Lyten Acquires Bankrupt Northvolt, Aiming to Revive Europe’s Battery Ambitions

U.S.-based battery startup Lyten has agreed to purchase most of bankrupt Swedish battery maker Northvolt, potentially offering the fallen European giant a second chance. The Silicon Valley company, backed by Stellantis and FedEx, specializes in developing lithium-sulphur cells — a cleaner alternative to traditional lithium-ion batteries.

Northvolt, once seen as Europe’s strongest contender against major Asian EV battery makers, filed for bankruptcy in March, marking one of Sweden’s largest corporate failures. Lyten CEO Dan Cook told Reuters the deal, struck at a “substantial discount” to the original asset value, aims to continue the work Northvolt had started. Swedish Deputy Prime Minister Ebba Busch welcomed the agreement, calling it key to Europe’s energy independence.

Northvolt’s downfall was attributed to production challenges and failing to meet quality expectations, despite strong backing from customers like Scania. While Scania has not confirmed future orders from Lyten, it expressed satisfaction with the acquisition.

Lyten plans to restart Northvolt’s flagship Skelleftea plant in northern Sweden, with the goal of resuming lithium-ion battery deliveries by 2026. The acquisition also includes Northvolt’s energy storage business in Poland, its projects in Sweden and Germany, and its intellectual property. Work is underway to take over its Canadian operations as well.

Several former Northvolt executives will join Lyten, though not founder Peter Carlsson. The company will initially focus on securing high-yield production for a single customer before expanding to a broader market, targeting the automotive, defense, and energy storage sectors.

Lyten recently raised over $200 million in new equity to support its acquisitions and expansion, and Cook expressed confidence that automakers like BMW, Volkswagen, and Audi — once part of Northvolt’s $50 billion order book — could return sooner than expected.

Apple Leads Global Tech Rally After Trump Tariff Exemptions

Global technology stocks surged Thursday after U.S. President Donald Trump announced that his proposed 100% tariffs on chips and semiconductors would largely exempt companies manufacturing in, or committed to manufacturing in, the United States.

Apple shares rose 2%, recovering most of their losses since April’s Liberation Day selloff, after Trump confirmed the company will invest an additional $100 billion in U.S. operations — a move that could shield iPhones from potential tariffs. Semiconductor suppliers and Apple partners, including Applied Materials, Texas Instruments, GlobalFoundries, and Broadcom, gained between 1.3% and 5.5%. Other U.S.-listed chipmakers also rallied, with AMD up 3.1% and Nvidia up 1.4%.

European chipmakers joined the rally, with ASML and ASMI rising more than 3% each and BE Semiconductor Industries up 4.7%. J.P. Morgan analysts noted that the proposed 100% tariff would not stack on top of the 15% baseline tariff agreed between the U.S. and EU last week, which includes zero-for-zero tariffs on semiconductor equipment.

Taiwan’s TSMC, which produces chips for most major U.S. tech firms, saw its shares hit an all-time high after gaining nearly 5%, buoyed by investor confidence in AI demand regardless of tariff risk. South Korea’s Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, both with significant U.S. investments, rose 2.5% and 1.4%, respectively, after confirmation they would not face the 100% tariff.

However, not all markets benefited. The Philippines, where semiconductors account for 70% of electronics exports, warned the tariffs could be “devastating” and saw its stock market close slightly lower. Malaysia also requested clarity from U.S. trade officials on the tariff scope.

Duolingo Shares Jump 32% on Strong AI-Driven Growth and Upgraded Forecast

Duolingo shares surged about 32% on Thursday after the language-learning platform raised its annual forecast, boosting investor confidence in its ability to accelerate user growth through AI-powered features, social engagement tools, and improved monetization strategies.

The company has been experimenting with app features and subscription models to enhance retention and attract new users. Duolingo runs targeted experiments to decide which subscription options are shown to which users and when, aiming to maximize long-term value rather than pushing any single plan.

In the second quarter, average revenue per user rose 6%, largely due to more users switching to the higher-priced Max tier, which includes AI-powered video calls for conversational practice, and the $12.99-per-month Super plan. Analysts at Raymond James noted potential upside in monetization, pricing, paid conversion rates, and margins, despite a cautious stance on near-term user growth.

Gross margin fell 100 basis points in the quarter, a smaller decline than the 300 basis points Duolingo had anticipated, thanks to lower AI costs and stronger ad performance. “AI costs that power Max were lower than expected, as the cost of calling AI tools has dropped significantly,” CFO Matt Skarupa told Reuters.

The company posted adjusted earnings per share of 91 cents, beating analyst expectations of 58 cents, prompting an upward revision in earnings forecasts. If current levels hold, Duolingo’s market valuation could increase by roughly $5 billion from its prior $15.62 billion.

Even after the rally, Duolingo trades at a forward price-to-earnings multiple of 85.21 — higher than peers such as Uber (26.54) and DoorDash (79.38).