Shares of Yum China fall on fourth-quarter loss

Shares of Yum China Holdings Inc. fell in Wednesday’s extended session after the fast-food chain posted a quarterly loss, stemming in part from a charge related to U.S. tax cuts. The operator of KFC and Pizza Hut in China reported it swung to a fourth-quarter loss of 90 million, or 23 cents a share, versus earnings of $88 million, or 23 cents a share, a year earlier. Yum China recorded a one-time tax charge of $164 million and would have earned earned 19 cents a share on an adjusted basis. Revenue grew 13% to $2.2 billion while same-store sales rose 5%, led by KFC. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had forecast earnings of 18 cents on revenue of $2.15 billion. Yum China had spun off from Yum Brands at the end of 2016. Yum China shares slid 2.9% after hours.

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From:: Stock Market News

The Dow, S&P 500 just blew their biggest leads since August 2015

The Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 on Wednesday just relinquished their biggest point leads in about three years. The Dow boasted an intraday advance of about 381 points, but ended the volatile session off 19 points, or less than 0.1%, at 24,893, representing its biggest reversal from a peak intraday since Aug. 25, 2015, according to WSJ Market Data Group. A similar reversal played out for the broader-market S&P 500 index which gave up a nearly 33-point intraday gain to finish the session down more than 13 points, or off 0.5%, also representing its biggest blown lead since 2015 when it rose 55 points but ended the session down 1.4%. The frenetic swings for the equity gauges highlights a resurgence of volatility on Wall Street after a lengthy period of quiet as investors focus on a Federal Reserve that may be more aggressive in raising borrowing costs as stubbornly low inflation resurfaces.

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From:: Stock Market News

iRobot shares drop more than 20% as earnings, outlook miss Street view

Shares of iRobot Corp. dropped in the extended session Wednesday after the Roomba maker’s earnings results and outlook fell short of Wall Street estimates. Shares of iRobot fell 21% to $69.36 after hours. The company reported fourth-quarter net income of $4.6 million, or 16 cents a share, compared with $13.7 million, or 49 cents a share, in the year-ago period. Revenue rose to $326.9 million from $212.5 million in the year-ago period. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had estimated 25 cents a share on revenue of $318.8 million. For the year, iRobot estimates earnings of $2.10 to $2.35 a share on revenue of $1.05 billion to $1.08 billion. Analysts expect earnings of $2.70 a share on revenue of $1.02 billion.

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From:: Stock Market News

Buyers Caught in Deadlock: NAR

By Susanne Dwyer

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Buying a home is a mark of the American Dream—but even though the desire exists, realizing it is a struggle, according to the Aspiring Home Buyers Profile recently released by the National Association of REALTORS® (NAR).

Homebuyers are hopeful, however. Demand is ever-increasing, and, of aspiring homeowners, the majority do want to own. In 2017, approximately one-quarter (and as much as 32 percent) of aspiring homeowners identified their motivators for purchase as children, marriage and/or retirement, the Profile reveals. A similar share (26-30 percent) indicated they would buy if their finances improved.

Less motivating is a raise in rents, the Profile shows. Despite 51 percent of renters anticipating their rent will rise, 42 percent would not move. Twenty-five percent would find a less pricey rental. Just 15 percent would make the move to own.

Affordability is the obstacle—and according to Lawrence Yun, chief economist at NAR, aspiring homeowners at the lower-end of the market have the worst of it. At the close of 2017, in fact, 56 percent of aspiring homeowners did not have the means to purchase, while the amount of aspiring homeowners who believed it is a good time to buy declined (down to 58 percent from 62 percent).

“A tug-of-war continues to take place in many markets throughout the country, where consistently solid job creation is fueling demand, but the lack of supply is creating affordability constraints that are ultimately pulling aspiring buyers further away from owning,” says Yun. “These extremely frustrating conditions continue to be most apparent at the lower end of the market, which is why the overall share of first-time buyers remains well below where it should be given the strength of the job market and economy.

“Housing demand in 2018 will be fueled by more millennials finally deciding to marry and have kids and the expectations that solid job growth and the strengthening economy will push incomes higher,” Yun says. “However, with prices and mortgage rates also expected to increase, affordability pressures will persist. That is why it is critical for much of the country to start seeing a significant hike in new and existing housing supply. Otherwise, many would-be first-time buyers will be forced to continue renting and not reach their dream of being a homeowner.”

The Aspiring Home Buyers Profile is based on findings from NAR’s 2017 Housing Opportunities and Market Experience (HOME) surveys.

For more information, please visit www.nar.realtor.

Suzanne De Vita is RISMedia’s online news editor. Email her your real estate news ideas at sdevita@rismedia.com. For the latest real estate news and trends, bookmark RISMedia.com.

