ClosingBell posts
FeedPosted Nov 18th 2008 4:17PM by Jon Ogg (RSS feed)
Filed under: Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), Home Depot (HD), , Corning Inc (GLW)

Today was another one of those days where it was hard to tell if the market was up. The market gapped up and then posted a great morning rally, and then proceeded to give back most of the gains from noon until late in the afternoon. Housing was dismal, producer prices were down, and Bernanke and Paulson testified about the TARP usage.
Below are today's unofficial closing bell levels:
DJIA: 8,424.75 +151.17 +1.83%
NASDAQ: 1,483.27 +1.22 +0.08%
S&P 500: 859.12 +8.37 +0.98%
Analyst Calls:
Top Upgrades and
Top DowngradesAnheuser-Busch Companies Inc. (NYSE:
BUD) is no more..... The merger was completed today with InBev and the stock will now be European listed and be called Anheuser-Busch InBev. Shareholders of common stock receive $70.00 per share in cash as part of this $52 billion merger.
Corning Inc. (NYSE:
GLW) gave disappointing LCD panel guidance which was "below" the $1.1 to $1.2 billion in revenues previously offered and "at the low end of below" the $0.20 to $0.28 EPS range previously offered just a few weeks ago. Shares were down 7% right before the the close.
Continue reading Closing Bell: Was that a win or loss? BUD is no more; GLW, FSLR, HPQ, HD
Posted Jul 25th 2008 4:31PM by Jon Ogg (RSS feed)
Filed under: After the bell, Google (GOOG), Juniper Networks (JNPR), Crocs Inc (CROX), DJIA, Delta Air Lines (DAL)

If you were looking for another hard day of profit taking on a summer Friday, the markets escaped the hangman. A barely positive durable goods of big ticket items was enough to send the pessimists to the showers and gave the bulls a little more ammo. Throw in an oil ticker showing a drop of more than $2.00 to almost $123.00 per barrel and that's all that was needed. Look at bond yields and you'll see we gave back almost all of yesterday's move.
Here are today's unofficial closing bell levels:
DJIA 11368.33 (+19.05)
S&P500 1257.65 (+5.11)
NASDAQ 2310.53 (+30.42)
10YR T-NOTE 4.111% (+0.095%)
TOP ANALYST UPGRADESTOP ANALYST DOWNGRADES
Select Short Sales DataArch Coal (NYSE:
ACI) tripled earnings posted EPS of $0.78 vs. $0.64 estimates. The stock was up more than 3% in pre-open but was up almost 9% at $55.45 in the final minutes of the day.
Crocs Inc. (NASDAQ:
CROX) led the garbage stocks after a very
ugly earnings warning last night. It now sees sales for all of 2008 modestly lower than 2007 and is now only targeting a break-even result for 2008. Retailers were noted as keeping inventory re-orders at low levels, which is hard to blame them considering the ugly shoe fad has already started its workdown. Shares were down 44% at $4.99 after shares had already sold of more than 80% from 52-week highs.
Continue reading Closing Bell: The bears wore their Crocs to work
Posted Sep 18th 2006 6:39PM by Sarah Gilbert (RSS feed)
Filed under: After the bell, Newspapers
According to the Wall Street Journal, Laura Bush was wearing "a pink skirt-suit" when she rang the closing bell for the New York Stock Exchange today, marking the first time, ever, that a First Lady has rung the closing bell. The White House website says brightly that her visit was made to "symbolize the vital contribution that women bring to a growing global economy."
And what better way to symbolize women in economy, everywhere, than to wear pink?
The Journal pointed out that she pronounced the floor trading "interesting" after receiving a description of the NYSE's workings from Spear Leeds & Kellogg.
Laura Bush has certainly worked hard for women's rights in her time as First Lady, but has labored much of this second term deep in the shadow of her husband. She's visiting New York City by herself this week, attending a conference on global literacy, accepting an award, and talking at the Clinton Global Initiative. She'll also talk at the UN about Burma's humanitarian crisis.
