|
**Haftungsausschluss: Der Text wurde mit Hilfe einer KI zusammengefasst und übersetzt. Für Aussagen aus dem Originaltext wird keine Haftung übernommen!**
US stocks split at the opening bell on Thursday as Nvidia's (NVDA) stellar earnings failed to wow investors and left Wall Street juggling growing worries over AI's potential for payoff and disruption.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) moved up roughly 0.4%, following solid wins for stocks more broadly on Wednesday. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 (^GSPC) and the tech-exposed Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) lost 0.2% and 0.4%, respectively.
DJI - Free Realtime Quote•USD
(^DJI)
Follow View Quote Details
49,668.82 +186.67 (+0.38%)
As of 9:43:53 AM EST. Market Open. ^DJI^GSPC ^IXIC
Advanced Chart
Nvidia shares fell over 2% near the open, as the chip giant received a lukewarm response from investors despite big beats on quarterly revenue and profit, and guidance that also came in above expectations. But a lack of detail on drivers for the outlook — which doesn't include potential revenue out of China — left some on Wall Street asking questions about competitive threats and the staying power of AI buildout demand.
Fears of a AI bubble and the "AI scare trade" have buffeted stocks in recent weeks, with the technology's challenge to sectors such as legacy software coming to the fore. Salesforce (CRM) shares fell about 4% to continue an AI-driven sell-off after its revenue forecast fell short of estimates but picked up more than 2% at the open after CEO Marc Benioff tried to defuse sell-off worries.
Elsewhere in earnings, Big Three automaker Stellantis (STLA) posted a massive $26.billion full-year loss after an EV-related charge. Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD), Dell (DELL), and CoreWeave (CRWV) highlight Thursday's docket.
On the macro front, initial jobless claims ticked up marginally over the previous week while continuing claims saw a small drop, signaling a somewhat stagnated economy as investors wait for the January wholesale inflation reading on Friday to help evaluate the odds of an interest-rate cut.LIVE12 updates
6 mins ago
Jake Conley
US stocks open Thursday on mixed footing
The US stocks opened Thursday's trading session on mixed footing as Nvidia's (NVDA) earnings report underwhelmed the market after the bell on Wednesday.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) gained 0.4%, the only major index to move up. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 (^GSPC) and the tech-exposed Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) fell by roughly 0.2% and 0.5%, respectively.
DJI - Free Realtime Quote•USD
(^DJI)
Follow View Quote Details
49,668.82 +186.67 (+0.38%)
As of 9:43:53 AM EST. Market Open. ^DJI^GSPC ^IXIC
Advanced Chart
Elsewhere in earnings, Stellantis (STLA) recorded a $26.billion full-year loss Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) reported drops in revenue and earnings per share. Dell Technologies (DELL) and CoreWeave (CRWV) are still to come on Thursday's docket.
On the macro front, initial jobless claims ticked up marginally from the previous week, while continuing claims fell slightly, signaling a somewhat stagnant economy as investors wait for the January wholesale inflation reading on Friday to help evaluate the odds of an interest rate cut. 57 mins ago
Jake Conley
Initial jobless claims climb, continuing claims tick down in weekly report
212,000 people filed initial jobless claims in the week ended Feb. 21, according to data released Thursday by the Department of Labor. The figure marks a slight increase from the previous week, in a sign of potential stagnation in the labor market even after an explosive January jobs report.
The initial jobless claims number is above the previous week's 208,000 initial claims but comes in below expectations. Economists had predicted 216,000 initial claims, according to consensus estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
Continuing claims were 1.83 million for the week ended Feb. 14, notching a similar drop from the previous week's 1.87 million claims. Economists had estimated continuing claims of 1.86 million.
"It's a labor market more defined by its inactivity than its vigor," ADP chief economist Nela Richardson told Bloomberg in televised comments Thursday morning. "It's very unusual to see the kind of caution we’ve seen from employers." Today at 1:41 PM UTC
Grace O'Donnell
Nutanix shares gallop higher on strong earnings, AMD investment
Cloud computing provider Nutanix (NTNX) reported strong earnings and announced a multiyear deal with AMD (AMD) on Wednesday, sending the stock more than 15% higher in premarket trading on Thursday.
