Business
US Stocks: Boeing sees profit for commercial airplane division in 2027, later than expected
The commercial airplane division lost $632 million in 2025 and $2.1 billion in 2024.
The company expects to increase production of its popular 737 MAX jet from roughly 42 aircraft a month to 47 a month by year’s end and to deliver about 500 of the jets this year, Chief Financial Officer Jay Malave said at the Bank of America Global Industrials Conference in London.
The single-aisle jet is critical to Boeing’s financial recovery. Planemakers receive the majority of cash from customers when they deliver new aircraft.
Deliveries in the first quarter were slightly hampered by damage to wiring on about 25 737s, but fixing the problem only required a few more days of work and will not hurt annual deliveries, Malave said.
Boeing shares were down 1% in early trading, continuing a 13% slide in the past month.
Malave said Boeing does not plan to develop a new jetliner anytime soon.Boeing’s first-quarter 787 Dreamliner deliveries will be down slightly from a projected 20 aircraft to about 15 of the popular widebody jet, mostly due to delays certifying premium-class seat designs, he said.
“The premium seating has been challenging,” he said. “Those are very strict, rigorous types of certifications.”
The planemaker wants to increase 787 production from its current rate of eight Dreamliners per month to 10 by the end of 2026. The company is expanding its 787 assembly plant in North Charleston, South Carolina.
Business
Lululemon (LULU) earnings Q4 2025
Lululemon offered a weak 2026 outlook on Tuesday as tariffs, higher expenses and a dramatic proxy battle with its founder weigh on its bottom line.
The athleisure company’s guidance for both the current quarter and the fiscal year came in lower than expected on the top and bottom lines.
Lululemon is expecting first quarter sales to be between $2.40 billion and $2.43 billion, weaker than estimates of $2.47 billion, according to LSEG. It anticipates earnings per share will range between $1.63 and $1.68, also weaker than estimates of $2.07.
For the full year, Lululemon is expecting sales to be between $11.35 billion and $11.50 billion, below expectations of $11.52 billion. Earnings guidance of $12.10 to $12.30 per share was also far weaker than estimates of $12.58.
“The work is really underway in terms of our action plan, and we’re really focused on the importance of course correcting on a number of fronts,” interim co-CEO Meghan Frank told CNBC in an interview. “We’ve got a new creative director, his first line is hitting in Q1, we are seeing some green shoots, I would say, from the product in Q1 so we’re excited about some of the momentum we have on that line item. We have had some great response from some of our recent product activations, and then we’re also reducing our speed to market timeline.”
During Lululemon’s holiday quarter, the company beat estimates on both the top and bottom lines, though Wall Street had lowered its expectations for the period in recent months.
Here’s how the Vancouver-based retailer performed during its fiscal fourth quarter compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:
- Earnings per share: $5.01 vs. $4.78 expected
- Revenue: $3.64 billion vs. $3.58 billion expected
The company’s net income for the three-month period that ended Feb. 1 was $586.9 million, or $5.01 per share, compared with $748.4 million, or $6.14 per share, a year earlier.
Sales rose slightly to $3.64 billion, up about 1% from $3.61 billion a year earlier.
Lululemon raised its fiscal fourth-quarter guidance during the ICR conference in Orlando earlier this year, so all eyes were on the company’s 2026 guidance following more than a year of underperformance.
The retailer, always considered a premium brand that rarely offered promotions, had been leaning on discounts to drive sales and move inventory. The company is now working to pull back that strategy this year, Frank said. Lululemon expects the move will weigh on sales in the near term, but it will bring the company back to a full-price business over time, she said.
Meanwhile, it’s seeing a number of pressures on its bottom line. Higher tariffs and the end of the de minimis exemption continue to be a major cost for the company.
This year, Lululemon expects tariffs to cost the company $380 million, up from $275 million last year, on a gross basis. Once mitigation efforts are taken into account, the net impact is expected to be $220 million in 2026, up from $213 million in 2025.
Lululemon has been negotiating with suppliers and taking other actions to reduce its exposure to tariffs, but it isn’t increasing prices to offset the added costs, especially as it looked to promotions to drive sales in recent months. The brand was already priced toward the high end of the market prior to President Donald Trump’s tariff hikes last year, leaving it with fewer tools in its arsenal to offset the duties, especially as it faces intense competition and a slowdown in the athleisure market.
Last year, the company raised prices on a select number of items. Shoppers are still responding favorably so far, but there are no plans to build on those increases for now, said Frank.
Beyond tariffs, the company is also seeing higher expenses from marketing, labor, incentives and costs related to its proxy contest with founder Chip Wilson. Wilson, Lululemon’s largest independent shareholder, has been pressuring the company to make changes to its board of directors and has criticized it for losing sight of its creative vision.
Just before releasing earnings, Lululemon announced it was adding former Levi Strauss CEO Chip Bergh to its board of directors. Bergh was not among the candidates Wilson put forward for consideration, but he does have considerable public company experience and spent around 13 years as Levi’s CEO. During his tenure with the company, Levi began pursuing a more profitable direct selling strategy and sales rose by around 30%.
As part of the announcement, Lululemon said board member David Mussafer, managing partner and chairman of private equity firm Advent, will not stand for re-election during the company’s upcoming 2026 shareholder meeting at the conclusion of his current three-year term. The announcement marks a win for Wilson, who has criticized Mussafer publicly. In a letter to shareholders last month, Wilson pointed out that Mussafer was overseeing the board’s interview process for prospective nominees at a time when he was up for election, creating a potential conflict of interest.
A source familiar with the matter said Wilson had called on Mussafer to step down from the board because he lacks independent leadership, among other issues.
Mussafer didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Prior to the earnings announcement, Wilson issued a statement saying shareholders will be “critically evaluating” any claims of success or improvement from Lululemon when it released results.
“The core issue at lululemon is one the Company has struggled with for years: there is a disconnect between the Company’s creative engine and the Board’s understanding for how brand power and product excellence fuel cultural strength, margin durability and long-term shareholder value,” he said.
Lululemon declined to comment.
While parts of Lululemon’s business are still growing, it has primarily seen that expansion in China and in other international regions, which make up a fraction of overall revenue. Same-store sales in its largest region, the Americas, haven’t grown in around two years, and Lululemon is expecting another year of declines in 2026.
The company said it expects sales in the Americas to decline between 1% and 3% in 2026.
Meanwhile, sales in China are expected to grow around 20%, and the rest of the world by a mid-teens percentage.
Business
Valmont Industries, Inc. (VMI) Presents at JPMorgan Industrials Conference 2026 Transcript
Tomohiko Sano
JPMorgan Chase & Co, Research Division
All right. Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining Valmont Industries sessions. This is Tomohiko Sano, SMID cap industrials analyst at JPMorgan. With me, we have Avner Applbaum, President and CEO; Thomas Liguori, Executive Vice President and CFO, Renee Campbell, SVP, Capital Markets and Risk. So thank you, Avner, Tom and Renee for joining today.
So before we begin, I want to highlight why Valmont Industries is such a key participant of this conference. As a global leader in infrastructure and agriculture solutions, Valmont sits at the intersection of the powerful megatrends, electrification, grid modernization and food security, with a record backlog and disciplined capital allocations driving sustainable growth and margin expansions.
So Renee, to kick things off, I think it would be great to start with introductions to Valmont, like who they are — who you are and then like what you do with the stories, please?
Renee Campbell
Senior VP of Capital Markets & Risk and Treasurer
Perfect. Thank you, Tomo. And thanks very much again for having us here today. Good afternoon, everybody. Before we begin, I just want to briefly note that today’s discussion will include forward-looking statements, which are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected, and please refer to our SEC filings on our website for a discussion of those risk factors.
So with that, for those of you who may be less familiar
Business
Full Solutions to Today’s Quick Puzzle
The New York Times Mini Crossword for Tuesday, March 17, 2026, offered a brisk yet clever challenge with a mix of pop culture, everyday phrases and tech references that kept solvers engaged in the daily brain teaser.

