logo
BP Hits the Gas

BP Hits the Gas

Bloomberg2 days ago
Morning, I'm Louise Moon
BP may have had a strong second quarter, but there is more work to be done.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Digital Weight Loss App Noom Undercuts Wegovy With Low-Price Offer
Digital Weight Loss App Noom Undercuts Wegovy With Low-Price Offer

Yahoo

time3 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Digital Weight Loss App Noom Undercuts Wegovy With Low-Price Offer

Popular digital weight loss app,Noom (NOOM) undercuts Novo Nordisk's (NYSE:NVO) Wegovy by offering quarter-dose packs at $119 for the first month, aiming to broaden access to GLP-1 therapy. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 1 Warning Sign with NVO. Noom will then charge $199 monthly for the same 0.6 mg dose, versus Wegovy's standard 2.4 mg at over $1,300 per month. Its GLP-1Rx program adds compounded semaglutide up to 1.2 mg at $149 in month one and $279 thereafter. Noom also sells generic liraglutide alongside Eli Lilly's Zepbound (NYSE:LLY) at $349, creating a tiered pricing ladder to suit different budgets. Rival Hims and Hers Health (NYSE:HIMS) offers compounded semaglutide for $199 per month on a prepaid plan, putting pressure on Noom to prove its lower-price strategy can win share. Noom says the move cuts cost barriers and could drive a surge in its digital weight-loss subscriptions. Lower-tier pricing may fuel subscriber growth and recurring revenue in the $50 B obesity-treatment will watch Noom's Q2 earnings on Aug 23 for subscriber counts, margin trends and guidance. This article first appeared on GuruFocus.

O2, Three and iD Mobile most complained-about mobile providers
O2, Three and iD Mobile most complained-about mobile providers

Yahoo

time3 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

O2, Three and iD Mobile most complained-about mobile providers

TalkTalk attracted the most complaints from broadband consumers and O2, Three and iD Mobile were the most complained-about mobile providers over the last quarter, latest Ofcom figures show. Plusnet generated the fewest complaints among broadband providers, while EE, Sky Mobile, Tesco Mobile and Vodafone were the least complained-about mobile providers, the regulator said. Ofcom publishes figures for complaints it receives about the UK's main landline, mobile broadband and pay-TV providers every quarter. It said O2's broadband customers mainly complained about how their grievances were handled, while Three customers were most often concerned about billing, pricing and charges. EE and TalkTalk were the most complained-about landline providers, while Utility Warehouse generated the fewest complaints. Virgin Media was the pay-TV provider that generated the most complaints, while Sky and TalkTalk customers were the happiest with their service. The figures cover complaints received by Ofcom from January to March. They remained similar to the previous quarter, but complaints about fixed broadband and pay-TV increased, the regulator said. Ofcom said it compiled and published the figures to help consumers see how their providers performed in relation to others, and to help them choose a new provider if they were thinking of switching. An Ofcom spokeswoman said: 'It's positive to see stable complaints numbers overall, which have come down over time. 'But this doesn't mean telecoms companies can sit back when it comes to customer service. Some providers have seen complaints about them increase, so we want to see further improvements.'

Singapore's Keppel raises $4.9 billion in private funds for education and data centre assets
Singapore's Keppel raises $4.9 billion in private funds for education and data centre assets

Yahoo

time3 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Singapore's Keppel raises $4.9 billion in private funds for education and data centre assets

(Reuters) -Singapore's Keppel has secured S$6.3 billion ($4.91 billion) in funds under management so far this year for its private fund strategies, including education assets and data centres, the global asset manager and operator said on Thursday. The company said the raising includes around S$907 million in capital commitments from global institutional investors for its Keppel Education Asset Fund II and Keppel Data Centre Fund III. The company aims to oversee $150 billion of funds by 2030. Christina Tan, CEO of fund management and also its chief investment officer said, "Keppel's private funds continue to attract robust investor interest, underscoring the strength of our platform and the appeal of strategies aligned with transformative megatrends". The Singapore-based asset manager last week reported net profit of S$431 million for the six months ended June, while also announcing a S$500 million buyback programme. ($1 = 1.2835 Singapore dollars) Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store