Before the Bell posts
FeedPosted Oct 9th 2008 8:30AM by Michael Rainey (RSS feed)
Filed under: Before the bell, International Business Machines (IBM)

Stock futures in the U.S. are
up this morning, indicating a potentially strong opening for the financial markets.
While volatility is likely to remain high, positive futures suggest that the co-ordinated rate cuts by central banks are having the intended effect. European markets have moved higher, with the FTSE 100 and DAX up over 1%.
Markets may also be buoyed by
reports that the U.S. Treasury is considering taking an ownership stake in major banks. This follows the announcement of a similar plan in Great Britain. The plan, which amounts to a partial (and voluntary) nationalization of the banks, seems to be generating more enthusiasm and confidence than the vague $700 billion bailout already approved by Congress.
Additional positive news came from
International Business Machines (NYSE:
IBM), which released preliminary third quarter
results above analyst estimates. The stock is up 4.6% to $94.76 in pre-market trading. Sales were down, but the company showed impressive results nonetheless, suggesting that other large tech firms may be able to weather the global slowdown.
Analysts will be focused on weekly jobless claims and August wholesale inventory reports for further clues about the state of the economy. The end of the ban on short selling may act as another market catalyst.
Posted May 2nd 2008 8:50AM by Michael Rainey (RSS feed)
Filed under: Before the bell, Microsoft (MSFT), Yahoo! (YHOO), American Express (AXP), Oil
Some investors are starting to believe that the worst of the credit crunch is behind us, and European banks including
UBS (NYSE:
UBS) and
Royal Bank of Scotland (NYSE:
RBS) are leading a bullish move in the markets.
The dollar stabilized and oil weakened, giving a
boost to many blue chip stocks.
Home Depot (NYSE:
HD) rose nearly 4% in trading on Thursday, and
American Express (NYSE:
AXP) was up nearly 7%.
Not all news is positive, however. U.S. futures are flat as the markets await the Labor Department's official employment report, due today. According to Bloomberg's calculation,
unemployment in the U.S. continues to rise as employers shed more than 75,000 jobs in April. The unemployment rate is now probably at 5.2%, a three-year high. And real unemployment is probably worse that that, since the Labor Department's calculation method, which Bloomberg uses, significantly
undercounts unemployment and underemployment.
And the Microsoft-Yahoo! saga continues. The AP
reports that
Microsoft (NASDAQ:
MSFT) may go hostile in its bid to buy
Yahoo! (NASDAQ: YHOO) today. Should be entertaining, so say tuned.
UPDATE: Job numbers
better than expected, unemployment falls to 5.0%.
Posted Dec 11th 2007 7:35AM by Barry Summerlin (RSS feed)
Filed under: Before the bell, H and R Block (HRB), Kroger Co (KR), , Federal Reserve

Stock futures were tightly mixed Tuesday as investors looked ahead to this afternoon's
interest rate announcement from the Federal Reserve Board. The Fed is widely expected to lower the Federal Funds rate -- the rate of interest banks charge each other -- by a quarter point, although forecasts of a half-point cut are growing.
In addition to the Fed's afternoon announcement, the Census Bureau of the Department of Commerce will release
wholesale inventories for October this morning at 10.
On Monday, the Dow closed at 13,727.03 and the S&P 500 finished at 1,515.96, each higher by three-quarters of a percent. The Nasdaq reached 2,718.95, 0.47 percent higher. U.S. stocks were boosted by anticipation of interest rate cuts and an improved outlook on home sales. The National Association of Realtors reported yesterday that
pending-sales of homes had climbed 0.6% in October, increasing for a second-straight month following a long skid.
After Monday's close,
Washington Mutual (NYSE:
WM) announced it will
discontinue subprime mortgage lending and plans to cut 2,600 jobs in its home loans division. WaMu will write-down the value of its loans unit by $1.6 billion and now expects to report a loss in the fourth quarter,
echoing similar news Monday from Swiss bank
UBS (NYSE:
UBS).
Top grocer
Kroger Co. (NYSE:
KR) is due to report quarterly results on Tuesday; analysts expect EPS of 35 cents per share. Tax preparer
H&R Block (NYSE:
HRB), initially scheduled to report second-quarter earnings Monday,
now says it will not file on time.
Overseas, the dollar was little changed against the euro, and rose from 111.67 to 112.11 yen. The Nikkei 225 climbed 0.8% to
close above 16,000, while London's FTSE 100 slipped in morning trades.
Posted Oct 26th 2007 7:35AM by Barry Summerlin (RSS feed)
Filed under: Before the bell, Microsoft (MSFT), Market matters, , , , Economic data,

