Business
Home sellers are re-listing properties at the fastest pace in a decade
A “For Sale” sign outside a house in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Washington, DC, US, on Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2025.
Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty Images
The all-important spring housing market is off and running, and while the pace isn’t expected to be strong, there are signs of optimism, at least among sellers. Some who gave up last year are jumping back in.
Nearly 45,000 homes that were delisted last year were relisted for sale in January, according to Redfin, a real estate brokerage. That is the highest January figure since Redfin began tracking this metric a decade ago and represents a record 3.6% of homes that were on the market in January.
The January figures come as Redfin reported a record number of sellers pulling their homes off the market last September. Close to 85,000 sellers delisted, up 28% from September 2024. Higher mortgage rates last year, still-high home prices and growing uncertainty in the economy sidelined buyers last fall, taking sellers out of the driver’s seat, where they had been in the years during and just after the pandemic.
Ashley Rummage, a real estate agent in Raleigh, North Carolina, in response to CNBC’s fourth-quarter Housing Market Survey, said in December that more sellers were being asked for concessions, and some just refused.
“A lot of sellers I’ve encountered and worked with have just thrown their hands up in the air and said, ‘If we can’t get what we want for our house right now, or what we think is it’s worth, then we’re gonna go ahead and take it off to market and try again, maybe in the spring,’” Rummage said.
The overall inventory of homes for sale nationally is higher than it was a year ago, but the gains are plateauing, according to Realtor.com. Active listings were up 7.9% in February, year-over-year, but that number has been shrinking for nine straight months. Listings are still down 17% from 2019, pre-pandemic.
“Inventory has improved for more than two years, but the momentum has faltered in recent months,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist, Realtor.com. “Supply gains have been concentrated in the South and West and skewed toward homes priced below $500,000. While the Northeast and Midwest have seen growth, they remain significantly undersupplied.”
With rates now hovering near four-year lows, Hale said, a key question is whether this “thaw” spurs more buyers or more sellers. Mortgage rates have climbed slightly higher in recent days, due to the ongoing war with Iran and renewed fears over inflation.
Business
Goldman Sachs CEO Surprised by Stock Market Reaction to Iran. He’s Not Wrong to Worry.
Goldman Sachs CEO Surprised by Stock Market Reaction to Iran. He’s Not Wrong to Worry.
Business
Prestige Consumer Healthcare Inc. (PBH) Presents at J.P. Morgan 2026 Global Leveraged Finance Conference – Slideshow
Prestige Consumer Healthcare Inc. (PBH) Presents at J.P. Morgan 2026 Global Leveraged Finance Conference – Slideshow
Business
US Stock Market Pulls Back as Oil Surge Resumes Amid Ongoing Middle East Conflict
Major U.S. stock indexes retreated Thursday as renewed escalation in the U.S.-Israel conflict with Iran drove oil prices higher, stoking fresh investor concerns over energy costs, inflation risks, and global growth headwinds.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average declined about 350 points, or 0.75%, to trade around 47,450 during midday action, after touching lows near 47,300 earlier. The S&P 500 slipped roughly 0.6% to hover near 6,420, while the Nasdaq Composite eased 0.4% into the low 22,000s, paring some initial drops but holding negative amid broad risk aversion.
Prior Session Rebound
This pullback largely offset Wednesday’s recovery, when the Dow added around 220 points, or 0.47%, closing near 47,800 to end a short two-day skid. The S&P 500 climbed 0.7% to about 6,460, and the Nasdaq rose 1.1% toward 22,200, supported by a brief oil pullback and economic prints that bolstered hopes for Federal Reserve rate-cut flexibility.
Oil and Geopolitical Driver
Thursday’s downturn linked straight to Middle East flare-ups, with the conflict hitting day six amid Iranian warnings on Strait of Hormuz shipping. No full tanker halts materialized, but reports of delayed transits and spiking insurance rates propelled crude futures up 3-4%, pressuring industrials and consumer stocks while lifting energy shares modestly.
Volatility Gauge
Traders adjusted after midweek bets on U.S. naval protection or quiet diplomacy lost steam against blockade rhetoric. The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) stayed above 18, down from prior spikes near 22, reflecting ongoing caution short of outright fear.
