Company Customer

Mid-Week Update 07-14-10

Second quarter earnings season is finally upon us. After first-reporter Alcoa released positive results on Monday, Growth Portfolio member and technology bellwether Intel (INTC) reported blowout numbers last night after the market’s close.

The largest computer chip maker in the world collected $2.89 billion in net income, or 51 cents a share, during the second quarter – easily outpacing consensus estimates of 43 cents. Importantly, the semiconductor giant accomplished this through outperformance on both the top-line (revenues were $10.8 billion versus expectations of $10.3 billion), and the bottom line, with further gross profit margin improvements (67.2 percent versus 50.8 percent in the same period last year). With this strong showing, the company upped its gross margin estimate for the full-year: to 66 percent from a previous prediction of 64 percent.

Intel’s forward-looking guidance also beat expectations. For the current quarter, the company now expects total sales to be $11.6 billion – plus or minus $400 million. Analysts had estimated $10.9 billion, so Intel’s most bearish guidance now exceeds the average analysts’ expectations by $300 million. CEO Paul Otellini cited higher enterprise spending as the catalyst behind the impressive results and forecast. Corporate customers are replacing old desktops and laptops, while other companies like Google and Facebook are increasing the size of their server farms.Read more...

WHAT THEY’RE BUYING

Calamos Growth’s front-end sales charge may understandably deter some investors. But nobody has questioned the ability of the fund’s managers to pick good stocks. And when management adds to an existing position, that stock is worth an especially close look.
 
During the past quarter, Calamos significantly beefed up its holdings of Electronic Arts (ERTS), making it the fund’s second-largest position. Electronic Arts is the biggest U.S. developer, publisher, and distributor of videogames, with more than $2.9 billion in sales. It’s a leader in all parts of the interactive game market, producing and distributing titles for PCs, Sony’s PlayStation, Microsoft’s Xbox, and Nintendo’s GameCube. By continuously gaining market share, the company has increased sales even during periods of overall industry decline. (In the second quarter of 2003, revenues for Electronic Arts grew by almost 17 percent, while the industry showed a 1 percent decline.) It has almost no debt, and its management team is as sharp as they come.
 
Even if you’ve never heard of Electronic Arts, you’re probably familiar with some of its products.
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Market Update 09-30-08

The verdict is in. After days of anxiously awaiting political negotiations in Washington, the $700 billion bailout proposal was finally put to a vote on Monday in the House of Representatives but failed to pass. The Dow immediately dropped over 700 points in response, marking the worst one day drop in history. Every index was down across the board. The failure to pass the plan is clearly devastating news to the stock market and investors hoping for an injection of cash into the financial sector. It can also be devastating for the economy. 

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Market Update 08-12-08

The U.S. dollar is trading near a 6-month high against the euro, and it is helping the market sentiment. At the same time, we feel that the low price for oil and gold, caused mostly by the stronger dollar, while helping the markets, is becoming irrational. Selling oil and oil stocks does not help address the supply/demand misbalance issues that caused oil prices go up in the first place. Today, the International Energy Agency raised the forecast for energy demand for the next year as it expects Chinese oil consumption to go up after the Olympics. The forecast was increased by 70,000 barrels, to a total of 87.8 million barrels a day. 

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Market Update 03-16-07

Leeb's IPO Insight

 - Weekly Update -

 March 16, 2007

 The performance of the overall equity markets over the past several weeks has had somewhat of a dampening affect on IPOs, but we view this as a good thing as several IPOs have been opening with less of a premium. And, in our opinion, the recent correction may have run its course. Although the financial media continues to talk about how a recession could occur later this year, we see little evidence of an impending recession. 

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