Renewables stocks surge as investor inflows return and power demand outlook brightens

After two years in decline, renewable energy stocks are staging a strong comeback, driven by renewed investor inflows and a powerful shift in global electricity demand. The sector has posted its best quarterly performance since 2020, as confidence returns amid clearer U.S. policy direction and soaring energy needs from AI data centers and electrification.

Data from Lipper shows alternative energy funds attracted nearly $800 million in September, their biggest monthly inflow since April 2022, while Morningstar reports fund outflows have dropped to their lowest in over a year. The MSCI Global Alternative Energy Index rose 17% in the third quarter, doubling the broader market’s gains.

BlackRock’s Alastair Bishop said valuations had become so depressed that even negative policy news turned into a “positive catalyst,” helping investors refocus on fundamentals. Similarly, Robeco’s Roman Boner said inflows into the firm’s clean-energy strategies have resumed.

The rally has been powered by Big Tech’s AI-fueled data center boom, accelerating electrification of transport and industry, and upgrades to grid infrastructure. U.S. power consumption, flat for a decade, is now expected to surge, with solar-plus-storage emerging as the fastest way to meet demand. “Every electron counts,” Boner said.

Private equity is also reentering the space, with Global Infrastructure Partners reportedly in talks to acquire AES Corp. Analysts say renewable stocks still trade at a 40% discount to global equities, leaving room for upside as earnings momentum builds.

Despite risks from higher interest rates and political shifts, managers believe the rally could persist as short positions unwind and clean-energy earnings recover.

Nvidia-backed Reflection AI secures $2 billion funding, valued at $8 billion

Reflection AI, a fast-rising artificial intelligence startup backed by Nvidia, announced on Thursday it has raised $2 billion in fresh funding, pushing its valuation to $8 billion. The massive round underscores investor enthusiasm for startups automating software development through AI.

The funding attracted major names, including former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, Citi, Donald Trump Jr.-backed 1789 Capital, and existing investors Lightspeed and Sequoia. Reflection AI, founded in 2024 by former DeepMind researchers Misha Laskin and Ioannis Antonoglou, builds AI systems that can autonomously write, test, and optimize software — a rapidly expanding niche within the AI industry.

The new valuation marks a huge leap from the company’s last funding round, when it raised $130 million at a $545 million valuation, according to PitchBook.

Investor appetite for AI ventures remains robust. Global venture capital funding jumped 38% year-over-year in Q3 2025 to $97 billion, with nearly half of that going to AI companies. Reflection AI’s momentum reflects how automation-focused startups are drawing capital on par with heavyweights like OpenAI and China’s DeepSeek.

The company said the funds will accelerate product expansion and recruitment as it scales operations globally amid intensifying competition in AI-driven coding tools.

MercadoLibre enters Brazil’s online pharmacy market with first drugstore acquisition

MercadoLibre, Latin America’s largest e-commerce company, will begin selling medicines online in Brazil for the first time after acquiring a local drugstore, executives said on Thursday. The move marks the firm’s entry into one of the region’s largest and most tightly regulated pharmaceutical markets.

While MercadoLibre already operates online drug sales in Mexico, Argentina, Chile, and Colombia, Brazil’s laws require a company to own at least one licensed physical pharmacy to sell medications online. Local head Fernando Yunes confirmed the acquisition and said the company’s aim is to act as a marketplace platform rather than build a nationwide pharmacy chain.

“The pharmaceutical sector is the only one in Brazil we haven’t entered yet, and we see a big opportunity to improve access,” Yunes said. “We want small and medium-sized pharmacies selling through MercadoLibre, not to compete directly with them.”

Executives said the company will evaluate next steps based on the performance of its first pharmacy. MercadoLibre is also in discussions with Brazilian regulators to modernize existing laws that restrict online pharmaceutical trade, calling for reforms to make it easier for pharmacies to reach customers digitally.

The move signals MercadoLibre’s growing ambitions to expand its healthcare footprint in Brazil, its largest market by revenue, and tap into the country’s rapidly growing digital health sector.