Latest news with #SusanAnderson
Yahoo
27-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
e.l.f. Beauty's $1 Price Hike Seen As 'Manageable' Tariff Move: Analyst
Canaccord Genuity analyst Susan Anderson reiterated the Buy rating on e.l.f. Beauty (NYSE:ELF) with a price forecast of $105. On May 23, the firm disclosed via social media its plan to increase prices by $1 starting August 1, attributing the decision to the current tariff environment. According to Anderson, this development should be viewed positively, as it suggests the company's tariff impact is 'manageable' using its existing strategy while continuing to provide affordable, high-quality analyst also pointed out that the firm's planned price increase is justified because their current average unit retail price of around $6.50 is significantly lower than that of their mass-market peers, who average over $9. It is also even further below prestige brands. She also observed that the company's post suggests manufacturer's suggested retail prices (MSRP) may differ by retailer. The company's post mentioned 75% of its U.S. product lineup will continue to be priced below $10, while a comment on the same page indicated that 50% of its products globally remain under the $10 mark. The analyst noted that e.l.f. products tend to be priced higher in international markets like Europe compared to the U.S. However, Anderson also cautioned that despite the near-term optimism, recent tariff-related statements from President Donald Trump have reintroduced a level of uncertainty regarding the broader outcome of the tariff situation. With President Trump again stoking the flames of a trade war that appeared to be cooling with potential escalation against the European Union and on Apple products, tariff risk may not be in the rearview mirror just yet, she stated. The company announced that it will hold a webcast to discuss its fourth quarter fiscal 2025 results on Wednesday, May 28, 2025. Anderson stated that during its earnings, she anticipates the company will provide additional details on its strategy for addressing its manufacturing exposure in China. The analyst projects the company to report quarterly adjusted EPS of 71 cents, and sales of $327.7 million. Price Action: ELF shares are trading higher by 8.23% to $90.84 at last check Tuesday. Read Next:Image by LisaChi via Shutterstock Date Firm Action From To Feb 2022 DA Davidson Maintains Buy Jan 2022 Raymond James Maintains Outperform Nov 2021 DA Davidson Maintains Buy View More Analyst Ratings for ELF View the Latest Analyst Ratings Up Next: Transform your trading with Benzinga Edge's one-of-a-kind market trade ideas and tools. Click now to access unique insights that can set you ahead in today's competitive market. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? This article e.l.f. Beauty's $1 Price Hike Seen As 'Manageable' Tariff Move: Analyst originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
27-03-2025
- General
- Yahoo
‘It's horrifically beautiful,' The Clothesline Project, a visual testimony of violence on a community
BLACKSBURG, Va. (WFXR) – The Women's Center at Virginia Tech and United Feminist Movement are honoring the end of Women's History Month and the beginning of Sexual Assault Awareness Month with the Clothesline Project. The project is a visual testimony to the effects of gender-based and sexual violence on the community. Hundreds of shirts were hanging in Squires Hall on Tech's campus on Wednesday, March 27th, all representing someone's story of violence. (Photo Credit: Zoe Mowery/WFXR News) Southwest & Central Virginia Honor Flight prepares for 10th annual trip to Washington D.C. The shirts were on display side by side to show the victims standing together. Shirts are color-coded, with each color representing different traumas: White: for victims who have died of violence. Yellow or beige: survivors who have been battered or assaulted. Red, pink, or orange: For those who have been sexually assaulted. Blue or green: for survivors of incest or child sexual abuse. Purple or lavender: for those attacked because of their sexual orientation. Black: for those disabled because of violence. 'I think it is horrifically beautiful. Every shirt is a work of art. Every shirt tells the story of a survivor or a victim of gender based or sexual violence, and it's an awareness that people need to have about what happens in our community,' said Susan Anderson, the facilitator for the Clothesline Project on Virginia Tech's campus. (Photo Credit: Zoe Mowery/WFXR News) The display has been put up annually at Virginia Tech since the 1990s. The stories shown on the shirts represent the entire New River Valley, women, men, students, faculty, and community members. YMCA of Pulaski County announces funds to expand memberships, services 'It really raises awareness that violence happens in our community. We are no less safe or more safe than any other college community,' said Anderson, 'We want to raise that awareness that people can't have these prejudices like, 'violence only happens to poor people,' or 'people who live in that neighborhood' or 'this ethnic group' or 'those religious people.' Violence cuts across all socioeconomic lines, all kinds of lines, and it is something that we need to understand so that we can work as a community to try to lessen it.' (Photo Credit: Zoe Mowery/WFXR News) For the rest of this week, those who wish to create a shirt are able to from 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the women's center on Washington Street. This is open to everyone in the community. Another time to see some of the shirts collected over the decades is at the Annual Take Back the Night on April 10th at 7 p.m., an annual rally on campus against all forms of sexual violence. For more information about domestic violence, you can visit the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


BBC News
05-03-2025
- Sport
- BBC News
Bristol netball team 'devastated' at loss of Easton court
A netball team is campaigning to keep a full-sized netball court at a council-run leisure centre that is being redeveloped. The Back to Netball team from Easton, Bristol, says it will no longer be able to play at Easton Leisure Centre, which is run by Everyone Active on behalf of Bristol City Council., because it will no longer have a full-sized court. Susan Anderson, 62, from Hartcliffe, has been running the training sessions for 14 years and said the team was "devastated" as it had already had to relocate twice before. City councillor Stephen Williams, chair of the public health and communities committee, said he understood the disappointment but a small court would still be available. The Back to Netball sessions, run by Netball England, are designed to encourage women back to the than 20 women attend the sessions in Bristol – including women from diverse communities and team says it was not consulted in the decision to redevelop the court. Ms Anderson said: "There is a real community spirit amongst these girls."They just keep moving us and, everywhere we go, they keep taking the courts away. "They offered us another venue, but we want to stay here."Janie Randell, 42, from Fishponds, has played at the club since it started and said she would "fight" for the club because they were "such a great family". "Even on my lowest days, I come here and I feel so much better knowing I am around people and doing something good for myself," she team says it will have to find a new court to play on from 21 says the Easton Leisure centre court worked well because it was completely private, which it says also enabled Muslim women to play in a women-only environment. Ayan Mussa, 33, from Eastville, is one of them, and said: "This netball club means the world to me as a mum of four young kids."It's a really nice inclusive session where all women from all communities and backgrounds come together. "Without it I don't know what I would be doing." She added she was not sure she would be able to carry on attending sessions if they were not at the leisure centre. Another player, Merriel Waggoner, 57, from Ashley Down, said: "I have never known something so joyous, it's laughter from beginning to end. "I think it's a beautiful example of what community sport should and could be." Williams said as part of a 15-year contract with Everyone Active, the council had invested £8m in five of the city's major leisure and sporting facilities."A dedicated women's only gym, additional studio space, refurbishment of poolside areas, improvements to the reception area, and a new soft play facility will be delivered as part of the £3.3m upgrade for Easton Leisure Centre," he said."We understand the disappointment of the team impacted by a reduction in the sports hall space and netball court size. "Following these refurbishment works the new court, although no longer full-size, remains available for use and we are working with our leisure operator to identify appropriate alternative venues within our leisure sites and across Bristol's community-owned and managed facilities."