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My Gen Alpha sister sent me her Christmas list, and some of the items surprised me. Her wish list is a snapshot of what teens at her Texas high school are coveting this holiday season. Nike, Apple, and Lululemon remain popular among teens, according to her list and a recent survey. AdvertisementEvery holiday season, my family expects to receive an extensive Christmas list from my 14-year-old sister — in true youngest-sibling fashion. Here's what else my sister said she and her Gen Alpha friends are coveting this holiday season.
Persons: Alpha, Z, , Stanley, Lululemon —, Piper Sandler, Lululemon, It's, Stanley tumbler, That's, Siri, Max, she's, Nike Dunks, Jim Duffy, Dunks Organizations: Nike, Apple, Dior, Apple Intelligence, Nike Jordan, Stifel Locations: Texas
Shoppers walk along 5th Avenue on Black Friday in New York, US, on Friday, Nov. 25, 2022. Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesRetailers hype Black Friday sales, and it works. According to WalletHub's 2024 Best Things to Buy on Black Friday report, 41% of items at major retailers offer no savings compared with their pre-Black Friday prices. What not to buy on Black FridayTypically, Black Friday is a great time to find rock-bottom prices on fall clothing — including flannels, denim, coats and accessories — as well as televisions and consumer electronics. In-store Black Friday spending is expected to grow by 7.3 per cent in the UK this year.
Persons: Andrea Woroch, PIRG, Etsy, Adam Davis, Davis, Lauren Beitelspacher, Lululemon, Woroch, Leon Neal Organizations: Bloomberg, Getty, National, Wells, Wells Fargo Retail Finance, Finance, Babson College, Nike, Day, Labor, Oxford Circus Locations: New York, R.J, Wells Fargo, Oxford
“Some Black Friday deals are misleading as retailers may inflate original prices to make a deal look like a better value,” said consumer savings expert Andrea Woroch. This year, in particular, some of the deals are already as good as they are going to get. Retailers plan to deliver your holiday deals a little slower this year. Travelers can check out Travel Tuesday deals from 2023 to get an idea of what to expect this year. If an item costs less at another store or popular site, often the retailer will match the price, Woroch said.
Persons: , Andrea Woroch, Adam Davis, Patrick Kelleher, Lauren Beitelspacher, ” Beitelspacher, “ we’ve, ” Davis, Lululemon, , Woroch, ” Woroch Organizations: National, Wells, Wells Fargo Retail Finance, , Consumers, DHL Supply, North, CNBC, Retailers, Babson College, Nike, , Day, Labor, Walmart, Target, Black Locations: Wells Fargo, North America
A customer visits Macy's Herald Square store in New York City during early morning Black Friday sales, Nov. 24, 2023. Consumers are increasingly concerned that their online orders may not arrive in time for the holiday — and rightfully so. What discounts to expect on Black Friday"You are easily going to see 20% to 30% off," Davis said — but "not necessarily storewide." What not to buy on Black FridayTypically, Black Friday is a great time to find rock-bottom prices on fall clothing — including flannels, denim, coats and accessories — as well as televisions and consumer electronics. Travelers can check out Travel Tuesday deals from 2023 to get an idea of what to expect this year.
Persons: Kena Betancur, Patrick Kelleher, Lauren Beitelspacher, Beitelspacher, we've, Davis, Lululemon, Woroch Organizations: Macy's Herald, Consumers, DHL Supply, North, CNBC, Babson College, Nike, Day, Labor Locations: New York City, North America
Ford posted adjusted earnings per share of 47 cents compared to the consensus forecast of 68 cents, according to LSEG. Edwards also reported second-quarter adjusted earnings of 70 cents a share, a penny above expectations, per LSEG. Honeywell — Shares moved more than 4% lower after the industrial giant's full-year outlook missed analysts' expectations. According to LSEG, analysts were expecting earnings to come in at $2.20 per share on $15.62 billion in revenue. Northrop Grumman — The defense stock climbed more than 5% after the company beat second-quarter earnings expectations.
