Nebius: A Most Peculiar Power Play

While other chaps are fiddling about with the bits and bobs of AI infrastructure, Nebius offers the whole shebang – the power and the clever software to make the machines think. This has caught the attention of a rather large and important fellow, one Microsoft (MSFT 0.65%), who’s signed a deal worth up to $19.4 billion. That’s a lot of sherbet, even for them. A full 300 megawatts, enough to power a small country, or at least a very enthusiastic collection of computers.

Roku’s Illusions

The company’s true business, it’s said, isn’t the devices themselves—mere conduits for the endless stream of content—but the advertising that clings to it like barnacles. A clever strategy, certainly. To profit not from providing amusement, but from interrupting it. It’s a commentary on our age, wouldn’t you agree?

Rigetti: A Speculative Gamble

Rigetti Computing, a name now familiar to those who follow the currents of speculative finance, embodies this paradox. It is a company built on anticipation, on the belief that a technological breakthrough will inevitably translate into market dominance. Such faith, while not uncommon, should always be regarded with a measure of skepticism.

Kyndryl: A Fleeting Reprieve

On February 9th, the company offered a glimpse into the darkness – a postponement of filings, a whispered warning of “material weaknesses.” It was an admission of vulnerability, a crack in the facade of order. The market, ever the skittish beast, reacted with a predictable ferocity, halving the stock’s value in a single day. One wonders if the true loss wasn’t measured in dollars, but in faith – faith in the meticulousness of record-keeping, in the very foundations of trust upon which these fortunes are built. To admit imperfection is to invite chaos, and chaos, in the realm of finance, is a sin most unforgivable.

The Weight of Oil & Forgotten Prophecies

The immediate cause, as always, was deceptively simple. The black blood of the earth, that most capricious of commodities, had grown momentarily reluctant, dipping below $67 a barrel. For a company whose fortunes are so intimately bound to the subterranean currents, this was a minor wound, a pinprick in the hide of a beast. But the wound, as any seasoned observer knows, often masks a deeper malaise. The air hung heavy with the unspoken truth: the wells do not yield forever, and even the most carefully constructed empires are built on shifting sands.

A Flicker of Hope: Compass Pathways and the Soul’s Affliction

Today, however, a more substantial report has reached the ears of investors, and with it, a surge of optimism. Compass has announced the findings of two Phase 3 trials, trials which, to the astonishment of many, have yielded statistically significant and positive results. They now intend to formally petition the FDA for approval, a step fraught with uncertainty, yet brimming with the potential to alter the lives of countless souls. The stock, predictably, has reacted with a fervor bordering on the irrational, soaring upwards as if to escape the gravity of reality itself.

Littelfuse & the Currents of Speculation

The sale brings Segall Bryant & Hamill’s stake in Littelfuse down to $70.81 million, a decrease of $6.99 million from the previous quarter. This figure is complicated, naturally, by both the shedding of shares and the fluctuating market price. It is a reminder that reported values are rarely simple, and often conceal a multitude of factors.

CoreWeave: A Devil’s Bargain?

The next three years, my friends, will be less about reaping rewards and more about dodging the daggers. This isn’t a question of if things can go wrong, but how spectacularly. And believe me, the possibilities are… imaginative. Consider it a theatrical production, with CoreWeave as the unfortunate protagonist, and the market as a particularly capricious audience.

USA Rare Earth: A Texas-Sized Gamble

So, the government, bless its heart, decided we needed a domestic supply. A grand idea, of course. They’ve sunk a considerable sum into USA Rare Earth (USAR 2.19%), a company that, as of yet, hasn’t actually dug anything up. It’s all promise and potential, like a politician’s pledge during election season. They’re aiming to pull 40,000 metric tons of this stuff outta the Texas ground by 2030. A mighty ambition, I say. Mighty.

First Majestic’s Silver Lining, or Lack Thereof

Gold, that age-old arbiter of value and vanity, recently flirted with a peak of $5,419.80 per ounce on January 28th, a sum that briefly threatened to render mere banknotes utterly ridiculous. It then, with a petulant sigh, retreated toward the $4,500 mark in early February, before engaging in a capricious dance of ascent and decline. As of today, it rests at $4,878, a price point that feels, shall we say, merely adequate. A gold price that inspires neither breathless adoration nor utter despair.