GBA Presents: House of Gummy-!

Discussion in 'Stocks' started by stonedinvestor, May 13, 2023.

  1. It’s going the wrong direction for Stoney. I don’t understand what he see’s in RELL! I see lots of great companies screaming that are not AI. NVTS absorbed the shelf($7.20-$7.5), home builders and supplies. AMWD, BECN, TMHC, DFH, TOL, BZH. AEHR finally broke free of the CEO leaving in Dec.
     
    #1561     Jun 12, 2023
  2. vanzandt

    vanzandt

    Sam Adams is down $13 from his "strong buy"... but I don't mention these things. :cool:
     
    #1562     Jun 12, 2023
  3. vanzandt

    vanzandt

    The Sheik is rumored to have a deal Stoney.

    MANU---> $24.38
     
    #1563     Jun 13, 2023
    stonedinvestor likes this.
  4. vanzandt

    vanzandt

    US air taxi chief says European regulation ‘not good for business’
    Archer Aviation’s boss says new EU standard risks shutting down electric aircraft market
    [​IMG]
    Adam Goldstein co-founded flying taxi company Archer Aviation, which went public in 2021 and has a market capitalisation of about $800mn © Mike Blake/Reuters

    The head of a leading company in the race to bring electric aircraft to the skies has hit out at Europe’s aviation regulator, warning its rules threatened to put the fledgling sector out of business.
    Adam Goldstein, chief executive of Archer Aviation, said in an interview that certification guidance published by the European Union Aviation Safety Agency would make it “extremely hard” to bring the new vehicles — often described as air taxis — to market.
    “EASA has openly said, ‘We know our regulations are harder and not good for business, and we don’t care,’” Goldstein told the Financial Times.
    California-based Archer is among the companies seeking approval to operate so-called electric vertical take-off and landing (eVTOL) aircraft to provide a range of services from short-hop flights over congested urban areas to longer regional flights. The company, co-founded by Goldstein, went public in 2021 and has a market capitalisation of about $800mn.
    Several companies hope aviation safety regulators will begin to certify their vehicles for flight from as early as next year.
    EASA is the only regulator to have published formal guidance for eVTOLs offering commercial services to passengers. Its approach assumes relatively large flight volumes over urban areas.
    The agency has told developers to adopt the same standard for safety as the one applied to large commercial jetliners: the chance of just one catastrophic failure in 1bn flight hours, or “10 to the minus nine”, in industry parlance.
    Goldstein criticised the regulation as too strict, saying there was no point in fostering an industry only “to regulate it out of business”, when it was possible to take “an approach that can still be at the highest levels of safety, but . . . that is more amendable to allowing companies to build around.”
    Archer, whose second prototype, Midnight, will have its first test flight this summer, wants to build a vehicle that is “as safe as commercial airliners today”, Goldstein said.
    EASA said in a statement: “Archer’s opinion is that high safety standards are not good for business. This point of view is not shared by EASA.”
    The EU regulator said the safety objectives it had set out were based on “risk assessment” and had been “evaluated to be equivalent to bus transportation safety, once eVTOL operations have reached a moderate scale”.
    It added: “EASA’s opinion is that setting such safety objectives enables business and protects future businesses.”
    The US Federal Aviation Administration has yet to publish a standard. Industry publications have reported it was likely to set the target safety level at one catastrophic failure per 10mn or per 100mn flight hours.
    The FAA said the new electric aircraft are mechanically simpler than commercial jets, allowing for a regulatory approach that uses certification standards “applicable to the size and complexity of aircraft and types of operations involved”.
    The FAA’s approach to eVTOLs is philosophically different than EASA’s, but no less safe, US officials said. The regulator believes it can reach the same level of safety in operations without the same requirements for back-up systems to be built into aircraft because it will have accounted for risks in other ways, including counting the pilot as an extra safeguard, according to the officials.
    Goldstein said that in the US, “it’s been a real positive for US-based companies because the regulator is so on board”.
    Last Wednesday the regulator proposed rules that lay out training protocols for pilots of aircraft that lift off vertically and then switch to winged flight. David Boulter, the FAA’s acting administrator for aviation safety, said the proposals will “safely usher in this new era of aviation and provide the certainty the industry needs to develop”.
    EASA has similarly put forward proposals on what kind of pilot training will be necessary to enable the operation of eVTOLs.
    The two regulators are in talks to agree on a common certification approach towards the sector to ensure companies can fly between different regions. They will meet again next week in Cologne.
    Recommended
    FT Magazine
    Flying car, anyone?
    [​IMG]

