
China Calls for Smart Driving Vigilance After Fatal Xiaomi Crash
Signs saying the use of smart-driving systems are banned, or suggesting drivers deploy them with caution, were spotted by social media users during the April 4-6 long weekend on expressways in Zhejiang, Jiangsu and Anhui provinces, according to local media reports. The Xiaoxiang Morning Herald also cited Anhui traffic police telling the public to avoid using advanced driver technology if possible.

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Earnings live: Foxconn buoyed by AI demand, Birkenstock beats, Deere sinks
Second quarter earnings season is winding down, and with most of the reports in, the results have been mostly positive. Over 90% of S&P 500 index companies have reported results, and as of Friday analysts expected S&P 500 companies to report an 11.8% jump in earnings per share during the second quarter. Companies had a lower expectation bar to clear coming into the quarter — analysts expected S&P 500 earnings to rise 5% in Q2, the slowest pace of earnings growth since Q4 2023 — amid President Trump's tariffs, stocks' lofty valuations, and uncertainty about the health of the US economy. Earnings this week include Circle (CRCL), Lenovo ( AMC (AMC), Cava (CAVA), Cisco (CSCO), CoreWeave (CRWV), Deere (DE), On (ONON), and Oklo (OKLO). Here are the latest updates from corporate America. Advance Auto Parts stock sinks 14% on gloomy financial outlook Advance Auto Parts (AAP) stock sank 14% on Thursday morning after issuing a downbeat profit forecast. The Raleigh, N.C.-based company beat Wall Street's earnings estimates but lowered its full-year earnings per share outlook to $1.20-$2.20 from its previous range of $1.50-$2.50. Advance Auto Parts attributed this change to a higher net interest expense related to its recent senior notes offering. In the earnings call, executives noted that approximately 40% of the company's cost of goods is exposed to tariffs at a blended rate of 30%. During the quarter, Advance Auto Parts saw lower transactions but higher tickets, as prices increased by 2%. The company noted that its competitors are also raising prices in a similar fashion. "If you look at the maybe lower to mid-income cohorts, they are more pressured than others right now," CFO Ryan Grimsland said about the price impacts of tariffs. "The wages aren't necessarily fully keeping up with some of the inflation that's in there. And so there are trade-offs that they're making. And we're still seeing that. It'd be interesting to see how that plays out in the back half of the year." China's tops quarterly revenue estimates on steady e-commerce demand Chinese e-commerce giant (JD) rose 1% in premarket trading after the company beat estimates for quarterly revenue on Thursday, highlighting robust shopping traffic. However, profits halved year over year. Total revenue rose 22.4% to 356.66 billion yuan ($49.73 billion) during the second quarter, above analysts' average estimate of 331.63 billion yuan. Profit fell by more than 50% to 6.2 billion yuan ($864 million) from 12.6 billion yuan a year earlier as the company invests in new businesses such as food delivery, competing with Meituan (MPNGY) and Alibaba (BABA). Reuters reports: Read more here. Tapestry forecasts annual profit below estimates on tariff pain Tapestry (TPR) stock fell 8% before the bell on Thursday after the Coach handbag maker forecast annual profit below estimates. The company cited higher costs due to tariffs that have hit its margins. Reuters reports: Read more here. Lenovo stock drops despite profit beat Lenono Group LTD., the world's top PC maker, reported better-than-expected profit on PC sales but the stock dropped on worries over its cloud division. From Bloomberg Intelligence: Read more here. Deere's third-quarter profit falls, stock drops (Reuters) – Farm-equipment maker Deere & Co reported a lower third-quarter profit and tightened its annual profit forecast on Thursday, pressured by headwinds from U.S. tariffs and muted demand. ... Deere's net income in the third quarter came in at $1.29 billion, or $4.75 per share, compared with $1.73 billion, or $6.29 per share, a year earlier. Overall, quarterly sales fell about 9% to $12.02 billion from a year ago. Read more here. Birkenstock beats profit estimates on strong full-price footwear sales Reuters reports: Read more here. Nvidia partner Foxconn profit jumps after AI spending rises Foxconn, also known as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., ( HNHPF, HNHAF) said on Thursday it expects higher third-quarter revenue due to robust demand for its artificial intelligence servers, which has helped the world's largest contract electronics maker beat forecasts and see a 27% increase in second-quarter profit. Reuters reports: Read more here. Cisco forecasts higher-than-expected quarterly revenue on increased demand Cisco Systems (CSCO) reported adjusted earnings per share of $0.99 in the fiscal fourth quarter, barely beating estimates of $0.98. Revenue was $14.67 billion versus an estimate of $14.63 billion. Its fiscal first quarter forecast for revenue was also better than expected, as the AI boom boosted demand for networking equipment from cloud customers. However, Cisco stock fell 2% after hours. Reuters reports: Read more here Brinker International stock pops as Chili's drives earnings beat Brinker International (EAT) stock jumped 9% in premarket trading on Wednesday after the restaurant group reported earnings and revenue that topped estimates, powered by another quarter of strong sales at Chili's. The company reported net income of $107 million, or $2.49 per