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Wall Street Lunch: U.S. Growth Revised Lower While Core PCE Stays Hot (NYSE:UMAC)

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Hercules Capital: 3 Reasons Why The Market Is Wrong (Rating Upgrade)

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Listen below or on the go on Apple Podcasts and Spotify

U.S. GDP growth slowed as inflation pressures remained elevated. (0:15) Drone stocks up on Trump administration defense funding. (1:29) Lamborghini defends abandoning EV plans as luxury buyers favored hybrid vehicles. (2:35)

This is an abridged transcript of the podcast:

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Our top story so far, GDP was revised lower for Q1 to a 1.6% annual rate, versus 2% in the initial estimate and 0.5% in the prior quarter.

The downward revision primarily reflected weaker investment and consumer spending.

Overall, GDP was supported by increases in government spending and exports, along with faster investment growth, partly offset by slower consumer spending.

David Laut of Kerux Financial said the stability in economic growth “suggests that interest rates at their current levels are justified.”

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Meanwhile, the April core PCE price index showed inflation remains well above the Fed’s 2% target.

The index rose 0.2% for the month, a touch below the 0.3% estimate, but increased 3.3% annually, in line with consensus and slightly hotter than March’s 3.2% pace.

Consumers continued to spend despite persistent inflation, though income growth was flat.

Economist Joseph Brusuelas said Americans are “so upset right now” because of three straight monthly declines in disposable income growth and weakness in that same measure over the past year.

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“Real wages are falling as disposable income declines and households are drawing down savings,” he said. “With rising inflation not having yet peaked this will get worse before it gets better and real spending is likely to decline in May.

Among active stocks, drone-related stocks are rallying after The Wall Street Journal reported that the Trump administration is considering funding agreements with several companies as part of a broader push to expand domestic production and reduce costs for the increasingly important defense technology.

Unusual Machines (UMAC) is up 50%, while Red Cat Holdings (RCAT), AeroVironment (AVAV), Kratos Defense & Security Solutions (KTOS), AgEagle Aerial Systems (UAVS), ZenaTech (ZENA), Ondas Holdings (ONDS) and Airo Group (AIRO) are also moving higher.

Best Buy (BBY) is rallying after beating estimates with its Q1 earnings report and issuing solid full-year guidance.

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Best Buy sees full-year revenue of $41.2 billion to $42.1 billion, versus the $41.8 billion consensus estimate, and adjusted EPS of $6.30 to $6.60, versus $6.48 expected.

And Dollar Tree (DLTR) is rallying after reporting Q1 sales growth of 7.3%.

Same-store sales for the Dollar Tree banner rose 3.5%, topping the 3.2% consensus estimate.

The gain was driven by a 4.5% increase in average ticket, partly offset by a 1% decline in traffic.

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And in other news of note, Lamborghini CEO Stephan Winkelmann said the automaker’s decision to scrap its EV plans was “the right way to go” after Ferrari’s new electric vehicle faced backlash over its design.

“The decision to go from the internal combustion engine to plug-in was a very important one for us, and it worked out,” he told CNBC.

“We don’t speak about our competitors… but everybody has their own strategy.”

Lamborghini, which is owned by Volkswagen (VWAGY), abandoned plans for an all-electric Lanzador and a fully electric version of its Urus SUV.

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“By observing the market… we saw that the acceptance curve (of EVs) for our type of customers is not increasing, and therefore, we decided to move away from a full-electric car into a plug-in hybrid,” Winkelmann said.

Editor’s Note: This article discusses one or more securities that do not trade on a major U.S. exchange. Please be aware of the risks associated with these stocks.

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Why Australia’s Digital Leisure Economy is Growing Fast

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Craps remains one of the most popular games in casinos due to the energy with which it is played, and it conveys an energizing touch, which is allied with risk.

If you’ve paid any attention to the sudden explosion of online keno in Australia, you’re actually looking at a symptom of a much larger shift.

Over the past ten years, the way Australians interact with entertainment, mobile tech, and online services has completely transformed. We’ve moved away from rigid schedules and bulky setups.

Instead, whether it’s interactive gaming ecosystems, streaming media, or real-time digital experiences, today’s businesses like keno online in Australia are having to adapt to an audience that demands total convenience. We want instant engagement, and we want it across all our connected devices without a single hiccup.

