Business
Compass, Inc. (COMP) Shares Edge Higher Ahead of Q4 Earnings Release
Compass, Inc., the largest residential real estate brokerage in the United States by sales volume, saw its stock close slightly higher on Feb. 25 as investors positioned for the company’s fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 earnings report, due after market close on Feb. 26.
Compass (NYSE: COMP) ended the trading session at $9.51, up 0.85% or 8 cents, on volume of nearly 19.7 million shares. The stock has traded in a 52-week range of $5.66 to $13.95, reflecting volatility in the housing market amid fluctuating interest rates and economic uncertainty.

Analysts expect the tech-enabled real estate platform to report revenue of approximately $1.64 billion for the quarter ended Dec. 31, 2025, representing about 21% growth from the year-ago period, according to consensus estimates. Earnings per share are projected at a loss of 6 cents, an improvement from prior-year results but still indicative of ongoing profitability challenges in a competitive sector.
The company has shown resilience in recent quarters. In the third quarter of 2025, Compass reported record revenue of $1.85 billion, up 23.6% year over year, surpassing the high end of its guidance. Adjusted EBITDA reached $93.6 million, an 80% increase from $52 million in the prior-year quarter, while free cash flow grew 124% to $73.6 million. The results highlighted strong agent recruitment, with 851 gross principal agents joining—the highest quarterly total ever—and market share gains despite a sluggish overall housing market.
For the full year 2024 (the most recent complete annual data available in filings), Compass generated $5.63 billion in revenue, up from $4.89 billion in 2023. The company achieved positive free cash flow in every quarter of 2024, totaling $105.8 million for the year, and strengthened its balance sheet with significant cash reserves.
Compass has pursued aggressive growth through acquisitions and strategic moves. In late 2025, the company announced an all-stock merger with Anywhere Real Estate Inc., valued at around $4.2 billion, aimed at consolidating its position in a fragmented industry. The deal has progressed with shareholder approvals and regulatory steps, though it faced scrutiny, including questions from lawmakers about antitrust implications. Recent reports indicated the transaction avoided deeper Justice Department review amid internal agency dynamics.
The company also tapped capital markets in early 2026, announcing and upsizing a convertible senior notes offering to $850 million. Proceeds supported merger-related activities and general corporate purposes, including bolstering liquidity.
Challenges persist. Compass has navigated legal hurdles in the evolving real estate landscape, including a failed bid in February 2026 for an injunction against Zillow’s listing access standards, which could impact online home listings visibility. Broader industry pressures, such as commission structure changes stemming from National Association of Realtors settlements, have weighed on brokerages.
Despite these headwinds, Compass has outpaced market transaction growth in recent periods. In Q3 2025, transactions rose 21.5% year over year, compared with a 2% market increase, driving organic revenue growth of 11%. Analysts maintain a generally positive outlook, with an average 12-month price target around $14.45—suggesting more than 50% upside from recent levels—and ratings leaning toward “buy.”
The upcoming earnings call, scheduled for 5 p.m. ET on Feb. 26, will provide insights into Q4 performance, 2026 guidance, and updates on integration efforts post-merger. Management has emphasized cost discipline, agent retention, and technology investments in its end-to-end platform, which empowers agents with digital tools for buyers and sellers.
Compass operates as a leading tech-powered residential real estate services firm, with more than 33,000 agents as of late 2024 and gross transaction value exceeding $216 billion annually in recent periods. Its model focuses on outpacing industry growth through innovation and scale.
Investors will watch closely for signs of sustained momentum in a housing sector sensitive to mortgage rates and economic conditions. While the stock has declined about 30% over the past month amid broader market fluctuations, it remains up modestly year over year.
As Compass prepares to release results, the report could serve as a barometer for the real estate brokerage sector’s recovery trajectory in 2026.
