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SAP beats Q1 estimates as cloud demand surges

🏷️ Finance & Economics🌍 Germany🔗 11 sources53Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
SAP beats Q1 estimates as cloud demand surges

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SAP reported stronger-than-expected first-quarter results on April 23, 2026, driven by rapid cloud demand and improved profitability. Revenue rose to €9.56 billion, up 6% year‑on‑year, while non‑IFRS operating profit climbed to €2.87 billion. Cloud revenue reached €5.96 billion (19% growth; ~27% at constant currency) and the current cloud backlog expanded about 25% to €21.9 billion. Management kept full‑year revenue guidance intact, forecasting cloud growth of 23%–25% but warned the outlook depends on de‑escalation of the Middle East conflict. Free cash flow was €3.2 billion, affected by a €408 million litigation payout. Executives highlighted strong public‑cloud order momentum, partner channel gains and initial traction for Business AI offerings, while cautioning that broad enterprise AI adoption and scaling remain early-stage challenges. Shares rose following the results as investors digested the cloud momentum and guidance caveats.

Intel forecasts strong AI-driven revenue surge

🏷️ Finance & Economics🌍 United States🔥 Trending🔗 28 sources50Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Intel forecasts strong AI-driven revenue surge

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Intel stunned markets on April 23-24, 2026 after reporting stronger-than-expected Q1 results and forecasting a second-quarter revenue range of $13.8bn–$14.8bn. Q1 revenue was $13.6bn, up about 7% year‑on‑year; Data Center & AI sales rose to $5.1bn (≈22% y/y). The company posted non‑GAAP EPS of $0.29 and a GAAP loss (about $0.73/share) reflecting significant restructuring and goodwill charges. Intel Foundry revenue increased to $5.4bn, though most foundry sales remained internal and external foundry customers were modest. CEO Lip‑Bu Tan said a shift from model training to inference and “agentic” AI has revived demand for CPUs, boosting Xeon orders and prompting partnerships and investments — including deals with Google, Nvidia, SoftBank, a U.S. government 10% stake, and participation in Elon Musk’s Terafab project. Intel also repurchased a minority stake in its Ireland Fab 34. Shares jumped roughly 15–20% in after‑hours trading, adding tens of billions in market value. Management cautioned that supply constraints (memory, wafers, substrates) and heavy foundry losses mean capacity and margin risks remain as the company scales production.

Nike to cut about 1,400 jobs in overhaul

🏷️ Finance & Economics🌍 United States🔗 9 sources48Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Nike to cut about 1,400 jobs in overhaul

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Nike said on April 23-24 it will eliminate roughly 1,400 roles, mainly within its Global Operations technology teams, as part of a broader “Win Now” turnaround. The reductions represent just under 2% of Nike’s global workforce and span North America, Europe and Asia. In an internal memo, Chief Operating Officer Venkatesh Alagirisamy said the moves will consolidate technology operations into two hubs — the Philip H. Knight Campus in Beaverton and the Nike India Technology Center — and include modernization of Air Manufacturing Innovation facilities, relocation of some Converse footwear engineering closer to factory partners, and tighter integration of materials into footwear and apparel supply chains. The cuts follow earlier reductions this year, including about 775 distribution center roles in January, and come as the company grapples with years-long sales pressure, a forecast 2–4% drop in the current quarter and an expected ~20% decline in China. Nike’s recent quarterly results showed profit and sales weakness, and its shares have fallen sharply over the past three years.

BoE deputy warns global stock markets overvalued

🏷️ Finance & Economics🌍 United Kingdom🔥 Trending🔗 6 sources47Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
BoE deputy warns global stock markets overvalued

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Bank of England Deputy Governor Sarah Breeden told the BBC on April 24 that stock markets around the world are “too high” and are likely to fall because current share prices do not fully reflect a range of economic and geopolitical risks. Breeden, who leads the Bank’s financial stability work, declined to predict timing or scale of any correction but said her priority is to ensure the financial system is resilient if markets adjust. She highlighted the rapid expansion of private credit — now roughly $2.5 trillion after 15–20 years of growth — as a particular concern because it has not been tested at scale and is deeply interconnected with other parts of finance. Breeden warned about the danger of multiple risks crystallising simultaneously, including a major macroeconomic shock, an abrupt readjustment in AI-related valuations, and spillovers from the recent Middle East conflict that have boosted energy costs. Her comments echo recent Bank analysis that higher inflation, weaker growth and rising borrowing costs raise the chance of simultaneous stress across government debt, private credit and major technology stocks.

Mobileye Raises 2026 Outlook After Strong Q1

🏷️ Finance & Economics🌍 Israel🔗 13 sources43Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Mobileye Raises 2026 Outlook After Strong Q1

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Mobileye Global reported a stronger-than-expected first quarter on April 23–24, 2026, with revenue of $558 million, up about 27% year-on-year, and adjusted earnings of $0.12 per share. Adjusted operating income rose to $95 million, a 61% increase, and operating cash flow was $75 million. The Jerusalem-based company lifted its 2026 revenue guidance (now about $1.94–2.02 billion) and nudged adjusted operating income guidance higher. Management credited higher EyeQ unit shipments (roughly 10 million units in Q1), higher ADAS fitment at core Western customers and robust Chinese OEM export volumes. Mobileye also announced a $250 million share repurchase and reported a non-cash goodwill impairment of about $3.788 billion, producing a GAAP net loss of roughly $3.8 billion for the quarter. The stock jumped sharply on the results. Mobileye highlighted progress on advanced programs — SuperVision, Surround ADAS design wins (including Mahindra) and robotaxi work with Volkswagen/MOIA — while warning of geopolitical volatility, mix-driven margin pressure from lower ASP China volumes and a cautiously soft Q2 revenue outlook.
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