Business
Stock-Split Watch: Is C3.ai Next?

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Companies can use stock splits as a way to change their stock price and share count.
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They often happen for a specific reason.
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While they aren’t necessarily easy to predict, there are a few clues investors can look for.
Stock splits are tools that companies can use to artificially manipulate their stock prices or share count. While they aren’t always easy to predict, they are typically done for a specific reason and tend to draw interest from shareholders.
C3.ai (NYSE: AI) has been a popular stock to watch among retail investors, as the company has tried to tap into the enthusiasm brought about by the high-flying artificial intelligence (AI) sector. The company hasn’t had a great year, and the stock is actually down significantly since going public at the end of 2020. Could a stock split be in the cards?
Before we examine whether C3.ai could conduct some kind of stock split in the near future, it’s important for investors to understand what a stock split and reverse stock split is.
A stock split allows a company to decrease its share price and increase its shares outstanding, while a reverse stock split does the opposite. It’s crucial for investors to remember that stock splits do not change the market cap of a company, so if you own an equity position in a stock before some kind of stock split, the share price might change, but the actual equity position doesn’t.
Why would a company undergo a stock split? Well, there are a few reasons, but the big one has to do with bringing the share price up or down for a strategic reason.
Let’s say some high-growth AI company just went on a massive run, and now their stock price trades for more than $1,000 per share. That might look daunting to retail investors, so a company would conduct a stock split to lower the share price in order to make it more appealing. Stock splits can also boost liquidity.
A reverse stock split can be a useful tool if a company on the New York Stock Exchange or Nasdaq has fallen out of compliance. Both major exchanges require stocks to trade for over $1 per share for 30 consecutive trading days. If a company is struggling and has seen a big sell-off, but thinks they can turn things around and wants to stay on a major exchange, than a reverse stock split can increase the share price and serve as a bridge until the company gets back on its feet.
The enterprise AI company C3.ai has never conducted any kind of stock split. After listing its initial public offering at $42 in late 2020, the stock surged to as high as $161 per share, but now trades around $28.50 and at a $3.9 billion market cap. So the stock is not unattainable for investors in terms of price and also clearly in compliance with NYSE rules.
Business
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Business
‘It was a present to myself’: Southport house for sale with ball pit off bedroom | Property

It was the model Cara Delevingne who said you can never be sad in a ball pit – so why wouldn’t you install one in a room you don’t quite know what to do with?
A large Victorian house for sale in Southport has gone viral not because it is, as estate agents say, a “hidden gem” and an “oasis of calm” with viewing “absolutely essential” but because just off the master bedroom is a vestibule that is “presently adorned by numerous plastic balls to create a ball pool all of your very own”.
There are 11,300 plastic balls in the pit and it is enjoyed by children and adults alike, according to Julie Williams, an IT consultant who is selling the house. “It was a birthday present to myself,” Williams said. “Instead of a weekend away I built a ball pit. It is so relaxing.”
Williams was inspired by Delevingne, who installed a ball pit in her former Los Angeles home, described by Architectural Digest as “St-Tropez meets Coney Island meets Cotswolds cottage meets Monte Carlo meets butch leather bar”.
Delevingne said the house reflected her changing characters and moods: it had a costume room for dress-up parties, a poker tent, trampolines, a secret “vagina tunnel”, a party bunker with a mirrored ceiling, a David Bowie memorial bathroom and the ball pit. “If I’m having a bad day, I just hop in the ball pit,” she said. “You can’t really cry in a ball pit.”
Williams said she had thought about creating a bathroom in what she called her “project room” – an odd first-floor vestibule off the master bedroom with its own small staircase.
“My friend had seen a video on YouTube of Carla Delevingne where she says something along the lines of you can never be unhappy or sad in a ball pit.” So Williams went for it, buying 11,300 plastic balls in March 2024 and creating the ball pit herself.
It was inaugurated with Williams and friends drinking half bottles of rosé champagne in it. “It’s great. This is the new relaxation method for mums and dads. Get a ball pit and hide away from the children.”
Williams’ seven-bedroom house in leafy Birkdale village is on the market for £799,995, and if new buyers wanted to keep the pit, plus balls, then they could, Williams said.
The house went viral after featuring on a social media account called Housing Horrors, which shines a light on some of the weirder and more wonderful quirks of houses for sale or rent in the UK.
Business
Net-zero ‘not a platitude’ for oil and gas sector