For the fiscal second quarter, Nutanix reported adjusted earnings per share of $0.56 for the quarter on revenue of $722.8 million. Wall Street analysts were looking for earnings per share of $0.44 on $709.7 million in revenue, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.
For the full year, Nutanix said it expects revenue of $2.80 billion to $2.84 billion and a non-GAAP operating margin of 21% to 22%.
Nutanix's new multiyear partnership with AI chipmaker AMD also boosted shares on Thursday as the two companies seek to develop a platform for enterprise agentic AI. AMD said it will invest $250 million in Nutanix shares and joint R&D and go-to-market efforts, and the equity investment is expected to close in the second quarter of 2026.
AMD stock slid 1.5% following the announcement and earnings from its rival Nvidia (NVDA).
Read more here. Today at 1:30 PM UTC
Karen Friar
Stock investors are hedging for a drop. Strategists see that as a buy signal.
From Bloomberg:
SNP - Free Realtime Quote•USD
(^GSPC)
Follow View Quote Details
6,925.76 -20.37 (-0.29%)
As of 9:43:52 AM EST. Market Open. Advanced Chart
Read more here. Today at 1:08 PM UTC
Karen Friar
Stellantis reports massive $26.3 billion loss, but posts improving second half results as turnaround slowly begins
Yahoo Finance's Pras Subramanian reports:
Big Three automaker Stellantis (STLA) reported a massive full-year loss after taking a $26 billion EV-related charge, but saw improving second-half results, suggesting the company's turnaround under CEO Antonio Filosa may be working.
Stellantis — which counts brands like Ram, Jeep, Fiat, and Alfa Romeo in its product portfolio — reported second half net revenue of 79.25 billion euros ($93.47 billion), That was in range of the 78 billion to 80 billion euros ($91.87 to $94.23 billion) forecast, and 10% higher than the 71.86 billion euros ($84.64 billion) reported a year ago.
Stellantis posted a second-half adjusted operating income loss of 1.38 billion euros ($1.63 billion), also in range of the 1.2 billion to 1.5 billion euros ($1.41 billion to 1.77 billion) forecast. That was a reversal of the 185 million euro ($218 million) gain reported in the second half of 2024, which itself was a massive drop compared to the 10.2 billion euro ($12 billion) profit reported in 2023.
... For the full year, Stellantis reported a net loss of 22.3 billion euros ($26.3 billion), due to 25.4 billion euros ($29.96 billion) of "unusual charges," the company said.
Stellantis stock was little changed in premarket trade in New York.
NYSE - Nasdaq Real Time Price•USD
(STLA)
Follow View Quote Details
8.15 +0.44 (+5.64%)
As of 9:43:52 AM EST. Market Open. Advanced Chart
Read more here. Today at 1:00 PM UTC
Karen Friar
Trump pushed for lower gas prices and got them. The oil industry is paying the price.
Yahoo Finance's Jake Conley reports:
During his State of the Union address on Tuesday night, President Trump touted an energy industry strengthened by the success of his "Drill, baby, drill" policy, a dual mandate of more hydrocarbon drilling and lower gas prices.
A year into Trump's second term, oil and gas production is at or near all-time highs, and gasoline prices average below $3 per gallon nationally.
But for the US oil and gas industry, the president's ambitions have come at a cost.
"Capital efficiencies and returns drive our investment decisions," said an oil and gas operator responding to the Dallas Federal Reserve's fourth quarter energy survey.
"If economic conditions worsen, drilling and completion activities will cease in 2026."
... Even as Exxon Mobil (XOM) and Chevron (CVX), the country's largest integrated oil and gas operators, increased their production and beat analyst estimates on top-line revenue, both companies recorded year-on-year declines in annual profit as the oil glut depressed prices, shrinking their margins.
Read more here. Today at 12:08 PM UTC
Karen Friar
Nvidia investors give lukewarm reaction to upbeat forecast
From Bloomberg:
Nvidia Corp. (NVDA), the dominant maker of artificial intelligence processors, failed to impress investors with its latest sales forecast, signaling that concerns about an overheated AI economy will continue to dog the company.