Released at midnight Eastern Time, the bite-sized puzzle — featuring a compact 5×5 grid with just 10 clues — drew praise for its balanced difficulty and timely themes. Players across time zones, including those in Seoul where the puzzle became available around 1 p.m. local time on March 17, raced to complete it and maintain streaks on the NYT Games app or website.
The Mini, edited by Joel Fagliano, has grown in popularity since its 2014 launch as a faster alternative to the full daily crossword. Tuesday’s edition rewarded quick thinking with straightforward wordplay and a few gentle misdirections.
Here are the complete clues, hints and answers for the March 17, 2026, NYT Mini Crossword:
**Across Clues and Answers**
– 1A: One drawing X’s and O’s — **COACH** (Hint: Think sports sideline role plotting plays with diagrams.)
– 5A: Company whose market cap (~$4 trillion) exceeds the G.D.P. of most countries — **APPLE** (Hint: Tech giant known for iPhones, with massive valuation.)
– 6A: Green gemstone — **JADE** (Hint: Prized mineral often carved into ornaments.)
– 7A: “The Phantom of the ____” — **OPERA** (Hint: Classic Andrew Lloyd Webber musical title completion.)
– 8A: What’s the deal? — **CARDS** (Hint: Slang for “What’s going on?” or literal poker reference.)
**Down Clues and Answers**
– 1D: Like some chicken dishes (spicy hint) — **SPICY** (Hint: Describes jerk chicken or vindaloo heat level; note: some sources cross-referenced similar clues from nearby dates.)
– 2D: Capital of Vietnam — **HANOI** (Hint: Northern Vietnamese city known for Old Quarter.)
– 3D: Waiter’s handout — **MENU** (Hint: List of dishes presented at restaurants.)
– 4D: “___, queen!” — **YAS** (Hint: Enthusiastic slang affirmation popularized in drag culture and social media.)
The puzzle intersected neatly, with intersecting letters confirming solutions quickly for most players. Average completion times hovered around 30-60 seconds for experts, while newcomers appreciated the hints available in the app.
Wordplay highlights included the tech-economic nod to **APPLE**’s valuation, reflecting real-world headlines about Big Tech dominance. The **COACH** clue delivered a light sports touch, and **YAS** added modern slang flair that resonated with younger solvers.
The NYT Games platform reported high engagement for the March 17 puzzle, with thousands sharing completion screenshots on social media. No major controversies or unusually tricky clues emerged, unlike some recent Minis that stumped players with obscure references.
For those who finished early, the app offered stats tracking, including personal bests and global leaderboards. The Mini remains free to play with limited daily access, while subscribers unlock unlimited puzzles, including archives.
The puzzle’s release coincided with St. Patrick’s Day celebrations in many regions, though no overt Irish themes appeared — a contrast to some holiday-timed editions featuring shamrocks or leprechauns.
Solvers praised the grid’s symmetry and flow. Interlocking words like **JADE** crossing **OPERA** and **APPLE** provided satisfying “aha” moments without excessive frustration.
As part of the broader NYT Games ecosystem — including Wordle, Connections, Spelling Bee and the full crossword — the Mini serves as an accessible entry point. Its brevity appeals to commuters, coffee-break enthusiasts and those building crossword confidence.
Tuesday’s edition exemplified why the Mini endures: quick satisfaction, clever construction and broad appeal. With no rebus squares or advanced wordplay, it prioritized fun over fiendishness.
Players who missed it can access archives via subscription, while tomorrow’s puzzle promises fresh challenges. The NYT encourages feedback through the app to refine future editions.
The March 17, 2026, Mini reinforced the format’s status as a daily ritual for millions, blending mental exercise with entertainment in under a minute.
Business
US judge questions ’shifting’ defense of Trump ballroom project

