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Two influencers have di3d after refusing to wear lifejackets on a speedboat that sank off the Brazilian coast.
Though the tragic incident occurred on September 29, police reported this week that the deceased had refused life jackets, not wanting the safety gear to ruin their tan in photos.
Five out of the seven people on board the vessel were rescued. While the deceased have been identified as Aline Tamara Moreira de Amorim, 37, and Beatriz Tavares da Silva Faria, 27.
In an interview with G1 Globo’s TV Tribuna, the city’s chief police officer Marcos Alexandre Alfino cited a testimony by the boat’s captain and said that the two women declined to wear life jackets “because they were taking selfies.”
“They said that life jackets would get in the way of their tanning,” Alfino added of the women, who were attending a party held on the ill-fated boat.
According to information obtained by G1 Globo, Amorim — who reportedly has a 17-year-old son — shared photos of herself on social media while out at sea. The outlet added that her brother claimed she didn’t know how to swim.
The Brazilian news source says the two women who passed away did not know each other prior to the party.
Reports also detailed that the accident happened in the region known as Garganta do Diabo, which translates to Devil’s Throat.
The partygoers were being transported back to land on a different vessel when that smaller boat was hit by a wave, knocking all seven people into the water.
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Smurfit WestRock (SW) shares popped on Wednesday, marking one of the S&P 500's top performances, after the packaging manufacturer released the first quarterly result to reflect the July merger of Ireland's Smurfit Kappa and U.S.-based WestRock.
Given the timing of the transaction, the second-quarter 2024 report covered only the performance of Smurfit Kappa.
The stock, recently up nearly 13%, is now back in positive territory for the year.
The cardboard box maker reported a third-quarter 2024 net loss of $150 million on net sales of approximately $7.7 billion. Both figures fell short of analysts' consensus estimates.
Despite the lower-than-expected headline numbers, the top-line result more than doubled from net sales of roughly $2.9 billion posted in the year-ago period, boosted by contributions from the WestRock acquisition and strong volumes in corrugated packaging. The company attributed around $500 million of the quarterly loss to expenses and accounting adjustments related to the merger.
Smurfit WestRock reports results in three geographical segments. Although sales remained essentially flat year-over-year for the segment comprising Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and the Asia-Pacific region, the WestRock add-on contributed to a surge in sales for the North America segment. The Latin America segment posted sales growth of 48% from a year ago.
CEO Tony Smurfit stressed the impact of the merger on the company's performance, asserting that "these results are a strong foundation to build upon."
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The financial deficit between young homeowners and renters is growing, as young renters find it hard to break into the housing market.
A recent study from Redfin found that 69% of millennials and Gen Z homeowners feel better off financially now than they were four years ago. Meanwhile, only 52% of renters in these generations, defined as ages 18-43, said they were better off.
Young renters have struggled to catch up to their peers who bought homes during the pandemic, increasing the financial gap between homeowners and renters.
Many young homeowners were able to buy their first homes during the pandemic by taking advantage of low mortgage rates and home prices at the time. Since then, many benefited from a historic surge in home values in 2021 and 2022 and have built up large home equity, Redfin said.
“Economic inequality is on the rise between young people who have been able to break into homeownership and young people who haven’t,” said Chen Zhao, economics research lead at Redfin, in a press release.
Young renters are finding it even harder to enter the housing market now, as high mortgage rates and prices block them out.
Renting prices also continue to increase, making it tough for young renters to save up for a down payment. Minimum-wage earners can not comfortably afford an apartment anymore, and in 22 states, mortgage payments are cheaper than rent.
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Shares of Qorvo (QRVO) plunged more than 25% Wednesday afternoon when the radio frequency and power chipmaker posted a surprising loss and warned of a continuing slowdown in its business.
The company reported a fiscal 2025 second-quarter loss of $17.4 million, or $0.18 per share. Analysts surveyed by Visible Alpha expected a profit of $101.9 million, or $1.03 per share. Revenue fell 5% year-over-year to $1.05 billion, basically in line with forecasts.
Qorvo shares sank to their lowest level since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.
Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Grant Brown said that while the flagship and premium tiers in the smartphone market are performing well, customers are choosing entry-tier Android 5G smartphones in favor of mid-tier ones, adding that "content and ramp profiles vary by model, and we are experiencing unfavorable mix. We expect this to continue in the second half of fiscal 2025."
Sales at its Advanced Cellular Group (ACG) tumbled 12% to $751.4 million, and at its High Performance Analog (HPA) division, they slipped 1% to $148.3 million. However, sales soared 42% to $146.8 million at its Connectivity and Sensors Group (CSG).
Brown added that Qorvo was "taking appropriate actions, including factory consolidation and operating expense reductions as well as focusing on opportunities that align with our long-term profitability objectives."
Brown explained that full-year revenue and gross margin would be down slightly from fiscal 2024. The company sees current-quarter adjusted earnings per share (EPS) between $1.10 and $1.30, and revenue of $900 million, plus or minus $25 million.
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Wingstop (WING) shares tumbled Wednesday after the chicken-wing chain's third-quarter profits fell short of analyst estimates.
The company reported $162.5 million in revenue on $1.2 billion in sales across its network of nearly 2,500 locations (Those sales are system-wide, which includes sales from both company-owned and franchised restaurants.) The revenue figure surpassed analyst estimates—compiled by Visible Alpha—by nearly $2 million, while sales fell about $20 million short.
Wingstop posted $25.7 million in net income, below the $28.2 million analysts had expected. The company's costs climbed during the quarter because of higher chicken wing prices and higher payroll and stock-based compensation expenses.
Wingstop shares were down nearly 20% in recent trading, sliding to their lowest point since February.
For the full fiscal year, Wingstop lifted its projections for expenses by a few million dollars. It also lifted its expected range of net new restaurant openings to between 320 and 330, up from 285 to 300 previously, after opening a record 106 new locations in the third quarter.
Domestic same store sales grew by just under 21% year-over-year, a bit below the 21.6% growth analysts had expected.
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Google parent Alphabet (GOOGL) posted third-quarter earnings that topped Street expectations and showed artificial intelligence (AI) progress, with both JPMorgan and Citigroup analysts noting the tech giant's strong Google Cloud revenue.
JPMorgan raised its price target for Alphabet to $212 from $208 and reiterated an "overweight" rating.
The broker noted "Google's increased confidence" in the rollout of its AI search business; its strong cloud business, with 35% year-over-year revenue growth in the quarter; and upside for operating profits given the company's plans to "re-engineer the cost structure" as reasons behind the increased price target.
JPMorgan analysts said that Google's AI Overviews service—its AI-generated search summaries—is being rolled out to 100 new countries and territories with a reach of more than a billion users per month, and is "monetizing at roughly the same rate as non-AI searches" in terms of advertising.
On the company's earnings call, Alphabet Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Sundar Pichai said the company has seen use of Google Search rise among people who use AI Overviews, and that Google Lens is drawing 20 billion visual searches each month.
Citi analysts stuck with their "buy" rating and $212 price target for Alphabet. The broker, like JPMorgan, noted Google Cloud's "accelerating growth from greater GenAI demand," thanks in part to Alphabet's Gemini large language model.
Shares of Alphabet jumped more than 5% Wednesday afternoon and have gained 28% this year.
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