
Super Group to Participate in Upcoming Investor Conferences
Oppenheimer 28th Annual Technology, Internet & Communications Conference
August 11, 2025 – Virtual
Attendees: Neal Menashe, Chief Executive Officer, Alinda Van Wyk, Chief Financial Officer, and Nkem Ojougboh, Head of Investor Relations
Canaccord Genuity 45 th Annual Growth Conference
August 12, 2025 – Boston, MA
Attendees: Neal Menashe, Chief Executive Officer, and Nkem Ojougboh, Head of Investor Relations
Citizens Capital Markets & Advisory Non-Deal Roadshow
September 2, 2025 – New York, NY
Attendees: Alinda Van Wyk, Chief Financial Officer, and Nkem Ojougboh, Head of Investor Relations
Benchmark Technology, Media & Telecom Conference
September 3, 2025 – New York, NY
Attendees: Alinda Van Wyk, Chief Financial Officer, and Nkem Ojougboh, Head of Investor Relations
Citi Global TMT Conference
September 4, 2025 – New York, NY
Attendees: Alinda Van Wyk, Chief Financial Officer, and Nkem Ojougboh, Head of Investor Relations
For further information, or to schedule a meeting with management, please contact a representative of the appropriate firm.
About Super Group
Super Group (SGHC) Limited is the holding company for leading global online sports betting and gaming businesses: Betway, a premier online sports betting brand, and Spin, a multi-brand online casino offering. The group is licensed in multiple jurisdictions, with leading positions in key markets throughout Europe, the Americas and Africa. The group's sports betting and online gaming offerings are underpinned by its scale and leading technology, enabling fast and effective entry into new markets. Its proprietary marketing and data analytics engine empowers it to responsibly provide a unique and personalized customer experience. Super Group has been ranked number 6 in the EGR Power 50 for the last three years. For more information, visit www.supergroup.com.
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Globe and Mail
29 minutes ago
- Globe and Mail
Prediction: This Artificial Intelligence (AI) Semiconductor Stock Will Soar in September (Hint: It's Not Nvidia)
Key Points Rising AI infrastructure spend bodes well for data center services and GPU designers. Access to high-caliber memory and storage solutions should arise alongside increased demand for GPUs. Micron Technology has a budding high-bandwidth memory solutions business, yet it trades at a considerable discount to other leading semiconductor stocks. 10 stocks we like better than Micron Technology › Over the last few weeks, several big tech companies have reported earnings for the second calendar quarter of 2025. One of the biggest takeaways from behemoth artificial intelligence (AI) developers like Alphabet, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, and Amazon is that investment in infrastructure continues to surge. Collectively, these companies are expected to spend more than $330 billion on AI infrastructure this year alone. A large portion of this capital is going to data center buildouts, networking equipment, servers, and more chips, of course. At first glance, these secular tailwinds may appear most favorable for GPU designers such as Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices. However, rising GPU acquisition ignites demand for other mission-critical services within the broader semiconductor landscape, too. Let's dig into why Micron Technology (NASDAQ: MU) also looks well positioned alongside its chip peers to benefit from rising AI infrastructure spend from the hyperscalers. Is now a good time to scoop up shares of Micron with earnings scheduled for September? Read on to find out. What does Micron do? Nvidia and AMD design advanced chipsets called GPUs, which serve as the core architectures on which AI models are trained and inferenced. Micron enters the equation through its high-bandwidth memory (HBM) solutions, which essentially help keep GPUs running at optimal speeds and help prevent bottlenecks during data workload processing. Outside of data centers, Micron's DRAM and NAND products power applications across Internet of Things (IoT) devices such as smartphones and gaming PCs, as well as cloud infrastructure and more industrial applications such as autonomous automotive systems and robotics. How large of an opportunity is high-bandwidth memory? According to data compiled by Bloomberg Intelligence, the total addressable market for HBM was estimated to be worth $4 billion in 2023. This figure is expected to grow at a 42% compound annual growth rate through 2033, reaching approximately $130 billion by the early 2030s. Despite