The Shift Toward Bite-Sized, Mobile-First Entertainment

A massive piece of this puzzle comes down to the simple fact that our phones and networks are finally good enough to handle our demands. Widespread smartphone adoption paired with high-speed mobile connectivity means Australians now expect to be entertained instantly, no matter where they are. This has opened up huge opportunities for platforms that can deliver fast and responsive services.

Australia’s underlying tech infrastructure deserves a lot of the credit here. We now have much better broadband access and stronger mobile networks, which have essentially wiped out the technical bottlenecks that used to make online entertainment so frustrating. Because of this, digital platforms can handle a lot more traffic and deliver smooth, real-time experiences whether you’re sitting in a Sydney cafe or relaxing in a regional town.

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This mobile-first mentality has also fundamentally changed how we fit leisure into our day. Gone are the days when we always needed to set aside a two-hour block for entertainment. Instead, people gravitate toward short-session experiences that slide easily into a busy routine. The massive shift toward remote and hybrid work environments has only amplified this. With more flexible schedules and a lot more time spent hovering near connected devices, people are sprinkling quick gaming or streaming sessions into their daily lives far more frequently than they used to.

How AI and Personalization Keep Us Hooked

Modern consumers have zero patience for generic experiences. We expect platforms to figure out what we want almost automatically. If you look at any major entertainment ecosystem right now, customized interfaces and behavior-driven content suggestions are the absolute bare minimum. Businesses are heavily leveraging data analytics and machine learning simply because they have to—it’s the only way to keep people engaged and stop them from jumping to a competitor.

Behind the curtain, Artificial Intelligence is doing an incredible amount of heavy lifting. AI systems are constantly chewing through behavioral data to figure out how to optimize the user experience. They recommend the right content, streamline customer support, and even flag unusual account activity to prevent fraud. It’s this technology that allows companies to manage millions of users while somehow making the experience feel entirely individualized.

Australia’s younger, digitally native demographics are really driving this push. They adopt new tech faster than anyone else and have incredibly high standards for how responsive a mobile experience should be. To win them over, businesses have to prioritize clean designs, deep personalization, and platforms that encourage continuous interaction. On top of that, social media is now deeply baked into the experience. Online communities, user-generated content, and influencer marketing aren’t just add-ons; they are core strategies for bringing in new users and keeping them around through strong social engagement loops.

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Seamless Payments and the Invisible Tech Keeping Things Running

Of course, none of this growth happens if it’s hard for people to spend their money. Payment innovation has been a massive accelerator for the online leisure market. We now expect transactions to be completely frictionless. Whether it’s instant deposits or secure mobile checkouts integrated directly into an app, fintech advancements like digital wallets and biometric logins have made spending money online incredibly easy.

This slick financial infrastructure is exactly what has allowed subscription models and transaction-driven entertainment to take off so rapidly. People are comfortable managing their money within these digital ecosystems, giving businesses a golden opportunity to offer fully integrated, hassle-free account systems.

But keeping all of this running requires some serious backbone, which is where cloud computing steps in. Entertainment platforms deal with wildly unpredictable traffic—think of a massive surge during a live event or a Friday night. Scalable cloud infrastructure lets these companies expand their computing power on the fly so the platform doesn’t crash when everyone logs on at once.

Naturally, as more money and time flow into these platforms, cybersecurity has become a monumental priority. Businesses are pouring money into advanced encryption, AI-powered threat monitoring, and fraud detection. They know that if they lose consumer trust, the whole ecosystem falls apart.

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Navigating a Crowded, Highly Regulated Future

The competition in Australia’s digital economy is getting fierce. With aggressive new startups and massive international platforms constantly flooding the market, businesses can’t just rely on having good content or cheap pricing anymore. They have to stand out through flawless user experiences, genuine technological innovation, and rock-solid reliability.

At the same time, the rules of the game are changing. Regulatory developments surrounding privacy, consumer data, and digital transactions are constantly evolving on a global scale. Companies are walking a tightrope—trying to build highly personalized, data-hungry platforms while staying strictly compliant with ethical data practices and new legal obligations.

Looking ahead, Australia’s digital leisure economy is only going to keep expanding. As mobile connectivity gets even faster, AI gets smarter, and fintech becomes more invisible, we are going to see entirely new forms of interactive entertainment emerge. Digital leisure isn’t just some secondary offshoot of the economy anymore. It has grown into a powerhouse of innovation and investment, completely reshaping Australia’s technological and cultural landscape.