Business
Your EBITDA Isn’t What You Think It Is
And Sophisticated Buyers Already Know It Before You Sit Down
There is a conversation that happens thousands of times a year across Canada. It unfolds over golf rounds, dinner tables, and quiet advisory meetings between business owners and the people they trust most. It sounds something like this: “We’re doing about three million in EBITDA.” The number lands with authority. It carries the weight of years of work, sacrifice, and compounding effort. It feels like truth.
But somewhere beneath the confidence, a quieter voice exists. One that remembers the personal vehicle expenses run through the company. The above-market management fee paid to a holding entity. The one-time equipment write-off that, if you are being precise, was not exactly one-time. The family member on payroll whose role would not be backfilled by an arm’s-length hire at the same cost.
That quieter voice does not speak at dinner. But in a formal sale process, it eventually must.
The gap between the EBITDA a founder believes in and the EBITDA a buyer will actually underwrite is not simply a financial discrepancy. It is a credibility problem, a trust problem, and ultimately a multiple problem. Understanding how that gap forms, why it quietly widens over years of owner-operator decisions, and how to close it before a deal process begins is one of the most strategically valuable things a business owner can do in the years preceding an exit.
The Number That Feels Real But Cannot Survive Diligence
Most private business owners arrive at their EBITDA figure through a combination of internal management accounts, year-end tax filings, and a set of verbal adjustments they carry in their heads like trusted companions. The legal dispute from three years ago. The daughter who was on salary during university and has since moved on. The company-paid memberships that are genuinely optional and personal in nature.
Each of these adjustments may be entirely legitimate in isolation. Normalized or adjusted EBITDA is an accepted and expected starting point in mid-market mergers and acquisitions. Buyers understand that owner-operated businesses run with a degree of personal overlap. The issue is not the existence of addbacks. The issue is how those addbacks are presented, supported, and stress-tested when a sophisticated buyer deploys a quality of earnings team against your financials.
A quality of earnings analysis, which has become near-universal in transactions above two million dollars in enterprise value, does not accept your verbal summary. It reconstructs earnings from source documents. It traces cash flows. It interrogates year-over-year patterns for inconsistencies. It distinguishes between genuinely non-recurring items and expenses that have been classified as one-time repeatedly across multiple years.
When addbacks are undocumented, inconsistently applied, or narratively weak, they begin to erode. Sometimes gradually. Sometimes in a single diligence meeting that reshapes the entire deal structure.
Why Owners Overestimate Their Own Numbers
This is not a character failing. It is a natural consequence of how owner-operators experience their own businesses over time.
When you run a company for fifteen years, certain financial decisions become invisible to you. The SUV that is 80 percent personal becomes “the company truck.” The annual retreat to a resort that blends strategy with leisure becomes “an offsite.” The consulting fee paid to a spouse who contributes meaningfully but whose market-rate compensation would be a fraction of what is being paid becomes a normal line item in the overhead.
None of these decisions are inherently problematic. Many are prudent tax management strategies entirely appropriate in an owner-operated context. The problem surfaces when those same decisions are presented to a buyer without translation. Without the narrative infrastructure to explain them, contextualize them, and demonstrate that they will not recur under new ownership, they become liabilities rather than addbacks.
The psychological phenomenon at play here is what behavioral economists call the endowment effect. We assign higher value to things we own and have built than an objective outside observer would assign to them. This applies to businesses as directly as it applies to real estate or collectibles. A founder who has poured identity into a company will, almost always, unconsciously calibrate its value upward. The buyers across the table do not share that emotional history. They are underwriting future cash flows, not rewarding past effort.
The Diligence Room and the Anatomy of a Collapsed Deal
Picture a deal that looked clean on paper. A manufacturing company generating what the owner reported as $2.8 million in normalized EBITDA. The initial letter of intent was signed at a seven-times multiple. Enterprise value of $19.6 million. Life-changing money.
Six weeks into diligence, the buyer’s quality of earnings team begins circling three categories of addbacks totaling $620,000. A related-party lease paid at a rate 40 percent above market comparables. A “one-time” consulting engagement that appeared in each of the prior four years under slightly different descriptions. And an owner salary addback that assumed a replacement CEO could be hired for $180,000 annually, when the actual market rate for the operational role being performed was closer to $280,000.
