· 2d
Gap Beats Wall Street Expectations Thanks to Holiday-Season Sales
· 2d
Gap beats quarterly sales, profit estimates on strong holiday quarter
Gap Stock Jumps 15% on Earnings Beat and Strong Guidance
Gap stock was surging after the apparel retailer barreled through earnings expectations and delivered stronger-than-expected profit guidance. Gap stock jumped 15% to $22.41 in premarket trading Friday.
Analysts expect the Palo Alto, California-based company to report quarterly earnings at 38 cents per share, down from 49 cents per share in the year-ago period. Gap projects quarterly revenue of $4.07 billion,
Gap’s holiday-quarter profit is head and shoulders above Wall Street expectations and retailer speaks of a “reinvigoration” of its brands.
Along with its namesake brand, Gap owns Old Navy, Banana Republic and Athleta. Gap CEO Richard Dickson described the apparel company's most recent quarter, which impressed Wall Street and indicates the company is maintaining its turnaround.
Gap shares spike 17% as retailer blows away expectations again, showing turnaround has staying power
Gap has been in the midst of a turnaround under CEO Richard Dickson and has blown away Wall Street expectations for four quarters in a row.
Gap has been in the midst of a turnaround under CEO Richard Dickson and has blown away Wall Street expectations for four quarters in a row.
(GAP) on Thursday reported fiscal fourth-quarter earnings of $206 million. The San Francisco-based company said it had net income of 54 cents per share. The results exceeded Wall Street expectations.
The stock of The Gap (GAP) is up 15% after the clothing retailer announced strong financial results and provided bullish forward guidance that
The downfall of economically thriving Black communities stands as a stark reminder of the consequences of systemic racism.
Analysts on Wall Street project that Gap (GAP) will announce quarterly earnings of $0.36 per share in its forthcoming report, representing a decline of 26.5% year over year. Revenues are projected ...
2don MSN
Wall Street’s sell-off kicked back into gear after tariff whiplash and falling AI stocks dragged the market lower.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results