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Rivian announces R2 will start at $59,485 at launch, with lower cost trims set to arrive in 2027

EV maker Rivian on Thursday announced that its highly anticipated R2, which CEO RJ Scaringe has called “maybe the most important thing we’ve launched to date,” will start at $59,485 at launch.

The company is prioritizing pricier trims at first, with a lower-range $46,495 base model set to arrive in late 2027.

The nearly $60,000 launch price, and the timeline for the base model’s arrival, seem to be slightly different than what investors were hoping for, and Rivian shares are down 4% intraday on Thursday.

Rivian’s R2 is a midsize SUV, smaller than its R1S predecessor. The launch model will have an estimated range of 330 miles.

Rivian has said it expects R2 deliveries to begin in the second quarter of this year. The company has implied that it expects to make between 20,000 and 25,000 R2 deliveries in 2026.

The nearly $60,000 launch price, and the timeline for the base model’s arrival, seem to be slightly different than what investors were hoping for, and Rivian shares are down 4% intraday on Thursday.

Rivian’s R2 is a midsize SUV, smaller than its R1S predecessor. The launch model will have an estimated range of 330 miles.

Rivian has said it expects R2 deliveries to begin in the second quarter of this year. The company has implied that it expects to make between 20,000 and 25,000 R2 deliveries in 2026.

markets

Why the war in Iran put these four chemical stocks on top of the S&P today

They’re not the most glamorous stocks in the market, but chemical-slash-fertilizer companies CF Industries, Mosaic Co. , Dow, Inc., and LyondellBasell are the belles of the ball in Thursday trading, topping the list of S&P 500 performers shortly before 12 p.m. ET.

Natural gas is a crucial input for the chemical and fertilizer industries, and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz is basically cutting off supply from the region, which European and Asian chemical companies depend on.

That leaves these US giants — with access to abundant stateside gas supplies — able to produce and take advantage of pricing power in the absence of robust global competition.

Here’s how Citi analysts put it today in a note upgrading LyondellBasell and Dow to “buy” from “neutral”:

“While the duration of the conflict remains uncertain, we believe the disruptions and shutdowns across the upstream LNG plants to downstream crackers in Asia and Europe could provide months of supply-driven pricing uplift.”

Good times for them. (And their shareholders.)

Some of these companies like Dow, Mosaic, and CF Industries are also major suppliers of fertilizers, which influence food prices. And that suggests the world economy is experiencing growing inflationary pressures stemming from the less than 2-week-old war, which could eventually become a problem for the market.

$1B

Meme coin factory Pump.fun has surpassed $1 billion in revenue, making it the first protocol built on the solana blockchain to reach the milestone. 

The platform launched two years ago and has gained immense popularity in part for jump-starting viral cryptocurrencies such as fartcoin, pnut, and Moo Deng.

The solana-based token launchpad has seen around $98 million in revenue so far this year and is on pace to generate $476 million in annualized revenue, a drawdown from 2025’s figure of nearly $651 million, data from DefiLlama shows. 

Pump.fun’s revenue in the last 24 hours, 7 days, and 30 days places the platform among the top earners in the entire crypto ecosystem, trailing only perpetuals venue Hyperliquid as well as stablecoin issuers Tether and Circle

The platform uses the vast majority of its revenue to buy back its native token, PUMP, a program aimed at reducing the circulating supply of the token and absorbing sell pressure. Over $323.5 million worth of PUMP has been purchased since the start of the program, offsetting 28.8% of the cryptocurrency’s circulating supply. 

Currently, the price of PUMP is down 77% from its all-time high set in September 2025, per CoinGecko. 

markets

Never-ending stream of private credit conniptions weighs on financials

The steady drip of negative news on private credit is exacerbating the sell-off in stocks tied to the asset class and the broader financial sector.