this rapid acceleration, the HBM market remains highly concentrated. Only a few companies such as Micron, Samsung, and SK Hynix are producing HBM solutions at global scale. While competition is intense, I see this industry concentration as the foundation of Micron's high strategic market value. As hyperscalers expand AI capacity, many will seek to diversify their supply chains for different chip components. This makes sense, as big tech does not want to rely solely on a singular vendor in order to ensure steady access to chip supply, lock in favorable pricing, and access broader manufacturing footprints. With its growing HBM capabilities, Micron is well positioned to acquire additional market share in this environment. Is Micron stock a buy right now? The chart below benchmarks Micron against a small cohort of leading chip stocks on a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) basis. Data by YCharts. The obvious thing that sticks out is that Micron's forward P/E experienced notable compression during late 2024. This is due, in part, to the lumpiness in Micron's financial guidance since accurately forecasting demand trends for a still-developing market such as HBM is challenging. Investors tend to shy away from uncertainty, which appears to be weighing on sentiment around Micron at the moment. The valuation disparity between between Micron and its peers could suggest that investors do not fully understand or appreciate just how important the company's products are to overall AI infrastructure. Micron's HBM solutions and edge computing products are essential for AI development at scale. As the market begins to connect the dots between Micron's leadership in memory and storage chips to the broader AI narrative, there is significant room for Micron's valuation to expand. With earnings scheduled for next month and the stock still trading for a steep discount to its peers, Micron looks like a compelling buy right now. Should you invest $1,000 in Micron Technology right now? Before you buy stock in Micron Technology, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Micron Technology wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $660,783!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $1,122,682!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 1,069% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 184% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor. See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of August 13, 2025 Adam Spatacco has positions in Alphabet, Amazon, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Advanced Micro Devices, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool recommends Broadcom and recommends the following options: long January 2026 $395 calls on Microsoft and short January 2026 $405 calls on Microsoft. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.


CBC
30 minutes ago
- CBC
Is the stock market in an AI bubble?
Stock markets surged again this week, reaching new all-time highs. Yet again, gains in financial markets were driven by a handful of companies focused on artificial intelligence. Tech giants like Meta and Nvidia have seen their values soar while investors wait breathlessly for OpenAI, Anthropic and Perplexity to go public. But for all the enthusiasm, some investors are worried. They say we've been down this road before. And they're pointing to the dot-com bubble in the 1990s when tech companies skyrocketed in value only to see the bubble burst in early 2000. "The difference between the IT bubble in the 1990s and the AI bubble today is that the Top 10 companies in the S&P 500 today are more overvalued than they were in the 1990s," wrote Torsten Sløk, Chief Economist at the economics research firm Apollo in a note on his website, citing the price-to-earnings ratios of the companies, a common measure of whether a company's stock may be overvalued. In other words, he says, this time the bursting bubble could be even worse that it was. And that's saying something. The dot-com bubble in the 1990s had many similarities to the market today. A new technology was offering a potential game-changing way of doing business, and everyone wanted a piece of it. When the bubble burst Many of today's biggest companies were founded in those nascent days of the internet. Companies like Apple, Amazon and Microsoft were key pillars to the then-new wave of technology companies. But other giants of the day failed and were wiped out when the bubble burst. Companies like and WorldCom raised hundreds of millions of dollars and collapsed. From 1995 to March