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NYSE: BRBR Investigation Alert: Kessler Topaz Meltzer & Check, LLP Encourages BellRing Brands, Inc. (NYSE: BRBR) Investors with Significant Losses to Contact the Firm

NYSE: BRBR Investigation Alert: Kessler Topaz Meltzer & Check, LLP Encourages BellRing Brands, Inc. (NYSE: BRBR) Investors with Significant Losses to Contact the Firm

Associated Press5 hours ago

RADNOR, Pa.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jun 27, 2025--
The law firm of Kessler Topaz Meltzer & Check, LLP ( www.ktmc.com ) is currently investigating potential violations of the federal securities laws on behalf of investors of BellRing Brands, Inc. ( NYSE: BRBR ) ('BellRing Brands').
On May 6, 2025, during its second quarter 2025 earnings call, BellRing Brands revealed that certain customers were now choosing to 'optimize' their inventories by lowering 'their weeks of supply on hand.' As a result, BellRing Brands disclosed that this would slow sales growth in the third quarter to 'low-single-digits.' On this news, the price of BellRing Brands' stock fell by nearly 19%, from a close of $78.43 on May 5, 2025, to close at $63.55 on May 6, 2025.
If you are a BellRing Brands investor and would like to learn more about our investigation, pleaseCLICK HEREto fill out our online form or contact Kessler Topaz Meltzer & Check, LLP: Jonathan Naji, Esq. (484) 270-1453 or E-mail at[email protected].You can also click on the following link or paste it in your browser:https://www.ktmc.com/bellring-brands-inc-investigation?utm_source=Businesswire&utm_medium=PR
Kessler Topaz Meltzer & Check, LLP prosecutes class actions in state and federal courts throughout the country involving securities fraud, breaches of fiduciary duties and other violations of state and federal law. Kessler Topaz Meltzer & Check, LLP is a driving force behind corporate governance reform, and has recovered billions of dollars on behalf of institutional and individual investors from the United States and around the world. The firm represents investors, consumers and whistleblowers (private citizens who report fraudulent practices against the government and share in the recovery of government dollars). For more information about Kessler Topaz Meltzer & Check, LLP, please visit www.ktmc.com.
May be considered attorney advertising in certain jurisdictions. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.
View source version on businesswire.com:https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250627748488/en/
CONTACT: Kessler Topaz Meltzer & Check, LLP
Jonathan Naji, Esq.
280 King of Prussia Road
Radnor, PA 19087
(484) 270-1453
[email protected]
KEYWORD: UNITED STATES NORTH AMERICA PENNSYLVANIA
INDUSTRY KEYWORD: CLASS ACTION LAWSUIT PROFESSIONAL SERVICES LEGAL
SOURCE: Kessler Topaz Meltzer & Check, LLP
Copyright Business Wire 2025.
PUB: 06/27/2025 11:06 AM/DISC: 06/27/2025 11:06 AM
http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250627748488/en

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Trump Management 101: World leaders adapt to his erratic diplomacy with flattery and patience
Trump Management 101: World leaders adapt to his erratic diplomacy with flattery and patience

Associated Press

time18 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Trump Management 101: World leaders adapt to his erratic diplomacy with flattery and patience

