Good morning.
Chickenjoy to the world.
On Tuesday, Philippine fast-food giant Jollibee said in a filing with the Philippine Stock Exchange that it plans to list its international restaurant operations as a separate company in the US by late 2027. Unfamiliar with the Jollibee brand? The chain is well-known for its eclectic menu, which includes Chickenjoy fried chicken, cheeseburgers and Ube pocket-sized pies, as well as its very jolly honeybee mascot.
The company, which also acquired the LA-based Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf in 2019, now operates 107 Jollibee locations in North America. That includes its very first US franchise location, which opened last August in New York City, where we’re sure the local Italian-American population is quite accepting of the chain’s famed spaghetti topped with a tomato sauce featuring a “hefty dose” of hot dog slices.
Activist Elliott’s Citgo Deal May Deliver a Windfall in Wake of Maduro’s Ouster

Activist hedge fund Elliott Investment Management may hit the 2026 geopolitical megalottery.
The firm is on the verge of taking possession of Venezuela’s most valuable foreign oil assets, all at a massively discounted price tag.
The Deal of a Field Lifetime
Since the 1980s, Citgo Petroleum has operated as the US-based subsidiary of Petróleos de Venezuela (PdVSA), Venezuela’s state-owned oil and gas company. Based in Houston, it owns three Gulf Coast refineries, dozens of oil terminals and runs a network of thousands of independently owned gas stations.
But in November, a federal judge approved the $5.9 billion sale of the company to Amber Energy, an affiliate of Elliott, the activist known for its headline-making tussles with Southwest Airlines and PepsiCo. Citgo was put up for sale after US economic sanctions targeting PdVSA were rolled out in 2019. The company’s facilities are purpose-built for refining heavy crude oil, which is dense and more difficult to process into gasoline and other fuels. Without Venezuelan crude, Citgo was forced to buy heavy crude from pricier sources such as the Canadian oil sands, crunching its margins in the process. A Citgo sale was forced by creditors seeking to recover bond payments Venezuela defaulted on. Elliott, a holder of a significant amount of those bonds, included their face value in its bid.
The Citgo assets could prove a massive bargain: Analysts estimate they’re worth $11 billion to $13 billion, roughly double Elliott’s bid. The Venezuelan government claims they’re worth $18 billion. But Elliott’s windfall is not in the bank just yet:
- Delcy Rodríguez, now Venezuela’s acting president, denounced the sale as “fraudulent” and, last month, Venezuela and Citgo appealed the judicial sale to keep the assets under domestic control. While Elliott’s affiliate, Amber Energy, believes it will close the deal this year, it’s also awaiting approval from the Treasury Department.
- President Trump has made bullish projections that America’s big oil firms will rush to invest billions in revamping Venezuela’s oil sector, benefiting Citgo’s refineries, which have a daily processing capacity of 769,000 barrels. Venezuela, due to its mismanaged infrastructure, produces just 934,000 barrels per day, or less than 1% of global supply, despite having the world’s largest reserves. At the same time, experts and oil industry insiders have been far more cautious in their statements.
No Stranger: Elliott has a history of playing hardball with South American governments. In 2012, it joined a group of bondholders that seized an Argentine Navy vessel to pressure the country to repay defaulted bonds. Four years later, in 2016, Elliott received $2.4 billion from Argentina, a 392% return on its original investment.
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Does Anyone Care About Nvidia’s CES Breakthroughs?
If a tree falls in an AI forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?
Nvidia arrived guns blazing at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) this week, announcing its next-gen line of hyper-efficient chips sooner than expected, while showing off new hardware for video game makers and a suite of new autonomous driving tools for automakers. Investors barely stifled their yawns. Consider it a sign of a market rotation in full motion.
Row, Row, Rotate Your Boat
The official unveiling of the new chip architecture, dubbed the Vera Rubin, wasn’t expected until later this spring. But in his keynote presentation at CES, CEO Jensen Huang said the chips are already in production and are set to go on sale in the second half of the year. More importantly, Jensen said the new chips can train AI models using just one-quarter the amount of chips required by its current-gen Blackwell offering, while delivering a 90% cost reduction compared with Blackwell chips when used for AI inference applications. Amazon, Anthropic and OpenAI are already slated to employ the new chips.