Persons: Ford, Molina, FactSet, Edwards Lifesciences, Edwards, CJ Desai, LSEG, RTX, AbbVie, Northrop Grumman, , Alex Harring, Yun Li, Pia Singh, Hakyung Kim, Jesse Pound Organizations: Ford, Viking Therapeutics, U.S . Army . American Airlines, American Airlines, Honeywell —, Southwest Airlines —, Southwest, Citi, Hasbro, Revenue, Machines, Business Machines, Nasdaq
For the current quarter, Five Below said it expects between $830 million and $850 million in revenue, while analysts polled by LSEG expected $883 million. The move was made earlier this week and comes just days after the company reported its first revenue miss since 2006. Lululemon issued weak guidance for the current quarter, but its full-year earnings per share guidance was above expectations. The company recorded earnings of $2.66 per share, which is better than the LSEG consensus estimate of $2.33 in earnings per share. The bank cited its earnings per share potential and discounted valuation as reasons for the call.
Persons: LSEG, ValueAct, Mason Morfit, Lululemon, Sprinklr, Smartsheet, Smucker, Goldman Sachs, , Samantha Subin, Michelle Fox, Lisa Han, Alex Harring Organizations: LSEG, Revenue, Old Dominion, Fluence Energy, Guggenheim, Ultragenyx Pharmaceutical, JPMorgan
Five Below told investors to expect between $830 million and $850 million, while analysts polled by LSEG forecasted $883 million. Sprinklr — The business technology stock dove 21.1% in the wake of weak guidance for the current quarter and full year. StoneCo — The financial technology stock rose 2.6% following an upgrade to overweight from neutral by JPMorgan . Ultragenyx Pharmaceutical — The biopharma stock added nearly 4% following an upgrade to buy from neutral at Goldman Sachs. Shopify — The e-commerce technology stock slipped 1.6% on the back of a MoffettNathanson downgrade to neutral from buy.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Smartsheet, LSEG, Sprinklr, Mizuho, there's, StoneCo, CH Robinson, Goldman, ISI's, Shopify, Guggenheim, , Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox, Lisa Kailai Han Organizations: Nvidia, LSEG, Revenue, Mizuho, JPMorgan, Ultragenyx Pharmaceutical, Goldman, eBay, Citi, UBS, BMO Capital, BMO, Viridian Therapeutics, ISI, Energy Locations: Americas
Target — Target's shares tumbled more than 7% after first-quarter earnings missed estimates, driven by a year-over-year sales decline of about 3% as consumers bought fewer discretionary items. Shopify — The retail software stock rose 2.6% following a Goldman Sachs upgrade to buy from neutral. Urban Outfitters — The clothing retailer added 1.8% after beating Wall Street estimates for fiscal first-quarter results. PDD — PDD Holdings, the Chinese parent of discount retailer Temu, gained 7.6% after reporting a 131% increase in first-quarter revenue. Analysts surveyed by LSEG were looking for $4.14 per share on $2.53 billion of revenue.
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Sarah Min Organizations: Outfitters, Wall, Urban, PDD Holdings, Toll, Citi, Wall Street Journal
Urban Outfitters — The clothing retailer slid 4.6% despite posting a fiscal first-quarter beat, after trading higher before Tuesday's opening bell. Urban Outfitters reported adjusted earnings of 69 cents per share, higher than the 52 cents per share analysts polled by LSEG had expected. First Solar — Shares surged more than 18% in midday trading. Other alt energy stocks also surged, in part owing to enthusiasm that AI will lift power demand. Bloom Energy surged 18%; Sunnova Energy added 14%; and Enphase Energy , Fluence Energy and Sunrun were all up 10%.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, LSEG, , Alex Harring, Lisa Kailai Han, Jeff Greenberg Organizations: Goldman, Urban Outfitters, Garmin, Bank of America, , Toll, Citi, Tesla, Elon, Bloomberg, UBS, Bloom Energy, Sunnova Energy, Enphase Energy, Fluence Energy, Sonoma, Universal, Getty Locations: Massachusetts, Europe, FactSet, Miami Beach , Florida
Paramount — The entertainment company saw shares climb more than 5% in premarket trading after reports that its board is preparing to fire CEO Bob Bakish as soon as Monday morning. Domino's Pizza — Shares of the pizza chain jumped more than 5% after a first-quarter earnings beat. Domino's reported $3.58 in earnings per share versus the $3.39 expected by analysts polled by LSEG. Southwest Airlines — The airline stock dipped 1.2% after Jefferies downgraded shares to underperform from hold. The company also said it expects box office performance for the second quarter to remain pressured by last year's strikes.