Sector Rotations
Defensive positioning dominated. Cyclicals like industrials and materials weighed on the Dow, as firms sensitive to fuel costs faced headwinds. Tech megacaps provided some ballast but couldn’t stem overall declines. The Russell 2000 fell 0.9%, prolonging its choppy run.
Inflation Policy Risks
Beyond stocks, oil’s advance—with WTI approaching $76 and Brent in the low $80s from recent sessions—revived inflation worries, potentially crimping the Fed’s easing cycle. Policymakers have highlighted energy as a key monitor, with sustained crude jumps risking a shift from rate cuts if price pressures build.
Earnings and Corporate Snapshot
Mixed corporate signals emerged as earnings tapered off. Energy outfits gained on higher realizations, while defense names saw mild bids from tensions. Consumer discretionary trailed amid pump-price strains, and clean energy stayed tentative despite niche spotlight.
Economic Calendar Ahead
Focus sharpened on Friday’s data, led by nonfarm payrolls to test labor strength. Jobless claims, Challenger cuts, and trade prices could also sway views, with forecasts for 160,000-180,000 jobs and steady 4.1% unemployment.
| Index | Thursday Change | Approximate Close | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dow | -350 pts (-0.75%) | ~47,450 | Oil escalation, industrials drag |
| S&P 500 | -0.6% | ~6,420 | Risk-off rotation |
| Nasdaq | -0.4% | Low 22,000s | Tech resilience insufficient |
| Russell 2000 | -0.9% | N/A | Small-cap volatility |
Weekly Volatility Context
The week’s swings spotlight headline sensitivity. The Dow dropped roughly 600 points across three prior sessions before Wednesday’s lift, mirroring rapid responses to Iran news. History shows events like the 2022 Ukraine crisis often yield short dips followed by rebounds without major disruptions.
Hormuz Stakes
This round stands apart due to the Strait’s role in 20% of world oil. Banks like Goldman Sachs lifted short-term WTI outlooks to the high $70s on risk overlays, without extreme calls. Extended strains could pinch profits, spending, and the S&P 500’s 8-10% year-to-date rise.
Bond and Haven Moves
Yields edged up, with the 10-year Treasury near 4.05% versus recent sub-4% dips, as inflation tempered cut bets. Gold held above $2,700 an ounce for safety, while bitcoin eased under $95,000 with risk peers.
Volume and Flows
Energy rose 1.5-2%, financials mixed, utilities cushioned losses. Volumes swelled 15-20% over norms, heavy in futures and hedges.
Retail Tie-In
GameStop traded flat near $24, propped by cash and buyout talk per separate reports, as retail broadly eyed cost squeezes.
Technical Outlook
Volatility persists ahead. De-escalation hints might spark snaps higher; Hormuz flares could extend weakness. S&P support eyes 6,350-6,400, resistance 6,500 in its oil-shadowed monthly band.
Year-to-Date Backdrop
From early-2026 S&P lows near 6,000, indexes built on AI momentum and cuts but now grapple war overlays. National gas averages near $3.15 per AAA erode purchasing power.
Sector Winner-Loser Balance
Producers thrive, but airlines, logistics, and makers suffer. Refiners gain on spreads; chemicals cite costs. Europe’s Stoxx 600 (-0.8%) and Japan’s Nikkei (-1.2%) synced lower.
Trading Close Notes
Afternoon action steadied sans breakout, volumes hinting defense. Payrolls and diplomacy loom for Friday.
Historical Precedent
This dip aligns with shock absorption patterns, banking U.S. production buffers. Oil momentum and Hormuz watch keep nerves taut.
President Trump’s team signals energy security focus, possibly tapping reserves, layering policy angles. Fuel impacts heighten voter awareness.
Business
Earnings call transcript: Cooper Companies beats Q1 2026 EPS estimates, stock dips

Earnings call transcript: Cooper Companies beats Q1 2026 EPS estimates, stock dips
Business
Report of Iran Talks Buoys Stocks
Stocks seesawed early Wednesday as the market tried to process reports about the possibility that Iranian officials have reached out to the CIA.
Some investors’ hopes for a quick end to the conflict surged after the New York Times reported that operatives from Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence had initiated talks with the Central Intelligence Agency about how to bring an end to the conflict.
An Iranian news agency then reported that the ministry had denied the Times report.
