Business
Burgum optimistic on Venezuela energy partnership with America
FOX Business’ Edward Lawrence speaks with U.S. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum about his meetings with Venezuelan oil and gas executives on ‘The Big Money Show.’
Interior Secretary Doug Burgum told FOX Business in an exclusive interview from Venezuela on Wednesday that the relationship between the U.S. and the South American country is moving at “Trump speed,” as their new energy partnership is on track to a “golden age of abundance.”
Burgum told FOX Business that “you can’t argue with geography,” as American companies are showing they want to invest in Venezuela. He said this would have positive impacts on energy affordability in the U.S. and job creation in both the U.S. and Venezuela.
“If you’re shipping oil to a Gulf of America refinery, it’s five days [from Venezuela]. They were shipping some of their product for 40 days around the world,” he said of Venezuela. “It is so beneficial to both the U.S. and Venezuela for us to have a tight synergistic partnership around energy and around minerals just like we did 25 years ago.”
“This literally could be one of the richest countries in the world, and to have them as our friend, our ally and our trading partner, that is absolutely terrific,” Burgum said, noting that the relationship is what the U.S. needs to keep energy prices down for Americans.
VENEZUELA RELEASES ALL KNOWN AMERICAN DETAINEES FOLLOWING MADURO CAPTURE AND GOVERNMENT TAKEOVER

Venezuela’s interim President Delcy Rodriguez and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum deliver statements at Miraflores Palace, in Caracas, March 4, 2026. (Reuters/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria)
Burgum said he is optimistic after meeting with Venezuela’s leadership and companies.
“When the U.S. is entering a gold age under President Trump, allies like Venezuela become a strong partner, our economies get back to the way they used to be integrated, they can ride right on our coattails and have their own golden age of abundance,” he said.

Interior Secretary Doug Burgum in Caracas, Venezuela, March 4, 2026. (Reuters/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria)
Burgum was meeting with oil and gas executives, including Chevron and Shell, along with Venezuelan business leaders during his trip to highlight critical mineral partnerships.
TRUMP SIGNALS LONG ROAD AHEAD IN VENEZUELA IN HIS BOLDEST INTERVENTIONIST MOVE YET
On Thursday, Shell signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Venezuelan government to start liquified natural gas (LNG) production in the Dragon gas field.
Two American service companies, KPR and Baker, and one Venezuelan company, Vepica, will also sign onto the memorandum, so work can begin on oil and natural gas production.

The heavy oil upgrader facility in the Orinoco Oil Belt near Cerro Negro, Venezuela, Dec. 4, 2004. (Ed Lallo/Getty Images)
A senior administration official told FOX Business the LNG from Venezuela could eventually help support power to Europe.
The Trump administration wants to expand access to oil production in the country, ultimately changing the course of global energy supply chains and reducing reliance on China.
Burgum’s visit comes weeks after the Trump administration completed its first sale of Venezuelan oil, valued at $500 million.
The deal comes after Trump announced interim authorities in Venezuela would be turning over between 30 million and 50 million barrels of sanctioned oil to the U.S., worth about $2.8 billion at current market prices.
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Venezuela holds more than 300 billion barrels of proven oil reserves, nearly quadruple those of the U.S.
Fox News Digital’s Anders Hagstrom and Fox Business’ Ed Lawrence contributed to this report.
Business
Hercules Capital Vs. Oxford Square – 50% Alpha In 17 Easy To Understand Charts (NYSE:HTGC)
Arbitrage Trader, aka Denislav Iliev has been day trading for 15+ years and leads a team of 40 analysts. They identify mispriced investments in fixed-income and closed-end funds based on simple-to-understand financial logic.
Denislav leads the investing group Trade With Beta, features of the service include: frequent picks for mispriced preferred stocks and baby bonds, weekly reviews of 1200+ equities, IPO previews, hedging strategies, an actively managed portfolio, and chat for discussion. Learn more.
Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial short position in the shares of OXSQ either through stock ownership, options, or other derivatives. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.