None of these were fabrications. They were real items, poorly documented, inconsistently framed, and not pre-emptively addressed before the buyer’s team arrived with questions. The adjusted EBITDA settled at $2.18 million after negotiation. At the same multiple, the enterprise value dropped to $15.3 million. Four million dollars in value, dissolved not because the business was worth less, but because the financial presentation could not defend what it was claiming.
This is the scenario that keeps owners awake. Not the negotiation itself. The feeling of having the numbers taken apart in a room where you cannot control the narrative.
Inconsistent Reporting and What It Signals to a Buyer
Beyond specific addback disputes, there is a broader credibility signal that buyers read before a single addback is ever discussed. It is the internal consistency of your financials over time.
When revenue recognition policies shift between years without explanation, when gross margin percentages fluctuate in ways that do not align with cost input changes, when owner compensation appears in three different line items across three different years of financials, a pattern emerges. And that pattern communicates something specific to an experienced acquirer.
It communicates that the business has been managed for tax efficiency rather than for clarity. That the financials have been optimized for minimizing reportable income rather than for demonstrating value. This is an entirely rational strategy for an ongoing business owner with no near-term plans to sell. It becomes a significant obstacle when the goal changes.
The institutional buyers, private equity groups, and strategic acquirers who operate at this level of the market have developed finely tuned instincts for what they call “hair on the deal.” Inconsistent reporting, even when individually explainable, creates a cumulative impression of opacity. And opacity is expensive. It either reduces the price or adds conditions and escrow structures that erode net proceeds.
The Addback Problem Is Not Financial, It Is Narrative
Here is a reframe that most business owners find genuinely clarifying: the addback problem is not primarily an accounting problem. It is a storytelling problem.
A well-presented addback schedule does not simply list expenses and declare them non-recurring. It builds a case. Each item is supported by documentation. Each item is explained in plain language that a non-specialist buyer can follow. Each item is anticipated before the buyer asks about it, which shifts the dynamic from reactive defense to proactive transparency.
Consider two ways of presenting the same addback. Version one appears as a line in a spreadsheet: “Owner personal expenses, $147,000.” Version two appears as a documented schedule with a brief explanatory note: “Owner-related expenses totaling $147,000, comprising $82,000 in vehicle costs related to two personal vehicles maintained on the company fleet, $41,000 in club memberships and personal travel, and $24,000 in discretionary charitable donations made in the owner’s name. These costs are fully discretionary and will not be replicated under new ownership. Supporting documentation available.”
Both versions are presenting the same financial reality. But only one of them invites trust. Only one of them signals to a buyer that the management team understands what they are looking at and has done the work of presenting it honestly.
This is the essence of buyer-grade financial preparation. It is not about inflating numbers. It is about presenting accurate numbers in a way that earns credibility rather than erodes it.
What “Buyer-Grade” Actually Means in Practice
The phrase gets used frequently in deal preparation conversations, but its practical components are worth unpacking directly.
Buyer-grade financial presentation typically encompasses several interconnected elements. First, a normalized income statement that clearly separates reported financials from adjusted figures, with each adjustment individually identified and cross-referenced to supporting documentation. Second, a consistent three-to-five year historical view that allows a buyer to observe trends, identify any anomalies, and understand the trajectory of the business without needing to request additional data. Third, a working capital analysis that defines what a normalized level of working capital looks like for the business and defends that figure against buyer attempts to renegotiate the peg at closing. Fourth, a capital expenditure schedule that distinguishes between maintenance capex required to sustain current operations and growth capex that is discretionary.
Each of these components, when prepared in advance and organized into a cohesive information package, does something important. It shifts the center of gravity in a diligence process. Instead of the buyer’s team setting the agenda and the seller’s team responding reactively, the seller has framed the conversation. The buyer is working within a narrative structure that the seller has already established.
