Minutes after the close of Wednesday's debate, the Republican National Committee chairman leveled extraordinary criticism at the debate's host network, echoing his candidates on stage.

"I'm disappointed in the moderators. I’m disappointed in CNBC. … It was one 'gotcha' question, one personal question after another," Priebus said, in video aired afterward on CNN.

"I’m proud of our candidates for pretty much sticking together. I'm very disappointed in the moderators, and I'm very disappointed in CNBC."

Later, in a statement, he added: "CNBC should be ashamed of how this debate was handled."

The host network of the third Republican presidential debate quickly became the punching bag for Republican candidates and the national Republican Party, who both claimed the network and its moderators had unfairly treated the candidates.

A network spokesman defended its debate. "People who want to be President of the United States should be able to answer tough questions."

Real-estate magnate Donald Trump, the GOP front-runner, began the debate slamming CNBC's supposedly unfair question about his campaign's seriousness. He also ended the debate by ripping CNBC in his closing statement. Trump noted that he had successfully pushed the network into a two-hour debate timeframe, which he said was a sign of his negotiating talent.

"These folks, CNBC, they had it down to three, three and a half hours," he said. "I went out and said it's ridiculous. … In about two minutes, I renegotiated down to two hours so we could get the hell out of here. Not bad. And I will do that with the country: We will make America great again."

 

 

After the debate, Trump went to CNBC for an interview, where he said he had a good time but complained that the Democrats were tossed softballs in comparison during a CNN debate earlier in the month.

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush's (R) campaign manager reportedly confronted a CNBC producer about the debate. And Sen. Rand Paul's (R-Kentucky) campaign started fundraising off of the allegedly unfair debate format before the event was even over.

"Rand warned you the media would try and black out his message," Paul's campaign wrote to supporters. "And they are putting their plan into action. In the first 60 minutes of tonight's debate, he was given only 2 minutes to speak!"

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), meanwhile, delivered perhaps the biggest applause line of the night when he slammed CNBC's moderators for asking "cage match" questions.

CNBC moderator Carl Quintanilla asked Cruz about his hard-line voting record in the US Senate, questioning him about whether he was a problem-solver. But Cruz pivoted, pointing immediately to what he deemed unfair questions during the first hour of the debate.

"Let me say something at the outset: The question that have been asked so far in this debate illustrate why the American people don't trust the media," Cruz said.

"This is not a cage match. And you look at the questions: 'Donald Trump, are you a comic-book villain? Ben Carson, can you do math? John Kasich, will you insult two people over here? Marco Rubio, why don't you resign? Jeb Bush, why have your numbers fallen?' How about talking about the substantive issues."

Next up was retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, who has surged to become a front-runner along with Trump in recent weeks.

The audience booed loudly when a moderator challenged Carson over his controversial association with Mannatech, a nutritional-supplement company based in Texas. He appeared in a promotional video and spoke at two conferences hosted by the company, whose supplements have come under fire.

"That's easy to answer. I didn't have an involvement with them. Total propaganda. I did a couple speeches for them. I did speeches for other people — they were paid speeches. It is absolutely absurd to say that I had any kind of relationship with them. Do I take the product? Yes. I think it's a good product," he said.

The moderator then pointed out that Carson was on the company's webpage. Carson said he didn't give them permission to do that.

After the audience loudly booed the follow-up question, Carson simply said: "They know."

Finally, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) entered into a discussion with Quintanilla about fantasy football, and the investigation into allegations of misconduct within the two biggest daily-fantasy sports websites.

"Carl, are we really talking about getting the government involved in fantasy football? Wait a second. We have $19 trillion in debt. We have people out of work. We have ISIS and al Qaeda attacking us. And we're talking about fantasy football!" Christie exclaimed as the audience roared in approval.

Harwood then turned to climate change and asked what Christie would do to address the problem.

"First off, what we don't do is do what Hillary Clinton and John Kerry and Barack Obama want us to do, which is their solution for everything: Put more taxes on it," Christie said.

"What should we do?" Harwood interjected.

"What we should do is to be investing in all types of energy, John," Christie continued.

Harwood jumped into the conversation again to ask who should be doing the investing. Christie then turned on the moderator.

 

 

 

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Twitter still hasn't found a way to solve its problems despite having its celebrity CEO Jack Dorsey back.

The company turned in another disappointing report about the number of users it has, and on top of that, issued a sluggish outlook. Shares of the company sank 10% after hours.

Twitter's main problem has been: People who know how to use it, love it. Everyone else doesn’t really get it.

