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A state regulator rejects Vistra's plans for assessing the impact on surface water and groundwater from its 2025 Moss Landing battery fire, local residents and elected officials denounce ICE operations, a local writer shares her perspective on the violent crackdowns in Iran, and more in this week's local news roundup.
In this episode of Monterey Bay This Week, stories about the one year anniversary of the Vistra battery fire, anti-ICE protests in the region, Highway 1 reopening through Big Sur, and more
Unser Whatsapp-Kanal. Aktien hören ist gut. Aktien kaufen ist noch besser. Unser Partner Scalable Capital ist jetzt Bank und bietet euch dadurch jetzt noch bessere Konditionen. Mehr Infos findet ihr unter: scalable.capital/oaws. Rossmann und Mr. Beast sind bald dank CK Hutchison und Bitmine an der Börse. Mitsubishi kauft Aethon. Trump pusht GE Vernova & Siemens Energy. Er schadet Vistra & Constellation. Er bedroht Europa. Novo Nordisk, Klöckner & Micron steigen. Porsche nicht. Hat Silber noch Potenzial? Das haben wir mit Ronald-Peter Stöferle besprochen. Er ist Fondsmanager und Mitglied der Geschäftsleitung beim Vermögensverwalter Incrementum und Rohstoffexperte. Robert Pera hat alles richtig gemacht. Aus Leidenschaft NBA-Team gekauft. Geld verzehnfacht. Aus Leidenschaft Wifi-Produkte entwickelt. 30-facher Milliardär geworden. Das ist die Story von Ubiquiti (WKN: A2PQP8). Diesen Podcast vom 19.01.2026, 3:00 Uhr stellt dir die Podstars GmbH (Noah Leidinger) zur Verfügung.
Plus, Dave covers the pharmaceutical industry's race to treat colon cancer.
Bis zu 2.500 € Bonus von Scalable Capital. Neu- und Bestandskunden, die Wertpapiere oder Guthaben bei Scalable Capital einzahlen, können sich bis zum 15.01.2026 einen Bonus sichern. Alle Infos gibt's hier: scalable.capital/transfer-bonus. KI, Deals und Trump. Das war Börse am Freitag. MiniMax, Meta, Oklo, Vistra, Softbank & OpenAI hatten KI-Themen. Exxon, Lennar, Pulte, D.R. Horton & Opendoor hatten Trump-Themen. Merck, Revolution Medicines, Baywa, Amazon & CSG hatten Deal-Themen. 2026 könnte den größten Bergbau-Deal der Geschichte bringen. Es geht natürlich im Kupfer. Rio Tinto (WKN: 852147) x Glencore (WKN: A1JAGV). Jahrelang war Innodata (WKN: 907651) langweiliger Digitalisierer. Jetzt sind sie KI-Schaufelverkäufer. Diesen Podcast vom 12.01.2026, 3:00 Uhr stellt dir die Podstars GmbH (Noah Leidinger) zur Verfügung.
AI Unraveled: Latest AI News & Trends, Master GPT, Gemini, Generative AI, LLMs, Prompting, GPT Store
AI Unraveled: Latest AI News & Trends, Master GPT, Gemini, Generative AI, LLMs, Prompting, GPT Store
Rafael Ojeda, miembro del Comité de Inversiones de Ursus 3 Capital Agencia de Valores, analiza los protagonistas de la sesión: Merck, Johnson & Johnson, Vistra, Oklo, JP Morgan, TSMC y General Motors.
AI Unraveled: Latest AI News & Trends, Master GPT, Gemini, Generative AI, LLMs, Prompting, GPT Store
AI Unraveled: Latest AI News & Trends, Master GPT, Gemini, Generative AI, LLMs, Prompting, GPT Store
The latest sampling report on the Vistra battery fire in Moss Landing last January. And, the Trump administration is trying to halt billions of dollars in childcare funding for California and other Democrat-led states.
Die gestrigen Reden der CEOs von AMD und NVIDIA auf der CES-Unterhaltungselektronik-Messe in Las Vages, wirken sich auf beide Aktien nur leicht positiv aus. Beide Unternehmen haben die neusten KI-Chips vorgestellt, mit den Aussagen von NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang besonders bullish. Vera Rubin, die Nachfolge-Technologie von Blackwell, soll gegen Jahresende in Produktion gehen. Laut Huang wird die Technologie die Vorreiterstellung von NVIDIA solide festigen. Außerhalb des KI-Sektors könnten Tech-Werte von den erneut nach oben revidierten Quartalsschätzungen der Firma Microchip profitieren. Vistra wird aufgrund der rund $4 Mrd. Übernahme von Cogentrix Energy ebenfalls freundlich in den Tag starten. Nachdem die Aktien von Adidas in Europa unter einer Verkaufsempfehlung der Bank of America gelitten haben, werden bei RBC Capital zum Handelsauftakt die Ziele für Nike von 85 US-Dollar auf 78 US-Dollar gesenkt. Die Aktie wird dennoch zum Kauf empfohlen. Der Analyst senkt allerdings die Gewinnschätzungen bis hinein ins Fiskaljahr 2028. Ein Podcast - featured by Handelsblatt. ► Mehr Einblicke: https://bit.ly/360wallstreetpc * +++ Alle Rabattcodes und Infos zu unseren Werbepartnern findet ihr hier: https://linktr.ee/wallstreet_podcast +++ Der Podcast wird vermarktet durch die Ad Alliance. Die allgemeinen Datenschutzrichtlinien der Ad Alliance finden Sie unter https://datenschutz.ad-alliance.de/podcast.html Die Ad Alliance verarbeitet im Zusammenhang mit dem Angebot die Podcasts-Daten. Wenn Sie der automatischen Übermittlung der Daten widersprechen wollen, klicken Sie hier: https://datenschutz.ad-alliance.de/podcast.html Impressum: https://www.360wallstreet.de/impressum *Werbung
Die gestrigen Reden der CEOs von AMD und NVIDIA auf der CES-Unterhaltungselektronik-Messe in Las Vages, wirken sich auf beide Aktien nur leicht positiv aus. Beide Unternehmen haben die neusten KI-Chips vorgestellt, mit den Aussagen von NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang besonders bullish. Vera Rubin, die Nachfolge-Technologie von Blackwell, soll gegen Jahresende in Produktion gehen. Laut Huang wird die Technologie die Vorreiterstellung von NVIDIA solide festigen. Außerhalb des KI-Sektors könnten Tech-Werte von den erneut nach oben revidierten Quartalsschätzungen der Firma Microchip profitieren. Vistra wird aufgrund der rund $4 Mrd. Übernahme von Cogentrix Energy ebenfalls freundlich in den Tag starten. Nachdem die Aktien von Adidas in Europa unter einer Verkaufsempfehlung der Bank of America gelitten haben, werden bei RBC Capital zum Handelsauftakt die Ziele für Nike von 85 US-Dollar auf 78 US-Dollar gesenkt. Die Aktie wird dennoch zum Kauf empfohlen. Der Analyst senkt allerdings die Gewinnschätzungen bis hinein ins Fiskaljahr 2028. Abonniere den Podcast, um keine Folge zu verpassen! ____ Folge uns, um auf dem Laufenden zu bleiben: • X: http://fal.cn/SQtwitter • LinkedIn: http://fal.cn/SQlinkedin • Instagram: http://fal.cn/SQInstagram