LONDON (AP) — If world leaders were teaching a course on how to deal with U.S. President Donald Trump early in his second term, their lesson plan might go like this: Pile on the flattery. Don't chase the policy rabbits he sends running across the world stage. Wait out the threats to see what, specifically, he wants, and when possible, find a way to deliver it. With every Oval Office meeting and summit, the leaders of other countries are settling on tactics and strategy in their pursuit of a working relationship with the emboldened American leader who presides over the world's largest economy and commands its most powerful military. The results were there to see at NATO, where leaders heaped praise on Trump, shortened meetings and removed contentious subjects from the agenda. Given that Trump dominates geopolitics, foreign leaders are learning from each other's experiences dating to Trump's first term, when he reportedly threatened to withdraw the U.S. from the alliance. Among the learnable Trumpisms: He disdains traditional diplomacy. With him, it's ' America first,' it's superlative — and ' it's not even close. ' He goes with his gut, and the world goes along for the ride. They're finding, for example, that the sheer pace of Trump's orders, threats and social posts can send him pinging from the priority of one moment to another. He describes himself as 'flexible' in negotiations, such as those in which he threatened big tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China only to back down during talks. And while Trump claimed credit for the ceasefire in the Iran-Israel war, he also has yet to negotiate ending the conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza as promised. Trump's threat this week to levy retaliatory tariffs on Spain, for example, 'is a mystery to everyone,' Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever told reporters Thursday during a summit in Brussels. 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But later, on Monday, June 16, he abruptly departed the summit a day early as the conflict between Israel and Iran intensified. Trump ordered U.S. pilots to drop 30,000-pound bombs early Sunday on two key underground uranium enrichment plants in Iran, and by Wednesday announced on social media 'a Complete and Total ceasefire.' What followed was a 48-hour whirlwind during which Trump veered from elated to indignant to triumphant as his fragile Israel-Iran ceasefire agreement came together, teetered toward collapse and ultimately coalesced. Trump publicly harangued the Israelis and Iranians with a level of pique and profanity that was notable even for him. Chiding the two countries for attacking each other beyond a deadline, he dropped the f-word. Not finished, he then cast doubt on his support for NATO's mutual defense guarantee. Such was the president's mood as he winged toward a meeting of the trans-Atlantic alliance he had disparaged for years. NATO was ready for Trump with a summit set to please him NATO is essentially American, anyway. The Europeans and Canadians cannot function without American heavy lift, air refueling, logistics and more. Most of all, they rely on the United States for its range of nuclear weapons for deterrence. The June 25 summit was whittled down to a few hours, and one Trump-driven subject: Raising the amount of money the member nations spent on defense to lighten the load carried by the United States. Emphatically not on the agenda: Russia's ongoing war with Ukraine. Trump did, however, meet with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who has climbed his own learning curve on Trump management since Trump berated him in the Oval Office in February. The Ukrainian leader has deployed a conciliatory approach and mirrored Trump's transactional style. The goal, widely reported, was to avoid doing anything that might cause Trump to blow up the event or leave. Trump was invited to stay at the royal palace in The Hague and dine with the royal family. It was expected that most members would endorse the plan to raise their spending targets for their one-for-all defense against Russia. The other NATO ambassadors had told Secretary-General Mark Rutte to deploy his Trump-whispering skills. He sent the president a private, presummit text predicting Trump would achieve 'BIG' success there, which Trump posted on his own socials for all to see. At the summit, Rutte likened Trump's role quieting the Iran-Israel war to a 'daddy' interdicting a schoolyard brawl. 'He likes me,' Trump explained. Backlash was stiff. Lithuania's former foreign minister called Rutte's approach 'the gushings of weakness and meekness.' 'The wording appears to have been stolen from the adult entertainment industry,' Gabrielius Landsbergis tweeted. 'It reduces Europe to the state of a beggar — pitiful before our Transatlantic friends and Eastern opponents alike.' It was the latest confirmation that complimenting is a favorite way for leaders to deal with him, if not a popular one in some circles. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been using the tactic since at least 2018, when he called Trump 'the greatest friend Israel has ever had,' and even named a settlement in the Golan Heights after him. The late Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe plied him with multiple rounds of golf. French President Emmanuel Macron invited Trump to be the guest of honor at Bastille Day in 2017, featuring an elaborate military parade. What Trump left behind Rutte found a way to make Trump's demand that member countries spend 5% of their gross domestic product on defense work. Their military support to Ukraine could count as a substantial slice of that money. But the agreement left big issues unresolved, including a U.S. troop reduction that is likely to be announced later in the year, and the potential for a resulting security vacuum. Posters on social media referred to NATO as the 'North Atlantic Trump Organization.' 'This summit has all been about managing him, and it's all been about trying to get him to say the right thing in the right moment,' Fiona Hill, a former senior White House national security adviser to three U.S. presidents, including Trump, told the BBC. By the end of the summit, participants were declaring it a success as much for what it prevented as for what was accomplished. Trump showed up. He did not blow it up, leave early or start fights. And critically, NATO survived — indeed, with Trump declaring himself a changed man where the alliance is concerned. And his night in the palace? He said he'd 'slept beautifully.' ___ Associated Press reporters Lorne Cook in Brussels and Samya Kullab in Kyiv, Ukraine, contributed to this story.

