Nebius: A Transient Bloom

They spoke last year, these bright young men and women at Nebius, of a revenue run rate of $1.1 billion by the close of 2025. A bold figure, perhaps, but one they have, it seems, managed to surpass. $1.25 billion, they report. A triumph, certainly. Though one can’t help but wonder if such numbers truly capture the weight of things, the quiet disappointments that inevitably accumulate.

The Billion-Dollar Club: A Question of Expenditure

Currently, Netflix languishes at a mere $346.9 billion, while Oracle trails at $410.4 billion – a considerable distance from the company of Nvidia, Alphabet, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Broadcom, Meta Platforms, Tesla, Berkshire Hathaway, and even, rather surprisingly, Walmart. One begins to suspect that the pursuit of such astronomical valuations is, at best, a fool’s errand, and at worst, a symptom of a wider, and rather worrying, detachment from reality.

Valaris & Transocean: A Merger of Sorts

On Monday, the company announced what can only be described as a “merger of equals” with Transocean (RIG +5.89%). Now, the phrase “merger of equals” is a curious one. It implies a sort of symmetrical union, a harmonious blending of forces. In reality, it often means one company is slightly larger and therefore gets to decide what color the new stationery will be. This particular union, however, appears to be of a scale that would likely require a whole new planet to house the stationery.

Dogecoin’s Flicker: A Brief Rally

Everyone was watching the January CPI. It’s the temperature gauge on the spending fever, and right now, the fever seems to be breaking…slightly. The year-over-year increase came in at 2.4%. A small reprieve. The monthly rise? A modest 0.2%, core CPI a bit higher at 0.3%. The street expected more, a hotter number. They got a lukewarm one instead.

Coeur Mining: A Bit of Sparkle (and Maybe a Gamble)

Turns out, the reason for today’s little lift is… gold. Shocking, I know. It had its dramatic peak on January 28th – $5,419.80 an ounce, can you believe the audacity? – then promptly decided it was all a bit much and dipped down to nearly $4,500 in February. TradingEconomics.com has the receipts, if you’re into that sort of thing. It’s clawed its way back above $5,000 – currently sitting at $5,015 – which, let’s be honest, feels less like a recovery and more like a temporary reprieve.

Amazon’s Dip: ETFs for the Slightly Cynical Investor

And the whispers are getting louder about how they’re going to pay for all this. Cash flow negative? Oh, lovely. That’s exactly what you want to hear when you’ve got a Prime subscription and a penchant for next-day delivery. Over the last five years, the stock’s only up 25.3%. It’s…fine. If you compare it to a slightly more enthusiastic Nasdaq-100 or S&P 500, it feels a bit like bringing a water pistol to a fireworks display. But, hey, let’s not write the obit just yet.

Vertiv: A Most Curious Surge

Everyone’s flapping about an “AI bubble,” a frightful notion. But Vertiv? They’re not selling hot air. They’re providing the guts – the proper, solid, dependable bits – that keep all these whizz-bang artificial brains from frying themselves into uselessness. These aren’t flimsy gadgets; these are the very foundations upon which the future is being built, and the demand, my friends, is positively ravenous.

Hycroft: A Glimmer, or Fool’s Gold?

As of this late hour, shares are up 12.7%, almost back to where they began the week. One is reminded of a particularly clumsy bear attempting to regain its footing on a patch of ice. The question, of course, is whether this is genuine momentum, or merely a twitch before another plunge.

Inflation Cools as Markets Bet on the Fed’s Next Move

The January 2026 Consumer Price Index (CPI), released Feb. 13 by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, showed headline inflation rising 0.2% month over month and 2.4% year over year, below economist forecasts. Core inflation, which excludes food and energy, increased 0.3% on the month and 2.5% annually, matching expectations but remaining above the Fed’s 2% target.

A Spot of Growth: Two Stocks with Potential

Thus, we find ourselves contemplating two companies – IonQ and Celestica – which, if one might be so bold, possess the potential for a rather spirited ascent. A parabolic trajectory, if you will. They’re growing at a rate that would make a beanstalk blush, and a shrewd investor might do well to give them a closer look.