share on an adjusted basis, on revenue of $1.46 billion in the fiscal fourth quarter. During the same period last year, Brinker posted net income of $57.3 million ($1.24 per share) on $1.2 billion in revenue. The results were also better than Wall Street expected. Estimates going into the report were for adjusted diluted earnings per share of $2.47 and revenue of $1.44 billion. Chili's was the standout this quarter, with 23.7% sales growth and 16% traffic growth. Comparable sales at Maggiano's declined 0.4%. "With that sustained momentum, along with a strong pipeline of initiatives, we are confident in our ability to grow sales and traffic throughout Fiscal 2026," CEO Kevin Hochman said in a statement. "Chili's is officially back, baby back!" Brinker expects fiscal 2026 revenue to be between $5.6 billion and $5.7 billion. It sees full-year earnings per share at $9.90 to $10.50. Dutch Bros CEO says company in 'growth mode' as Starbucks turnaround stokes beverage competition Yahoo Finance's Brooke DiPalma reports: Read more here. Tencent's revenue beats estimates in boost for AI ambitions Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Cava stock plummets after company misses some of Wall Street's marks, cuts guidance Cava (CAVA) missed Wall Street's mark for revenue and same-store sales growth in its second quarterly earnings report. The company's revenue came in at $280.62 million, below the $285.56 million Wall Street expected, per Bloomberg consensus estimates. Adjusted earnings beat by $0.03, coming in at $0.16. Same-store sales came in lower than expected, up 2.1%, driven by menu prices and product mix. Meanwhile, guest foot traffic was flat, far less than the 6.14% jump expected by the Street. In the release, CEO Brett Schulman called it a "fluid macroeconomic environment," adding that it "continued to grow market share" during the quarter. For the full year, the company expects same-store sales growth of 4% to 6%, down from the previously expected range of 6% to 8%. CoreWeave Q2 revenue beats estimates, but results come up against high bar Nvidia (NVDA)-backed AI cloud company CoreWeave (CRWV) delivered solid revenue growth in its second quarterly report since going public, but its loss per share widened. The stock fell 6% in after-hours trading. Wall Street expected strong top-line numbers going into earnings, as robust AI demand, a deal with Core Scientific, and a $4 billion expansion deal with OpenAI ( fueled the quarter. Two of CoreWeave's key customers, Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META), also reaffirmed their spending plans going into the quarter in a bullish sign for AI demand. Here are some key figures CoreWeave reported versus estimates compiled by S&P Global Market Intelligence: Revenue beat: $1.21 billion, versus $1.08 billion estimated and $395.4 million a year ago. Wider loss per share: $0.60 loss per share, compared to a $0.49 loss estimated. Operating expenses increased: $1.19 billion in the quarter, compared to $317 million a year ago. Lighter capital expenditures on property and equipment: $2.45 billion, compared to estimates of $3.54 billion. Revenue backlog increased: $30.1 billion, as of June 30. In the first quarter, the company's backlog was $25.9 billion. "Our strong second quarter performance demonstrates continued momentum across every dimension of our business," CEO and co-founder Michael Intrator said in the earnings release. "We are scaling rapidly as we look to meet the unprecedented demand for AI.' CoreWeave said it will provide forward-looking guidance on its earnings call at 5 p.m. ET. You can listen to that call live on the company's stock page. Read more here. offers robotaxi production update as revenue surges Chinese robotaxi operator (PONY) reported revenue grew 76% year over year in the second quarter as the business scaled its autonomous vehicle production. The stock was up more than 1% in premarket trading but pared gains during the earnings call (you can listen to it live here). The Toyota-backed (TM) company began mass production of its two robotaxi models in June and July, respectively. Robotaxi revenue also surged over 300% to $1.5 million in the quarter. "Since mass production started two months ago, over 200 Gen-7 Robotaxi vehicles have rolled off the production line, putting us firmly on track to hit the year-end 1,000-vehicle target," CEO James Peng said in a statement. The company is still on its journey to profitability. For the quarter, it posted a net loss of $53.3 million (loss of $0.14 per share), compared to a loss of $30.9 million in the same period a year ago. Trading platform eToro beats profit estimates (Reuters) - Stock and crypto trading platform eToro beat Wall Street views for profit in the second quarter on Tuesday, as retail investors maintained a firm risk appetite despite broader macroeconomic uncertainty due to new tariffs. Shares of eToro rose in premarket trading after results. Retail trading activity has been strong this year, buoyed by gains in U.S. equity markets and renewed interest in high-risk assets such as cryptocurrencies and tech stocks. Read more here. On stock jumps on sales beat, CEO weighs in on tariffs Footwear company On Holding (ONON) stock gained 7% in early trading after beating second quarter sales estimates and raising its full-year sales guidance. Net sales increased by 38.2% year over year on a constant currency basis, with revenue coming in at 749 million Swiss francs. The company reported a diluted loss per share of CHF 0.12, a loss of around $0.15. In 2025, net sales are expected to be up at least 31% year over year on a constant currency