2bn spend for its low-Earth orbiting satellites through 2029. Its balance sheet is already stretched. Net debt is almost four times annual adjusted ebitda, and was nudging up against covenants before these were extended. That’s bad enough. But it also faces formidable competition in Starlink, which beats it hands down in terms of capacity, coverage and technology. This is a global business by definition and Starlink operates in 120 countries, meaning orbiting satellites are more likely to be working more of the time. Effectively a vertically integrated group, Starlink has crunched down costs, manufacturing its own kit and — thanks to Musk’s SpaceX — launching the satellites into space. Much the same will apply to Amazon’s Kuiper, launching this year and which again has much more capacity than OneWeb, Eutelsat’s low-orbit operation. Bumping up revenues would pivot Eutelsat into positive free cash flow territory next year. Despite its smaller fleet of satellites, Eutelstat has slack; Bernstein estimates capacity utilisation is running at just 15-20 per cent. If the Italian contract switches to Eutelsat — and Musk will not let go lightly — that would be an additional annual $300mn of revenues, roughly half the group’s interim haul. The concerns about Starlink speed up an existing trend towards more homegrown European satellite spend. Eutelsat is already part of the consortium working on IRIS², a €10.6bn project 60 per cent funded by the EU and due to go into service in 2030. Of course, what money doesn’t buy is time. Even in the unlikely event that the money was ponied up tomorrow, users need terminals on the ground and any additional satellite orders will need to go to tender. Still, as problems go, these are the nicest Eutelsat has had for a very long time. Eutelsat-? TECH A European Starlink rival’s shares skyrocketed 390% in a week — here’s why PUBLISHED MON, MAR 10 KEY POINTS Shares of French satellite operator Eutelsat skyrocketed almost 390% last week. Eutelsat shares continued to climb Monday, jumping more than 22%. The gains follows speculation that Eutelsat could replace Elon Musk’s Starlink in Ukraine. I should of moved faster here.// These will be somewhat tough to buy How to buy Eutelsat stock? To buy Eutelsat Communications shares,you need a share account held by a financial intermediary registered at the Paris Stock Exchange (Euronext Paris), it can be a bank, broker or electronic broker. Shares can be held either as "bearer shares", or "registered shares".