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Tag: construction

  • Hill Hiker Inclined Elevators at Impressive Project in Dubai Win Top Industry Award

    Hill Hiker Inclined Elevators at Impressive Project in Dubai Win Top Industry Award

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    Elevator World, the premier elevator industry publication, announced the winners of its Project of the Year industry recognition awards. Hill Hiker, Inc. is proud to win the Inclined Lifts Award. Celebrating innovation and persistence.

    In a monumental achievement, Hill Hiker, Inc. proudly announces its consecutive win of the prestigious Elevator World’s Project of the Year Award for the second year running, solidifying its pioneering status in the industry. The award-winning project, “KSA Expo 2020 Pavilion,” is a testament to innovation, resilience, and unparalleled engineering prowess.

    Crafting Excellence Amidst Unconventionality
    The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s visionary pavilion at Expo 2020 defied architectural norms with a cantilevered marvel rising six stories at a daring 24-degree angle. Traditional elevators proved impractical, requiring a groundbreaking solution. Hill Hiker, Inc. answered the challenge, designing and installing two custom-inclined elevators that transformed this architectural marvel into an unparalleled opportunity.

    Confronting Challenges with Creativity
    Space limitations posed formidable hurdles, demanding inventive solutions. Hill Hiker, Inc. engineered end-loading inclined elevator cars, integrating architectural glass and minimal framing to seamlessly merge with the pavilion’s exhibit, ensuring an uninterrupted experience for visitors.

    Navigating strict safety codes and regulations was another frontier. Hill Hiker, Inc. innovated with a reel system interfacing with custom-built rollers — solving the friction dilemma and ensuring compliance, despite the challenges posed by hardwired power requirements.

    Amidst the unparalleled challenges, the global pandemic disrupted operations. The team showed remarkable adaptability, maneuvering installations via remote communications and navigating travel restrictions with unwavering determination.

    The Climax of Innovation: Recognition and Triumph
    The completion of the KSA Pavilion project in August 2021 marked a triumph. Thorough inspection under the stringent ASME Code validated the elevators’ safety and functionality. Facilitating over 4.6 million guests, the inclined elevators earned acclaim, bagging the UAE Innovation Award for “Best Innovation that Drives Mobility.”

    This recognition celebrates collaborative effort. The synergy between Hill Hiker, VAA, TK Elevator, and others surmounted challenges, paving the way for an exceptional feat in inclined elevators.

    Conclusion: Elevating Standards, Defying Limits
    Hill Hiker, Inc.’s consecutive win of Elevator World’s Project of the Year Award for “KSA Expo 2020 Pavilion” signifies an unwavering commitment to innovation, resilience, and excellence. This remarkable journey sets a new benchmark in elevator engineering, showcasing the transformative power of determination and innovation. The legacy of this project extends beyond recognition; it’s a tribute to human ingenuity, perseverance, and the spirit that defies limitations.

    Founded in 1997 by Bill and Laurel MacLachlan, Hill Hiker, Inc. is a leading provider of innovative inclined elevators, specializing in pushing the boundaries of elevator engineering to redefine possibilities in architectural design. 

    Find out more about Hill Hiker, Inc. by visiting our website at hillhiker.com

    #HillHikerInc #InclinedfortheFuture #ElevatorEngineeringExcellence

    Source: Hill Hiker, Inc.

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  • A new issue in divorce: Who keeps the mortgage rate?

    A new issue in divorce: Who keeps the mortgage rate?

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    When Ann Shea, 44, was finalizing a divorce last year, she knew she wanted to keep the suburban Chicago home where she was raising her school-age kids. But it was equally important for her to hold onto her relatively low mortgage rate.

    She had purchased the home in the summer of 2012, and had refinanced to a rate of 2.8% during the pandemic. She wanted to keep the house to provide stability for her kids, who were still young and attending school nearby.

    But to get the mortgage and the title of the home in her name only would have required refinancing, which would have bumped up her mortgage rate to the 6% range, where rates were averaging in mid-April when her divorce was finalized. A back-of-the-envelope math estimate would suggest that her monthly mortgage payment could have ballooned by 33%.

    “The divorce was so expensive, and to think about adding on that cost would have been terrible,” Shea, a compliance attorney, told MarketWatch. 

    Moving to such a comparatively high mortgage rate after 11 years of paying off the 2.8% loan would have felt to Shea like she had “lost all that ground,” she added. 

    Shea’s plight is becoming more common. As mortgage rates soared from historic lows during the pandemic to two-decade highs at the end of 2023, homeowners with rates under 3% became the envy of their friends and family. But when a marriage splits up, the question of who walks away with the lower mortgage rate sparks far more than casual jealousy.

    It’s increasingly a source of tension at the divorce negotiating table, Alla Roytberg, a New York City-based family and matrimonial law attorney and a mediator, told MarketWatch.

    “In the past, when rates were low, it was an easy answer, because somebody could refinance and get a 3.5% rate,” Royberg, who has been in matrimonial law for the last three decades, said. “And now, they have this 3% rate, and if they refinance, they’re going to get 7% or 6% — and that makes it unaffordable.”

    Unconventional solutions to who keeps the low mortgage rate

    Historically, a couple who is going through a divorce will either work out an arrangement to refinance the home and put it in one spouse’s name, or if the divorce is acrimonious, they can be forced by a court to sell the home and divide the proceeds, Erin Levine, co-founder of Hello Divorce, a company based in Alameda, Calif., that sells online divorce services, told MarketWatch.

    Levine is a family law attorney licensed in California, and has helped more than 5,000 individuals through the legal process of divorce. Hello Divorce recently beefed up its real-estate arm, because it’s seen a surge in interest in home-owning couples interested in divorce.

    Those traditional methods are still an option separating partners pursue today. But the large gap between prevailing mortgage rates and the rates on divorcing couples’ homes, coupled with a more expensive housing market, has prompted some to turn to unconventional strategies to divide real-estate assets. They can include deciding to co-own a property together or  agreeing to stay in the same house for a certain number of years.

    “People are trying to figure out ways to work things out of court,” Levine said.

    The financial motivation is strong, too. “We have to come up with creative options over how to handle those kinds of cases,” added Roytberg. “Some of them are barely able to find the budget that they were living with. How do you add another three, four thousand dollars in rent, when the money isn’t there?”

    Some couples are finding innovative solutions — from sale leasebacks to mortgage assumptions — to hang on to their prized ultra-low rate. Others are resorting to less sustainable stopgap measures.

    Here are some of the scenarios couples are turning to:

    Stalling until the market improves

    One strategy is to “buy time,” Levine said.

    In this scenario, the couple finalizes their divorce, but continues to co-own the home while waiting for rates to fall. Either they stay together in the house, or one spouse moves out, but they both continue to own the home together to avoid refinancing. 

    About a tenth of the divorcees on Levine’s platform are saying, “‘I really want to stay in the house, I can’t afford these mortgage rates, and I don’t know what the market’s gonna look like, so give me two years,’” Levine said. “And with you staying on the mortgage, in exchange, I’ll pay you some money.”

    Some arrangements include a higher-earning spouse paying the mortgage in place of spousal support, and then deducting it from their taxes, Roytberg explained. “It helps both sides,” she said, “because they don’t need to refinance at a higher rate for the other, and [the higher-income spouse] could directly pay the mortgage instead of spousal support.” 

    Continue living together while you ‘wait and see’

    The so-called lock-in effect — which refers to high mortgage rates forcing homeowners to stay put in homes with lower rates — has most homeowners frozen in place for the time being. Few are willing to give up their home and their low mortgage rate and move to a house that costs more, and requires a mortgage with significantly higher borrowing costs. That’s also led to a squeeze on resale inventory, which is hurting aspiring homeowners.

    But with rates staying below 7% since mid-December, there are some early signs that the housing market is coming back to life. 

    “Buyers and sellers are learning to live with uncertainty,” Shay Stein, a Las Vegas-based real-estate agent with Redfin
    RDFN,
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    said in a recent report. “They’ve realized no one has a crystal ball that can predict exactly when mortgage rates will fall back to 5%, so they’re making moves now,” she added, “because they can only wait so long to be near their grandkids, live in an RV like they’ve always dreamt of, or finalize their divorce.”