In other words, Nvidia is on the front lines of the tech industry’s AI efficiency war. Meanwhile, CFO Colette Kress said at an event hosted by JPMorgan on Tuesday that the company’s revenue forecast “has definitely gotten larger” since it projected $500 billion in future sales back in October.
Still, shares of the company barely budged Tuesday following Huang’s keynote address, dipping 0.4% by market close. Companies downstream from the chip giant, on the other hand, saw lots of action:
- The winners? Data storage companies such as Sandisk (stock up 27% Tuesday), Western Digital (up nearly 17%), and Seagate (up 14%), which surged after Huang said the AI industry’s need for memory storage is a “completely underserved market.”
- The losers? HVAC companies. Among Vera Rubin’s nifty new tricks is that it won’t require water-chilling systems. Shares of cooling-equipment makers were slammed; among them: Modine Manufacturing (down 7%), Johnson Controls (down 6%) and Trane Technologies (down 2%).
Music To My Ears: Nvidia made headlines beyond the new toys it showed off at CES, too. The company is seeing demand for its lower-powered H200 chips in China and is now waiting on regulatory approval from DC and Beijing. Meanwhile, Universal Music Group announced Tuesday it had struck a partnership with the chip designer to “pioneer responsible AI for music discovery, creation and engagement.”
Morgan Stanley Pushes Past Crypto Blues to Build its First Bitcoin ETF
Morgan Stanley has become the first big US bank to seek Securities and Exchange Commission approval for crypto ETFs, products it designed to track the prices of bitcoin and solana.
The latest move by the Wall Street firm, which opened access to crypto funds for all its clients last fall after previously making them available only to high-net-worth investors, comes as the finance industry expands crypto offerings despite tepid interest from retail investors burned by a selloff last fall.
New Year, New ETF
It’s been two years since spot bitcoin ETFs were first listed in the US, and major financial companies including BlackRock and Fidelity have rolled out their own products since. Banks, however, have hung back from ETFs, instead directing their advisors to offer clients options from other companies. Bank of America yesterday started letting its advisors do just that.
But Morgan Stanley’s move could tap into a rapidly growing opportunity: Bitcoin ETFs notched $697 million worth of inflows Monday, their biggest gain since early October. That’s before money started flowing out as the price of bitcoin slipped, dragging investor optimism down with it.
This year, so far, seems like a turnaround:
- The first two trading days of 2026 have seen $1.2 billion in inflows into bitcoin ETFs, with nine of the US’s 12 funds in the green on Monday. More than half of Monday’s inflows entered BlackRock’s bitcoin ETF and a sizable chunk flowed into Fidelity’s.
- And 2026 is off to a strong start for the wider crypto world, not just bitcoin. Spot ethereum ETFs notched $168 million in inflows on Monday, while investors also boosted ETFs tracking altcoins including solana and XRP.
Cautiously Optimistic: As money poured into bitcoin ETFs, the price of bitcoin also rose, climbing about 6% for the year as of yesterday afternoon. While retail traders still seem hesitant to dive all the way back into crypto, ETFs offer an investing option with a degree of separation from the volatile assets. And institutional interest, which judging from recent news is still high, could signal brighter long-term prospects for the sector.
Extra Upside
- And the Winner Is: Goldman Sachs advised on deals worth $1.5 trillion in 2025, placing it atop the global dealmaking table ahead of JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley.
- Echoes of Buffett: Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says he is “perfectly fine with” a proposed billionaire tax that could appear on California’s state ballot this November, while fellow billionaires Peter Thiel and David Sacks have eyed moving to Florida and Texas.
- Step Into 2026 With Clarity. The Pour Over simplifies the news with clear headlines and unbiased reporting, helping you stay informed without the anxiety. More than 1.5M readers already rely on it to start their day grounded and focused on what truly matters. Subscribe for free.*
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