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What the International Media Got Wrong About Cambodia’s Yim Leak

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What the International Media Got Wrong About Cambodia’s Yim Leak

In December 2025, Thai authorities launched a sweeping enforcement operation that made international headlines. Among the central figures named was Yim Leak, a Cambodian businessman whom the media quickly labelled a fugitive, a scam kingpin, and a Thai national whose citizenship was being revoked.

The Anti-Money Laundering Office has since frozen more than 20 billion baht, roughly $580 million, in assets connected to Mr. Yim and his wife Veereenyah Yim.      No criminal charges have been filed.

Yim Leak’s Bangkok-based legal team at Dentons Pisut & Partners, one of the largest international law firms, issued public statements in December 2025 and February 2026 challenging the factual basis of the media coverage. Several of those corrections are independently verifiable. Below is a review of the most widely repeated claims and what the record shows.

Claim: Yim Leak is a Thai national who fled the country

This has been one of the most damaging claims in the coverage. The Thai government publicly stated that Yim Leak’s Thai nationality would be revoked. The framing implied he fled to avoid prosecution.

According to Dentons Pisut, Mr. Yim has never held Thai citizenship or possessed a Thai passport. He is a Cambodian national, which the firm says is verifiable through Ministry of Interior records. Documented travel records show that Yim Leak departed Thailand on June 19, 2025, and his wife departed on October 11, 2025. Both departures took place months before the December raids. The legal team argues that describing someone as a fugitive when they left the country months before any enforcement action is inconsistent with the documented timeline.

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Claim: He was named in the U.S. Dismantle Foreign Scam Syndicates Act

This claim appeared in Thai media following a government press conference in which officials said they had been tipped off by the FBI. What was not widely reported is that Yim Leak’s name was removed from the legislation (H.R. 5490) on the same day the Thai government cited it at the press conference. This is publicly verifiable through the U.S. House of Representatives Document Repository. The inclusion of his name in an early draft, followed by its removal, is materially different from the impression left by the press conference, which treated the original inclusion as confirmation of guilt. The legal team notes that the episode was publicly framed as a U.S. tip-off, despite the fact that U.S. legislators removed his name from the Act on the same day.

Claim: He is associated with Chen Zhi’s scam network

Media coverage repeatedly placed Yim Leak alongside Chen Zhi, a figure at the center of the Thai government’s anti-scam narrative, creating an impression of partnership or criminal collaboration. Dentons Pisut has formally denied any business relationship between Yim Leak and this individual. According to the firm, no evidence of a direct business relationship between Mr. Yim and such a person has been presented publicly by any authority to date.

Claim: AMLO found criminal activity in his accounts

According to Dentons Pisut, AMLO conducted an investigation in 2024 into virtually the same assets connected to the same family. The firm says AMLO confirmed at the conclusion of that review that the assets did not relate to criminal activities, and that the assets were returned. The current proceedings, which target virtually the same asset base, represent what the legal team describes as a reactivation of claims that were previously examined and dismissed by the same agency now pursuing them.

Claim: The 20 billion baht forfeiture reflects 20 billion baht in criminal proceeds

The scale of the freeze, now exceeding $580 million, has been widely reported as though it reflects the scale of the underlying criminal activity. The actual transaction at the origin of the case, according to his legal team, was a currency exchange transfer worth approximately $165,000, processed through a regulated operator’s pooled Thai clearing account.

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Pooled-account settlement is how the majority of cross-border currency exchanges are conducted in Southeast Asia. A business converting dollars from Cambodia into Thai baht in Thailand typically uses a regulated operator that maintains a pooled clearing system, through which dozens of unrelated parties’ money are “pooled” to transfer money into the end recipient’s account. Industry estimates suggest that 40 to 55 percent of cross-border funds entering Thailand move through these structures, which are widely used because they allow large sums to move faster than a traditional SWIFT wire.

When authorities trace funds backward through a co-mingled pooling account and treat a downstream recipient as if they were directly linked to suspicious upstream deposits, the legal team argues, innocent businesses and individuals can be swept into aggressive asset-freeze actions simply because their transactions passed through the same regulated pooled system. According to the defense, the gap between a $165,000 currency exchange and a $580 million freeze does not establish that $580 million in criminal proceeds were found and may instead reflect the methodology of the tracing. The legal team contends that this approach produces outcomes that are inconsistent with Thai and international law, and that the resulting freeze is disproportionate to the underlying transaction.