    But some divorcees are not as keen, opting to wait and see.

    “I had one [divorcee] that had decided that he was just gonna live in the basement, so good luck with that,” Jae Tolliver, an Ohio-based mortgage broker with Union Home Mortgage, told MarketWatch, referring to someone who wanted to continue to live in their existing house, even though they had split from their spouse. “People are definitely trying to get more creative.”

    Tolliver recently quipped on social media that couples are staying together not for the kids’ sake these days, but rather for their low mortgage rate.

    He also described another client who decided to stay in the house with their ex-spouse after the divorce, and continue to pay the mortgage payments like before just to keep the low rate. 

    But “it wasn’t working out so great,” Tolliver said. “Because at the end of the day, you have a divorced couple that’s living under the same roof, and that just isn’t going to work.” 

    Co-owning the home until a milestone is reached 

    Some splitting couples decide to continue to own their home together until a certain milestone, such as their youngest child graduating from high school.

    “It’s almost always tied to kids,” Levine said, because couples often want to provide stability. For example, a child who is involved in a very competitive sport may require more consistency in their schedule, so the parents may opt to stay put until the child gets to college.

    Sale leasebacks

    Some couples are turning to sale lease-backs, a strategy which Levine says is something she hadn’t encountered recently.

    Similar to the concept of buying time, a sale leaseback between a splitting couple can mean an arrangement where one individual sells the home to the other, and then rents it back from them with the option to repurchase their share later.

    “Some of our customers like it, because in divorce, a lot of people’s credit is screwed, as they’ve been separated for a while and in different households, so they haven’t been paying bills,” Levine said. Those financial setbacks could make it difficult to rent or buy a place on their own.

    By selling their share to their ex and leasing it back, they can secure a place to live without having to worry about the debt-to-income requirements, or their low credit score, which can be obstacles to finding housing, she added.

    Biting the bullet

    Other divorcing couples, anticipating the struggles ahead should they fight to keep their low rate, have decided to bite the bullet and refinance. 

    Take one recent divorcee’s case in San Mateo, Calif. 

    After a mother of two split with her husband in December 2021, they had gone through the process of formalizing their divorce. That meant that she would have to give up the 3.25% mortgage rate that she got in 2020.

    She spoke on the condition of anonymity because she did not want her story to affect her child support payments. 

    “I had to refinance while rates were insanely high,” the homeowner told MarketWatch. 

    She refinanced in October 2023 to get her ex-husband off the mortgage and the title of the home, as well as to buy him out of his equity in the home. She ended up with a 30-year mortgage rate of 8.25%.

    “I have an awful rate right now, I mean, it’s ridiculous. My mortgage has more than doubled,” she added. Her monthly payment went from $1,450 to $2,975. 

    She considered the possibility of selling the home and using her share of the proceeds to buy another one, or even renting a cheaper home. 

    But both options were unappealing because she would still be stuck with a higher rate, and would lose her home, which she has lived in since December 2013. She hopes to refinance in the future when rates fall. 

    “I’m just looking at it as if it’s temporary,” she added. She also got a raise recently which could help offset some of those expenses.

    Shea’s solution: Assuming the mortgage

    Shea, the suburban Chicago divorcee who didn’t want to give up her 2.8% rate, managed to land a mortgage assumption, meaning that she essentially took over the existing mortgage that had been in both her and her husband’s name, at the same rate.

    Assumable mortgages have become an incentive offered by some sellers, but they are rare and only available in certain circumstances.

    Shea worked with Tami Wollensak, a mortgage broker who is also a Certified Divorce Lending Professional with specialized training on divorce-related real-estate transactions. 

    It was Wollensak who recommended that Shea ask her lender if she could assume the loan in her own name. She guided Shea on how to ask for the right department and how to request an assumption, rather than a regular refinance.

    “It’s very unusual,” Wollensak, who is also based in Chicago, told MarketWatch. “Every lender looks at it differently.” 

    Fannie Mae
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    guidelines give lenders some discretion to grant assumptions to people who are going through life transitions. But borrowers have to qualify for the mortgage and must be able to afford it on their own. The timing of the divorce must also allow for the assumption process to complete.

    When Shea first asked her lender, Iowa-based Green State Credit Union, about an assumption, she was turned away. But the duo kept digging and asking for different people to talk to. 

    The lender eventually allowed Shea to assume the mortgage at 2.8%, and have only her name appear on it. Wollensak says the lender may have allowed Shea to take over the payment alone without her spouse based on her strong credit profile. Green State Credit Union did not respond to a request for comment.

    “It depends from servicer to servicer. It’s very much like the Wild, Wild West,” Wollensak said. Shea did not pay any expenses associated with the assumption of the loan, such as closing costs or other fees.

    “It was a lot of back and forth trying to find the right person,” Shea said. “I’m so grateful.”

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  • Oaktree Capital calls commercial real estate ‘most acute area of risk’ right now

    Oaktree Capital calls commercial real estate ‘most acute area of risk’ right now

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    Distressed-debt giant Oaktree Capital sees big opportunities in credit unfolding over the next few years as a wall of debt comes due.

    Oaktree’s incoming co-chief executives Armen Panossian, head of performing credit, and Bob O’Leary, portfolio manager for global opportunities, see a roughly $13 trillion market that will be ripe for the picking.

    Within that realm is high-yield bonds, BBB-rated bonds, leveraged loans and private credit — four areas of the market that have only mushroomed from their nearly $3 trillion size right before the 2007-2008 global financial crisis.

    “Clearly, the most acute area of risk right now is commercial real estate,” the co-CEOs said in a Wednesday client note. “That’s because the maturity wall is already upon us and it’s not going to abate for several years.”

    More than $1 trillion of commercial real-estate loans are set to come due in 2024 and 2025, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

    A retreat in the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield
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    to about 4.1% on Wednesday from a 5% peak in October, has provided some relief even though many borrowers likely will still struggle to refinance.

    Related: Commercial real estate a top threat to financial system in 2024, U.S. regulators say

    “There’s a need for capital, especially for office properties where there are vacancies, rental growth hasn’t materialized, or the rate of borrowing has gone up materially over the last three years. This capital may or may not be readily available, and for certain types of office properties, it absolutely isn’t available,” the Oaktree team said.

    With that backdrop, the firm expects to dust off its playbook from the financial crisis and acquire portfolios of commercial real-estate loans from banks, but also plans to participate in “credit-risk transfer” deals that help lenders reduce exposure.

    Oaktree also sees opportunities brewing in private credit, as well as in high-yield and leveraged loans, where “several hundred” of the estimated 1,500 companies that have issued such debt are likely “to be just fine” even if defaults rise, they said.

    Another area to watch will be the roughly $26 trillion Treasury market, where Oaktree has some concerns “about where the 10-year Treasury yield goes from here” — given not only the U.S. budget deficit and the deluge of supply that investors face, but also how foreign buyers, once the “largest owners in prior years, may be tapped out.”

    Related: Here are two reasons why the 10-year Treasury yield is back above 4%

    U.S. stocks
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    fell Wednesday after strong retail-sales data for December pointed to a resilient U.S. economy, despite the Federal Reserve having kept its policy rate at a 22-year high since July.

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  • Beynon Sports Enhances Customer Trust With Industry-Leading 10-Year Warranty on BSS 300

    Beynon Sports Enhances Customer Trust With Industry-Leading 10-Year Warranty on BSS 300

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    From day one, Beynon Sports has been at the forefront of innovation in athletic surfacing, consistently delivering products that set the standard for quality, performance, and durability. Our commitment to excellence is reflected in every square inch of our surfaces, and trusted by renowned track & field programs, world-class venues, and municipalities across the globe.  

    Today, we’re proud to announce a key enhancement to our offering: The extension of the warranty period for our BSS 300 system from 5 years to an industry-leading 10 years.

    This change is not just an adjustment in policy; it’s a bold statement of confidence in our industry-leading polymer elastomeric chemistry and a testament to the BSS 300’s outstanding performance over the past 20 years.

