President Trump, the “undisputed champion of beautiful, clean coal,” wants the Defense Department to start buying more of it
Younger companies and leaders embrace more remote work, new study finds
Before Hims’ GLP-1 pill fallout, its pharmacy partner was already drawing scrutiny from state regulators
An agreement between the US and Iran on a “set of guiding principles” following talks between officials from the two countries on Tuesday is sending oil prices lower. That, in turn, is boosting airline stocks.
West Texas Intermediate crude futures were down 1.1% Tuesday afternoon. Shares of airlines, including United Airlines, American Airlines, Alaska Air, JetBlue, and Delta Air Lines were up.
Southwest Airlines, which also received an upgrade to “buy” and a price target hike from $73 from $51 from UBS on Tuesday morning, was up more than 7%.
Iran said it temporarily closed the Strait of Hormuz for live fire drills on Tuesday as the talks began. About 20% of the world’s oil passes through the key choke point waterway. Later in the day, however, Iran's foreign minister expressed optimism that a deal could be reached with the US, saying "a new window has opened."
Since launching in June 2025, Tesla’s 45 Austin Robotaxis have been involved in 14 crashes, per Electrek reporting citing National Highway Traffic Safety Administration data.
Electrek analysis found that the vehicles have traveled roughly 800,000 paid miles in that time period, amounting to a crash every 57,000 miles. According to the NHTSA, US drivers crash once every 500,000 miles on average.
The article says Tesla submitted five new crash reports in January of this year that happened in December and January. Electrek wrote:
“The new crashes include a collision with a fixed object at 17 mph while the vehicle was driving straight, a crash with a bus while the Tesla was stationary, a collision with a heavy truck at 4 mph, and two separate incidents where the Tesla backed into objects, one into a pole or tree at 1 mph and another into a fixed object at 2 mph.”
Tesla updated a previously reported crash that was originally filed as only having damaged property to include a passenger’s hospitalization.
Last month, Tesla shares climbed after CEO Elon Musk said in a post on X that the company’s Austin Robotaxis had begun operating without a safety monitor.
The article says Tesla submitted five new crash reports in January of this year that happened in December and January. Electrek wrote:
“The new crashes include a collision with a fixed object at 17 mph while the vehicle was driving straight, a crash with a bus while the Tesla was stationary, a collision with a heavy truck at 4 mph, and two separate incidents where the Tesla backed into objects, one into a pole or tree at 1 mph and another into a fixed object at 2 mph.”
Tesla updated a previously reported crash that was originally filed as only having damaged property to include a passenger’s hospitalization.
Last month, Tesla shares climbed after CEO Elon Musk said in a post on X that the company’s Austin Robotaxis had begun operating without a safety monitor.
AI’s ongoing need for more memory chips, which some are referring to as “RAMmageddon,” is reportedly shifting Sony’s plans for its next PlayStation console.
According to reporting by Bloomberg, the company is weighing a delay of the PS6 to 2028 or 2029 — a pivot from the company’s typical six- to seven-year console life cycle.
Memory costs could also result in Nintendo hiking the price of the Switch 2, per the report.
The report is part of a larger trend of AI demand impacting consumer electronics, including gaming equipment. Earlier this month, reports said that Nvidia will not release a new gaming graphics chip this year — a first. Steam owner Valve delayed its forthcoming Steam Machine console, and its popular Steam Deck handheld is currently unavailable for purchase in the US. Per Valve’s website: “Steam Deck OLED may be out-of-stock intermittently in some regions due to memory and storage shortages.”
Amid the AI memory squeeze, gaming stocks have also experienced major recent sell-offs following the release of Google’s AI interactive world-generation tool, Project Genie.
Memory costs could also result in Nintendo hiking the price of the Switch 2, per the report.
The report is part of a larger trend of AI demand impacting consumer electronics, including gaming equipment. Earlier this month, reports said that Nvidia will not release a new gaming graphics chip this year — a first. Steam owner Valve delayed its forthcoming Steam Machine console, and its popular Steam Deck handheld is currently unavailable for purchase in the US. Per Valve’s website: “Steam Deck OLED may be out-of-stock intermittently in some regions due to memory and storage shortages.”
Amid the AI memory squeeze, gaming stocks have also experienced major recent sell-offs following the release of Google’s AI interactive world-generation tool, Project Genie.
If recent history is any guide, Walmart’s Q4 earnings release Thursday before the bell will be appointment viewing.
This time last year, it wasn’t the DeepSeek freak-out or tariff chatter that caused the S&P 500 to definitively begin its downturn from all-time highs. It was Walmart’s underwhelming full-year guidance that catalyzed a momentum stock meltdown.
