Blog

  • Microsoft officially confirms it’s testing a free, ad-supported version of Xbox Cloud Gaming.

    Microsoft officially confirms it’s testing a free, ad-supported version of Xbox Cloud Gaming.

    Microsoft officially confirms it’s testing a free, ad-supported version of Xbox Cloud Gaming.

    Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive…

    Continue Reading

  • Examining Boeing’s Valuation After a 42.8% Gain and Cash Flow Turnaround

    Examining Boeing’s Valuation After a 42.8% Gain and Cash Flow Turnaround

    Debating what to do with Boeing stock? You’re not alone. With its share price ending last session at $221.35 and a strong rally over the past year, investors are buzzing as they consider whether to add, hold, or even take profits. Over the last twelve months, Boeing has delivered a stellar 42.8% return, and so far in 2024, it’s up nearly 29%. That is no fluke; in just the past week, the stock climbed 3.9%. Even looking further back, Boeing has been on a long-term recovery arc, returning over 53% in both the last three and five years.

    Much of this momentum comes as the aviation industry navigates a tricky but promising landscape. Recent headlines point to rising airline demand and progress on resolving manufacturing delays, both of which have helped reshape risk perception around Boeing’s prospects. Investors have also reacted favorably to announcements about expanded partnerships and moves to improve production oversight, signifying more confidence in the company’s ability to deliver on its pipeline.

    So, how does Boeing stack up on valuation? When we score the stock across six key checks for undervaluation, it comes in at 3 out of 6. That is not a screaming bargain, but it is no red flag either. Different approaches to valuation inevitably tell different stories, so which is most reliable for today’s market? Next, we will break down what each method reveals, and later share an even smarter way to put those numbers in perspective.

    Boeing delivered 42.8% returns over the last year. See how this stacks up to the rest of the Aerospace & Defense industry.

    The Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) model estimates a company’s intrinsic value by projecting its future cash flows and discounting them back to today’s value using a required rate of return. This method gives investors a sense of what the business is worth based on its ability to generate cash over time.

    For Boeing, the most recent free cash flow over the last twelve months is negative at $8.1 Billion. However, analysts anticipate a significant turnaround and forecast free cash flow to rise to $12.8 Billion by 2029. While direct analyst estimates only extend a few years ahead, Simply Wall St extrapolates these further by projecting steady growth in Boeing’s cash generation through 2035.

    Based on these projections, the DCF analysis arrives at an intrinsic value of $319.00 per share. With Boeing’s current price at $221.35, this suggests the stock is trading at a substantial discount of around 30.6% relative to its estimated true value.

    Continue Reading

  • Gigi Hadid ‘arrested’ by Sabrina Carpenter during live concert

    Gigi Hadid ‘arrested’ by Sabrina Carpenter during live concert

    Sabrina Carpenter handcuffed Gigi Hadid on stage in Pittsburgh, calling the model her “soulmate” in a viral moment

    Sabrina Carpenter kicked off the…

    Continue Reading

  • Save an extra $10 when you bundle Microsoft Office 2021 and Windows 11 Pro

    Save an extra $10 when you bundle Microsoft Office 2021 and Windows 11 Pro

    TL;DR: Save $10 when you bundle Microsoft Office 2021 ($49.99) and Windows 11 Pro ($14.97), now $54.97 together (reg. $418.99). Codes are limited in supply.


    Support for Windows 10 ended on October…

    Continue Reading

  • New Tool Screens for Access to Healthy Food

    New Tool Screens for Access to Healthy Food

    Newswise — In a study led by researchers at the Food is Medicine Institute at the Gerald J. and Dorothy R. Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, a new screening tool has been developed and validated to…

    Continue Reading

  • Flu Vaccination Associated With Lower Risk of Major Cardiovascular Events in Older Adults

    Flu Vaccination Associated With Lower Risk of Major Cardiovascular Events in Older Adults

    Influenza (flu) vaccination was associated with a reduced risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) in older adults, according to results from a retrospective cohort study presented at Infectious Disease Week 2025.1

    MACE risk reduction…

    Continue Reading

  • Columbia leans on endowment to offset Donald Trump’s funding cuts

    Columbia leans on endowment to offset Donald Trump’s funding cuts

    Unlock the White House Watch newsletter for free

    Columbia University plans to rely more heavily on its endowment to finance operations next year, following sweeping research funding cuts imposed by President Donald Trump.

    In its annual financial statement released late on Thursday, the New York Ivy League school said it had taken the rare step of drawing directly from its endowment to create a “research stabilisation fund” to offset $400mn in funding cuts by the White House. The fund has issued more than 500 internal research grants.

    The university also said its trustees approved a limited-term increase in its use of endowment returns to fund operations for fiscal year 2026 as part of its “financial stabilisation efforts”.

    Columbia’s struggle to maintain its financial health highlights the growing pressure on US universities resulting from the Trump administration’s use of funding cuts as leverage for greater federal control of higher education.

    Columbia is among the US universities hit hardest by federal research-funding cuts since the president returned to office, after the administration made the school — home to one of the country’s largest student protests over Israel’s war in Gaza — a target of greater political scrutiny.

    Columbia’s operating surplus fell to $113mn this year from $305mn in 2024 — a result Anne Sullivan, the university’s executive vice-president for finance, described as “modest” and “below our historical average” after the government suspended hundreds of research grants earlier this year.

    Sullivan said the university experienced a “major destabilising event” after the government terminated more than 350 grants, worth over $1.3bn, in March. The situation has eased since July, when the Trump administration reinstated 260 research grants to Columbia after the university agreed to a $221mn settlement resolving federal investigations into its handling of antisemitism on campus.

    While Columbia’s financial statement reported a mere 1 per cent decline in government grants and contracts this year from 2024, Sullivan said the figure “does not adequately capture the level of strain experienced by the research enterprise” in the third and fourth quarters.

    She said: “Because tapping endowment for one-time purposes erodes our future capacity to provide support for programmes dependent on the annual distribution, utilising endowment assets in this way, beyond our annual distribution, is a rare and multi-faceted decision which we do not make lightly.”

    Columbia’s finances have also benefited from a 12.4 per cent gain on its endowment in the year to June — the highest annual return in seven years. Kim Lew, chief executive of Columbia Investment Management Company, said the result was driven by gains in stocks and an improvement in private investment returns.

    Continue Reading

  • Hackers exploiting critical vulnerability in Windows Server Update Service

    Hackers exploiting critical vulnerability in Windows Server Update Service

    Security researchers are warning that cyber threat actors are abusing a critical vulnerability in Microsoft Windows Server Update Service. 

    The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2025-59287,…

    Continue Reading

  • Prince Andrew’s arms banner removal ‘ghastly,’ reserved for ‘high treason or rebellion’: royal expert

    Prince Andrew’s arms banner removal ‘ghastly,’ reserved for ‘high treason or rebellion’: royal expert

    Prince Andrew’s crest and banner being removed from Windsor Castle is another “nail in the coffin” for the disgraced royal, according to experts.

    Buckingham Palace confirmed to Fox News Digital that Andrew’s flag, which featured his coat of arms,…

    Continue Reading

  • The Strad – Sharing the spotlight: The Isidore Quartet at Honens 2025

    The Strad – Sharing the spotlight: The Isidore Quartet at Honens 2025

    Read more Featured Stories like this in The Strad Playing Hub 

    For a string quartet, sharing the spotlight with fellow chamber musicians is second nature – but not usually in circumstances like this. The New York City-based Isidore…

    Continue Reading