Though the chipmaker delivered a 73% surge in fourth-quarter revenue and a first-quarter outlook that easily beat the average Wall Street estimate, Nvidia shares fell as much as 1.5% during a conference call with analysts. The stock was up less than 1% in premarket trading on Thursday.
NasdaqGS - Nasdaq Real Time Price•USD
(NVDA)
Follow View Quote Details
189.77 -5.85 (-2.99%)
As of 9:43:52 AM EST. Market Open. Advanced Chart
It was a stark reminder of the skepticism now surrounding Nvidia. After explosive sales growth turned the chipmaker into the world’s most valuable company, investors are seeking stronger assurances that booming AI sales are here to stay.
“By most measures, Nvidia delivered a solid set of results,” analysts at JPMorgan Chase & Co. said in a note after the results. “Even so, the stock response suggests investors were left wanting more.”
CEO Jensen Huang pushed back on the concerns during Wednesday’s call, arguing that customers are already making money from their newly acquired computing power. That’s why clients will keep investing at elevated levels, he said.
“You need compute capacity, and that translates directly to growth, and that translates directly to revenues,” Huang said. “I’m confident their cash flows are growing.”
Read more here. Today at 11:18 AM UTC
Karen Friar
Nvidia's CEO prepares investors for a renewed battle with Intel, AMD
From Reuters:
Nvidia (NVDA) may have made its immense fortune on the back of specialized graphics processing units (GPUs) used to power artificial intelligence servers, but CEO Jensen Huang is increasingly professing his love for the more generalist CPU.
The CPU, or central processing unit, was for decades traditionally viewed as the main brain of a computer — a product most associated with Intel (INTC) or sometimes Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).
Huang is fond of saying that where once 90% of computing used to happen on CPUs and 10% on chips like his, the ratio had flipped in recent years.
But the CPU is now making a comeback - increasingly seen as an equivalent if not better option as AI companies shift from training their models to deploying them - a shift that Nvidia plans to be a big part of.
"We love CPUs as well as GPUs," Huang said on a call with analysts on Wednesday for the company's fourth-quarter results.
He assured them that Nvidia was not only ready for the CPU's return to the spotlight, but also that Nvidia's own CPU offerings for data centers, first released in 2023, would outcompete rivals.
NasdaqGS - Nasdaq Real Time Price•USD
(NVDA)
Follow View Quote Details
189.77 -5.85 (-2.99%)
As of 9:43:52 AM EST. Market Open. Advanced Chart
Read more here. Today at 9:49 AM UTC
Jenny McCall
Premarket trending tickers: Marriott Vacations, Trade Desk, and Zoom
Marriott Vacations' (VAC) stock rose 8% before the bell on Thursday after reporting fourth quarter earnings, with revenue exceeding analyst expectations.
Trade Desk (TTD) stock sank 16% during premarket hours today. The technology platform reported fourth quarter earnings of $0.59 per share, beating estimates and also reported a rise in revenue. But it forecast first quarter revenue of $678 million, which fell below analyst expectations.
Zoom (ZM) stock fell 3% before the bell on Thursday after forecasting quarterly profit below Wall Street estimates on Wednesday. Today at 8:44 AM UTC
Karen Friar
Salesforce stock slips after FY revenue forecast misses the mark
Shares of Salesforce (CRM) fell almost 4% in premarket trading after the software company's fiscal 2027 revenue forecast came in below Wall Street expectations on Wednesday.
The San Francisco-based company flagged sluggish spending on enterprise business software as it invests heavily in its AI platform to drive up demand.
NYSE - Nasdaq Real Time Price•USD
(CRM)
Follow View Quote Details
194.91 +2.97 (+1.55%)
As of 9:43:52 AM EST. Market Open. Advanced Chart
Reuters reports: Today at 1:51 AM UTC
Rian Howlett
Baidu stock price drops 20% in display of China's demands for AI sector
Bloomberg reports:
Read more here. Today at 12:03 AM UTC
Rian Howlett
Nvidia pushes up in extended trading on healthy Q1 guidance and beating Q4 expectations.
