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The news comes as Paramount posted per-share earnings of 62 cents, topping the 36 cents anticipated by analysts polled by LSEG. First-quarter earnings of 24 cents per share surpassed an estimate of 11 cents per share from Factset. Second-quarter earnings and revenue guidance also came in better than expected. F5 — The application security cloud company dropped 9% after F5 issued disappointing third-quarter revenue guidance of $675 million to $695 million, compared to the $695 million LSEG consensus estimate. Second-quarter revenue of $681 million also missed the $685 million anticipated by analysts.
Persons: Bob Bakish, LSEG, Chegg, Medifast, Coursera, Woodward, Jeff Cote, Martha Sullivan, Sensata, Phillip Eyler Organizations: Paramount, CBS, LSEG, Sensata, Elliott Investment Locations: LSEG ., Factset .
How Mark Zuckerberg is reimagining the classroom
  + stars: | 2024-04-15 | by ( Clare Duffy | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +7 min
Later this year, Meta will launch new software for educators that aims to make it easier to use its VR headsets in the classroom. The tools will let teachers manage and program multiple Quest headsets at once, give them access to a range of education-related apps and provide greater oversight and control of how students are using the devices. CNN reporter Clare Duffy interviews Meta President of Global Affairs Nick Clegg in virtual reality, using a Meta Quest 3 headset, alongside Meta spokespeople, on Wednesday, April 10, 2024. Questions about VR in the classroomThe cost to incorporate VR headsets in the classroom could be a hurdle to adoption for the many schools already struggling with limited resources. While cheaper than some other headsets on the market, Meta’s Quest 3 devices still start at $499 each.
Persons: Shakespeare, , Global Affairs Nick Clegg, Clegg, Vincent Quan, Abdul Latif Jameel, ” Quan, Clare Duffy, Meta spokespeople, ” Clegg, Organizations: New, New York CNN, Magic School, Meta, Globe Theatre, Global Affairs, VR, CNN, New Mexico University, Morehouse College, Quest Locations: New York, Ancient Rome, Meta, Manhattan, London,
Hong Kong CNN —Two Chinese business executives at companies controlled by the embattled financial conglomerate Zhongzhi have gone missing, according to statements by their respective firms. The development comes just days after Chinese authorities launched a criminal investigation into the troubled shadow bank, one of China’s largest. Both companies are controlled by Zhongzhi’s investment units, and the missing executives have been connected with the conglomerate for years. The office building of Zhongrong International Trust, a trust company partially owned by Zhongzhi Enterprise Group, in Beijing. Zhongzhi’s trust banking unit has invested about a tenth of its money in real estate.
Persons: Zhongzhi, Ma Hongying, Ma Changshui, Florence Lo, Xie Zhikun, , , Xie, Xi Jinping Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, Gym Education Technology, Shenzhen Stock Exchange, International Trust, Zhongzhi Enterprise Group, Beijing, Business Locations: Hong Kong, Dalian, Xinjiang, Beijing, China’s, China
Zoom Video Communications — The software stock added nearly 2% ahead of its third-quarter earnings due after market close. The Professional Fighters League announced on Monday that it completed its acquisition of mixed martial arts brand Bellator from Paramount. Penn Entertainment — The gambling stock jumped 7% on the heels of a Bank of America upgrade to buy from neutral. Boeing — The aerospace stock jumped 4% after Deutsche Bank upgraded the shares to a buy rating from hold. Chegg — Shares of the education technology company dropped 5% following a downgrade to underweight from equal weight by Morgan Stanley.
