ntrs posts
FeedPosted Feb 28th 2009 4:50PM by Peter Cohan (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bad news, Scandals, Financial Crisis
Northern Trust (NASDAQ: NTRS) had a great time with taxpayer money. It spent $6.3 million for an LA bash featuring a golf tournament, spa treatments in posh hotels, and musical performances from Sheryl Crow, Earth Wind & Fire, and Chicago. Who paid? We did -- that's because Northern Trust took $1.6 billion in TARP money.
But from now on Northern Trust is going to have to use its own money if it wants to pamper its executives. Thanks to all the wonderful publicity it's received about its lavish spending, it has decided to pay back the $1.6 billion that it never wanted to take to begin with. And thanks to its excellent financial performance -- in the last year it generated $4.3 billion in revenues and $795 million in profit -- it never needed the money to begin with but Hank Paulson forced Northern to take it.
Continue reading Northern Trust to repay $1.6 billion TARP injection less $6.3 million for LA bash
Posted Feb 25th 2009 8:00AM by Peter Cohan (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bad news, Scandals, Financial Crisis
I thought I had heard it all after banks that took TARP billions paid themselves $18 billion in bonuses after sinking the global financial system. But every time I think banks can't do more to shock me, they go and top themselves. That's what happened with Northern Trust (NASDAQ: NTRS), which took $1.6 billion in bailout money. To its credit, Northern Trust did not blow it all on bonuses -- instead it spent $6.3 million on a big LA party last week.
Why didn't I get my invitation? After all, I paid part of the tab. And so did you. What did our money go to? Here's a partial list:
Continue reading Northern Trust's LA blowout on taxpayer's tab
Posted Jan 24th 2009 2:40PM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Google (GOOG), eBay (EBAY), International Business Machines (IBM), Advanced Micro Dev (AMD), Southwest Airlines (LUV), Lockheed Martin (LMT), AMR Corp (AMR), UAL Corp (UAUA)
Continue reading Earnings highlights: eBay, Google, IBM, Southwest, UAL, AMR, Northern Trust and others
Posted Jan 21st 2009 4:10PM by Jon Ogg (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, General Electric (GE), Intel (INTC), Market matters, International Business Machines (IBM), United Technologies (UTX)

Today's early gains were met by selling as the Capitol Hill grilling of Tim Geithner took place to decide whether or not he would be confirmed as Treasury Secretary in the Obama administration. But buying the dips finally came after an endless flow of selling.
Here are today's unofficial closing bell levels:
DJIA: 8,228.42 +279.33 +3.51%
NASDAQ: 1,507.07 +66.21 +4.60%
S&P 500: 840.24 +35.02 +4.35%
Top Analyst UpgradesTop Analyst DowngradesGeneral Electric Company (NYSE:
GE) was hit again today on constant
fresh rumors and concerns ahead of earnings, but the good news is that shares did manage to get back into positive territory in the last hour of trade as the market rallied. Shares were up less than 1% at $13.00 shortly before the closing bell.
Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:
INTC) might have traded lower if the data was regarded in a vacuum. The company sent a memo to employees noting that it could in fact post a quarterly loss. That would be the first quarter in over 20 years that it lost money. Shares were up about 2% at $13.10 right before the close.
Continue reading Closing Bell: Rally's surprise source ... earnings; GE, INTC, IBM, NTRS, UTX
Posted Jan 20th 2009 8:50AM by Paul Foster (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bank of New York (BK)
State Street (NYSE: STT) is recently trading at $24.30 in pre-open trading, below its close of $36.35. STT reported Q4 EPS of 15 cents on net income of $65 million, compared to net income of $223 million, or 57 cents per share in Q4 2007. STT February option implied volatility is at 88, February is at 84; above its 26-week average of 73, according to Track Data, suggesting larger price movement.
