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

How The Mag 7 Became The Drag 7, And Might Drop The S&P 500 By 30% (Technical Analysis)

Published

on

How The Mag 7 Became The Drag 7, And Might Drop The S&P 500 By 30% (Technical Analysis)

How The Mag 7 Became The Drag 7, And Might Drop The S&P 500 By 30% (Technical Analysis)

Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Business

US close to allowing Anthropic to restore Fable 5 model, Axios reports

Published

on

US close to allowing Anthropic to restore Fable 5 model, Axios reports


US close to allowing Anthropic to restore Fable 5 model, Axios reports

Continue Reading

Business

Eagle Point Credit: I Avoid Common Stock For Now, Focus On Senior Securities (NYSE:ECC)

Published

on

Pearl Diver Credit: Preferred Stock Is The Way To Go (NYSE:PDCC)

This article was written by

The Investment Doctor is a financial writer, highlighting European small-caps with a 5-7 year investment horizon. He strongly believes a portfolio should consist of a mixture of dividend and growth stocks.
He is the leader of the investment group European Small Cap Ideas which offers exclusive access to actionable research on appealing Europe-focused investment opportunities not found elsewhere. The a focus is on high-quality ideas in the small-cap space, with emphasis on capital gains and dividend income for continuous cash flow. Features include: two model portfolios – the European Small Cap Ideas portfolio and the European REIT Portfolio, weekly updates, educational content to learn more about the European investing opportunities, and an active chat room to discuss the latest developments of the portfolio holdings. Learn more.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of ECC.PR.D 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 currently have no position in the common stock, but will keep an eye on it.

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

Business

Goldman Sachs raises MakeMyTrip stock price target to $84 on growth outlook

Published

on


Goldman Sachs raises MakeMyTrip stock price target to $84 on growth outlook

Continue Reading

Business

Iran targets Bahrain, vessel attacked in Strait of Hormuz as tensions flare

Published

on


Iran targets Bahrain, vessel attacked in Strait of Hormuz as tensions flare

Continue Reading

Business

UBS outlines portfolio playbook for uncertain markets

Published

on


UBS outlines portfolio playbook for uncertain markets

Continue Reading

Business

Hezbollah rejects US-brokered Israel-Lebanon security deal as ’surrender’

Published

on

Hezbollah rejects US-brokered Israel-Lebanon security deal as ’surrender’


Hezbollah rejects US-brokered Israel-Lebanon security deal as ’surrender’

Continue Reading

Business

Weekly Indicators: Simply Stellar Consumer Spending

Published

on

Weekly Indicators: Simply Stellar Consumer Spending

Weekly Indicators: Simply Stellar Consumer Spending

Continue Reading

Business

SpaceX Stock Steadies Near $153 as $25 Billion Bond Sale Draws Record $89 Billion From Investors Worldwide

Published

on

Elon Musk

Shares of SpaceX closed essentially flat Friday at $153.23, up 0.15%, before slipping slightly to $152.77 in after-hours trading, as the newly public rocket and satellite company found a measure of stability following a punishing two-week stretch that had erased much of its post-IPO gains.

The modest move caps a volatile first month on public markets for Elon Musk’s space and artificial intelligence venture, one that has included a record-setting debut, a sharp multi-day selloff, and, this week, a massive bond offering that investors say has removed one of the central risks weighing on the stock.

A debut for the history books, followed by a steep pullback

SpaceX completed the largest initial public offering in history on June 12, pricing shares at $135 and raising roughly $75 billion at an initial valuation approaching $1.8 trillion. The stock surged 19% on its first day of trading, closing at $160.95, and continued climbing in the sessions that followed, briefly pushing the company’s market capitalization above both Amazon and Microsoft before settling back below both.

Advertisement

Shares reached an all-time intraday high of $225.64 on June 16, but the rally proved short-lived. SpaceX stock fell 16% the following Monday alone, extending a selloff that saw shares tumble across three full trading sessions, with the stock losing nearly 24% over that stretch before bottoming out at $147.11 on June 23 — briefly dipping below its $150 opening-day price.

What was driving the decline

Much of the pressure tracing through SpaceX’s stock in recent weeks centered on a looming debt deadline tied to the company’s financing structure. According to market analysis, the September 2027 deadline on a $20 billion bridge loan was the key hard deadline that drove most of the price decline from $225 to $147.11, as investors grew increasingly focused on how the company intended to refinance that obligation.

Beyond the bridge loan, investors have also flagged broader concerns about SpaceX’s financial profile as a newly public company. The company posted a $4.9 billion net loss in 2025, and lost an additional $4.28 billion in the first quarter of this year alone, even as its core businesses continued growing rapidly.

Advertisement

A bond sale that reshaped sentiment

The turning point for the stock came this week, when SpaceX moved to address the bridge loan concern directly. The company priced its first $25 billion bond offering across five separate tranches, with coupon rates ranging from 5.350% to 6.650% for maturities stretching from 2031 to 2056.

The response from institutional investors was overwhelming. The bond offering drew $89 billion in demand, representing roughly 3.5 times oversubscription and what market analysts described as one of the largest investment-grade order books in history. SpaceX confirmed it would use the proceeds of the offering, which settled June 26, to pay off the outstanding bridge loan entirely — directly eliminating the maturity risk that had been most responsible for the stock’s slide from its June 16 peak.

Market analysts framed the divergence between the bond market’s enthusiasm and the equity market’s caution as telling. One analysis described the dynamic as a divergence between bearish equity sentiment and bullish institutional credit demand, suggesting the stock’s earlier selloff was more sentiment-driven than tied to a genuine deterioration in SpaceX’s underlying creditworthiness.

