earningsreports posts
FeedPosted Aug 19th 2009 8:30AM by Mark Fightmaster (RSS feed)
Filed under: Before the bell, Earnings reports

Retailer
BJ's Wholesale Club (NYSE:
BJ) stepped into the earnings spotlight this morning,
reporting second-quarter earnings of 64 cents per diluted share. A year ago, BJ reported net income of 61 cents per diluted share, including three cents per share from favorable state income tax audit settlements.
During the first half of 2009, BJ raked in $1.09 per diluted share compared to 90 cents per diluted share a year ago. Quarterly sales slipped slightly more than 5% to $2.5 billion on a year-over-year basis, but the bulk retailer did forecast full-year sales to increase 0.5% to 1.5%. On the forecast front, BJ now expects full-year earnings between $2.46 and $2.56, which is higher than the previously forecast $2.44 to $2.54.
Continue reading BJ Wholesale reports second-quarter earnings
Posted Jul 17th 2009 3:40PM by James Cullen (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Competitive strategy, Citigroup Inc. (C)
"This is a great time to be a banker," New York Times columnist Floyd Norris says, somewhat tongue-in-cheek. Jabs about bailouts and huge bonus payments aside, it's true that banking system is finally seeing rational pricing of risk -- and that means earnings power has greatly increased for deposit-taking banks. If you have a savings account or money market, you might have noticed that your interest payments have dried up to a pittance; the interest you aren't being paid is dropping through to banks' bottom lines.
Looking at today's earnings report from Citigroup, Inc. (NYSE: C), for example, is useful to see how the economics of the industry function, and whether Citicorp -- the "good bank" as Citigroup works to split itself -- will live up to the promise CEO Vikram Pandit attributes to it. In a company press release, Pandit said, "Citicorp is our core franchise and will be the source of Citi's long term profitability and growth. Citicorp is unique with institutional and consumer businesses operating on an unmatched global footprint."
Continue reading Citigroup: what the numbers say about credit cards and mortgages
Posted Jul 14th 2009 2:30PM by James Cullen (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Johnson and Johnson (JNJ)
Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:
JNJ), the huge producer of pharmaceutical and over-the-counter drugs and consumer healthcare products, reported earnings before the market opened today. Earnings per share for the second quarter of 2009 were $1.15 on $15.2 billion in revenue, compared to the $1.11 average and $1.14 high expected from analysts. The consensus revenue target was $15 billion, so the firm also beat on the top line despite seeing a single-digit percentage drop in revenues from last year.
Similar to consulting firm Accenture (NYSE: ACN), international results were hurt by foreign exchange effects, which offset nearly 4% operational growth overseas. Half of Johnson & Johnson's total revenues for the quarter came from outside the United States. Shares, which are down year-to-date and are underperforming the S&P 500, were up fractionally today in mid-day trading.
Continue reading Johnson & Johnson earnings: More of the same from this blue chip
Posted Jul 9th 2009 6:20PM by James Cullen (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Alcoa Inc (AA)
Aluminum producer Alcoa Inc. (NYSE: AA), the first Dow Jones Industrial Component to report earnings, beat estimates when they announced after the bell -- or so the story goes. It continues that this touched off buying interest across the market that had been sorely lacking in prior sessions. There's only one problem: Alcoa's results weren't very good, and they didn't boost the market.
Alcoa opened trading today up more than 5.5% from its close yesterday, before it reported earnings. Going into the final minutes of trading, the stock was down more than 2% -- a tough reversal for those buying on the pop. The company reported a headline EPS of -$0.32, or -$0.26 excluding restructuring charges. This compared to analysts' consensus of -$0.38 on $3.9 billion in revenue.
Continue reading Don't believe the headline hype on Alcoa
Posted Jun 26th 2009 2:30PM by James Cullen (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, KB HOME (KBH)

Shares in homebuilder
KB Home (NYSE:
KBH) dropped more than 8% as of mid-day Friday following the company's earnings release. Earnings per share for the quarter ending May 31 were a loss of $1.03, or $78.4 million, on $384.5 million in revenue, compared to the $0.64 average loss expected from analysts. The expected earnings range was between a $0.03 and a $1.40 loss, reflecting uncertainty about the writedowns needed on home inventories, land, and joint ventures.
When the housing market was at its peak in 2006, KB Home's sales topped $3 billion in one quarter. The company has struggled since, as the worst housing market in generations has led to a decline in housing starts of more than 75% from the peak to the present.
Continue reading KB Home drops amid more losses
Posted Jun 25th 2009 6:10PM by James Cullen (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Stocks to Buy
Accenture Ltd. (NYSE: ACN), a global consulting firm that also offers outsourcing and technology services, reported earnings after the close today. Earnings per share for the quarter ending May 31 were $0.68 on $5.15 billion in revenue, compared to the $0.64 average and $0.67 high expected from analysts. The consensus revenue target was $5.2 billion, and results were hurt by currency translation effects, which reduced U.S. dollar results by 12%. Year-over-year, EPS was down 8% from the $0.74 earned in the same quarter last year, with the difference again attributable to currency exchange.
Shares, which were up fractionally today, jumped almost 5% in after-hours trading following the earnings results.
Continue reading Accenture shares rise on earnings beat
Posted Jun 25th 2009 5:50PM by Beth Gaston Moon (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Bed Bath and Beyond (BBBY)

Leading domestics retailer
Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. (NASDAQ:
BBBY) closed more than 9% higher today after the one-two punch of a well-received earnings report and a brokerage upgrade. The company announced first-quarter results of 34 cents per share, a whopping nine cents better than analysts were expecting. Revenue edged 2.8% higher year over year. The one gray lining was same-store sales numbers, which drifted 1.6% lower during the reporting period.
Reacting to this after-the-close earnings report, Cowen & Co. upgraded the shares this morning to "neutral" from "underperform." The brokerage noted that BBBY has been able to cut advertising expenses now that its chief competitor, LInens n' Things, has filed for bankruptcy. Cowen also notes that BBBY has reduced its payroll expenses.
Continue reading Bed Bath & Beyond on the move after earnings
Posted May 21st 2009 5:00PM by Michael Fowlkes (RSS feed)
Filed under: Major movement, Earnings reports, Forecasts, Good news, From the boards, Products and services, Competitive strategy, Recession, Financial Crisis

Shares of discount retailer
Ross Stores, Inc. (NASDAQ:
ROST) have been soaring today after the company reported
strong first quarter numbers, and raised its future guidance.
It is no secret that shoppers are looking for bargain deals these days, and that trend resulted in a
3% jump in same store sales for Ross, and a 15% jump in its first quarter earnings. The company's earnings came in at 72 cents per share, which was in line with analyst estimates, and its revenues were above what Wall Street was looking to see.
Continue reading Ross Stores soars on first quarter results
Posted May 21st 2009 12:30PM by Beth Gaston Moon (RSS feed)
Filed under: Major movement, Earnings reports, Bad news
Video-game retailer GameStop Corp. (NYSE: GME) is seeing quite a sell-off in the wake of its first-quarter earnings report. This morning, GME reported net income of $70.4 million, or 42 cents per share, topping year-ago results by a nickel per share and beating analysts' estimates by a penny. Sales were on the upswing as well, gaining 9% to $1.98 billion to match Street expectations (same-store sales dropped 1.5%).
While all seemed fairly well and good for this reporting period, the future isn't quite so bright. Company officials project per-share earnings of 28 to 33 cents, falling considerably shy of the 40 cents expected by analysts. What's more, same-store sales are now projected to drop between 8% and 11%.
Continue reading GameStop shares in fail mode after earnings report
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