Yahoo Finance's Dan Howley reports:
NasdaqGS - Nasdaq Real Time Price•USD
(NVDA)
Follow View Quote Details
189.77 -5.85 (-2.99%)
As of 9:43:52 AM EST. Market Open. Advanced Chart
Read more here
View Comments |
|
**Haftungsausschluss: Der Text wurde mit Hilfe einer KI zusammengefasst und übersetzt. Für Aussagen aus dem Originaltext wird keine Haftung übernommen!**
Fourth quarter earnings season is entering its final stretch.
Earnings from Nvidia (NVDA) mark the final company among the "Magnificent Seven" tech stocks to report quarterly results.
This report offered a crucial update on how demand for its high-tech AI chips — a big part of the hundreds of billions of dollars its Big Tech peers are spending on AI investments — continues to shape up.
Other key results this week include reports from Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) and Paramount Skydance (PSKY), with the latter currently locked in a duel with Netflix to acquire the former.
Salesforce (CRM), Home Depot (HD), and Lowe's (LOW) will also be among the notable companies expected to report in the coming week.LIVE214 updates
7 mins ago
Grace O'Donnell
Nvidia stock jumps after earnings beats, revenue guidance tops expectations
Nvidia (NVDA) stock popped by more than 3% after earnings beat expectations and delivered a strong revenue outlook for the first quarter.
Nvidia said it expects revenue of $76.44 billion to $79.56 billion in Q1, ahead of expectations of $72.78 billion, according to Bloomberg consensus estimates.
Here's what Nvidia reported for the fourth quarter compared to analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg:
Data Center compute revenue ($51.3 billion, up 58% from a year ago) and networking revenue ($11.0 billion, up 263%) both also reached record highs. Today at 3:35 PM UTC
Jenny McCall
Shoemaker Steven Madden withholds profit forecast on tariff uncertainty
Steve Madden's (SHOO) stock fell 5% on Wednesday after the shoe and handbag maker withdrew its 2026 earnings forecast due to tariff uncertainty, in the first sign of chaos since the Supreme court shut down President Trump's tariffs last week Friday.
Reuters reports:
Read more here. Today at 1:26 PM UTC
Grace O'Donnell
First Solar stock tumbles as guidance disappoints
First Solar (FSLR) stock plunged by around 16% on Wednesday morning after the solar company issued a bleaker-than-expected full-year outlook.
The company said it expects 2026 net sales in a range of $4.9 billion to $5.2 billion, whereas the Street was looking for guidance of $5.6 billion.
In the fourth quarter, First Solar reported earnings per share of $4.84, missing analyst estimates for $5.17 per share, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. Revenue of $1.68 billion came in ahead of forecasts for $1.56 billion.
“Our growth journey continued into 2025, with the commissioning of our new Louisiana factory and our decision to establish a new facility in South Carolina,” said CEO Mark Widmar. “As we navigated a rapidly evolving environment, we maintained a disciplined approach to contracting and remained anchored in our core principle of pricing and delivery certainty, a key differentiator that our customers value.” Today at 11:49 AM UTC
Jenny McCall
Circle stock jumps after Q4 revenue rises on stablecoin growth
Circle (CRCL) stock rose 14% on Wednesday during premarket hours after reporting an increase in fourth quarter revenue, as its income from reserves got a boost from a rise in circulation of its stablecoin token, USDC.
Reuters reports:
Read more here. Today at 11:37 AM UTC
Brooke DiPalma
Lowe's earnings beat analyst estimates but full year guidance falls short
Lowe's (LOW) reported fourth quarter results that beat Wall Street's expectations across the board including revenue, earnings and same-store sales growth.
Adjusted earnings came in $1.98, four cents higher then the Street predicted for the fourth quarter, per Bloomberg consensus data. Whereas, revenue grew 10% to $20.58 billion, slightly above the expectations of $20.35 billion.
Same-store sales grew 1.3%, more than the roughly 0.5% increase Wall Street estimated for, boosted higher by growth in its Pro business, home services sales and a "strong holiday performance."
However, the home improvement company's stock fell more than 3% during premarket hours, after sales guidance for the full year fell short of expectations, a sign the housing market will remain lackluster in the near term due to high borrowing costs.
