Survey How are the Trump tariffs affecting you? Take our survey and let us know. HKSE - Delayed Quote • HKD Everbright Securities Company Limited (6178.HK) Follow Add holdings 6.890 +0.090 +(1.32%) As of 10:33:06 AM GMT+8. Market Open. Related News Slate: Introducing the Bezos-backed EV pickup for the masses “We built it, you make it.” That’s the motto for Slate, a new American EV company, as it revealed its launch model: a bare-bones pickup truck with a footprint smaller than a Ford Maverick. Intel CEO unveils major workplace overhaul to boost innovation, slams 'suffocating' bureaucracy Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan started his first quarterly earnings presentation at the helm of the troubled chipmaker by announcing a major workplace overhaul that aims to boost innovation. Skechers, Boyd Gaming, T-Mobile: Trending Tickers Julie Hyman takes a look at some of the trending tickers in extended-hours trading. Skechers (SKX) stock sinks after the company withdrew its guidance and reported an earnings miss. Boyd Gaming (BYD) stock pops after the company's earnings and revenue results topped analyst estimates. T-Mobile (TMUS) stock falls after announcing softer-than-expected phone customer numbers. To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Asking for a Trend here. Takeaways from Alphabet's Q1: Cost cutting & Google Search growth Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) stock pops after the Google parent company reported first quarter results that beat on the top and bottom lines. D.A. Davidson managing director Gil Luria and CFRA Research senior equity analyst Angelo Zino join Market Domination Overtime with Julie Hyman and Fundstrat Global Advisors managing director and global head of technical strategy Mark Newton to live react to the earnings print. To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Market Domination Overtime here. Alphabet stock rises on Q1 revenue, earnings beat Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL), the parent company of Google, reported first quarter earnings of $2.81 per share, well above the Bloomberg consensus estimate of $2.01. Revenue ex-TAC was $76.49 billion versus the expectation of $75.4 billion. The tech giant also announced a 5% increase in its dividend and a plan to repurchase up to an additional $70.0 billion worth of shares. Market Domination Anchor Julie Hyman, Yahoo Finance Reporter Josh Schafer, and Fundstrat Global Advisors managing director Mark Newton discuss the breaking numbers. To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Market Domination Overtime here. Whirlpool CEO: 'Call me pro tariff' Whirlpool chair and CEO Mark Bitzer says tariffs from the Trump administration will help his company. P&G CEO: Consumers are doing less laundry amid tariff backdrop P&G chairman and CEO Jon Moeller strikes a cautious tone on the state of the US consumer. Adobe wants to create a robots.txt-styled indicator for images used in AI training For years, websites included information about what kind of crawlers were not allowed on their site with a robots.txt file. Adobe, which wants to create a similar standard for images, has added a tool to content credentials with an intention to give them a bit more control over what is used to train AI models. Convincing AI companies to actually adhere to Adobe's standard may be the primary challenge, especially considering AI crawlers are already known to ignore requests in the robots.txt file. Adobe releases new Firefly image generation models and a redesigned Firefly web app Adobe on Thursday launched the latest iteration of its Firefly family of image generation AI models, a model for generating vectors, and a redesigned web app that houses all its AI models, plus some from its competitors. There's also a mobile app for Firefly in the works. The new Firefly Image Model 4, Adobe says, improves on its predecessors in terms of quality, speed, and the amount of control over the structure and style of outputs, camera angles, and zoom. It can generate images in resolutio Alphabet says Waymo may offer robotaxis for personal ownership in future SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -Alphabet's Waymo self-driving taxis may be available for people to own in the future, CEO Sundar Pichai said on Thursday, just as electric vehicle maker Tesla gears up to roll out robotaxis this year in the United States. Waymo, which started as a small self-driving project in 2009 and spun out of Google seven years later, has expanded slowly but steadily in a tricky autonomous vehicle market that has witnessed several casualties due to soaring investment, tight regulatory requirements and tough technological hurdles. With more than 700 vehicles in its fleet - 300 of which operate in San Francisco - Waymo is the only U.S. firm that