FedEx stock rises on company’s earnings, sales beat

Shares of FedEx Corp. rose more than 2% late Tuesday after the logistics company reported second-quarter results that beat Wall Street expectations. FedEx said it earned $755 million, or $2.84 a share, in the quarter, compared with $700 million, or $2.59 a share, in the year-ago period. Adjusted for one-time items, the company reported earnings of $3.18 a share, compared with $2.77 a share a year ago. Revenue rose to $16.3 billion in the quarter, from $14.9 billion a year ago. Analysts polled by FactSet had expected adjusted earnings of $2.73 a share on sales of $15.7 billion. “Strategic execution by the FedEx team and a stronger global economy drove improved financial results,” Chief Executive Frederick W. Smith said in a statement. The company is on track “for another record holiday-shipping season,” he said. Shares of FedEx ended the regular session up 0.3%.

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From:: Stock Market News

Stitch Fix stock plunges more than 10% after first earnings since IPO

Stitch Fix Inc. shares plunged in the extended session Tuesday after the company reported earnings for the first time as a public company. Stitch Fix shares dropped 12% to $21.84 after hours. The online clothing retailer reported fiscal first quarter net income of $13.5 million, compared with $13.2 million in the year-ago period. Revenue rose to $295.6 million from $236 million in the year-ago period. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had estimated revenue of $295 million. For the fiscal second quarter, analysts model revenue of $286 million. Executives forecast fiscal second-quarter sales of $287 million to $294 million. Stitch Fix stock has gained 53% since its November IPO, with the S&P 500 index rising 4.3%.

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From:: Stock Market News

Micron shares surge after earnings beat, strong outlook

Micron Technology Inc. shares rose in the extended session Tuesday after the memory chip maker’s results for the November-ending quarter and outlook topped Wall Street estimates. Micron shares surged 3.8% to $45.55 after hours. By Tuesday’s close, Micron shares have risen just over 100% for the year. The company reported fiscal first-quarter net income of $2.68 billion, or $2.19 a share, compared with $180 million, or 16 cents a share, in the year-ago period. Adjusted earnings were $2.45 a share. Revenue rose to $6.8 billion from $3.97 billion in the year-ago period. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had estimated earnings of $2.20 a share on revenue of $6.44 billion. For the second quarter, Micron estimates earnings of $2.51 to $2.65 a share on revenue of $6.8 billion to $7.2 billion. Analysts had estimated earnings of $2.04 a share on revenue of $6.24 billion.

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From:: Stock Market News

Stocks end slightly lower as House passes tax overhaul

Stocks ended with modest losses Tuesday, pulling back from all-time highs. Stocks remained lower as the House of Representatives, as expected, passed tax legislation that would slash corporate rates, sending it on to the Senate where a vote is expected Tuesday evening. The tech-weighted Nasdaq Composite ended 0.4% lower, while the S&P 500 lost 0.3%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended around 37 points, or 0.2%, lower to end around 24,755.

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From:: Stock Market News

Changing Demand for Rentals Strains Supply

By Susanne Dwyer

Demand for rentals is still strong—but what does it look like today, a decade after the recession?

According to America’s Rental Housing Report, recently released by the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University, demand is evolving. In the aftermath of the crash, demand exploded, and a large portion of rentals were single-family homes. Now demand, though largely out of necessity, is becoming motivated more by preference.

Americans who can afford to buy a home, for example, are opting to rent. In 2016, 6.1 million (or 18 percent of) renter households brought in more than $100,000 a year, the report shows; in 2006, only 3.3 million (or 12 percent of) renter households earned $100,000-plus.

Additionally, the makeup of renters is shifting. The majority of renters are single, but there are now more renter households that contain families with children than there are owner households that contain families with children (33 percent versus 30 percent). Moreover, the median age of renters has gone up to 40 years old, and one-third are 50 years old or older. Their backgrounds are diverse, as well: 20 percent of renter households are foreign-born, and 47 percent are minorities—a distinction from owner households, which are predominantly white.

This changing demand has been met with higher-end (and higher-priced) units; in fact, 40 percent of all additions to the market in 2016 rented for $1,500 or more, up from 15 percent in 2001, while 18 percent in 2016 rented for less than $850, down from 42 percent in 2001.

