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Pre-market movers (S) (CLWR) (MOT) (YHOO)

Sprint (NYSE:S) is upi 5% on news that it will form an alliance to build out it WiMax broadband network.

Clearwire (NASDAQ:CLWR) is up over 10% on news that it will be part of the Sprint initiative.

Yahoo! (NASDAQ:YHOO) is down 1.2% on news that Bill Gates says his company will not pursue its takeover bid.

Motorola (NYSE:MOT) is up 1.2% on news that Carl Icahn has raised his stake in the company.

Stocks may trade differently in the pre-market than they do in the regular session.

Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.

Analyst initiations: V, BEAT and MOT

MOST NOTEWORTHY: Visa, Cardionet and Motorola were today's noteworthy initiations:
  • RBC initiated Visa Inc (NYSE: V) with an Outperform based on margin expansion opportunities, the secular growth story towards electronic payments, lack of credit risk, and international opportunities. Piper started Visa with a Neutral rating. While the firm believes that Visa should generate long-term earnings growth and free cash flow, the firm thinks that Visa's valuation has increased the risk that strong earnings growth may not meet investors' expectations. However, the firm believes that Visa can still post strong results despite the U.S. consumer slowdown. Goldman initiated Visa with a Buy rating and $90 target and Morgan Stanley started shares with an Equal Weight rating and $75 target.
  • Citigroup rated Cardionet Inc (NASDAQ: BEAT) a Buy, citing favorable arrhythmia monitoring trends. The firm has a $26 target on Cardionet.
  • Motorola Inc (NYSE: MOT) was assumed with an Equal Weight rating and $75 target at Morgan Stanley on valuation.
OTHER INITIATIONS:

Analyst downgrades: MOT, WSM, GT, POT and SNCR

MOST NOTEWORTHY: Motorola, Williams-Sonoma and Synchronoss were today's noteworthy downgrades:
  • Thomas Weisel downgraded Motorola Inc (NYSE: MOT) to Market Weight from Overweight based on the general uncertainty in the company's core markets and the likelihood that the spin off may not occur for several quarters.
  • Piper believes Williams-Sonoma Inc (NYSE: WSM) faces a challenging environment, and their checks reveal weakness at Pottery Barn. Shares were cut to Neutral from Buy.
  • ThinkPanmure downgraded Synchronoss Technologies Inc (NASDAQ: SNCR) to Accumulate from Buy. The firm expects a strong Q1 report but expects shares to sell-off following the Q1 conference call due to modest guidance and the lack of a major customer win announcement.
OTHER DOWNGRADES:

Anadigics (ANAD): Shares define bullish 'pennant'

Anadigics (NASDAQ: ANAD) makes gallium arsenide (GaAs) and indium phosphide (InP) radio frequency integrated circuits for the broadband wireless and wireline communications markets. The physical properties of GaAs and InP allow the firm to make chips that are smaller, faster and more energy efficient than the usual silicon-based devices. The company focuses on applications for wireless local area networks, cable set-top boxes, cell phones, cable television systems, microwave systems and fiber-to-the-premises communications systems. Customers include Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) and Motorola (NYSE: MOT).

The firm surprised the Street last week, when it reported Q1 EPS of 15 cents and revenues of $74.4 million. Analysts had been looking for ten cents and $69.2 million. Management also guided Q2 EPS to 16-17 cents (13 cent consensus) and Q2 revenues to $77-$79 million ($72.96M consensus). Roth Capital subsequently reiterated its "buy" recommendation on ANAD and Charter Equity upgraded the stock to "market perform".

Continue reading Anadigics (ANAD): Shares define bullish 'pennant'

Early research calls (MOT) (V)

Goldman Sachs affirmed its "neutral" rating on Sysco (NYSE: SYY), saying "shares have been trading lower on concerns related to whether softening consumer spending is affecting casual dining and upper-end restaurants," according to the AP.

Thomas Weisel downgraded Motorola (NYSE:MOT) to "market weight" from "overweight" according to Briefing.com. The news service also reports that Morgan Stanley intiated Visa (NYSE:V) with a rating of "equal weight".

Credit Suisse (NYSE:CS) was raised to "peer perform" at Bear Stearns according to a report at 24/7 Wall St. The financial website also writes that Goodyear Tire & Rubber (NYSE:GT) was cut to "neutral " at JP Morgan.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Despite troubles, KKR still likes semiconductors

Lately, there have been some scary stories -- such as in BusinessWeek and Forbes.com -- about the buyout of Freescale, which is a major semiconductor operator (the transaction came in September 2006 at $17.6 billion).

The latest earnings report was anemic. Plus, the company's bonds are selling at distressed levels. In fact, the CEO -- Michel Mayer -- quit his post in February (but don't cry for him as he took millions in a nice payday). And of course, Freescale's key customer, Motorola, Inc. (NYSE: MOT), is ailing.

So, might this prevent further buyout deals in the semiconductor space?