    The BSS 300 System: A Legacy of Durability

    The BSS 300 system has been engineered with the highest quality materials and cutting-edge technology to withstand the rigors of athletic competition. Our advanced polyurethane quality ensures that each track maintains its structural integrity, performance characteristics, and visual appeal under the most demanding conditions.  

    With over 500 completed projects, showcased at choice institutions such as the University of Mount Union, Eastern Oregon University, University of California Santa Barbara, and the University of Memphis, the BSS 300 system is one our most popular systems, coast-to-coast. 

    Quality Local Manufacturing

    Our decision to extend the warranty period is driven by hard data and the proven longevity of the BSS 300 system. Facilities outfitted with our surfaces have consistently reported exceptional performance year after year, with minimal need for maintenance or repair. These aren’t just surfaces; they’re investments in the future of athletics, and our new 10-year warranty reflects our unwavering confidence in their lasting value.

    Our Maryland, USA, manufacturing facility is one of the few in the industry to have their Quality Management Systems certified to ISO 9001-2015 

    Unmatched Value for Our Customers

    The enhanced warranty underscores the added value Beynon Sports provides to every client. With double the duration of protection, facility owners and managers can enjoy peace of mind, knowing their investment is secure for a decade. This extended warranty not only promises durability but also demonstrates our belief in developing long-term relationships with our customers, built on trust, reliability, and mutual respect.

    We thank our customers for their trust in Beynon Sports and look forward to continuing to serve the athletic community with surfaces that are, quite literally, where champions are made.

    Source: Beynon Sports

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  • If Nvidia looked more like Salesforce, it might unlock billions more in cash

    If Nvidia looked more like Salesforce, it might unlock billions more in cash

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    Nvidia Corp. is raking in billions in cash, but one analyst thinks the chip maker could throw $100 billion more onto the pile if it started to look more like Salesforce Inc.

    Nvidia
    NVDA,
    +2.29%

    might unlock even more cash by developing businesses that expand recurring revenue, according to BofA Securities analyst Vivek Arya. The company has suffered some boom-and-bust cycles in recent years, and another bust could be smoothed by developing longer-term software contracts akin to those of Salesforce
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    , Workday Inc.
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    -0.48%

    and ServiceNow Inc.
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    ,
    which generate recurring revenue from their customers.

    Arya sees a pathway for Nvidia to rake in $100 billion in incremental free cash flow over the next two years if it can bulk up its own recurring-revenue options.

    Read: Apple’s stock needs to get ‘unstuck’ — and its innovation rut may not be helping

    “While NVDA has a solid lead in AI, hardware-oriented businesses are not valued as highly as visibility tends to be limited,” Arya wrote. Nvidia generates only about $1 billion, or 2%, of its sales from software and subscriptions. Arya doesn’t think the company can get much higher than $5 billion with its software and subscription offerings unless it turns to acquisitions.

    Nvidia has shown some openness to deals that would beef up its intellectual property and software offerings, Arya notes, as it tried to buy British chip designer Arm Holdings
    ARM,
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    before facing regulatory pushback.

    “We envision [Nvidia] considering more enhanced partnerships/M&A of software companies that are helping traditional enterprise customers deploy, monitor and analyze [generative AI] apps,” he wrote. Nvidia “is already serving them via on-premise hardware and/or its DGX cloud service, but we believe greater direct recurring software/service channel could be more impactful.”

    The addition of more recurring-revenue streams could help Nvidia’s “relatively depressed trading multiple,” in Arya’s view. Nvidia shares trade at a 20% to 30% discount to its “Magnificent Seven” peers on the basis of price to earnings as well as enterprise value to free cash flow, even though the company’s compound annual growth rate on the top line is three times what it is for those other tech giants.

    The discount is “partly due to uncertainty in [calendar 2025] growth prospects, and partly due to a very hardware-dependent business unlike other large-cap software/internet peers that have recurring-revenue profiles,” he wrote.

    Arya has a buy rating and $700 price objective on the stock.

    See also: Amazon’s stock could be helped by this secret weapon in 2024, BofA says

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  • Medical Properties Trust Stock Is Crashing

    Medical Properties Trust Stock Is Crashing

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    Shares of Medical Properties Trust plummeted after the real estate investment trust said it is ramping up efforts to recover uncollected rent and outstanding loans from its largest tenant.

    Continue reading this article with a Barron’s subscription.

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  • UC Berkeley makes dead-of-night push to wall off storied People's Park

    UC Berkeley makes dead-of-night push to wall off storied People's Park

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    A massive contingent of law enforcement officers converged on People’s Park in the wee hours of Thursday morning, intent on clearing the way for crews to wall off the storied green space near the UC Berkeley campus in preparation for construction of a much-contested housing complex for students.

    The university launched the extraordinary operation — designed to double-stack metal cargo containers around the entire park perimeter — around 12 a.m.

    On their arrival, police surrounded the park. Inside, they were met by several dozen protesters, chanting “Long live People’s Park” along with shouts of “Fight back!” Some were holed up in a makeshift treehouse and on the roof of a single-story building in the park.

    By starting the exercise under the cover of darkness and during students’ winter break, university leaders hoped to minimize a conflict with activists adamant the park should remain open space, a living tribute to free speech and student activism. The university planned to install the cargo containers over several days, banking on the massive metal structures to provide a more formidable barrier than the fences protesters have easily breached in the past.

    The university acknowledged that construction of the housing, ensnared in a legal dispute, cannot begin unless the state Supreme Court agrees that the Berkeley campus has completed an adequate environmental review of the project. The proposed development would create a dormitory with space for 1,100 students in a college town with a dire shortage of affordable housing. In addition, it would include permanent supportive housing for 125 people living homeless. About 60% of the site would remain green space, with commemorative exhibits about the park’s history.

    “Given that the existing legal issues will inevitably be resolved, we decided to take this necessary step now in order to minimize the possibility of disorder and disruption for the public and our students when we are eventually cleared to resume construction,” Chancellor Carol Christ said in a prepared statement.

    The university said it intended to keep streets around the park, and at least one block to the north and east, closed for three or four days.

    “Unfortunately, our planning and actions must take into account that some of the project’s opponents have previously resorted to violence and vandalism,” Christ said, adding that this was “despite strong support for the project on the part of students, community members, advocates for unhoused people, the elected leadership of the City of Berkeley, as well as the legislature and governor of the state of California.”

    Activists intent on preserving the park were tipped off several days in advance that the university would try to cordon off the site while students were on break. They called the incursion by law enforcement and work crews an “attack” that would destroy a legacy to people-powered activism.

    Nicholas Alexander was among the activists standing watch over People’s Park on Wednesday evening, prepared to protest efforts to wall off the site.

    (Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

    Nicholas Alexander was among a small group standing watch over the park Wednesday evening around sunset. Alexander, once unhoused, praised the park as a place that needy people have been able to go for decades to find assistance. He said he was part of the group that helped tear down a university-erected fence in 2022. “This park has always helped the counterculture and the disenfranchised,” he said, “and it’d be a shame if it was taken from us now, because where else will we go?”

    Another member of the group watching the park, Sylvia Tree, said she had graduated from Berkeley in 2021. She described the conflict as “a struggle based on the land.”

    “It’s about a place where people who don’t own any land can have a little piece of it, a piece that you can grow things on, that you can have sunshine on, that you can meet your friends on,” said Tree, 25. “There’s nobody who controls it. There’s nobody who’s selling you something.”

    Such passionate advocacy has become a perennial rite at the small patch of green just south of the campus and a few paces east of Telegraph Avenue.

    It began more than half a century ago, in 1969, when the UC system’s founding campus announced its plan for development on what was then an empty lot. Hundreds of students and community activists had another idea, dragging sod, trees and flowers to the lot and proclaiming it People’s Park. The university responded by erecting a fence.

    The student newspaper, the Daily Californian, urged students to “take back the park.” More than 6,000 people marched down Telegraph, where they were confronted by law enforcement. In the clash that followed, one man died and scores were injured.

    In the decades since, the university has made repeated efforts to reclaim the property, once attempting to construct a parking lot on the edge of the park. A new generation of demonstrators arrived, with shovels and picks, to uproot the asphalt and restore plant life.

