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Richtech Robotics: I’ve Never Wanted To Give A Sell Rating So Badly (Downgrade) (RR)
Writer | Investment Advisor | Economics Wonk | Top 5% on TipRanks | Long Signal, Short Noise | Author of The Macro Obsession, a weekly newsletter on current events and trends in finance, tech, and the real economy. My work focuses on my quest to uncover narrative trends before mainstream financial media, a process I’ve been describing as the hunt for information alpha. It is chart-heavy, macro-oriented, and data-driven.I invest across securities and asset classes. My focus has largely been on ETF investing, and I am known as a macro analyst, though I do cover stocks that I am personally trading or considering for my portfolio. These are typically technology and next-gen energy stocks or large caps with a juicy story.“Successful investing requires holding uncomfortably idiosyncratic positions.” — Howard Marks, paraphrasing David Swensen “History does not repeat, it instructs.” — Timothy Snyder, On Tyranny
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Business
Trump and Xi Prepare for Crucial Talks in Beijing
U.S. President Donald Trump is scheduled to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing for a two-day summit aimed at stabilizing bilateral relations amidst significant geopolitical and economic tensions. The talks are expected to cover a broad spectrum of issues, including trade agreements, the war in Iran, Taiwan, nuclear arms control, and the development of artificial intelligence, as both leaders seek to address areas of conflict while exploring potential cooperation on economic and technological matters.
Key Points
- Economic Cooperation: The two nations are expected to announce forums for trade and investment, alongside Chinese commitments to purchase American agricultural products, Boeing aircraft, and energy resources.
- Trade War Status: Discussions will address the potential extension of a trade truce that currently facilitates the flow of Chinese rare earth minerals to the U.S., with U.S. officials expressing confidence in an eventual renewal.
- Geopolitical Tensions: President Trump intends to pressure President Xi regarding China’s economic and material support for Russia and its influence over Iran, urging Beijing to help resolve the ongoing conflict between Iran and the U.S.-Israel coalition.
- Strategic Disagreements: The summit will address persistent friction over Taiwan, with the U.S. reaffirming its support for the island despite China’s increased military presence in the region.
- AI and Nuclear Policy: The U.S. administration aims to establish formal communication channels regarding the risks of advanced artificial intelligence; however, China continues to show reluctance toward participating in nuclear arms control discussions.
China has officially confirmed that U.S. President Donald Trump will conduct a three-day state visit to Beijing, marking his first trip to the country since his 2017 term. This high-stakes summit with President Xi Jinping is intended to project stability between the world’s two largest economies, with discussions centered on trade, investment mechanisms, and industrial agreements, while observers closely monitor potential dialogue regarding the ongoing conflict in Iran and issues related to Taiwan.
The upcoming talks come at a pivotal moment as China continues to assert itself on the world stage, while the United States seeks to recalibrate its approach to Beijing. Experts believe this meeting could influence future diplomatic and economic policies for both nations. It also signals a desire to manage conflicts through direct dialogue rather than confrontation.
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Business
Net interest margin to fall, Bank of Baroda can look to upsize treasury, wealth business
Your net interest margin (NIM) has dropped year-on-year. What is the outlook on core profitability?
All banks have taken a cut on NIM year-on-year; so it is in line with industry. Rather, our drop is lower than many of the banks. Going forward, the deposit cost is going to be sticky. I am not looking at further moderation. To protect NIMs, the bank will need to look at the asset side. EBLR is not going to change because there is a long pause of the expectation, so not going to change. In the corporate loan book there are two components MCLR and non-MCLR linked. The only segment I am looking at a realignment possibly is a non-MCLR book in corporate loan, which is linked to t-bills and government securities because our rates linked with those would move up with the benchmarks. We closed last year at 2.89% but we are giving a guidance of 2.75% to 2.95% this year. Last fiscal, there was an element of interest on tax refund. Keeping that volatility in mind we are giving a lower guidance of 2.75% on the downside.
Will the pressure on margin continue in the medium term?
As we migrate to a mature market, I think the margin needs to be squeezed because banks will have to operate at a lower margin, while keeping the return on assets (RoA) more than 1%. We need to be aligning ourselves for a slightly lower margin. In a mature market, the borrower would demand fine pricing, whereas the depositor would expect a higher rate. We will be trying our best to protect the margin, but the mature market scenario would force us to operate slightly at a lower margin and upsizing our non-interest income and lowering our cost to income.
You have made an extra ₹1,500 crore floating provision. is it to do with the expected credit loss (ECL) framework?
With that ₹1,500 crore floating provision we have buffered the balance sheet. With this, our total floating provision is ₹2,500 crore. This provision can be used in extraordinary scenarios with the approval of the regulator. It is not tagged with ECL provision. On ECL provision, the bank is well prepared to capture any impact. We are still computing ECL impact but for the year ended March 2026, my credit cost was 0.46%. I am now giving a credit cost guidance of below 0.6% for the current fiscal. This increase is sufficient to take care of the ECL provision on the income. ECL has two impacts, one the capital adequacy and another on the income. This increase is sufficient to take care of the impact on the income side.Any new businesses you plan to start this year?
Given that our current NIM is elevated vis a vis the system, we have to increase our non-interest income. Reducing cost to income is a challenging task. But to increase non-interest income we can upsize our wealth and treasury business. The treasury is where we have a lot of scope to get more fee income. The precise reason to float the primary dealer (PD) business is for us to do DCM business which we are not doing currently. We want to replicate a model of global banks where fee out of treasury would be a significant part of non interest income. There are debt market products like STRIPS, a non-corporate bond market where we can get fees. The PD business started operation from April 1 2026. We have committed ₹2,000 crore capital into the PD business. We plan to upscale that business. BoB Capital Markets will focus entirely on the equity side. We expect to start the pension fund in six to nine months.
What are the plans on subsidiaries like BoB Cards and Nainital Bank?
On BoB Cards we want to strengthen and create scale in the company and become a significant player in the market. Their ranking is almost at number 10 and we want them to improve. We have no board mandate as of today. We are open to infuse more capital there. Nainital is also doing well. They have good profitability, asset quality and strengthened their board and governance structure.
Business
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Discover the purchasing drivers and considerations that matter most when switching from synthetics
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Astera Labs director Stefan Dyckerhoff sells over $2.5m in stock