basis. Previously, the company guided for sales to be up at least 28%. On also expanded its adjusted EBITDA margin to 17%-17.5% from 16.5%-17.5% previously. "On has a very strong momentum across the world," CEO Martin Hoffmann told Yahoo Finance, "This is most visible in our growth of our DTC channel, which has seen 55% growth in the quarter." Investors were pleased with On's ability to mitigate the tariffs successfully on its key sourcing region, Vietnam. "Our industry has always been exposed to tariffs in the US," Hoffmann said. "This is nothing new for us. ... We have been paying around 20% of most of our imports, and now this number goes up to 40% for importations from Vietnam and 39% for Indonesia." Hoffmann said the company benefits from being a premium player, as consumers are willing to pay up for innovation. He added, "We are a premium brand and we want to be the most premium global sportswear brand. We keep on investing in quality, in our innovation, in our customer experiences, in sustainability, in social impact. ... The same is for price increases. We don't need additional price increases this year to mitigate the impact." Circle revenue jumps in first results since blockbuster IPO (Reuters) - Circle (CRCL) posted higher revenue and reserve income on Tuesday in its maiden quarterly results since going public in June, driven by increased circulation of its USDC stablecoin and stronger subscription services. Shares rose more than 7% in premarket trading, solidifying the rally that has pushed the company's stock to more than five times its initial public offering price. Read more here. Smithfield Foods lifts profit outlook after strong sales Smithfield Foods Inc. (SFD), stock fell 2% before the bell despite raising its profit expectations following a strong second-quarter. The largest pork producer in the US cited challenges stemming from tariffs imposed by President Trump on some of the biggest importers of the meat. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Tencent Music beats quarterly revenue estimates Reuters reports: Tencent Music Entertainment (TME) surpassed second-quarter revenue expectations on Tuesday, driven by stronger subscriber growth and rising engagement with long-form audio content such as podcasts and audiobooks. The company's New York stock rose 3% before the bell on Tuesday. Read more here. Oklo stock has rallied 230% this year, but it's slipping on Q2 results Shares of nuclear energy company Oklo (OKLO) fell after the closing bell on Monday as second quarter results failed to meet Wall Street's lofty expectations. The advanced fission company reported a net loss of $34.5 million in Q2, or $0.18 per share, compared to a loss of $0.27 per share during the same period last year. All the same, Wall Street analysts were hoping for an $0.11 per share loss. Oklo stock went into earnings as an outperformer. Year to date, shares are up 238%, compared to an 8% rise in the S&P 500 (^GSPC), as several tailwinds have fueled the stock's rise. These include President Trump's executive orders supportive of the nuclear industry, a wave of demand for artificial intelligence and data centers, and several deals Oklo inked during the year. Advance Auto Parts stock sinks 14% on gloomy financial outlook Advance Auto Parts (AAP) stock sank 14% on Thursday morning after issuing a downbeat profit forecast. The Raleigh, N.C.-based company beat Wall Street's earnings estimates but lowered its full-year earnings per share outlook to $1.20-$2.20 from its previous range of $1.50-$2.50. Advance Auto Parts attributed this change to a higher net interest expense related to its recent senior notes offering. In the earnings call, executives noted that approximately 40% of the company's cost of goods is exposed to tariffs at a blended rate of 30%. During the quarter, Advance Auto Parts saw lower transactions but higher tickets, as prices increased by 2%. The company noted that its competitors are also raising prices in a similar fashion. "If you look at the maybe lower to mid-income cohorts, they are more pressured than others right now," CFO Ryan Grimsland said about the price impacts of tariffs. "The wages aren't necessarily fully keeping up with some of the inflation that's in there. And so there are trade-offs that they're making. And we're still seeing that. It'd be interesting to see how that plays out in the back half of the year." Advance Auto Parts (AAP) stock sank 14% on Thursday morning after issuing a downbeat profit forecast. The Raleigh, N.C.-based company beat Wall Street's earnings estimates but lowered its full-year earnings per share outlook to $1.20-$2.20 from its previous range of $1.50-$2.50. Advance Auto Parts attributed this change to a higher net interest expense related to its recent senior notes offering. In the earnings call, executives noted that approximately 40% of the company's cost of goods is exposed to tariffs at a blended rate of 30%. During the quarter, Advance Auto Parts saw lower transactions but higher tickets, as prices increased by 2%. The company noted that its competitors are also raising prices in a similar fashion. "If you look at the maybe lower to mid-income cohorts, they are more pressured than others right now," CFO Ryan Grimsland said about the price impacts of tariffs. "The wages aren't necessarily fully keeping up with some of the inflation that's in there. And so there are trade-offs that they're making. And we're still seeing that. It'd be interesting to see how that plays out in the back half of the year." China's tops quarterly revenue estimates on steady e-commerce demand Chinese e-commerce giant (JD) rose 1% in premarket trading after the company beat estimates for quarterly revenue on Thursday, highlighting robust shopping traffic. However, profits halved year over year. Total revenue rose 22.4% to 356.66 billion yuan ($49.73 billion) during the second quarter, above analysts' average estimate of 331.63 billion yuan. Profit fell by more than 50% to 6.2 billion yuan ($864 million) from 12.6 billion yuan a year earlier as the company invests in new businesses such as food delivery, competing with Meituan (MPNGY) and Alibaba (BABA). Reuters reports: Read more here. Chinese e-commerce giant (JD) rose 1% in premarket trading after the company beat estimates for quarterly revenue on Thursday, highlighting robust shopping traffic. However, profits halved year over year. Total revenue rose 22.4% to 356.66 billion yuan ($49.73 billion) during the second quarter, above analysts' average estimate of 331.63 billion yuan. Profit fell by more than 50% to 6.2 billion yuan ($864 million) from 12.6 billion yuan a year earlier as the company invests in new businesses such as food delivery, competing with Meituan (MPNGY) and Alibaba (BABA). Reuters reports: Read more here. Tapestry forecasts annual profit below estimates on tariff pain Tapestry (TPR) stock fell 8% before the bell on Thursday after the Coach handbag maker forecast annual profit below estimates. The company cited higher costs due to tariffs that have hit its margins. Reuters reports: Read more here. Tapestry (TPR) stock fell 8% before the bell on Thursday after the Coach handbag maker forecast annual profit below estimates. The company cited higher costs due to tariffs that have hit its margins. Reuters reports: Read more here. Lenovo stock drops despite profit beat Lenono Group LTD., the world's top PC maker, reported better-than-expected profit on PC sales but the stock dropped on worries over its cloud division. From Bloomberg Intelligence: Read more here. Lenono Group LTD., the world's top PC maker, reported better-than-expected profit on PC sales but the stock dropped on worries over its cloud division. From Bloomberg Intelligence: Read more here. Deere's third-quarter profit falls, stock drops (Reuters) – Farm-equipment maker Deere & Co reported a lower third-quarter profit and tightened its annual profit forecast on Thursday, pressured by headwinds from U.S. tariffs and muted demand. ... Deere's net income in the third quarter came in at $1.29 billion, or $4.75 per share, compared with $1.73 billion, or $6.29 per share, a year earlier. Overall, quarterly sales fell about 9% to $12.02 billion from a year ago. Read more here. (Reuters) – Farm-equipment maker Deere & Co reported a lower third-quarter profit and tightened its annual profit forecast on Thursday, pressured by headwinds from U.S. tariffs and muted demand. ... Deere's net income in the third quarter came in at $1.29 billion, or $4.75 per share, compared with $1.73 billion, or $6.29 per share, a year earlier. Overall, quarterly sales fell about 9% to $12.02 billion from a year ago. Read more here. Birkenstock beats profit estimates on strong full-price footwear sales Reuters reports: Read more here. Reuters reports: Read more here. Nvidia partner Foxconn profit jumps after AI spending rises Foxconn, also known as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., ( HNHPF, HNHAF) said on Thursday it expects higher third-quarter revenue due to robust demand for its artificial intelligence servers, which has helped the world's largest contract electronics maker beat forecasts and see a 27% increase in second-quarter profit. Reuters reports: Read more here. Foxconn, also known as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., ( HNHPF, HNHAF) said on Thursday it expects higher third-quarter revenue due to robust demand for its artificial intelligence servers, which has helped the world's largest contract electronics maker beat forecasts and see a 27% increase in second-quarter profit. Reuters reports: Read more here. Cisco forecasts higher-than-expected quarterly revenue on increased demand Cisco Systems (CSCO) reported adjusted earnings per share of $0.99 in the fiscal fourth quarter, barely beating estimates of $0.98. Revenue was $14.67 billion versus an estimate of $14.63 billion. Its fiscal first quarter forecast for revenue was also better than expected, as the AI boom boosted demand for networking equipment from cloud customers. However, Cisco stock fell 2% after hours. Reuters reports: Read more here Cisco Systems (CSCO) reported adjusted earnings per share of $0.99 in the fiscal fourth quarter, barely beating estimates of $0.98. Revenue was $14.67 billion versus an estimate of $14.63 billion. Its fiscal first quarter forecast for revenue was also better than expected, as the AI boom boosted demand for networking equipment from cloud customers. However, Cisco stock fell 2% after hours. Reuters reports: Read more here Brinker International stock pops as Chili's drives earnings beat Brinker International (EAT) stock jumped 9% in premarket trading on Wednesday after the restaurant group reported earnings and revenue that topped estimates, powered by another quarter of strong sales at Chili's. The company reported net income of $107 million, or $2.49 per share on an adjusted basis, on revenue of $1.46 billion in the fiscal fourth quarter. During the same period last year, Brinker posted net income of $57.3 million ($1.24 per share) on $1.2 billion in revenue. The results were also better than Wall Street expected. Estimates going into the report were for adjusted diluted earnings per share of $2.47 and revenue of $1.44 billion. Chili's