Persons: Wells, Sam Altman, Greg Brockman, Raymond James, Morgan Stanley, Krispy Kreme, Iovance, Goldman Sachs, Terri Kelly, Kelly, Peter Grom, , Alex Harring, Yun Li, Lisa Kailai Han, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Organizations: Communications, FactSet, Paramount, Professional Fighters League, Bellator, Penn Entertainment, Bank of America, ESPN Bet, Spectrum Brands, Microsoft —, Microsoft, Nvidia, Boeing, Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan, Caterpillar —, HSBC, United Rentals — United Rentals, Bristol Myers, Energizer Holdings, UBS, RBC Capital Markets Locations: FactSet
Maverick Capital wasn't immune to the private market turmoil that has tanked start-ups and crushed venture capital returns. Like many private investors, Maverick has marked down some of its investments internally as higher interest rates have put pressure on money-losing start-ups. Snapdocs, according to Maverick, should no longer be considered a unicorn, valuing the online mortgage processing company at $628 million. Maverick, which runs a $1.4 billion venture and growth fund, is bullish on a few of its companies, though — even raising their valuations despite the overall market turbulence. Brazilian digital rental marketplace company QuintoAndar is worth 20% more now than when Maverick invested at the end of 2021.
Persons: Lee Ainslie, Maverick, Organizations: Maverick, Cub, Business
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailByju's co-founder on the Indian tech startup's turnaround planDivya Gokulnath, co-founder of Indian education technology startup Byju's, talks about the company's turnaround plans after it has faced a number of issues including auditing troubles and debt repayments.
Persons: Gokulnath
Affirm posted $496.5 million in revenue, more than the $444.5 million consensus estimate, according to FactSet. It posted adjusted per-share earnings of $8.03, greater than the consensus estimate of $7.55, according to FactSet. The media conglomerate expanded its cost-cutting measures by $2 billion, and reported stronger-than-expected adjusted earnings for the fiscal fourth quarter. Becton, Dickinson and Company — Shares dropped more than 8% after Becton, Dickinson and Company reported disappointing quarterly earnings. The medical technology company posted adjusted earnings of $3.42 per share, lower than the $3.43 per share anticipated by analysts polled by LSEG, formerly Refinitiv.
Persons: Duolingo, Valaris, FactSet, Dickinson, Krispy Kreme, Amylyx, CNBC's Lisa Han, Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim Organizations: . Virgin Galactic Holdings, TransDigm, — Aerospace, TransDigm Group, Disney —, Disney, Barclays, Arm, Company, LSEG, Revenue, AMC Entertainment, Pharmaceuticals
A man walks past an advertising hoarding of Byju's, an Education Technology company and one of India's biggest startup, outside one of its branch in New Delhi, India, June 23, 2023. Byju's parent Think & Learn's operating losses fell 6% to 24 billion Indian rupees ($288.67 million) for its core online education business, while revenue more than doubled to 35.5 billion Indian rupees ($426.99 million) for the year ended March 31, 2022. "The takeaways from a uniquely belligerent year, which included nine acquisitions, are life-long learnings," Raveendran said in a statement. Last September, Byju's filed its 2021 numbers after a 17-month delay. ($1 = 83.1400 Indian rupees)Reporting by M. Sriram; Editing by Michael PerryOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Adnan Abidi, Byju Raveendran, Raveendran, Byju's, MBAs, Sriram, Michael Perry Organizations: Education Technology, REUTERS, Rights, Deloitte, Atlantic, Reuters, Thomson Locations: New Delhi, India, Rights MUMBAI, Prosus, Blackrock
Since buying Neopets, Law said his team is in the process of restoring those minigames and modernizing them to enhance the experience. Competing in the current metaWhile Law is optimistic, he is aware that Neopets was born in a different era of video gaming. For Neopets, Law said the merch business would include both physical, like plushies and clothing, and digital, such as in-game purchases. In 2024, Law's team is planning to launch World of Neopets, a 3D simulator game that will utilize the existing Neopets world, but in a modern gaming environment. Does this mean that new Neopets games will replace the 24-year old Neopets.com?