I have a long position in HTGC
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Business
US House committee wants travel companies to disclose AI use for pricing

US House committee wants travel companies to disclose AI use for pricing
Business
Tesla Stock Dips Slightly in Early Trading Amid Robotaxi Optimism and Analyst Upgrades
Tesla Inc.’s shares edged lower in early Thursday trading, reflecting a modest pullback after a strong gain the previous session, as investors weighed fresh optimism around the company’s autonomous driving and robotics ambitions against ongoing regulatory scrutiny and market volatility.

Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) opened around $401.57 and was trading at approximately $403.50 to $403.64 by mid-morning Eastern Time, down about 0.6% from Wednesday’s close of $405.94. The electric vehicle giant’s market capitalization hovered near $1.52 trillion, with intraday volume exceeding 12 million shares.
The modest decline followed a 3.44% surge on Wednesday, when shares closed at $405.94 after climbing from an open of $397.85 and ranging between $394.58 and $408.33. That rebound came on the heels of Bank of America’s decision to reinstate coverage of Tesla with a “Buy” rating and a $460 price target, implying roughly 14% upside from recent levels.
BofA analysts highlighted Tesla’s leadership in consumer autonomy, citing advances in Full Self-Driving (FSD) technology and its robotics ventures as key drivers. “Tesla is the current leader in consumer autonomy,” the firm noted in a client report, pointing to potential market share gains in a shifting regulatory landscape for electric vehicles and autonomous systems.
The upgrade injected fresh confidence into a stock that has navigated choppy waters in 2026. After hitting a 52-week high of $498.83 in late December 2025, TSLA has pulled back but remains well above its 52-week low of $214.25, achieved earlier in 2025. Year-to-date performance has shown resilience, with the stock up significantly from earlier lows amid broader enthusiasm for AI-integrated mobility solutions.
Tesla’s momentum stems partly from Elon Musk’s bold vision for artificial general intelligence (AGI) and humanoid robots, positioning the company beyond traditional automotive manufacturing. Recent commentary from Musk has emphasized Tesla’s role in leading AGI development, with ambitious timelines for robotaxi deployment and Optimus humanoid robot production.
Sales data has provided additional tailwinds. Reports indicate robust growth in Europe during February, suggesting a potential turnaround in key markets where EV adoption had faced headwinds from competition and economic pressures. Strong deliveries and expanding energy storage business have bolstered revenue streams, with trailing twelve-month figures showing solid contributions from non-auto segments.
Yet challenges persist. Tesla faces a critical deadline on March 9 to submit detailed data on its Full Self-Driving system to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), part of an ongoing investigation into traffic incidents and system performance. Analysts warn that any adverse findings could pressure the stock, particularly as regulatory oversight intensifies for autonomous technologies.
Wall Street remains divided on Tesla’s valuation. The stock trades at a lofty price-to-earnings ratio exceeding 377, reflecting bets on future growth from robotaxis, AI and energy rather than current automotive margins. Some analysts express caution over execution risks in Musk’s robotics push, while others see untapped value in software and autonomy.
” Tesla’s self-driving effort could be worth more than double its EV division,” one market analysis suggested, underscoring the narrative shift toward AI and robotics as primary value drivers.
Broader market context also influences TSLA. With interest rates and inflation dynamics in flux, growth stocks like Tesla remain sensitive to macroeconomic signals. However, renewed analyst confidence and positive sales indicators have helped stabilize sentiment.
Looking ahead, Tesla’s first-quarter earnings, expected around late April, will provide further clarity on delivery numbers, margins and progress on Cybercab and Optimus initiatives. Prediction markets and investor forums show mixed conviction on near-term milestones, but many view dips as buying opportunities amid long-term upside potential.
Tesla’s stock has historically been volatile, driven by product launches, regulatory news and Musk’s public statements. Wednesday’s gain illustrated how quickly sentiment can shift on positive catalysts, while Thursday’s early softness serves as a reminder of profit-taking and broader caution.
Investors continue to monitor developments closely, balancing enthusiasm for Tesla’s transformative technologies against execution hurdles and competitive pressures in the EV space.
As of mid-morning trading on March 5 (U.S. time), with markets still open, Tesla shares showed resilience near $403, down modestly but holding key support levels. The coming weeks, particularly around the NHTSA deadline and quarterly updates, could prove pivotal in determining whether 2026 marks a consolidation phase or renewed breakout for the EV pioneer.
