Ironic press about the market is increasing...from Fortune
Street Life
Wednesday, April 15, 1998, 6:45 p.m.
NASDAQ Takes Its Turn
By Bethany McLean
Today was all about the NASDAQ, which jumped 20.23, to a record 1863.26. The Dow mostly just limped along, until a late-day rally sent it up 52.07, to 9162.27. The S& P? A snooze. It closed up 3.57, to 1119.32. Want to know what made the tech-heavy NASDAQ so happy? Compaq! No, I KNOW Compaq isn't traded on NASDAQ, but its 96% plunge in profit had traders showering their gratitude all over tech land. Hey, it could have been worse! And thanks to the March pre-announcements, we knew the bad news already (if we all shared our secrets, would the world be a better place?). Anyway, today everyone is remembering that we invest for the long term, and of course, the second half of the year will be wonderful.
COKE FIZZLES.... Well, just a wee bit. The stock slipped $1 1/8, to $76 11/16, despite earnings that met Wall Street's (low) expectations. All it took was a 13% DROP vs. last year. Yeah, last year's results were sweetened by a one-time gain. So strip that out: Earnings rose a whole 3%. How impressive. Worldwide volume was up 14% (without three extra shipping days it would have been up 9%), but revenues only grew 7.7%. You know, that strong dollar. OK, Coke is a cash machine, and in the future everyone in the world will brush her teeth with Coke. But earnings are supposed to be FLAT in 1998!!!! And the stock sells for 46.8 times those FLAT earnings!! And how come when the dollar was weak, the extra oomph from currency translation was considered one of the benefits of being a big multinational? Well, at least Coke makes bank stocks look like a bargain.
DESPITE TECH'S TRIUMPH.... everyone is all confused about Intel. After yesterday's close, it looked like the market was focusing on whatever good news it could find. In after-hours trading, Intel moved up. But today, the stock gyrated wildly between a high of $79 1/8 and a low of $74 3/4, finally closing down $1 1/8, to $74 7/8. BA Robertston Stephens, Morgan Stanley, and Soundview all upgraded the stock. Morgan said "strong buy," Soundview talked a $90 price target; BA talked $100. But Tom Kurlak, the influential Merrill analyst who's considered the "ax" on Intel, downgraded it. Then, CNBC reported that Kurlak said the stock could fall to $60. Stay tuned...
MUSIC TO THEIR EARS.... (and pocketbooks). The RZO Companies--which handles the business affairs of entertainment stars like The Rolling Stones and Patti LaBelle--is joining up with Prudential Insurance to form a new company, Entertainment Finance Limited. The concept is based on 1997's David Bowie deal. Remember that? Prudential bought $55 million of Bowie bonds. Bowie gets the bucks now; Pru gets the future royalties on sales of songs like Blue Jean (I love Blue Jean). So this new company, EFI, will pay recording artists, book and software authors, songwriters, and even other entertainment companies for their intellectual property assets. EFI expects to handle more than a billion dollars of transactions annually, though there's nothing they'll talk about yet. Says RZO co-founder Joe Rascoff: "Our clients are interested and hopeful." Hey, what about journalists? They say the financings will be as small as a half a million bucks. I'm worth that.
Loose Change
APPLE MADE MONEY!!! $55 million!! More than DOUBLE analysts' estimates!!ÿ GO, Apple.ÿ Beat the evil empire!... Cendant said that it's going to restate 1997's earnings. Watch out.... Disney just can't keep those super CFOs. Young gun Richard Nanula is walking out to become the CEO of Starwood, beefing up chairman Barry Sternlicht's forces. Gotta wonder what Nanula's predecessor at Disney, Stephen Bollenbach, thinks about that. Remember the bruising battle that Starwood and Hilton waged last fall for ITT?? Are things like this really just coincidence?... Speaking of Disney, CSFB says it's worth $150 per share, 32% above current levels. The thesis: that $36 of value is "hidden" in places like the Animal Kingdom. Think it's stashed near the piranhas?... Yes, search engines continued to soar, but I'm sick of talking about them.... Bear Stearns fell $2 1/2. Investment-banking revenue grew a wimpy 4.6% and net income barely budged. In this market, those results aren't pretty.... Schwab said its average commission during the quarter fell over 10% from just three months ago, due to growth in less lucrative Internet trading. See, the Net isn't good for everyone.... Deutsche Bank is supposedly scaling back its U.S. investment-banking ambitions, but DMG just hired Wes Maat, a top-ranked oil analyst. Now, we all know he didn't come cheap.... A company called Creditrust filed for its IPO today. It acquires and manages delinquent consumer debt accounts. Such a nice business.
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