
T1 Energy Announces Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Release and Conference Call Schedule
The second quarter 2025 press release will be issued at or around 6:00 am Eastern Daylight Time. The conference call is scheduled to begin at 8:00 am Eastern Daylight Time.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Globe and Mail
6 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
3 Millionaire-Maker Technology Stocks
Key Points If quantum computing takes off in the next decade, IonQ could be a big winner. SoundHound is a company that has shown its ability to adapt, and it could become a big winner in agentic AI. Palantir has the potential to become one of the largest AI companies in the world. 10 stocks we like better than IonQ › If you're looking to invest in potential millionaire-making tech stocks, you're sometimes going to have to swing for the fences. The three stocks below are bold bets on companies chasing massive markets with long runways. You're not buying these stocks looking for modest returns; you're buying them because you see a shot at something transformational. That said, these are high-risk, high-potential-reward stocks. None of their valuations are cheap, and most are still just starting to scratch the surface of their potential. But if the technologies deliver and management teams execute, the upside could be enormous. IonQ Quantum computing company IonQ (NYSE: IONQ) isn't just an academic lab with a bunch of theoretical physics testing hypotheses, like the characters on the TV show "The Big Bang Theory." It's building real quantum computers that are already being tested in commercial, government, and academic settings. IonQ is working to build fault-tolerant systems that can operate at scale, which is the holy grail in quantum computing. Without that reliability, this emerging technology won't move beyond the lab. The company has made solid early progress. It's working with AstraZeneca, Amazon, and Nvidia on early use cases, and it has a strong balance sheet with around $700 million in cash and investments and zero debt. That gives it time and room to invest without constantly going to the market for funding. IonQ also opened a 65,000 square foot facility in Washington to manufacture systems in-house. That's another sign that this isn't just a science project anymore and that the company is gearing up to deliver working machines. The company has also been acquiring smaller quantum computing players to help bolster its capabilities. That's a smart move in a burgeoning field where technical talent and intellectual property are key. There's still a long road ahead, but if quantum computing takes off in the next decade, IonQ is positioned to be one of the companies that could be a huge winner. SoundHound AI While SoundHound AI (NASDAQ: SOUN) is still a relatively young company, it has consistently been able to adapt in an ever-evolving tech landscape. That's something great tech companies do. A leader in "speech-to-meaning" and "deep meaning understanding" technology, the company acquired Amelia last year to add its advanced conversational intelligence to its platform. It's now taking this combined technology and applying it to create voice-first artificial intelligence (AI) agents that can go out and complete tasks without the need for human intervention. By merging its voice technology with Amelia's enterprise software, SoundHound now has a complete voice automation platform. SoundHound has been strong in the automobile and restaurant industries, while Amelia brought with it expertise in the medical and financial verticals, which have their own nuances and specific industry jargon. It's also used Amelia's technology as part of the foundation for its AI agent ambitions. With the recent rollout of its Amelia 7.0 platform, it's now moved beyond being simply an AI voice company to being a voice-first agentic AI company. This is still a small company with something to prove, but the product roadmap and customer traction suggest it's heading in the right direction. And as I said at the beginning, it has been quick to adapt. The company actually started out as a platform for discovering music, where it would then direct customers to online music stores. It's come a long way since those early days, and the future looks bright. Palantir Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ: PLTR) is the largest company on this list and the one with the clearest momentum. Originally formed to help fight terrorism after 9/11, the data gathering and analytics company has been a key government vendor for years. However, it has successfully expanded into the commercial sector, where its AI platform (AIP) has become a central tool for helping organizations implement AI in the real world. Most businesses don't lack data -- they lack the tools to do anything meaningful with it. Palantir helps organizations gather data from a wide variety of sources and then structure it into an ontology that links the data to their real-world counterparts. The ontology provides clean, structured data that helps AI models operate more effectively. Customers can then apply whatever AI models they want with this ontology to identify real-world problems and then go out and solve them. AIP has been a hit with commercial customers. In Q1, its U.S. commercial revenue grew 71%, and commercial deal value more than doubled. Best of all, most of these deals are in their early stages, and Palantir has a big opportunity not just to add more customers, but to grow significantly within its existing customer base. The stock's valuation is steep, no question. However, given the breadth of use cases across industries for which AIP can be used, the company has the potential to become one of the largest AI companies in the world in the future. Should you invest $1,000 in IonQ right now? Before you buy stock in IonQ, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and IonQ wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $624,823!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $1,064,820!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 1,019% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 178% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor. See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of July 29, 2025


Globe and Mail
7 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
Got $1,000 to Invest in August? These High-Yielding Dividend Stocks Could Turn It Into Nearly $60 of Annual Passive Income.