Business
Hightower Buys $5 Billion RIA, Expands Employee Advisor Unit
Hightower Buys $5 Billion RIA, Expands Employee Advisor Unit
Business
Rupee soars after RBI comes out firing in support
The rupee gained due to what traders described as ‘significant’ interventions by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). It closed at 91.60/$1 on Thursday, up from its previous close of 92.15/$1.
The rupee had gained to 91.41/$1 earlier in the session.
The strength in the rupee comes despite an increase in crude oil prices and the dollar index. Brent crude oil was trading at $84 per barrel, while the dollar index was at 99. The rupee traded in a narrow 20 paise range of 91.64/$1 and 91.41/$1.
Traders expect RBI intervention to continue on Friday and the range is expected to be 91.25/$1 to 91.75/$1 on the last day of the week. “RBI did not let the rupee go past 91.61/$1, even though there was significant dollar demand. The central bank also intervened before 9:00 am, which made the currency open at 91.56/$1 in domestic markets,” said Anil Bhansali, head of treasury, Finrex Treasury Advisors.
This aggressive intervention by RBI comes after the rupee touched a record low of 92.31/$1 on Wednesday.
Traders are, however, unsure of how long RBI will provide such large interventions, as dollar sales to defend the rupee in the currency market drain domestic rupee liquidity. “We have seen this in the past, where there is stiff intervention on one day and then the intervention abruptly stops. RBI also cannot keep intervening as aggressively as it did today (Thursday), because it then impacts domestic liquidity,” said a chief dealer at a PSU bank.
The central bank’s latest weekly data showed its foreign currency reserves were at $724 billion, covering about 11 months of imports.
Business
Oil Prices Surge Amid Escalating Middle East Conflict as WTI Crude Nears $79
Crude oil prices climbed sharply in early Asian trading Friday, extending a volatile week driven by the ongoing U.S.-Israel military campaign against Iran and retaliatory actions that have disrupted global supply expectations. Benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures rose more than 5% to hover near $78.50 per barrel, while Brent crude, the international standard, approached $84 amid fears of prolonged supply risks in the Persian Gulf.

WTI crude for April delivery was trading at approximately $78.47 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, up $3.81 or 5.10% from Thursday’s close of $74.66. The contract opened at $76.15 and ranged between a low of $74.97 and a high of $78.54 in overnight and early session activity. Brent crude futures on the Intercontinental Exchange gained around 3% to trade near $83.99 to $84.00 per barrel, reflecting a $2.59 to $2.60 increase or roughly 3.2% from the prior settlement.
The sharp moves come as the conflict in the Middle East enters its second week, with reports of Iranian forces targeting a U.S.-registered tanker in the northern Persian Gulf adding fresh upward pressure. Iran’s Tasnim news agency cited missile strikes on the vessel, heightening concerns over potential blockades or disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly 20% of global oil trade flows. Analysts warn that any sustained closure or significant interference could push prices toward triple digits.
The rally has already translated into higher costs at the pump for American drivers. The national average gasoline price reached $3.25 per gallon Thursday, up 30 cents in less than a week and a 9% jump from pre-conflict levels around $2.98, according to AAA data. Industry observers note that every $1 increase in crude typically adds about 2.4 cents per gallon to retail fuel prices, though the relationship can vary with refining margins and regional factors.
Market sentiment has whipsawed since the U.S. and Israel launched strikes on Iranian targets Saturday, initially sending oil surging as much as 11% in early sessions. Brent opened around $81.60 early in the week before climbing further, while WTI jumped 8% at one point. Trading volume spiked to record levels on the Intercontinental Exchange, with 12.7 million energy futures and options contracts changing hands Monday alone as investors rushed to hedge or speculate on the volatility.
U.S. crude producers have moved quickly to lock in elevated prices through hedging strategies, securing gains amid the uncertainty. Diesel futures outperformed both crude and gasoline earlier in the week, settling nearly 12% higher at one stage due to tighter supply dynamics in refined products.
Broader economic implications are mounting. Federal Reserve officials are monitoring the oil shock closely, with some suggesting it could prompt a pause in recent interest rate cuts or even force reconsideration of policy easing if inflation pressures reemerge. President-elect-aligned figures and market watchers have highlighted affordability concerns ahead of midterm elections, as higher energy costs ripple through household budgets and transportation expenses.
