Showing posts with label stocks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stocks. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Apple Profits Fall And Growth Slows. Welcome To The New Normal

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Apple reported its first profit decline in over a decade and bluntly admitted that its growth is slowing. It was, indeed, a strange but not wholly unexpected change of pace for the wildly successful Cupertino company.

Despite that bad news, the stock market barely hiccupped. As of writing, Apple shares were virtually unchanged in after-hours trading from their close of $406.13 — a level roughly 42% below their peak just seven months ago. Which means that these diminished expectations are, for now, Apple's new normal.

Posted via email from Create | Inspire - DM2 Studios

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Activist Hedge Fund Buys $2 Billion Worth Of Microsoft

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Activist hedge fund ValueAct Capital took a $2 billion stake in Microsoft, its CEO Jeffery Ubben announced at an investment a conference in New York, today.

He explained the investment by saying, "In three to five years, which is our time horizon, we’ll stop talking about PC cycles and instead talk about Microsoft as the largest cloud-computing company in the world."

For his sake, let's hope so. The PC business is imploding, so Microsoft's traditionally lucrative Windows business is flattening, and could start shrinking soon.

Microsoft has two other businesses that are doing well — Servers and Tools and the Business Division, which is home to Office. Those businesses are strong enough to offset Windows, for now.

Posted via email from Create | Inspire - DM2 Studios

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Trader admits fraud in $1-billion Apple stock scheme

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A former Rochdale Securities trader whose unauthorized purchase of about $1-billion of Apple Inc. stock caused the demise of the financial services company pleaded guilty on Monday to wire fraud and conspiracy.

David Miller, 40, entered his guilty plea before U.S. Magistrate Judge Donna Martinez in Hartford, Connecticut.

Posted via email from Create | Inspire - DM2 Studios

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Dow Hits Record High; Time to Buy Tech?

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The Dow Jones Industrial Average has never been higher. On Tuesday, after a run-up of 125 points, the index of 30 blue chip companies closed at 14,253, beating the record close set in October 2007. Wind back those five-plus years, and you’ll recall we were on the verge of a global financial collapse and the worst recession since the Depression.

So what are we to make of crossing this line? Especially if you believe it’s not industrial behemoths like Alcoa, General Electric, and Procter & Gamble – all component companies in the Dow – that are the economic engines of our future but tech companies like Apple, Google and Facebook. What’s a tech investor, or even an employee of a tech company, to do?

Invest in tech, says Kevin Landis, president of Firsthand Capital Management, a mutual fund company, with $300 million under management. Landis’ largest holdings are Apple, Amazon, Google and Facebook. On the secondary market, he’s also purchased a chunk of still privately held Twitter.

“I think of the Dow as possessing what I would call psychological incumbency; it’s probably that simple as to why it’s followed so closely,” Landis says. “But as an active investor, I am glad people follow it. I do better in a world where people look at the wrong things.”

That Wall Street was celebrating the Dow on Tuesday, and not the tech-heavy Nasdaq, is a function of how ridiculously expensive tech companies were back in the bubble days of 2000 when the Nasdaq hit a record 5,049. On Tuesday it closed at 3,220. Nowhere near a record, but higher than it’s been in 12 years...

Posted via email from Create | Inspire - DM2 Studios

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Apple Stock Just Crashed To A New Low

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It was an up day for the market and most technology stocks, but not for Apple.

Apple stock fell another 2.5% to close at $430--its lowest closing price since the stock's slide began last September.

Apple is now down almost 40% from its peak.

And for the first time in forever, anyone who has bought Apple in the past year and held it has lost money on it.

What's going on with Apple's stock? How low could it go?

On the first question, there are several things going on with Apple's stock.

Some are fundamental, having to do with changes in Apple's business.

Posted via email from Create | Inspire - DM2 Studios

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Apple Stock Tanks Again - Getting Close To A New Low

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Apple stock fell another 2% yesterday to close at $442. It's down again this morning.

The stock is now closing in on its lowest closing price since it peaked just above $700 in September.

Apple is now down almost 40% from its peak.

Apple's market value has now lost about $250 billion. Thanks to Apple's massive size, that's more money than investors in Hewlett-Packard and Research In Motion have ever lost in those two stocks combined.