Astera Labs director Stefan Dyckerhoff sells over $2.5m in stock
Business
Not so dusty: How tech is changing woodworking
Woodworking shops have been transformed by tech to make tools safer and more precise.
Business
SBI sheds over $11 billion in market value in 2 sessions on margin squeeze, disappointing earnings
Shares of India’s largest lender by customers dropped 4.5% to a year-to-date low of 973.60 rupees on Monday, extending Friday’s near-7% post-results fall.
The selloff brought the stock down more than 10% in two sessions, wiping out $11.3 billion.
NSE data showed the heaviest fresh call writing on SBI’s 1,000 strike on Monday, signalling that investors expect any near-term rebound in the stock’s price to likely be capped at that level.
About 95 million shares changed hands over the two sessions, almost five-fold the 30‑day average of 18.7 million.
Analysts said the lender’s fourth-quarter earnings miss reinforced concerns that Indian banks are entering a tougher profitability cycle, with rising funding costs beginning to erode lending margins.
SBI on Friday reported a narrower net interest margin of 2.8% for the quarter, compared with 2.98% in the previous three-month period, and also missed analysts’ profit estimate.”NIM compression is becoming more visible as funding costs reprice faster,” JP Morgan said on Monday, adding that earnings momentum could moderate in the coming quarters.
“Core earnings were underwhelming, with incremental margins tightening,” Bernstein said, cautioning that upside catalysts may be limited without a stabilisation in margins.
SBI’s asset quality remained a key positive, with bad loans and credit costs staying benign, brokerages said, but warned it may not fully offset pressure on net interest income from margin compression.
Nonetheless, analysts retained a constructive long‑term view, citing the bank’s strong balance sheet, scale and market leadership.
The two-session selloff erased SBI’s year-to-date gains, leaving the stock down 0.8% in 2026, though it still outperformed the benchmark Nifty 50’s 8.8% drop.
Business
Ex-White House AI czar warns US to harden systems amid AI concerns
Former White House ‘AI czar’ David Sacks discusses President Donald Trump’s upcoming China trip, where he is expected to talk about AI with Chinese President Xi Jinping on ‘The Claman Countdown.’
Former White House AI czar David Sacks predicted potential outcomes of President Donald Trump’s meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping as the two leaders prepare to discuss artificial intelligence.
Sacks assessed the state of the intensifying AI arms race on “The Claman Countdown” Monday as China and the U.S. emerge as fierce competitors on the global stage.
“I do think that there are things that may be in our common interest, and it’s worthwhile to explore having those conversations,” he said.
“The fact is we have to still protect from against each other. So I think it’s going to be a little bit limited in terms of what we can achieve there.”
BEIJING IS QUIETLY DICTATING THE TRADE WAR’S NEXT MOVES AS TRUMP AND XI PREPARE TO MEET

US President Donald Trump and China’s President Xi Jinping (ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP / Getty Images)
Sacks’ comments follow the release of Anthropic’s Mythos, a model that has raised widespread worry over its capability to identify decades-old security vulnerabilities.
Sacks said the U.S. and China could potentially reach an agreement on new cyber standards during this week’s meeting, noting that neither country wants “rogue actors” to use AI models for dangerous purposes.
He also warned that the U.S. must take proactive defensive measures to ensure new AI models do not exploit existing vulnerabilities.
WHITE HOUSE MEETS AI FIRM ANTHROPIC AMID POLITICAL TENSIONS, PENTAGON DISPUTE
“We need to take steps now to harden our systems and scan our code bases to find latent vulnerabilities and patch them,” the former ‘AI czar’ said.

