Showing posts with label FT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FT. Show all posts

Morning Movers: MLM, HHS, MA, VNO Down; ADM, BZ, OSK Up

Martin Marietta (MLM) Q3 beat earnings estimates with $1.23 per share in profit, but fell short of the sales estimates, and forecast ’09 EPS well below estimates at $2.20 to $2.45 per share, versus the consensus $2.78. The stock is down 5.4% at $82.25.
Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) missed revenue estimates for Q3 by a cool $3 billion, reporting $14.92 billion, down 30%, while beating EPS estimates by 20 cents with 77 cents per share. The company said it sees demand improving. The stock is up 72 cents or 2.4% at $31.25.
Boise (BZ), maker of paper and packaging products, beat EPS estimates by 2 cents and reported sales down 20%, year over year, to $508 million, missing estimates. The stock is up 19 cents, or 4%, at $4.90.
Direct marketing firm Harte Hanks (HHS) met EPS estimates for 22 cents per share, while reporting a 23% drop in revenue, missing the average $216 million estimate by $7 million. The stock is down 11 cents, or 1%, at $11.31.
Mastercard (MA) beat EPS estimates by a mile with $3.48 per share versus the $2.94 average estimate, as revenue rose 2% to $1.36 billion, beating estimates. Purchases globally were about flat with last year, the company said. The company said it will file a universal shelf registration this month. The stock was down $9.21, or 4.4%, at $213.53.
Rugged vehicle maker OshKosh (OSK) is up $2.25, or 7%, at $34.08, after the company this morning handily beat earnings estimates with 27 cents per share, with sales falling 20% but still beating estimates at $1.49 billion. The company forecast revenue growth in 2010 and expects to be “solidly profitable.”
Hospital owner Tenet Healthcare (THC) beat EPS estimates with a profit of 3 cents versus the average 2-cent loss projected, as revenue rose 6% to $2.26 billion, slightly ahead of estimates. Shares were unchanged at $5.30.
Commercial REIT Vornado Realty Trust (VNO) beat estimates by 8 cents with $1.25 per share a! s revenu e fell about 1% year over year to $671.2 million, ahead of estimates. The stock is down 71 cents, or 1%, at $59.56.

Stocks: Ready to hold steady

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- U.S. stocks were expected to open little changed Tuesday, while world markets responded positively to indications that the Federal Reserve is prepared to keep interest rates at very low levels.
The Dow Jones industrial average (INDU), S&P 500 (SPX) and Nasdaq (COMP) futures were slightly negative. Stock futures indicate the possible direction of the markets when they open at 9:30 a.m. ET.

Investors head into Tuesday's session mulling the latest data on the troubled housing market, and awaiting a new reading on consumer confidence that's on tap.

A slew of reports released last week suggest that the housing market remains a drag on an economy that otherwise shows signs of improving.
On top of home price data from the Case-Shiller 20-City Index, investors will also look at corporate results from homebuilder Lennar for a reading on the sector.
In the afternoon, Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke will deliver a lecture at George Washington University, and a House Financial Services subcommittee will hold a hearing on aid to the eurozone.

Regional banks ready to rally

U.S. stocks rallied Monday, after Bernanke's comments on the job market gave investors reason to believe the central bank will keep interest rates low.
World markets: European stocks were mixed in afternoon trading. Britain's FTSE 100 (UKX) was unchanged, the DAX (DAX) in Germany rose 0.6% and France's CAC 40 (CAC40) dropped 0.2%.
Asian markets ended mixed. The Shanghai Composite (SHCOMP) shed 0.2%, the Hang Seng (HSI) in Hong Kong gained 1.8% and Japan's Nikkei (N225) jumped 2.4%.
Economy: Home prices in 20 major cities fell to the lowest level since 2002, according to S&P/Case-Shiller.
The index for January dropped 3.8%, after a 4.1% drop in the month prior.
The Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index for March is expected to come in at 70.1, according to a survey of analysts by Briefing.com, down from 70.8 in February.
Companies: Lennar (LEN) posted earnings of 8 cents per share on revenue of $725 million, figures that topped analysts' estimates. The homebuilder said it has seen an uptick in sales and new orders in the first quarter. Shares were up 4% on the news.