Persons: Dominic Law, Neopets, Neopets …, Jakub Porzycki, NetDragon Websoft, Law, we've, John Legend, Kass Basher, Mickey Mouse Organizations: Neopets, Koelnmesse, CNBC, Gamescom, Law, Getty, Nurphoto, Adobe, Activision, Monopoly Locations: Asia, Singapore, asia, Canada, Hong Kong, Gamescom Asia, that's, Krakow, Poland, Neopets, U.S
This was higher than the $1.58 in earnings per share on $1.48 billion in revenue that analysts surveyed by FactSet had been expecting. Chewy — The pet food seller added 4% in premarket trading after Morgan Stanley upgraded the stock to overweight from equal weight. Chegg's third-quarter earnings came in at 18 cents per share, excluding items, higher than the 17 cents per share expected by analysts polled by LSEG. BP — Shares of the oil company slid 4% after the company missed analysts' estimates for its third-quarter earnings . XPO — The freight transportation company added 1.7% after announcing stronger-than-expected third-quarter earnings.
Persons: FactSet, Pinterest, Chewy, Morgan Stanley, Lauren Schenk, Caterpillar, LSEG, Tesla, XPO, Jefferies, AutoNation, Rajat Gupta, Wells, Ferguson, MoffettNathanson, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Samantha Subin Organizations: Arista Networks, Arista, Revenue, Global, Anheuser, Busch, LSEG, Caterpillar — Investors, JetBlue, BP —, BP, JPMorgan, Bank of America Locations: U.S, Wells Fargo
Pfizer — Shares rallied 3.61% following an upgrade by Jeffries to buy from hold. The firm sees an attractive buying opportunity after Pfizer cut its full-year guidance last week on slumping vaccine sales. Alignment Healthcare — Shares soared 17.22% after being upgraded to strong buy from outperform by Raymond James. Tal Education — The education technology stock popped 6.73% after UBS upgraded shares to a buy rating, citing an attractive valuation and tailwinds from Tal Education's nonacademic tutoring business. Greenbrier — Shares of the transportation services company gained 3.81% Monday morning after Susquehanna upgraded the stock to a positive rating.
Persons: Dow, Lululemon, Jeffries, Novavax, Raymond James, Morgan Stanley, Jim Ratcliffe, Sheikh Jassim bin Hamad al Thani, Glazer, Tal Education's, Charles Schwab —, Schwab, Albemarle —, Albemarle, Bascome, Henry Schein —, Yun Li, Fred Imbert, Hakyung Kim, Samantha Subin, Alex Harring, Pia Singh, Lisa Han Organizations: Dow Jones Indices, Activision, Microsoft, Pfizer —, Pfizer, Moderna, News Corp, Reuters, Street, Street Journal, Systems, Manchester United, Tal Education, UBS, Liontown, Greenbrier —, Susquehanna Locations: BioNTech, Greenbrier
Tech companies by the dozens wanted a chance to prove their software was what schools needed. Clark County schools in the Las Vegas area, for one, signed contracts worth at least $70 million over two years with 12 education technology consultants and companies. The pandemic sparked a boom for tech companies as schools went online. Clark County schools spent more than $7 million on Achieve3000 apps. The Jefferson County district signed contracts with online tutoring companies Paper and FEV for a combined $7.7 million.
