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Sherritt International Corp T.S

Alternate Symbol(s):  SHERF

Sherritt International Corporation is a Canada-based company engaged in the mining and refining of nickel and cobalt metals essential for the adoption of electric vehicles through hydrometallurgical processes. The Company is engaged in the production of high purity nickel and cobalt metals from lateritic ore. Its technologies group creates solutions for oil and mining companies around the world to improve environmental performance. The Company offers a range of products including Nickel, Cobalt, Fertilizers and Other Products. The Nickel products category includes standard grade, steel grade, and nickel powders. The Cobalt products category includes cobalt briquettes and cobalt powders. The Company’s Fertilizers product category includes anhydrous ammonia, granular ammonium sulfate, crystalline ammonium sulfate-super salt, and crystalline ammonium sulfate-standard grade. The Other products category includes sulfuric acid, zinc sulfide, and copper sulfide.


TSX:S - Post by User

Post by CommonCents123on Jan 31, 2024 8:09am
75 Views
Post# 35854439

LAST POST OF THE DAY - GOING TO MY BEACH VILLA IN THE ALPS

LAST POST OF THE DAY - GOING TO MY BEACH VILLA IN THE ALPSOPEN YOUR EYES GUYS...ENJOY CNBC MORNING SQUAWK

 
1. Reading the tea leaves - DON'T SMOKE THEM LIKE SOMEONE ELSE ON THIS BOARD
Wall Street is waiting with bated breath to hear what the Federal Reserve will say Wednesday about interest rates. The S&P 500 closed nearly flat Tuesday ahead of the announcement, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.3% and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.6%. Investors aren’t necessarily expecting a big change in rates at this meeting. In fact, the fed funds futures market has priced in a 97% probability that the central bank will leave rates unchanged. Instead, they’re more interested in the post-meeting statement the Fed will release, and what it means for the future of the bank’s policy. For now, follow live market updates.
 
2. Not good enough
It was good, just not good enough. Both Alphabet and Microsoft saw their stock sell off in extended trading Tuesday despite reporting revenue and earnings that topped expectations. Alphabet shares slid roughly 6% as the company reported disappointing ad revenue of $65.52 billion didn’t hit the $65.94 billion that StreetAccount analysts were forecasting. YouTube also came in shy of expectations, but Google Cloud was a bright spot, expanding 26% in the fourth quarter compared with a year ago. Microsoft shares, meanwhile, initially dropped more than 2%, though they recovered some of those losses. Microsoft said in a statement that its revenue increased 17.6% year over year, although its outlook was a bit light. Its Intelligent Cloud segment beat analysts’ expectations, and revenue from Azure and other cloud services grew 30%.
 
 
 
3. Boeing blowout
Boeing reported a narrower loss than expected for the last three months of the year, but its future is still unknown. The company reported an adjusted loss per share of 47 cents versus the 78 cents loss analysts expected. Aircraft demand and deliveries rose for that same period. But the report comes weeks after a door plug blew out on a Boeing 737 Max 9 that was flying at 16,000 feet, leaving a gaping hole in the side of the plane. The company did not provide a 2024 outlook. But investors are eager to hear from the planemaker about how the blowout could reverberate through the industry as the incident is under federal investigation. “While we often use this time of year to share or update our financial and operational objectives, now is not the time for that,” Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun said in a message to employees.
 
4. UPS down APPARENTLY THE ECONOMY IS DOING WELL....LAYOFFS?
UPS is cutting 12,000 jobs. CEO Carol Tom said the layoffs will save the shipping giant about $1 billion in costs and that 2023 was a “unique, and quite candidly, difficult and disappointing year.” UPS shares dropped more than 8% Tuesday as the company fell short of Wall Street’s revenue estimates. UPS also reported a drop in international and domestic shipping volume, with Tom citing softness in Europe, as well turmoil in the Red Sea region and Panama and Suez canals contributing to the decline.
 
5. Too much?
A Delaware judge voided Elon Musk’s $56 billion Tesla compensation on Tuesday, agreeing with a plaintiff that Musk’s pay package was inappropriately set by the board. The compensation plan that Tesla granted Musk in 2018 was unprecedented and the judge noted it was the largest in public corporate history. It also made Musk the richest person on the planet. But Chancery Court Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick said in a 200-page ruling that Tesla failed to show “that the compensation plan was fair” or provide much evidence that its members had even negotiated with Musk. She said the plaintiff in the case is entitled to rescission. Tesla shares slid about 3% in after-hours trading after the decision was announced.
 
— CNBC’s Michele Luhn wrote this newsletter. Brian Evans, Ashley Capoot, Ari Levy, Jordan Novet, Leslie Josephs, Laya Neelakandan, Dan Mangan and Lora Kolodny contributed.
Follow Squawk Pod for the best conversations and analysis from Squawk Box in a curated, daily podcast. 
 
 
 
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