Connect with us
DAPA Banner
DAPA Coin
DAPA
COIN PAYMENT ASSET
PRIVACY · BLOCKDAG · HOMOMORPHIC ENCRYPTION · RUST
ElGamal Encrypted MINE DAPA
🚫 GENESIS SOLD OUT
DAPAPAY COMING

Business

CLSE: Survives Yet Another Stress Test And Proceeds To Capture Upside (BATS:CLSE)

Published

on

CLSE: Survives Yet Another Stress Test And Proceeds To Capture Upside (BATS:CLSE)

This article was written by

Platform Author: Steve Booyens CFA, FRMSeeking Alpha’s readers can expect cross-asset coverage. Steve doesn’t amalgamate headlines to form directional views. Instead, he emphasises signal over noise by assessing macroeconomic, quantitative risk, and fundamental factors.About Pearl Gray: Pearl Gray is an independent research firm and private investment vehicle. Pearl Gray has delivered independent research to a range of clients including Government Entities, Asset Managers, and Retail Investors. The firm’s investment vehicle includes allocation to global equities, fixed income, and real estate. The firm also operates its own trading book with a focus on FICC.Disclaimer: Kindly note that our published content is dispensed as Independent Analysis and Doesn’t Constitute Financial Advice. For any content-related concerns, contact Steve Booyens, CFA, FRM on LinkedIn or leave a message in the comments section.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. 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.

Kindly note that our content on Seeking Alpha and other platforms doesn’t constitute financial advice. Instead, we set the tone for a discussion panel among subscribers. As such, we encourage you to consult a registered financial advisor before committing capital to financial instruments.

Advertisement

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Business

Jersey Mike’s Stacks Up Profit Prior to IPO

Published

on

Heather Haddon hedcut

Jersey Mike’s profits shot up last year, though the sandwich chain said that sales growth has been mixed in recent months as it gears up for a potential public offering this year.

The New Jersey-based sub sandwich maker said Thursday in its initial registration filing that net income jumped to $55 million in its 2025 fiscal year, up from $5 million the year before, due to more royalties and lower founder-related discretionary expenses. Same-store sales grew 2.3% in the 13 weeks ended June 28, down from 3.6% in the previous year’s period.

New marketing and a chicken salad offering have helped in June, the chain said. “We are building a brand with global, long-term endurance,” CEO Charlie Morrison said in the fling.

Continue Reading

Business

Nasdaq Falls After June Hiring Misses Expectations

Published

on

Stocks Fall After Trump Picks Kevin Warsh as Next Fed Chair

Stocks were mixed Friday after June jobs data pointed to slower-than-expected growth in the labor market.

The U.S. added 57,000 jobs in June, down from May and roughly half the 115,000 jobs that economists expected to see added. Treasury yields slipped as investors took it as a sign the Fed could be more reluctant to raise interest rates; the dollar also weakened.

Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

Continue Reading

Business

The Nasdaq 100’s Fear Gauge Just Spiked

Published

on

Stocks Little Changed After Fed Decision

The stock market’s fear gauge may be resting on a beach somewhere, but the Nasdaq 100’s just woke up.

The Cboe NASDAQ-100 Volatility Index swung from about 26.13 to 28.19 in the past hour or so. The measure of expected 30-day volatility in the Nasdaq 100 was on track to snap a three-day losing streak.

The CBOE Volatility Index, or VIX, also spiked, but it’s still at 16.72. A reading below 20 on the VIX typically signals lower volatility. Going back to 2021, the VIX has averaged a close of 19.35.

Continue Reading

Business

Russia stocks lower at close of trade; MOEX Russia Index down 0.62%

Published

on


Russia stocks lower at close of trade; MOEX Russia Index down 0.62%

Continue Reading

Business

Comcast Spinoff Could Rejuvenate Its Depressed Stock

Published

on

Comcast Spinoff Could Rejuvenate Its Depressed Stock

Comcast Spinoff Could Rejuvenate Its Depressed Stock

Continue Reading

Business

Salah Injury Doubt as Socceroos Chase Historic First Knockout Win

Published

on

Christian Pulisic

DALLAS — Two nations that have never won a World Cup knockout match meet Friday at Dallas Stadium with a place in the round of 16 on the line, and the contest that should be one of the round of 32’s most evenly matched fixtures has been further complicated by significant injury concerns surrounding Egypt’s captain and all-time greatest player.

Mohamed Salah, the 34-year-old who lit up Egypt’s group stage campaign with his creativity and goal threat, is a major doubt for Friday’s match after suffering a hamstring strain in the final minutes of Egypt’s 1-1 draw with Iran. Salah was withdrawn in the second half of that match and did not train with the rest of the Egyptian squad on Monday, focusing instead on rehabilitation work as he attempts to recover sufficiently to take some part against the Socceroos. His status remains uncertain heading into kickoff at 2 p.m. ET.

The potential absence of Salah would be a significant blow to an Egyptian side that has leaned heavily on his creative output throughout the tournament. Salah generated 11 chances for teammates during the group stage, a figure that placed him second among all players in the tournament during that phase, behind only Belgium’s Leandro Trossard, who created 13. Without him, Egypt lacks a comparable creative presence capable of consistently unlocking organized defensive structures, and Australia’s compact shape has proven very difficult to break down throughout the tournament.