The history-making step at the NYSE seems at once flamboyant and girlish, feminista and feminine. Why ring the bell now? Why wear pink? As a woman in business, I'm at once bemused and a little insulted at this would-be economic role model. Will anyone remember Laura's actions as a mark on the timeline for feminism, or women, or pink -- or is it just a trivia footnote that will be quickly forgotten by all but the most dedicated Bushophiles? What do you think?
Posted Sep 14th 2006 4:10PM by Jon Ogg (RSS feed)
Filed under: After the bell, Time Warner (TWX)

This was actually a quiet day for Time Warner (TWX), even with the stock down 0.4% to close at $16.91. There was some good news for TWX when
Time Warner Telecom (TWTC) announced that TWX and affiliates were selling some 27.5 million shares. This is actually good as it allows TWX to focus on its own entities a tad more, and allows the company to unlock some of the hidden value in its assets. That won't generate enough cash that the bond rating firms will take much note, but it won't be bad for them at all either. The volume was pretty normal, with 21.9 million shares traded compared to an average daily volume of 20.5 million.
The move probably wasn't even a "Punish Cramer" after
he said "BUY TWX" yesterday because of how his call on Hansen (HANS) went so poorly in the immediate day after. It seems that the stock was just doing a healthy pullback because of overbought indicators. That isn't indicative of a bunch of short sellers and it isn't indicative of a big institutional investor or key insider bailing out. This is just some clean profit taking on overbought conditions that we had previously telegraphed. When stocks go up seven out of eight or nine days, that happens.
Options activity was quiet a day ahead of expiration date, so there wasn't any added options volatility causing any artificial moves. I was shocked that I had to go all the way out to the January 2008 contracts just to find contracts that posted over 1,000 traded on the day at 3:15 PM. The JAN08 $15 PUTS traded 5,495 contracts as of that time. Someone made a highly speculative bet in an options trade by purchasing 1,362 of the JAN08 $30 CALLS for a $0.05. That is someone looking for a highly leveraged trade that they will make a fortune on if the stock starts to rally significantly.
Posted Jul 18th 2006 4:13PM by Sarah Gilbert (RSS feed)
Filed under: After the bell, Earnings reports, Yahoo! (YHOO)
Investors are a hopeful kind of bird. Yahoo! stock, along with many in the tech sector, has been in the doldrums as of late. Earnings are coming out in about an hour, though, and this makes the investor bird preen its feathers and buy in advance of the announcement. Despite intraday lows that were down signficantly from yesterday's close, Yahoo! ended the day at $32.17, up 33 cents or 1.04%.
But Piper Jaffray, among other analysts, are predicting good things, including the consensus 11 cents per share profit (down from 13 cents in the year-ago quarter) and positive news in the search ad revenue department. Check back at 5 p.m. Eastern, when we'll be liveblogging the earnings report.
Posted May 30th 2006 6:01PM by Sarah Gilbert (RSS feed)
Filed under: After the bell, Products and services, Launches, Microsoft (MSFT)
Microsoft joined the rest of the BloggingStocks universe today, closing down significantly. For MSFT, losing 57 cents took the stock down 2.4%, to $23.15, and it was despite an opening bell spike.
None of the market seemed to be much affected by individual company news today, although there was a lot of buzz today about Mr. Softie, with a number of MSFT watchers eager to see what Steve Ballmer will say tomorrow morning in his uncharacteristic chat with investors. And later this afternoon, news of pricing for Microsoft Vista ($450 is the word on the 'net) had lots of bloggers biting, wondering whether it was worth your while to pay more for your operating system than your computer (despite the bells and whistles everyone's raving over). Ryan Block at Engadget muses, "when you consider the fact that the single-license full install retail MSRP of XP Pro is still $300 US, it's not too drastically unrealistic. Don't get us wrong, we're not exactly endorsing snapping up operating systems that cost more than the machines they run on but, you know, it is Ultimate freaking Vista, dude."