was the standout this quarter, with 23.7% sales growth and 16% traffic growth. Comparable sales at Maggiano's declined 0.4%. "With that sustained momentum, along with a strong pipeline of initiatives, we are confident in our ability to grow sales and traffic throughout Fiscal 2026," CEO Kevin Hochman said in a statement. "Chili's is officially back, baby back!" Brinker expects fiscal 2026 revenue to be between $5.6 billion and $5.7 billion. It sees full-year earnings per share at $9.90 to $10.50. Brinker International (EAT) stock jumped 9% in premarket trading on Wednesday after the restaurant group reported earnings and revenue that topped estimates, powered by another quarter of strong sales at Chili's. The company reported net income of $107 million, or $2.49 per share on an adjusted basis, on revenue of $1.46 billion in the fiscal fourth quarter. During the same period last year, Brinker posted net income of $57.3 million ($1.24 per share) on $1.2 billion in revenue. The results were also better than Wall Street expected. Estimates going into the report were for adjusted diluted earnings per share of $2.47 and revenue of $1.44 billion. Chili's was the standout this quarter, with 23.7% sales growth and 16% traffic growth. Comparable sales at Maggiano's declined 0.4%. "With that sustained momentum, along with a strong pipeline of initiatives, we are confident in our ability to grow sales and traffic throughout Fiscal 2026," CEO Kevin Hochman said in a statement. "Chili's is officially back, baby back!" Brinker expects fiscal 2026 revenue to be between $5.6 billion and $5.7 billion. It sees full-year earnings per share at $9.90 to $10.50. Dutch Bros CEO says company in 'growth mode' as Starbucks turnaround stokes beverage competition Yahoo Finance's Brooke DiPalma reports: Read more here. Yahoo Finance's Brooke DiPalma reports: Read more here. Tencent's revenue beats estimates in boost for AI ambitions Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Cava stock plummets after company misses some of Wall Street's marks, cuts guidance Cava (CAVA) missed Wall Street's mark for revenue and same-store sales growth in its second quarterly earnings report. The company's revenue came in at $280.62 million, below the $285.56 million Wall Street expected, per Bloomberg consensus estimates. Adjusted earnings beat by $0.03, coming in at $0.16. Same-store sales came in lower than expected, up 2.1%, driven by menu prices and product mix. Meanwhile, guest foot traffic was flat, far less than the 6.14% jump expected by the Street. In the release, CEO Brett Schulman called it a "fluid macroeconomic environment," adding that it "continued to grow market share" during the quarter. For the full year, the company expects same-store sales growth of 4% to 6%, down from the previously expected range of 6% to 8%. Cava (CAVA) missed Wall Street's mark for revenue and same-store sales growth in its second quarterly earnings report. The company's revenue came in at $280.62 million, below the $285.56 million Wall Street expected, per Bloomberg consensus estimates. Adjusted earnings beat by $0.03, coming in at $0.16. Same-store sales came in lower than expected, up 2.1%, driven by menu prices and product mix. Meanwhile, guest foot traffic was flat, far less than the 6.14% jump expected by the Street. In the release, CEO Brett Schulman called it a "fluid macroeconomic environment," adding that it "continued to grow market share" during the quarter. For the full year, the company expects same-store sales growth of 4% to 6%, down from the previously expected range of 6% to 8%. CoreWeave Q2 revenue beats estimates, but results come up against high bar Nvidia (NVDA)-backed AI cloud company CoreWeave (CRWV) delivered solid revenue growth in its second quarterly report since going public, but its loss per share widened. The stock fell 6% in after-hours trading. Wall Street expected strong top-line numbers going into earnings, as robust AI demand, a deal with Core Scientific, and a $4 billion expansion deal with OpenAI ( fueled the quarter. Two of CoreWeave's key customers, Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META), also reaffirmed their spending plans going into the quarter in a bullish sign for AI demand. Here are some key figures CoreWeave reported versus estimates compiled by S&P Global Market Intelligence: Revenue beat: $1.21 billion, versus $1.08 billion estimated and $395.4 million a year ago. Wider loss per share: $0.60 loss per share, compared to a $0.49 loss estimated. Operating expenses increased: $1.19 billion in the quarter, compared to $317 million a year ago. Lighter capital expenditures on property and equipment: $2.45 billion, compared to estimates of $3.54 billion. Revenue backlog increased: $30.1 billion, as of June 30. In the first quarter, the company's backlog was $25.9 billion. "Our strong second quarter performance demonstrates continued momentum across every dimension of our business," CEO and co-founder Michael Intrator said in the earnings release. "We are scaling rapidly as we look to meet the unprecedented demand for AI.' CoreWeave said it will provide forward-looking guidance on its earnings call at 5 p.m. ET. You can listen to that call live on the company's stock page. Read more here. Nvidia (NVDA)-backed AI cloud company CoreWeave (CRWV) delivered solid revenue growth in its second quarterly report since going public, but its loss per share widened. The stock fell 6% in after-hours trading. Wall Street expected strong top-line numbers going into earnings, as robust AI demand, a deal with Core Scientific, and a $4 billion expansion deal with