Bank of New York (NYSE: BK) is recently trading at $21.39 in pre-open trading, below its close of $23.36. BK is expected to report Q4 EPS on January 22. BK February option implied volatility of 87 is above its 26-week average of 69, according to Track Data, suggesting larger price movement.
Northern Trust (NASDAQ: NTRS) is recently down $4.58 to $46.50 in pre-open trading. NTRS is expected to report Q4 EPS on January 21. NTRS option implied volatility of 99 is above its 26-week average of 71, according to Track Data, suggesting larger price movement.
Option Update is provided by Stock Specialist Paul Foster of theflyonthewall.com
Posted Jan 18th 2009 12:30PM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Forecasts, Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), General Electric (GE), International Business Machines (IBM), Advanced Micro Dev (AMD), Bank of New York (BK), Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan (POT), U.S. Bancorp (USB)
I think it's fair to say that there's much trepidation about the earnings season that picks up steam this week. And for better or worse, numbers from the big financials have begun to roll in. Last week we saw profit sink for JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM) and significant losses from Bank of American Corp. (NYSE: BAC), Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C), and Deutsche Bank (NYSE: DB).
Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters expect Bank of New York Mellon Corp. (NYSE: BK) to be among those financials reporting fourth-quarter earnings growth this week. They anticipate that Bank of New York will post a profit of $0.70 per share, compared to $0.67 per share a year ago and $0.72 in the previous quarter. Revenue is expected come to $3.8 billion, about the same as it was a year ago. Bank of New York has fallen short of earnings estimates in two of the past five quarters, by as much as 11.1%. For the full year, analysts are looking for $2.78 per share (+5.8%) on $14.8 billion (+4.2%). The consensus recommendation of analysts is to buy BK, and the long-term EPS growth rate forecast is 10.7%. Shares are 48.7% lower than a year ago. Other financials expected to report quarterly earnings growth this week include SunTrust Banks Inc. (NYSE: STI) and M&T Bank Corp. (NYSE: MTB).
Continue reading The week in preview: Financials, techs lead off earnings crunch
Posted Jan 7th 2009 11:58AM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst reports, Analyst upgrades and downgrades, Analyst initiations, Urban Outfitters (URBN)
Analyst upgrades:
- Oppenheimer upgraded OceanFreight (NASDAQ:OCNF) to Perform from Underperform on valuation and a lack of negative catalysts following the recent weakness.
- UBS raised Micron (NYSE:MU) to Buy from Neutral citing supply cuts which should improve prices. The target remains $5.
- Jesup & Lamont upgraded Atlas Air (NASDAQ:AAWW) to Buy from Hold is positive on the company's 20 year blocked space agreement with DHL and expects the stock to continue higher.
- AK Steel (NYSE:AKS) was added to Goldman's Conviction Buy List and upgraded to Buy from Neutral.
- Goldman also upgraded Northern Trust (NASDAQ:NTRS) to Buy from Neutral.
- Digital River (NASDAQ:DRIV) was upgraded to Hold from Sell at Stanford.
Analyst downgrades:
- Stephens downgraded shares of Titan Machinery (NASDAQ:TITN) after their survey of farmers indicated declining sales of agricultural equipment. The firm lowered their target to $19 but believes Titan Machinery's long-term growth story remains intact.
- Jefferies downgraded Helen of Troy (NASDAQ:HELE) and Blyth (NYSE:BTH) to Underperform from Hold as they believe the further deterioration in the U.S. consumer macro environment could pressure near-term results. The firm lowered its target on Helen of Troy to $13 from $16.50 and on Blyth to $5.50 from $8.
- UBS cut Indevus (NASDAQ:IDEV) to Neutral from Buy and lowered its target to $5.50 from $5 following the acquisition offer by Endo Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:ENDP).
- AECOM Tech (NYSE:ACM) was lowered to Equal Weight from Overweight at Morgan Stanley.
- Amerisafe (NYSE:AMSF) was downgraded at Oppenheimer to Perform from Outperform.