Since then, the retail behemoth has become a more important — and richly valued — part of the S&P 500, joining the trillion-dollar market cap club in the process. Investors have clamored for safety within the US stock market in 2026, and that’s meant bidding up the income streams associated with moving loads of volume at everyday low prices.
Jeff Jacobson, head of derivatives strategy at 22V Research, offers some perspective on just how well things have been going for the Bentonville-based giant:
Walmart versus the SPDR S&P 500 ETF is at its highest level since the aftermath of the global financial crisis;
The implied volatility of calls that offer exposure to additional upside in Walmart is very elevated relative to history (that is, they’re expensive);
This is the only time in the past five years where Walmart has traded above Wall Street’s 12-month price target.
That makes the bar to clear, regardless of how the actual numbers and guidance end up, fairly high.
In Jacobson’s view, it would be prudent for Walmart holders to try to take advantage of this elevated implied volatility by selling upside, or attempting to lock in gains after this hot run.
His recommendations:
Covered calls: sell April $145 calls at $3 or better.
Collar the position: sell WMT May $155 calls, buy May $125 put, sell May $110 put.
On Sunday, Logan Paul sold his Pikachu Illustrator “Pokémon” card for a record $16.5 million to AJ Scaramucci, son of former White House Communications Director Anthony Scaramucci.
The sale price is more than triple what Paul paid to acquire the card five years ago, nearly $5.3 million, a world record at the time. Since then, many of the trading cards have skyrocketed in value, outpacing baseball cards and even Meta.
The sale has drawn controversy in the crypto industry, as Paul had announced in 2022 that the card would be tokenized and listed on his digital collectibles platform, Liquid Marketplace. Since then, the platform has since been accused of “multi-layered fraud in the crypto asset sector,” according to a 2024 filing from Canada’s Ontario Securities Commission.
“I had originally offered to sell up to 51% of the Illustrator on Liquid Marketplace but ultimately only 5.4% of the card was sold for about $270k in the Summer of 2022 to fractional owners,” Paul wrote on social media.
“In May 2024, I bought the card back for the same price it was sold for per the terms of LM and made funds available for users to withdraw. I was told that those funds were available to be withdrawn for approximately a year after being deposited in LM users’ accounts,” Paul added.
Fractional Pikachu Illustrator holders watching Logan Paul sell the card that they own for $16 million dollars. pic.twitter.com/b117AOENAm
— Bold (@boldleonidas) February 16, 2026
US total coal consumption, however, has plummeted in the last two decades.
Gemini Space Station, the crypto firm the Winklevoss brothers founded, announced it will be parting ways with three executives, COO Marshall Beard, CFO Dan Chen, and CLO Tyler Meade, effective today, according to a February 17 form 8-K filing. Bloomberg Intelligence analyst James Seyffart deemed the announcement “a big shakeup.”
In addition, Beard resigned from his role as a member of the company’s board of directors.
Shares were down over 13% following the news and are down 35% year to date.
The announcement comes on the heels of the firm’s September IPO and amid an overall downturn in crypto, which is taking a toll on several firms.
Gemini said it does not intend to appoint a successor COO at this time. Kate Freedman will become interim general counsel.
“Many of the duties previously performed by Mr. Beard, including revenue-generating responsibilities, will be assumed by Cameron Winklevoss in addition to his existing responsibilities,” the filing reports.
Meanwhile, Danijela Stojanovic, the firm’s chief accounting officer, will be interim CFO.
Earlier this month, the company slashed 25% of its workforce and shuttered operations in the United Kingdom, European Union, and Australia, per Bloomberg.
The company also pre-announced its 2025 earnings results, expecting net revenue to be between $165 million and $175 million as compared to $141 million for the year ended December 31, 2024. It expects an adjusted loss before tax of between $257 million and $267 million.
AMC is enjoying a solid start to the week as management looks to make progress on managing its onerous (and expensive) debt load.
Bloomberg reports that the theater chain is marketing a $750 million term loan and seeking $1.73 billion in secured debt, citing a person with knowledge of the matter.
The obligations that the chain is reportedly looking to refinance are its $2 billion term loan due in 2029 (priced at one-month SOFR plus 700 basis points) and $400 million in senior notes due next year that carry a coupon of 12.75%.
Florida-based construction company JFB Construction Holdings climbed 14% in premarket trading on Tuesday following an announcement that it will merge with Israeli drone maker Xtend in a $1.5 billion deal.
The shares were halted for news pending Tuesday morning, per a Bloomberg trading notice, before resuming trading.
JFB said the deal is backed by investments from Eric Trump. Unusual Machines, a drone tech company linked to Donald Trump Jr., is also listed as a strategic investor.