"While the housing macro remains pressured, we are focused on directing what is within our control, which includes our ongoing productivity initiatives. We remain confident that we are well-positioned to take share regardless of the macro environment," CEO Marvin Ellison said in the release.
For 2026, the company expects same-store sales growth to be flat, to up 2% compared to last year. The Street was looking for up 2%. Wall Street's prediction for full year revenue was $93.2. billion, which fell in the middle of the range Lowe's said of $92.0 to $94.0 billion.
Adjusted earnings though fell short of the $13.00 forecast. Lowe's said it expected earnings to come in between the range of approximately $12.25 to $12.75.
TD Cowen analyst Max Rakhlenko wrote in a note to clients, "Ultimately, we think the early reaction with shares down low-single digits makes sense with the results and guide in-line to slightly below" expectations. Today at 11:11 AM UTC
Jenny McCall
HSBC annual profits fall but top estimates
Yahoo Finance UK's Vicky McKeever reports:
Read more here. Tue, February 24, 2026 at 9:44 PM UTC
Iris Winslow
HP warns US trade regulations, memory chip costs to weigh on annual forecasts
Reuters reports:
Read the full story here. Tue, February 24, 2026 at 9:31 PM UTC
Grace O'Donnell
Workday stock plunges 8% as outlook falls short of expectations
Workday (WDAY) stock plunged around 8% after the enterprise applications company reported an adjusted earnings beat but disappointing guidance. The quarterly results come as software stocks like Workday have sold off on concerns that artificial intelligence could automate and eat away at their core businesses.
In the fourth quarter, Workday reported revenue of $2.53 billion, a 14.5% annual increase, which just managed to exceed estimates of $2.52 billion, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. Subscription revenue hit $2.36 billion.
Adjusted earnings per share of $2.47 also beat the Street's expectations of $2.32 per share.
But Workday's subscription revenue guidance fell short of expectations. The company expects first quarter subscription revenue of $2.335 billion, suggesting a slowdown from the current quarter, and full-year subscription revenue of $9.92 billion to $9.95 billion.
Workday stock was already down more than 9% over the past five days as worries about AI disruption coursed through the sector, fueled by a doom-and-gloom report from Citrini Research.
Join the earnings call live > Tue, February 24, 2026 at 9:22 PM UTC
Iris Winslow
Lucid reports mixed Q4 results, $2.8 billion adjusted EBITDA loss for the year
Yahoo Finance's Pras Subramanian reports:
Read more here. Tue, February 24, 2026 at 12:52 PM UTC
Grace O'Donnell
Planet Fitness stock falls 5% after earnings beat
Planet Fitness (PLNT) reported better-than-expected profits and revenue in the fourth quarter, but the stock fell around 5% in premarket trading.
Earnings of $0.73 per share on revenue of $376.3 million. Wall Street analysts were expecting earnings of $0.68 per share on revenue of $367.9 million, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.
The company said it had 20.8 million members by the end of 2025 across nearly 2,900 clubs.
"Adding approximately 1.1 million net new members in 2025 — the first full-year of our 50 percent price increase for new Classic Card members — highlights the incredible demand for our brand," said Planet Fitness's CEO Colleen Keating.
In 2026, Planet Fitness expects to log sales growth between 4% and 5%, and revenue is forecast to increase by around 9%, a bit lighter than the Street was expecting.
Listen to the earnings call here. Tue, February 24, 2026 at 12:48 PM UTC
Jenny McCall
Constellation Energy misses Q4 earnings despite revenue beat
Constellation Energy (CEG) stock edged higher on Tuesday during premarket hours after reporting fourth quarter adjusted earnings of $2.30 per share, which just fell short of analysts' expectations of $2.31 per share.
The gas and electricity company did beat analysts' estimates on revenue, reaching $6.07 billion, surpassing the $4.95 billion expected by analysts.
Investing.com reports:
Read more here. Tue, February 24, 2026 at 12:36 PM UTC
Jenny McCall
American Tower posts upbeat revenue on strong leasing activity amid 5G, data-center growth
Reuters reports:
Read more here. Tue, February 24, 2026 at 11:38 AM UTC
Brooke DiPalma
Home Depot posts better than expected same-store sales growth, driving stock higher
Home Depot (HD) posted mixed fourth quarter results as consumer uncertainty around the housing market lingers.