Our Thematic and Equity Strategist Michelle Weaver and Power, Utilities, and Clean Tech Analyst David Arcaro discuss how investments in AI data centers are affecting electricity bills for U.S. consumers.Read more insights from Morgan Stanley.----- Transcript -----Michelle Weaver: Welcome to Thoughts on the Market. I'm Michelle Weaver, Morgan Stanley's U.S. Thematic and Equity Strategist.David Arcaro: And I'm Dave Arcaro, U.S. Power, Utilities, and Clean Tech Analyst.Michelle Weaver: Today, a hot topic. Are data centers' raising your electricity bills?It's Tuesday, December 23rd at 10am in New York.Most of us have probably noticed our electricity bills have been creeping up. And it's putting pressure on U.S. consumers, especially with higher prices and paychecks not keeping pace. More and more people are pointing to data centers as the reason behind these rising costs, but the story isn't that simple.Regional differences, shifting policies and local utility responses are all at play here. Dave, there's no doubt that data centers are becoming a much bigger part of the story when it comes to U.S. electricity demand. For listeners who might not follow these numbers every day, could you break down how data centers' share of overall electricity use is expected to grow over the next 10 years? And what does that mean for the grid and for the average consumer?David Arcaro: Definitely they're becoming much bigger, much more important and more impactful across the industry in a big way. Data centers were 6 percent of total electricity consumption in the U.S. last year. We're actually forecasting that to triple to 18 percent by 2030, and then hit 20 percent in the early 2030s. So very strong growth, and increasing proportion of the overall utility, electricity use.In aggregate, this is reflecting about 150 gigawatts of new data centers by 2030. Just a very large amount. And this is going to cause a major strain on the electric grid and is going to require substantial build out and upgrading of the transmission system along with construction of new power generation – like gas plants and large-scale renewables, wind, solar, and battery storage across the entire U.S.And generally, when we see utilities investing in additional infrastructure, they need to get that cost recovered. We would typically expect that to lead to higher electric rates for consumers. That's the overall pressure that we're facing right now on the system, from all these data centers coming in.We've got these substantial infrastructure needs. That means utilities will need to charge higher prices to consumers to cover the cost of those investments.Michelle Weaver: What are the main challenges utilities companies face in meeting this rising demand from data centers?David Arcaro: There are a number of challenges. If I were to pick a few of the biggest ones that I see, I think managing affordability is one of the biggest challenges the industry faces right now, because this overall data center growth is absolutely a shock to their business, and it needs to be managed carefully given the political and regulatory challenges that can arise when customer bills are getting are escalating faster than expected. The utility industry faces scrutiny and constant attention from a political and regulatory standpoint, so it's a balance that has to be very carefully managed. There are also reliability challenges that are important.Utilities have to keep the lights on, you know, that's priority number one. The demand for electricity is growing much faster than the supply of new generation that we're seeing; new power plants just aren't being built fast enough. New transmission assets are not being built, as quickly as the data centers are coming on. So, in many areas we're seeing that leads to essentially less of a buffer, and more risk of outages during periods of extreme weather.Michelle Weaver: And you mentioned, companies are thinking about how can they insulate consumers. Can you take us through some of the specifics of what these utility companies are doing? And what regulators are doing to respond, to protect existing customers from rate increases driven by data centers?David Arcaro: Definitely. The industry is getting creative and trying to be proactive in addressing this issue. Many utilities, we're seeing them isolate data centers and charge them higher electric rates, specifically for those data center customers to try to cover all of the grid costs that are attributable to the data center's needs.A couple examples. In Indiana, we're seeing that there's a utility there who's building new power plants, specifically for a very large data center that's coming into the state and they're ring fencing it. They're only charging the data center itself for those costs of the power plants. In Georgia, a utility there is charging a higher rate for the data centers that are coming in to the Atlanta area – such that it actually more than covers the costs and compensates other consumers in the form of bill credits or even bill reductions as those data centers come on.Similarly, then, in Pennsylvania, there's a utility that has excess transmission infrastructure than the state's [infrastructure]. They're better able to absorb data center activity. They're able to lower customer bills as the data centers come on, as they spread their costs over a larger customer base in that case. So, this isn't universal though. There are some areas around the country where there are costs related to data center growth that get socialized across all consumers.One approach I also wanted to mention that we're seeing