OpenAI ( fueled the quarter. Two of CoreWeave's key customers, Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META), also reaffirmed their spending plans going into the quarter in a bullish sign for AI demand. Here are some key figures CoreWeave reported versus estimates compiled by S&P Global Market Intelligence: Revenue beat: $1.21 billion, versus $1.08 billion estimated and $395.4 million a year ago. Wider loss per share: $0.60 loss per share, compared to a $0.49 loss estimated. Operating expenses increased: $1.19 billion in the quarter, compared to $317 million a year ago. Lighter capital expenditures on property and equipment: $2.45 billion, compared to estimates of $3.54 billion. Revenue backlog increased: $30.1 billion, as of June 30. In the first quarter, the company's backlog was $25.9 billion. "Our strong second quarter performance demonstrates continued momentum across every dimension of our business," CEO and co-founder Michael Intrator said in the earnings release. "We are scaling rapidly as we look to meet the unprecedented demand for AI.' CoreWeave said it will provide forward-looking guidance on its earnings call at 5 p.m. ET. You can listen to that call live on the company's stock page. Read more here. offers robotaxi production update as revenue surges Chinese robotaxi operator (PONY) reported revenue grew 76% year over year in the second quarter as the business scaled its autonomous vehicle production. The stock was up more than 1% in premarket trading but pared gains during the earnings call (you can listen to it live here). The Toyota-backed (TM) company began mass production of its two robotaxi models in June and July, respectively. Robotaxi revenue also surged over 300% to $1.5 million in the quarter. "Since mass production started two months ago, over 200 Gen-7 Robotaxi vehicles have rolled off the production line, putting us firmly on track to hit the year-end 1,000-vehicle target," CEO James Peng said in a statement. The company is still on its journey to profitability. For the quarter, it posted a net loss of $53.3 million (loss of $0.14 per share), compared to a loss of $30.9 million in the same period a year ago. Chinese robotaxi operator (PONY) reported revenue grew 76% year over year in the second quarter as the business scaled its autonomous vehicle production. The stock was up more than 1% in premarket trading but pared gains during the earnings call (you can listen to it live here). The Toyota-backed (TM) company began mass production of its two robotaxi models in June and July, respectively. Robotaxi revenue also surged over 300% to $1.5 million in the quarter. "Since mass production started two months ago, over 200 Gen-7 Robotaxi vehicles have rolled off the production line, putting us firmly on track to hit the year-end 1,000-vehicle target," CEO James Peng said in a statement. The company is still on its journey to profitability. For the quarter, it posted a net loss of $53.3 million (loss of $0.14 per share), compared to a loss of $30.9 million in the same period a year ago. Trading platform eToro beats profit estimates (Reuters) - Stock and crypto trading platform eToro beat Wall Street views for profit in the second quarter on Tuesday, as retail investors maintained a firm risk appetite despite broader macroeconomic uncertainty due to new tariffs. Shares of eToro rose in premarket trading after results. Retail trading activity has been strong this year, buoyed by gains in U.S. equity markets and renewed interest in high-risk assets such as cryptocurrencies and tech stocks. Read more here. (Reuters) - Stock and crypto trading platform eToro beat Wall Street views for profit in the second quarter on Tuesday, as retail investors maintained a firm risk appetite despite broader macroeconomic uncertainty due to new tariffs. Shares of eToro rose in premarket trading after results. Retail trading activity has been strong this year, buoyed by gains in U.S. equity markets and renewed interest in high-risk assets such as cryptocurrencies and tech stocks. Read more here. On stock jumps on sales beat, CEO weighs in on tariffs Footwear company On Holding (ONON) stock gained 7% in early trading after beating second quarter sales estimates and raising its full-year sales guidance. Net sales increased by 38.2% year over year on a constant currency basis, with revenue coming in at 749 million Swiss francs. The company reported a diluted loss per share of CHF 0.12, a loss of around $0.15. In 2025, net sales are expected to be up at least 31% year over year on a constant currency basis. Previously, the company guided for sales to be up at least 28%. On also expanded its adjusted EBITDA margin to 17%-17.5% from 16.5%-17.5% previously. "On has a very strong momentum across the world," CEO Martin Hoffmann told Yahoo Finance, "This is most visible in our growth of our DTC channel, which has seen 55% growth in the quarter." Investors were pleased with On's ability to mitigate the tariffs successfully on its key sourcing region, Vietnam. "Our industry has always been exposed to tariffs in the US," Hoffmann said. "This is nothing new for us. ... We have been paying around 20% of most of our imports, and now this number goes up to 40% for importations from Vietnam and 39% for Indonesia." Hoffmann said the company benefits from being a premium player, as consumers are willing to pay up for innovation. He added, "We are a premium brand and we want to be the most premium global sportswear brand. We keep on investing in quality, in our innovation, in our customer experiences, in sustainability, in social impact. ... The same is for price increases. We