Dish earnings buoyed by $1.2 billion tax benefit

Dish Network Corp. said Wednesday it had net income of $1.39 billion, or $2.64 a share, in the fourth quarter, up from $355 million, or 73 cents a share, in the year-earlier period. Net income included an income tax benefit of about $1.2 billion due to adjustments to deferred tax assets and liabilities, following the tax revamp signed into law in December. Revenue fell to $3.48 billion from $3.75 billion. The FactSet consensus was for EPS of 55 cents and revenue of $3.524 billion. The company ended the quarter with 13.242 million pay-TV subscribers, including 11.030 million Dish TV subscribers and 2.212 million Sling TV subscribers. Net pay-TV subscribers rose about 39,000 in the quarter, including 75,000 reactivations in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, following the damage caused by Hurricane Maria. Shares were not yet active premarket, but have fallen 29% in the last 12 months, while the S&P 500 has gained 15%.

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North Korea canceled secret meeting with Pence: reports

Vice President Mike Pence was set to secretly meet with North Korean officials during his recent trip to the Winter Olympics in South Korea, but the North Koreans pulled out of the meeting at the last minute, according to reports Tuesday. The Washington Post reported Pence’s meeting with Kim Yo Jong, the sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, and premier Kim Yong Nam was canceled about two hours before it was scheduled to start. “We regret their failure to seize this opportunity,” State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said Tuesday, according to the Associated Press. Both the Post and AP said the North Koreans ditched the meeting over Pence’s hard-line stance, as well as displeasure over recent new sanctions.

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Republican senators urge Trump to enter TPP trade talks

Nearly half of the U.S. Senate’s 51 Republicans urged President Trump to revive talks with Japan, Canada, Australia and eight other countries on a trade deal the White House rejected last year. The so-called Trans-Pacific Partnership is set to go into effect soon without the U.S. after years of negotiations. “As you know, increased economic engagement with the eleven nations currently in the TPP has the potential to substantially improve the competitiveness of U.S. businesses, support millions of U.S. jobs, increase U.S. exports, increase wages, fully unleash America’s energy potential, and benefit consumers,” the letter by 25 senators said. The senators also said the TPP, which excludes China, would help act as a counter to Chinese influence.

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Foot Locker raises dividend, cuts yearly capital plan to focus on online sales

Foot Locker Inc. said late Tuesday its board of directors has approved a quarterly cash dividend of 34.5 cents a share, payable on May 4 to shareholders of record on April 20. That represents an 11% increase in the dividend, the company said. The retailer also said its board approved a $230 million capital expenditures program for this year, compared with about $270 million spent in 2017. That reflects the company’s “greater focus on digital and supply chain initiatives relative to investments in real estate,” Foot Locker said in a statement. “The digital investments include enhancements to its mobile and web platforms, the global roll-out of its new point-of-sale software, and expanding data analytics capabilities.” Spending on its stores, however, will still comprise the majority of the company’s capital expenditures, and will include ongoing store remodels as well as the testing of off-mall retail formats, the company said. Shares of Foot Locker were flat in after-hours trading and ended the regular trading session down 2%.

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LendingClub shares fall after quarterly earnings miss

Shares of LendingClub Corp. fell more than 4% late Tuesday after the company missed fourth-quarter adjusted earnings and sales expectations. The lender also said it had reached a preliminary settlement of class-action lawsuits filed in federal and California state courts arising from some legacy issues disclosed in 2016. LendingClub said it lost $92.1 million, or 22 cents a share, in the quarter, compared with a loss of $32.3 million, or 8 cents a share, in the year-ago period, thanks mostly to the class-action litigation settlement expense of $77.25 million in the period, it said. Adjusted for one-time items, the company earned 1 cent a share in the quarter, versus a loss of 2 cents a share a year ago. Revenue reached $156.5 million, up 20% from $30.5 million a year ago. Analysts polled by FactSet had expected adjusted earnings of 2 cents a share on sales of $157.6 million. LendingClub shares ended the regular trading session up 4.6%.