data centers pursue more and more actively is to power themselves. Essentially bring their own power, and they're using gas turbines, engines, and fuel cells that they're deploying right on site. This is actually in many cases faster than connecting to the grid, but it also avoids any consumer impact. Companies like Solaris Energy and Bloom Energy are two providers of that type of solution. And we're also seeing at a broader industry level. Another approach is the idea of data centers being flexible or turning off and not consuming power from the grid at certain times when the grid is facing stress, in an extreme weather scenario in the winter or summer. And that idea is gaining traction as well. So, we think the industry is looking for approaches that could ease the pressure on the system and on reliability, manage the affordability issues while continuing to enable and build data centers.Michelle Weaver: You mentioned what a few different states are doing on this front. But data centers are not evenly distributed through states or evenly distributed across regions. Are there regional differences in how data center growth is impacting electricity prices?David Arcaro: There are a couple of key differences that we're seeing around the country. Some areas just aren't getting that many data centers, you know, so I'd point out the northeast – in New England, in New York, we're just not seeing that much data center growth. So, it's less of an issue, the impact of data center power demand impacting customer bills in those areas. And then in some regions around the country, the utility structure is important to be aware of. There are some regions where the price of electricity fluctuates based on the supply and demand of power, rather than being directly set and controlled by a regulator. In those markets, data centers can actually more directly impact the price of electricity and there just isn't an easy way in that case to ring fence them and protect consumers from the impact of price increases.So that's where we think unique challenges can arise. And over time, we would expect to see the most meaningful rate impacts to consumers in those areas specifically. And examples would be New Jersey, Maryland, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Ohio. Those are a couple of the states where we're seeing those more volatile and directly impacted prices.So, as we look at utilities, we think the state exposure is going to be more and more important. And so, a few companies like NextEra, Sempra and AEP are a few utilities that are in states that have less affordability concerns and less direct exposure to rate impacts from data centers. And then several power companies like Vistra and Talen have more of their power plants that are in states that have excess infrastructure; and as a result, potentially less affordability concerns.So, clearly the energy sector is facing real challenges and changes. So, Michelle, how are rising electricity bills actually affecting U.S. households?Michelle Weaver: It's putting even more pressure on a consumer that's already being stretched thin by multiple years of inflation and elevated price levels, and electricity is a really different type of good. It's very different from gasoline or other consumer goods or staples – in that it's an essential good. You need to have it. And it's a network service that households are structurally locked into. Unlike gas where you could adjust your trip frequency or take a different type of transport, there really aren't good substitutes for electricity.And so this dynamic weighs on consumers. They have to continue paying these bills, and it weighs particularly heavily on lower income consumers where utility bills make up a much larger portion of their household budget.So, it crowds out some of that other potential spending.David Arcaro: That makes a lot of sense. It's an important expense to consider in terms of the impact on consumers. And, you know, as a result, are consumers blaming data center electricity demand for this rise that we're seeing in bills or are they pushing back?Michelle Weaver: Yeah. Data center development is quickly becoming a NIMBY or “not in my backyard” issue with communities pushing back and even getting projects canceled. Companies really need to find ways to address local concerns about environmental and water related externalities. And message that they're able to insulate consumers, or do something to mitigate these potentially higher electricity bills.A recent poll of around 2200 voters found that just over half of respondents attribute overall electricity price increases to AI data centers, at least somewhat. While around another third, consider them very responsible. And these responses are consistent across all regions and across political affiliations. And I think this consistency across regions is really interesting. As we're talking about before, data centers are not impacting bills in every region. But consumers are still blaming them and still attributing bill increases there.It's clear that both the energy sector and U.S. consumers are navigating a complex landscape with data center growth at the center of the conversation. As policy responses evolve and the U.S. midterm elections approach, this issue is only going to gain more attention. And we'll be sure to bring you the latest. Dave, thanks for taking the time to talk.David Arcaro: Great speaking with you, Michelle.Michelle Weaver: And thanks for listening. If you enjoy Thoughts on the Market, please leave us a review wherever you listen and share the podcast with a friend or colleague today.
Jim Burke, the CEO of Texas-based electricity provider Vistra, discusses the challenges of serving the state and U.S. markets at a time of expanding power demand from data centers and residential users. The Dallas Fed's Pia Orrenius and Garrett Golding explore with Burke what will be needed to keep up.
