Second quarter report 2021
Please find the second quarter report for Sbanken Boligkreditt AS enclosed.
This information is subject to the disclosure requirements pursuant to Section 5-12 the Norwegian Securities Trading Act
Attachment
Voyager Digital Ltd. ("Voyager" or the "Company") (CSE: VYGR) (OTCQB: VYGVF) (FRA: UCD2), is pleased to provide stakeholders with a business update for the Fiscal 4Q ended June 30, 2021.
What happened Shares of graphics (and crypto-mining) chipmaker NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) tumbled for a third straight day Thursday, falling 4% in 1:25 p.m. EDT trading despite getting a boost in its price target from Wall Street bank Mizuho.
Bond guru Jeffrey Gundlach of DoubleLine Capital said it is no mystery why U.S. Treasury yields are anchored lower despite evidence that inflation is rising in an economy attempting to rebound from a stultifying pandemic.
In May 2020, I concluded that “the stock market… is stronger than even the most bullish investors believe.” In January of this year, I wrote that the market was still “firing on all cylinders.” In an interview on July 14, Martin said the U.S. stock market today is most definitely not firing on all cylinders. In fact, he said, the market’s internal health is now worse than at any time since October 2018.
Stocks are near all-time highs, and though U.S. futures point to a soft open on Thursday, it’s easy to find bulls these days. But a technical indicator suggests investors should be bearish.
The semiconductor industry just keeps getting weirder and weirder, and the latest news from Intel Corp. is another example of the industry's quest for deals in search of growth.
We are in an upward-bound market right now, the S&P is up over 18% so far this year, and it’s tempting to just sit back and the portfolio appreciate. Returns are solid, and if they’re not as high as they were in 2019, they are more broad-based then they were when tech pulled back earlier this year. There’s a positive feeling in the air. It’s easy to be complacent in an atmosphere like this, but some Wall Street pros believe that now is the time to diversify the portfolio, and shift into multiple
Jim Suva, Citi Managing Director in Equity Research specializing in technology, joined Yahoo Finance Live to break down his thoughts ont he outlook of Apple.
Yahoo Finance’s Jared Blikre reports on the day's trending tickers.
Apple and Nvidia fell as market weakness continued. Elon Musk said the Cybertruck could "flop." But several stocks are near buys.
Virgin Galactic Holdings (NYSE: SPCE) completed a historic milestone last Sunday, successfully launching founder Richard Branson into space. Branson's flight into space happened nearly a year after it was originally planned, due to a combination of COVID-related delays and some testing setbacks. Richard Branson (second from left) and the mission specialists ahead of the July 11 flight.
Semiconductor heavyweight (INTC) is in talks to buy contract chip maker GlobalFoundries for $30 billion, The Wall Street Journal reported late Thursday. Intel (ticker: INTC) stock edged up 0.5% in the extended session. Intel declined to comment.
Despite the stock market hitting seemingly one new high after another since the year began, Wall Street still sees value in equities. Based on the highest Wall Street price target for each of the following small-cap stocks, implied upside ranging from 158% to as much as 329% may await. The first tiny tot that Wall Street appears to be really excited about is clinical-stage biotech stock Vaxart (NASDAQ: VXRT).
Shares of embattled electric pickup start-up Lordstown Motors (NASDAQ: RIDE) were trading higher on Thursday. In March, short-seller Hindenburg Research alleged that Lordstown (among other things) exaggerated the number of pre-orders it had for its Endurance pickup truck. Lordstown denied the allegations, but the Securities and Exchange Commission opened an investigation.
The S&P 500 has been rising all year, and to date has posted gains of more than 16%. After a more volatile start to the year, with strong swings up and down from January to the end of May, during which investors pulled back from the tech giants, the NASDAQ has joined the upward trend. Its year-to-date gain now stands at 14%, and like the S&P, sits just under a record high level. But how much room is there for further growth across the board? In an environment like this, investors need to take ca
GM expanded its new EV charging service to include commercial vehicles and named EVgo a preferred partner.
In March, shares of the company slumped after investment research firm Hindenburg Research said Lordstown had misled consumers and investors about pre-orders worth $1.4 billion for its Endurance truck. An internal investigation into Hindenburg's claims in June acknowledged that Lordstown had overstated the quality of pre-orders for its electric trucks.
General Electric (NYSE: GE) stock is sitting in the middle of a battleground of bulls and bears. The bears point out that the stock is up less than 12% compared to the near 50% gain in the S&P 500 since October 2018, when Larry Culp took over as GE's CEO. GE is a company that remains poorly run despite Culp's efforts, and faces significant end market challenges in aviation (slow recovery in commercial air flights) and power (weak demand for gas turbines over renewable energy).
Crude oil is having a banner year as prices return to pre-pandemic levels, and we think two companies in particular are on track to win big
Institutional finance has had many opportunities to make money in the cryptocurrency space—but as its influence spreads, the cryptocurrency market is transforming into something new.