Bitcoin: The New Bone of Contention in Russian Splitsville
Imagine trying to split a shadow. That’s what dividing cryptocurrency feels like compared to carving up a car or a dacha. It’s enough to make a babushka weep.
Imagine trying to split a shadow. That’s what dividing cryptocurrency feels like compared to carving up a car or a dacha. It’s enough to make a babushka weep.
NuScale Power (SMR 2.03%) operates within the Small Modular Reactor (SMR) segment, a conceptually attractive space predicated on reduced capital expenditure and deployment timelines. However, the transition from design to operational reality remains a significant hurdle. The company’s reliance on regulatory approvals within the United States introduces a considerable degree of uncertainty. While the agreement with Nuclearelectrica in Romania represents a positive development, commercialization is not projected until 2033, extending the period of capital expenditure without revenue generation.

They pulled out, thankfully. Which, let’s be honest, was probably the smartest thing they’ve done in months. It’s like realizing you’re about to marry someone after a particularly hazy night and suddenly remembering you have a cat and a crippling fear of commitment. A relief, really. Though, naturally, the market had a full-blown freakout before they calmed down.

The recent earnings report offered little solace. Not disaster, certainly, but a muted melody, a landscape painted in shades of gray. Insurance underwriting, once a robust current, now trickles. The other segments, dutifully increasing their earnings, feel like tributaries feeding a slowing river. It is the quietness that is most unsettling, the absence of a grand vision, a bold stroke of inspiration.

For a time, the nuclear ambitions of nations lay dormant, troubled by events most unfortunate – a disaster in Japan, if memory serves. This, naturally, dampened the demand for low-enriched uranium (LEU), the very sustenance of these power-generating behemoths. Centrus, once a proud enricher of this vital fuel, found itself compelled to import it, a rather humbling circumstance for a company of its stature. Furthermore, the cessation of a certain program involving repurposed warheads – a curious arrangement, indeed – deprived it of a steady supply. Revenue dwindled, falling from a respectable 1.86 billion to a paltry 193 million. A most lamentable state of affairs!

Analysts thought they’d earn $1.20 a share. They managed $1.28. Not a vast overshoot, but enough to elicit a polite nod. Sales were a touch under expectations at $34.7 billion. It’s all relative, of course. If you laid all those dollar bills end to end, it would stretch a considerable distance. Probably to the next state.

Naturally, investors are turning a hopeful eye towards the stock. The question, as always, is upside. Can it reach the rather ambitious milestone of $1,000 a share? A perfectly respectable sum, of course, but one must ask if it’s entirely realistic. The current price, hovering around $324.33 (a temporary dip, naturally), requires a 208% increase. A trifle demanding, wouldn’t you say?

The question, naturally, is whether this recent dip presents an opportunity, or merely a foreshadowing of a more substantial fall. Let us delve into the matter, though I confess, attempting to decipher the logic of financial markets feels akin to interpreting the dreams of a particularly capricious sphinx.

Oil, you see, is the lifeblood of a good many ventures, and when that blood gets expensive, things tend to ail. Shipping’s been having a grand time of it, what with routes getting rerouted and rates going sky-high. But there’s always someone who benefits from misfortune, ain’t there? The real trouble, though, falls on them that depend on cheap fuel – and that includes a good many folks who fancy a holiday.

Micron Technology (MU 3.49%). They’ve had a good run. A good run. Up 345%? It’s almost… suspicious. And yet, everyone’s still buying. The P/E ratio? Twelve times fiscal 2026 estimates? It sounds good, I guess. But honestly, these numbers… they just feel… constructed. Like someone’s trying to tell me a story. And I don’t need a story with my investments, thank you very much.