don't need additional price increases this year to mitigate the impact." Footwear company On Holding (ONON) stock gained 7% in early trading after beating second quarter sales estimates and raising its full-year sales guidance. Net sales increased by 38.2% year over year on a constant currency basis, with revenue coming in at 749 million Swiss francs. The company reported a diluted loss per share of CHF 0.12, a loss of around $0.15. In 2025, net sales are expected to be up at least 31% year over year on a constant currency basis. Previously, the company guided for sales to be up at least 28%. On also expanded its adjusted EBITDA margin to 17%-17.5% from 16.5%-17.5% previously. "On has a very strong momentum across the world," CEO Martin Hoffmann told Yahoo Finance, "This is most visible in our growth of our DTC channel, which has seen 55% growth in the quarter." Investors were pleased with On's ability to mitigate the tariffs successfully on its key sourcing region, Vietnam. "Our industry has always been exposed to tariffs in the US," Hoffmann said. "This is nothing new for us. ... We have been paying around 20% of most of our imports, and now this number goes up to 40% for importations from Vietnam and 39% for Indonesia." Hoffmann said the company benefits from being a premium player, as consumers are willing to pay up for innovation. He added, "We are a premium brand and we want to be the most premium global sportswear brand. We keep on investing in quality, in our innovation, in our customer experiences, in sustainability, in social impact. ... The same is for price increases. We don't need additional price increases this year to mitigate the impact." Circle revenue jumps in first results since blockbuster IPO (Reuters) - Circle (CRCL) posted higher revenue and reserve income on Tuesday in its maiden quarterly results since going public in June, driven by increased circulation of its USDC stablecoin and stronger subscription services. Shares rose more than 7% in premarket trading, solidifying the rally that has pushed the company's stock to more than five times its initial public offering price. Read more here. (Reuters) - Circle (CRCL) posted higher revenue and reserve income on Tuesday in its maiden quarterly results since going public in June, driven by increased circulation of its USDC stablecoin and stronger subscription services. Shares rose more than 7% in premarket trading, solidifying the rally that has pushed the company's stock to more than five times its initial public offering price. Read more here. Smithfield Foods lifts profit outlook after strong sales Smithfield Foods Inc. (SFD), stock fell 2% before the bell despite raising its profit expectations following a strong second-quarter. The largest pork producer in the US cited challenges stemming from tariffs imposed by President Trump on some of the biggest importers of the meat. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Smithfield Foods Inc. (SFD), stock fell 2% before the bell despite raising its profit expectations following a strong second-quarter. The largest pork producer in the US cited challenges stemming from tariffs imposed by President Trump on some of the biggest importers of the meat. Bloomberg News reports: Read more here. Tencent Music beats quarterly revenue estimates Reuters reports: Tencent Music Entertainment (TME) surpassed second-quarter revenue expectations on Tuesday, driven by stronger subscriber growth and rising engagement with long-form audio content such as podcasts and audiobooks. The company's New York stock rose 3% before the bell on Tuesday. Read more here. Reuters reports: Tencent Music Entertainment (TME) surpassed second-quarter revenue expectations on Tuesday, driven by stronger subscriber growth and rising engagement with long-form audio content such as podcasts and audiobooks. The company's New York stock rose 3% before the bell on Tuesday. Read more here. Oklo stock has rallied 230% this year, but it's slipping on Q2 results Shares of nuclear energy company Oklo (OKLO) fell after the closing bell on Monday as second quarter results failed to meet Wall Street's lofty expectations. The advanced fission company reported a net loss of $34.5 million in Q2, or $0.18 per share, compared to a loss of $0.27 per share during the same period last year. All the same, Wall Street analysts were hoping for an $0.11 per share loss. Oklo stock went into earnings as an outperformer. Year to date, shares are up 238%, compared to an 8% rise in the S&P 500 (^GSPC), as several tailwinds have fueled the stock's rise. These include President Trump's executive orders supportive of the nuclear industry, a wave of demand for artificial intelligence and data centers, and several deals Oklo inked during the year. Shares of nuclear energy company Oklo (OKLO) fell after the closing bell on Monday as second quarter results failed to meet Wall Street's lofty expectations. The advanced fission company reported a net loss of $34.5 million in Q2, or $0.18 per share, compared to a loss of $0.27 per share during the same period last year. All the same, Wall Street analysts were hoping for an $0.11 per share loss. Oklo stock went into earnings as an outperformer. Year to date, shares are up 238%, compared to an 8% rise in the S&P 500 (^GSPC), as several tailwinds have fueled the stock's rise. These include President Trump's executive orders supportive of the nuclear industry, a wave of demand for artificial intelligence and data centers, and several deals Oklo inked during the year. Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Is BYD the Smartest Investment You Can Make Today?
