How to know when a CEO shakeup is a buy signal — and when it screams “sell.”
My previous $82 price target for NextEra stock was hit, but I'm not selling. A new, more powerful AI-driven growth thesis has emerged, replacing the value recovery story. The AI boom is structurally reversing decades of flat electricity demand. However, simply identifying this trend isn't enough. The key is pinpointing which companies can actually execute and profit. NextEra Energy stands apart. Its unmatched scale, superior supply chain stability, and fortress balance sheet create unique competitive advantages in the race to power AI.
TGT's AI-driven efficiency and digital gains give it an edge over BBW's record results amid retail headwinds.
NextEra Energy remains a top utilities pick, blending defensive stability with AI-driven growth opportunities, and I reiterate my "Buy" rating. Q3 earnings beat EPS expectations, driven by strong Florida Power & Light performance and a new partnership with Google to restart the Duane Arnold nuclear plant. NEE's valuation is attractive; I raise my price target, projecting further upside as EPS growth, corporate deals, and AI tailwinds support fundamentals.
Target Corp (NYSE:TGT) late Thursday revealed that it is eliminating 1,800 jobs across its organization, representing about 8% of its corporate workforce. The layoffs, which are largest round at the retailer in a decade, are part of Target's efforts to streamline decision-making and speed up initiatives to rebuild its customer base.
Yesterday, Target Corporation announced news that no one wants to hear—especially just before the holidays.
TGT plans to slash 1,800 corporate jobs to streamline operations and revive growth amid mounting retail competition.
Struggling retail stock Target Corp (NYSE:TGT) is trading up 1.2% to trade at $95.42, after the company announced plans to layoff 1,800 corporate employees, or 8% of its workforce.
Alaska Airlines (ALK) restored operations after an IT outage grounded all flights, canceling over 220 and postponing its Q3 2025 earnings call. Target (TGT) is cutting 1,800 corporate positions, about 8% of its global team, to streamline operations and boost agility.
Target Corp. said on Thursday (Oct. 23) that it will eliminate 1,800 corporate roles, or 8% of its headquarters workforce, in its largest restructuring in years, a move designed to streamline operations and reduce costs as it battles waning sales and investor skepticism.
Target is cutting about 1,000 corporate positions and eliminating 800 open roles in an effort to speed up business decision-making and drive growth under its new chief executive, Michael Fiddelke.
As Target prepares for a new era with Michael Fiddelke at the helm, the retailer is reportedly cutting jobs in an effort to reduce the “complexity” that its new CEO says slowed down the company.