MARKET TALK: Rational's March Qtr May Be OK, But June?
15 Mar 12:21
Edited by Thomas Granahan Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES (Call Us: 201 938-5299; All Times Eastern) MARKET TALK can be found using code N/DJMT 12:21 (Dow Jones) JP Morgan trims FY03 revenue and earnings estimates for Rational Software (RATL) to reflect "continued weakness in key technical segments." Analyst Chris Galvin says his March quarter estimates ($180M in revenue and EPS of 9c) seem appropriate, but he's concerned about the June quarter consensus. Rational shares down 11.5% to $16.93. (MLP) 12:13 (Dow Jones) Sanders Morris Harris analyst David Miller cut his 2Q earnings estimate on Walt Disney (DIS) to 9c a share from 14c, citing continued weakness in the core media networks' operation. In addition to ABC having to offer make-good time to advertisers because of low ratings, the Arts & Entertainment cable channel has also seen a ratings decline this year, the analyst said. (DDO) 11:58 (Dow Jones) It's possible Toys R Us (TOY) was headed to junk before announcing plans to sell equity and equity-linked securities, says Gimme Credit. Moody's cut to one notch above junk Thursday, while S&P said triple-B was likely even if equity deal came off (it's triple-B-plus now). Without the equity, Gimme Credit thinks the barrier junk would have been broken. (CSE) 11:49 (Dow Jones) Bear Stearns analyst Bob Lam expects strong growth for companies making technologies for managing increasingly complex computer networks, despite a sluggish macroeconomy and telecom recovery. He put industry growth at 20% to $21 billion over the next four years, but predicted four companies will outpace the average as they solidify leadership positions: NetIQ (NTIQ), Micromuse (MUSE), Mercury Interactive (MERQ), and Concord Communications (CCRD). He called all four good long-term investments, but rates the first two buy and the second two attractive. "These young companies have the right technologies, partnerships, healthy balance sheets (including strong cash flow), and management teams to address changing customer demands and to overcome the current challenges," Lam said. (RR) 11:38 (Dow Jones) More layoffs in the investment-banking industry. SoundView Technology Group (SNDV), a technology boutique, has laid off 19% of its staff.
But the firm, which has been hurt by the market and economic slump, is also seeking to expand: Come April, SoundView will open a new office in Boston, to be run by John Cronin, formerly with FleetBoston Financial Corp.'s (FBF) Robertson Stephens unit. SoundView shares are up 2.2%. (GFC) 11:34 (Dow Jones) Delta (DAL) remains Deutsche Banc Alex. Brown's top airline pick this year. Firm cites strategic and financial position to weather the sharp falloff in demand due to weak economy and terrorist attacks. Also likes airline's use of regional jets. Keeps strong buy and 12-18 month target of $61.
DAL up 2% at $36. (TG) 11:23 (Dow Jones) Currency markets usually waffle on Friday's in NY and this one is par for the course, with EUR choppy around $0.8820 and USD/JPY on either side of Y129. EUR is $0.8823; USD/JPY is Y129.03 (JRH) 11:17 (Dow Jones) The move to begin trading single-stock futures trudges along: OneChicago LLC, the joint venture formed by the CBOE, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, and the Chicago Board of Trade this week approved an initial list of 24 lead market makers that will help provide liquidity when trading of this new investment class kicks off. Many recognizable names on this list, including option specialists like Susquehanna, Timber Hill, Wagner Stott Bear, Wolverine Trading, Equitec, Botta, and Goldman Sachs' SLK-Hull Derivatives, as well as Wall Street financial firms like Deutsche Bank and TD Securities. (KT) 11:10 (Dow Jones) Call it a delayed reaction to some robust economic data. Or maybe a resumption of the run that has cooled in recent sessions. Or just a fluke. But stocks are starting toact very well Friday, led by a pretty broad group of sectors. DJIA adds 61 to 10579, Nasdaq Comp higher by 11 to 1866, and S&P 500 up 11 to 1164. Among the major groups, semis, banks, and airlines look good, while home construction, forest products, and building materials are at the bottom of the pack. In fact, that may be the trend as rates continue higher. (TG) 11:02 (Dow Jones) Asbury Auto's (ABG) IPO, which managed just a 30-cent gain Thursday, is having a worse day today. The shares have broken issue, trading at $16, or 50 cents below their offering price. Usually, companies that break their offer price never make it back, but there has been one big exception this year. PayPal (PYPL) broke its $13 offer price a week after its IPO last month, but it has since rebounded, now up 44% from the offering price. (RJH) 10:54 (Dow Jones) Don't get your hopes up for data network equipment makers, says JP Morgan analyst Michael Funsch. He cut profit and sales estimates for three networking firms Friday, saying 1Q appears weak. They are Extreme Networks (EXTR), Enterasys Networks (ETS) and Foundry Networks (FDRY). "Our preliminary channel checks suggest that, contrary to consensus views, the March 2002 quarter appears weak and may not represent the point of a return to sequential growth that most investors were expecting," Funsch writes. (PDL) 10:46 (Dow Jones) Weak spending by telecom service providers led UBS Warburg analyst Nikos Theodosopoulos to trim his estimates on Nortel (NT), Tellabs (TLAB), Sonus (SONS), and Juniper (JNPR). "Further weakness in the U.S.
wireline market is putting pressure on capital spending," he says. A spending pickup may come in the second half of the year, Theodosopoulos said, but could be tempered by wireless consolidation. (JDB) 10:31 (Dow Jones) The Economic Cycle Research Institute's weekly leading index rose by 0.2% in the week ended March 8 and the index was 2.9% above its 52-week moving average, a larger gain than in the prior three weeks. (JM) 10:20 (Dow Jones) As the economy continues to stabilize and strengthen, value stocks like autos and auto parts will become less attractive. Prudential says market share slippage means overcapacity will continue, and incentives will stay high. Rising interest rates by mid-year will likely depress auto industry valuations, though Pru says the risk to its thesis is if production remains strong and rates don't climb near mid-year. (TG) 10:11 (Dow Jones) The State Teachers Retirement Systems of Ohio said it will vote in favor of the merger of Hewlett-Packard (HWP) and Compaq (CPQ) in part because it has confidence that Compaq CEO Michael Capellas will bring the two companies together, said spokeswoman Laura Ecklar. The pension fund also likes the merger because it believes the combined company can achieve its cost savings and revenue projections. While Ecklar said there is some concern about competing in the low-margin consumer PC market, that will be offset by steady sources of cash that will enable the new company to keep its lead in imaging and printing. The retirement fund owns 4.3 million shares of Compaq and 3.5 million shares of H-P. (DLF) (END) DOW JONES NEWS 03-15-02 12:21 PM |