Earnings
By Rick Aristotle Munarriz, The Motley Fool
| 11:45AM 4/16/2012
Let's go over some of the items that will help shape the week that lies ahead on Wall Street: smartphones and software, discount brokers and airbeds, and would you like a side of fries with that?
By Rick Aristotle Munarriz, The Motley Fool
| 3:35PM 3/28/2012
Most homebuilders saw their shares pop higher Tuesday after heavyweight Lennar released better-than-expected quarterly numbers -- but not KB Home. In fact, its shares actually fell. Here's why KB isn't invited to the housing recovery party.
By Rick Aristotle Munarriz, The Motley Fool
| 1:20PM 3/27/2012
The holidays may have come and gone, but when Best Buy posts its quarterly earnings, it's going to very publicly relive them -- whether it wants to or not. Wall Street analysts are generally optimistic, but there reasons for investors to worry.
By Rick Aristotle Munarriz, The Motley Fool
| 8:46AM 3/26/2012
Here's what may shape the week ahead for Wall Street: Earnings reports from Best Buy and Walgreens may disappoint, while Lennar and Red Hat probably won't. And fund managers will jump into last quarter's winners to fool clients into thinking they're more clever than they are.
By Rick Aristotle Munarriz, The Motley Fool
| 1:45PM 3/19/2012
Let's go over some items that will help shape the week ahead for Wall Street: The Hunger Games will give theaters a much needed boost; FuelBand may do the same for Nike; video game sellers hunger for hits; and Tiffany and Oracle will give us clues about the recovery.
By Rick Aristotle Munarriz, The Motley Fool
| 5:05PM 3/15/2012
Teens can be fickle, and Pacific Sunwear of California knows that all too well. The retailer, which specializes in surf and skate apparel, saw its shares wipe out on Wednesday after it posted disappointing quarterly results. Is the sun setting on the chain?
By Rick Aristotle Munarriz, The Motley Fool
| 1:45PM 3/01/2012
It's not as if DreamWorks Animation had an awful year at the box office. Kung Fu Panda 2 and Puss in Boots combined for a healthy $1.2 billion in worldwide ticket sales. But that's down from 2011's $1.6 billion take when Shrek Forever After was in theaters.