Despite the upward momentum, some analysts caution that the spike may moderate if the conflict de-escalates or if alternative supplies from non-Middle East producers ramp up. Goldman Sachs recently raised its Q2 Brent forecast to the low $80s, reflecting a more bullish near-term view but acknowledging execution risks. Other forecasts suggest Brent could average around $74 in Q1 before potential stabilization, though current events have rendered such projections outdated.
Global stock markets have shown mixed reactions, with Asian shares rebounding modestly after earlier losses while U.S. equities faced pressure. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped significantly earlier in the week as oil’s climb weighed on growth-sensitive sectors. Energy stocks have benefited, with producers and service companies posting gains on higher commodity realizations.
The conflict’s trajectory remains the dominant driver. Reports indicate continued U.S. strikes in Iran, with Tehran vowing retaliation that could further imperil shipping lanes. Investors are watching for any diplomatic breakthroughs or military de-escalation signals, though none appeared imminent as of early Friday.
Longer-term, the episode underscores vulnerabilities in global energy markets. Disruptions have spotlighted reliance on Strait of Hormuz transit and prompted renewed discussion of strategic reserves and diversification efforts. U.S. production, already at robust levels, offers some buffer, but export infrastructure constraints and refining capacity limit immediate offsets.
Gasoline and heating oil prices have followed crude higher, with RBOB gasoline futures up around 3.5% in recent sessions. Natural gas has seen milder moves, trading near $2.93 with modest gains.
As trading continues into the U.S. session, volatility is expected to persist. The coming days could prove decisive, with potential for further spikes if supply threats materialize or stabilization if containment efforts succeed. For now, oil markets remain firmly in risk-on mode, pricing in geopolitical premiums that have lifted benchmarks to multi-month highs.
The surge marks a dramatic reversal from earlier 2026 levels, when WTI hovered in the mid-$60s amid ample supply and demand concerns. Year-to-date, crude has gained significantly, though the latest leg higher reflects war-driven speculation rather than fundamentals alone.
Market participants continue to brace for headline risk, balancing enthusiasm for producer profits against broader economic headwinds from sustained high energy costs.
Business
GoPro, Inc. (GPRO) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript
Operator
Good afternoon. Thank you for attending the GoPro Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2025 Earnings Call. My name is Cameron, and I’ll be your moderator for today. [Operator Instructions].
I would now like to pass the conference over to your host, Robin Stoecker, Director of Corporate Communications with GoPro. You may proceed.
Robin Stoecker
Director of Corporate Communications
Thank you, Cameron. Good afternoon, and welcome to GoPro’s Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Earnings Conference Call. With me today are GoPro’s CEO, Nicholas Woodman; and CFO and COO, Brian McGee.
Today’s agenda will include brief commentary from Nick and Brian, followed by Q&A. For detailed information about our fourth quarter and full year 2025 performance as well as outlook, please read our Q4 and full year 2025 earnings press release and management commentary we posted to the Investor Relations section of GoPro’s website.
Before I pass the call to Nick, I’d like to remind everybody that our remarks today may include forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements and all other statements that are not historical facts, are not guarantees of future performance and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, which may cause actual results to differ materially.
Additionally, any forward-looking statements made today are based on assumptions as of today. This means that results could change at any time, and we do not undertake any obligation to update these statements as a result of new information or future events.
To better understand the risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ from our commentary, we refer you to our most
Business
Atea Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 2025 Q4 – Results – Earnings Call Presentation (NASDAQ:AVIR) 2026-03-05
Seeking Alpha’s transcripts team is responsible for the development of all of our transcript-related projects. We currently publish thousands of quarterly earnings calls per quarter on our site and are continuing to grow and expand our coverage. The purpose of this profile is to allow us to share with our readers new transcript-related developments. Thanks, SA Transcripts Team
Business
Relief rally lifts Sensex, Nifty on hopes of de-escalation in Iran-Israel war
NSE’s Nifty rose 285 points, or 1.2%, to close at 24,765. BSE’s Sensex gained 899 points, or 1.1%, to end at 80,015. Both indices had fallen close to 2.7% in the past two trading sessions of the truncated week, with the military conflict in West Asia deepening the risk-off mood. Indian markets had remained shut on Tuesday on account of Holi.