Firms that work with business owners preparing to sell my business, particularly those with revenues between five and one hundred million dollars, frequently cite proactive financial preparation as the single most impactful thing a seller can do to protect their multiple in a competitive process. Not the quality of their legal counsel. Not the breadth of the buyer pool. The quality of the financial story they arrive with.
The Multiple Is Not Fixed, It Floats on Confidence
One of the most consequential misunderstandings in private business transactions is the belief that the purchase multiple is determined by the market and applied mechanically to a normalized EBITDA figure. In reality, the multiple is a negotiated outcome that floats on a combination of factors, and one of the most underestimated is the buyer’s confidence in the numbers themselves.
A buyer looking at two companies with identical normalized EBITDA figures will offer a meaningfully different multiple to the company whose financials they find credible versus the one whose financials require extensive interpretation. This is not arbitrary. It is a rational response to risk. When a buyer cannot fully trust the earnings figure, they protect themselves with a lower entry price, a more aggressive working capital peg, a longer escrow period, or an earn-out structure that defers a portion of the proceeds contingent on future performance.
Each of these mechanisms transfers risk from the buyer back to the seller. They are not punishments. They are rational structures in the presence of uncertainty. The most effective way to reduce their prevalence in a deal is to reduce the uncertainty that triggers them.
The Pre-Sale Window That Most Owners Miss
The ideal window for beginning financial preparation in anticipation of a sale is two to three years before the intended exit date. This is not an arbitrary buffer. It reflects the practical reality that a buyer will request three to five years of historical financials, and the quality of those years is largely fixed by the time a deal process begins.
If a business owner begins cleaning up their financial presentation eighteen months before going to market, they can influence the most recent one or two years in the historical record. If they begin three years out, they can shape the majority of the period a buyer will scrutinize. If they wait until they are actively in a process, they are defending history rather than engineering credibility.
The preparation process itself involves several stages. An honest internal audit of current financial practices, identifying where owner-related expenses have been commingled with business operations. A reclassification of recurring expenses into the appropriate reporting categories. The establishment of consistent accounting policies that will hold across multiple reporting periods. The documentation of all anticipated addback items with supporting evidence organized and retrievable. And the development of a coherent management narrative that explains the business, its performance drivers, and the sustainability of its earnings in language a sophisticated buyer can evaluate.
Working with experienced business brokers in Canada who have a track record in mid-market sell-side preparation can accelerate this process significantly, particularly for business owners who have not been through a formal transaction before. The institutional knowledge of what buyers in specific industries and size ranges actually scrutinize is not something that can easily be replicated through general research.
The Credibility Multiple and Why Buyers Pay It
There is an informal concept in M&A advisory circles sometimes referred to as the credibility premium. It describes the additional multiple that a well-prepared, financially transparent business tends to command in a competitive process compared to a comparable business with messier presentation.
The mechanics of this premium are intuitive when examined through the buyer’s psychology. A buyer who sits down with a business’s financial package and finds it organized, consistent, well-documented, and proactively explanatory experiences something important: reduced anxiety. Acquisitions are high-stakes decisions. The individuals and investment committees making them are acutely aware of downside risk. When a seller’s presentation reduces perceived risk, the buyer’s required return adjusts accordingly, which manifests as a willingness to pay a higher price.
Robbinex, a business brokerage firm serving Canadian mid-market business owners, has built a portion of its advisory process around exactly this dynamic, working with sellers to prepare financials that not only survive diligence but actively build buyer confidence throughout the process.
The inverse is equally true. When a buyer encounters financial statements that require interpretation, when addbacks feel more like guesses than documented facts, when the numbers tell a slightly different story each time they are approached from a different angle, anxiety rises. And anxious buyers do not pay premiums. They build in discounts, conditions, and protective mechanisms that erode the seller’s net outcome.
What the Owner With $3M EBITDA Actually Needs to Hear
Return to the owner at the beginning of this piece. The one who tells friends his company does three million in EBITDA. He is not wrong, exactly. The business probably does generate something close to that figure in economic benefit to him as the owner. The problem is that three million in economic benefit to a current owner and three million in transferable, defensible, buyer-grade normalized EBITDA are meaningfully different concepts.
The transferable version asks a harder question: how much of this cash generation will survive the departure of the current owner, under new management, with no personal expenses, no related-party arrangements, and no discretionary owner decisions embedded in the cost structure?
When that question is answered rigorously and honestly, the number sometimes holds. The business genuinely generates three million in transferable value and the addbacks are clean and defensible. But more often, the rigorous answer produces a lower number, typically somewhere between fifteen and thirty percent lower than the informal version, and sometimes more.
The earlier that gap is identified, the more time exists to close it. Not through manipulation of the numbers, but through deliberate operational decisions, financial hygiene improvements, and documentation practices that make the true value of the business visible and legible to the people who will eventually be asked to pay for it.
A business that generates two million in rigorously defensible EBITDA with clean books, documented addbacks, consistent reporting, and a coherent earnings narrative will often command a higher absolute purchase price than a business claiming three million in EBITDA that collapses under scrutiny. The multiple applied to a credible number, by a buyer who trusts what they are seeing, frequently exceeds the multiple applied to an inflated number that generates anxiety and adversarial negotiation.
The owners who understand this earliest are the ones who arrive at closing with the outcome they expected. The ones who discover it in the diligence room are the ones who spend the flight home recalculating what the deal actually delivered.
For anyone considering a transition in the next several years, the work of preparing financials to withstand scrutiny is not a transaction cost. It is a value creation strategy. One that pays its highest returns not when the documents are assembled, but when a buyer looks across the table, absorbs what they are seeing, and decides that this is a business worth paying a premium to own.
Business
How User Interviews Can Be Accelerated with an AI-Powered Insights Platform
What’s actually eating your research timeline – and why the fix isn’t what most people expect.
Nobody skips user research because they don’t care about users.
They skip it because the last time they tried, two weeks of recruiting ended with three cancellations. The sprint didn’t wait. Someone made a judgment call, the feature shipped, and everyone quietly agreed they’d do it properly next time — which is what they said the time before that too.
Next time never really comes.
AI-powered research platforms are worth paying attention to right now, not because they make research feel futuristic, but because they remove the specific friction that makes teams abandon it in the first place. That’s a more boring claim than most vendor marketing would make – and probably a more useful one.
The Interview Itself Is Rarely the Problem
A 45-minute conversation with a user isn’t what kills research timelines. What kills them is everything around it.
Recruitment for a niche persona – say, a head of operations at a logistics company with 50 to 200 employees – can take three weeks on its own. Then you’re coordinating schedules across time zones. Then someone’s dog has a vet appointment and they reschedule, which cascades into your analysis window. Transcription, tagging, theming. Pulling together a synthesis doc that stakeholders will actually read. By the time that’s done, the decision you were trying to inform has already been made – or worse, you’ve held it up.
This is what researchers mean when they talk about the infrastructure tax. The research itself is a relatively small part of the timeline. The coordination surrounding it is enormous.
AI platforms specifically target that tax. Not the conversation, but everything before and after it. That’s a narrow claim but an important one, because it changes what you should expect these tools to do and what you shouldn’t.
What These Platforms Actually Do
The category is still early enough that a lot of what gets labeled “AI research” is just survey tools with a chatbot bolted on. Worth distinguishing that from platforms genuinely rearchitecting the workflow.
The more interesting approach involves synthetic personas – AI-generated user profiles built from demographic, psychographic, and behavioral parameters relevant to your target market. Rather than finding and scheduling real participants, you define who you want to hear from, and the platform constructs representative personas accordingly. Then it run automated interview sessions with those personas: the AI moderates, adapts follow-up questions based on what the persona “says,” and runs multiple sessions in parallel. What would normally take three weeks of logistics happens in under an hour.
The synthesis piece is where a lot of the time savings actually land. Traditional research often ends with a pile of transcripts that still need a human to code, theme, and interpret. These platforms produce structured analysis – hypothesis validation, theme identification with supporting evidence, pattern recognition across personas – as part of the output. You’re not starting from raw data.
One thing worth noting: synthetic personas sidestep a few real problems with live interviews. Politeness bias (participants saying what they think you want to hear) goes away. So does incentive distortion – the way a $75 gift card quietly changes how someone responds. Whether those tradeoffs net out positively depends on what you’re trying to learn, which brings up the more nuanced question.
Where This Works and Where It Doesn’t
Synthetic research is genuinely well-suited to a specific category of work: concept validation, messaging tests, pricing sensitivity, feature prioritization, early hypothesis pressure-testing. Situations where you want directional signal before committing resources, not ethnographic depth.
What it’s not designed for: longitudinal behavior tracking, use cases where existing behavioral data is sparse or nonexistent, or research where the texture of lived experience is the actual insight you need. A team building tools for people managing chronic illness, for example, should be talking to real people. The emotional specificity of that context matters in ways a synthetic persona can’t replicate.
Most teams who get this right don’t treat it as either/or. Synthetic research handles the high-frequency, lower-stakes validation work – testing messaging before a campaign goes live, checking whether a new nav pattern makes sense before engineering builds it, running a quick concept test before a sprint kickoff. Live interviews get reserved for the contextual, strategic work that actually needs them.
That division of labor is less philosophically interesting than the debate about whether AI can replace human insight (it can’t, fully), but it’s far more practically useful.
What Changes When Research Gets Cheaper and Faster
Here’s the part that doesn’t get talked about enough: when research is slow and expensive, it gets rationed. You do it on the big decisions – new product lines, major redesigns, significant pivots. Everything else ships on instinct.
That’s not negligence. It’s math. A two-week study doesn’t make sense for a microcopy change or a nav restructure or a pricing page tweak. So those decisions get made without data, and sometimes they’re fine, and sometimes they compound into a product that technically works but keeps missing the mark with users in ways nobody can quite diagnose.
Lower the cost and time of research to 30 minutes, and the calculus changes. A PM tests three different onboarding flows before the engineering ticket gets written. A founder checks whether a landing page angle actually resonates with their target segment before spending on ads. A designer validates a navigation pattern while the Figma file is still open. None of these are decisions that would have justified a traditional study. All of them produce better outputs.
Agencies feel this particularly acutely. Research has traditionally been a premium offering – something you include on the big retainers, not the smaller project work. Faster, cheaper tools change what you can viably include in a scope. That has real downstream effects on what you can charge for, what you can defend in a pitch, and what your clients walk away trusting.
The cumulative effect of running more validation – across smaller decisions, earlier, when there’s still room to change direction – is hard to quantify neatly. But teams that do it consistently tend to make fewer expensive late-stage corrections.
Starting Out: What the First Run Actually Looks Like
If you haven’t used one of these platforms before, the first session is usually less complicated than expected. You describe what you want to learn – the idea, the problem you’re testing, the assumption you’re trying to pressure-test. You define your target user in reasonably plain terms. The platform handles persona generation, interview design, execution, and synthesis.
Articos structures this as five steps: define the idea, generate personas, shape the interview questions, run the sessions, review the analysis. First time through, most people are done in 30 to 40 minutes. The output is a structured report – not raw transcripts – with themes, hypothesis validation, and supporting quotes from the sessions.
A practical starting point: pick something your team is already debating. A feature that’s been stuck in prioritization discussions. A pricing structure you’ve never properly tested. A headline you’re running on gut. Run a study on it before the next planning meeting and bring the output. That’s usually enough to shift how the team thinks about doing this regularly.
The teams that get the most value from these platforms aren’t treating it as a one-off. They block time – weekly, sometimes more often – to run a study the way they’d block time for a retrospective or a design review. Not because it’s a habit that feels productive, but because it keeps decisions connected to actual user behavior rather than drifting toward internal opinion.
Where This Is Headed
User research has been slow and expensive for a long time, and that’s shaped how teams think about it – as something you invest in seriously or skip entirely. The middle ground, where you validate things quickly and often on decisions of all sizes, hasn’t really existed at scale before.
That’s what’s starting to change. Not the underlying value of talking to users – that hasn’t changed – but the economics of doing it frequently enough to matter.
For teams that figure out how to fold this into their normal working rhythm, the compounding effect is real. More validation, earlier, on more decisions. Fewer expensive surprises six months into a build. More confidence in the things you ship.
It’s worth paying attention to, even if you’re skeptical. Especially if you’re skeptical – because the case for faster research isn’t that AI has solved the hard problem of understanding users. It’s that the logistics were always the part holding most teams back, and those are now genuinely solvable.
Business
Renewables Infrastructure Group reports 10% NAV decline for FY25

Renewables Infrastructure Group reports 10% NAV decline for FY25
Business
Community larder helps 117 people in one day
Jo Haywood says the volunteer-led group is seeing “record numbers” of people needing cheaper food.
Business
Greenland Energy expected to start Nasdaq trading March 18

Greenland Energy expected to start Nasdaq trading March 18
Business
Nischal Maheshwari bets on PSU banks, flags microfinance reset as structural positive
On microfinance, which has seen renewed interest amid regulatory changes, Maheshwari said the recent state-level legislation signals both the sector’s importance and its structural challenges. “This is a very interesting thing brought in by a state. It shows how important microfinance is in the states,” he said, adding that the industry plays a key role in the MSME and lower-ticket economy. However, he flagged the issue of over-lending: “There are huge issues as far as multiple loans are concerned… people are giving more loans to the same borrowers and they in turn default.” The move to restrict borrowers to two loans, he believes, could help stabilise the system. “Some issues are getting sorted and this will help the industry overall,” he noted, describing the legislation as beneficial “for both sides.”
On banking, Maheshwari maintained that PSU lenders continue to hold an edge over private peers. “PSUs continue to outshine… valuations are much cheaper,” he said, pointing out that growth and asset quality are now comparable. He also linked volatility to foreign investor flows. “FIIs have been major holders in IT and banks, and that is where we are seeing the selling.”
Metals, in his view, demand agility rather than long-term conviction. “One year is too long a call on the metal sector… you have to play quarter by quarter,” he said, citing global volatility. While non-ferrous stocks have largely played out, “for the moment ferrous looks interesting,” he added, suggesting steel may offer better near-term opportunities.
On commercial vehicles, Maheshwari acknowledged early signs of recovery but urged caution on capex trends. “CV seems to be in a good spot,” he said, though private capex remains subdued. Replacement demand, however, could drive the cycle. “The five-year fleet renewal is coming up… replacement demand is going to be very strong,” he said, adding, “I am positive on the CV cycle.”
In the energy space, he sees a tactical opportunity in upstream PSUs amid geopolitical risks. “Upstream guys like Oil India, ONGC could be a good trading play,” he said, while suggesting a cautious stance on OMCs “for the moment.”
Maheshwari was blunt on so-called value retailers. “I do not know how you call them value because they are hugely overvalued,” he remarked, citing high multiples and moderating growth. “Anywhere the PEG is two or three, so nothing catches my focus in the sector.”On power, he differentiated between product and service plays. “Product-wise, there is nothing cheap out there… people are discounting well ahead two-three years of growth,” he said. However, “T&D players are reasonably priced,” making services a relatively better bet. He also highlighted data centres as a structural demand driver with “strong visibility for the next three to five years.”
Autos remain a relative outperformer. “One of the bright spots in the overall gloomy market… autos would be the top bet at the moment,” he said.
On defence, however, he advised restraint. “The outlook is very good but it is already getting priced in… prices are marked to perfection,” he cautioned, adding that while existing investors can hold, “I do not see any reason to buy it fresh.”