Persons: Bob Bakish, Domino's, Jefferies, Sheila Kahyaoglu, Bernstein, Toni Sacconaghi, , Sarah Min, Yun Li, Michelle Fox, Pia Singh, Jesse Pound Organizations: Paramount, LSEG, Southwest Airlines —, Apple, Barclays, AMC Locations: LSEG ., China
Lululemon — Shares declined 2% after Wells Fargo downgraded the athleisure company to equal weight from overweight. The firm said Lululemon's prior positive catalysts have already played out, and it forecasts more muted growth in 2024. Spotify — Shares added 8.8% after the music streaming company announced it would lay off 17% of its workforce. The three stocks will replace Sealed Air , Alaska Air Group and SolarEdge Technologies . Virgin Galactic — Shares of the space company plunged nearly 15%.
Persons: Wells, MicroStrategy, Dow, FirstSource, Richard Branson, Branson, KeyBanc, Carvana, Morgan Stanley, — CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Jesse Pound, Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Yun Li, Lisa Kailai Han, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Organizations: Marathon, Spotify, Technologies, Uber Technologies, Dow Jones, Builders, Alaska Air Group, SolarEdge Technologies, Galactic —, Financial, United, JPMorgan, Alaska Air Group —, Hawaiian Airlines, Alaska Air, Hawaiian Holdings, General Motors, Cadillac, Chevrolet, Mizuho Securities, United Auto Workers, Palo Alto, Palo Alto Network Locations: MicroStrategy, British, Seattle, Palo
The Cheesecake Factory is more than a staple of US shopping malls – it's a sign of financial health. Malls without a Cheesecake Factory were much more likely to be behind on their loans, Moody's found. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe Cheesecake Factory first opened in Beverly Hills, California, in 1978 and has since grown to more than 200 restaurants across North America. The chain is typically located in or near shopping malls — a commercial real estate segment that has seen a rough few years with changing shopping patterns. To see how that relationship plays out in real life, I headed off for lunch at my local Cheesecake Factory at the West Towne Mall in Madison, Wisconsin.
Persons: Moody's, , Matt Reidy, Reidy Organizations: Service, Sears, Nordstroms, Apple, Factory, West Locations: Beverly Hills , California, North America, West Towne, Madison , Wisconsin
Pfizer , Moderna , BioNTech — Shares of Pfizer dropped 1.3% after the company slashed its full-year revenue guidance by $9 billion, noting waning demand for its Covid treatment and vaccine. Following the guidance cut, Jefferies upgraded Pfizer on Monday, citing an attractive buying opportunity. Vaccine markers Moderna and BioNTech also dropped premarket, losing 4.1% and 5%, respectively. Colgate-Palmolive — The consumer products stock gained more than 1% in premarket trading after Stifel upgraded Colgate-Palmolive to buy from hold. The firm cited the stock's attractive valuation and the rapid and profitable growth of TAL's non-academic tutoring business as catalysts.
Persons: Jefferies, BioNTech, premarket, Morgan Stanley, Jim Ratcliffe, Jeffrey Stein, Dow, Charles Schwab, CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Jesse Pound, Tanaya Macheel, Michelle Fox Theobald, Lisa Han Organizations: Pfizer, Moderna, BioNTech, Colgate, Palmolive, Manchester United, Wall Street, . Rite, Dow Jones, Activision, Microsoft, TAL Education Group, UBS Locations: New Jersey
Pfizer — Shares rallied 3.61% following an upgrade by Jeffries to buy from hold. The firm sees an attractive buying opportunity after Pfizer cut its full-year guidance last week on slumping vaccine sales. Alignment Healthcare — Shares soared 17.22% after being upgraded to strong buy from outperform by Raymond James. Tal Education — The education technology stock popped 6.73% after UBS upgraded shares to a buy rating, citing an attractive valuation and tailwinds from Tal Education's nonacademic tutoring business. Greenbrier — Shares of the transportation services company gained 3.81% Monday morning after Susquehanna upgraded the stock to a positive rating.