Advertisement

A new contract win adds to the week’s headlines

SpaceX also received a boost from a previously unrelated business line this week. The company was named among the winning bidders, alongside Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile, in a Federal Communications Commission wireless spectrum auction, adding another data point to the company’s expanding footprint across the broader telecommunications and connectivity landscape that includes its Starlink satellite broadband business.

Where analysts stand on the stock now

Wall Street’s outlook on SpaceX remains notably divided even after this week’s developments. The average 12-month price target across analysts covering the stock sits at $187.80, with estimates ranging from a low of $62 to a high of $310 — an unusually wide spread that reflects just how much uncertainty remains around how to value a company straddling rocket launches, satellite broadband and artificial intelligence under one roof.

Advertisement

Some firms have struck a cautious tone even as the bridge loan concern has been resolved. Susquehanna maintained a Neutral rating on the stock with a price target of $170, implying modest upside from Friday’s closing level, while Argus initiated coverage of the company with a Hold rating this week. Other risks cited by analysts following the stock include ongoing operating losses tied to SpaceX’s xAI artificial intelligence division, a cautious free-cash-flow outlook through 2029 from S&P, a stock lockup period set to expire in December 2026, and a notably bearish fair-value estimate from Morningstar pegged at $62 per share — far below where the stock currently trades.

The business fundamentals behind the stock

Beneath the volatility, SpaceX’s underlying revenue growth has remained robust. According to the company’s IPO prospectus, Starlink accounted for roughly 61% of total revenue in 2025, generating $11.4 billion, up about 50% from the prior year, with active customers surpassing 10.3 million across 160 countries and markets as of the end of the first quarter. Total company revenue grew to $18.67 billion in 2025, with adjusted EBITDA of $6.58 billion, even as the company posted a GAAP net loss of nearly $5 billion for the year tied to heavy investment in newer business lines, including Starship development and its AI operations.

SpaceX is scheduled to join the Nasdaq 100 index on July 7, a milestone expected to trigger an estimated $4.3 billion in passive index-fund inflows as funds tracking the benchmark are required to add the stock to their holdings. With the bridge loan risk now resolved and the stock trading well off both its post-IPO highs and its 52-week low, investors are likely to watch closely whether that added index demand, combined with continued growth in Starlink subscriptions, can stabilize a stock that has spent its first six weeks as a public company swinging between record-setting enthusiasm and sharp, sentiment-driven retreats.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

Warriors, IREN set sponsorship deal record with annual $50 million pact: report

Published

on

Warriors, IREN set sponsorship deal record with annual $50 million pact: report

The Golden State Warriors will have a new company patch on their jerseys, and it will set a new precedent in the sponsorship deal space.

IREN, an Australian-founded vertically integrated AI cloud provider, will have its brand on the jerseys beginning with the 2026-27 season after a deal reportedly worth more than $50 million a year.

Advertisement

The financial terms, first reported by Sportico, make it the largest sponsorship deal in North American sports.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXBUSINESS.COM

Draymond, Steph, Jimmy Butler

The Golden State Warriors will have an Iren patch on their jerseys beginning the 2026-27 season. (Iren / Fox News)

The deal is with the Golden State Group, the parent holding company that owns and operates the Warriors, the WNBA’s Golden State Valkyries, and the NBA G League’s Santa Cruz Warriors, among others.

“The Warriors jersey badge is our most visible global platform, and finding a partner that shares our vision for both innovation and community engagement was paramount,” Golden State Chief Commercial Officer Mike Kitts said in a press release. “IREN is committed to powering the future of technology, education and local impact, and aligns perfectly with our goals as we look to push the boundaries of innovation on a global scale and create a lasting legacy across the Bay Area and beyond.”

Advertisement

“What makes Golden State special is the platform they’ve built: championship performance, a category-defining business and a deep commitment to community, all reinforcing each other over time,” said IREN Co-Founder and Co-CEO Daniel Roberts. 

Golden State jersey

The deal is reportedly worth over $50 million annually, making it the largest sponsorship deal in North American sports. (Iren / Fox News)

“At IREN, we think about our business through a similar lens. We own and operate the full infrastructure stack: power, data centers and compute. That vertical integration allows us to serve the world’s most demanding AI workloads and invest in the communities that support us. This partnership brings together two organizations focused on execution, sharing a commitment to the people and the city building what comes next.”

In addition to the Warriors’ jersey badge, the partnership includes IREN’s designation as the Official AI Cloud Partner of Golden State, branding on warm-ups for the WNBA’s Valkyries and the Santa Cruz Warriors’ jerseys, prominent visibility throughout San Francisco’s Chase Center, and presenting sponsorship of the Warriors’ annual City Edition platform.

Stephen Curry

Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry smiles at the end of the third quarter of his NBA basketball game against San Antonio Spurs in San Francisco, Calif. Saturday, Dec. 4, 2021. (Stephen Lam/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images / Getty Images)

GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

Advertisement

IREN delivers GPU clusters for AI training and inference to customers in the Bay Area and around the world. It has secured more than five gigawatts of power around the world to support AI training and inference workloads and is focused on building the infrastructure that enables the next generation of technological advancement.

Continue Reading

Business

Cybin: A Speculative Bet On Their Pivotal Depression Readout

Published

on

Cybin: A Speculative Bet On Their Pivotal Depression Readout

Cybin: A Speculative Bet On Their Pivotal Depression Readout

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025