Key Points BYD's stock has more than quadrupled since 2020. Its deliveries accelerated, its margins expanded, and its profits soared. It still looks reasonably valued relative to its growth potential. 10 stocks we like better than BYD Company › BYD (OTC: BYDDY), China's largest automaker, has seen its stock surge nearly 330% over the past five years. That rally was driven by its explosive sales growth, market share gains, overseas expansion, and technological advancements. It also outperformed many other domestic and international automakers even as the pandemic, inflation, geopolitical conflicts, tariffs, and other macro headwinds rattled the industry. So is BYD still one of the smartest investments you can make today? Let's review its growth rates, future catalysts and challenges, and valuations to decide. A brief history of BYD BYD started out as a battery manufacturing company 30 years ago. It launched its own automotive subsidiary in 2003, and it started selling its first gas-powered vehicles in 2005. It launched its first battery-powered electric vehicle, the BYD e6, in 2009. In 2008, Berkshire Hathaway's (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B) MidAmerican Energy acquired a stake in BYD. Berkshire still holds a 4.4% stake in BYD today, making it one of the few Chinese stocks approved by Warren Buffett. BYD's auto sales stagnated from 2009 to 2020 as its annual shipments stayed at around half a million vehicles. That sluggish growth was caused by tougher competition, quality control issues, and its focus on gas-powered vehicles instead of its new energy vehicles (NEVs). The Chinese government also reined in its subsidies for the NEV market. But from 2020 to 2024, BYD's annual vehicle sales skyrocketed tenfold from 427,302 to 4,272,145 cars, its revenue rose more than fivefold, and its net income surged nearly tenfold. By comparison, its smaller rival Nio (NYSE: NIO) only delivered 221,970 EVs in 2024. Why did BYD grow so quickly? During those four years, BYD sold more EVs powered by its own lithium iron phosphate (LFP) "Blade" batteries -- which were safer, cheaper, and more power-efficient than traditional lithium ion batteries. It also revamped its vehicle designs, expanded its manufacturing plants, aggressively slashed its prices to gain more domestic customers, and expanded overseas across Southeast Asia, Europe, and Latin America. As BYD scaled up its business, it vertically integrated its own supply chain (by manufacturing its own batteries, motors, chips, and power electronics) to reduce its production costs. It also unified its production lines with its e-Platform 3.0 architecture, which allowed multiple types of vehicles to be built with the same components, and sold a higher mix of its higher-margin plug-in hybrid vehicles (PHEVs). All of those improvements -- along with its soaring revenues and economies of scale which diluted its production costs per vehicle -- partly offset the pressure from its margin-crushing markdowns. What will happen over the next few years? BYD expects its near-term growth to be driven by its rising overseas sales, the expansion of its own fast charging network across China, the rollout of its higher-end AI and driver assistance features in its mid-range models, and its increased production capacity. BYD had already eclipsed Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA), which delivered 1.79 million vehicles in 2024, as the world's largest EV maker. But looking ahead, JPMorgan (NYSE: JPM) expects its annual vehicle sales to rise 29% to 5.5 million units in 2025 and 18% to 6.5 million units in 2026. From 2024 to 2027, analysts expect its revenue and net income to grow at a CAGR of 19% and 25%, respectively. Those are robust growth rates for a stock that trades at less than 1 times this year's sales and 17 times this year's earnings. BYD's valuations are likely being compressed by three pressing concerns: its dependence on China, which still faces unpredictable tariffs and messy macro headwinds; competition across the country's fragmented EV market; and the impact of its overseas expansion, price cuts, and other capital-intensive projects on its long-term margins. So is it the smartest investment you can make today? BYD still has a brighter future than many of China's other EV makers, and it should keep growing over the next decade. But it also probably won't command a higher valuation until the Chinese EV market stabilizes or the U.S. and China strike a favorable trade deal. So while BYD might outshine a lot of other EV makers and seem like a decent stock to accumulate right now, I'd hesitate to call it the "smartest" investment you can make today. It offers a good combination of value and growth, but it's neither the best value nor growth play for this volatile market. Should you buy stock in BYD Company right now? Before you buy stock in BYD Company, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and BYD Company 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 JPMorgan Chase is an advertising partner of Motley Fool Money. Leo Sun has positions in Berkshire Hathaway. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Berkshire Hathaway, JPMorgan Chase, and Tesla. The Motley Fool recommends BYD Company. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Is BYD the Smartest Investment You Can Make Today? was originally published by The Motley Fool
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Chinese automaker unveils AI-powered EV with impressive capabilities: 'Hardcore technology'
A Chinese automaker is debuting its new electric SUV featuring artificial intelligence computing power. According to Car News China, Xpeng unveiled its latest model, the G7, back in early June. The car combines "hardcore technology with spacious comfort," says Xpeng chairman He Xiaopeng. The G7 will have the same electric 292-horsepower engine as its predecessor, the G6, and is expected to demonstrate low energy consumption. However, the engine and battery play second fiddle to the car's list of features, which help the G7 fit Xiaopeng's description of the car, per Car News China, as an intelligent SUV. First and foremost among those features is the car's Turing AI chip, designed by the company. The Turing chip will enable self-driving as well as the car's augmented reality head-up display — or AR-HUD — system. That HUD just may be the star of the G7 show. With an 87-inch display, it utilizes the Turing chip to analyze data and project information across multiple lanes, covering up to eight different driving scenarios. It projects navigation data over the real-world view, which could aid in decision-making and improve safety. The Turing chip also supports features like lane-level navigation, assisted driving, and the standard array of safety alerts, such as lane departure and pedestrian warnings, according to Car News China. It can also help drivers navigate poor weather. If that wasn't enough, the G7's price is pretty eye-opening. It comes in at just $36,000 — at least $8,000 cheaper than the Tesla Model Y. Replacing a gas-powered car with an EV is a fantastic way to save on fuel costs and reduce one's carbon footprint. Drivers can also enhance the savings and environmental benefits by installing solar panels at home to power their EVs using cleaner, more affordable energy. For those looking to switch to solar, EnergySage offers free tools to connect prospective buyers with vetted local installers, potentially saving consumers up to $10,000 on solar installation. Xpeng started accepting presale orders for the G7 on June 11 in China. Deliveries are expected to begin later this year. Would you buy an EV if it only took you five minutes to charge? Sign me up Depends on the cost No way I already have one Click your choice to see results and speak your mind. Join our free newsletter for weekly updates on the latest innovations improving our lives and shaping our future, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet.