A message from our friends at Huge Alerts *Content Disseminated on Behalf of Power Metallic Mines*  Bullish Metals Markets and Breakthrough Lion Zone Drilling Put PNPNF in the Spotlight as Gold, Silver, and Copper Rally Power Metallic Mines Inc. (PNPNF) is making waves after releasing results from its Lion Zone, showing remarkably high recoveries of multiple metals. Initial Locked Cycle Test results by SGS Canada Ltd. on a blended composite of high-grade and low-grade mineralization returned recoveries of 98.9% copper, 96.8% platinum, 93.9% palladium, 85.0% gold, and 88.9% silver. With gold breaking past $5,500 per ounce this year, silver climbing over $100, and copper and battery metals surging, PNPNF’s polymetallic deposits position the company at the center of soaring demand for both precious and industrial metals. Fully funded through 2026, the company’s extensive drilling program aims to expand resources across Quebec’s Nisk, Lion, and Tiger zones, targeting high-grade extensions and new discoveries. Nisk represents a rare North American polymetallic opportunity, delivering diversified exposure across nickel, copper, cobalt, PGEs, gold, and silver from a politically stable jurisdiction. As supply tightens globally and investors anticipate Fed rate cuts, PNPNF provides a strategic hedge with exposure to ethically sourced nickel, copper, cobalt, PGEs, gold, and silver. Supported by industry veterans and strong institutional backing, the company is poised to capitalize on the North American polymetallic revolution. With marquee investors and robust financial backing, an upgrade to a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy), PNPNF combines high-grade resources with industry expertise to accelerate exploration and resource expansion. Learn why PNPNF is a high-grade, multi-metal investment opportunity you may not want to overlook
More Reading from MarketBeat NVIDIA's 13F Bombshell: A New AI Power Trio EmergesAuthor: Leo Miller. Article Posted: 2/19/2026. 
Key Points - NVIDIA's public equity portfolio shifted significantly in Q4 2025, with the firm adding three stocks and selling out of four.
- Intel and Synopsys are now NVIDIA's two largest holdings, but the firms are aligning around more than just equity stakes.
- Meanwhile, NVIDIA backed away from one of its neocloud investments, maintaining its position in CoreWeave and Nebius.
- Special Report: Trading the market's daily range is the real game changer (From ProsperityPub)
 The world’s most valuable company reported headline-grabbing news this week. Semiconductor giant NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) has filed its latest 13F with the SEC, disclosing the investments it made and disposed of during Q4 2025. As the firm at the center of the artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure boom, NVIDIA’s trades attract close attention from investors. The filing not only reveals which stocks NVIDIA sees value in, but also highlights strategic moves within the AI and semiconductor ecosystem. While NVIDIA announced many of these trades before the 13F was filed, some details were not public until now. The clearest takeaways are where NVIDIA added exposure, where it exited, and what it left unchanged. Intel and Synopsys Become NVIDIA’s Top Holdings While headlines focus on Tesla's car sales, tech analyst Jeff Brown says the real story is Tesla's role in a $25 trillion AI revolution — one that Nvidia's CEO himself has called a "multi-trillion-dollar future industry" — and he's uncovered a little-known stock 168 times smaller than Nvidia that could be positioned to ride this breakthrough. Click here now to see the full report Three names newly appear on NVIDIA’s 13F: Intel (NASDAQ: INTC), Synopsys (NASDAQ: SNPS) and Nokia (NYSE: NOK). NVIDIA announced these investments in several press releases during 2025, but they remain worth a closer look. Intel is now NVIDIA’s largest holding. At the end of Q4, NVIDIA held over 214 million Intel shares, valued at about $7.9 billion—roughly 61% of its public equity portfolio. NVIDIA first disclosed the position in September 2025, when it initiated a $5 billion purchase at $23.28 per share. Since then, Intel shares have risen nearly 50%, including a 23% jump immediately after NVIDIA’s announcement. Synopsys is one of the two global leaders in electronic design automation, the software essential to designing advanced chips. It also owns key intellectual property used as building blocks in semiconductor design. NVIDIA held more than 4.8 million Synopsys shares, worth around $2.2 billion at the end of Q4. Synopsys has gained over 5% since NVIDIA announced its $2 billion purchase in December 2025 at $414.79 per share. Strategic Alignment: Connecting NVDA, INTC and SNPS NVIDIA’s stakes in Intel and Synopsys appear to be about more than generating returns; they reflect strategic alignment across the chip ecosystem. With Intel, NVIDIA is expanding its reach into the x86 central processing unit (CPU) market. Intel will produce x86 CPUs that NVIDIA can integrate into both its data center and personal computing products. In the CPU market, x86 architectures compete with Arm-based designs, led by ARM (NASDAQ: ARM), a position NVIDIA sold during Q4. Arm accounted for roughly 20% of the data center CPU market at the end of its 2025 fiscal year, leaving the majority of the market to x86 incumbents like Intel and Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD). NVIDIA continues to work with Arm as its architecture gains share, but partnering with Intel could strengthen NVIDIA’s position across the broader CPU landscape. Intel is also one of Synopsys’s largest customers. Synopsys tends to benefit when semiconductor companies launch new design programs—exactly the kind of activity the NVIDIA-Intel partnership implies. That interconnection suggests Intel, NVIDIA and Synopsys could all profit if the collaboration succeeds. NVIDIA is also collaborating with Synopsys to accelerate chip design workflows. NVIDIA Sells 1 Neocloud, Holds 2 Others NVIDIA removed four names from its public equity portfolio in Q4 2025—moves that were not previously announced. The company exited positions in Applied Digital (NASDAQ: APLD), Arm, Recursion Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: RXRX), and WeRide (NASDAQ: WRD). At the end of Q3, those positions were worth between roughly $17 million and $177 million. The most notable exit for retail investors is Applied Digital. The stock fell after NVIDIA’s 13F was released. Applied Digital is a neocloud firm offering cloud infrastructure optimized for AI workloads—a different focus than hyperscalers like Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN), which provide both traditional and AI-centric services. What makes this move interesting is that NVIDIA kept positions in two other neocloud companies: CoreWeave (NASDAQ: CRWV) and Nebius Group (NASDAQ: NBIS). That contrast suggests NVIDIA has more confidence in the outlook for CoreWeave and Nebius than it does for Applied Digital. What the Q4 2025 Filing Signals About NVIDIA’s AI Infrastructure Priorities In Q4 2025 NVIDIA consolidated its public equity portfolio from six positions to five, while deepening ties with large ecosystem partners like Intel and Synopsys. It trimmed smaller, noncore names such as Recursion and WeRide, and exited Applied Digital while maintaining exposure to other neocloud providers. Taken together, the 13F points to a more focused public-equity portfolio—and a clearer set of priorities within the AI infrastructure stack.
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