AI assistant apps on a smartphone — OpenAI ChatGPT, Google Gemini, and Anthropic Claude. (Getty Images / Getty Images)
Sacks also downplayed concerns about AI, arguing there is no need for strong federal regulation of the technology, while cautioning that China’s advancing cyber capabilities remain a serious concern.
“There’s been this debate about whether we needed an FDA for AI. That would be solving a problem I don’t think we have,” he told FOX Business.
“The real issue is not what the American labs do. It’s the fact that Chinese models and other models that other actors could train are gonna have advanced cyber capabilities within the next six months or so.”
Sacks cited previous success in AI discussions with China, including a late 2024 summit between former President Joe Biden and Jinping, where both countries agreed to keep AI away from nuclear weapons systems.

U.S. President Joe Biden escorts Chinese President Xi Jinping to his car to bid farewell after their talks in the Filoli Estate in the U.S. state of California, Nov. 15, 2023. (Photo by Li Xueren/Xinhua via Getty Images / Getty Images)
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The former ‘AI czar’ said that while the U.S. and China remain locked in a highly competitive race for AI dominance, dialogue about the technology is a step in the right direction.
“I think the point here is for the two sides to start talking, to establish an initial dialogue and just to see how the Chinese are thinking about this,” Sacks said.
Business
Supreme Court clears way for Alabama Republicans to pursue new voting map
The US Supreme Court in Washington, DC, US, on Monday, April 20, 2026.
Graeme Sloan | Bloomberg | Getty Images
The U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way on Monday for Alabama Republicans to pursue a congressional voting map more favorable to their party ahead of November’s midterm elections, the latest fallout from the court’s seismic voting rights ruling.
The justices lifted a lower court’s decision that had blocked state Republicans’ preferred map as racially discriminatory and for illegally diluting the voting power of Black Alabamians.
The politically conservative Southern state is expected to seek to revert to this previous map, which would drop the number of districts where Black voters comprise a majority, or near-majority, from two to one out of the state’s seven U.S. House districts. Use of the previous map could be beneficial to Republicans.
The order was powered by the nine-member court’s conservative majority. The three liberal justices dissented and suggested that the lower court could reapply its judicial block to the Alabama Republicans’ preferred map.
President Donald Trump‘s fellow Republicans are fighting to maintain their control of the House, as well as the Senate, in the midterm elections.
Alabama is among a group of Republican-led states that has sought to eliminate majority-Black congressional districts and boost their party’s chances ahead of the elections following the Supreme Court’s ruling undercutting a key provision of the Voting Rights Act. Black voters tend to support Democratic candidates.
In its landmark April 29 ruling, the court, in a 6-3 ruling powered by its conservative members, struck down an electoral map that had given Louisiana a second Black-majority U.S. congressional district. The redrawn map, the majority ruled, had relied too heavily on race in violation of the constitutional equal protection principle.
Following the Supreme Court’s decision, Alabama immediately filed emergency motions asking the justices to allow it to revert to an older map with only a single majority-Black district.
Alabama, where Black voters make up a quarter of the electorate, had been ordered by a lower court to use a map that includes two majority-Black districts out of seven. Both are held by Black Democrats.
The lower court decided that a prior map had intentionally discriminated against Black voters and unlawfully diluted their voting power.
Alabama officials had argued in Supreme Court filings that Alabama’s court-ordered map shared the same constitutional defects as Louisiana’s.
In a dissent, liberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor emphasized that the lower court’s ruling concerning Alabama’s map was more expansive than the case involving Louisiana and included a finding of unconstitutional discrimination by intentionally diluting the votes of Black voters in Alabama.
The majority’s decision to set aside the lower court’s ruling is therefore “inappropriate and will cause only confusion as Alabamians begin to vote in the elections scheduled for next week,” Sotomayor wrote in a dissent that was joined by her two fellow liberal justices.
She said the lower court “remains free on remand to decide for itself whether Callais has any bearing on its Fourteenth Amendment analysis or if its prior reasoning is unaffected by that decision,” referring to the court’s April 29 decision, called Louisiana v. Callais.
In 2023, the court had upheld the lower court’s decision that the state’s Republican-drawn electoral map diluted Black voters’ power, violating the Voting Rights Act. That 5-4 ruling was authored by Chief Justice John Roberts, and he was joined by fellow conservative Justice Brett Kavanaugh and the court’s three liberal justices.
In a process called redistricting, the boundaries of legislative districts across the United States are reconfigured to reflect population changes as measured by the national census conducted every 10 years. Redistricting typically has been carried out by state legislatures once per decade.
Republicans and Democrats have been waging a multistate redistricting fight ignited last year when Trump initiated an unprecedented mid-decade effort to redraw maps in Republican-led states, starting with Texas.
Business
Disney Cruise Line cancels Singapore sailing after passengers board
Check out what’s clicking on FoxBusiness.com.
Passengers aboard Disney Cruise Line’s Disney Adventure say their four-night Singapore sailing was canceled after boarding due to technical issues, leaving families waiting hours for answers before being sent to hotels late at night.
Guests had already embarked on the May 7 voyage when the ship’s captain reportedly told them there were technical issues and that they would “set sail soon,” according to a passenger who documented the situation on Reddit.
By around 2 p.m. local time the following day, the captain announced the sailing would be canceled entirely.
“It’s really disappointing especially if vacationing with kids,” the user wrote.
DISNEY LAUNCHES NEWEST CRUISE SHIP AMID MASSIVE SEAFARING EXPANSION