Business
Elastic N.V. 2026 Q3 – Results – Earnings Call Presentation (NYSE:ESTC) 2026-02-27
Q3: 2026-02-26 Earnings Summary
EPS of $0.73 beats by $0.08
| Revenue of $449.88M (17.74% Y/Y) beats by $11.46M
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
Top 2 Overweight-rated European Oil & Gas Stocks, according to JPMorgan

Top 2 Overweight-rated European Oil & Gas Stocks, according to JPMorgan
Business
N4 Pharma plans name change to Thalia Therapeutics

N4 Pharma plans name change to Thalia Therapeutics
Business
(VIDEO) Kelly Osbourne Calls Out ‘Disgusting’ Body-Shaming Comments as ‘Abuse’
Kelly Osbourne forcefully denounced online body-shaming directed at her appearance, labeling the harsh remarks “disgusting” and a form of “abuse” in a series of Instagram Stories posts this week.

The 41-year-old television personality and former “The Osbournes” star shared a screenshot Monday, Feb. 23, of a particularly vicious comment on one of her recent posts. The anonymous user wrote that she “looks like a dead body,” described her as “tooooo thin and fragile,” and added, “Looks like she’s going to see her dad soon.” The reference alluded to the July 2025 death of her father, Black Sabbath frontman Ozzy Osbourne, at age 76.
“Literally can’t believe how disgusting some human beings truly are!” Osbourne wrote over the screenshot. “No one deserves this sort of abuse!”
In a follow-up Story, she added, “This too shall pass, but like, holy f—.”
The outburst came amid ongoing scrutiny of Osbourne’s dramatic weight loss, which fans and critics have noted since late 2025. She has appeared noticeably slimmer in public outings and social media photos, prompting a mix of concern, speculation and outright criticism.
Osbourne has addressed similar comments before. In December 2025, she posted that she was “ill right now” and grieving, saying her life had been “completely flipped upside down.” She questioned why people expected her to “bounce back and look like everything is just fine” and asserted that simply getting out of bed and facing each day should be commended.
The recent incident highlights persistent issues with body shaming in the public eye, particularly for women in entertainment. Osbourne has faced weight-related commentary since her teenage years, when tabloids labeled her “Ozzy’s chubby daughter.” She has spoken openly about past struggles with body image, eating disorders and public pressure.
Her mother, Sharon Osbourne, defended her daughter’s appearance in a prior interview on “Piers Morgan Uncensored,” attributing the changes to profound grief over losing her father. “She lost her daddy,” Sharon said, emphasizing the emotional toll.
Kelly’s response drew support from many followers, who condemned the original comment as lacking empathy. Some pointed out that grief manifests differently for everyone and criticized the cruelty of linking her appearance to her father’s death.
Others expressed genuine worry about her health, with discussions on platforms like Instagram and Reddit debating whether comments stemmed from concern or malice. A few referenced past controversies, including Osbourne’s own remarks on weight-loss medications like Ozempic, but most focused on the inappropriateness of the “dead body” jab.
Osbourne, who shares a son with ex-partner Matthew Mosshart, has maintained a public presence through television hosting, fashion commentary and social media. She has been more active online in recent months, sharing glimpses of daily life while navigating personal loss.
The episode underscores broader conversations about online harassment, mental health and the ethics of commenting on celebrities’ bodies during vulnerable periods. Mental health advocates have long warned that such remarks can exacerbate grief and body-image issues.
No further public statements from Osbourne emerged as of Friday, Feb. 27, but her Stories remained visible to followers. The posts garnered widespread coverage from outlets including People, E! News, Entertainment Tonight and Page Six, amplifying her message against abusive commentary.
Friends and family have rallied around her privately, sources close to the Osbourne circle told media. The family continues to process Ozzy’s passing, with tributes and memorials ongoing in the music community.
Osbourne’s candid clapback serves as a reminder that public figures, despite their visibility, deserve boundaries around personal health and grieving processes. Her words resonated with many who have faced similar online vitriol, reinforcing calls for kinder digital interactions.
As she continues to share updates, supporters hope the attention shifts from speculation about her appearance to respect for her journey through loss and recovery.
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