Continue reading Despite troubles, KKR still likes semiconductors

Motorola (MOT) about to lose No.1 market share position in US

No matter how badly Motorola (NYSE:MOT) has done in the handset business, it has managed to keep its spot as the market share leader in its home base of the US but that may change. According to The Wall Street Journai, "Motorola's U.S. cellphone sales are dropping so sharply -- and Samsung is catching up so quickly -- that the South Korean company may soon knock Motorola from the perch it has held in the U.S. since it invented the cellphone in 1983."

What can be said? Motorola has been losing market share for the last two years and there is no reason to believe that it can reverse that trend. When its RAZR was selling well, it had 22% of the global market. Now that number is closer to 14%. Nokia (NYSE:NOK), the leader, has 39% of the global market.

The market share figure is not just a number on a piece of paper. It may result in making the spin-off of the handset unit to shareholders more difficult. After pressure from Carl Icahn and other investors, Motorola will split the company into two pieces. One will have the handset assets and the other the home products, enterprise, and government sales operations.

There has been some speculation that the handset part of the company is worth nothing. Motorola tried to sell the operation last year. As far as anyone knows, there were no buyers. The company's shares now trade for $9.55, down from $26 in October 2006. Almost all of that loss in value comes from problems in the handset operations.

When shareholders get their handset division stock in the spin-out, they will be lucky if they are worth $1.

Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.

Scramble for your tax rebate, 13 ways to lower your electric bill & rags-to-riches billionaires - Today in Money 4/24

In the News:

The Scramble for Your Tax Rebate
Beginning next week more than 130 million Americans will open their mailboxes to find tax rebate checks, ranging from $600 to $1,200 per household. Retailers across the country desperately want a piece of that action in a U.S. economy flirting with recession, and the sales promotions tied to the government cash injection are already coming fast and furious. Big-box chains are devising crafty ways to coax stimulus checks into their cash registers.

Continue reading Scramble for your tax rebate, 13 ways to lower your electric bill & rags-to-riches billionaires - Today in Money 4/24

Before the bell: DOW, CS, BAC, PEP, WEN, MMM, MOT ...

Before the bell: Futures down on SBUX, AMZN, despite AAPL, Ford

Dow Chemical (NYSE: DOW) reported a smaller-than-forecast 3% profit drop Thursday and said it would have a good second quarter. Higher feedstock and energy costs were blamed for the drop. The chemical giant reported earnings of 99 cents per share, beating the 94 cents estimate.

If two weeks ago some hoped we've seen the bottom of the subprime mortgage crisis, since then more problems, especially with European banks seem to pop. Credit Suisse (NYSE: CS) reported a wider-than-forecast loss of $2.1 billion on a $5.3 billion writeoff as the global effects of the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis continued to spread. Share of CS though are rising in premarket trading about 1.8% as the bank may have seen the worst.

Bank of America Corp. (NYSE: BAC) shareholders don't want the bank to proceed with the $4 billion acquision of Courntrywide Financial Corp. (NYSE: CFC), the mortgage lender that has become the poster child for the subprime mortgage problems. The have pleaded on Wednesday with the bank's CEO.

Continue reading Before the bell: DOW, CS, BAC, PEP, WEN, MMM, MOT ...

Before the bell: Futures down on SBUX, AMZN, despite AAPL, Ford

It seems that despite Apple's crushing earnings and sales estimates Wednesday and Ford swinging to profit this morning, investors are wary of earnings. Stock futures declined early Thursday following Amazon's earnings, Starbucks' profit warnings as well as other companies. In addition, debate over an expected pause in the Federal Reserve recent wave of rate cuts as well as some data seem to leave investors more on a cautious mood this morning.

U.S. stocks ended higher on Wednesday after better-than-forecast results from Boeing (NYSE: BA) helped sentiment on the Street, albeit in a choppy manner. The Dow industrials finished nearly 43 points higher, or 0.34%, the S&P 500 rose almost 4 points, or 0.29%, and the Nasdaq Composite rose 28 points, or 1.29%.

Today, several economic reports are due out. At 8:30 a.m., weekly initial jobless claims will be released, as well as March durable goods orders. At 10:00 a.m., new home sales will come out, where another drop is expected.

Continue reading Before the bell: Futures down on SBUX, AMZN, despite AAPL, Ford

Research In Motion (RIMM): Share price cycles through positive trading channel

Research In Motion (NASDAQ: RIMM) is a leading provider of wireless communications hardware, software and services. Company devices allow access to email, telephone, messaging, Internet and intranet-based applications. RIM products include the BlackBerry wireless platform and the RIM Wireless Handheld product line. The firm also provides software development tools and makes radio-based modems that other manufacturers incorporate into their portable devices. Competitors include Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT), Motorola (NYSE: MOT) and Nokia (NYSE: NOK).

The company surprised the Street earlier in the month, when it reported Q4 EPS of 72 cents and revenues of $1.88 billion. Analysts had been looking for 70 cents and $1.86 billion. Management also guided Q1 EPS to 82-86 cents (76 cent consensus) and Q1 revenues to $2.23-$2.30 billion ($2.02B consensus). In discussing the solid numbers, the firm noted that heightened retail activities helped drive exceptional subscriber growth during the quarter. Oppenheimer, Lehman Brothers and Caris subsequently reiterated "buy" recommendations on the stock and declared price targets in the $135-$150 range.