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From:: Finance and Economy

Gilead’s once-a-day HIV regimen has been approved by FDA

Gilead Sciences Inc.’s once-a-day HIV regimen has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration, the company said Wednesday afternoon. The regimen, Biktarvy, is intended for HIV patients who are new to treatment and will cost $35,859, similar to other single-tablet HIV therapies, said Mizuho analyst Salim Syed. The approval happened a few days earlier than expected, and the safety label for the product is clean, he said. Biktarvy is expected to become a “gold standard” HIV regimen for patients new to treatment because it has a high barrier to resistance, no liver toxicity issues, few potential drug-drug interactions, a small pill size and a rapid start to therapy, said RBC Capital Markets analyst Brian Abrahams. Gilead shares rose 4.5% in extremely heavy Wednesday afternoon trade. Shares have surged 14.7% over the last three months, compared with a 4.6% rise in the S&P 500 and a 5.8% rise in the Dow Jones Industrial Average .

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From:: Stock Market News

U.S. runs $51 billion budget surplus in January, CBO estimates

The federal government had a budget surplus of $51 billion in January, slightly smaller than the same month a year ago, according to the Congressional Budget Office. For the first four months of fiscal 2018, the shortfall is $174 billion, up $16 billion from the same period a year ago. For the fiscal year to date, receipts are up by 4% and spending is 5% higher, CBO said. Department of Homeland Security outlays have risen 67%, or $12 billion, for the fiscal year due to activities related to disaster relief.

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From:: Stock Market News

Snap stock’s bullish ‘breakaway gap’ suggests first uptrend may have started

In one fell swoop, Snap Inc.’s stock hurdled its 50-day moving average, its 200-day MA and a 9-month long downtrend line, creating a bullish “breakaway gap” which suggests it may have launched its first uptrend since going public 11 months ago. The stock had bouncing around a relatively narrow range since it closed at a record low of $11.83 on Aug. 11, 2016. On Wednesday, after the ephemeral-messaging company reported late Tuesday quarterly results that beat expectations for the first time, the stock opened at $17.15, above its 50-day MA at $14.60, above its 200-day MA at $15.80, above a downtrend line starting in May that extended to about $14.65 and to trade above its IPO price of $17 for the first time in seven months, before extending gains. “Breakaway gaps occur when price suddenly breaks through a formation boundary and signal the beginning of a trend,” according to a report of a study conducted by the Market Technicians Association. “These are thought to be the most profitable gaps [to trade].” It was up 46% in afternoon trade, the biggest-ever one day gain since it went public on March 2, 2017. It has climbed 36% over the past three months, while the S&P 500 has gained 4.5%.

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From:: Stock Market News

Rabobank pleads guilty to money laundering, agrees to $369 million fine

Rabobank, a Roseville, California subsidiary of the Netherlands-based Coöperatieve Rabobank U.A., pleaded guilty on Wednesday to a felony conspiracy charge for concealing deficiencies in its anti-money laundering program and obstructing the regulatory examination of the bank. Rabobank will forfeit $369 million. Rabobank admitted to conspiring with several of its former executives to defraud the United States by unlawfully impeding the OCC’s ability to regulate the bank, and to allowing hundreds of millions of dollars in untraceable cash, sourced from Mexico and elsewhere, to be deposited into its rural bank branches and transferred via wire transfers, checks, and cash transactions, without the proper notification to federal regulators as required by law. Rabobank had been cited for nearly identical failures in 2006 and 2008. A Rabobank vice president, George Martin, also entered into a deferred prosecution agreement for his role in aiding and abetting the scheme. Martin admitted his conduct in Dec. 2017. Chief executive officer Mark Borrecco said in statement on Rabobank’s site, “Settling these matters is important for the bank’s mission here in California. Reinforced with strong levels of capital and liquidity, and enhanced internal controls and risk management functions, we are committed to growing with our customers for years to come.”

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From:: Stock Market News

Saks Fifth Avenue parent Hudson’s Bay rejects unsolicited offer for German business

Hudson’s Bay Co. said Wednesday that it has rejected an unsolicited offer for its German business from Signa Holding GmbH after a review. “It significantly undervalues our German business and related real estate assets and is not supported by sufficient certainty of financing to warrant further consideration at this time,” said David Leith, lead independent director of the Hudson’s Bay’s board. Included in Hudson’s Bay’s portfolio are Galeria Kaufhof, a German department store group, Saks Fifth Avenue and Lord & Taylor. Hudson’s Bay shares are down 7.2% for the past year while the S&P 500 index is up 17.6% for the period.

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From:: Stock Market News

Debt ceiling fears fade from Treasury bills after Congress leaders strikes budget pact

Yields for short-dated Treasury bills due in early March fell from their elevated levels on Wednesday after Senate leaders said they struck a two-year budget deal that would lift the debt ceiling. The bill most be voted on in Congress. The yield for the one-month bill maturing in March. 08 slipped around 11 basis points to 1.352%. Before the agreement, investors had avoided bills set to mature in early March, pushing its yields higher above later maturities, when the Treasury Department was expected to exhaust accounting maneuvers. Bond yields move inversely to prices. As a result, the yield spread between government paper maturing in March and April has been negative in the past few weeks, producing an unusual kink in the so-called yield curve, which traces a bond’s maturities against its yield.

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From:: Stock Market News