Kevin KeaneEnvironment, energy and rural affairs correspondent, BBC Scotland

The head of the oil and gas regulator says cutting the sector’s carbon emissions is not “a platitude or a soundbite” but presents significant commercial benefits.
Stuart Payne, who leads the North Sea Transition Authority (NSTA), told BBC Scotland News the energy transition was “well underway” and has been “for decades”.
His remarks follow a pledge by UK Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch to rid the NSTA of the net-zero “burden” and task it with the sole job of maximising oil and gas production.
Mr Payne said about half of the £100bn expected to be invested in the North Sea over the next few years will be in alternative energies like carbon capture and storage (CCS) and floating wind.
The Conservative leader addressed the huge Offshore Europe conference in Aberdeen later, where around 35,000 delegates will gather for the next four days.
Badenoch said the UK is “sabotaging” itself and that “families, communities, entire towns could be wiped out.”
She promised to scrap the net-zero compatibility tests that come with oil and gas permitting, adding that “we will judge… on one metric alone – how much oil and gas they produce.”
She said there would be no more “judicial overreach … because a judge is persuaded by a pressure group”.
She ended her speech by saying Conservatives will “not be bullied by activists” and “will not surrender Britain’s future.”
The conference is a showcase for the sector where multi-million pound deals are agreed between the supply chain and operators.
Over recent years, the event has pivoted towards alternative energies.

Stuart Payne said the NSTA’s focus on green technologies has already delivered a 34% cut in emissions from producing oil and gas.
However he said there was “much more to do.”
He added: “The words we use matter. How we talk about this industry, whether that’s in the wind side, whether that’s in CCS, in oil and gas, in decommissioning, it matters.
“And it’s vital that we do everything we can to ensure that we’re attracting and retaining investment in all of those things.”
He said it was “not a good thing” for his organisation to be treated like a political football and that “how we talk about this industry” is important.
“The net zero opportunity for the UK is not something that is a platitude or a soundbite,” he added.
“There are real, very significant, commercial benefits for the UK from the projects around net-zero.”
‘Energy independence’
Originally called the Oil and Gas Authority, the regulatory body was renamed by the UK Conservative government in 2022 to reflect its growing role in the wider North Sea energy industry.
The NSTA’s job is to “regulate and influence the oil and gas, offshore hydrogen, and carbon storage industries” as well as holding the sector to account on reducing its operational emissions.
But Kemi Badenoch says she would rename it the “North Sea Authority” with a mandate to “maximise the extraction of our oil and gas.”

Oil and gas production in the North Sea has been in decline for more than 25 years since it peaked in 1999.
Three years ago, an energy profits levy – or windfall tax – was introduced when prices spiked, taking the headline rate of tax on profits to 78%.
The industry has been lobbying for the tax to be cut and says up to a thousand jobs a month are being lost because of the pressures it is under.
It also wants a more “pragmatic” approach to exploration licensing than the UK Labour government’s blanket ban introduced last year.
A government consultation is currently examining the future shape of the North Sea.
Tessa Khan from the environmental campaign group Uplift said the UK has already burned most of its oil and gas.
She added: “The idea we can unleash a golden age of oil and gas is a tired gimmick that’s been tried by Badenoch’s predecessors and flopped.
“The North Sea is a mature basin with dwindling oil and gas reserves.
“It’s like a piñata at the end of a kids party – it doesn’t matter how many times you hit it, you’re not going to get much more out of it.
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