The cruise ship “Disney Adventure”, built in the Wismar shipyard, is moored in the port of Mukran on the island of Rügen, while bathers and a windsurfer are in the water in the foreground. After around seven years of construction, one of the world’s (Photo by Stefan Sauer/picture alliance via Getty Images / Getty Images)
The passenger said guests waited hours for official instructions after the announcement, with only a handful of crew members assisting guests.
They said they did not receive hotel details until 12:10 a.m. and did not expect to reach their hotel until well after 1:30 a.m.
A letter to guests, later obtained and published by Disney Cruise Line Blog, said the sailing could not proceed as planned and apologized for the disruption.
DISNEY UNVEILS NEW SHOW IN PARK UNDERGOING MASSIVE TRANSFORMATION

Captain Mickey, Captain Minnie, Susan Egan, Josh D’Amaro and Joe Schott during the Disney Destiny christening in Fort Lauderdale, Florida on Nov. 10, 2025. (Pilar Arias/Fox News Digital / Fox News)
“We are truly sorry to let you know that we are unable to proceed with your Disney Adventure experience from May 7-11, 2026 as planned,” the company wrote, adding that “your safety and comfort as our guests are always our highest priority.”
The cruise line said affected guests would receive a full refund, 50% off a future cruise and a complimentary hotel stay, along with coverage for potential flight change fees and up to $500 per stateroom for incidental expenses.
However, the passenger raised concerns about the compensation, noting that the 50% future cruise discount requires booking by July 31, 2026, and sailing by May 31, 2027.
DISNEY ANNOUNCES MAJOR PLANS TO COMMEMORATE AMERICA’S 250TH ANNIVERSARY

Disney Adventure should have capacity for about 6,700 guests and 2,500 crew members, Disney Cruise Line said. (Disney)
The user also questioned whether accommodations were consistent across guests, claiming that some passengers with back-to-back bookings received multiple complimentary nights while others were provided just one.
“We reached our hotel at around 2:00 a.m. and we have to check out at 12 noon… that isn’t even a full night,” the user wrote.
Additional complaints included a reported S$200 (about $150 USD) food and beverage credit, which the passenger said barely covered meals for one person — let alone a family of four.
The user said some travelers had flown in from countries including India, Australia and Canada specifically for the cruise, describing it as “one of the worst” experiences they’ve had with Disney.
“The Disney Adventure departed as scheduled on its next sailing after the mechanical issue was resolved,” a Disney spokesperson told FOX Business. “We completely understand this was an unfortunate situation for our guests and worked with them directly to support their travel needs, help make their trip home as smooth as possible and invite them back to a future sailing.”
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The Disney Adventure is part of Disney Cruise Line’s major expansion plans, with the company aiming to grow its fleet to 13 ships by 2031. The vessel, which is home ported in Singapore, marks Disney’s first permanent cruise deployment in Asia.
FOX Business previously reported that Disney Cruise Line has been aggressively expanding its global cruise footprint, with Disney Experiences Chairman Josh D’Amaro saying the company is focused on bringing Disney cruises “to new guests on new shores.”
Business
Nutrabolt hires former Hershey US president

Andrew Archambault named president and chief operating officer.
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