In the fourth quarter, revenue fell 4% to $38.2 billion, slightly less than nearly $38.3 billion the street forecasted, per Bloomberg consensus data. Adjusted earnings came in better than expected at $2.72, compared to estimates of $2.55.
Overall same-store sales grew 0.4%, compared to the expected 0.4% decline. The results were driven by a higher ticket size, but drop off in consumer transactions.
"For the fourth quarter, our results were largely in-line with our expectations, reflecting the lack of storm activity in the third quarter and ongoing consumer uncertainty and pressure in housing," CEO Ted Decker said in the release, "Adjusting for storms, underlying demand was relatively stable throughout the year."
Home Depot stock rose nearly 3% in pre-market trading, and are up roughly 10% so far this year. For comparison, the S&P 500 (^GSPC) has been flat.
For the fiscal year, the company posted better than expected results across all key metrics.
Revenue came in at $164.68 billion, more than the $164.59 billion expected, alongside adjusted earnings of $14.69, a tick above the $14.53 expected.
Same-store sales grew 0.3%, more than the 0.2% Wall Street anticipated.
For this fiscal year, the company reiterated guidnce it shared at its investor day back in December. It expects total sales to grow in the range of 2.5% to 4.5%, alongside same-store sales growth of roughly flat to up 2%.
Adjusted earnings for the year are expected to be between flat and up 4.0% from $14.69 posted this fiscal year. Mon, February 23, 2026 at 9:56 PM UTC
Grace O'Donnell
Hims & Hers forecasts 2026 revenue above estimates, but the stock is down
Hims & Hers (HIMS) reported lower profits in the fourth quarter compared with a year ago, sending the stock down more than 2.5% in extended trading.
The telehealth and drug platform reported earnings per share of $0.08, beating Wall Street estimates for $0.05 but falling from $0.11 per share a year ago, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. Revenue of $617.8 million was roughly in line with estimates.
One bright spot in the earnings release was Hims & Hers 2026 revenue forecast, which came in above estimates.
Reuters reports:
Read more here. Mon, February 23, 2026 at 1:21 PM UTC
Grace O'Donnell
Dominion stock seesaws after company post earnings in line with estimates
Dominion Energy (D) stock fluctuated shortly after the company released stable fourth quarter and full-year earnings results, as the company looks to invest in its energy infrastructure amid growing demand for electricity and natural gas.
The Virginia-based company reported fourth quarter earnings of $0.65 per share that were in line with Wall Street estimates, while revenue of $4.1 billion topped estimates of $3.7 billion, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence data.
For the full year, Dominion posted earnings per share of $3.45, slightly below consensus expectations of $3.47, and the company's 2026 earnings guidance also fell a bit short at the midpoint.
Dominion said it expects to earn between $3.45 and $3.69 per share this year, with that midpoint of $3.57 per share falling below the Street's expectations of $3.61.
Dominion's earnings call begins at 11 a.m. ET. Listen to the call live here. Mon, February 23, 2026 at 12:25 PM UTC
Brooke DiPalma
Domino's Pizza beat US same store sales growth estimates as consumers still seek out value
Domino's (DPZ) posted mixed fourth quarter and fiscal 2025 results as the chain doubles down on growing sales, store count, and profits while consumers home in on value.
The pizza chain posted revenue of $1.54 billion for the fiscal fourth quarter on Monday morning. That was up 6.4% year over year and a tick above the $1.52 billion Wall Street forecast, per Bloomberg consensus data. The bump was driven by higher order volumes and an increase in the company's food basket pricing to stores.
Adjusted earnings came in at $5.35 per share, just below estimates of $5.37.
CEO Russell Weiner said the chain's "MORE strategy" delivered higher sales and profits.
He said in the release, "These strong results flowed through to increased franchisee profits, showcasing our ability to drive store level profitability while providing incredible value for our customers."
US same-store sales grew 3.7%, above the 3.3% jump forecast, while international stores of 0.7% were lower than the expected 1.1% tick up.