Of course, Apple has only fallen to a level that it first breached in January last year. So long-term Apple investors are still in the money. At least for now.

(For the first time in forever, though, anyone who has bought Apple in the past year and held it has lost money on it).

What's going on with Apple's stock? How low could it go?

On the first question, there are several things going on with Apple's stock.

Posted via email from Create | Inspire - DM2 Studios

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Holy Smokes! AOL Is Up 25% In Two Weeks

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AOL stock was already up huge year-over-year, when it reported earnings on February 8.

Since then, it's up 25%.

Ken Sena of Evercore Partners has a theory on why.

On February 8, AOL reported its quarterly financials in a new way – breaking its business into three segments: Membership Group, Brand Group, and AOL Networks.

Doing so has provided investors greater clarity into which parts of the business are growing, and which provide baseline, dependable value.

Wall Street loves to bet on companies that are showing accelerating momentum.

By segmenting its revenue reporting in this new way, AOL has exposed these investors to the part of its business that is achieving those things.

Posted via email from Create | Inspire - DM2 Studios

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Will Twitter file a secret IPO?

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Twitter is expected to file for an initial public offering in late 2013 or early 2014. That much is widely known. Less attention has been paid to whether Twitter will make a normal IPO filing or if, as new rules allow, the company will try to go public in secret.

The Jumpstart Our Business Startups (JOBS) Act, signed into US law last year, lets firms with less than $1 billion in annual revenue keep their IPO filings confidential up until three weeks before they start marketing shares to investors in a “road show.” It was largely proposed and pushed by venture capitalists in Silicon Valley, who said it would stem a decline in US IPOs by reducing the burdens of going public felt by smaller firms. Ordinarily, a company has to make public a lengthy discussion of its financials, strategy, and risks months before an IPO, giving investors—and competitors—more of a chance to evaluate the stock.

In the first nine months since the JOBS Act went into effect, 59% of eligible companies availed themselves of the option to keep their IPO filings secret, according to an Ernst & Young study reported today by the Wall Street Journal. Twitter is likely to be eligible: It made $350 million in revenue last year, and it’s not expected to hit $1 billion until 2014.

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Ex-BlackBerry CEO Jim Balsillie Has Completely Sold His Stake In The Company

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Former BlackBerry co-CEO Jim Balsillie sold the last of his stake in the company last year, according to an SEC filing.

Balsillie joined BlackBerry in 1992, eight years after it was founded. He was co-CEO with founder Mike Lazaridis until in January of 2012 when they both stepped down to let Thorsten Heins take over.

Heins has overseen the development and introduction of BlackBerry 10, a new operating system which is supposed to compete with Android and iOS. He also rebranded the company as BlackBerry, killing the company's name of Research In Motion.

Posted via email from Create | Inspire - DM2 Studios

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Google Stock Blasts To All-Time High

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After a four-year rocket ride following its spectacular 2004 IPO, Google's stock took a multi-year breather.

From 2007 to the middle of 2012, as the company's hyper-growth slowed, Google's stock multiple compressed.

But Google the company kept growing.

And Google the cash factory kept coining more and more money.

And now, with Google's stock having settled into a reasonable price-earnings ratio--24X trailing earnings--the stock is on the move again.

Posted via email from Create | Inspire - DM2 Studios

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Yahoo Perks Up Amid Q4 Growth And Mayer's Plan To Right The Ship

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Yesterday In its fourth quarter earnings call, Yahoo reported its first revenue growth spurt in four years. The company saw 2% year-over-year growth for the first time since 2008, with a net income of $272.3 million in the fourth quarter. The numbers beat out Wall Street estimates by 30%, with shares opening at $20.87 - the highest point Yahoo's stock had seen since its 2008 era highs.

All eyes are on CEO Marissa Mayer, former Google engineer and executive, who is widely credited with jump-starting Yahoo's stock into late 2012. Confidence in Mayer has inspired a much-needed morale boost for the company, which is still struggling to find its footing among massive, savvier competitors like Google and Facebook.

Posted via email from Create | Inspire - DM2 Studios

Thursday, January 17, 2013

How Low Could Apple Go?