Persons: Dow, Lululemon, Jeffries, Novavax, Raymond James, Morgan Stanley, Jim Ratcliffe, Sheikh Jassim bin Hamad al Thani, Glazer, Tal Education's, Charles Schwab —, Schwab, Albemarle —, Albemarle, Bascome, Henry Schein —, Yun Li, Fred Imbert, Hakyung Kim, Samantha Subin, Alex Harring, Pia Singh, Lisa Han Organizations: Dow Jones Indices, Activision, Microsoft, Pfizer —, Pfizer, Moderna, News Corp, Reuters, Street, Street Journal, Systems, Manchester United, Tal Education, UBS, Liontown, Greenbrier —, Susquehanna Locations: BioNTech, Greenbrier
Klaviyo — Klaviyo shares jumped more than 9% after the marketing automation company surged to $36.75 after its New York Stock Exchange initial public offering. Stellantis — Shares rose about 1.7% after sales in Europe of brands such as Peugeot and Opel surged more than 6% in August. On Holding — The shoe stock rose finished lower ever after Needham initiated coverage with a buy rating. Lululemon — The athleisure clothing company rose nearly 2% after Needham initiated coverage with a buy rating, saying it expects double-digit top-line growth as accelerating technical innovation drives demand. Davidson initiated coverage on the stock at a buy.
Persons: Instacart, Steelcase, Jefferies, Davidson, Mills, Coty, Morgan Stanley, Chewy, Oppenheimer, Needham, Goldman Sachs, Azul, it's, , Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox, Sarah Min, Yun Li, Lisa Kailai Han Organizations: Nasdaq, New York Stock Exchange, Bausch Health, , Health, Peugeot, Opel, Chrysler, United Auto Workers, Citi, D.A, LSEG, Coty, Technologies, Textron — Textron, Berkshire Hathaway, Cessna Citation, Azul, JPMorgan, First, Bank Locations: Europe, U.S
SentinelOne — Shares fell more than 35% in premarket trading after cybersecurity company missed revenue expectations for the first quarter and cut its full-year revenue guidance. The company reported first-quarter revenue of $133.4 million, below the consensus estimate of $136.6 million from FactSet. It sees just $141 million in revenue for the second quarter, well below the $152.1 million consensus estimate from FactSet. ChargePoint said revenue would be between $148 million and $158 million this quarter, below the consensus estimate of $165.6 million from FactSet. Asana's revenue last period was $152.4 million,compared to the analyst consensus of $150.5 million from FactSet.
Persons: MongoDB, Lululemon, Dupont De, Corteva, Morgan Stanley, ChargePoint, PagerDuty, CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Jesse Pound, Yun Li Organizations: Dupont De Nemours —, Chemours, U.S . Water Systems, Bloomberg Locations: Canadian, U.S, China, FactSet
MongoDB — Shares of the data developer rocketed 28% after the company forecast strong fiscal first-quarter earnings and boosted its full-year guidance. The company cited macroeconomic pressure as a contributor to slowing sales growth in a shareholder letter and cut its full-year revenue guidance. PagerDuty — Shares slumped 17.1% after the IT cloud company issued second-quarter revenue guidance that missed expectations. Samsara — The cloud company popped nearly 28% after reporting a smaller-than-expected first-quarter loss and lifting its full-year sales guidance. That's above the expected loss of 5 cents a share and $191.9 million in revenue, according to FactSet.