The reports on Office Ulimate MSRP: $679. That's some expensive PowerPoint slides. Maybe I should sign up for pay-as-you-go. Dude. And that brings up an excellent question: if the geeks are willing to pay, will corporations follow suit?
Posted May 23rd 2006 6:43PM by Sarah Gilbert (RSS feed)
Filed under: After the bell, Products and services, Apple Inc (AAPL)
What's the problem with iPods? Supply has been an issue, with customers and retailers joining together to bicker over that last iPod Nano come holiday time. If Apple has anything to do with it, next Christmas it will be a little easier. That is, if you're a sucker for anything that rolls out of a vending machine. It seems as if there will be 180 of the new Zoom @ Macy's vending machines -- scheduled to stock iPods -- in stores by the fall. I, for one, would much rather buy the new $29 Nike+iPod Sport in a vending machine in one of my fave running spots. Now there's an interesting business plan!
If investors heard about the new vending machines, though, they weren't impressed. AAPL was down 23 cents to $63.15 in the same end-of-day malaise that struck the rest of the market. It's a pity, as AAPL opened extremely strong, up to $65.19 in the first minutes of the trading day on below-average volume.
Posted May 19th 2006 7:25PM by Sarah Gilbert (RSS feed)
Filed under: Major movement, Bad news, Products and services, Blogs, Microsoft (MSFT)
Ah, poor Softie. Where have you gone wrong? In a day when the market was generally up, Microsoft flirted with its new two-year low, closing down 27 cents to $22.56, a drop of 1.18%. MSFT took a dive in the opening minutes and never recovered. Why so low, Softie?
The volume was relatively average, so all we can do is speculate. Many Apple watchers were surprised today to discover that the consumer versions of the new MacBook and the little Mac Mini don't meet the minimum requirements for Microsoft Vista when it's released ... sometime. Is the checklist for Vista so draconian that investors can't stomach the pain of having to purchase a special graphics adaptor? Must be.
Posted May 17th 2006 6:29PM by Sarah Gilbert (RSS feed)
Filed under: After the bell, Products and services, Launches, Apple Inc (AAPL)
Apple always has to be different. But today, everyone cheered as the company brought out a version of their pretty laptop, the MacBook, in matt black (yes, that's the same finish as your boring old PC). Our sister site, Engadget, took the MacBook for a spin and declared it "a pretty freaking great value" (but they're not doing black, for the record). The Apple Insider hails the removable (by an actual user!) hard disks. No more purely cosmetic screws!
It wasn't all black hearts and roses, though; MacWorld UK today mourned the locking down of OS X. Thanks to concerns of piracy, Apple closed down its open source code so that developers can no longer tinker with its operating system. Bad for pirates is also bad for very advanced users; says Tom Yager, "there are ways to address the piracy issue without stripping the critical and defining quality of openness from OS X."
AAPL stock responded by ticking up 25 cents to $65.26 on lower-than-average volume. Evidently the market, while intrigued, isn't ready to jump unreservedly on board for black is the new MacBook.
[Photo redjar]
Posted May 4th 2006 8:03PM by Sarah Gilbert (RSS feed)
Filed under: After the bell, Bad news, Magazines, Time Warner (TWX)

No one likes to be average, even if there's a little plus sign after your "C." This grade, handed down by
CNNMoney for AOL's performance as compared to other internet search firms, may have been the impetus to send
Time
Warner's stock down another nine cents to $17.03, despite a hopeful market open.
There certainly wasn't
much in the way of love for Time Warner today.
Business Week wondered if AOL wasn't moving too slow,
mourning "The Ails of AOL";
Jeremy MacNealy of the
Motley Fool snarks at how "pleased" Dick Parsons was despite "net revenues inching forward just 1%
versus the year-ago period"; and while
some analysts said Time
Warner's prospects were "promising," still, it's "not enough" to get a boost in recommendations
from anyone on the street.
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