Business
Amazon cuts at least 100 jobs in robotics unit amid ongoing layoffs
FOX Business host Charles Payne unpacks AI disruption fears on ‘Making Money.’
Amazon is continuing its workforce reductions, cutting at least 100 white-collar jobs in its robotics unit this week, according to a new report.
The affected division designs robots and other automation systems used primarily in Amazon warehouses, two people familiar with the matter told Reuters.
“We regularly review our organizations to make sure teams are best set up to innovate and deliver for our customers,” Amazon said in a statement without specifying the number of jobs cut.
DESPITE POSTING RECORD REVENUE YEAR ACROSS ALL DIVISIONS

The move adds to a series of large-scale layoffs announced over the past year. (Jason Redmond/AFP via Getty Images)
The move adds to a series of large-scale layoffs announced over the past year. In January, the company cut around 16,000 jobs and signaled at the time that additional reductions could follow.
That same month, Amazon halted development of a robotic arm known as Blue Jay that it demonstrated at an event in October. Blue Jay featured multiple robotic arms that could grab several items at once and was designed to help workers in smaller spaces.

Amazon Proteus robots demonstrate autonomous navigation using barcodes on the floor during the Delivering the Future event at the Amazon Robotics Innovation Hub in Westborough, Mass., Nov. 10, 2022. (M Scott Brauer/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)
Beginning with a round of about 14,000 white-collar layoffs in October, Amazon has eliminated roughly 30,000 corporate roles, citing efficiency gains from artificial intelligence and broader cultural changes. The cuts represented nearly 10% of its white-collar workforce, though the majority of Amazon’s approximately 1.5 million employees are hourly workers, particularly in warehouses known as fulfillment centers.

The affected division designs robots and other automation systems used primarily in Amazon warehouses. (M Scott Brauer/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
CLICK HERE TO GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO
In addition to the broader cuts in October and January, Amazon over the past year has pared a smaller number of jobs in its devices and services, books, podcasts and public relations units, among others.
Business
Cracker Barrel revenue falls amid rebranding recovery efforts
Cracker Barrel CEO Julie Masino spoke to The Blaze’s Glenn Back about the backlash she and the company faced after its controversial redesign this year.
Cracker Barrel reported a drop in quarterly revenue and profit as the company continues to recover from last summer’s rebranding controversy, though CEO Julie Masino says early signs of a turnaround are beginning to emerge.
Speaking during the Tennessee-based restaurant and retail chain’s fiscal second-quarter 2026 earnings call on Wednesday, Masino said that the company is focused on strengthening operations, refining its menu and marketing strategy to better connect with customers, and reducing costs to improve profitability.
“We’re gaining traction and are encouraged by some important guest metrics and green shoots around traffic, and we’re energized in terms of driving improved performance,” Masino said.
Cracker Barrel posted second-quarter revenue of $874.8 million, down 7.9% from a year earlier.
CRACKER BARREL RESPONDS TO REPORTS ABOUT EMPLOYEE DINING REQUIREMENTS DURING WORK TRAVEL

A Cracker Barrel sign hangs on the outside of a restaurant on Aug. 21, 2025, in Homestead, Florida. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
Comparable restaurant sales fell 7.1%, largely driven by a 10.1% drop in traffic, while comparable retail sales slid 9.2%, according to chief financial officer Craig Pommells.
Net income totaled $1.3 million, a sharp decrease from $22.2 million in the same quarter last year.
Despite the declines, results topped Wall Street expectations.
Masino highlighted improving employee turnover rates and a higher Google star rating as evidence that the company’s turnaround efforts are gaining traction.

A general view of a Cracker Barrel Country Store in Fishkill, NY, on Monday, August 25, 2025. (Richard Beetham for Fox News Digital)
“We view all of these metrics as important leading indicators and are confident that these gains will translate into improved traffic over time,” she said.
As part of its strategy to win back customers, Cracker Barrel has also reintroduced popular limited-time offerings, including Country Fried Turkey, and added new menu items such as a breakfast burger and Garden and Farmhouse Scrambles.
The company’s loyalty program now has more than 11 million members and accounts for over 40% of tracked sales. Masino said loyalty member traffic has held up better than nonmembers since August.