- Tractor Supply (NASDAQ:TSCO) was cut to Neutral from Buy at Piper Jaffray.
Analyst initiations:
- KeyBanc initiated Urban Outfitters (NASDAQ:URBN) with a Buy rating and $22 target. The firm believes the Urban Outfitters and Antropologie divisions are under penetrated and have visible growth.
- Kaufman Bros. started SuccessFactors (NASDAQ:SFSF) with a Hold rating and $7 target and believes the current demand backdrop could be worse than reflected in current consensus estimates.
- CarMax (NASDAQ:KMX) was initiated at Baird with a Neutral rating and $10 target. The firm is impressed with CarMax's business model but does not see a way around the near-term economic headwinds.
- Manulife Financial (NYSE:MFC) and Sunlife Financial (NYSE:SLF) were assumed with Equal Weight ratings at Morgan Stanley.
- Oppenheimer started Pacific Sunwear (NASDAQ:PSUN) with a Perform rating.
- Kite Realty Trust (NYSE:KRG) was initiated with a Buy rating at Janney Montgomery.
Posted Jan 2nd 2009 9:45AM by Jim Cramer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Market matters, JPMorgan Chase (JPM), , Goldman Sachs Group (GS), Morgan Stanley (MS), Wells Fargo (WFC), Cramer on BloggingStocks, Financial Crisis
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says Goldman's sturdy balance sheet has it positioned for good returns in 2009. Remember the craze to own deposit banks? Remember the thought that if you had oodles of deposits, you could make it through this period with much more aplomb than if you were an investment bank, an investment bank like Lehman or
Merrill (NYSE:
MER) (
Cramer's Take) or Bear? Or, of course, obviously,
Morgan Stanley (NYSE:
MS) (
Cramer's Take) and
Goldman Sachs (NYSE:
GS) (
Cramer's Take)?
The stocks are saying that the judgment -- the judgment in favor of deposits against so-called "hot money" -- may be inaccurate or at least premature.
The judgment, as meted by Goldman Sachs' stock, in fact, is saying that the deposit game may be dead wrong for 2009.
You can see what's happening with the Goldman Sachs base and the lack of erratic trading, perhaps because the goal of breaking Goldman Sachs didn't happen. It didn't happen by now, it ain't happening -- that's what the stock's screaming.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: One of the best
Posted Oct 27th 2008 9:58AM by Peter Cohan (RSS feed)
Filed under: Financial Crisis
Who knows why the Treasury gives our money to some banks and not to others. That comes to mind when considering that we just gave $18 billion to 10 regional banks -- three of which are unprofitable. Why does this matter? Because giving taxpayer money to an unprofitable bank could be as good as flushing it away. I guess Treasury figures it can always get more where that came from, so why not?
Here are the lucky winners of the government bailout lottery that earned a profit and their pre-market stock price change:
And here are the three that lost money but still got taxpayer capital -- the amount of their latest loss is in parentheses:
Continue reading 10 more banks get $18 billion of our money; three are money losers
Posted Oct 19th 2008 12:30PM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Forecasts
Wall Street's optimism in last week's preview about the earnings of tech stocks wasn't misplaced, as there were many more positive surprises than negative ones among the stocks we looked at. This week will bring plenty more data for investors in and watchers of the sector to mull over. Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL), AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T), and Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT), for example, are expected by analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial to post modest earnings gains from a year ago, to $1.11 per share (on $8.1 billion in sales), $0.72 per share (on $31.3 billion in sales), and $0.47 per share (on $14.8 billion in sales) respectively. All three of these companies ended the week closer to their 52-week lows than highs, and analysts on average consider them each a buy.