Continue reading Research In Motion (RIMM): Share price cycles through positive trading channel

Former Motorola insider trashes the company inside and out

Motorola Inc. (NYSE: MOT) seems to be in the midst of a crisis, even as it prepares to split itself into two companies to give shareholders more visibility into just how bad one part of its business can be while the other piece can be, well, not so bad. Of course, I'm talking about the wireless giant's cellphone division, which is still in the top three worldwide in terms of sales. It's sinking faster than a rock, though. How did this come to pass?

After reading a missive by a former Motorola employee, Numair Faraz, who worked closely with the late Geoffrey Frost -- Motorola's former Chief Marketing Officer and father of the RAZR handset -- one has to wonder about a few things. For example, just what kind of incompetence has brewed in the corner office for the last three years? From reading Faraz's words, both former CEO Ed Zander is pitched as a complete idiot and slave driver who literally worked Frost to death and current CEO Greg Brown is pitched as a technological moron who can't even use email (his secretary prints off messages to read to him later). Are these truths? They sure could be.

Zander, who was highly regarded when he came back in 2004 to take over for CEO (and grandson of company founder) Chris Galvin, seemed to have everything going for him. Looking back, nothing ever went right for Zander. The RAZR that gave Motorola its two-year recognition was in the works before he arrived. What did Zander -- a former president of Sun Microsystems (NASDAQ: JAVA) -- do during his tenure with Motorola?

Swipe big chunks of compensation while churning out middling performance, according to many on Wall Street and Faraz as well. Maybe Galvin was not such a bad CEO after all, right? When Faraz said in 2003 that "Motorola's biggest problem is that Samsung kicks ass," he wasn't kidding -- and that's precisely what happened. Seems to be another example of very sub-par performance being rewarded with a golden parachute, while shareholders get shafted once again. Motorola stood at under $10 a share early today.

Before the bell: AMR, BA, MOT, HON, YHOO, PG, DIS

Before the bell: Stocks futures decline on UPS warning, financial and economic concerns

AMR Corp (NYSE: AMR)'s American Airlines cancelled 500 flights on Tuesday and is expected to cancel more flights Wednesday as the FAA inspects its MD-80 planes and if the airlines complies with federal rules about wiring on about 300 of its planes. MAR shares were down 2.3% in after-hours trading.

Boeing (NYSE: BA) may announce a 14- to 18-month delay of its already-delayed 787 Dreamliner according to the The Times of London, the AP reported. Seattle Post-Intelligencer puts the delay at 14 months from the original goal of first flight by the end of June, and first delivery in early 2009. Either way, the delays are much more than the 6-9 months analysts and buyers said they expected. BA shares were down 2.4% in very early premarket trading.

Motorola (NYSE: MOT) is keeping busy. After announcing it is splitting its handset and telecom equipment arms, and after settling a proxy battle with activist investor Carl Icahn, the cell phone maker on Wednesday said former AT&T Chairman and CEO David Dorman will be the non-executive chairman. He'll succeed Ed Zander, who as planned is retiring after the shareholder meeting on May 5.

Continue reading Before the bell: AMR, BA, MOT, HON, YHOO, PG, DIS

What future products lurk in the hearts of companies

When I saw the news of NTT DoCoMo (NYSE: DCM)'s new mobile phone that emits fragrances, I began wondering what other oddities today's corporate powerhouses may be working on. No financial advice here, these are just some ideas I came up with:

Apple Inc (NASDAQ: AAPL) will unveil headgear that doubles as both headphones and a personal masseuse, giving tantalizing head, neck and shoulders massages.

In an attempt to help with falling click-through rates, Google Inc (NASDAQ: GOOG)'s new mobile phone will be offered free as long as you sign Google's activation agreement requiring you to click on a mobile ad every hour, even while you sleep.

Continue reading What future products lurk in the hearts of companies

Cramer on BloggingStocks: Tech stocks face real trouble

TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says that absent any catalyst beyond "cheap," the sector looks set to disappoint.

When people say "tech" on TV, it is almost always followed with "cheap," or "low valuation." To which I say, "So what?" AMD (NYSE: AMD) (Cramer's Take) looked cheap until last night. Motorola (NYSE: MOT) (Cramer's Take) looked cheap and there turned out to be no there there. Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO) (Cramer's Take) looks cheap but all I hear are earnings cuts. Dell (NASDAQ: DELL) (Cramer's Take) looks cheap, but who cares?

Lots of cheap out there.

Here's my question: where's the catalyst?

Shorts? Stronger growth in the second half? No, the only catalysts I look for in tech are product cycles, and other than Salesforce.com (NYSE: CRM) (Cramer's Take) (nice move there), Research in Motion (NASDAQ: RIMM) (Cramer's Take) and maybe Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) (Cramer's Take), because we need a new phone there already, there are no new product cycles to speak of.

Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Tech stocks face real trouble

Next Page »

Symbol Lookup
IndexesChangePrice
DJIA-118.9512,747.83
NASDAQ-6.232,445.01
S&P 500-9.521,388.16

Last updated: May 09, 2008: 04:03 PM

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