Elsewhere in Asia, Japan rose 1.9%, China advanced 0.6%, Hong Kong gained 0.3%, South Korea jumped 9.6% and Taiwan rose 2.6%.
“The sharp rally in the second half of the session was driven by expectations of potential de-escalation in geopolitical tensions,” said Aamar Deo Singh, senior vice president of research at Angel One.
Technical indicators were also oversold, which added to the day’s rebound. “The pullback was primarily a textbook mean-reversion event driven by deeply oversold technicals and a violent short-covering squeeze in the derivatives segment,” said Bhavya Shah, technical research analyst at Stoxbox.
Shah said based on intraday price action, the index consolidated through the first-half of the session before breaking out past 2:15 PM, which triggered cascading stop-losses for intraday bearish bets.
The Nifty India Volatility Index, or VIX-popularly known as the market’s fear gauge- cooled 15.5% to 17.86 on Thursday after rising more than 50% earlier this week. Broader market indices outperformed the benchmarks on Thursday, with Nifty Midcap 150 gaining 1.5% and Nifty Smallcap 250 rising 1.4%. Of the total 4,397 stocks traded on BSE, 2,749 advanced and 1,515 declined.
FPIs net sold shares worth ₹3,752.5 crore, while domestic institutional investors were buyers worth ₹5,153 crore.
Analysts are hesitant to conclude that the recovery is permanent. “The near-term outlook remains highly volatile with a sell-on-rise underlying bias,” said Shah. “Traders should not conflate a short squeeze with a new bull phase.”
He said traders should watch the resistance level of 24,850 on the Nifty, below which the index is likely to see a resumption of the prevailing downtrend toward 24,300.
Business
Asia-Pacific Financial Institutions Face Rising Challenges Amid 2026 Regulatory Shifts
Financial services firms across the Asia Pacific are facing a critical inflection point in 2026, as regulators across the region accelerate efforts to address the growing risks posed by artificial intelligence, digital assets, and financial crime, according to Deloitte’s Asia Pacific Financial Regulatory Outlook 2026, published by the firm’s Asia Pacific Centre for Regulatory Strategy (ACRS).
Key takeaways
- Financial services firms in the Asia Pacific must move from reactive compliance to proactive regulatory leadership, especially as AI and digital assets reshape the industry faster than existing frameworks can keep up.
- Regulatory fragmentation across the region is no longer sustainable, as financial risks in AI, digital assets, and financial crime are global by nature and demand cross-border coordination.
- Boards and senior executives that treat emerging threats like financial crime and AI governance as back-office issues rather than strategic priorities risk being caught ofguard in an increasingly complex regulatory environment.
The report, developed in collaboration with Deloitte counterparts across EMEA and the Americas, offers one of the most comprehensive analyses of the regional regulatory environment to date, and its findings carry urgent implications for board members and senior executives across the financial sector.
AI and Technology Top the Regulatory Agenda
Artificial intelligence has moved from emerging technology to core operational infrastructure across the region’s financial institutions, embedding itself in credit decisions, fraud detection, and customer onboarding systems. Regulators, however, are struggling to keep pace.
The Deloitte report identifies AI governance as one of the defining regulatory challenges of the year, warning that firms without robust explainability standards and model risk frameworks face growing exposure as oversight frameworks tighten across multiple markets.
Digital Assets Enter the Regulatory Mainstream
Once dismissed as speculative, digital assets have secured a permanent place in the regulatory conversation across the Asia Pacific.
The 2026 outlook dedicates a full chapter to the sector, reflecting the rapid maturation of licensing regimes, custody standards, and cross-border frameworks across the region. Firms that have yet to develop a clear regulatory strategy for digital assets are running out of time to do so.
Financial Crime Risks Grow Alongside Innovation
As financial institutions adopt new technologies and expand into digital markets, regulators are raising expectations around financial crime compliance.
The report warns that the surface area for illicit activity grows in parallel with innovation, placing renewed pressure on firms to treat anti-money laundering and financial security as frontline strategic priorities rather than back-office functions.
The Deloitte report concludes that the financial services industry across the Asia Pacific must adapt and innovate to meet the evolving needs of its stakeholders and contribute to the region’s long-term success.
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