Persons: Chris Ryan, , Ryan, Lynn Knight, , Bart Epstein, Lorena Rojas, Edmentum, edtech, ” Epstein, Kia McDaniel, Sharon Lurye Organizations: WASHINGTON, Tech, Associated Press, Schools, AP, Revenue, Harvard, Department, , IXL, Carnegie Corporation of New Locations: America’s, Clark County, Las Vegas, edtech, Nekoosa , Wisconsin, Clark, Norway, Germany, Louisville , Kentucky, Jefferson County, Prince George’s County, New Orleans, Carnegie Corporation of New York
People walk past an advertising hoarding of Byju's, an Education Technology company and one of India's biggest startup, outside one of its branch in New Delhi, India, June 23, 2023. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsSept 26 (Reuters) - Indian education firm Byju's plans to cut around 5,500 jobs to decrease costs amid a restructuring of its business, the Economic Times reported on Tuesday. The firm, valued at $22 billion last year, has experienced a series of business setbacks, including its auditor and board members quitting. In the last few months, it has also been negotiating the repayment of a $1.2 billion loan. (This story has been corrected to change Arjun Mohan's designation to say CEO of Byju's India business, not the company, in paragraph 2)Reporting by Shivani Tanna in Bengaluru; Editing by Pooja Desai私たちの行動規範:トムソン・ロイター「信頼の原則」
Persons: Adnan Abidi, Arjun Mohan, Byju's, Arjun, Shivani Tanna, Pooja Desai 私 Organizations: Education Technology, REUTERS, Economic Times Locations: New Delhi, India, Bengaluru
"The single most important skill that everybody has pointed to is these two words: prompt engineering," Agarwal, the chief platform officer of multimillion-dollar education technology company 2U, tells CNBC Make It. Prompt engineering is essentially the skill of refining and inputting text commands for generative AI programs like ChatGPT. "How you ask for something [from a generative AI tool] is very critical," says Agarwal, the founder of online educational platform edX, which was acquired by 2U in 2021. Prompt engineering can particularly help prevent generative AI's biggest current drawback: regular occurrences of mistakes, fabricated information and other errors, all known as "hallucinations." A well-trained engineer "can stop [AI] from hallucinating by providing constraints," creating more accurate and efficient results, Agarwal says.
Persons: Anant Agarwal, Agarwal, He's Organizations: CNBC, MIT, CNBC Technology Locations: hallucinating
I spent the last week talking with university officials, teachers and high school seniors about the dreaded college admissions essay. And I’ve been thinking a lot about how artificial intelligence tools like ChatGPT, which can manufacture school essays and other texts, might reshape the college application process. I was particularly interested to learn whether admissions officials were rejiggering their essay questions — or even reconsidering personal essays altogether. Amid a deluge of high school transcripts and teacher recommendations, admissions officers often use students’ writing samples to identify applicants with unique voices, experiences, ideas and potential. How might that change now that many students are using A.I.
Persons: chatbots Organizations: The Times
A man walks past an advertising hoarding of Byju's, an Education Technology company and one of India's biggest startup, outside one of its branch in New Delhi, India, June 23, 2023. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsBENGALURU, Aug 29 (Reuters) - Byju's Chief Business Officer, Prathyusha Agarwal, and two other senior executives have resigned as the struggling Indian ed-tech startup restructures its business and operations, a company spokesperson said on Tuesday. Two other business heads - Himanshu Bajaj and Mukut Deepak - have also left, the company, once India's most valuable startup, said. Byju's has let go of thousands of employees this year as it grapples with multiple legal and financial woes. Reuters has reported that Byju's will file 2022 audited earnings by September and 2023 results by December.
Persons: Adnan Abidi, Prathyusha Agarwal, Agarwal, Himanshu Bajaj, Mukut Deepak, BYJU'S, Moneycontrol, Byju's, Mohandas Pai, Rajnish Kumar, Pranav Kiran, Navamya Ganesh, Nivedita Organizations: Education Technology, REUTERS, Rights, Byju's, Zee Entertainment Enterprises, Prosus NV, Deloitte, Reuters, State Bank of India, Thomson Locations: New Delhi, India, Bengaluru
Several companies, ranging from under-the-radar biotech names to major software providers, could still rake in major gains this year, according to analysts from Needham. Investors can look to these names for some potential returns after witnessing a series of market losses this month. Analysts at the firm forecast 17% upside to the stock based on Tuesday's closing price. The company reported a beat on second-quarter earnings in July amid negative sentiment on the sector, analyst Ryan Koontz noted. Still, the analyst expects continued upside on revenue and earnings per share, driven by a strong rural fiber access market.