    In the early 1990s, a young machete-wielding activist infuriated by the university’s construction of volleyball courts at the park was shot and killed by police after she broke into the campus residence of then-Chancellor Chang-Lin Tien. Police said they found a note in the teenager’s bag. It read: “We are willing to die for this piece of land. Are you?”

    The push for the university to develop the property gained new life after Christ became chancellor in 2017 amid a student housing crisis. With Berkeley providing housing to a lower percentage of its students than any other UC campus, Christ promised to double the number of beds within a decade. She made it clear that she considered People’s Park — long a “third rail” that campus leaders avoided — a good location for housing.

    Activists gather on a rooftop in People's Park.

    The tensions over UC Berkeley’s efforts to develop People’s Park have spawned more than half a century of activism and debate.

    (Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

    Opponents of the housing development contend that UC Berkeley has not done enough to study alternative sites. Their cause got a boost in December, when a unit of the National Trust for Historic Preservation wrote a letter calling for “exploring all possible opportunities” for preservation of the park.

    The university counters that its plan does acknowledge the historic nature of the park while also trying to resolve problems that have plagued the site and nearby streets in recent years, including homeless encampments, open drug use, petty theft and violence. UC Police Chief Yogananda Pittman characterized this week’s action as necessary to provide members of the community with “the safety and security they need and deserve.”

    The university released results of a survey in 2021 that showed students favor the project by 56% to 31%. More recently, in an effort to address complaints that the proposed development would displace unhoused people living in the park, the university hired a full-time social worker and said most park denizens had been relocated to a Quality Inn and offered support services.

    But the project suffered a setback early last year when a state appellate court ruled that UC had not properly complied with the California Environmental Quality Act, a decades-old law known as CEQA, which requires state and local governments to consider the environmental impacts of certain construction and housing projects. The court found the university had not properly addressed the issue of noise — specifically the noise generated by students who might drink and hold “unruly parties,” as some neighbors asserted in documents submitted to the court.

    The court also ruled that the campus had not properly justified its decision not to consider alternative locations for the housing development. UC attorneys have said that because the project’s aim is to repurpose the park, no alternative would suffice.

    The university appealed the decision to the state Supreme Court and also turned to the Legislature. Lawmakers passed a law, signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom in September, designed to make it easier for universities to build housing and overcome lawsuits from residents who raise noise concerns as a potential problem.

    All parties in the dispute await a decision by the high court, and the new law presumably will factor into its deliberations.

    The last concerted effort by UC to take control of the park for construction came in August 2022. Just hours after an Alameda County judge issued a tentative ruling that the university could begin clearing the park, construction machinery moved into place. But the 2 a.m. operation soon drew protesters who confronted construction crews, toppling a newly erected chain-link fence and streaming into the park, where they were tackled by California Highway Patrol officers.

    By day’s end, the university ended the standoff by suspending its effort to take control of the park.

    Berkeley City Councilmember Kate Harrison issued a public letter this week calling on police involved in any new go-round with protesters to “follow the City of Berkeley’s rules concerning use of ‘less-lethal’ weapons and tactics,” which include a ban on the use of pepper spray and tear gas. Harrison added: “These rules, established to protect human life and people’s first amendment rights, are core to our City’s value.”

    Staff photographer Jason Armond contributed to this report.

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    Hannah Wiley, Jessica Garrison, James Rainey

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  • Toll Brothers, Inc. (NYSE:TOL) Stock Position Raised by State of Alaska Department of Revenue

    Toll Brothers, Inc. (NYSE:TOL) Stock Position Raised by State of Alaska Department of Revenue

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    State of Alaska Department of Revenue lifted its position in Toll Brothers, Inc. (NYSE:TOLFree Report) by 1.8% in the 3rd quarter, according to the company in its most recent 13F filing with the SEC. The institutional investor owned 12,996 shares of the construction company’s stock after buying an additional 235 shares during the quarter. State of Alaska Department of Revenue’s holdings in Toll Brothers were worth $961,000 as of its most recent filing with the SEC.

    A number of other hedge funds have also recently added to or reduced their stakes in the company. Bank Julius Baer & Co. Ltd Zurich increased its holdings in Toll Brothers by 104,751.7% in the second quarter. Bank Julius Baer & Co. Ltd Zurich now owns 79,592,943 shares of the construction company’s stock worth $6,293,414,000 after buying an additional 79,517,033 shares during the last quarter. Vanguard Group Inc. increased its holdings in Toll Brothers by 9.1% in the first quarter. Vanguard Group Inc. now owns 11,623,797 shares of the construction company’s stock worth $546,551,000 after buying an additional 968,528 shares during the last quarter. Greenhaven Associates Inc. increased its holdings in Toll Brothers by 0.3% in the third quarter. Greenhaven Associates Inc. now owns 5,553,907 shares of the construction company’s stock worth $410,767,000 after buying an additional 15,960 shares during the last quarter. State Street Corp increased its holdings in Toll Brothers by 1.1% in the first quarter. State Street Corp now owns 4,070,929 shares of the construction company’s stock worth $191,415,000 after buying an additional 45,004 shares during the last quarter. Finally, Dimensional Fund Advisors LP increased its holdings in Toll Brothers by 10.3% in the first quarter. Dimensional Fund Advisors LP now owns 3,773,505 shares of the construction company’s stock worth $177,444,000 after buying an additional 353,364 shares during the last quarter. Institutional investors and hedge funds own 91.11% of the company’s stock.

    Analyst Upgrades and Downgrades

    TOL has been the topic of a number of research reports. Barclays increased their price objective on Toll Brothers from $74.00 to $95.00 and gave the stock an “underweight” rating in a report on Thursday, December 7th. Royal Bank of Canada increased their price target on Toll Brothers from $90.00 to $97.00 and gave the company an “outperform” rating in a report on Thursday, December 7th. Raymond James increased their price target on Toll Brothers from $110.00 to $120.00 and gave the company a “strong-buy” rating in a report on Friday, December 8th. The Goldman Sachs Group increased their price target on Toll Brothers from $68.00 to $78.00 and gave the company a “sell” rating in a report on Thursday, December 7th. Finally, UBS Group increased their price target on Toll Brothers from $96.00 to $112.00 and gave the company a “buy” rating in a report on Thursday, December 7th. Two investment analysts have rated the stock with a sell rating, two have issued a hold rating, nine have given a buy rating and one has assigned a strong buy rating to the company’s stock. According to MarketBeat, the stock currently has an average rating of “Moderate Buy” and an average price target of $96.46.

    View Our Latest Research Report on TOL

    Insider Buying and Selling

    In related news, Director Paul E. Shapiro sold 1,000 shares of the firm’s stock in a transaction on Tuesday, October 17th. The stock was sold at an average price of $73.36, for a total value of $73,360.00. Following the completion of the transaction, the director now directly owns 130,033 shares of the company’s stock, valued at $9,539,220.88. The sale was disclosed in a document filed with the SEC, which can be accessed through the SEC website. In other Toll Brothers news, Director Paul E. Shapiro sold 1,000 shares of Toll Brothers stock in a transaction on Tuesday, October 17th. The stock was sold at an average price of $73.36, for a total transaction of $73,360.00. Following the completion of the transaction, the director now directly owns 130,033 shares of the company’s stock, valued at $9,539,220.88. The sale was disclosed in a document filed with the SEC, which can be accessed through this hyperlink. Also, Director Paul E. Shapiro sold 3,518 shares of Toll Brothers stock in a transaction on Thursday, December 7th. The shares were sold at an average price of $91.41, for a total value of $321,580.38. Following the transaction, the director now directly owns 129,808 shares of the company’s stock, valued at $11,865,749.28. The disclosure for this sale can be found here. Insiders sold a total of 21,273 shares of company stock valued at $2,112,723 over the last ninety days. 1.79% of the stock is owned by company insiders.

