Kyle Hagee
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
They've made their largest acquisition recently in Wiz for $32 billion. And they're now telling some remote workers It's time to get back to the office, lock in, collaborate, like let's keep this momentum going. So I think finally some good news for Alphabet, which is really nice to hear for them.
They've made their largest acquisition recently in Wiz for $32 billion. And they're now telling some remote workers It's time to get back to the office, lock in, collaborate, like let's keep this momentum going. So I think finally some good news for Alphabet, which is really nice to hear for them.
They've made their largest acquisition recently in Wiz for $32 billion. And they're now telling some remote workers It's time to get back to the office, lock in, collaborate, like let's keep this momentum going. So I think finally some good news for Alphabet, which is really nice to hear for them.
Okay, we're back with our next stock of the week. And Neil, it's officially a Zinfandel spring because my stock of the week is Philip Morris International, the maker of the infamous Zin nicotine pouch. Now, the company announced Wednesday that it expects a bigger adjusted profit this year. Its stock is up nearly 5% over the past five days. And let's talk numbers.
Okay, we're back with our next stock of the week. And Neil, it's officially a Zinfandel spring because my stock of the week is Philip Morris International, the maker of the infamous Zin nicotine pouch. Now, the company announced Wednesday that it expects a bigger adjusted profit this year. Its stock is up nearly 5% over the past five days. And let's talk numbers.
Okay, we're back with our next stock of the week. And Neil, it's officially a Zinfandel spring because my stock of the week is Philip Morris International, the maker of the infamous Zin nicotine pouch. Now, the company announced Wednesday that it expects a bigger adjusted profit this year. Its stock is up nearly 5% over the past five days. And let's talk numbers.
For the first three months of the year, the company recorded a quarterly operating profit of $3.5 billion, up 16% from a year earlier, and revenue rose 5.8% to $9.3 billion. Now on Zin specifically, shipments of Zin topped 200 million cans, which is 53% higher year over year, and the company now expects to sell 800 to 840 million cans in 2025. They also have the FDA stamp of approval.
For the first three months of the year, the company recorded a quarterly operating profit of $3.5 billion, up 16% from a year earlier, and revenue rose 5.8% to $9.3 billion. Now on Zin specifically, shipments of Zin topped 200 million cans, which is 53% higher year over year, and the company now expects to sell 800 to 840 million cans in 2025. They also have the FDA stamp of approval.
For the first three months of the year, the company recorded a quarterly operating profit of $3.5 billion, up 16% from a year earlier, and revenue rose 5.8% to $9.3 billion. Now on Zin specifically, shipments of Zin topped 200 million cans, which is 53% higher year over year, and the company now expects to sell 800 to 840 million cans in 2025. They also have the FDA stamp of approval.
Zinn is the only nicotine pouch brand authorized by the FDA. What is also interesting is tobacco manufacturing is predominantly domestic. And so they're relatively, compared to the competition, insulated from these tariff and trade uncertainties. So, Neil, I guess they found out that selling addictive things makes you money.
Zinn is the only nicotine pouch brand authorized by the FDA. What is also interesting is tobacco manufacturing is predominantly domestic. And so they're relatively, compared to the competition, insulated from these tariff and trade uncertainties. So, Neil, I guess they found out that selling addictive things makes you money.
Zinn is the only nicotine pouch brand authorized by the FDA. What is also interesting is tobacco manufacturing is predominantly domestic. And so they're relatively, compared to the competition, insulated from these tariff and trade uncertainties. So, Neil, I guess they found out that selling addictive things makes you money.
Yeah. I mean, you mentioned they don't spend anything on marketing. Like the Zins have kind of gone viral and that's the marketing for them. Like this whole like take us in and lock in trend has been everywhere. And so they're putting all their money towards production. Neil, if they ever make the social network, too, I think I have a story for you that they need to base it on.
Yeah. I mean, you mentioned they don't spend anything on marketing. Like the Zins have kind of gone viral and that's the marketing for them. Like this whole like take us in and lock in trend has been everywhere. And so they're putting all their money towards production. Neil, if they ever make the social network, too, I think I have a story for you that they need to base it on.
Yeah. I mean, you mentioned they don't spend anything on marketing. Like the Zins have kind of gone viral and that's the marketing for them. Like this whole like take us in and lock in trend has been everywhere. And so they're putting all their money towards production. Neil, if they ever make the social network, too, I think I have a story for you that they need to base it on.
So let me break this down. A high school kid named Roy Lee gets accepted to Harvard, which is his dream. He sneaks away on a high school field trip, tries to outrun a cop, gets into some legal trouble, which causes Harvard to rescind his offer, and then other colleges don't want to touch him either. He goes to community college. He locks himself away. He learns to code.
So let me break this down. A high school kid named Roy Lee gets accepted to Harvard, which is his dream. He sneaks away on a high school field trip, tries to outrun a cop, gets into some legal trouble, which causes Harvard to rescind his offer, and then other colleges don't want to touch him either. He goes to community college. He locks himself away. He learns to code.
So let me break this down. A high school kid named Roy Lee gets accepted to Harvard, which is his dream. He sneaks away on a high school field trip, tries to outrun a cop, gets into some legal trouble, which causes Harvard to rescind his offer, and then other colleges don't want to touch him either. He goes to community college. He locks himself away. He learns to code.
He finally transfers to Columbia University, where he builds Interview Coder, which is an undetectable application that lets you cheat on leet code exams, which are basically coding exams. Big tech offer often uses, he gets an internship with Amazon because of this. Then he gets discovered that he was cheating. It goes viral. He gets suspended from Columbia. The offer pulled from Amazon.
He finally transfers to Columbia University, where he builds Interview Coder, which is an undetectable application that lets you cheat on leet code exams, which are basically coding exams. Big tech offer often uses, he gets an internship with Amazon because of this. Then he gets discovered that he was cheating. It goes viral. He gets suspended from Columbia. The offer pulled from Amazon.