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THIS WEEK’S FOCUS

Copying is considered cheating in school. In investing, it might be the smartest thing you can do. For a full year, I followed Mohnish Pabrai's every move — no original ideas, no independent research, just disciplined imitation.

The results, revealed in Saturday's video, are the kind that make you rethink everything you thought you knew about how ordinary people can build real wealth.

This week also brought a burst of significant corporate news — from a chipmaker's stunning comeback to a new era beginning at the world's most valuable company.

RECOMMENDED VIDEO

I Let Mohnish Pabrai Pick My Stocks for 365 Days

A year ago, a simple question was asked: can you build wealth by copying Mohnish Pabrai's portfolio, move for move? Not by following his philosophy in a general way — but by mirroring his actual trades, position sizes, and adjustments, tracked in real time.

The answer, after 365 days, is in. And it is not what most people would expect.

TODAY’S PARTNER

5 Stocks Redefining the Defense Technology Sector

Defense spending is at its highest point in decades, and the companies capturing those dollars have changed. A new class of contractors is winning Pentagon business with AI-driven systems, satellite infrastructure, and advanced aerospace technology. This free research report profiles five of them. You'll find what each company does, why it's winning contracts, and what the growth case looks like from an investor's perspective. These aren't household names yet. That's the point. Download the free report and see why analysts are paying attention to this corner of the market before the rest of Wall Street catches on.

5 STORIES THAT MATTER THIS WEEK

Intel's best day in nearly 40 years

Intel's stock surged 24% on Friday — its strongest single-day gain since 1987 — after the company reported quarterly results that showed genuine signs of life. Revenue in Intel's data centre division climbed 22% to $5.1 billion, driven by rising demand for its chips in AI workloads. Google committed to using Intel's processors across multiple generations of AI infrastructure. The chipmaker is still losing money overall, but the direction of travel has changed, and investors took notice in a significant way.

Warner Bros. and Paramount get their green light

Shareholders of Warner Bros. Discovery voted overwhelmingly on April 23 to approve the company's $110 billion acquisition by Paramount Skydance. The deal, which beat out a competing bid from Netflix, is expected to close in the third quarter of 2026, pending regulatory clearances in the US and EU. If it goes through, it will create one of the largest media companies on earth — combining HBO Max, CNN, Warner Bros. film studio, and the Paramount content library under a single roof.

Greg Abel starts reshaping Berkshire Hathaway

Warren Buffett's successor is quietly making his presence felt. Greg Abel has begun unwinding investment positions associated with former manager Todd Combs — including a near-complete exit from Amazon — and is refocusing the roughly $300 billion portfolio around Berkshire's core long-term holdings: Apple, American Express, Coca-Cola, and Moody's. Berkshire has underperformed the S&P 500 since Abel took over at the start of 2026, and investors will get their first real chance to question him directly at next week's annual shareholder meeting.

Adobe bets $25 billion on itself

Adobe announced a $25 billion share buyback on April 21, its largest ever, following a prolonged slide in its stock price driven by investor fears that AI tools will erode demand for its creative software. The buyback is a significant statement of confidence from management — a signal that leadership believes the shares are undervalued at current levels. Whether the market's concern about AI disruption is overblown, or whether Adobe's best days are behind it, remains the central question for investors watching the stock.

Apple names its next leader

Apple announced that hardware engineering chief John Ternus will become chief executive officer on September 1, handing the reins from Tim Cook, who will transition to a new role. Ternus, who has led the development of the M-series chips and the Vision Pro, is seen as an inside candidate who understands both the product and the engineering culture that has defined Apple's rise. The succession marks a generational shift at the most valuable company in the world — and sets up one of the most watched leadership transitions in corporate history.

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