Persons: Needham, Biopharmaceuticals, Ami Fadia, MongoDB, Mike Cikos, Cikos, Ryan Koontz, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Needham, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Management, Education Locations: 2H23
The health care company reported earnings per share of $1.31. Organon posted $1.61 billion in revenue, beating analysts' expectations of $1.57 billion. Beyond Meat — The plant-based meat company fell 16% during midday trading after missing on second-quarter revenue, citing weak U.S. demand. The fragrance and cosmetics company reported revenue of $2.93 billion, falling shorter than analysts' estimates of $3.07 billion, according to StreetAccount. See Corp. — Shares of the packaging company lost 7% after See missed revenue expectations for the second quarter.
Persons: Moody's, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Organon, StreetAccount, Chegg, Charlie Ergen, EchoStar, Eli Lilly —, Eli Lilly, Palantir, , Samantha Subin, Jesse Pound, Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim Organizations: PNC Financial, Citizens, T Bank —, T Bank, Webster, PNC, JPMorgan, Nordisk —, Technologies, Refinitiv . Fox Corp, Corp,
On Tuesday, the White House convened school administrators, educators and companies to explore how best to protect schools and students' information from cyberattacks. At least eight K-12 school districts across the country experienced significant cyberattacks in the last academic year, the White House said, leading to disruptions in learning. The White House announced a series of actions from federal agencies and commitments from companies to help school districts secure their digital information. Amazon Web Services committed $20 million to fund a cyber grant program for school districts and state departments of education. It will also conduct free security reviews for U.S. education technology companies that provide "mission-critical applications" for K-12 schools.
Persons: Biden, Miguel Cardona, Cardona, Cloudflare, PowerSchool Organizations: White, Government, Office, White House, Federal Communications Commission, Universal Service Fund, Infrastructure Security Agency, Federal Bureau of Investigation, National Guard Bureau, CNBC, Web Services, Google Locations: cyberattacks, U.S
Byju’s blowup makes its investors look bad
  + stars: | 2023-08-07 | by ( Pranav Kiran | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
REUTERS/Adnan Abidi/File Photo/File PhotoBENGALURU, Aug 7 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Byju’s says it provides learning programs to over 150 million students. The biggest lesson may be for the Indian education giant’s global investors including Prosus (PRX.AS) and Peak XV, formerly part of Sequoia, who watched founder power run amok in a country they have pinned high hopes on. But so long as the blowup at the hot startup once valued at $22 billion goes from bad to worse, its backers will struggle to create enough distance. For early supporter Peak XV Partners, the mess comes at a sensitive time, hot on the heels of announcing a separation from its U.S. parent. Representatives of the Amsterdam-listed investor and Peak XV Partners, formerly Sequoia’s India unit, both quit Byju’s board in June.
Persons: Adnan Abidi, Byju Raveendran, Davidson, Byju’s, Reuters Breakingviews, Prosus, Una Galani, Thomas Shum Organizations: REUTERS, Reuters, Bloomberg, XV Partners, HK, Thomson Locations: New Delhi, India, BENGALURU, Sequoia, U.S, Byju’s, Amsterdam, China, Delaware
Byju’s virtue-signalling is late but valuable
  + stars: | 2023-07-14 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
India’s once-most valuable startup is luring big talent even after its auditor Deloitte resigned and three investors including Prosus (PRX.AS) quit the company’s board. His experience navigating government departments will be handy as the Ministry of Corporate Affairs ordered an inspection of Byju’s books per Bloomberg. It also could shore up Byju’s hopes of raising cash from new investors to meet creditor demands for early repayment of a $1.2 billion loan. Prosus for example thinks the company is only worth $5.1 billion, down from a peak valuation of $22 billion. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
Persons: Rajnish Kumar, Mohandas Pai, India’s, Kumar, Pai, Byju Raveendran, Divya Gokulnath, Pranav Kiran, Una Galani, Thomas Shum Organizations: Reuters, State Bank of India, Infosys, Deloitte, Ministry of Corporate Affairs, Bloomberg, Twitter, Thomson Locations: Bengaluru
Some 212,294 workers in the tech industry have been laid off in 2023 alone, according to data tracked by Layoffs.fyi, already surpassing the 164,709 recorded in 2022. But in the shadow of those mass layoffs, the tech industry has also been gripped by an AI fervor and invested heavily in AI talent and tech. Roger Lee, a startup founder who has been tracking tech industry layoffs via his website Layoffs.fyi, also runs Comprehensive.io, which examines job listings and compensation data across some 3,000 tech companies. Those looking to thrive in the tech industry and beyond may need to brush up on their AI skills. It’s not that everyone needs to become AI specialists, Wang added, but rather that workers should know how to use AI tools to become more efficient at whatever they’re doing.