Here's a look at some of the week's biggest expected earnings gainers and decliners in the sector:
Continue reading The week in preview: More hope for techs, doubt about financials
Posted Sep 23rd 2008 11:00AM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst upgrades and downgrades, General Electric (GE), Novartis AG ADS (NVS), Regions Financial (RF), Newell Rubbermaid (NWL), Analyst initiations, Anadarko Petroleum (APC)
Analyst upgrades:
- Credit Suisse upgraded shares of Novartis (NYSE: NVS) to Neutral from Underperform as they believe the stock's defensive characteristics justify a premium valuation.
- Merrill raised Dreamworks (NYSE: DWA) to Buy from Neutral and has increased confidence in DWA's sustainable success following the performance of Kung Fu Panda and new revenue streams.
- Anadarko Petroleum (NYSE: APC) was raised to Buy from Hold at Stanford on valuation.
- Goldman upgraded Smurfit-Stone (NASDAQ: SSCC) and Canadian National (NYSE: CNI) to Buy from Neutral and added International Paper (NYSE: IP) to the Conviction Buy List.
- Northern Trust (NASDAQ: NTRS) was upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Merrill.
Analyst downgrades:
- Jefferies downgraded shares of Savvis (NASDAQ: SVVS) to Hold from Buy and lowered the target to $17 from $20 to reflect decreasing visibility from economic headwinds and expectations for increased capex.
- Citigroup downgraded Regions Financial (NYSE: RF) to Sell from Hold as they believe fundamentals are not in-line with the current valuation following the recent rally.
- Merrill lowered their General Electric (NYSE: GE) estimates below consensus and downgraded shares to Neutral from Buy citing increased fundamental pressures on the company's GE Capital unit. GE's target was cut to $28 from $37.50.
Continue reading Analyst calls: NVS, DWA, APC, RF, GE, MTB, BYD, NWL ...
Posted Jul 13th 2008 12:40PM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Forecasts, Citigroup Inc. (C), JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Bank of New York (BK), BB and T (BBT), CIT Group (CIT), , Comerica Inc (CMA), Wells Fargo (WFC)
After the implosion of IndyMac Bancorp (NYSE: IMB) and news of the deterioration of Fannie Mae (NYSE: FNM) and Freddie Mac (NYSE: FRE) last week, there's bound to be a certain level of trepidation as the earnings crunch begins this coming week and many big financial companies report. Here's a look at what Wall Street was expecting (see The week in preview: Expectations as the earnings crunch begins for expectations of other reporting companies.)
Analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial are expecting the following of companies to report lower earnings when compared to the same period of the previous year.
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Comerica Inc. (NYSE:
CMA): 51 cents EPS (-59.2%) on sales of $680.2 million (-7.3%)
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BB&T Corp. (NYSE:
BBT): 69 cents EPS (-16.9%) on sales of $1.8 billion (+5.9%)
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U.S. Bancorp (NYSE:
USB): 60 cents EPS (-7.7%) on sales of $3.8 billion (+8.3%)
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Continue reading Financials expected to post earnings declines, losses this week
Posted Apr 14th 2008 9:45AM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Forecasts
Analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial expect Northern Trust Corp. (NASDAQ: NTRS) and State Street Corp. (NYSE: STT) to report profit gains in the first quarter. Both companies are scheduled to post results on Tuesday.
Northern Trust is expected to earn 95 cents per share, which is up 13% from the same period in 2007 when it earned 84 cents. The company has tended to beat quarterly estimates recently. In the third quarter of 2007, it beat the consensus estimate by 6.7%, and in the fourth quarter it beat it by 4.8%.
Chicago-based Northern Trust provides banking and trust services to the affluent and to financial institutions and corporations. In the past year, its revenues were $5.4 billion and its net income totaled $726 million. Its EPS growth forecast for the year is 9.6%, which is better than the banking industry average and the S&P 500. But the consensus recommendation of analysts is still to hold Northern Trust.
The stock has gained 11.2% in the past year and trades at a P/E of 18.37. Shares closed Friday at $67.22.
Continue reading Northern Trust and State Street Q1 profits expected to rise
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