    Toll Brothers Trading Down 2.0 %

    Shares of Toll Brothers stock opened at $100.76 on Wednesday. The company’s fifty day simple moving average is $88.57 and its 200-day simple moving average is $81.30. The company has a market cap of $10.49 billion, a price-to-earnings ratio of 8.13, a PEG ratio of 1.05 and a beta of 1.62. The company has a current ratio of 4.78, a quick ratio of 0.86 and a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.42. Toll Brothers, Inc. has a 1 year low of $49.87 and a 1 year high of $105.91.

    Toll Brothers (NYSE:TOLGet Free Report) last announced its quarterly earnings data on Wednesday, December 6th. The construction company reported $4.11 earnings per share (EPS) for the quarter, topping the consensus estimate of $3.72 by $0.39. The business had revenue of $3.02 billion for the quarter, compared to the consensus estimate of $2.78 billion. Toll Brothers had a net margin of 13.73% and a return on equity of 20.97%. Toll Brothers’s quarterly revenue was down 18.6% on a year-over-year basis. During the same quarter last year, the company posted $4.67 earnings per share. As a group, sell-side analysts expect that Toll Brothers, Inc. will post 12.23 EPS for the current year.

    Toll Brothers Dividend Announcement

    The company also recently announced a quarterly dividend, which will be paid on Friday, January 26th. Investors of record on Friday, January 12th will be given a $0.21 dividend. The ex-dividend date is Thursday, January 11th. This represents a $0.84 annualized dividend and a yield of 0.83%. Toll Brothers’s dividend payout ratio (DPR) is currently 6.78%.

    Toll Brothers Company Profile

    (Free Report)

    Toll Brothers, Inc, together with its subsidiaries, designs, builds, markets, sells, and arranges finance for a range of detached and attached homes in luxury residential communities in the United States. It designs, builds, markets, and sells condominiums through Toll Brothers City Living. The company also develops a range of single-story living and first-floor primary bedroom suite home designs, as well as communities with recreational amenities, such as golf courses, marinas, pool complexes, country clubs, and fitness and recreation centers; and develops, operates, and rents apartments.

    See Also

    Institutional Ownership by Quarter for Toll Brothers (NYSE:TOL)

    Receive News & Ratings for Toll Brothers Daily – Enter your email address below to receive a concise daily summary of the latest news and analysts’ ratings for Toll Brothers and related companies with MarketBeat.com’s FREE daily email newsletter.

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  • Clarius Group LLC Decreases Stake in Vulcan Materials (NYSE:VMC)

    Clarius Group LLC Decreases Stake in Vulcan Materials (NYSE:VMC)

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    Clarius Group LLC reduced its holdings in Vulcan Materials (NYSE:VMCFree Report) by 15.5% during the 3rd quarter, according to the company in its most recent Form 13F filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The institutional investor owned 1,257 shares of the construction company’s stock after selling 231 shares during the period. Clarius Group LLC’s holdings in Vulcan Materials were worth $254,000 as of its most recent filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    Several other hedge funds and other institutional investors have also recently modified their holdings of the business. Vanguard Group Inc. lifted its stake in shares of Vulcan Materials by 1.3% in the first quarter. Vanguard Group Inc. now owns 14,535,907 shares of the construction company’s stock worth $2,670,246,000 after buying an additional 184,543 shares in the last quarter. BlackRock Inc. lifted its stake in shares of Vulcan Materials by 1.4% in the second quarter. BlackRock Inc. now owns 10,257,453 shares of the construction company’s stock worth $2,312,440,000 after buying an additional 139,264 shares in the last quarter. State Street Corp lifted its stake in shares of Vulcan Materials by 2.3% in the second quarter. State Street Corp now owns 5,385,006 shares of the construction company’s stock worth $1,213,996,000 after buying an additional 123,332 shares in the last quarter. Clearbridge Investments LLC lifted its stake in shares of Vulcan Materials by 0.8% in the second quarter. Clearbridge Investments LLC now owns 3,025,765 shares of the construction company’s stock worth $682,128,000 after buying an additional 22,933 shares in the last quarter. Finally, Geode Capital Management LLC lifted its stake in shares of Vulcan Materials by 3.1% in the second quarter. Geode Capital Management LLC now owns 2,944,739 shares of the construction company’s stock worth $662,189,000 after buying an additional 89,322 shares in the last quarter. 90.10% of the stock is owned by hedge funds and other institutional investors.

    Analysts Set New Price Targets

    Several equities research analysts recently issued reports on the stock. Raymond James cut their price objective on shares of Vulcan Materials from $240.00 to $225.00 and set an “outperform” rating for the company in a research report on Monday, October 30th. StockNews.com assumed coverage on shares of Vulcan Materials in a research report on Thursday, October 5th. They set a “hold” rating for the company. JPMorgan Chase & Co. upgraded shares of Vulcan Materials from a “neutral” rating to an “overweight” rating and raised their price objective for the stock from $240.00 to $245.00 in a research report on Tuesday, December 12th. Stifel Nicolaus raised their price objective on shares of Vulcan Materials from $260.00 to $279.00 and gave the stock a “buy” rating in a research report on Tuesday, December 19th. Finally, Seaport Res Ptn upgraded shares of Vulcan Materials from a “neutral” rating to a “buy” rating in a research report on Tuesday, October 24th. Three equities research analysts have rated the stock with a hold rating and twelve have given a buy rating to the stock. Based on data from MarketBeat.com, the stock has an average rating of “Moderate Buy” and an average target price of $241.64.

    Get Our Latest Research Report on VMC

    Insiders Place Their Bets

    In other news, SVP David P. Clement sold 764 shares of Vulcan Materials stock in a transaction dated Thursday, November 30th. The stock was sold at an average price of $212.00, for a total value of $161,968.00. Following the completion of the transaction, the senior vice president now owns 2,887 shares in the company, valued at approximately $612,044. The sale was disclosed in a document filed with the Securities & Exchange Commission, which is accessible through this link. In other Vulcan Materials news, SVP David P. Clement sold 764 shares of the stock in a transaction that occurred on Thursday, November 30th. The shares were sold at an average price of $212.00, for a total value of $161,968.00. Following the sale, the senior vice president now directly owns 2,887 shares of the company’s stock, valued at approximately $612,044. The sale was disclosed in a legal filing with the SEC, which is available at the SEC website. Also, Director Melissa H. Anderson sold 500 shares of Vulcan Materials stock in a transaction on Tuesday, October 31st. The stock was sold at an average price of $195.92, for a total transaction of $97,960.00. Following the sale, the director now directly owns 1,530 shares of the company’s stock, valued at $299,757.60. The disclosure for this sale can be found here. Insiders have sold a total of 8,228 shares of company stock worth $1,739,020 in the last quarter. 0.57% of the stock is owned by company insiders.

    Vulcan Materials Trading Up 0.7 %

    NYSE VMC opened at $227.01 on Monday. The company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.52, a quick ratio of 2.47 and a current ratio of 3.13. The firm has a market cap of $30.16 billion, a price-to-earnings ratio of 36.79, a PEG ratio of 1.42 and a beta of 0.79. The firm has a 50 day simple moving average of $213.29 and a 200-day simple moving average of $214.85. Vulcan Materials has a one year low of $159.76 and a one year high of $229.75.

    Vulcan Materials (NYSE:VMCGet Free Report) last released its earnings results on Thursday, October 26th. The construction company reported $2.29 earnings per share (EPS) for the quarter, topping analysts’ consensus estimates of $2.19 by $0.10. The company had revenue of $2.19 billion for the quarter, compared to analyst estimates of $2.17 billion. Vulcan Materials had a net margin of 10.74% and a return on equity of 12.35%. The firm’s quarterly revenue was up 4.7% on a year-over-year basis. During the same period in the prior year, the business earned $1.78 EPS. Equities research analysts anticipate that Vulcan Materials will post 6.87 EPS for the current fiscal year.

    Vulcan Materials Announces Dividend

    The business also recently announced a quarterly dividend, which was paid on Wednesday, November 29th. Investors of record on Monday, November 13th were paid a dividend of $0.43 per share. The ex-dividend date of this dividend was Friday, November 10th. This represents a $1.72 annualized dividend and a yield of 0.76%. Vulcan Materials’s payout ratio is 27.88%.

