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2026-03-12 14:14:00| Fast Company

Dollar Generals fourth-quarter and full-year 2026 earnings report shows some successesthough you wouldnt know that by the reaction of its stock. Shares of Dollar General Corp (NYSE: DG) fell more than 6% in premarket trading on Thursday following the reports early-morning release.  And yet the discount retailer’s financial results include figures such as a 5.9% increase year-over-year (YOY) in quarter-four, with net sales increasing to $10.9 billion. Its 2025 net sales saw a similar jump of 5.2% YOY to $42.7 billion. Same-store sales also rose 4.3% YOY in the last quarter and 3% YOY for 2025.  Notably, Dollar General did predict slower growth for 2026. It expects net sales to increase between 3.7% and 4.2% over the year, while it estimates same store sales to grow 2.2% to 2.7%.  Dollar General store closures The 2025 report is free of one ominous announcement that loomed over last years results: additional store closures.  In its fiscal 2024 fourth-quarter report, Dollar General announced that it would shutter 96 of its namesake stores and 45 PopShelf locations, a retail chain the company owns. The 141 store closures followed 117 other shutterings throughout the year. This time around there are, at least, no additional store closure announcements, and in fact Dollar General ended the year with a net gain in stores. Dollar General shuttered 290 stores across the two brands in 2025 (which the 141 announced would be included in). But it opened 589 locations.  As of January 30, 2026, Dollar General had a total count of 20,893 stores, compared to 20,594 at the same time last year. At publication, Dollar General stock was down more than 7% in early Thursday trading.


Category: E-Commerce

 

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2026-03-12 13:53:35| Fast Company

A widening war in Iran has halted oil tankers, made targets of refineries and spooked investors worried about the cascading impact of spiking energy prices.In response, the International Energy Agency agreed on Wednesday to release the largest volume of emergency oil reserves in its history, with the Paris-based organization pledging to make 400 million barrels of oil available from its member nations’ stockpiles. The announcement marked a shift in momentum in government response to the war upending the flow of oil, with other global leaders previously indicating reluctance to tap into stockpiles.Here is a look at the energy supplies that countries hold and when they tap them: Many countries have reserves of oil Since war erupted in the Middle East on Feb. 28 with the U.S. and Israel’s joint attacks on Iran, the flow of oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz has all but stopped, cutting off a vital passageway where roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil sails through on a typical day. Major producers in the region like Iraq, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates have also cut production because they are running out of storage space. And Iran, Israel and the U.S. have all struck oil and gas facilities, worsening supply concerns.That has sent prices soaring with dramatic swings almost every day. On Monday, Brent crude oil the international standard surged to as high as nearly $120 a barrel, before falling to under $90 after President Donald Trump suggested the war could be near an end. But attacks have continued to escalate since, pushing prices back to about $100 a barrel.Countries around the world hold vast quantities of oil that they can use in the event of a crisis.Because oil is a global commodity and flooding the market with a sudden stream of new supply has international implications, countries often talk to one another before tapping reserves. That includes coordinating with the IEA, an organization created in the aftermath of the 1973 oil crisis. It has 32 members including Germany, Austria and Japan, all of whom confirmed Wednesday that they would be tapping parts of their reserves. The U.S., Mexico, Australia and other major countries are also part of the IEA.IEA members currently hold over 1.2 billion barrels of public emergency oil stocks, with a further 600 million barrels of industry stocks held under government obligation. The largest-ever previous collective release of emergency stocks by IEA member countries was 182.7 million barrels following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.Each of the IEA member countries promises to have a reserve at least equivalent to what they import in a 90-day period. The U.S. exports more than it imports, maintaining its own reserve known as the Strategic Petroleum Reserve despite there being no requirement. But for other countries, tapping their reserves means that they will eventually need to replenish what was removed.“Because of that, countries tend to keep reserves for a last-resort scenario, should the disruption be prolonged,” said Maksim Sonin, an energy executive who works with Stanford University’s Hydrogen Initiative. Timing a release is tricky Opting to use oil reserves is never a simple calculation, particularly when linked to a war with constantly shifting parameters and no clear timeline.When nations tap into strategic reserves in situations like the war in Iran, the oil is sold into the global marketplace, theoretically increasing supply and thus, lowering prices.“The key question on drawing down these reserves remains one of, ‘How long will this conflict last?'” said Tom Seng, an energy finance professor at Texas Christian University. “And, more importantly, ‘How long will the Strait of Hormuz remain blocked?'”Oil reserves have been tapped when the market has faced major disruption in the past, including wars in Iraq, Libya and, most recently, in Ukraine.Kenneth Medlock, senior director of the Center for Energy Studies at Rice University, said it’s not a matter of whether the current conflict is serious enough to merit intervention, but whether the precise moment has arrived.“The price is up but it could get worse,” Medlock said. “What happens if this drags on for two, three months? Then you run into a situation where you lose your buffer.” Shift in discussions and the impact on prices Before Wednesday, countries were reticent to tap reserves. Over the weekend, Trump downplayed the idea of turning to the U.S. reserve, maintaining that supplies were ample and prices would soon fall.But that’s changed. On Wednesday, the president told WKRC Local 12 in Cincinnati his administration would tap into the SPR “a little bit” to bring down prices. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright later confirmed the U.S. would release 172 million barrels as part of the IEA’s effort.Representatives from the Group of Seven major industrialized powers previously held off on using strategic reserves earlier this week, too. But G7 nations also joined the IEA effort. French President Emmanuel Macron praised Wednesday’s decision and noted the amount pledged by the G7 nations alone comprises 70% of the total, including 14.5 million barrels from France.Talk of tapping into national reserves helped ease energy markets earlier this week. But crude prices actually ticked up after the withdrawal was confirmed Wednesday, with Brent rising 4.8% to settle at $91.98. That is far higher than the roughly $70 it was selling for before the war started less than two weeks ago.Analysts maintain the IEA’s release of 400 million barrels is a short-term bridge, making up for just a few weeks of lost supply. Matt Sedensky and Wyatte Grantham-Philips, Associated Press