“We’re committed to operating with excellence, and we’re implementing actions to improve profitability, all to strengthen the business and to return to positive momentum,” Masino said.

Cracker Barrel CEO Julie Felss Masino walks out of a Starbucks in Nashville, Tennessee, on Aug. 28, 2025. (Zak Bennett for Fox News Digital)
The revenue slump follows backlash last summer after Cracker Barrel announced changes to its logo and store interiors, including removing the “old timer” from its branding.
The company reversed course less than a week later after complaints from customers.
Masino has previously cautioned that the company’s recovery will take time.
GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE
Cracker Barrel did not immediately respond to FOX Business’ request for comment.
FOX Business’ Eric Revell contributed to this report.
Business
Alphabet Stock Edges Lower in Early Trading as AI Capex Concerns Weigh Amid Geopolitical Volatility
Alphabet Inc. shares dipped modestly in early U.S. trading Friday, reflecting broader market caution driven by surging oil prices and ongoing Middle East tensions, while investors continued to digest the company’s massive 2026 capital expenditure plans tied to artificial intelligence infrastructure.

AFP
Alphabet Class A shares (NASDAQ: GOOGL) were trading around $299.50 to $300.00 by mid-morning Eastern Time, down approximately 1.0% to 1.2% from Thursday’s close of $303.13. The stock opened near $302.50 to $303.00, with intraday action ranging from a low near $298.80 to a high of about $303.30. Volume approached 5 million to 10 million shares in early sessions, consistent with recent averages but below levels seen during high-volatility periods.
Alphabet Class C shares (NASDAQ: GOOG) moved similarly, trading near $300.00 to $300.50, down about 1.0% from the prior close around $303.45. The company’s combined market capitalization hovered near $3.65 trillion to $3.67 trillion, cementing its position among the world’s most valuable firms despite recent pullbacks.
The decline extended a pattern of consolidation after Alphabet reached multi-month highs earlier in 2026, with shares peaking near $349.00 in early February. Year-to-date performance remains positive but lags the broader S&P 500 amid concerns over heavy AI spending and competitive pressures in search and cloud computing. Over the past 12 months, GOOGL has gained significantly, up more than 70% from lows around $140 in early 2025, driven by strong revenue acceleration and AI advancements.
Recent momentum traces to Alphabet’s fourth-quarter earnings reported in early February, which beat expectations across key metrics. Revenue climbed 18% year-over-year to $113.8 billion, while adjusted earnings per share reached $2.82, surpassing consensus by about 7%. Google Cloud posted explosive 48% growth, underscoring its role as a major growth engine alongside core advertising.
Management’s guidance for 2026 capital expenditures—projected between $175 billion and $185 billion—sparked debate. The figure, roughly double 2025’s estimated $91 billion to $92 billion, prioritizes servers, data centers, and networking to support Gemini AI, cloud expansion, and other initiatives. Roughly 60% targets compute infrastructure, with the remainder for facilities.
Analysts view the spending as a bold bet on AI dominance but warn of near-term pressure on free cash flow and margins. Depreciation costs are expected to rise sharply, potentially compressing profitability even as revenue grows. Some forecasts suggest free cash flow could dip temporarily before rebounding, with optimistic scenarios projecting $55 billion to $72 billion annually in coming years if execution succeeds.
Bullish voices highlight Alphabet’s cash generation strength and positioning in AI. Google Cloud’s momentum, Gemini’s user growth beyond 750 million monthly actives, and advertising resilience provide tailwinds. Options activity has shown bullish tilt, with notable call volume at strikes near current levels for short-dated expirations, signaling trader bets on near-term recovery.
Yet challenges persist. Antitrust scrutiny, regulatory risks in multiple jurisdictions, and competition from OpenAI, Meta, and others in generative AI remain headwinds. Recent news highlighted partnerships like expanded Google Cloud collaborations with CVS Health and others, but also isolated incidents involving Waymo robotaxis and legal matters.
Broader market context amplified Friday’s softness. Oil’s surge amid Middle East conflict pressured growth stocks, with energy-sensitive sectors underperforming. The Dow and S&P 500 traded lower, while tech showed relative resilience but failed to buck the trend fully. The VIX stayed elevated, reflecting ongoing geopolitical unease.