Lower-income renters, however, still, represent a significant share, and the discrepancy is extending them beyond their means, foiling any goal of owning. More income is needed to buy a home than rent one in the majority of markets: 29.8 percent of a household’s income monthly, versus 25.4 percent, according to data from realtor.com®.

Affordability—the lack thereof—has other implications for ownership. Homebuyers facing limited options have investors to thank, at least partly, for the shortage of supply.

“For the past 10 years, the number of single-family homes that are rented has grown steadily and remains near the highest levels ever recorded,” says Aaron Terrazas, senior economist at Zillow. “The combination of foreclosures and growing rental demand following the housing crash was an attractive opportunity for investors large and small who were able to buy foreclosed homes and use them to meet the rental demand.

“At the same time, many long-time owners have opted to hold onto their homes as rentals even after they decide to move somewhere else,” Terrazas says. “With such a large portion of single-family homes being rented out, and with new homes being built more slowly than the market needs, home values will continue to rise, particularly among the most affordable homes with the highest demand.”

Annual home sales, markedly, were cut by 270,000 due to the single-family rental surge, according to an analysis by Zillow.

With demand morphing and inventory strained, questions remain. To address the lack of lower-cost options, the Joint Center for Housing Studies calls for …read more

From:: Finance and Economy

GE’s stock slumps to 6-year low to repeat a bearish 3-day pattern

Shares of General Electric Co. slumped 1% in afternoon trade Tuesday, putting them on course to close at the lowest level since Dec. 20, 2011. Since the stock closed at a 6-year low of $11.66 on Dec. 6, it has followed a three-session pattern of bouncing the next session, then closing at a lower 6-year low two sessions later; Tuesday’s selloff would be the third straight time the stock has followed that pattern. The stock has now plunged 14.2% since the new CEO John Flannery unveiled the industrial conglomerate’s turnaround plan on Nov. 13, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average has rallied 1,355 points, or 5.8%, over the same time.

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From:: Stock Market News

Gaming machines maker PlayAGS files to go public

PlayAGS Inc., a Las Vegas-based maker of electronic gaming machines (EGMs), has filed to go public. The company, which was founded in 2005, has focused on supplying EGMs, including slot machines and video bingo machines, to the Native American gaming market. The filing said the company expects to raise $100 million in the offering, but that is a placeholder amount used to estimate a registration fee, as PlayAGS did not yet provide the number of shares it plans to sell. The company said it plans to apply for listing on the New York Stock Exchange, under the ticker symbol “AGS.” The company said it lost $35.9 million in the nine months ended Sept. 30, 2017, compared with a loss of $63.3 million in the same period a year ago. Revenue rose to $154.3 million from $124.1 million. The company’s IPO filing comes at a time that Renaissance IPO ETF has gained 5.9% over the past three months, while the S&P 500 has rallied 7.1%.

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From:: Stock Market News

House passes Republicans’ tax overhaul

The House of Representatives passed Republicans’ tax bill on Tuesday, advancing the sweeping legislation a step closer to enactment. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act heads next to the Senate, where Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says it will come up for a vote Tuesday evening. The bill cuts corporate and individual rates and doubles the child tax credit, among many other steps. The vote in the House was 227 to 203, with no Democrats supporting the bill.

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From:: Stock Market News

Roku stock hits new all-time high for third-straight day

Roku Inc.’s stock hit a new all-time intraday high in Tuesday trading, putting shares on course to close at a record high for the third straight session. Shares of the streaming-media firm are up 4% in afternoon trading. The company said in a filing released late Monday that Morgan Stanley had a 5.1% stake in the company. Roku shares are up 314% from their September IPO price of $14. The S&P 500 Index has gained 7.1% since Roku went public.

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From:: Stock Market News

New Construction Up, Permits and Completed Const Off

Despite weakening housing permits and completed construction, new construction rose last month. In the West, new construction soared as completed construction plummeted.

In permit-issuing places, there were 96,500 privately owned single-family housing units that were authorized by building permits during November.

Last month’s activity brought the number of building permits issued from Jan. 1 through Nov. 30 of this year to 1.1673 million.


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From:: Financing