Key Points EPR Properties pays a monthly dividend yielding over 6%. Vici Properties' payout yields more than 5%. The REITs expect to continue increasing their dividend payments. 10 stocks we like better than EPR Properties › Investing in high-yield dividend stocks is a great way to generate passive income. For example, investing $1,000 in the following companies could yield nearly $60 of annual dividend income: EPR Properties (NYSE: EPR) $500 6.42% $32.10 Vici Properties (NYSE: VICI) $500 5.29% $26.45 Total $1,000 5.85% $58.55 Data sources: Google Finance and author's calculations. Dividend yields are as of July 31. Here's a closer look at these high-quality, high-yielding dividend stocks. EPR Properties EPR Properties is a real estate investment trust (REIT) focused on experiential real estate. The company owns a diversified portfolio of movie theaters, eat-and-play venues, health and fitness properties, attractions, and other entertainment spaces. It leases these properties back to operating tenants, primarily under long-term, triple net leases (NNN s). Those leases provide it with very stable cash flow because tenants cover all property operating costs (including routine maintenance, real estate taxes, and building insurance). The REIT expects its stable portfolio to generate $5 to $5.16 per share of funds from operations (FFO) as adjusted this year. That easily covers its monthly dividend payment of $0.295 per share, or $3.54 annually. It also provides a cushion and surplus cash to invest in more experiential properties. EPR Properties invested $86.3 million into new properties in the first half of this year. Recent investments included acquiring land for $1.2 million and providing $5.9 million in mortgage financing secured by improvements at a health and wellness property in Georgia. It also acquired land for a new eat-and-play property development in Virginia for $1.6 million, which has an expected total cost of $19 million and an anticipated completion in 2026. The company plans to invest $200 million to $300 million in new properties this year. This includes $106 million for experiential development and redevelopment projects it plans to fund over the next 18 months. These investments should grow EPR's FFO and dividend. The REIT raised its payout by 3.5% earlier this year. Vici Properties Fellow REIT Vici Properties also invests in experiential real estate. However, its primary focus is on market-leading gaming, hospitality, wellness, entertainment, and leisure destinations. For example, it owns several iconic casinos along the Las Vegas Strip, including Caesars Palace Las Vegas, MGM Grand, and the Venetian Resort Las Vegas. The REIT also leases its properties under long-term NNN contracts with operating tenants. These leases currently have a weighted average remaining term of over 40 years. A growing subset of its leases -- 42% this year, rising to 90% by 2035 -- link rents to inflation. Its strategy of investing in large properties with long-term, inflation-linked leases provides it with stable and rising rental income. Vici Properties currently pays out $0.4325 per share each quarter in dividends, for a total of $1.73 annually. It produces plenty of cash to cover that payment level -- $2.35 to $2.37 per share of adjusted FFO is expected this year. The REIT uses the cash it retains to invest in additional experiential properties. The company has secured two notable new investments this year. It has agreed to provide a loan of up to $510 million to fund the development of the North Fork Mono Casino & Resort in California. Additionally, Vici has committed to investing $450 million into a mezzanine loan related to the development of One Beverly Hills, a landmark luxury mixed-use development in California. Vici's new investments help drive growth in both its FFO per share and its dividend. The REIT has raised its payment for seven straight years (each year since its formation). It has grown the payout at a 7.4% compound annual rate during that period, outpacing the 2.3% average of other REITs focused on properties secured by NNNs. Excellent ways to generate passive dividend income EPR Properties and Vici Properties own diversified and growing portfolios of experiential real estate. Those properties provide them with rising streams of rental income to pay dividends and invest in additional properties. That makes them great ways to turn $1,000 into a growing stream of passive dividend income this August. Should you invest $1,000 in EPR Properties right now? Before you buy stock in EPR Properties, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and EPR Properties wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $624,823!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $1,064,820!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 1,019% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 178% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor. See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of July 29, 2025


Globe and Mail
15 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
Is QuantumScape a Buy After Battery Breakthroughs?