of 2000, the NASDAQ index had climbed 80 per cent. Then the bubble burst. By October of 2002, the NASDAQ had dropped by a staggering 78 per cent from its peak, wiping out all the gains it made during the bubble. Today, it's not hard to find similarities in the markets. Investors are flocking into a space they don't fully understand, before the use-case application of the underlying technology is established. The real economy is struggling to find its footing amid all the turmoil and uncertainty associated with Trump's trade war and on-again, off-again tariffs. Job growth has slowed and the U.S. economy shrank in the first three months of the year. Some of America's biggest companies have been clobbered by tariff costs. GM says tariffs led to a $1.1 billion drop in profits. Ford posted its first quarterly loss in years. And still stocks are at all-time highs and there is a clear sense of FOMO (fear of missing out). "Every bubble in modern market history has been based on a narrative, whether it be the internet or real estate," wrote Wall Street trader Tom Essaye in his newsletter Sevens Report. "Today, that potentially bubble-inflating theme is unquestionably AI technology." What looks different this time But for all the similarities, there are some very obvious differences as well. Barry Schwartz joined the investment firm Baskin Wealth Management as the dot-com bubble was bursting. Today, he's the company's president and chief investment officer "Unlike the dot-com pre-revenue companies, these companies are profitable. They have global distribution, captive customers," he said in an interview with CBC News. Schwartz says Google, Apple, Meta and Amazon all have billions of customers. He says those businesses will continue whether AI becomes a game changer or not. But if it does, those tech giants will be poised to take advantage. "So this is not like chicken and the egg. The egg and the chicken are already on the table. The market understands it," said Schwartz. U.S. President Donald Trump's AI czar, billionaire David Sacks, says most people don't fully understand where AI development really is at the moment. "The Doomer narratives were wrong," he posted to the social media platform X. Sacks says that narrative was built on the notion that there would be a rapid take-off to artificial general intelligence which would propel one AI model to self improve rapidly enough to leave the others in the dust. But he says, the opposite is happening. "The leading models are clustering around similar performance benchmarks," he wrote in his lengthy post last week. "Model companies continue to leapfrog each other with their latest versions." More to the point, those models (like OpenAI's ChatGPT, X's Grok or Google's Gemini) are building what he calls "developing areas of competitive advantage." WATCH | AI 'assistants' could change how you use the internet AI agents could change how you use the internet 16 days ago OpenAI and other big tech companies are starting to roll out the next wave of artificial intelligence, designed to operate with more autonomy. CBC's Nora Young breaks down how agentic AI works and why some think it will change how you use the internet. So, from a market perspective, a handful of AI models are in healthy competition with one another. Meanwhile, the tech giants (Apple, Amazon, Meta just to name a few) are aggressively adapting AI into their business models. And chip makers like Nvidia can barely keep up with the insatiable demand all those companies have developed. Case in point, Nvidia hasn't just seen its stock take off. Its revenues are so big they're hard to wrap your head around. Since 2022 Nvidia's revenues have quintupled. Its profits are up more than tenfold. Tariff uncertainty – even for tech The fears of a repeat of the dot-com bubble may be legitimate. But for now, the more pressing threat is that financial markets start pricing in the impact of the global trade war. Multiple company earnings reports have shown just how deep tariffs are already biting. Automakers like GM and Ford led the charge, but the tech companies aren't immune. Apple says tariff-related costs will climb to $2 billion through the first half of this year. Schwartz says he knows just how dangerous it is to think that "this time is different." But he says the issue boils down to a pretty simple calculation. "It just comes down to one simple question. Do you think we're gonna be using more AI and data in the future or less?" he said.


CBC
30 minutes ago
- CBC
Las Vegas is hurting as tourism drops. Are Canadians behind the Sin City slump?