What the record suggests

Questions have also been raised about how the case has been handled procedurally. According to Dentons Pisut, AMLO’s board resolutions and detailed property inventories appeared in the Thai press before defense counsel had received formal notice of the proceedings. The legal team has also stated that AMLO summoned information regarding the balance in the couple’s six-year-old son’s savings account. According to the defense team’s reading of the proceedings, the child could face forfeiture of his savings and potential legal consequences if he does not respond to the authorities’ request to report to their office. If accurate, legal observers say this would raise serious questions about the proportionality of the enforcement measures being applied in the case.

None of the above is an argument for or against Yim Leak’s innocence. That is a matter for the Thai Civil Court, where the case will soon be heard. But for international media outlets that have reported this story primarily through the lens of government press conferences and unnamed official sources, the factual record compiled by his legal team, most recently outlined in a statement published on AP News, raises questions that deserve the same prominence as the original allegations.

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Yim Leak is the chairman of BIC Group, a Southeast Asian conglomerate. “Yim Leak reaffirms his commitment to cooperating fully with Thai authorities through proper legal channels,” the most recent statement reads. “He expresses his hope that the process will adhere to the principle that individuals are presumed innocent until proven otherwise.”

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Burlington Stores, Inc. (BURL) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Burlington Stores, Inc. (BURL) Q1 2026 Earnings Call May 28, 2026 8:30 AM EDT

Company Participants

David Glick – Group Senior VP of Investor Relations & Treasurer
Michael O’Sullivan – CEO & Director
Kristin Wolfe – Executive VP & CFO

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Conference Call Participants

Matthew Boss – JPMorgan Chase & Co, Research Division
Irwin Boruchow – Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Research Division
Lorraine Maikis – BofA Securities, Research Division
Brooke Roach – Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., Research Division
Adrienne Yih-Tennant – Barclays Bank PLC, Research Division
Dana Telsey – Telsey Advisory Group LLC
Mark Altschwager – Robert W. Baird & Co. Incorporated, Research Division
Michael Binetti – Evercore ISI Institutional Equities, Research Division

Presentation

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Operator

Good morning, and thank you for standing by. My name is John, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Burlington Stores Fiscal 2026 First Quarter Operating Results. [Operator Instructions]

I would now like to turn the conference over to David Glick, Group Senior Vice President, Investor Relations and Treasurer for Burlington Stores. Please go ahead.

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David Glick
Group Senior VP of Investor Relations & Treasurer

Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate everyone’s participation in today’s conference call to discuss Burlington’s fiscal 2026 first quarter operating results. Our presenters today are Michael O’Sullivan, our Chief Executive Officer; and Kristin Wolfe, our EVP and Chief Financial Officer.

Before I turn the call over to Michael, I would like to inform listeners that this call may not be transcribed, recorded or broadcast without our expressed permission. A replay of the call will be available until June 4, 2026. We take no responsibility for inaccuracies that may appear in transcripts of this call by third parties. Our remarks and the Q&A that follows are copyrighted today by Burlington Stores. Remarks made on this call concerning future expectations, events, strategies, objectives, trends or projected

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Snowflake Stock Surges 35 Percent on Strong AI-Driven Earnings, Raising Buy Case in 2026

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Snowflake Stock Surges 35 Percent on Strong AI-Driven Earnings, Raising

NEW YORK — Snowflake Inc. shares soared more than 35 percent on Thursday, trading near $236 after the cloud data platform company reported robust first-quarter results fueled by artificial intelligence demand and announced a major partnership with Amazon Web Services, reinforcing its position as a key player in the data and AI infrastructure boom.

The dramatic move came after Snowflake reported fiscal first-quarter revenue of $1.39 billion, exceeding Wall Street expectations, with product revenue reaching $1.334 billion, up 34 percent year-over-year. The company also raised its full-year revenue outlook, citing accelerating AI adoption across its customer base. Analysts widely view the results as a clear inflection point for the company, strengthening the case for buying shares in the current environment.