Persons: Arvind Krishna, Barrons, Krishna, Dropbox, , Drew Houston, , Dan Wang, ” Wang, Mark Zuckerberg, Roger Lee, Lee, Wang, It’s, That’s Organizations: CNN, Bloomberg, Columbia Business School, Layoffs.fyi, Microsoft, Machine Locations: OpenAI, Silicon Valley
Byju's leadership is in talks with the investors to try to convince them to reverse their decision, the three sources, who declined to be named as the talks are private, told Reuters. Its rise was seen as a boost for India's startup scene as investors including General Atlantic made big bets on Byju's. Two of the sources said the investors took the decision collectively to resign from the board as they were not getting answers from Byju's founder and senior management. The departures mean Byju's board is now only made up of its founder and chief executive Byju Raveendran, his wife Divya Gokulnath, and his brother Riju Raveendran. While the investors are holding talks with Byju's, it has not yet been decided whether or not their decision to resign would change, one of the sources added.
Persons: Chan Zuckerberg, Byju's, Byju Raveendran, Divya Gokulnath, Riju Raveendran, Aditya Kalra, Alexander Smith Organizations: Peak XV Partners, Sequoia Capital, Deloitte, Reuters, Byju's, General Atlantic, Thomson Locations: DELHI, Sequoia Capital India, U.S
Meanwhile, limits on applicable copyright rules make it simpler to train AI tools. Nevertheless, accuracy issues with AI tools, Redburn said, could boost the use case for Pearson. Copyright issues are another major obstacle for music companies. Some potential copyright violations include replicating an artist's likeness or voice, and that could weaken the catalog value for many music companies, analysts said. Similarly, Deutsche Bank analyst Matthew Niknam highlighted in a recent note AI presents more opportunities than risks and offers "underappreciated upside tailwinds" for Five9.
Persons: GOOGL, Goldman Sachs, Dan Rosensweig, Chegg, Brad Erickson, Hayden Brown, Brown, BTIG, Chegg's, Pearson, Redburn, Morgan Stanley, Brent Thill, Thill, Douglas Mitchelson, Rosenblatt, Barton Crockett, Morgan Stanley's Omar Sheikh, Ygal, Nat Schindler, Wix, Jefferies, Oppenheimer, Timothy Horan, Matthew Niknam, Meta Marshall, Marshall, Michael Bloom Organizations: Wall Street, Microsoft, Nvidia, Goldman, Chegg, Companies, Freelance, Upwork, RBC Capital, Pearson, Bank of America, UBS, Jefferies, Industry Music, Spotify, Credit, Warner, Warner Music Group, Universal Music Group, Citi, NICE, Deutsche Bank Locations: Nice
Uwill zeroed in on ensuring college students can access those treatments. The company announced in May that it raised a $30 million Series A round. UwillUwill, founded in 2020, is focused on providing virtual mental-health services to college students. Before Uwill, London started companies focused on education technology, including Examity, an online-testing platform, and College Coach, which Bright Horizons Family Solutions owns today. In May, Uwill announced it had raised a $30 million Series A round from the education-focused private-equity firm Education Growth Partners.
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