The 6 Best Stocks To Buy Now For July 2025
The 6 Best Stocks To Buy Now For July 2025

Forbes

time18 minutes ago

  • Forbes

The 6 Best Stocks To Buy Now For July 2025

Opt for companies with reasonable valuations and strong outlooks to hedge against a downturn later ... More this year. The S&P 500 is flirting with a new high this June, despite geopolitical unrest and a fast-approaching tariff deadline. When investor enthusiasm runs hot, it can be a good time to exercise caution. Should inflation or unemployment jump later this year, you'll appreciate having defensive options in your portfolio. That's why these top stocks for July have defensive qualities alongside double-digit upside potential. Any one of them could be the all-field player your portfolio needs to thrive amid the economic complexities of 2025. How These Top Stock Picks Were Chosen Analysts at Wealth Management see opportunities later this year in utilities, financials and international industrials alongside ongoing growth in technology. Utilities have long been viewed as defensive stocks, but they now have good growth potential, too—since the AI data center buildout is driving electricity demand higher. Financials can be a defensive play against rising interest rates, but they're also likely to thrive as banking regulations ease under President Trump. Also, regional financial companies and utilities have the added advantage of limited tariff exposure. The selection criteria for these top stock picks were designed to capitalize on these trends. All six stocks are either utilities or financials that meet these parameters: The six stocks chosen also pay dividends, with yields ranging from 0.7% to 6.5%. 6 Top Stocks To Buy Now In July 2025 The table below highlights six reasonably valued financial and utility stocks that are expected to deliver double-digit EPS growth this year. A review of each company follows. Metrics are sourced from company reports, and author calculations. For more top stock ideas, see this list of best stocks to buy for 2025. 1. PG&E Corporation (PCG) (H2) PCG by the numbers: PG&E sells electricity and natural gas to residential, commercial and agricultural customers in Northern and Central California. PG&E's 2025 non-GAAP core earnings EPS guidance is $1.48 to $1.52. The midpoint of the range, $1.50, represents an increase of 10.2% from 2024. Longer term, analysts expect the utility company to continue increasing earnings by high single digits, reaching EPS of $2.12 in 2029. A strong data center pipeline and aggressive capital spending plan are contributing to PG&E's optimistic outlook. The utility has 18 projects in the final engineering phase, with some scheduled to come online next year. PG&E's capital spending budget from 2025 through 2028 totals $52.5 billion. Cost control and risk mitigation are also priorities. PG&E's long-term operations and maintenance cost reduction target is 2% annually. The company exceeded this goal in 2023 and 2024. The risk mitigation efforts are focused on improving wildfire response and powerline safety. PG&E's quarterly dividend is $0.025 and the yield is 0.7%. 2. Edison International (EIX) EIX by the numbers: Edison International provides electricity to residential, commercial, agency and industrial customers in Southern California. Edison International's 2025 core EPS guidance is $5.94 to $6.34. The midpoint of the range, $6.14, is 24.5% higher than EIX's 2024 core EPS of $4.93. The EIX leadership team says the company can grow core EPS 5% to 7% annually through 2028. The targeted range for 2028 core EPS is $6.74 to $7.14. EIX's stock price fell dramatically after the California wildfires in January 2025. The stock had been trading above $80 per share since the prior summer. It's now in the $50s. Several analysts see this as a buying opportunity. The consensus price target on the utility is $76.82, equating to 51.5% upside. Edison is facing lawsuits related to the wildfires, a risk investors should weigh carefully. California has a wildfire fund to protect its utility companies from bankruptcy if courts rule one of them liable for fire damages. Unfortunately, the $21 billion fund may not be enough to cover losses from the Eaton Fire. PG&E executives have said they don't think the utilities or their shareholders should contribute to the fund. Edison International pays a quarterly dividend of $0.8275 per share, for a yield of 6.5%. 