Drug-store chain Walgreen (WAG, Fortune 500) reported earnings of 78 cents a share on $18.7 billion in revenue, slightly better than analyst estimates. Shares were up by 0.4% in premarket trading.

Why Netflix's Facebook app would be illegal

Shares of private education provider Apollo Group (APOL, Fortune 500) dropped 6% in premarket trading, despite reporting earnings late Monday that beat Wall Street estimates.
Currencies and commodities: The dollar strengthened against the euro, the British pound and the Japanese yen.
Oil for May delivery rose 16 cents to $107.19 a barrel.
Gold futures for April delivery increased $7.40 to $1,693 an ounce.
Bonds: The price on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury increased, pushing the yield down to 2.23% from 2.25% late Monday.

Why You Should Buy the Most Hated Sector On the Market

For more than half a decade, few stocks have been more vilified than those from one out-of-favor sector. Even as the market recovered from its 2009 lows, this entire group was left behind. Investors simply wanted nothing to do with these stocks…
However, the first signs of life in this sector are beginning to appear. And I�ve found a unique way for you to play this hidden rally.
I�m talking about the housing sector. Since the housing market peaked more than 5 years ago, few investors have been willing to go anywhere near homebuilders. For years, these stocks have stagnated. Even sector leaders like Toll Brothers (NYSE:TOL) have failed to see their shares recover from 2008 lows.
Negative news surrounding the housing market continues to command front-page coverage. It�s been all too easy for the media to pile onto the countless human interest stories in the most affected regions of the country. Foreclosure horror stories, entire abandoned neighborhoods, and abusive bank practices remain top stories in the financial and mainstream media alike.
On the surface, housing sector data doesn�t look any brighter. The Case-Shiller index � which measures property values in 20 major cities � showed in its most recent data that home prices dropped 3.7% year-over-year.
But beneath the gloom-and-doom, there are several signs that the environment for homebuilders is improving.
Even Case-Shiller index co-creator Karl Case sees the silver lining in the numbers. Case told Bloomberg last month that the seeds of recovery have already been planted because homes are becoming affordable again. Add in record-low interest rates and you have a reason to be hopeful about housing.
According to the AP, builders broke ground on a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 699,000 homes last month. This milestone puts the seasonally adjusted rate at its highest level since October 2008. These glimmers of hope for the housing market have ignited a stealth rally within the sector:!
Homebuilders Index Quietly Outperforms
SPDR S&P Homebuilders Index ETF
Am I arguing that the housing market is ready to boom again? Absolutely not.
But when the skies are completely clear for the housing sector (and many experts are predicting at least two years before the market truly regains its footing) the investing opportunities will have passed us by. Right now, I am seeing the bottoming process play out in this sector.
While it would be completely unrealistic to expect anything even close to housing bubble conditions reappearing, I do believe there is opportunity in this space. There�s value to be found in some of these beaten-down homebuilders. Even though conditions will remain far from perfect for some time, many of these stocks could find higher ground now that the monumental bust that buried every single one of these stocks back in 2008 is beginning to wear off…
Mea Culpa: How I Was (Kind of) Wrong About Zynga
Last week, I warned you about the imminent collapse of Zynga Inc. (NASDAQ:ZNGA), the developer of FarmVille and other fad games for Facebook and mobile phones. I suspected that unrealistic expectations would eventually catch up with the stock. But I didn�t expect that to happen right away.
In fact, I wrote that the stock would probably trade even higher before any hint of a correction:
�Unfortunately, countless eager investors will probably get sucked into this stock before it crumbles,� I wrote just one week ago. �It will begin next week when Zynga will announce fantastic earnings. The company will beat estimates, predict incredible growth and win over plenty of new followers.�
That�s not exactly how it played out…
Yesterday, Zynga announced fourth quarter earnings! that se nt speculators packing. The stock lost nearly 18% of its value by the end of the day. Lower earnings and skyrocketing expenses helped spur the selling.
Needless to say, I was surprised that Zynga couldn�t put together a decent-looking quarter. Even more alarming are the huge research costs that are contributing to the company�s rising expenses. It�s clear that Zynga is going all-in when it comes to developing new games. Of course, there�s still no guarantee that those millions spent on game development will translate to long-term profits. I still recommend avoiding this stock.

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