Dorsey acknowledged the issue during Twitter's last earnings call, and promised he would try to fix it.

But on Tuesday, Twitter said it added just 3 million new core users over the past quarter, bringing the total number of monthly active core users to 307 million. If you count the number of people who use a simplified version of the service called "SMS Fast Followers," then Twitter has 320 million.

Wall Street was looking for at least 323 million users. Since taking over Twitter in July, Dorsey and his team have introduced a number of new features, but most have been minor.

On the earnings call, the update they mentioned the most was "Moments," a new tab that aggregates tweets about news stories and trending topics. "Moments represents a real fundamental shift in our thinking," Dorsey said.

The feature doesn't follow the app's normal reverse chronological timeline format. Instead, tweets are strung together based on topics and "human narrative," he said.

Twitter is also making big bets on mobile video as a way to attract new people and make money.

Video views on Twitter and its mobile video services - Periscope and Vine have surged in the past six months. Sales from the quarter actually beat expectations, climbing to $569 million, versus a forecast of $560 million. But still not enough to make investors excited.

 

 

 

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Apple's profit soars 31% on the back of strong iPhone and Mac sales

The experts said it couldn't last, but Apple just keeps finding new ways to maintain its startup-like growth. Apple's profit jumped 31% last quarter, as customers continued to buy more expensive iPhones.

The average price that Apple customers spent on iPhones was $670 last quarter, up an impressive $67 from a year ago. The iPhone 6S Plus and iPhones with more storage have remained popular, and the costlier iGadgets mean higher profit margins.

The company sold 48 million iPhones last quarter, which was 22% more than it sold during the same period a year ago. But the money Apple made from those iPhone sales grew even more -- 36% -- over last year.

Customers were also buying Macs as Sales grew 3% last quarter to 5.7 million - an all-time record.

Even Apple's mysterious "other products" category had an outstanding quarter. Sales of those gadgets, which include iPods, Apple TVs and Apple Watches, grew 61% over last year. Apple still won't say how many of each of those product lines it sells, but something is catching on: Those gadgets brought in a collective $3 billion in sales last quarter.

Apple's services, including Apple Music, the iTunes App Store and music store, and iCloud, brought in a record $5.1 billion in sales. Yet iPads continued to be a sore spot for Apple. The company sold fewer than 10 million tablets, which was 20% fewer than it sold a year earlier.

Crucially, sales in China, which is Apple's second-largest market behind North America, grew 99% -- even as the economy continued to face struggles there. China is by far Apple's fastest growing market, and the company still believes that it will one day be its biggest.

Apple's overall sales rose 22% to $51.5 billion.

And Apple ended the quarter with a stunning $206 billion in cash. Shares of Apple (AAPL, Tech30) rose slightly after hours.

Tim Cook, Apple’s CEO expects Apple to have a very happy holiday season this quarter with a record number of iPhones sales, which will beat the 74.5 million iPhones sold during the last three months of 2014.

 

 

 

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E-commerce giant Alibaba reported third quarter sales and earnings Tuesday that easily beats Wall Street's forecasts.

Alibaba's revenue surged 32% in the quarter from a year ago, led by an explosion in mobile use by Alibaba customers.

The company ended the quarter with 346 million mobile monthly active users, an increase of nearly 60% from last year. Mobile revenue was up almost 200%.

"This was a great quarter for Alibaba Group, with strong growth across the board and particular outperformance in mobile," said Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang in a press release. "We are winning in mobile and remain focused on our top strategic priorities."

Alibaba also reported that sales in its small cloud computing business more than doubled in the quarter. Alibaba is trying to become a bigger player in this market, an area that has turned out to be incredibly lucrative for American rival Amazon (AMZN, Tech30).

Shares of Alibaba surged nearly 10% in premarket trading on the news. It's the latest sign that, after a rocky summer, the Chinese economy may be starting to stabilize a bit.

Alibaba (BABA, Tech30), like the rest of the Chinese stock market, has enjoyed a stunning comeback lately. Shares are up nearly 35% since hitting their lowest point ever on September 29.

The company also recently announced plans to purchase the remaining portion of Chinese online video site Youku Tudou (YOKU) that it didn't already own. Youku Tudou is often referred to as China's YouTube.

Investors have been concerned about Alibaba's valuation since its IPO more than a year ago and surged 38% on its first day of trading. Alibaba, which boasts a market value of $190 billion, is worth more than Walmart (WMT).

Alibaba's good news is also a blessing for Yahoo (YHOO, Tech30), which plans to sell the nearly 384 million shares of Alibaba that it owns before year's end.

 

 

 

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