Persons: Lululemon, Amazon, MongoDB, Wall, SentinelOne, Dupont, Dupont de Nemours, Zscaler, Morgan Stanley, PagerDuty, StreetAccount, Dell, Ginkgo, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Yun Li, Hakyung Kim, Brian Evans, Alex Harring Organizations: Wireless, Bloomberg News, Verizon, Mobile, Amazon, Dish, Broadcom —, Broadcom, Bank of America, Dupont de, DuPont, U.S . Water Systems, Stifel Locations: New York
Lululemon — Lululemon's stock popped 12% after the athletics apparel retailer posted better-than-expected fiscal first-quarter earnings and lifted its full-year guidance. However, Five Below posted revenue of $726 million, compared with Wall Street's forecast of $728 million. PagerDuty reported adjusted earnings per share that beat Wall Street's estimates, but issued weaker-than-expected revenue guidance. The electric vehicle charging stock beat Wall Street's earnings expectations but shared light guidance for the current quarter that was below consensus estimates. SentinelOne — SentinelOne shares cratered 34% after the bell as the cybersecurity company cut its revenue guidance and fell short of Wall Street's revenue expectations in the most recent period.
Persons: MongoDB, Asana, Darla Mercado Organizations: Broadcom, Revenue Locations: San Diego , California, FactSet
While earnings met analyst predictions, forward earnings fell short of a Refinitiv consensus estimate. . Bed Bath & Beyond — The meme stock gained 5.78%, building on its dramatic start to the year, even as the retailer warns of a potential bankruptcy. Johnson & Johnson — Shares of the drug maker ticked higher by less than 1% premarket after the company reported mixed quarterly financial results. Johnson & Johnson beat profit estimates by 10 cents per share, excluding items, according to Refinitiv. AMD — The chip stock fell more than 2% in premarket after Bernstein downgraded the chipmaker to market perform from outperform.
Bed Bath & Beyond — The retail stock jumped 13% as traders continued to pile into the heavily shorted name. Advanced Micro Devices — Shares slid 3.2% after Bernstein downgraded the semiconductor maker to market perform from outperform. The company posted $18.09 billion in revenue, falling short of the Street's expectations of $18.15 billion. Zions Bancorp — The bank's shares slumped 2% even after Zions posted fourth-quarter earnings per share that beat analysts' expectations. The company posted per-share earnings of $1.84, compared to the $1.64 anticipated by analysts polled by Refinitiv.
Visa , Mastercard — Shares of the payments companies gained 1.1% and 1.7% respectively, after Keybanc upgraded their ratings to overweight from from sector weight. Shares gained 2.8% premarket. Uber — Shares gained 2.8% after the rideshare platform was upgraded to overweight from neutral by Piper Sandler. Nvidia — The stock gained 1.6% premarket after being named a top pick by Wells Fargo analysts, who said they see a positive data center product-cycle materializing through 2023. Ferrari — Shares rallied more than 2% premarket after being named a top pick for 2023 by Bank of America.
World Wrestling Entertainment — Shares advanced 9.7% after Vince McMahon elected himself executive chairman of the company despite retiring last year due to a sexual misconduct scandal. Shares dropped 14% premarket, after posting a 42% loss Thursday. Meanwhile, Ulta lost 1.8% after getting downgraded to under weight from equal weight. Bath & Body Works shed 1.7% after the firm moved it to equal weight from overweight. Discover Financial , Synchrony Financial — The consumer finance stocks were under pressure after being downgraded by Barclays to equal weight from overweight.
Check out the companies making the biggest moves midday:Lululemon — Shares of Lululemon fell 12% after the athletic apparel company gave a weaker-than-expected fourth-quarter outlook. Broadcom — Broadcom gained 3.1% after giving an upbeat revenue forecast and reporting better-than-expected quarterly results after the bell Thursday. Netflix — Netflix gained 5% after being named a "best idea" for 2023 by Cowen and being upgraded by Wells Fargo to overweight from equal weight. DocuSign — Shares of DocuSign jumped 16% after the electronic signature company posted upbeat quarterly results. Bath & Body Works — Shares of Bath & Body Works gained rose 2.1% after activist investor Dan Loeb boosted his stake in the retailer.
They’re Gen Z. “One standout this Black Friday was the high turnout of Gen Z in stores,” said Kristen Classi-Zummo, apparel industry analyst with market research firm NPD. They came early, they came with friends, and they came to shop.”She said the prevalence of younger shoppers on Black Friday and over the Thanksgiving holiday shopping weekend surprised her. Mall operator PREIT, which owns 18 shopping centers primarily on the East Coast, confirmed that Gen Z consumers were out in force. “For Gen Z, it wasn’t just about shopping.
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