After doing gangbuster business in the post-COVID era, Las Vegas is in the midst of a slump, with the number of tourists down sharply as Canadians in particular avoid Sin City amid bilateral bad blood over trade. The total number of visitors is off more than 11 per cent year-over-year, according to data from the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, one of the most dramatic declines in recent memory outside of the pandemic. Airline figures reveal there's been an even steeper decline among Canadians going to the desert gambling mecca. The number of Air Canada passengers dropped by 33 per cent in June compared to the same month last year, airport figures show. WestJet, the largest Canadian air carrier at the region's Harry Reid International Airport, saw a similar 31 per cent drop. The decline was even more dramatic for low-cost carrier Flair, which saw its passenger numbers fall by a stunning 62 per cent. Some U.S. travellers are also avoiding the self-described entertainment capital of the world — due, in part, to a backlash over higher fees and fewer perks for some gamblers. But resort operators say the Canadian boycott has been a notable hit to the bottom line. On a quarterly conference call with investors last week, MGM Resorts president and CEO Bill Hornbuckle said the number of Canadian visitors started to fall earlier this year — around the time U.S. President Donald Trump launched his trade war — and there hasn't been much of a rebound. That company owns some of the city's top properties, such as Aria, Bellagio and the Cosmopolitan and part of the NHL rink, T-Mobile Arena. "International visitation has been an issue," Hornbuckle said. "Particularly earlier in the year, with Canada, we host a lot of hockey games, and we saw visitation down. And I think — I don't think, I know — it's still down," he said. Thomas Reeg, the CEO of Caesars Entertainment, another major resort and gaming company that owns properties up and down the Strip, pointed to Canadians as one reason for the company's disappointing second-quarter results. "International business, particularly Canadian, is softer," he said on a call with stock analysts. Explaining why fewer rooms were filled with guests over the last three months, Reeg said, "Canadians are a significant piece of that." Local union leaders have even taken to calling the dip in Canadian tourists the "Trump slump." Canadians cite Trump's 'disrespect' Winnipeg resident Martyn Daly is one of those visitors who's staying away. In an interview with CBC News, Daly said he and his wife typically go to Vegas once a year, but he can't bring himself to do it this year with the trade war raging. "We're pretty upset with what's going on in the U.S. and the disrespect that's been shown by the Trump administration towards Canada. I just feel obliged to do something — and one little thing I can do is not patronizing a place we enjoy," he said. "It's not a good idea to be spending any of our hard-earned money in the States. I can spend it elsewhere with a clear conscience." He's also leery of what he may face at the Canada-U.S. border amid reports some travellers are being held up for questioning or, in some rare instances, detention. Guy Kerbrat, of Regina, cancelled a long-planned trip to Vegas to see an AC/DC concert to protest Trump's treatment of Canada. "The thought of going down there right now — it doesn't make you feel warm and fuzzy. We just couldn't do it," Kerbrat said in an interview. "My wife and I, we are Vegas-goers. It's a destination we enjoy. But we looked at each other and said, 'We can't support Trump and these policies that are so anti-Canadian.' I hate to hurt the people, the workers who aren't supportive of what Trump's doing, but we had to take a stand," he said. Economic hardship There's evidence that Nevadans are facing some economic challenges as a result of these disruptions. Nevada's unemployment rate, at 5.4 per cent, is the highest among the states and second only to Washington, D.C., where there have been Trump-induced federal layoffs. One of Nevada's U.S. senators, Catherine Cortez Masto, was part of a bipartisan delegation to Ottawa last month to meet with Prime Minister Mark Carney to try and patch up relations amid what she called "the chaos of the Trump presidency." The Democrat said cratering tourism is "having an impact" and she wants to see "de-escalation" to normalize visitor numbers to the Silver State. Local politicians have good reason to be anxious about the Canadian travel boycott, said Stephen Miller, an economics professor at University of Nevada, Las Vegas. As the director of the university's business and economic research centre, he crunched the numbers and found Canadians contributed $3.6 billion US to the local economy last year. Canadian spending supported some 43,000 jobs in the region, more than those employed in the manufacturing sector, Miller said. That $3.6-billion figure comes close to the economic output of the local Nellis Air Force base — and that's saying something, given it's one of the largest and most important military installations in the U.S., with some 15,000 personnel. "The Canadian numbers have gone down dramatically and it's an area of concern for the casinos," Miller said. "After all, the main goal of the resort industry is to put heads in beds." He expects more promotional activity in the weeks ahead to try and break the patriotic boycott. "You might get people saying, 'Oh wait a minute, that's a really tempting offer. Let me reconsider my decision.'" Daly said he's already received "exceptionally good" offers with low room rates to try and lure him back. But he's not budging. "I know Canada is small but we do have a voice, and I think it's great that we're using it," he said. "I think the only thing that Trump seems to understand is when people take action that hits them in the pocketbook."