Shares in Domino's rose over 5% at market open Monday, as investors assessed its revenue growth. The stock is down 12% over the past year, compared with the S&P 500's (^GSPC) 15% gain.
For the fiscal year, revenue came in at $4.9 billion, alongside adjusted earnings of $17.57.
Same-store sales for US stores grew 3%, more than the 2.85% forecast. For the year, international stores' same-store sales growth missed expectations, rising 1.9% versus the estimated 2.14%.
In 2025, the company added 776 stores, slightly more than the Street anticipated, bringing the total to 22,142 globally.
For the current year, Domino's said it expects US same-store sales to grow 3% and for international sales to be up between 1% to 2%. The company also expects growth from third-party platforms, such as DoorDash and Uber.
"We expect our share on DoorDash to grow as awareness and marketing spend increases. This opportunity is meaningful, as we have not yet reached our fair share on either of the major aggregators," Weiner said. Fri, February 20, 2026 at 9:52 PM UTC
Myles Udland
Notable companies expected to report during the week of Feb. 23
Domino's Pizza (DPZ), Dominion Energy (D), ONEOK (OKE), Diamondback Energy (FANG)
Home Depot (HD), Alibaba (BABA), Constellation Energy (CEG), MercadoLibre (MELI), Keurig Dr Pepper (KDP), NRG Energy (NRG), Workday (WDAY), Axon Enterprise (AXON), First Solar (FSLR), Amer Sports (AS), CoStar Group (CSGP), HP Inc. (HPQ), GoDaddy (GDDY)
Nvidia (NVDA), HSBC (HSBC), Salesforce (CRM), The TJX Companies (TJX), Lowe's (LOW), Snowflake (SNOW), Diageo (DEO), HEICO Corporation (HEI), Medline (MDLN), Trip.com Group (TCOM), Agilent Technologies (A), Zoom Communications (ZM), TKO Group Holdings (TKO), Circle Internet Group (CRCL), The Trade Desk (TTD), Paramount Skydance (PSKY)
Intuit (INTU), Stellantis (STLA), Monster Beverage (MNST), Dell Technologies (DELL), Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD), Eni S.p.A. (E), Vistra Corp. (VST), Rocket Companies (RKT), Cheniere Energy (LNG), Autodesk (ADSK), Baidu (BIDU), CoreWeave (CRWV), PSEG (PEG), Rocket Lab Corporation (RKLB), EMCOR Group (EME), Coupang (CPNG), Block (XYZ), Zscaler (ZS), Coterra Energy (CTRA), Flutter Entertainment (FLUT), Talen Energy Corporation (TLN), The J.M. Smucker Company (SJM)
Friday
Chart Industries (GTLS), Pearson (PSO), Frontline (FRO), Globalstar (GSAT) Fri, February 20, 2026 at 1:29 PM UTC
Jenny McCall
Chemours stock falls after reporting $47M loss in Q4 earnings
Chemours Co. (CC) stock slumped 9% before the bell on Friday after reporting a loss of $47 million in its fourth quarter earnings.
The AP reports:
Read more here. Fri, February 20, 2026 at 9:57 AM UTC
Jenny McCall
Live Nation reports growing annual concert attendance as federal antitrust trial looms
Live Nation (LYV) stock rose more than 3% before the bell on Friday after the ticket provider posted an 11% increase in fourth quarter revenue to $6.31 billion, driven by a 12% gain in concert sales.
The Wall Street Journal reports:
Read more here. Fri, February 20, 2026 at 9:23 AM UTC
Jenny McCall
Opendoor stock rallies on 46% jump in home acquisition volume
Opendoor's (OPEN) stock jumped 14% during premarket hours on Friday, despite posting a fourth quarter loss of $1.26 per share, missing analysts' estimates. Revenue reached $736 million, surpassing Wall Street estimates of $576.94 million.
The digital real estate company also reported that home purchases had risen 46% quarter-over-quarter.
Investing.com reports:
Read more here.
Story Continues
For the latest earnings reports and analysis, earnings whispers and expectations, and company earnings news, click here
Read the latest financial and business news from Yahoo Finance
View Comments |