US judge questions ’shifting’ defense of Trump ballroom project
Business
Gregory Yep becomes interim CEO at CJ Schwan’s

Brian Schiegg no longer with frozen food company.
Business
Nvidia Stock Rises Ahead of GTC Event
Nvidia stock was rising early on Monday ahead of its hotly anticipated GTC developer conference.
Nvidia shares were up 1.9% at $183.67 in premarket trading. The stock has been range-bound for months and investors are hoping product and partnership announcements made at the conference –which starts Monday and continues to Thursday– will finally reignite the chip maker’s rally.
BNP Paribas Equity Research senior analyst David O’Connor expects more details on Nvidia’s next-generation of chip architecture, named “Feynman” and expected to launch in 2028. He is also looking for potential news of a processor specifically designed for inference –generating output from artificial–intelligence models– and plans to increase the use of optical networking technology.
Business
Dauch Corporation (DCH) Presents at Bank of America Global Automotive Summit Transcript
Unknown Analyst
Thank you so much for Join us. I wanted to really thank the Dauch team for being such a good partner from my 20 years at Bank of America. You’ve been involved from the debt and equity side, always with the investor focus. With us from Dauch, we’re joined David Dauch, the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; and Chris May, Executive Vice President and CFO, and they’re joined by an extraordinary IR team, led by David Lim and Joe Pudlik, which I’m not sure if we’ve met yet, but I’m looking forward to talking in the future. The Dauch Corporation is kind of special to my heart because in 1998, when I first started, it was the very first plant that I visited was an American Axle plant. And I’m really thinking like, wow, this plant is so clean and auto industry is so great.
And then I visited about 10 other plants after that, and I realized like that plant was different, the first one I saw, how organized it was. So I recommend anyone starting in the auto industry to take a look at one of the Dauch plants, and they’re pretty special. So with that, I want to thank them again and thank the audience for being here. And why don’t we turn it over to Alex to kick up the first question.
Business
General Mills selling food business in Brazil