runs uncrewed robotaxis that collect fares. Jeff Bezos' Final CEO Letter Isn't Just About Amazon — It Is A Clarion Call For Resisting Normality: 'The World Wants You To Be Typical...Don't Let It Happen' In his final letter as Amazon.com's (NASDAQ:AMZN) CEO, Jeff Bezos left more than business advice — he delivered a message that speaks to anyone fighting to stay authentic in a world built for conformity. What Happened: Bezos, who stepped down as Amazon's CEO in 2021 after founding the company nearly three decades earlier, used his final annual shareholder letter to share a powerful parting thought. Drawing inspiration from evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins, he explained that survival — in b Elon Musk Equates Car Ownership In Future To Riding A Horse While Using A Flip Phone — Pierre Ferragu Says Tesla's 'iPhone Moment' Hinges On Full Autonomy On Tuesday, during Tesla Inc.'s (NASDAQ:TSLA) first-quarter earnings call, CEO Elon Musk predicted that car ownership will soon become obsolete. What Happened: Musk said that most people will no longer buy cars in the future, framing the shift as an inevitable change. He compared traditional gasoline vehicles to outdated technologies, likening them to flip phones in an era dominated by smartphones. “In the not too distant future, buying a gasoline car that is not autonomous will be like riding a Google Faces a Potential Breakup The Department of Justice is asking that Alphabet sell Chrome. Trade tensions are giving Intel's older chips a second life (Reuters) -A Sino-U.S. trade war that threatens Intel's revenue from its biggest market, China, has become an unlikely driver of demand for the embattled chipmaker's older generation of personal computer and server chips, company executives said on Thursday. A worsening economic outlook and the prospect of higher prices brought on by U.S. President Donald Trump's sweeping global tariffs and Beijing's retaliatory levies is prompting customers to fall back on cheaper, older processors. "In client, we are seeing strong demand on older-gen parts and in data center as well," the chief executive of Intel's products unit, Michelle Johnston Holthaus, said during a call after Intel posted results. Analysis-After years of failed AI deals, Intel plans homegrown challenge to Nvidia (Reuters) -One of Intel's biggest missteps over the past decade was the failure to challenge Nvidia's dominance in the fast-growing market for artificial intelligence chips. During his first earnings conference call with analysts as Intel's new CEO, Lip-Bu Tan outlined how Intel hopes to change that, but warned, "This is not a quick fix." Tan said he would comb through Intel's existing products to sharpen them for emerging trends in the AI market such as robotics and agents that can carry out tasks for human users. Intel (INTC) Reports Q1 Earnings: What Key Metrics Have to Say Although the revenue and EPS for Intel (INTC) give a sense of how its business performed in the quarter ended March 2025, it might be worth considering how some key metrics compare with Wall Street estimates and the year-ago numbers. ‘There are no quick fixes’: Intel’s CEO gives Wall Street a reality check about the chipmaker’s would-be turnaround New CEO Lip-Bu Tan gave a broad outline of how he plans to revive the ailing chipmaking giant. Google wows Wall Street with strong Q1, but deflects questions about its business since Trump’s tariffs Advertising held up in the first quarter, but Google executives gingerly danced around their Q2 expectations. Google’s Earnings Power Holds Up in Global Turbulence Google-parent Alphabet reported solid earnings, but the tariff impact on the second quarter is still unclear. Workers could save 122 hours a year by adopting AI in admin tasks, says Google LONDON (Reuters) -Britain could gain 400 billion pounds ($533 billion) from AI-driven growth if it trained its workforce, Google said, after a pilot scheme in the UK showed workers could save more than 120 hours a year by using AI in administrative tasks. Simple steps such as giving workers permission to use AI and a few hours of training to get them started could help double the adoption of the new technology, and in turn boost economic growth, Google said in a report on its pilot scheme, published on Friday. The U.S. tech giant, which developed the Gemini AI chatbot, said that according to analysis by Public First, its partner in the scheme, two thirds of workers - particularly older women from lower socio-economic backgrounds - had never used generative AI at work. Performance Overview Trailing total returns as of 4/25/2025, which may include dividends or other distributions. Benchmark is SSE Composite Index (000001.SS) Return 6178.HK SSE Composite Index (000001.SS) YTD -13.88% -1.52% 1-Year +42.49% +8.12% 3-Year +66.85% +12.71%