Xtend has marketed some of its drone products as “low cost‑per‑kill” and in November announced it won a multimillion-dollar Pentagon contract.
ServiceNow’s executives have banded together to try to restore confidence in the struggling software company’s stock.
A filing released this morning showed CEO Bill McDermott entered into an agreement to purchase $3 million in company stock on February 27.
In addition, the CEO, CFO Gina Mastantuono, and three other executives ended their 10b5-1 trading plans (in which company stock is typically divested by an insider’s broker according to a preset schedule).
Shares were up about 3% in early trading before paring much of those gains.
ServiceNow was one of many software stocks to struggle this earnings season despite reporting better-than-expected results and rosy near-term guidance, as investors worry about the potential for industry-wide disruption by AI tools.
McDermott had attributed the slide in the stock to acquisitions announced in December. During the conference call following the company’s Q1 earnings report in late January, he told investors, “The worry is gone, you can give us back the market cap.”
Analysts and company execs are trying to dispel fears around AI’s impact on gaming, but Wall Street is still wary.
Warner Bros. Discovery will resume talks with Paramount Skydance to hear out its best and final offer after Netflix granted a limited weeklong waiver, according to a statement released Tuesday morning.
The Warner Bros. Discovery board, per the statement, continues to unanimously back the merger with Netflix, while the streamer will retain its rights to match or exceed any forthcoming offer from Paramount. This fresh negotiation period ends on February 23.
Shares of Warner Bros. Discovery rose on the news, up 2.6% as of 7:46 a.m. ET. Netflix shares also gained about 1% following the press release — suggesting that investors think the streaming giant might be overpaying at the originally agreed-upon price, and that losing out to Paramount could be a blessing in disguise.
Warner Bros. Discovery also confirmed that a Paramount representative told the company it would be willing to pay $31 per share “pending engagement” — that would be up about 3% from the current $30-per-share offer and also doesn’t constitute PSKY’s “best and final” proposal, per the representative.
The headline offer price had, up until now, proved a sticking point for both sides of the Paramount/Warner deal, while a clause covering the $2.8 billion breakup fee with Netflix in PSKY’s most recent offer could also prove enticing.
WBD shareholders will vote on the proposed Netflix merger on March 20. Interestingly, though the WBD board continues to “unanimously recommend” taking the Netflix deal, some prediction markets have now swung to place Paramount as the favorite in the acquisition battle.
(Event contracts are offered by Robinhood Derivatives, LLC. Data is sourced from KalshiEX LLC.)
Shares of Warner Bros. Discovery rose on the news, up 2.6% as of 7:46 a.m. ET. Netflix shares also gained about 1% following the press release — suggesting that investors think the streaming giant might be overpaying at the originally agreed-upon price, and that losing out to Paramount could be a blessing in disguise.
Warner Bros. Discovery also confirmed that a Paramount representative told the company it would be willing to pay $31 per share “pending engagement” — that would be up about 3% from the current $30-per-share offer and also doesn’t constitute PSKY’s “best and final” proposal, per the representative.
The headline offer price had, up until now, proved a sticking point for both sides of the Paramount/Warner deal, while a clause covering the $2.8 billion breakup fee with Netflix in PSKY’s most recent offer could also prove enticing.
WBD shareholders will vote on the proposed Netflix merger on March 20. Interestingly, though the WBD board continues to “unanimously recommend” taking the Netflix deal, some prediction markets have now swung to place Paramount as the favorite in the acquisition battle.
(Event contracts are offered by Robinhood Derivatives, LLC. Data is sourced from KalshiEX LLC.)
Norwegian Cruise Line rose as much as ~12% in premarket trading on Tuesday after The Wall Street Journal reported that Elliott Investment Management has built a more than 10% stake in the company and plans to push for a turnaround at the cruise operator.
Citing people familiar with the matter, the Journal detailed that the activist hedge fund aims to engage with the company to “try to help fix its underperformance” and “make changes to catch up to its rivals.” Per the report, Elliott also privately approached Adam Goldstein, the former president and COO of competitor Royal Caribbean — a company that Elliott sees as having been successfully improving its financial performance and guest experience — as a potential board member nominee for the company.
Indeed, NCLH has seen its stock drop more than 20% in the past year, lagging behind rivals like Royal Caribbean, which is projecting strong demand for the full year driven by affluent customer demand.
Last Thursday, Norwegian appointed former Subway CEO John Chidsey as its new chief executive. Shares fell more than 7% on Friday after the late evening news.
The EV maker’s software division helped power a strong Q4, as industry giants pump the brakes on their electric ambitions.