    About Vulcan Materials

    (Free Report)

    Vulcan Materials Company, together with its subsidiaries, produces and supplies construction aggregates primarily in the United States. It operates through four segments: Aggregates, Asphalt, Concrete, and Calcium. The Aggregates segment provides crushed stones, sand and gravel, sand, and other aggregates; and related products and services that are applied in construction and maintenance of highways, streets, and other public works, as well as in the construction of housing and commercial, industrial, and other nonresidential facilities.

    Further Reading

    Institutional Ownership by Quarter for Vulcan Materials (NYSE:VMC)

    Receive News & Ratings for Vulcan Materials Daily – Enter your email address below to receive a concise daily summary of the latest news and analysts’ ratings for Vulcan Materials and related companies with MarketBeat.com’s FREE daily email newsletter.

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  • These 20 stocks soared the most in 2023

    These 20 stocks soared the most in 2023

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    (Updated with Friday’s closing prices.)

    The 2023 rally for stocks in the U.S. accelerated as more investors bought the idea that the Federal Reserve succeeded in its effort to bring inflation to heel.

    The S&P 500
    SPX
    ended Friday with a 24.2% gain for 2023, following a 19.4% decline in 2022. (All price changes in this article exclude dividends). Among the 500 stocks, 65% were up for 2023. Below is a list of the year’s 20 best performers in the benchmark index.

    This article focuses on large-cap stocks. MarketWatch Editor in Chief Mark DeCambre took a broader look at all U.S. stocks of companies with market capitalizations of at least $1 billion, to list 10 with gains ranging from 412% to 1,924%.

    The Fed began raising short-term interest rates and pushing long-term rates higher in March 2022 by allowing its bond portfolio to run off. That explains the poor performance for stocks in 2022, as bonds and even bank accounts because more attractive to investors.

    The central bank hasn’t raised the federal-funds rate since moving it to the current target range of 5.25% to 5.50% in July, and its economic projections point to three rate cuts in 2024.

    Investors are anticipating the return to a low-rate environment by scooping up 10-year U.S. Treasury notes
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y,
    whose yield ended the year at 3.88%, down from 4.84% on Oct. 27 — the day of the S&P 500’s low for the second half of 2023.

    Read: Treasury yields end mostly higher but little changed on year after wild 2023

    Before looking at the list of best-performing stocks of 2023, here’s a summary of how the 11 sectors of the S&P 500 performed, with the full index and three more broad indexes at the bottom:

    Sector or index

    2023 price change

    2022 price change

    Price change since end of 2021

    Forward P/E

    Forward P/E at end of 2022

    Forward P/E at end of 2023

    Information Technology

    56.4%

    -28.9%

    11.5%

    26.7

    20.0

    28.2

    Communication Services

    54.4%

    -40.4%

    -7.6%

    17.4

    14.3

    21.0

    Consumer Discretionary

    41.0%

    -37.6%

    -11.4%

    26.2

    21.7

    34.7

    Industrials

    16.0%

    -7.1%

    8.0%

    20.0

    18.7

    22.0

    Materials

    10.2%

    -14.1%

    -4.9%

    19.5

    15.8

    16.6

    Financials

    9.9%

    -12.4%

    -3.4%

    14.6

    13.0

    16.3

    Real Estate

    8.3%

    -28.4%

    -21.6%

    18.3

    16.9

    24.7

    Healthcare

    0.3%

    -3.6%

    -3.3%

    18.2

    17.7

    17.3

    Consumer Staples

    -2.2%

    -3.2%

    -5.4%

    19.3

    20.6

    21.4

    Energy

    -4.8%

    59.0%

    51.8%

    10.9

    9.8

    11.1

    Utilities

    -10.2%

    -1.4%

    -11.4%

    15.9

    18.7

    20.4

    S&P 500
    SPX
    24.2%

    -19.4%

    0.4%

    19.7

    16.8

    21.6

    Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA
    13.7%

    -8.8%

    3.8%

    17.6

    16.6

    18.9

    Nasdaq Composite
    COMP
    43.4%

    -33.1%

    -3.5%

    26.9

    22.6

    32.0

    Nasdaq-100
    NDX
    53.8%

    -33.0%

    3.5%

    26.3

    20.9

    30.3

    Source: FactSet

    A look at 2023 price action really needs to encompass what took place in 2022 for context. The broad indexes haven’t moved much from their levels at the end of 2022 (again, excluding dividends). We have included current forward price-to-earnings ratios along with those at the end of 2021 and 2022. These valuations have declined a bit, which may provide some comfort for investors wondering how likely it is for stocks to continue to rally in 2024.

    Biggest price increases among the S&P 500

    Here are the 20 stocks in the S&P 500 whose prices rose the most in 2023:

    Company

    Ticker

    2023 price change

    2022 price change

    Price change since end of 2021

    Forward P/E

    Forward P/E at end of 2022

    Forward P/E at end of 2021

    Nvidia Corp.

    NVDA,
    239%

    -50%

    68%

    24.9

    34.4

    58.0

    Meta Platforms Inc. Class A

    META,
    -1.22%
    194%

    -64%

    5%

    20.2

    14.7

    23.5

    Royal Caribbean Group

    RCL,
    -0.37%
    162%

    -36%

    68%

    14.3

    14.9

    232.4

    Builders FirstSource Inc.

    BLDR,
    -1.02%
    157%

    -24%

    95%

    14.2

    10.7

    13.3

    Uber Technologies Inc.

    UBER,
    -2.49%
    149%

    -41%

    47%

    56.9

    N/A

    N/A

    Carnival Corp.

    CCL,
    -0.70%
    130%

    -60%

    -8%

    18.7

    41.3

    N/A

    Advanced Micro Devices Inc.

    AMD,
    -0.91%
    128%

    -55%

    2%

    39.7

    17.7

    43.1

    PulteGroup Inc.

    PHM,
    -0.26%
    127%

    -20%

    81%

    9.1

    6.3

    6.2

    Palo Alto Networks Inc.

    PANW,
    -0.24%
    111%

    -25%

    59%

    50.2

    38.0

    70.1

    Tesla Inc.

    TSLA,
    -1.86%
    102%

    -65%

    -29%

    66.2

    22.3

    120.3

    Broadcom Inc.

    AVGO,
    -0.55%
    100%

    -16%

    68%

    23.2

    13.6

    19.8

    Salesforce Inc.

    CRM,
    -0.92%
    98%

    -48%

    4%

    28.0

    23.8

    53.5

    Fair Isaac Corp.

    FICO,
    -0.46%
    94%

    38%

    168%

    47.1

    29.3

    28.7

    Arista Networks Inc.

    ANET,
    -0.62%
    94%

    -16%

    64%

    32.7

    22.3

    41.4

    Intel Corp.

    INTC,
    -0.28%
    90%

    -49%

    -2%

    26.6

    14.6

    13.9

    Jabil Inc.

    JBL,
    -0.45%
    87%

    -3%

    81%

    13.5

    7.9

    10.3

    Lam Research Corp.

    LRCX,
    -0.81%
    86%

    -42%

    9%

    25.2

    13.5

    20.2

    ServiceNow Inc.

    NOW,
    +0.57%
    82%

    -40%

    9%

    56.0

    42.6

    90.1

    Amazon.com Inc.

    AMZN,
    -0.94%
    81%

    -50%

    -9%

    42.0

    46.7

    64.9

    Monolithic Power Systems Inc.

    MPWR,
    -0.23%
    78%

    -28%

    28%

    49.1

    27.3

    57.9

    Source: FactSet

    Click on the tickers for more about each company.

    Click here for Tomi Kilgore’s detailed guide to the wealth of information available for free on the MarketWatch quote page.

    Don’t miss: Nvidia tops list of Wall Street’s 20 favorite stocks for 2024

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  • DocuSign's stock pops as company reportedly considers a sale

    DocuSign's stock pops as company reportedly considers a sale

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    One-time pandemic darling DocuSign Inc. may be looking to sign a deal of its own.

    The e-signature company is working with advisers as it considers a sale, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday afternoon. A deal for DocuSign
    DOCU,
    +11.37%
    ,
    valued at upwards of $11 billion, could result in one of the largest recent leveraged buyouts, the report said, noting that private-equity firms and technology companies were among the potential suitors.