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Walmart’s stock marks worst daily drop in its history as a publicly traded entity

Shares of Walmart Inc. on Tuesday got walloped, with the retailing giant notching its worst dollar and percentage decline of all time, according to FactSet data. The world’s largest retailer was under heavy selling pressure, down 10.2%, or $10.67, after it said online sales growth slowed during the fourth quarter. That marks a turn from three quarters of strong online growth, for the Bentonville, Ark.-based company as it attempts to wage war against rival and retailing behemoth Amazon.com Inc. . Walmart has been a publicly traded company since the early 1970s. On the upside, Walmart reported that sales in existing stores rose 2.6% in the fourth quarter, representing its 14th consecutive quarter of growth. Walmart’s decline weighed on the broader market, yanking the Dow Jones Industrial Average , where it is a component, down by about 70 points, while the S&P 500 index’s consumer-staples sector, as measured by the Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR ETF , also got whacked, with declines there weighing on the broad-market S&P 500. Nearly all the components of the XLP, referring to its ticker, ended in negative territory. The Dow closed the session down 254 points, or 1%, at 24,964, the S&P 500 index settled off 0.6% at 2,716, while the technology-laden Nasdaq Composite Index finished near flat, off less than 0.1%, at 7,234.

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Walmart’s stock exacts more than 70-point toll from Dow industrials in late trade

The Dow Jones Industrial Average finished Tuesday sharply lower, weighed by a historic pullback in shares of Walmart Inc. Walmart’s shares finished the session down about 10.2%, or $10.67, at $94.11, marking the retailing giant’s worst daily point and percentage decline in history, according to FactSet data. That decline weighed mightily on the Dow, exacting a more than 70-point toll. A $1 swing in any one of the Dow’s 30 components equating to a 6.89-point move. Walmart Inc.’s share stumble comes after its fourth-quarter adjusted earnings a share were weaker than forecast. Much of of the Dow’s 254-point drop, or 1%, to 24,964 was tied to Walmart. A pair of Dow components, UnitedHealth Group Inc. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. also delivered a downward blow to the equity gauge. The S&P 500 index retreated 0.6% to end at around 2,716, while the Nasdaq Composite Index finished near break-even at, off less than 0.1%, at 7,234.

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U.S. stocks end lower, with Walmart weighing on Dow

U.S. stocks closed lower on Tuesday, with the Dow falling back below 25,000 as losses accelerated in the afternoon. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 260 points, or 1%, to 24,960. The S&P 500 was down 16 points, or 0.6%, to 2,716. The Nasdaq Composite Index slipped 0.1%, or 5 points, to 7,234. Both the Dow and the S&P are coming off six-day rallies, while all three posted their biggest one-week percentage gain in years last week. One of the biggest drags on the day was Walmart Inc. , which tumbled 10% in the wake of its quarterly results. The discount retailer posted its worst one-day percentage loss in years, which weighed on both the Dow and the S&P. The day’s losses were broad, with 10 of the 11 primary S&P 500 sectors ending lower on the day. Technology was the only positive group, up 0.3%. Market participants continued to watch a rising dollar and climbing bond yields, both of which could make equities less attractive at current levels, even as macroeconomic conditions and corporate earnings are still seen as strong.

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White House says incident that will be made public shows Trump is ‘tough on Russia’

The White House said Tuesday there was “an incident” last week which will be revealed in the coming days that will show how President Donald Trump is “tough on Russia.” Press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders made the comment at the daily briefing, but offered no more details. Trump has suggested on Twitter that President Barack Obama’s administration didn’t do enough to counter meddling in the 2016 election, and called himself “much tougher on Russia than Obama.”

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Dow flirts with largest one-day drop in 2 weeks at its nadir as VIX kicks above 20

The Dow Jones Industrial Average late Tuesday was trading near session lows and set for its sharpest one-day drop since Feb. 8, when the benchhmark unraveled by more than 1,000 points. At its low, the Dow was off about 335 points, or 1.3%, at 24,884.19, but was most recently off 260 points at 24,962. The blue-chip gauge has been under pressure throughout the session on the back of weakness in shares of Walmart Inc. after the retailing giant reported fourth-quarter results that showed some softness in its online business. Selling pressure accelerated for the Dow with about an hour left in regular trade. Walmart shares were on track to mark the worst point decline on record, which was subtracting about 70 points from the Dow. A $1 move in any one of the Dow’s 30 components translates to a 6.89-swing in the price-weighted average. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 index was down 0.6% at 2,715, while the Nasdaq Composite Index , which had held on to modest gains throughout the session, was off 0.1% at 7,229. Meanwhile, a measure of volatility was trading above its historical average at 20. The CBOE Volatility Index was up at 20.89, which typically suggests that stock investors are expecting increased volatility in the coming month.

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