Stock index futures pointed to a
higher opening Friday on Wall Street, amid speculation that technology stocks would rise on
Microsoft (NASDAQ:
MSFT)'s strong earnings report late Thursday. Optimism was tempered on expectations that the monthly consumer confidence survey due Friday morning will show a declining economic outlook.
Yesterday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost just 3.33, ending a volatile trading session that saw the index swing as low as far as 100 points down. The Nasdaq Composite Index fared worse, falling 23.90, or 0.86%, to 2,750.86, while the S&P slipped 1.48 to 1,514.40.
The University of Michigan will release final consumer confidence figures for October at 10 this morning. The monthly survey is expected to show Americans more pessimistic about the nation's economic future.
Troubled
Countrywide Financial (NYSE:
CFC) will
report third-quarter results this morning. Analysts expect the top mortgage lender to post losses of $1.26 per share, though expectations vary widely.
Trucking group
Arkansas Best Corp. (NASDAQ:
ABFS) and industrial conglomerate
Ingersoll-Rand (NYSE:
IR) are among other companies reporting earnings Friday.
Abroad, stocks headed higher in Asia, with Japan's Nikkei and Hong Kong's Hang Seng indexes rising. Stocks were flat in early European trading.
Microsoft reported first-quarter earnings after the market close Thursday, posting a 23 percent rise that exceeding analysts' expectations. The software giant raised its forecasts for the year, citing sales of Windows Vista and its new Xbox 360 game
Halo 3.
Merrill Lynch (NYSE:
MER) shares advanced overseas on reports that
Merrill Lynch CEO Stanley O'Neal discussed merger potential with
Wachovia (NYSE:
WB) without consulting Merrill's board of directors.
Posted Oct 18th 2007 7:30AM by Barry Summerlin (RSS feed)
Filed under: Before the bell, Earnings reports, Google (GOOG), eBay (EBAY), Pfizer (PFE), Bank of America (BAC)
Index futures were flat Thursday morning ahead of today's round of earnings results. Companies reporting this morning include Dow 30 component
Pfizer (NYSE:
PFE) and
Bank of America (NYSE:
BAC), with internet giant
Google (NASDAQ:
GOOG) reporting after the market closes.
Analysts expect Pfizer Inc., the world's largest pharmaceutical firm
will post earnings of 52 cents per share, following a 16% miss last quarter.
UPDATE: Citing a $2.8 billion charge to end investment in the insulin drug Exubera, Pfizer posted third-quarter earnings of just 11 cents per share. But for the Exubera charge, Pfizer said it had earned 58 cents per share.
UPDATE: In its third-quarter report Thursday morning, No. 2 U.S. bank Bank of America posted just 82 cents EPS, missing analysts expectations by nearly a quarter.
Google, which will report third-quarter earnings this afternoon, is
expected to post earnings per share of $3.25, up from its Q3 2006 EPS of $2.36. Check back with BloggingStocks this afternoon as we LiveBlog Google's earnings call.
Extending a run of
strong tech results,
eBay (NASDAQ:
EBAY) posted impressive third-quarter numbers after Wednesday's closing,
crippled though by a write-off related to its investment in Skype, the online telephony service.
New unemployment claims are due out this morning -- the number is expected to climb from last week's 308,000 new claims reported. Also being watched Thursday, the Philadelphia Federal Reserve will report its manufacturing index for October at noon, an indicator of expansion.
UPDATE: The Labor Department reported that 337,000 new unemployment claims were filed last week, up 28,000 from last week's unemployment report.Foreign bourses were mixed Thursday: Japan's Nikkei average rose in early trading, while Britain's FTSE 100 slipped 0.25%.
Posted Aug 15th 2007 8:00AM by Barry Summerlin (RSS feed)
Filed under: Before the bell, Sara Lee Corp (SLE), Deere and Co (DE)