    DocuSign shares were up more than 11% in afternoon trading Friday following the report.

    A DocuSign spokesperson said the company doesn’t comment on rumors or speculation.

    The company was a pandemic-era poster child as businesses looked for ways to get signatures on contracts, mortgages and other documents in a virtual world. But DocuSign has struggled to match its earlier growth rates as offices have resumed in-person activity, and management acknowledged a tough macroeconomic environment when DocuSign last posted earnings.

    DocuSign shares traded above $310 at their highest point in September 2021, but they closed Thursday near $56. The stock was changing hands just south of $64 Friday amid the intraday rally.

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  • Introducing BioWorm™: A Sustainable, Nature-Based Erosion & Sediment Control Solution Offering Efficiency and Affordability

    Introducing BioWorm™: A Sustainable, Nature-Based Erosion & Sediment Control Solution Offering Efficiency and Affordability

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    Press Release


    Dec 12, 2023

    Siltworm Inc., a leading provider of erosion and sediment control solutions, proudly unveils its latest innovation, BioWorm™ – a nature-based filter sock solution that sets a new standard for affordable sustainability and is 100% made in the USA.

    Siltworm Inc., a leading provider of erosion and sediment control solutions, is proud to announce the launch of its latest innovation, BioWorm™. This nature-based filter sock solution is 100% made in the USA and delivers up to a 95.7% sediment retention rate, as tested by Tri-Environmental using ASTM testing standards. The product is available for pre-order now for first quarter 2024 delivery.

    BioWorm™ is made with OEKO-TEX ECO PASSPORT certified fibers and textiles, which validate Siltworm Inc.’s commitment to providing sustainable products. The product is also made with a blend of kiln-dried/low-moisture wood material, featuring over 99% reclaimed content. BioWorm™ blends durability, sustainability, and affordability for your erosion and sediment control filter sock needs.

    “At Siltworm Inc., our dedication to innovation and sustainability shines brightly in our exceptional product lines, having intercepted more than 20 million pounds of sediment from waterways,” said Joe Moore, Founder and Chief Brand Ambassador. “With the introduction of BioWorm™, we now have the ability to continue helping construction sites keep our waters clean with an even more eco-conscious solution.”

    About Siltworm Inc.

    Headquartered in Merrillville, IN, with principal manufacturing facilities located in Elkhart, IN, Siltworm Inc. distributes its erosion and sediment control solutions nationally through business-to-business channels. At the heart of their product portfolio, Siltworm™ and BioWorm™, are cutting-edge filter socks primarily designed for safeguarding new residential, commercial, DOT, utility, or industrial construction projects where earth-disturbing activities occur along with uses specified in Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plans (SWPPP). Siltworm Inc. products have diverted over 30 million pounds of recyclable materials from landfills and have intercepted more than 20 million pounds of sediment from waterways.

    Siltworm Inc. is proud to announce that it ranks No. 3455 on the 2023 Inc. 5000, its annual list of the fastest-growing private companies in America. Additionally, they were ranked No. 39 among other Indiana-based companies on the list and No. 26 among those focused on environmental services.

    Source: Siltworm Inc.

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  • Mortgage rates' dip to 7% could be brief if jobs market stays strong, Fannie Mae economist says

    Mortgage rates' dip to 7% could be brief if jobs market stays strong, Fannie Mae economist says

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    November’s sharp pullback in 30-year fixed mortgage rates may not last if the labor market remains strong, said Mark Palim, deputy chief economist at Fannie Mae.

    Palim was speaking to the robust jobs report released on Friday, showing the U.S. added 199,000 jobs in November and that wages rose, albeit with the figures somewhat inflated by the return of striking workers from the auto industry and from Hollywood.

    Homebuyers can benefit from a robust labor market and the near 80 basis point decline in mortgage rates since the end of October, Palim said. But if the “labor markets remain this strong, we believe the pace of mortgage rate declines will likely not continue in the near term or may partially reverse,” he said in a statement.

    The benchmark 30-year fixed mortgage rate was edging down to 7.05% on Friday, after surging to nearly 8% in October, according to Mortgage Daily News.

    Optimism around the potential for falling mortgage costs to thaw home sales helped lift shares of Toll Brothers Inc.,
    TOL,
    +1.86%

    and a slew of other homebuilders tracked by the SPDR S&P Homebuilders ETF, 
    XH,
    to record highs earlier this week, even while investors in some homebuilder bonds have been sellers in recent weeks.

    Yields on 10-year
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    and 30-year Treasury notes
    BX:TMUBMUSD30Y
    were up sharply Friday, to about 4.23% and 4.32%, respectively, but still below the highs of about 5% in October. The surge in long-term borrowing costs was stoked by tough talk by Federal Reserve officials about the need to keep rates higher for longer to bring inflation down to a 2% annual target.

    Read: Solid job growth, sharp wage gains sends Treasury yields up by the most in months

    U.S. stocks were up Friday afternoon, shaking off earlier weakness following the jobs report. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA
    was 0.2% higher, further narrowing the gap between its last record close set two years ago, the S&P 500 index
    SPX
    and the Nasdaq Composite Index
    COMP
    also were up 0.2%, according to FactSet data.

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  • Consumer sentiment jumps in early December for the first increase in five months

    Consumer sentiment jumps in early December for the first increase in five months

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    This is a developing story. Stay tuned for updates here.

    The numbers: The University of Michigan’s gauge of consumer sentiment rose to a preliminary December reading of 69.4 from a six-month low of 61.3 in the prior month. This is the highest level since August.

    Economists polled by the Wall Street Journal had expected a December reading of 62.4.

    Expectations of inflation cooled in early December, according to the report.

    Americans think inflation will average a 3.1% rate over the next year, down from 4.5% in the prior month. That’s the lowest level since March 2021.

    Expectations for inflation over the next five years fell to 2.8% from 3.2% in November, which was the highest reading in over a decade.

    Key details: According to the report, a gauge of consumers’ views on current conditions jumped to 74 in December from 68.3 in the prior month, while a barometer of their expectations of the future rose to 66.4 from 56.8.

    Big picture: A lot of factors were behind the increase in confidence, with the solid job market and declining gasoline prices mentioned most often by economists. Stock prices have also been strong. Despite the gains, sentiment is still well below prepandemic levels.

    Market reaction: Stocks
    DJIA

    SPX
    were higher in early trading on Friday, while the 10-year Treasury yield
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    rose to 4.21% after the solid job report was released earlier in the morning.

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  • Toledo Is Hot for Housing. Plus, 2 Affordable Regions.

    Toledo Is Hot for Housing. Plus, 2 Affordable Regions.

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    The housing market’s stagnation this year is projected to carry over into 2024. But a forecast published today by Realtor.com identifies metro areas that are poised to see both rising prices and sales next year, with Toledo, Ohio, leading the way.

    Continue reading this article with a Barron’s subscription.

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  • 7% Dividend Yields or Higher: The S&P 500’s 6 Best Payouts

    7% Dividend Yields or Higher: The S&P 500’s 6 Best Payouts

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    7% Dividend Yields or Higher: The S&P 500’s 6 Best Payouts

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  • New-home sales drop in October to much lower level than expected

    New-home sales drop in October to much lower level than expected

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    The numbers: U.S. new-home sales fell 5.6% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 679,000 in October, from a revised 719,000 in September, the government reported Monday. 

    Analysts polled by the Wall Street Journal had forecast new-home sales to occur at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 725,000 in October.

    The data are often revised sharply….

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  • Health of several key sectors, including the U.S. consumer, plus an outlook from Fed’s Powell on radar this coming week

    Health of several key sectors, including the U.S. consumer, plus an outlook from Fed’s Powell on radar this coming week

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    Recession fears are rising. Nothing beats fear better than good information and that’s what we will get this week. Investors and economists will get good insight into the mood of U.S. consumers and hear the last words of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell ahead of the central bank’s next interest-rate meeting on Dec. 12-13.