Asset manager Blue Owl Capital is trading at its lowest level since October 2022, the month the S&P 500 bottomed. Its business development company, Blue Owl Capital Corp. — effectively its private credit arm — is likewise sinking, with a price-to-book ratio below 0.8. That suggests investors don’t think its loans are worth what the company has reported they’re worth (or are worried that they’ll be marked down in the future).

Glendon Capital Management is leveling that direct charge against the firm and others in the industry. In a presentation seen by the Financial Times, Glendon alleged that “private credit funds managed by Blue Owl and many of its rivals had ‘misrepresented’ loss rates in their portfolios and were sitting on ‘larger losses than reported.’"

This news comes after JPMorgan reportedly curbed some of its lending to private credit funds and reduced the estimated value of software loans in those portfolios, according to Bloomberg.

Other lowlights in financials:

  • Deutsche Bank, which revealed a $30 billion exposure to private credit in its annual report, is down nearly 8% as of 11:10 a.m. ET, on track for its biggest one-day loss since April 2025.

  • With this week’s losses, the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF has erased its year-to-date gains, which were in excess of 13% as of early February.

  • Jon Turek, founder of JST Advisors, flagged that the Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund is poised to deliver a Q1 drop in excess of 10%. Other years in which that fund tumbled by 10% or more in the first three months include 2001, 2008, 2009, and 2020 — a nearly comprehensive list of the most tumultuous periods for global markets in the 21st century.

tech

Palantir announces slew of defense- and security-themed partnerships

Defense, intelligence, and AI software company Palantir Technologies announced a series of security-themed partnerships Thursday, ahead of its annual conference promoting its artificial intelligence software platform (AIP).

Shares were recently up 1.7%, stretching the stock’s gains over the past month to 19%.

The deals include partnerships with uranium enrichment company Centrus Energy, jet engine maker GE Aerospace, unmanned aerial vehicle maker Ondas, and privately held World View, which sells intelligence and surveillance balloons that operate in the upper atmosphere.

Separately, it also announced a new “sovereign AI OS reference architecture,” a collaboration Palantir says “delivers customers a turnkey AI data center from hardware procurement to application deployment.”

Reference architectures are effectively blueprints that tell organizations how to set up and use AI hardware and software systems.

Known as the Palantir OS Reference Architecture, it’s based on similar AI blueprints Nvidia already sells, and it will enable customers to use Palantir’s entire product set, including the AIP and Foundry, its data organization and management product.

The deals include partnerships with uranium enrichment company Centrus Energy, jet engine maker GE Aerospace, unmanned aerial vehicle maker Ondas, and privately held World View, which sells intelligence and surveillance balloons that operate in the upper atmosphere.

Separately, it also announced a new “sovereign AI OS reference architecture,” a collaboration Palantir says “delivers customers a turnkey AI data center from hardware procurement to application deployment.”

Reference architectures are effectively blueprints that tell organizations how to set up and use AI hardware and software systems.

Known as the Palantir OS Reference Architecture, it’s based on similar AI blueprints Nvidia already sells, and it will enable customers to use Palantir’s entire product set, including the AIP and Foundry, its data organization and management product.

tech

Tesla’s China sales jump as EV market slumps

Tesla’s China sales grew 43% to 38,206 vehicles in February, compared a low baseline a year earlier.

Still, thanks to strong sales of its Model Y, Tesla defied countrywide trends — overall China EV sales fell 35% last month.

As a result, Tesla’s market share in China, its second-biggest market, grew to nearly 14% — its highest level in nearly two years.

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markets

Bumble soars on better-than-expected Q4 and strong first-quarter profit outlook

Bumble surged more than 20% in premarket trading on Thursday after the dating app operator posted better-than-expected Q4 results and provided Q1 profit guidance that also beat estimates, powered by its ongoing turnaround efforts.

For the quarter ended December 31, 2025, the company reported:

  • Revenue of $224.2 million — down 14% year on year, but above the Wall Street consensus estimate of $221 million (per data compiled by Bloomberg).

  • Adjusted EBITDA of $71.6 million, beating analyst expectations of $63.5 million.