In der heutigen Folge sprechen die Finanzjournalisten Nando Sommerfeldt und Holger Zschäpitz über gute Chancen auf steigende Aktienkurse, Tristesse beim Bitcoin und drei Deutschland-Reformen, die jetzt auf den Weg gebracht wurden. Außerdem geht es um: CoreWeave, Microsoft, Oracle, ServiceNow, Meta, Alphabet, Berkshire Hathaway, Uniper, Eon, RWE, Siemens Energy, Lufthansa, Fraport, BMW, Stellantis, Amazon, Intel, Block, Lift, Robinhood, Pinterest, Arista Networks, Roblox, Duolingo, Nu Holdings, Broadcom, Confluent, Micron Technology, Kenvue, Walmart, Keurig Dr Pepper, Freeport McMoran, Las Vegas Sands, BP, Bank of America, Nuccor, D.R. Horten, Chubb, Dominos Pizza, Meta, Nvidia, Figure Technology Solution, Disney, Sunrun, CMS Energy, Merus, Indivior, iShares MSCI EM ETF (WKN: A0RPWJ), Stubhub, CRH, Vistra, Klarna, Bullish, Figma, AMD, Fiserv, American Airline, Trust Financial, XBP Global Holdings, iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (WKN: A3ERHE). Wir freuen uns über Feedback an aaa@welt.de. Noch mehr „Alles auf Aktien“ findet Ihr bei WELTplus und Apple Podcasts – inklusive aller Artikel der Hosts und AAA-Newsletter.[ Hier bei WELT.](https://www.welt.de/podcasts/alles-auf-aktien/plus247399208/Boersen-Podcast-AAA-Bonus-Folgen-Jede-Woche-noch-mehr-Antworten-auf-Eure-Boersen-Fragen.html.) [Hier] (https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6zxjyJpTMunyYCY6F7vHK1?si=8f6cTnkEQnmSrlMU8Vo6uQ) findest Du die Samstagsfolgen Klassiker-Playlist auf Spotify! Disclaimer: Die im Podcast besprochenen Aktien und Fonds stellen keine spezifischen Kauf- oder Anlage-Empfehlungen dar. Die Moderatoren und der Verlag haften nicht für etwaige Verluste, die aufgrund der Umsetzung der Gedanken oder Ideen entstehen. Hörtipps: Für alle, die noch mehr wissen wollen: Holger Zschäpitz können Sie jede Woche im Finanz- und Wirtschaftspodcast „Deffner&Zschäpitz“ hören. +++ Werbung +++ Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? [**Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte!**](https://linktr.ee/alles_auf_aktien) Impressum: https://www.welt.de/services/article7893735/Impressum.html Datenschutz: https://www.welt.de/services/article157550705/Datenschutzerklaerung-WELT-DIGITAL.html
Vistra Corp. plans to begin removing damaged batteries from its Moss Landing site later this month, and a bill moving through the state legislature would require schools to alert students and staff when immigration enforcement agents are on campuses.
เมื่อ M&A ไม่ใช่การขายกิจการ แต่คือการพาธุรกิจไทยทะยานสู่ตลาดโลก เอพิโสดนี้ชวนผู้ประกอบการมาถอดบทเรียนการเติบโตของ NBD Healthcare เจ้าของแบรนด์ Vistra กับการตัดสินใจครั้งสำคัญในการก้าวขึ้นเป็นส่วนหนึ่งของ Suntory Wellness แบรนด์ระดับโลกสัญชาติญี่ปุ่น เคน นครินทร์ คุยกับ Thomas Laroque – Head of Operations, NBD Healthcare, the subsidiary of Suntory Wellness – ถึงบทเรียนธุรกิจและเส้นทางการเติบโตของธุรกิจสัญชาติไทย ตั้งแต่การสร้างความแข็งแกร่งภายใน การปรับมาตรฐาน ไปจนถึงการเปลี่ยนผ่านองค์กรครั้งใหญ่ และมุมมองที่น่าสนใจว่า ‘การควบรวมกิจการ' สามารถเป็นเครื่องมือที่พาธุรกิจไทยให้ก้าวไปสู่การเติบโตอย่างยั่งยืนได้อย่างไร
เมื่อ M&A ไม่ใช่การขายกิจการ แต่คือการพาธุรกิจไทยทะยานสู่ตลาดโลก เอพิโสดนี้ชวนผู้ประกอบการมาถอดบทเรียนการเติบโตของ NBD Healthcare เจ้าของแบรนด์ Vistra กับการตัดสินใจครั้งสำคัญในการก้าวขึ้นเป็นส่วนหนึ่งของ Suntory Wellness แบรนด์ระดับโลกสัญชาติญี่ปุ่น เคน นครินทร์ คุยกับ Thomas Laroque – Head of Operations, NBD Healthcare, the subsidiary of Suntory Wellness – ถึงบทเรียนธุรกิจและเส้นทางการเติบโตของธุรกิจสัญชาติไทย ตั้งแต่การสร้างความแข็งแกร่งภายใน การปรับมาตรฐาน ไปจนถึงการเปลี่ยนผ่านองค์กรครั้งใหญ่ และมุมมองที่น่าสนใจว่า ‘การควบรวมกิจการ' สามารถเป็นเครื่องมือที่พาธุรกิจไทยให้ก้าวไปสู่การเติบโตอย่างยั่งยืนได้อย่างไร
In der heutigen Folge sprechen die Finanzjournalisten Lea Oetjen und Holger Zschäpitz über Börsen-Non-Event Alaska, eine hoffnungsvolle Softwarestudie mit 6 Top Picks und einen neuen Chart of Doom. Außerdem geht es um CoreWeave, Salesforce, Siemens Energy, Cisco Systems, Palo Alto Networks, ProSiebenSat.1, Novo Nordisk, AstraZeneca, AbbVie, Siemens Healthineers, Sonova, Medtronic, Haleon, iShares Aging Population ETF (WKN: A2ANH1), Boston Scientific, Glaukos, Exelixis, Sarepta, Swisscanto Healthy Longevity Fund (WKN: A40L0T), Eli Lilly, Abbott, UnitedHealth, Microsoft, Amazon, Nvidia, Meta, Netflix, Coreweave, Oracle, Carvana, TSMC, Roblox, Crowdstrike, Opendoor Technologies, Alibaba, PDD, Petroleo Brasileiro, Teva Pharmaceutical, Robinhood, Northrop Grumman, RTX, Lululemon, Mercadolibre, Talen Energy, GE Vernova, Broadcom, Vistra, Micron, Alphabet, Somnigroup International, Flutter Entertainment. Und hier gibt es die Tickets zum Finance Summit am 17. September! https://veranstaltung.businessinsider.de/FinanceSummit Wir freuen uns an Feedback über aaa@welt.de. Noch mehr "Alles auf Aktien" findet Ihr bei WELTplus und Apple Podcasts – inklusive aller Artikel der Hosts und AAA-Newsletter. Hier bei WELT: https://www.welt.de/podcasts/alles-auf-aktien/plus247399208/Boersen-Podcast-AAA-Bonus-Folgen-Jede-Woche-noch-mehr-Antworten-auf-Eure-Boersen-Fragen.html. Der Börsen-Podcast Disclaimer: Die im Podcast besprochenen Aktien und Fonds stellen keine spezifischen Kauf- oder Anlage-Empfehlungen dar. Die Moderatoren und der Verlag haften nicht für etwaige Verluste, die aufgrund der Umsetzung der Gedanken oder Ideen entstehen. Hörtipps: Für alle, die noch mehr wissen wollen: Holger Zschäpitz können Sie jede Woche im Finanz- und Wirtschaftspodcast "Deffner&Zschäpitz" hören. +++ Werbung +++ Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte! https://linktr.ee/alles_auf_aktien Impressum: https://www.welt.de/services/article7893735/Impressum.html Datenschutz: https://www.welt.de/services/article157550705/Datenschutzerklaerung-WELT-DIGITAL.html
Vistra Corp and the US Environmental Protection Agency reached a formal agreement related to the cleanup of the site of the January battery fire in Moss Landing. Plus, a report names Santa Cruz as the nation's least affordable rental market for the third year in a row.