Key Points QuantumScape has figured out how to make electric vehicle batteries better than the current state of the art. It's still not actually manufacturing these batteries at scale, and it's not clear when it might begin doing so. This stock's inability to hold on to its recent gains is a red flag, but the retracement seems exaggerated. 10 stocks we like better than QuantumScape › The past few weeks have been wild ones for QuantumScape (NYSE: QS) shareholders. After it drifted to a multi-year low in April, something suddenly lit a fire under this electric vehicle (EV) technology stock in late June. Shares were up by more than 200% less than a month later. That something was a breakthrough in how the company manufactures its high-performance EV battery packs. A key step in the process can now be completed about 25 times faster than before, offering the market some assurance that this pre-commercialization outfit will have the production capacity it needs when it needs it. Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Continue » Nearly half of that gain has unsurprisingly been unwound in the meantime. Investors jumped in response to the news, but eventually remembered that there's more this start-up needs to accomplish before mass commercialization. On the other hand, this pullback could also prove to be a fantastic second chance to dive in at a decent price. What's QuantumScape? First things first. What the heck is QuantumScape? This company makes lithium-based batteries like the ones the majority of modern electric vehicles require. QuantumScape's batteries are better than the standard lithium-ion battery you'll find powering most EVs these days. Not only are its solid-state lithium battery packs capable of storing more energy, they don't require the usual anode, tackling two of the EV battery business' lingering challenges. This simpler design not only translates into lower manufacturing costs, but also lower overall materials costs on a per-watt basis. The only problem? QuantumScape's batteries aren't actually being manufactured at commercial scale yet. It's not entirely clear how much it will cost or how difficult it will be to do so, either. The only powerpacks it's made so far are prototypes provided to carmakers that want to tinker with the technology in their own electric vehicles. Still, the science is quite promising. The solid-state batteries the company has made provide on the order of 15% to 40% more driving range than comparable conventional lithium-ion batteries do. Perhaps more importantly, they're far more durable. QuantumScape's own testing indicates that its powerpacks are capable of holding 95% of their original charge capacity, even after 1,000 recharges. That's about 300,000 miles worth of driving, alleviating one of would-be EV owners' top cost concerns -- the eventual replacement of their electric vehicle's battery at a price tag of anywhere between $10,000 and $20,000. A big leap forward Given all this, the company's story is compelling. The question is: How close is QuantumScape to actually manufacturing an affordable and functional solid-state EV battery at scale? Well, it's at least one step closer to this endzone than it was a little over a month ago. In late June, QuantumScape announced it had successfully integrated its advanced "Cobra" separator process into the production of its baseline lithium cells. That means the ceramic-based separator between its batteries' solid cathodes and the company's anode alternative can now be layered into place about 25 times faster than the company's previous fabrication process. That's the whole reason for July's brilliant burst of bullishness. Welcome to the world of story stocks. Still, it's easy to see why the market suddenly became so excited. This is no small matter. This ceramic material negates the need for a porous polymer separator between the liquid electrolyte and lithium metal material found inside most common lithium-based batteries. Not only is the solid nature of QuantumScape's battery materials more efficient at transferring a charge from one side of the battery to another, there's little loss of this efficiency over time, compared to a fluid material. Liquid electrolytes are also potentially just more dangerous than their solid-state counterparts, since they're more likely to be ignited and burn out of control than solid-state batteries. More to the point for investors, being one (admittedly big) step closer to being able produce its batteries at scale is a big win for QuantumScape, and its shareholders. Even if the bulls did end up getting ahead of themselves and have since cooled their jets, that's what catapulted the stock higher in July, reminding investors that story stocks like this one can be quite unpredictable. Don't waste the in-the-meantime The overarching question remains: Is QuantumScape stock a buy following its battery breakthrough? One of the key details glossed over by the noise of the recent run-up is that this $5 billion company is still bleeding money. It spent over $500 million last year, mostly on research and development, topping 2024's and 2023's outlays. And there's not a stitch of revenue yet. That's not an unusual situation for a start-up that's still refining what could be a game-changing technology; you have to spend money to make money. But it's a concern when there's less than $1 billion worth of cash and liquid assets on the balance sheet. Fund-raising could be in the cards. There's also no assurance that paying customers will actually step up once at-scale production becomes possible. The company's said both should materialize sometime in 2026, but such timelines are difficult to predict when a technological solution is as new as this one is. Either way, meaningful revenue wouldn't likely start to flow until 2027 or even 2028, with profits unlikely for at least a while after that. Nevertheless, Volkswagen -- the world's second-biggest automaker, and one of its biggest EV manufacturers -- has remained interested and financially supportive for years now when it didn't have to do so. It's QuantumScape's single biggest shareholder, in fact. Given how close QuantumScape is to the finish line now, it would be surprising if Volkswagen didn't see the development of these superior EV batteries all the way through. The only catch is that the massive automaker probably doesn't care at this point if QuantumScape ever actually turns a profit. It just wants the advanced lithium batteries. That's not the case for individual QS shareholders. Bottom line? Buy it if you're inclined to take a big risk with a potentially big reward. Just be prepared for plenty of volatility, and the possibility of significant losses. Even for most risk-tolerant investors, the odds of any meaningful long-term upside aren't quite high enough here to justify the amount of risk you'd actually be taking on. Sure, that could change in the future. Just don't miss out on other opportunities in the meantime while you're waiting to see if this story stock that raises more questions than it answers actually pans out. Don't sweat not getting in on the proverbial ground floor, either. If QuantumScape's tech is going to pay off, that will become clear enough once real revenue starts to flow. Should you invest $1,000 in QuantumScape right now? Before you buy stock in QuantumScape, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and QuantumScape wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $624,823!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $1,064,820!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 1,019% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 178% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join Stock Advisor. See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of July 29, 2025