Why Moderna Was a Big Winner on Friday
A country rapidly going maskless could benefit the biotech handsomely.
A country rapidly going maskless could benefit the biotech handsomely.
For beginners, it can seem like a good idea (and an exciting prospect) to buy a company that tells a good story to...
Snap stock surged Friday, after the Snapchat parent company reported Q1 earnings and sales that exceeded views.
Friendship knows no bounds (or age)!
Ditchling Museum of Art and Craft reveals personal insights into Briggs’s life, including 100 original artworks from his 60-year career.
Roku (ROKU) stock is trading lower on Friday as the company cautioned that the financial advantages stemming from price hikes are beginning to dissipate. The streamer also warned that heightened competition in the ad-supported streaming space could create a significant headwind. Yahoo Finance's Seana Smith and Brad Smith break down the details. For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Morning Brief. This post was written by Angel Smith
WOMEN’S SIX NATIONS: In the inevitable grand slam decider, a French victory would be a significant step for the championship in proving that England aren’t accelerating out of sight, writes Harry Latham-Coyle in Bordeaux
"GMFB" shares what they are looking forward to on Night 2 of the '24 draft
Relegation battles are nothing new for Chris Wood, but this latest fight for survival at Nottingham Forest is proving utterly unique. In a chaotic season littered with controversial refereeing and VAR decisions, plus a four-point deduction for breaching financial rules, Wood’s 12 league goals are helping to keep Forest’s hopes of staying up alive.
A woman murdered her boyfriend then invited his worried mother over as his body lay in a makeshift grave in the back garden.
Vanessa Rivas discovered the dress sitting in a shoe box in her garage
Steph McGovern is coming back to TV after her show Steph's Packed Lunch was unexpectedly axed last year.
PARIS (AP) — Paris has a new king of the crusty baguette. Baker Xavier Netry was chosen this week as the 31st winner of Paris' annual “Grand Prix de la baguette” prize. His long loaf beat 172 others. Competing baguettes were evaluated for taste, look, texture, airiness and the quality of the baking. The jury included a deputy mayor, industry representatives, journalists and six Parisians that City Hall said were drawn at random. The Utopie bakery in Paris' 11th district that Netry works for wins
Tickets to the dinner cost at least $25,000. Some of that will go toward a group that’s spent more than $50 million on Trump’s legal bills.
Key Insights Institutions' substantial holdings in Groupon implies that they have significant influence over the...
The US Secretary of State was speaking to the BBC at the end of a three-day trip to China.
Satisfaction with the AI overviews is also increasing and Google will continue to evolve those results this year, according to Sundar Pichai.
Outshining AI giants Nvidia, Meta and Google, HubSpot has secured placement on three premier stock screens.
This marks the latest in a series of blunders from the president as he campaigns for a second term in office
Both Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) and Microsoft (MSFT) posted quarterly results that topped Wall Street estimates. The big takeaway from both reports? That generative artificial intelligence is here and companies are spending on it, says both Baird Technology Desk Sector Strategist Ted Mortonson and RBC Capital Markets Software Equity Analyst Rishi Jaluria. "The commentary out of both Google and Microsoft, I think, tells us that there is real demand for AI... there's actual money being put behind this. It's not just hype. It's not just people talking about it. There's actual capital being put to work," Jaluria tells Yahoo Finance's Morning Brief. Mortonson agrees. "We are going through, really, a generational infrastructure build," Mortonson says, adding that both Microsoft and Alphabet have an "advantage" because their "data center footprint already exists." Jaluria notes that investors "will be patient" with Microsoft's big spending on infrastructure as long as the company's AI-related businesses continue to show growth. As to why investors were less happy about Meta's (META) AI spending, Mortonson thinks it may come down to "a game of positioning." "Meta was extremely crowded going into the print. There's some people that, quite frankly, didn't like some of the unprofitable spend," Mortonson says. He believes that Meta is "very attractive" given how hard the stock was hit by its results, but the Microsoft does have a "huge advantage" due to its enterprise business. For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Morning Brief. This post was written by Stephanie Mikulich.
A woman drowned trying to save her dog from a river while she and her husband were out for a country walk, an inquest heard.