For the first quarter of fiscal 2026, Bumble forecasts:

  • Adjusted EBITDA of $76 million to $80 million, well ahead of analysts’ consensus estimate of $57.7 million.

  • Revenue in the range of $209 million to $213 million, roughly meeting Wall Street expectations of $210 million.

Since founder Whitney Wolfe Herd returned to the top job around a year ago, Bumble has been undergoing a broad turnaround plan, featuring the introduction of new AI-enabled features to compete with stiff competition in the dating app market.

In the company’s press release, Wolfe Herd commented on its strategic overhaul: “With the heavy lift of our quality reset behind us, we are accelerating product innovation and prioritizing member experience enhancements. We are building from a stronger base and positioning Bumble for its next chapter of product-led growth.”

markets

UiPath dips despite revenue beat, as guidance fails to excite analysts about longer-term growth

UiPath is down 5% in premarket trading on Thursday after the software and agentic automation company’s guidance failed to fully address investors’ growth concerns, despite posting upbeat results for the quarter and full year ended January 31, 2026.

For the final quarter of FY2026, UiPath posted revenue of $481 million, just above analysts’ consensus estimate of $465 million (compiled by Bloomberg), and adjusted earnings per share of $0.30, topping Wall Street estimates by 18%. The company’s annualized recurring revenue grew 11% year over year to $1.853 billion, and the quarter also rounded out the company’s first profitable full year, with a GAAP operating income of $57 million for fiscal 2026.

Despite the better-than-expected results, shares slumped seemingly on the company’s conservative growth guidance. UiPath expects the following for the full year ending January 31, 2027:

  • Revenue between $1.754 billion and $1.759 billion, which would signal a slowdown in year-over-year growth to at least 9%, compared with 13% in the latest full-year results.

  • ARR in the range of $2.051 billion to $2.056 billion as of January 31, 2027.

  • Non-GAAP operating income of approximately $415 million.

In the wake of the results, a number of analysts have cut their price targets, suggesting that Wall Street was implicitly hoping for more exciting guidance. Morgan Stanley’s analyst cut their price target to $17 (from $19), Canaccord dropped its target to $15 (from $19), and UBS lowered it to $13 (from $17).

TOPSHOT-WAR-IRAN-US-ISRAEL-THAILAND-ATTACK-LOGISTICS

Oil jumps back over $100 per barrel with tankers ablaze after being struck near the Strait of Hormuz

Plans to release strategic reserves have offered some relief, but the IEA warns the conflict is causing the largest oil supply disruption ever.

$26B

Nvidia is planning on spending $26 billion to train its own AI open-weight models, according to a 2025 financial filing. Wired was first to report the information. Nvidia has released several of its own AI models, including the Nemotron reasoning model, as well as specialized ones for specific tasks.

Nvidia making its own large frontier models could allow the company to go head-to-head against some of its biggest AI customers.

markets

AI “bottleneck” stocks are the big winners halfway through a tumultuous week

Memory stocks and chip machinery companies are bouncing Wednesday, following a strong Oracle earnings report that bolstered confidence in the durability of the AI data center build-out.

In fact, Sandisk is the top performer of the S&P 500 so far this week, rising more than 21% from Friday’s close, as of shortly after 2 p.m. ET. Memory chip maker Micron is second in line, up more than 13% in weekly gains, and hard disk drive maker Western Digital is also getting a lift.

Other big winners so far this week are some of the so-called semicap shares — makers of the ultraprecise machines that turn silicon into actual semiconductors — with Lam Research and KLA Corp both racking up gains of about 10% on the week. Applied Materials is up about 8% this week.

Thematically speaking, both memory stocks like Sandisk and Micron as well as semicap shares like KLA have been part of the “buy the bottleneck” trade, in which investors buy companies they believe sit at key pinch points in the AI supply chain and therefore have pretty tremendous pricing power. Through that lens, the stocks’ bounce might reflect some additional excitement about the durability of the data center boom after Oracle’s results, which included a larger-than-expected capex number as well as sales guidances that was higher than Wall Street was forecasting.

