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Business
Herz — Business Desk · · 30s summary · 1 min read
The second quarter of 2026 reveals starkly contrasting trajectories among major global corporations, according to Handelsblatt. Volvo records a collapse in profits, while BlackRock achieves a record result driven by surging stock markets and the ETF boom. ABB sees its profits lifted by record orders. Johnson & Johnson, for its part, raises its annual targets for 2026.
The second quarter of 2026 reveals highly unequal results among four major international groups. These announcements are reported by Handelsblatt.
Volvo records a profit collapse during the second quarter of 2026.
BlackRock achieves a record result, driven by surging stock markets and the ETF boom. ETFs (Exchange-Traded Funds) are investment funds that pool together a collection of securities; their shares are bought and sold on stock exchanges like ordinary shares.
ABB sees its profits boosted by record orders.
Johnson & Johnson raises its annual targets, signaling an upward revision of its forecasts for the full year 2026.
Available sources do not specify the exact amounts of profits, losses, or orders for each of these companies. The causes behind Volvo's profit collapse are not detailed in the available information.
An ETF (Exchange-Traded Fund) is an investment fund that pools together a collection of securities. Its shares can be bought or sold on stock exchanges like ordinary shares.
The sources consulted do not explain in detail the reasons for these differences. BlackRock benefits from surging stock markets and the ETF boom; ABB benefits from record orders. The reasons for Volvo's difficulties are not specified.
Raising annual targets means a company expects better results than initially planned for the full year. Johnson & Johnson made this upward revision for 2026.
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