Verizon Q2 earnings negatively impacted by union strike, but above expectations

Verizon Communications Inc. reported second-quarter earnings above Wall Street expectations a day after reaching a deal to acquire Yahoo Inc.’s core internet business. Verizon reported net income for the quarter was $831 million, or 17 cents per share, compared with $4.35 billion, or $1.04 per share during the same quarter a year ago. Verizon said earnings were negatively impacted by 7 cents due to the seven-week strike by employees in its wireline business. Excluding non-operational items, earnings were 94 cents per share, just above the FactSet consensus of 92 cents. Revenue for the quarter hit $30.53 billion, a 5.3% decline compared with $32.22 billion in the year earlier period. The FactSet consensus on revenue was $30.84 billion. The cable, internet and phone company said the strike also resulted in a net decline of 13,000 Fios internet connections and 41,000 video connections. The company also mentioned its $4.83 billion deal on Monday to buy Yahoo’s core business, which is expected to close in the first quarter 2017. “By acquiring Yahoo, we are scaling up to be a major competitor in mobile media,” Chief Executive Lowell McAdam said in a statement. Verizon shares were inactive in premarket trade, but are up nearly 21% in the year to date, outperforming the S&P 500 Index , which is up more than 6%.

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Under Armour earnings fall but meet expecations

Under Armour Inc. shares fell 3.2% in Tuesday premarket trading after the sports apparel and accessories company reported second-quarter earnings that fell, but met expectations. The company had net income of $6.3 million, or 12 cents per share, versus net income of $14.8 million million, or 3 cents per share, for the same period last year. Adjusted earnings for the quarter were 1 cent per share, meeting the FactSet consensus. Revenue for the quarter totaled $1 billion, up from $783.6 million for the same period last year, also meeting the FactSet consensus. Operating income was down 39% for the quarter to $19 million, including a previously announced $23 million impairment related to The Sports Authority bankruptcy and liquidaton. Under Armour shares are down 12.2% for the last year while the S&P 500 Index is up 4.3% for the same period.

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Celgene shares slide after Revlimid use expansion curbed

Shares of Celgene Corp. fell in Monday’s extended session after the drug maker decided not the pursue approval for use of Revlimid, a lymphoma drug, in maintenance therapy following a late stage study. The clinical study had evaluated the impact of Revlimid on survival rates along with a placebo. “The interim analysis of overall survival, a key secondary endpoint, showed no benefit in the Revlimid arm,” said Celgene in a statement. Celgene shed 2.4% after hours.

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Noodles & Co. CEO resigns; company predicts lower quarterly revenue

Noodles & Co. shares fell more than 7% late Monday after news Kevin Reddy is stepping down as CEO and chairman, effectively immediately. The company’s board of directors has appointed Robert Hartnett as chairman and Dave Boennighausen, Noodles & Co.’s chief financial officer, as interim CEO. The board has started a search for external and internal candidates for a permanent executive, Noodles & Co. said in a statement. In the same statement, the company forecast its comparable-store sales will have fallen 1% systemwide in the second quarter. The company said it expects quarterly revenue of $121 million, whereas analysts polled by FactSet have forecast sales of $125 million for the quarter.

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Texas Instruments shares rally on earnings beat, strong outlook

Texas Instruments Inc. shares rallied in the extended session Monday after the chip maker topped Wall Street estimates for the quarter and offered a strong outlook. Texas Instruments shares surged 6% to $70.22 after hours. The company reported second quarter earnings of 76 cents a share on revenue of $3.27 billion. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had forecast 72 cents a share on revenue of $3.2 billion. Texas Instruments forecast third-quarter earnings of 81 cents to 91 cents a share on revenue of $3.34 billion to $3.62 billion. Analysts expect earnings of 81 cents a share on revenue of $3.38 billion.

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Smith & Wesson buys Crimson Trace for $95 million in cash deal

Smith & Wesson Holding Corp. has agreed to buy Crimson Trace Corp. for $95 million, in a deal utilizing cash on hand, the gun maker said late Monday. Crimson Trace, a leader in laser sighting systems and tactical lightning for firearms, has been a “key supplier” for Smith & Wesson, and will serve “as an ideal platform for our new Electro-Optics Division,” Smith & Wesson said in a statement. Shares of Smith & Wesson rose 0.4% in late trading after ending the regular session up 2.5%.

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Oil futures settle at a three-month low

Oil futures fell on Monday to settle at their lowest level in three months, as a glut of petroleum-product supplies implied a slowdown in crude refinery demand and the growing number of active U.S. oil rigs pointed to stronger production. September WTI crude fell by $1.06, or 2.4%, to settle at $43.13 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. That was the lowest settlement for a most-active contract since April 26, according to FactSet data.

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Buffalo Wild Wings stock takes flight after disclosing new large Marcato stake

Buffalo Wild Wings Inc.’s stock surged 5% in afternoon trade Monday, after the company disclosed that Marcato Capital Management has taken a large stake in the restaurant operator. Volume of 1.4 million shares was already nearly triple the full-day average. A regulatory filing disclosed that Marcato, which is run by Richard “Mick” McGuire, who used to work with billionaire investor Bill Ackman, now owns 950,000 shares, or 5.1%, of Buffalo Wild Wings’ shares outstanding. That would be enough to make Marcato the company’s fourth-largest shareholder, according to data provided by FactSet. The stock has run up 15% since it closed at an 18-month low of $129 on April 27. It is still down 7.3% year to date, while the S&P 500 has gained 5.9%.

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Wasserman Schultz won’t ‘gavel in’ the Democratic convention: reports

Party chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz will not perform the ceremonial function of calling to order the Democratic National Convention tonight in Philadelphia, according to MSNBC and CNN reports. Wasserman Schultz, a House member from Florida, announced Sunday she’d vacate her party post at the close of the convention in the wake of a WikiLeaks release of emails that strongly suggested the party apparatus sought to pave Hillary Clinton’s path to the Democratic nomination at the expense of main rival Bernie Sanders. When she was jeered at a pre-convention event early Monday for delegates from her home state, concern grew that her presence on stage in the convention hall would be a significant distraction.

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Starbucks names Cliff Burrows head of new Siren Retail group

In a message from Chief Executive Howard Schultz published online Monday, Starbucks Corp. announced that Cliff Burrows has been named head of a new retail group within the coffee company, Siren Retail. Burrows has been head of the Americas business for the past eight years. In this new role, he will oversee the global expansion of the company’s Roastery business and development of the Starbucks Reserve stores, as well as building out the elements of the new Princi partnership, including new Princi stores, and the Teavana business. The promotion was part of a larger organizational restructuring that also includes naming John Culver to group president of Starbucks Global Retail. He was previously group president of Starbucks Coffee China/Asia Pacific, channel development and emerging brands. Schultz announced that he will also be working more directly with a number of executives, including Liz Muller, vice president of creative and global design. All changes go into effect on September 1. Starbucks shares are down 0.2% in Monday trading, and down 3.7% for the year so far. The S&P 500 Index is up 5.8% for the year to date.

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