    Meanwhile, disagreement over target safety levels has created a point of contention among competitors in the industry. European companies argued in public filings submitted last year that US companies should have to meet EASA’s safety standards. They also raised concerns about the lack of detail contained in airworthiness criteria set out by the FAA for some of their US rivals.
    During a public comment period, UK-based Vertical Aerospace said that because of eVTOL’s “complex aircraft systems and complex commercial operating environment”, regulators should require the “10 to the minus nine” safety target.
    Trevor Woods, Vertical’s director of regulatory affairs, said the differences between the regulators “will narrow as certification requirements become clearer. Ultimately we, and the rest of the industry, want to see rules for eVTOLs standardised across countries.”
     
    #1564     Jun 13, 2023
  5. vanzandt

    vanzandt

    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
    Lilium has set its sights on longer flights, where the time spent on getting to the aircraft is less significant. It plans a statewide service in Florida from an estimated 14 vertiports developed by Ferrovial, and in October signed another deal with Saudia to supply it with 100 aircraft in the Middle East.
    Lilium’s jets would come into their own over ranges of 250km or more. There is no prospect of batteries replacing jet fuel for long-haul flights. But UK entrepreneur Alex Asseily, a Lilium investor and its former strategy director, has high hopes for short-haul. “I don’t know how much will be vertical take-off, but by 2030 you should be able to fly [electric] from London to anywhere in Europe.”
     
    #1565     Jun 13, 2023


  6. I think maybe you are chasing? I see in RELL a stock I can hold through a correction and still make money./ I think the technical set up supports this. Wait and see. ~si
     
    #1566     Jun 13, 2023
  7. Akoya Biosciences director buys $1.02M in common stock » 19:14 AKYA In a regulatory filing,… Akoya Biosciences director buys $10.1M in common stock » 19:13 AKYA In a regulatory filing,…
     
    #1567     Jun 13, 2023
  8. vanzandt

    vanzandt

    Consensus Outlook
    Core prices in May are not expected to slow at least on the month, seen holding steady instead at April's elevated 0.4 percent monthly increase. But the core's year-over-year rate is seen easing, to 5.3 from 5.5 percent. Overall prices are also expected to ease and substantially, to 0.2 percent on the month from 0.4 percent and to 4.1 percent on the year from 4.9 percent
     
    #1568     Jun 13, 2023
  9. StoneCo upgraded to Buy from Hold at HSBC 19:43 STNE

    Alight initiated with a Buy at Citi » 17:04 ALIT

    OmniAb CEO buys $519.8K in common stock » 16:50 OABI

    Emeren CFO Shah acquires 303,854 shares » 14:44 SOL

    GBA View On Regional Banks- Too Early more pain to come at earnings time-

    Northern Trust says cost of deposits 'very, very high' due to competition » 14:35 NTRS

    Truist Financial down 4% after lowering full year revenue growth outlook » 14:51 TFC Shares of Truist… Truist CFO says now sees full year year-over-year revenue growth of 3% 14:48 TFC
     
    #1569     Jun 13, 2023
  10. year-over-year rate is seen easing, to 5.3 from 5.5 percent.

    I have us going from 5.5 to 6.0 o_O
     
    #1570     Jun 13, 2023