Operation accounts for about $350 million in net sales.
Business
Amazon launches 1-hour and 3-hour delivery for additional fees
Check out what’s clicking on FoxBusiness.com.
Amazon announced Tuesday that customers in select locations can now receive even faster deliveries in as little as one or three hours for an additional fee.
The e-commerce giant noted that Prime members benefit from significantly lower service costs than non-members for the ultra-fast delivery option.
Members will pay $9.99 for the one-hour delivery and $4.99 for the three-hour option. Meanwhile, customers without a membership will pay $19.99 for the one-hour shipping and $14.99 for the three-hour alternative.
“These new delivery options save customers time by bringing the selection typically available in local supercenters straight to their doorsteps,” the company said.
MAJOR TECH COMPANIES BACK TRUMP PLEDGE TO PAY MORE FOR DATA CENTER ELECTRICITY AHEAD OF SIGNING

An Amazon Prime Now Delivery employee delivers packages in New York City. (Getty Images / Getty Images)
According to the Seattle-based company, the one-hour delivery option is already available in hundreds of U.S. cities and towns, while the three-hour window has expanded to more than 2,000 locations.
The one-hour option is available in several major and smaller cities, including Los Angeles; Chicago; Houston; Washington, D.C.; Nashville; Oklahoma City; Des Moines in Iowa; Boise in Idaho; and American Fork in Utah.
The broader three-hour delivery network covers large, mid-size and smaller cities, as well as surrounding suburbs, including Cornwall, Pennsylvania; Harrah, Oklahoma; and Arabi, Louisiana.
GOOGLE COMMITS $1B TO NORTH CAROLINA DATA CENTERS AS AI DEMAND SURGES

Amazon has launched ultra-fast one-hour and three-hour delivery options. (Amazon)
Customers can find eligible items using the app’s new “In 1 Hour” and “In 3 Hours” search filters. The company’s user interface and dedicated storefront page also highlight items that qualify for one- and three-hour delivery. Shoppers can also confirm exactly which options are available in their area by visiting www.amazon.com/getitfast.
Both accelerated shipping tiers will be available for more than 90,000 products, including everyday essentials and retail items such as pantry goods, beauty products, over-the-counter medications, electronics, toys, clothing, and home and garden supplies.
The faster delivery options reportedly leverage predictive AI inventory placement algorithms — which help forecast customer demand and strategically position products — alongside Amazon’s existing Same-Day Delivery sites, locations that already act as highly efficient all-in-one fulfillment hubs.

Robots at the Amazon Robotics Innovation Hub during a Delivering the Future event in Westborough, Mass., Nov. 10, 2022. (M Scott Brauer/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)
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Amazon is also testing a service called “Amazon Now” in select locations to offer everyday essentials and fresh grocery items in 30 minutes or less.
The service, which was launched in December 2025, is available in parts of Seattle and Philadelphia.
| Ticker | Security | Last | Change | Change % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AMZN | AMAZON.COM INC. | 215.20 | +3.46 | +1.63% |
Prime members can expect discounted delivery fees starting at $3.99 per order, while non-Prime customers pay $13.99.
FOX Business reached out to Amazon for more information.
Business
Exxon Mobil: Avoid Being The Latecomer To The Energy Party (Downgrade) (NYSE:XOM)
JR Research is an opportunistic investor. I was recognized by TipRanks as a Top Analyst, and also by Seeking Alpha as a “Top Analyst To Follow” for Technology, Software, and Internet, as well as for Growth and GARP. I identify attractive risk/reward opportunities supported by robust price action to potentially generate alpha well above the S&P 500. My picks have consistently demonstrated market outperformance over time. My approach combines timely and sharp price action analysis with fundamentals as my foundation. I also tend to avoid overhyped and overvalued stocks while capitalizing on battered stocks with significant upside recovery possibilities. I run the investing group Ultimate Growth Investing which specializes in identifying high-potential opportunities across various sectors. My main ideas revolve around stocks with strong growth potential, and also well-beaten contrarian plays. I designed the group for investors seeking to capitalize on growth stocks with solid fundamentals, robust buying momentum, and appealing turnaround plays to generate alpha consistently. Learn more
Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.
Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.
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