Two of the most well-known investors are betting on the same three Magnificent Seven stocks. Here's a look at the stocks owned by both Cathie Wood and Bill Ackman.
Ecosystems now scale more efficiently than stores, and that new reality is transforming retail. Amazon announced Wednesday (June 10) that it is expanding its Supply Chain Services platform with a less-than-truckload (LTL) freight offering that allows businesses to move goods beyond Amazon's own fulfillment network and into third-party warehouses, distribution centers and retail locations.
Autonomous vehicles may boost Uber-style platforms more than they disrupt them.
Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN) is broadening its logistics ambitions, adding a less-than-truckload freight service to its Amazon Supply Chain Services platform that allows businesses to ship goods to any third-party warehouse, distribution centre, or retail partner. The move taps into Amazon's existing transportation infrastructure, including more than 80,000 trailers and 24,000 intermodal containers.
Amazon.com, Inc. is nearing an operational tipping point with its Leo satellite network, offering a Starlink-like growth catalyst at a lower valuation. Leo's full-scale satellite deployment accelerates in 2025–2026, with commercial revenues expected to begin in 2026 and significant synergy potential across Amazon's ecosystem. Super-investors are accumulating AMZN, with the stock now the most owned by weight among tracked funds and recent large position increases by top holders.
VettaFi Head of Energy Research Stacey Morris joined Steve Darling from Proactive to discuss the outlook for North America’s midstream energy sector,...
The company said water use at sites it owns and operates directly fell 2% from 2024 levels, even while it expanded its data-center footprint.
Major tech stocks look a little sluggish early in pre-market trading on Thursday, as the headline noise continues.
Scott Galloway and Ed Elson laid out the math on Prof G Markets and it should make every fast food shareholder uneasy: roughly 30 million Americans, about 1 in 8 US adults, are now on GLP-1s, and the drugs are reducing fast food's addressable market by an estimated 27-30%.