Episode #1165 vom 24.07.2025 Unser Partner Scalable Capital ist der einzige Broker, den du brauchst. Inklusive Trading-Flatrate, Zinsen und Portfolio-Analysen. Alle weiteren Infos gibt's hier: scalable.capital/oaws. Aktien + Whatsapp = Hier anmelden. https://bit.ly/oaws-whatsappLieber als Newsletter? Geht auch. https://hi.omr.com/de-de/oaws-newsletterDas Buch zum Podcast? Jetzt lesen. https://amzn.to/48nDGbv Japan hat Deal mit Trump. Autobauer freut's. GE Vernova, Siemens Energy, Talen, Vistra & Constellation freut hoher Energiebedarf von KI. Enphase leidet unter Trump. Unicredit sagt BPM ab & Commerzbank zu. Temenos & Fiserv spielen andere Spiele. Lamb Weston & Cal-Maine zeigen: Basics funktionieren. Alphabet, T-Mobile & Tesla haben Zahlen. Die goldenen Bitcoin-Zeiten sind erstmal vorbei. Jetzt kommen die Altcoins. Ist das wirklich so? Oder ändert die Börse alles? Wir klären auf. Außerdem geht's um die neuesten Krypto-Projekte von PNC, JPMorgan, BNY Mellon und Goldman Sachs. Diesen Podcast vom 24.07.2025, 3:00 Uhr stellt dir die Podstars GmbH (Noah Leidinger) zur Verfügung.
Alissa Coram and Ed Carson analyze Wednesday's market action and discuss key stocks to watch on Stock Market Today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Alissa Coram and Justin Nielsen analyze Friday's market action and discuss key stocks to watch on Stock Market Today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Notas del Show: En este episodio cubrimos los eventos más relevantes antes de la apertura del mercado: • Wall Street rebota tras corrección arancelaria: Futuros al alza: $SPX +0.2 %, $US100 +0.3 %, $INDU plano. El mercado intenta estabilizarse tras el impacto del anuncio de aranceles del 25 % a Japón y Corea a partir del 1 de agosto. UBS advierte que podrían añadir +0.1–0.2 pp a la inflación. China amenaza con represalias. Hoy se publica el informe de crédito al consumo (esperado: $10.4B). • India acelera alianza energética con EE.UU.: Desde mayo 2025, India compra GLP norteamericano y planea elevar esa proporción al 10 % desde 2026. Estudia eliminar aranceles al propano y butano de EE.UU. y proyecta expandir su comercio bilateral a $500B para 2030. Se espera anuncio de miniacuerdo comercial hoy. • Vistra recibe extensión nuclear clave: $VST obtuvo aprobación para extender la operación de su planta nuclear Perry hasta 2046. La empresa opera 6 centrales con 6 500 MW, suficiente para 3.25 millones de hogares. Refuerza su posición como uno de los principales operadores nucleares del país. • Exxon y QatarEnergy descubren gas en Chipre: $XOM y QatarEnergy reportan nuevo hallazgo en el pozo Pegasus-1, segundo en el Bloque 10 tras Glaucus. Aún sin cuantificar el volumen, se suman a las seis reservas descubiertas en la ZEE chipriota desde 2011. Se esperan más estudios en los próximos meses. Una jornada marcada por la reacción a medidas arancelarias, avances en energía limpia y hallazgos clave en el sector energético. ¡No te lo pierdas!
On January 2025 The Moss Landing battery fire, a significant incident at Vistra's energy storage facility, caused widespread concer and disruption. The fire occured in a building housing thousands of lithium-ion batteries, triggering evacuations and raising concerns about the safety of large battery installations.Becky Steinbruner of the Community Matters show joins us to discuss a coalition of citizens with the goal to have Board of Supervisors approve a temporary moratorium on grid-scale lithium battery storage, facilities, covene a technical advisory panel to make recommendations regarding the impending draft Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) County Ordinance, and hold town hall meetings with the public. One of the three sites the County has selected to place a BESS is 90 Minto Road in Watsonville. That project, known as Seahawk Energy Storage, is already in the permitting process and would employ over 300 storage containers filled with lithium batteries. This is an agricultural area that borders College Lake and is near the County Fairgrounds, which serves as the evacuation shelter for the County.
Alissa Coram and Ken Shreve analyze Thursday's market action and discuss key stocks to watch on Stock Market Today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This month, Senior Portfolio Manager Matthew Sallee covers key energy market moves:Market Check: Utilities and midstream gain groundEarnings Pulse: Strong beats across power and gasGas Deals: NRG's $12B acquisition and Vistra's $1.9B dealAI Demand: Data centers fuel infrastructure optimismOPEC & Oil: Supply shifts meet geopolitical tensionNuclear Policy Shift: Executive orders aim to accelerate innovationListen in for a breakdown of what's driving energy markets now.Download Transcript
The percentage of homeless students in Monterey County is the highest in California. And, the county says it has corrected its online dashboard of test results following the Vistra fire.
Ricardo Tomás, asesor del fondo Multigestión Basalto USA, hace el análisis de las compañías Apple, Oklo, NuScale Power, Cameco, NexGen Energy, Constellation Energy, Vistra, General Dynamics, Fannie Mae, Freddy Mac, JPMorgan Chase, Banco de América, Citigroup, Wells Fargo y Ross Stores.
Rafael Ojeda, analista independiente, pone el foco sobre Alibaba, Boeing, GE Aerospace, Meta, Vistra y Berckshire Hathaway.
"Vistra (VST) is an interesting story" in utilities, says Morningstar's Travis Miller. He says all nuclear power plays have been "hot picks" for investors but considers Vistra more diversified with its legacy non-renewable businesses. Nate Bradley says he likes the space and considers nuclear power the catalyst to a "perfect storm" of developments in A.I., EVs, and robotics.======== Schwab Network ========Empowering every investor and trader, every market day.Options involve risks and are not suitable for all investors. Before trading, read the Options Disclosure Document. http://bit.ly/2v9tH6DSubscribe to the Market Minute newsletter - https://schwabnetwork.com/subscribeDownload the iOS app - https://apps.apple.com/us/app/schwab-network/id1460719185Download the Amazon Fire Tv App - https://www.amazon.com/TD-Ameritrade-Network/dp/B07KRD76C7Watch on Sling - https://watch.sling.com/1/asset/191928615bd8d47686f94682aefaa007/watchWatch on Vizio - https://www.vizio.com/en/watchfreeplus-exploreWatch on DistroTV - https://www.distro.tv/live/schwab-network/Follow us on X – https://twitter.com/schwabnetworkFollow us on Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/schwabnetworkFollow us on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/schwab-network/About Schwab Network - https://schwabnetwork.com/about
The Santa Cruz municipal wharf closes for emergency water main repairs. And, Vistra Corp is facing four lawsuits and $400 million in losses after the Moss Landing battery facility fire.
In today's newscast, the Watsonville Film Festival is expanding to neighboring cities. And an EPA representative says that in order to disconnect the remaining batteries at the fire-damaged Moss Landing storage plant, the owner, Vistra Corp., will need to hire a contractor to demolish the building. Plus, KAZU's Dylan Music invites River Voices into Studio B.
On WSJ's Take On the Week, co-host Telis Demos talks with reporter Peter Rudegeair about this coming week's latest inflation gauge, the personal-consumption-expenditures price index, or PCE, and what's going on with the price of eggs. Then they dive into what to expect from the slew of forthcoming housing data and what that could signal about mortgage rates. They also discuss Nvidia, Vistra and Constellation Energy earnings. Later on the show, Telis and Peter are joined by Chris Hansen, founder and portfolio manager of the hedge fund Valiant Capital Management, to talk about AI-related stocks beyond the tech companies investing in AI, including Amazon, Microsoft and Meta, and chipmakers such as Nvidia. They discuss the power companies that provide the extra electricity that fuels data centers needed to support AI and how power companies may also be long-term winners in the AI race. This is WSJ's Take On the Week where co-hosts Gunjan Banerji, lead writer for Live Markets, and Telis Demos, Heard on the Street's banking and money columnist, cut through the noise and dive into markets, the economy and finance—the big trades, key players and business news ahead. Have an idea for a future guest or episode? How can we better help you take on the week? We'd love to hear from you. Email the show at takeontheweek@wsj.com. To watch the video version of this episode, visit our WSJ Podcasts YouTube channel or the video page of WSJ.com. Further Reading and Listening To read more on energy stocks from guest co-host Peter Rudegeair, catch up on Tech-Loving Hedge Funds Have a Crush on Utility Stocks. Listen to Bold Names: Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff and the AI ‘Fantasy Land'. For more coverage of the markets and your investments, head to WSJ.com, WSJ's Heard on The Street Column, and WSJ's Live Markets blog. Sign up for the WSJ's free Markets A.M. newsletter.
In today's newscast, there was a flare-up at the Vistra battery storage facility in Moss Landing Tuesday night. Authorities say residents need not be concerned, but some are.
Several AI stocks surging today – from Oracle, to Dell, to Vistra and Vertiv - perhaps because of Elon Musk's new AI model. We discuss with our panel of experts. Plus, Ferguson Wellman's Mary Lago tells us how she is advising her high net worth clients right now. And, back-to-back Daytona 500 winner William Byron joins us at Post Nine.
We're experimenting and would love to hear from you!In this episode of ‘Discover Daily', we explore groundbreaking developments in AI technology and their far-reaching implications. Leading the headlines is Google's release of Gemini 2.0, introducing three powerful models - Flash, Pro, and Flash-Lite - each tailored for specific use cases and offering enhanced performance capabilities. We also delve into how the EU's Digital Markets Act is reshaping the iOS app landscape, with the controversial release of Hot Tub marking a significant shift in Apple's traditionally strict content policies.Our main story focuses on DeepSeek's revolutionary R1 AI model, which promises to transform the energy sector with its unprecedented efficiency gains. This Chinese startup's innovation has triggered a dramatic sell-off in energy stocks, with major players like Constellation Energy and Vistra experiencing substantial declines. The development challenges previous assumptions about AI's growing energy demands and could potentially reshape the future of data center infrastructure and power consumption patterns.The implications of DeepSeek's breakthrough extend beyond immediate market reactions, potentially accelerating the transition to renewable energy sources and forcing a reassessment of planned energy infrastructure expansions. With current projections suggesting AI-driven data centers could consume up to 12% of U.S. electricity demand by 2028, this efficiency breakthrough could fundamentally alter the trajectory of energy consumption in the tech sector and influence how companies approach their sustainability goals.From Perplexity's Discover Feed:https://www.perplexity.ai/page/google-s-gemini-2-0-now-availa-.jZH0lMHSSWdnsRf4nHWxwhttps://www.perplexity.ai/page/first-iphone-porn-app-controve-v6tz6uHVTfu.3v6lWPmeAwhttps://www.perplexity.ai/page/deepseek-upends-energy-industr-Ce9aHa1nSZyHcFbXWnCTrQ Perplexity is the fastest and most powerful way to search the web. Perplexity crawls the web and curates the most relevant and up-to-date sources (from academic papers to Reddit threads) to create the perfect response to any question or topic you're interested in. Take the world's knowledge with you anywhere. Available on iOS and Android Join our growing Discord community for the latest updates and exclusive content. Follow us on: Instagram Threads X (Twitter) YouTube Linkedin
In today's newscast, Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif., urges Republican colleagues to block a Trump appointee, Santa Cruz County conducts its Point-in-Time count and Vistra puts money in a relief fund for evacuees.
In today's newscast, details on Monterey County's plan to address homeless encampments and Monterey County officials hope to make soil and water testing from the Vistra battery fire available by the end of the week.
Il sistema bancario italiano è in fermento. Dopo il tentativo di Unicredit di acquisire Commerzbank e Banco Bpm e quello di Banca Ifis di rilevare Illimity, ora è Monte dei Paschi di Siena a lanciare un offerta su Mediobanca. Il brutto anatroccolo vuole comprarsi la più blasonata delle banche italiane. La potenziale fusione di Mps-Mediobanca, rispetto alle altre operazioni, però, ha un carattere più strategico. Infatti, il gruppo senese è sostanzialmente una banca commerciale, mentre Mediobanca è una banca private e un investment-bank, con una ingombrante partecipazione: Assicurazioni Generali.Fatto sta che oggi si è tenuto il cda di Mediobanca e Piazzetta Cuccia ha risposto stizzita ricordando anche gli interessi incrociati dei due protagonisti dell'operazione: Caltagirone e Delfin. Il cda «rigetta» l offerta pubblica di scambio «non concordata» di Mps, ritenuta «fortemente distruttiva di valore». Lo si legge in una nota dell istituto guidato da Alberto Nagel. «L Offerta non è stata concordata ed è da ritenersi ostile e contraria agli interessi di Mediobanca». Facciamo chiarezza con Luca Davi, Il Sole 24 Ore.Deepseek, momento Sputnik cinese o caos programmato? Un'intelligenza artificiale low cost di pechino nella giornata di ieri ha fatto crollare il Nasdaq e innescato un piccolo terremoto nel settore hi tech negli USA nella giornata di ieri. 1000 miliardi bruciati in un giorno. Su8lla scia dei risultati sorprendenti dell'app Deepseek, il colosso dei microchip Nvidia ha perso oltre il 17% in Borsa. In rosso sono finiti a Wall Street Broadcom (-16%), Microsoft (-4%), Micron (-8%) e Advanced Micro Devices (-5%). Sotto pressione Constellation Energy (-12%) e Vistra (-19%), impegnati in progetti energetici per IA. Al contrario, le aziende cinesi collegate a DeepSeek, tra cui Zhejiang Orient Holdings e Zhuhai Huajin Capital, sono salite del 10%. L'app cinese potrebbe rappresentare il momento Sputnik dell'intelligenza artificiale. Questa start up cinese, nata come spin off del fondo di investimento High-Flyer, ha rilasciato un chatbot che ha messo in discussione la leadership occidentale (o meglio, americana) nel settore dell'AI, sgretolando certezze su una presunta superiorità tecnologica che ora potrebbe essere più difficile da dimostrare. Cerchiamo di capirne di più con l'intervento di Biagio Simonetta, Il Sole 24 Ore e Nicola Gatti, professore ordinario in ingegneria informatica del politecnico di Milano e direttore del centro di ateneo per la ricerca e innovazione in intelligenza artificiale.