Category: E-Commerce

 

2026-03-12 13:21:00| Fast Company

Shares in Bumble Inc. (Nasdaq: BMBL), maker of the Bumble dating app, are surging this morning after the company announced its fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 results. The stock price bounce will be a relief to investors in dating companies, an industry that has suffered severely in recent years due to so-called swipe fatigue among users. Heres what you need to know about Bumbles earnings and why its stock is surging this morning. Bumble beats on Q4 revenue Today, Bumble reported its Q4 2025 results. And on the surface, those results werent great. As a matter of fact, just purely based on a year-over-year comparison, many of the companys most important metrics were down across the board, including: Total Revenue: $224.2 million, down 14.3% from the same quarter a year earlier. Bumble App Revenue: $181.0 million, down 14.8% Badoo App and Other Revenue: $43.2 million, down 12.4%  Total Paying Users: 3.3 million, down 20.5% Net loss: $611.1 million (versus a Net profit of $9.3 million in the same quarter a year earlier. Still, despite these poor year-over-year results, BMBL shares are popping this morningand there are two main reasons why. Bumble beats revenue expectations, and embraces AI The most immediate reason for Bumbles premarket stock bump is the companys total revenue of $224.2 million for the quarter. Yes, that sum is down more than 14% from the $261.6 million in revenue during the same quarter a year earlier, but critically, it still beat analysts relatively low expectations. As Reuters points out, analysts had expected Bumble to bring in $221.3 million in total revenue for the quarter. Bumble ended up beating this figure by nearly $3 million. And while that $3 million sum is relatively small, it signals to investors that things werent as bad in the quarter as many analysts expected. But investors are also likely feeling optimistic about another Bumble announcement today. On the companys earnings call, founder and CEO Whitney Wolfe Herd revealed that Bumble is revamping the app while also adding new AI tools to help users find more relevant matches. Wolfe Herd said that Bumble 2.0 will deliver a new experience designed to help address dating app users dissatisfaction. This dissatisfaction is usually referred to as swipe fatigue, and it has turned many younger people off dating apps in recent years. Those users have grown tired of the endless swipes that turn individuals into commodities and often lead to few real-world meetups. Bumble 2.0 introduces a chapter-based structure designed to help members tell their stories more authentically and understand one another more deeply, Wolfe Herd said on the call, according to a PitchBook transcript. This will enable them to see matches with stronger compatibility signals, build confidence in the experience, and get to meaningful in real life dates more quickly. Additionally, Wolfe Herd said the company is embracing artificial intelligence, announcing a new AI chatbot that is in development, called Bee. The chatbot is designed to interact with Bumble users to find out about their likes, interests, and dating objectives, and then use that information to better match them with other users who share the same interests and goals. Bee, Wolfe Herd told analysts, is designed to become a personal dating assistant and matchmaker, learning members’ values, relationship goals, communication style, lifestyle, and dating intentions through private conversations, then using those insights to identify mutual compatibility to find better dates with a higher degree of confidence and relevance. Bumble 2.0 and Bee are expected to roll out sometime in 2026. Some users in the key Gen Z age demographic have expressed skepticism about whether AI features will ultimately improve the dating app experience, as Fast Company reported last year. Still, as artificial intelligence is all the rage in the tech industry, investors are likely pleased to know that Bumble isnt sitting on the sidelines in the AI era. Bumble stock has had a horrible recent run After Bumbles Q4 results were announced, the price of the companys shares surged. As of this writing in premarket trading, BMBL shares are up over 23% to $3.51. Yesterday, the companys shares closed at $2.84. However, despite the massive stock price jump today, BMBL shares have had a horrible run in recent years. As of yesterday, the closing price of BMBL shares has fallen more than 41% over the past 12 months. And over the past five years, the companys stock price has collapsed by more than 95%. In March 2021, BMBL shares had traded over $74 apiece. But Bumble isnt the only dating app to see its stock price crash. Over the past year, Match Group, Inc. (Nasdaq: MTCH), owner of Tinder, Hinge, OkCupid, and more, has seen its shares decline about 2.4%. But over the past five years, the companys shares have declined a staggering 80%.  Likewise, shares of dating app maker Hello Group Inc. (Nasdaq: MOMO) have declined by more than 63% over the past five years. The only major dating app to be up over that five-year timeframe is Grindr Inc. (NYSE: GRND), whose shares have risen more than 19% over the period. The declines of these major dating app makers coincide with increasing dissatisfaction among dating app users, who frequently argue that the apps have become too expensive and that matches are fewer and farther between. While investors may be rewarding Bumble today, the company will need to address this user disillusionment if it is to successfully turn around its business.


Category: E-Commerce

 

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