South Korea imports about 45 percent of its naphtha, a critical petrochemical feedstock, with roughly 77 percent of those imports historically arriving from the Middle East. That supply line is now, for all practical purposes, severed.
Marvell reported Q4 FY2026 revenue of $2.22 billion, beating Wall Street expectations near $2.21 billion. Non-GAAP EPS came in at $0.80 versus the $0.79 consensus estimate. Those are modest beats on the headline numbers, but Cramer's "$1 billion more in sales than anyone thought" framing appears to reference the magnitude of data center revenue relative to where expectations stood earlier in the year.
The symbiotic relationship between Diamondback and Viper is highlighted during times like these where Diamondback continues to focus its development on wells where Viper owns high royalty interests. That structural advantage doesn't erode with oil prices.
US and Israeli airstrikes on Iran have prompted Iran's Revolutionary Guard to declare the Strait of Hormuz closed, a critical chokepoint for global energy flows, and the conflict has now spread across multiple countries. The paradox for investors: an energy shock lifting oil prices is simultaneously crushing the metals complex.
TD Cowen cut its earnings estimates to reflect inflationary pressure from higher prices of oil-based inputs and potentially higher costs for tallow, which are up 40% versus a year ago on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
Global helium consumption runs about 6 billion cubic feet per year. Qatar supplied a big slice until this month. With one-third of output sidelined, prices have already soared.
CEO Peter Matt stated, 'The CMC team delivered another strong quarter, driving a more than two-fold increase in core EBITDA compared to a year ago.' This reflects the company's robust performance amid challenging market conditions.
The ETF holds 50 positions, but the top two dominate in a way that makes the rest almost incidental. Johnson & Johnson carries a 25.4% weight, and Eli Lilly and Company sits at 21.4%. Together they account for roughly 46.8% of the entire fund.
Last quarter, Dell posted revenue of $27.0 billion, a slight miss against consensus, but non-GAAP EPS of $2.59 beat estimates. The real headline was the AI server business, where management highlighted record AI server orders and significant year-to-date demand.
U.S. shale producer Devon Energy will acquire Coterra Energy for nearly $26 billion in a combination that creates a domestic oil and gas juggernaut trailing only household names Exxon Mobil, Chevron, and ConocoPhillips in sheer production volumes, the companies announced Feb. 2. After a couple of years of rapid consolidation in the energy sector, dealmaking slowed down dramatically last year as oil prices fell when OPEC ramped up its output and the Trump administration implemented a series of tariffs worldwide.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE:TSM) sits at the center of this fund, representing 22.3% of the portfolio - a concentration that reflects TSMC's irreplaceable role in global chip supply chains. It manufactures chips for Apple, Nvidia, AMD, and virtually every other major technology company, and that dominance shows up in its financials: 45% profit margin and 35% return on equity that few industrial companies anywhere in the world can match.
Eos Energy's 2025 full-year revenue came in at $114.2 million, representing a staggering 700% year-over-year growth but still missing the low end of its own $150 million guidance by a wide margin. Wall Street had anticipated around $155 million, making the shortfall even more pronounced.
The company's record production jumped 12% year-over-year, driven by the Hess acquisition, which added 261 thousand barrels of oil equivalent per day. CEO Mike Wirth called it a "significant achievement...integrated Hess, started-up major projects, delivered record production." Chevron's integrated model spans upstream production, refining, chemicals, and emerging energy ventures, including lithium and hydrogen projects. The company returned $12.1 billion in share buybacks for the year and raised its dividend 4% to $1.78 per share.
Caterpillar Inc ( NYSE: CAT) manufactures heavy equipment that builds the world's infrastructure. The company just paid $1.51 per share in January 2026, bringing its annual dividend to $6.04 (up from $5.84 in 2025). That 3.4% increase extends a 15-year streak of annual raises. With a yield under 1%, you're not buying CAT for income today. You're buying it for what the dividend becomes over the next decade.
Helping, Deutsche Bank upgraded ALB to a buy rating with a $185 price target. Analysts at Baird also upgraded ALB to a buy with a price target of $210. "We are incrementally positive given the recent increase in lithium prices... and our view that demand strength stemming from stationary storage will continue to propel ALB higher," Baird analysts wrote, as noted by Seeking Alpha. Analysts at Truist also just upgraded ALB to a buy rating with a price target of $205.
Corning Incorporated ( NYSE:GLW) has delivered one of 2026's most impressive rallies, climbing 50.2% year-to-date and 46% over the past month. Corning's 2026 is so good, it's now the 6th top performing stock in the entire S&P 500. The 175-year-old materials science company is riding three converging waves: stellar earnings execution, a massive partnership with Meta, and surging demand for AI data center infrastructure.