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Apple's stock is now down about 30% from its high.

This plunge has led to a feisty argument between the Apple perma-fans, who dismiss the fall as "stock manipulation," and other investors, who think that several fundamental trends that have made Apple the most valuable company in the world have started to change.

After defending the stock for the first few months of its swoon, meanwhile, Wall Street analysts are now rushing to cut price targets and downgrade it.

So, who's right?

And how bad could it get?

Specifically, if those who believe Apple's fortunes are changing are right, how low could the stock go? And might Apple's stock just suddenly prove the doubters wrong and blast off to the stratosphere again?

Let's address the broader question first.

Posted via email from Create | Inspire - DM2 Studios

Friday, December 21, 2012

RIM Is Tanking

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Research In Motion has been down as much as 17.9% this morning.
The stock recovered slightly, and now it's down 13% after last night's earnings report.

This is the biggest one-day drop since June 29. Which, it just so happens, was the day after it reported earnings and announced 5,000 jobs would be cut.

Last night's earnings report safely beat expectations on the top and bottom line.

But on the earnings call, CEO Thorsten Heins put a scare in the market by saying the company's services revenue could be at risk.

Posted via email from Create | Inspire - DM2 Studios

Monday, December 17, 2012

Here's How Smart Investors Made A Killing On IPOs In 2012

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2012 turned out to be a very good year for investors who bet on new enterprise-tech companies.

This year, companies such as Splunk, Palo Alto Networks, and Workday had extremely successful opening days in spite of the Facebook IPO fiasco—or maybe because of it, as investors veered away from consumer Web plays.

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Thursday, December 13, 2012

Apple Stock Nears New Closing Low

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Apple's stock has resumed its decline over the last few days, falling another 2% to $526 in afternoon trading.

This is only $1 above the lowest close in Apple's recent swoon, which was $525.62 back on November 15.

After that, Apple briefly took off like a rocket, spiking back to $590 in a week.

But since then, the selloff that started last summer has resumed.

What's going on?

Posted via email from Create | Inspire - DM2 Studios

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Chart: Facebook Has The Worst IPO Of The Decade

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Facebook's IPO has been the worst performing IPO of the decade after five days, according to this chart from Bloomberg.

Posted via email from Inspiration

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Why Did Facebook's Stock Fall?

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Facebook's stock had been in a free fall since it hit the public markets.

This morning, it's actually up, but the company isn't out of the woods just yet.

What exactly is happening here? Why was the stock still falling? And why does the IPO suddenly look like a disaster?

Some of you already know the answers to those questions. For the rest of you, we have this simple guide, which tries to the best of our ability to explain everything that's going on in clear, plain English.

The once sentence explanation of all that's gone wrong: Facebook's stock fell almost immediately after it hit the public markets because investors just didn't think it was a $100 billion company, and this has led to all sorts of other problems.

Posted via email from Inspiration

Monday, May 21, 2012

FACEBOOK COLLAPSES OVER 12.5% AND BREAKS THE IPO PRICE

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As we wrote about in the original post below, Facebook plunged below the IPO price in the early going, and the route continues now that the official start of trading has begun.

It's now off over eight percent to around $35/share, well below the $38/share IPO price.

Posted via email from Inspiration

Friday, May 18, 2012

Facebook Opens at $42, Valued at $116.6 Billion

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Facebook shares started trading at $42 a share on Nasdaq around 11:30 a.m. Friday morning under the symbol “FB.”

The company’s 421.2 million shares offered to the public will now raise $17.7 billion, bringing its valuation to $116.6 billion.

The opening price comes after Business Insider reported earlier this morning that bids for the company’s stock were as high as €58.20, or $74 a share. Facebook’s stock had also occasionally traded higher in the secondary markets than its planned $38 opening price.

Posted via email from Inspiration

So Who Actually Got Rich Off Of Facebook Today?

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As you may have heard, a bunch of people just acquired Scrooge-McDuck quantities of cash thanks to this morning's Facebook IPO. So exactly who is walking around with an extra billion dollars in their bank account? Here's a visual breakdown of everyone who sold their shares today, and how much they made.

Posted via email from Inspiration