So far this week, the Dow has dropped 211 points despite advancing futures both Monday and Tuesday. Brace for today, as futures headed south on increasingly dire credit concerns.
Among the latest chapters in the subprime-mortgage fallout, cash manager Sentinel Management Group Inc. yesterday aired its fears of forced liquidation,
telling clients that it's seeking to stop withdrawals, although regulators deny such a request has been made.
Also Australian finance manager Basis Capital Fund Management Ltd. said the subprime collapse may
sack one of its hedge funds by 80%.
Deere & Co. (NYSE:
DE) surprised analysts this morning,
reporting third-quarter earnings of $2.37 per share, vaulting over EPS expectations by 38 cents. Other companies reporting earnings Wednesday include
Macy's Inc. (NYSE:
M) and
Sara Lee Corp. (NYSE:
SLE).
Loads of government data being released today, beginning with the Labor Department's Consumer Price Index for July at 8:30. CPI is expected to rise, though lower gas prices likely tapered any increase.
Later this morning, the Fed will release the July numbers on Industrial Production, measuring the output of factories, mines, and utilities. The DOE's weekly crude inventories report will be released at 10:30.
Overseas,
benchmark indexes fell across Europe, with the FTSE slipping 1%. Japan's Nikkei dropped 2.2%, though the
yen climbed to a 4-1/2 month high against the dollar and the euro.
Corporate news
Food giant
Nestle SA (NYSE:
NSRGY) reported an 18% improvement in first-half profits, boosting its shares overseas as well as competitors, including
Unilever (NYSE:
UN).
Posted Aug 14th 2007 8:00AM by Barry Summerlin (RSS feed)
Filed under: Before the bell, Home Depot (HD), Agilent Technologies (A), Applied Materials (AMAT), EMC Corp (EMC)

Index futures advanced this morning, indicating gains -- hopefully they'll stick today. After spending nearly all of Monday's session higher, all three major U.S. indexes
closed less than 0.1% lower.
The European Central Bank
continues to inject cash into its economy, compounding efforts by the Federal Reserve and other overseas central banks to reverse declining confidence in credit markets.
The Labor Department will report July's Producer Price Index an hour ahead of today's opening bell; July's PPI is expected to rise by 0.1%. The Census Bureau/Commerce Department's report on the international trade balance for June will also be released this morning.
Home Depot Inc. (NYSE:
HD)
released second-quarter figures this morning, posting a 15% drop in profit over last year's second-quarter numbers. Check back at 9 a.m. as
Michael Fowlkes liveblogs Home Depot's conference call.
Wal-Mart (NYSE:
WMT) also
reported second-quarter earnings Tuesday, posting higher sales and profit but lowering expectations for the fiscal year.
Other companies reporting earnings Tuesday include retail parent
TJX Co. Inc. (NYSE:
TJX), chipmaking supplier
Applied Materials Inc. (NASDAQ:
AMAT), and
Agilent Technologies Inc. (NYSE:
A).
Overseas, the Nikkei and London's FTSE 100
crept modestly higher.
Company news
EMC Corp. (NYSE:
EMC) spinoff
VMware (NYSE:
VMW) will make its anticipated market debut Tuesday.
Last night's offering of 33 million shares fetched $29 each from underwriters, raising $957 million.
Swiss bank
UBS (NYSE:
UBS) also
reported cautious earnings, posting a 79% jump in second-quarter profit but forecasting lower earnings in the second half of the year.
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