The injury concerns extend beyond Salah. Left-back Ahmed Fatouh has been ruled out with a hamstring tear of his own, while central defender Mohamed Abdelmonem is also listed as a doubt due to an ankle injury. The combination of those two absences could leave Egypt vulnerable across the defensive backline even as they attempt to manage without their captain and primary attacking threat.

Advertisement

Australia, meanwhile, arrives in Dallas without full-back Jacob Italiano and experienced midfielder Mathew Leckie, both of whom suffered tournament-ending injuries during the group stage. Despite losing both players, coach Tony Popovic is expected to continue with Aziz Behich at left-back and Jordan Bos on the opposite side of the defensive line, maintaining the structure that has given Australia its characteristic compactness throughout the competition.

Australia’s group stage results tell a story of a team that has not yet fully found its attacking rhythm. The Socceroos opened with a 2-0 win over Türkiye, following up with a 2-0 loss to the United States and a goalless draw against Paraguay. Of all sides that finished in the top two of their group at this year’s competition, only Croatia’s 24 shots were fewer than Australia’s 26, and no qualifying side generated a lower overall expected goals figure at 2.1. In their final two group matches, Australia managed only 17 combined shots with a total expected goals value of 0.9, a figure suggesting the team will need to create opportunities more efficiently in single-elimination play if they are to progress.

Australian striker Tete Yengi acknowledged the challenge of scoring against organized opponents while expressing confidence that the knockout format would unlock his team’s offensive output.

“There haven’t been easy games. We’ve been against good opposition, good defensive organisation, so it’s difficult to score,” Yengi said. “But we’re through now to the knockout stages, so we have to score now to win, so we’ll do that I think.”

Advertisement

Despite Egypt entering as narrow favorites according to Opta’s supercomputer modeling, which ran 25,000 pre-match simulations and produced Egypt winning 39.7% of them against Australia’s 28.4% and a draw occurring 31.9% of the time, the fixture is statistically the closest matchup of the entire round of 32. Egypt’s overall probability of advancing across all possible outcomes including extra time and penalties stands at 55.8%, compared with Australia’s 44.2%, making this genuinely the most open single-elimination contest of the knockout phase.

The defensive quality Australia brings to the match is genuine and measurable. Opta’s data shows that the average expected goals value of shots the Socceroos allowed in the group stage was just 0.052 per attempt, the second-lowest figure at the tournament behind Spain. Australia’s defensive organization has been the consistent thread through the competition even as the attack has sputtered, and their record against African opposition at World Cups is entirely positive: a 1-1 draw with Ghana in 2010 and a 1-0 win over Tunisia in 2022.

The goalkeeper story running through Australia’s campaign adds another dimension. Popovic’s surprise decision to bench veteran starter Matthew Ryan, the team’s long-serving captain, in favor of the inexperienced Patrick Beach has been one of the tournament’s more unexpected individual subplots. Beach, who plays domestically for Melbourne City and arrived at the tournament with just five international caps, has responded with two clean sheet performances and has been sharp in the moments that required him to make saves under pressure. His performance Friday could be decisive in a match where both teams are likely to be cautious in how they approach the first half.

Egypt’s group stage run was genuinely historic for the country. Their three-game unbeaten sequence, built on a 3-1 victory over New Zealand in which Salah scored, a hard-fought goalless draw with New Zealand’s opponents and the 1-1 result against Iran, represented the longest unbeaten run Egypt has ever had at a World Cup, and they scored as many goals across those three games as they had in their seven previous appearances at the tournament combined.

Advertisement

For the winner, a round of 16 matchup against Argentina awaits in Atlanta on July 7. That prospect of facing Lionel Messi and the reigning champions has been acknowledged in both camps’ public comments without requiring any particular elaboration. Both Australia and Egypt would represent significant obstacles to Argentina’s title defense regardless of how the bracket reads on paper, but getting there requires winning Friday’s match first.

The two nations have met just twice in senior competition previously, with Australia winning a 1987 tournament encounter on penalties and Egypt winning a 2010 friendly 3-0. Five members of the current Australian squad were also part of the team eliminated from the Tokyo Olympics by Egypt 2-0. That history is modest enough to offer little guidance for what happens when the referee blows the opening whistle in Dallas.

Continue Reading

Business

Canfor completes acquisition of PinkWood I-joist facility

Published

on


Canfor completes acquisition of PinkWood I-joist facility

Continue Reading

Business

ASKUL Corporation 2026 Q4 – Results – Earnings Call Presentation (OTCMKTS:ASKLF) 2026-07-03

Published

on

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

This article was written by

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

Continue Reading

Business

Firefighters battle blazes in southern France after European heatwave

Published

on

Firefighters battle blazes in southern France after European heatwave


Firefighters battle blazes in southern France after European heatwave

Continue Reading

Business

Largest US power grid PJM orders emergency curbs as electricity use nears record peak

Published

on

Largest US power grid PJM orders emergency curbs as electricity use nears record peak


Largest US power grid PJM orders emergency curbs as electricity use nears record peak

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025