This week, we have a special market trends episode from the recently relaunched WSJ's Take On the Week podcast. AI was a big stock market theme in 2024. We've talked about it, and heard it many times. But it was far from the only thing that happened in stocks last year. We saw record-breaking growth from power companies like Vistra. Cult stocks like Palantir and MicroStrategy also had a moment. And of course, Nvidia, a company that needs no introduction, had a blockbuster year. But where there are winners, there are also losers. The announcement of Walgreens' potential sale highlighted the challenges within the retail pharmacy sector. Shares of biotech company Moderna also slumped, partly due to waning demand for its Covid-19 vaccine and booster. And discount chain Dollar Tree took a hit as its shoppers showed signs of belt-tightening. For our first Sunday episode of 2025, WSJ's Take On the Week co-hosts Gunjan Banerji and Telis Demos are joined by colleagues from WSJ's Heard on the Street column to discuss 2024's stock market winners and losers and what those stock performances and other market trends could mean for investors and the economy in the year ahead. And if you like what you hear, be sure to check out WSJ's Take On the Week. Further Reading: Walgreens Is in Talks to Sell Itself to Private-Equity Firm Sycamore Partners Tech-Loving Hedge Funds Have a Crush on Utility Stocks For more coverage of the markets and your investments, head to WSJ.com, WSJ's Heard On The Street Column, and WSJ's Live Markets blog. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
AI was a big stock market theme in 2024. We've talked about it, and heard it many times. But it was far from the only thing that happened in stocks last year. We saw record-breaking growth from power companies like Vistra. Cult stocks like Palantir and MicroStrategy also had a moment. And of course, Nvidia, a company that needs no introduction, had a blockbuster year. But where there are winners, there are also losers. The announcement of Walgreens' potential sale highlighted the challenges within the retail pharmacy sector. Shares of the biotech company Moderna also slumped partly due to waning demand for its Covid-19 vaccine and booster. And discount chain Dollar Tree took a hit this year as its shoppers showed signs of belt-tightening. For our first episode of 2025, we're joined by global editor of WSJ's Heard on the Street column, Spencer Jakab, and deputy editor of WSJ's Heard on the Street, Aaron Back, to reveal more of the market's winners and losers in 2024 and examine what their wins or losses could mean for investors and the economy in the year ahead. Further Reading Walgreens Is in Talks to Sell Itself to Private-Equity Firm Sycamore Partners Tech-Loving Hedge Funds Have a Crush on Utility Stocks For more coverage of the markets and your investments, head to WSJ.com, WSJ's Heard On The Street Column, and WSJ's Live Markets blog.
This week, we unpacked Netflix's live sports debut with the Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson fight, which drew 60 million households. Could this success signal a new era for Netflix's stock, or should investors remain cautious about operational challenges? XRP's recent price surge was another hot topic, with discussions on the regulatory and market factors behind its comeback and what it means for its long-term potential. Tesla also made headlines as analysts predicted a bold $528 stock price within 16 months—are these forecasts realistic? We also explored Applovin's growth streak, Vistra's stock tripling over the year, and Super Micro's efforts to recover from near delisting. On the healthcare front, RFK's remarks have shaken investor confidence, while HIMS stock and Intel's geopolitical challenges offered unique investment opportunities. Other highlights included Eli Lilly's downturn, a potential comeback for NFTs, and the dangers of online gambling. Plus, we shared insights from our favorite investing books of the year. #MarketMondays #NetflixSports #XRP #TeslaStock #Investing #StockMarket #NFTs #OnlineGambling #FinancialFreedomSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/marketmondays/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Scott Wapner and the Investment Committee debate the rally in stocks with another rate cut likely today. Plus, Vistra surging after earnings, it's our Chart of the Day, Rob Sechan owns it and calls in with his strategy. And later, Josh Brown gives you the setup on two of his names reporting after the bell todayInvestment Committee Disclosures
Carl Quintanilla, Sara Eisen and David Faber discussed the latest for stocks as markets kick off a make-or-break week: with an election, a FOMC meeting and results out of 1/5 of the S&P 500 ahead. Also in focus: regulators blocked Amazon's nuclear power agreement with Vistra, bringing down stocks across the sector; plus: a deep dive on the new names joining the Dow 30 (Sherwin Williams & Nvidia). Squawk on the Street Disclaimer
Carl Quintanilla, Jim Cramer and David Faber started the show by looking at bull market turning 2-years old, with the S&P up more than 60% in that time period. The biggest S&P gainers during this 2-year run include Nvidia, Super Micro and Vistra. The desk also turned to Southwest Airlines, after activist investor Elliott formally called for a special meeting, marking the activist's first U.S. proxy fight since 2017. Elliott has an 11% stake in the carrier and is seeking the ouster of CEO Bob Jordan. Other topics in the hour included day 1 for new Nike CEO Elliott Hill, Morgan Stanley downgrading Caterpillar to ‘underweight', and Boeing announcing plans to cut 10% of its global workforce.Squawk on the Street Disclaimer
David Faber, Sara Eisen and Mike Santoli covered all of the market bases as the Dow and S&P 500 hit new all-time highs. The anchors also reacted to shares of General Motors and Ford falling on downgrades from Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas. Hear what one analyst had to say about investing in Vistra, the company that leapfrogged Nvidia to become this year's biggest gainer on the S&P 500. Also in focus: KB Home slides on earnings, Activist investor Elliott escalates its battle against Southwest Airlines, Justice Department vs. Visa, Google files a complaint with EU antitrust regulators about Microsoft's cloud business. Squawk on the Street Disclaimer
David Faber, Sara Eisen and Bob Pisani explored market momentum as the Dow hit a fresh record high. The anchors also discussed stimulus measures announced by China's central bank, which gave a lift to shares of U.S.-listed Chinese companies such as Alibaba -- as well as American multinationals with exposure to China. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm joined the program at Post 9 "First on CNBC" -- discussing everything from oil prices to the Constellation Energy-Microsoft deal to help power the tech giant's AI data centers. Also in focus: Vistra tops Nvidia as this year's top performer on the S&P 500, Novo Nordisk's CEO heads to Capitol Hill to testify on high prices for Wegovy and Ozempic, Starbucks downgraded, Levi Strauss' hint involving Beyoncé. Squawk on the Street Disclaimer