But the bounce also may be the less interesting market phenomenon of mean reversion rearing its head, as these stocks were also some of the most beaten down in the S&P 500 last week, when Sandisk lost 17% and Lam lost about 15%, for example. So, some snapback may merely be a market reflex.

Other big winners so far this week are some of the so-called semicap shares — makers of the ultraprecise machines that turn silicon into actual semiconductors — with Lam Research and KLA Corp both racking up gains of about 10% on the week. Applied Materials is up about 8% this week.

Thematically speaking, both memory stocks like Sandisk and Micron as well as semicap shares like KLA have been part of the “buy the bottleneck” trade, in which investors buy companies they believe sit at key pinch points in the AI supply chain and therefore have pretty tremendous pricing power. Through that lens, the stocks’ bounce might reflect some additional excitement about the durability of the data center boom after Oracle’s results, which included a larger-than-expected capex number as well as sales guidances that was higher than Wall Street was forecasting.

But the bounce also may be the less interesting market phenomenon of mean reversion rearing its head, as these stocks were also some of the most beaten down in the S&P 500 last week, when Sandisk lost 17% and Lam lost about 15%, for example. So, some snapback may merely be a market reflex.

markets

Papa John’s spikes following report of a $47-per-share take-private offer from Qatari investment fund Irth Capital

A few weeks after announcing it would close 300 stores by the end of next year, Papa John’s is drawing fresh take-private interest from Irth Capital, an investment fund backed by a member of the Qatari royal family.

Papa John’s shares were up 19% on Wednesday afternoon, on pace for their best day since February 2025.

According to The Wall Street Journal, Irth is offering $47 per share for PZZA, valuing the company at about $1.5 billion. The fund currently holds a roughly 10% stake in Papa John’s, per the report.

Irth has tried to take Papa John’s private before, offering $60 per share in a joint bid with Apollo Global in June of last year. In October, Apollo Global again offered to take the company private at $64 per share. That offer was later withdrawn.

Broadly, the pizza category is being increasingly dominated by Domino’s, which opened 700 stores globally last year and has a market cap 9x greater than Irth’s latest reported offer for Papa John’s.

According to The Wall Street Journal, Irth is offering $47 per share for PZZA, valuing the company at about $1.5 billion. The fund currently holds a roughly 10% stake in Papa John’s, per the report.

Irth has tried to take Papa John’s private before, offering $60 per share in a joint bid with Apollo Global in June of last year. In October, Apollo Global again offered to take the company private at $64 per share. That offer was later withdrawn.

Broadly, the pizza category is being increasingly dominated by Domino’s, which opened 700 stores globally last year and has a market cap 9x greater than Irth’s latest reported offer for Papa John’s.

tech
Rani Molla

Musk blurs the boundaries of his companies even more with joint xAI-Tesla AI agent project

Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk said Wednesday that Tesla and xAI, which is part of SpaceX, would work on a joint AI agent project called “Macrohard,” also referred to as “Digital Optimus,” as part of Tesla’s $2 billion investment in xAI. The collaboration would pair Grok with what Musk described as a real-time computer-controlling AI agent running on Tesla hardware.

In his post, Musk said Grok would serve as the higher-level “System 2” reasoning layer directing “Digital Optimus,” a faster “System 1” layer that processes the last five seconds of screen video and keyboard/mouse inputs to take action. He said the system would run inexpensively on Tesla’s low-cost AI4 chip alongside more expensive Nvidia chips at xAI, and suggested it could, “in principle,” emulate the function of entire companies. “No other company can yet do this,” he said.

Business Insider reported earlier Wednesday that Tesla was taking up the AI agent mantle as xAI’s similar project stalled, but Musk’s post suggests the initiatives are more intertwined than previously understood.

The collaboration marks the latest example of Musk’s companies working closely together, further blurring the lines between Tesla and the recently merged SpaceX-xAI entity.