    November consumer confidence

    Tuesday, 10:00 a.m. Eastern

    Economists surveyed by the Wall Street Journal expect that consumer’s view on the outlook have soured over the past few weeks. Geopolitical…

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  • Swiss National Bank Has $9.16 Million Stock Position in Fluor Co. (NYSE:FLR)

    Swiss National Bank Has $9.16 Million Stock Position in Fluor Co. (NYSE:FLR)

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    Swiss National Bank lifted its stake in shares of Fluor Co. (NYSE:FLRFree Report) by 0.8% during the 2nd quarter, according to the company in its most recent 13F filing with the SEC. The institutional investor owned 309,300 shares of the construction company’s stock after purchasing an additional 2,600 shares during the quarter. Swiss National Bank’s holdings in Fluor were worth $9,155,000 as of its most recent SEC filing.

    Several other institutional investors and hedge funds have also modified their holdings of FLR. Fifth Third Bancorp lifted its position in shares of Fluor by 46.5% during the 2nd quarter. Fifth Third Bancorp now owns 1,134 shares of the construction company’s stock worth $34,000 after buying an additional 360 shares during the last quarter. First Horizon Advisors Inc. lifted its position in shares of Fluor by 2,324.5% during the 1st quarter. First Horizon Advisors Inc. now owns 1,188 shares of the construction company’s stock worth $37,000 after buying an additional 1,139 shares during the last quarter. Atlas Capital Advisors LLC lifted its position in shares of Fluor by 665.0% during the 2nd quarter. Atlas Capital Advisors LLC now owns 1,836 shares of the construction company’s stock worth $45,000 after buying an additional 1,596 shares during the last quarter. State of Wyoming bought a new position in Fluor in the fourth quarter valued at about $113,000. Finally, Nomura Asset Management Co. Ltd. raised its position in Fluor by 29.9% in the first quarter. Nomura Asset Management Co. Ltd. now owns 4,561 shares of the construction company’s stock valued at $141,000 after purchasing an additional 1,051 shares during the last quarter. 99.20% of the stock is currently owned by institutional investors.

    Wall Street Analysts Forecast Growth

    Several research firms have commented on FLR. StockNews.com began coverage on Fluor in a research report on Thursday, October 5th. They issued a “hold” rating for the company. Credit Suisse Group increased their target price on Fluor from $32.00 to $38.00 and gave the company a “neutral” rating in a research report on Monday, August 7th. TheStreet upgraded Fluor from a “c” rating to a “b” rating in a research report on Friday, August 11th. Barclays increased their target price on Fluor from $30.00 to $39.00 and gave the company an “equal weight” rating in a research report on Tuesday, November 14th. Finally, UBS Group upgraded Fluor from a “neutral” rating to a “buy” rating and increased their target price for the company from $35.00 to $47.00 in a research report on Wednesday, October 4th. Four investment analysts have rated the stock with a hold rating and two have issued a buy rating to the company. Based on data from MarketBeat, the stock has a consensus rating of “Hold” and a consensus price target of $41.40.

    Check Out Our Latest Stock Analysis on Fluor

    Fluor Price Performance

    Shares of NYSE FLR opened at $37.93 on Friday. The company has a quick ratio of 1.61, a current ratio of 1.61 and a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.70. The company has a market capitalization of $6.46 billion, a PE ratio of 56.61 and a beta of 2.16. The firm has a fifty day simple moving average of $36.02 and a 200 day simple moving average of $32.65. Fluor Co. has a twelve month low of $25.69 and a twelve month high of $38.87.

    Fluor (NYSE:FLRGet Free Report) last posted its quarterly earnings data on Friday, November 3rd. The construction company reported $1.02 earnings per share for the quarter, topping the consensus estimate of $0.56 by $0.46. Fluor had a return on equity of 22.75% and a net margin of 1.10%. The firm had revenue of $3.96 billion during the quarter, compared to analyst estimates of $3.83 billion. During the same period last year, the company posted $0.07 EPS. The business’s quarterly revenue was up 9.7% on a year-over-year basis. On average, sell-side analysts forecast that Fluor Co. will post 2.62 EPS for the current year.

    About Fluor

    (Free Report)

    Fluor Corporation provides engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC); fabrication and modularization; operation and maintenance; asset integrity; and project management services worldwide. It operates through four segments: Energy Solutions, Urban Solutions, Mission Solutions, and Other. The Energy Solutions segment provides solutions to the energy transition markets, including asset decarbonization, carbon capture, renewable fuels, waste-to-energy, green chemicals, hydrogen, nuclear power, and other low-carbon energy sources.

    Further Reading

    Want to see what other hedge funds are holding FLR? Visit HoldingsChannel.com to get the latest 13F filings and insider trades for Fluor Co. (NYSE:FLRFree Report).

    Institutional Ownership by Quarter for Fluor (NYSE:FLR)

    Receive News & Ratings for Fluor Daily – Enter your email address below to receive a concise daily summary of the latest news and analysts’ ratings for Fluor and related companies with MarketBeat.com’s FREE daily email newsletter.

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  • WeWork’s stock has continued the strange trend of the bankruptcy bounce

    WeWork’s stock has continued the strange trend of the bankruptcy bounce

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    In a strange flashback to the demise of Bed Bath & Beyond Inc., WeWork Inc.’s stock soared on its over-the-counter debut this week, just days after the office sharing company filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. 

    WeWork
    WEWKQ,
    +23.02%

    filed for Chapter 11 in New Jersey on Monday and the beleaguered company’s stock was halted before the open that day. The New York Stock Exchange started the delisting process for WeWork that same day.

    Trading resumed over the counter on Wednesday, with WeWork shares ending their first session as an OTC stock up 91.5%.

    WeWork Chapter 11 a meme stock reality check: ‘No one should ever buy a stock that is rumored to be headed to bankruptcy

    A similar scenario happened when shares of Bed Bath & Beyond began trading over the counter in May after the Nasdaq started the delisting process for the bankrupt home-goods retailer and sometime meme-stock darling. Despite Bed Bath & Beyond’s well-documented woes, the stock ended its first session as an OTC stock up 30.4%. Bed Bath & Beyond’s shares were canceled in September.

    In June Overstock.com acquired Bed Bath & Beyond’s intellectual property, and began operating as Bed Bath & Beyond, before changing its corporate name to Beyond Inc.
    BYON,
    +2.06%
    .

    Like Bed Bath & Beyond, WeWork has continued to attract investor attention even as the company’s problems mounted. In mid-September WeWork’s stock saw a record run-up amid meme stock chatter, just weeks after WeWork warned that it may not be able to stay in business.

    Related: WeWork files for bankruptcy, capping a stunning downfall

    Users on social media noted the activity in WeWork’s share price this week, with Twitter user @asunapg warning Thursday that the OTC markets are “much more volatile and often a death trap for a lot of companies.”

    “Here we go again” tweeted @B2Investor Friday, with popcorn and clown emojis.

    WeWork’s stock ended Thursday’s session down 21.3% and the stock is down 12.7% Friday, compared with the S&P 500 index’s
    SPX
    gain of 1.3%.

    Related: Why investors gamble on shares of bankrupt companies — Bed Bath & Beyond, for example

    Tom Bruni, head of content at StockTwits, a social platform for investors and traders, told MarketWatch that, from what he is seeing, there doesn’t seem to be broad interest in the stock.

    “Unlike Bed Bath & Beyond and others where it seemed possible to restructure and continue operating, the current situation for WeWork is mainly a math equation,” he told MarketWatch. “It’s looking most likely that it’ll be bought out, the question is at what price and how much cash (if anything) does that leave for common shareholders to receive? The consensus right now is that all value from its 52 million shares of common stock will be wiped out.”

    Set against this backdrop, short covering could be driving the stock price up in the short term, according to Bruni. “Many market participants don’t want to risk being squeezed by unexpected good news, so they’d rather take their gains than ride it all the way down to zero,” he said. “Should that high short interest start to create sustainable upside momentum (more than a few days), then we’d likely see other traders get involved on the long side.”

    “But for now, with earnings season in full swing, there’s plenty of volatility and news elsewhere for investors/traders to focus on,” he added.

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