Snowflake CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy described the quarter as a “clear inflection point,” highlighting net revenue retention of 126 percent and 779 customers now spending more than $1 million annually. The company further boosted investor confidence by announcing a five-year, $6 billion deal with AWS for advanced processors to power agentic AI workloads.

Strong Earnings Beat Drives Optimism

Snowflake’s results demonstrated robust demand for its data cloud platform, particularly products like Snowflake Intelligence and Cortex that help enterprises harness AI. Adjusted earnings per share came in ahead of consensus estimates, while consumption-based revenue models continued to show healthy growth as customers expanded usage.

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The earnings beat triggered a sharp short squeeze and broad buying across growth-oriented investors. Pre-market trading saw shares open significantly higher, with volume spiking as retail and institutional buyers piled in. By mid-morning, the stock had posted one of its largest single-day percentage gains in recent memory.

Analysts reacted positively. Multiple firms raised price targets following the report, with several citing improved visibility into AI-related growth. The consensus 12-month price target now sits around $230–$250, though some bullish forecasts reach as high as $500, implying substantial further upside from current levels after Thursday’s surge.

AI Momentum and Strategic Partnerships

The AWS partnership stands out as a major catalyst. The multi-year deal provides Snowflake with dedicated infrastructure for advanced AI workloads, enhancing its ability to serve large enterprise customers seeking scalable data and AI solutions. This collaboration strengthens Snowflake’s competitive position against rivals in the rapidly expanding cloud data market.

Snowflake has benefited from the broader AI boom, as companies across industries invest heavily in data platforms capable of handling massive datasets for training and inference. Its architecture, which separates storage and compute, has proven particularly attractive for AI use cases requiring flexibility and cost efficiency.

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The company’s focus on consumption-based pricing has allowed it to capture growing usage without forcing large upfront commitments, contributing to high retention rates and expanding customer spend.

Valuation and Investment Thesis

Even after Thursday’s surge, many analysts argue Snowflake remains reasonably valued given its growth trajectory. The stock trades at a premium to traditional software companies but aligns with high-growth AI infrastructure peers. Strong free cash flow generation and a solid balance sheet provide additional downside protection.

For investors considering buying Snowflake stock, the case rests on structural tailwinds in data management and AI. The company’s platform has become foundational for enterprises modernizing their data estates, positioning it for sustained multi-year growth.

Potential buyers may view the post-earnings pullback (if any) as an attractive entry point. Long-term holders benefit from Snowflake’s technological leadership and exposure to one of the strongest secular trends in technology.

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Those leaning toward selling cite the elevated valuation and execution risks in a competitive cloud market. However, the overwhelming analyst consensus remains bullish, with the majority maintaining Buy ratings.

Diversification is recommended. While Snowflake offers high-quality exposure to AI and cloud computing, pairing it with more defensive holdings can help manage volatility inherent in growth stocks.

Broader Cloud and AI Sector Context

Snowflake’s performance reflects strength across the cloud infrastructure sector. Major hyperscalers and data platform providers have reported robust AI-related demand, validating the multi-year investment thesis for the space.

The company continues to face competition from established players like Amazon, Microsoft and Google, as well as specialized rivals. However, its neutral, multi-cloud approach has helped it win customers seeking flexibility across different providers.

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As enterprises increase spending on data platforms to support generative AI initiatives, Snowflake is well-positioned to capture a significant share of this expanding market. Analysts expect continued acceleration in consumption as more workloads migrate to its platform.

Outlook for Remainder of 2026

Management raised full-year guidance following the strong start to fiscal 2027, signaling confidence in sustained momentum. Key upcoming catalysts include progress on product innovation, major customer wins and further AI-related partnerships.

Risks include potential slowdowns in enterprise IT spending, intensified competition or broader macroeconomic headwinds. Geopolitical factors affecting technology supply chains could also introduce volatility.

Overall, analysts project strong revenue and earnings growth for Snowflake through 2026 and beyond. The company’s ability to execute on its AI roadmap will be critical in sustaining investor enthusiasm.

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As of late May 2026, Snowflake represents a high-conviction opportunity for growth-oriented investors. Thursday’s earnings-driven surge validates the market’s optimism around its positioning in the AI data economy.

Investors should monitor quarterly results closely, particularly metrics around consumption growth, net retention and large customer additions. Professional financial advice is recommended before making investment decisions in this dynamic sector.

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