3. SouthState Corporation (SSB) SSB by the numbers: SouthState Corporation operates a regional bank serving consumer and business customers in Texas and the southeastern U.S. Analysts expect SouthState to deliver EPS of $8.62 in 2025, up nearly 24% from the $6.97 result in 2024. By 2027, analysts expect SouthState's EPS to reach $10.50. SouthState implemented pivotal changes in the first quarter. The company completed its acquisition of Independent Bank Group, with branches located in fast-growing Texas markets. SouthState also completed a sale and leaseback of 165 bank branches and restructured $1.8 billion of securities. The acquisition expands SouthState's footprint into key markets. And the restructuring helped boost the bank's net interest margin to 3.85% from 3.48% in the prior quarter. The company is well-positioned for the future, with improved financial strength and profitability. SouthState pays a quarterly per-share dividend of $0.54, for a yield of 2.3%. 4. Webster Financial Corporation (WBS) WBS by the numbers: Webster Financial Corporation operates a regional bank serving consumers and business customers in Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and the New York metro. The 2025 EPS expectation for Webster Financial is $5.79, up 32.6% from last year's $4.37 result. Additionally, eight analysts project the company's 2027 earnings to eclipse $7 per share. Webster reported solid first-quarter 2025 results that included deposit and loan growth across multiple business lines. The bank also grew net interest income 0.6% on a higher net interest margin. However, WBS did increase its allowance for credit losses in the first quarter. CFO Neal Holland cited an uncertain economic outlook and the need to prepare "for a wider range of economic scenarios." Despite the uncertainty, WBS increased its common stock repurchase authorization by a generous $700 million in May. The move signals confidence in the bank's outlook. Webster Financial pays a quarter per-share dividend of $0.10, for a yield of 2.9%. 5. UMB Financial Corporation (UMBF) UMBF by the numbers: UMB Financial provides regional banking services to consumers and businesses in the Midwest and California. Services include traditional depository services plus wealth management, financial planning and institutional banking. Analysts expect UMBF to produce 2025 EPS of $10.23, a 13.8% improvement over 2024 EPS of $8.99. The earnings growth is projected to continue, albeit more slowly, in 2026 and 2027. The 2027 EPS outlook for UMBF is $12.25. UMB Financial has historically been a conservatively managed business. Strategic priorities include balance sheet health, liquidity and above-average credit quality. This approach has contributed to double-digit net income growth in three of the last four years. Business prudence also allowed UMBF to close the largest acquisition in its history in January. The purchase of Heartland Financial increased the bank's asset size by 32% and expanded UMBF's footprint into California, New Mexico, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa. The acquisition also contributed to a 37-basis point reduction in deposit costs and a 39-basis point improvement in net interest margin in the first quarter. UMBF pays a quarterly dividend of $0.40, for a modest yield of 1.5%. 6. Old National Bancorp (ONB) ONB by the numbers: Old National Bancorp operates the sixth largest commercial bank in the Midwest. The bank offers retail and commercial banking, wealth management, investing and capital markets services. Old National Bancorp produced 2024 EPS of $1.68. Analysts expect 2025 EPS of $2.17, which equates to earnings growth of 29.2%. Current EPS projections for 2026 and 2027 are $2.66 and $2.98, respectively. ONB's first quarter results beat analyst expectations for revenue and adjusted EPS. The leadership team cited solid organic loan and deposit growth combined with tight control of operating expenses. Other highlights included continued strong capital ratios and stable credit quality metrics. The positive results positioned ONB well for its merger with Bremer Bank, which closed after quarter-end on May 1. The ONB team expects the transaction to contribute to lower deposit costs and loan growth going forward. The combined entity at close had about $70 billion in assets and $37 billion in assets under management, placing it in the top 25 of U.S.-based banks. ONB pays a quarterly per-share dividend of $0.14, for a yield of 2.6%. Bottom Line For the second half of 2025, utility and midsized financial stocks could provide defensive growth, plus a nice boost to your cash income. Opt for companies with reasonable valuations and strong outlooks to hedge against a downturn later this year.

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