Wall Street coverage leans positive, with consensus “Strong Buy” ratings and average price targets around $350 to $380, implying 15% to 25% upside from recent levels. Firms like Mizuho and Bank of America maintained bullish stances, citing AI opportunities despite capex concerns. Some analysts forecast potential re-rating if cloud and AI monetization accelerates.
Alphabet’s diversified revenue—advertising still dominant but cloud and other bets growing—offers resilience. Q1 earnings, expected late April, will provide updates on spending progress, Gemini adoption, and cloud margins.
For now, shares consolidate near $300 support, with traders eyeing macro developments and any AI-related catalysts. The stock’s valuation, at a forward P/E around 28, appears reasonable relative to growth prospects, though execution on capex remains key.
Investors monitor closely as Alphabet navigates AI investment phase amid volatile macro backdrop. Friday’s dip illustrates sensitivity to external risks, but fundamentals suggest long-term optimism for the tech giant.
Business
CoreWeave Stock Is Rising. The Neocloud Wins a New AI Deal.
CoreWeave Stock Is Rising. The Neocloud Wins a New AI Deal.
Business
Electrovaya Inc. (ELVA:CA) Discusses Battery Technology Advancements and Business Growth Strategy Transcript
Glen Akselrod
Bristol Capital Ltd.
The purpose of today’s presentation is to give our audience a better understanding of the business through a presentation and then questions with management. The presentation is going to be led by Raj Das Gupta, CEO, who is also joined on the call by John Gibson, CFO; and Jason Roy, VP of IR. If you’d like to get a copy of today’s presentation, simply e-mail me at glen@bristolir.com. We’ll break for questions at the end of the formal presentation. When we do break, we encourage those questions. And as a reminder, we’re only going to take questions through the webinar portal. If you’re listening over telephone, please access the web link sent earlier to ask a question.
You can submit a question using the text box within the portal at any time. I’ll ask the question on air for everyone to hear and Raj or John will answer. I’m not going to reference any names, but simply read the questions asked. And as we do have a very large audience today, if I can’t get to your question online and has not yet been addressed during the call and can’t be, I’ll come back to you by e-mail. I won’t read the forward-looking statements, but I do state that they apply, and I reference them on Page 2 of this presentation.
With that said, once again, thank you for joining us. Remember, this is fairly informal, and we do encourage questions to help you better understand the business and its growth path. And now I’ll turn the call over to
-
Politics7 days agoITV enters Gaza with IDF amid ongoing genocide
-
Politics3 days agoAlan Cumming Brands Baftas Ceremony A ‘Triggering S**tshow’
-
Fashion6 days agoWeekend Open Thread: Iris Top
-
Tech5 days agoUnihertz’s Titan 2 Elite Arrives Just as Physical Keyboards Refuse to Fade Away
-
Sports6 days ago
The Vikings Need a Duck
-
NewsBeat5 days agoAbusive parents will now be treated like sex offenders and placed on a ‘child cruelty register’ | News UK
-
NewsBeat5 days agoDubai flights cancelled as Brit told airspace closed ’10 minutes after boarding’
-
NewsBeat5 days agoThe empty pub on busy Cambridge road that has been boarded up for years
-
NewsBeat4 days ago‘Significant’ damage to boarded-up Horden house after fire
-
Tech17 hours agoBitwarden adds support for passkey login on Windows 11
-
Entertainment4 days agoBaby Gear Guide: Strollers, Car Seats
-
Sports6 hours ago499 runs and 34 sixes later, India beat England to enter T20 World Cup final | Cricket News
-
Tech7 days agoNASA Reveals Identity of Astronaut Who Suffered Medical Incident Aboard ISS
-
Politics5 days ago
FIFA hypocrisy after Israel murder over 400 Palestinian footballers
-
NewsBeat5 days agoEmirates confirms when flights will resume amid Dubai airport chaos
-
NewsBeat3 days agoIs it acceptable to comment on the appearance of strangers in public? Readers discuss
-
Tech5 days agoViral ad shows aged Musk, Altman, and Bezos using jobless humans to power AI
-
Video4 days agoHow to Build Finance Dashboards With AI in Minutes
-
Business2 days agoGuthrie Disappearance Enters Fifth Week as Family Visits Memorial
-
Crypto World5 days agoUS Judge Lets Binance Unregistered Token Class Action Proceed
