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Showing posts with label NYSE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NYSE. Show all posts

Monday, July 25, 2016

Sprint revenue beats estimates as discounts attract subscribers

Business

Stock market. Technology.

(Reuters) - Sprint Corp (N:S) reported better-than-expected first-quarter revenue on Monday as big discounts helped it attract more postpaid subscribers, and the No. 4 U.S. wireless carrier said it had enough money to fund its business this year.
Analysts and investors had raised questions about Sprint's financial position after majority owner SoftBank Corp (T:9984) agreed earlier this month to buy UK chipmaker ARM Holdings Plc (L:ARM) for $32 billion.
"We expect that we will have adequate sources to provide all the capital necessary to fund the business and repay the debt maturities due in FY 16," Chief Financial Officer Tarek Robbiati said on a conference call with analysts.
Sprint, whose shares rose more than 18 percent in early trading, reported 173,000 postpaid wireless additions in the three months ended June 30 - the biggest increase for any first quarter in nine years.
That compared with a net loss of 12,000 subscribers in the same period last year.
The quarter also had the lowest postpaid phone churn in the company's history, Chief Executive Marcelo Claure said in a statement. Postpaid phone user churn, or the rate at which subscribers defect to other networks, was 1.39 percent.
"We believe the turnaround story is taking shape," Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) analyst Jennifer Fritzsche said in a client note.
However, the company's net loss widened to $302 million, or 8 cents per share, in the period from $20 million, or 1 cent per share, a year earlier.
The latest quarter included contract termination charges of $113 million, primarily related to an agreement with wireless carrier Ntelos.
Sprint, in which Japan's SoftBank holds a more than 80 percent stake, said its net operating revenue fell marginally to $8.01 billion. Analysts on average had expected $7.98 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Up to Friday's close of $4.62, Sprint's shares had risen 27.6 percent since the start of the year.

U.S. futures point to steady open in cautious trade

Stock Markets

Investing.com - Wall Street futures held steady on Monday, as investors remained cautious ahead of policy meetings by the Federal Reserve and the Bank of Japan this week.
The blue-chip Dow futures was up 0.03%, the S&P 500 futures inched 0.01% higher, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 futures dipped 0.02%.
Upbeat U.S. data released that week continued to support expectations for a rate hike by the U.S. central bank in the near future.
While most investors expect the Fed to leave its monetary policy unchanged this week, it could give hints on the timing of future rate hikes.
Market participants were also looking ahead to Friday’s policy statement by the BoJ, amid growing expectations for the announcement of additional stimulus measures.
General Electric was expected to remain in focus after reporting on Friday a 2% decline in second-quarter orders, citing a "volatile and slow growth economy." Shares were down 0.19% in pre-market trade.
Financial stocks were also likely to move on Monday as Morgan Stanley last week joined a number of other U.S. lenders in exceeding second-quarter profit estimates.
Elsewhere, American Airlines Group was set to be in the spotlight after reporting a 44% drop to $950 million in second-quarter net income.
The company also said it will be deferring the delivery of the 22 Airbus A350 aircraft it has on order. The carrier was supposed to receive its first A350 in the spring of 2017 but with the new agreement it will receive two A350s in late 2018 and then five A350s each year after that until 2022.
No major U.S. data was expected throughout the day.

SEC speeds up listing process for some ETFs

Stock Markets
(Reuters) - The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday approved listing standards for some exchange-traded funds, paving the way for issuers to bring funds to the market in weeks instead of months.
Many actively managed funds will now be able to list new ETF products without a separate filing with the SEC, effective immediately, the New York Stock Exchange said in a statement.
Bats Global Markets Inc, which emerged as one of the fastest-growing trading venues for ETFs last year, and the NYSE received the approvals on Friday.
NYSE is owned by Intercontinental Exchange Inc.
"This is a big deal for the industry," said Jeremy Senderowicz, a securities lawyer and partner at Dechert LLP in New York, adding that the standards will reduce the uncertainty that prevented companies from offering new ETFs.
"It doesn't expand the universe of products which can be offered, but it introduces reliability and speed into the process of getting to market."
ETFs issue shares in large blocks called "creation units" that investors then split up and sell in the secondary market.
The funds generally redeem those units by giving investors the securities in the portfolios instead of cash.
When a firm wants to launch a new kind of exchange-traded fund, it has to apply for "exemptive relief" from the SEC. The agency typically takes months to approve new ETF applications.
The SEC has heightened scrutiny of ETFs after an irregular volatility seen on Aug. 24, when some ETFs and stocks sank 30 percent or more from the previous day's closing level. Trading in 327 ETFs was halted.

Sunday, July 24, 2016

Corporate raiders seek Brexit bargains in Britain

Business and Stock Markets.
By Pamela Barbaglia and Freya Berry
LONDON (Reuters) - Overseas buyers lured by a plunge in the pound are looking to snare British companies on the cheap, ensuring a steady flow of deals since Britain voted to leave the European Union and defying expectations of an M&A drought.
Almost 60 transactions totalling $34.5 billion have been struck by foreign companies for British firms since June 23, according to Thomson Reuters data, compared with 79 deals amounting to $4.3 billion in the month leading up to the vote.
This activity - dominated by Japanese group SoftBank's $32 billion swoop for chip designer ARM Holdings - has defied warnings that dealmaking could dry up for a period if Britain backed Brexit, given uncertainty surrounding risks to the economy and access to the EU single market.
The list of British takeovers could grow after the summer, according to bankers who say they are working on possible bids on behalf of foreign companies interested in UK targets.
The SoftBank deal was hailed by the government as a sign of UK economic resilience, prompting new Prime Minister Theresa May to declare the country "open for business".
But M&A bankers said some of the post-vote takeovers had more to do with the relatively low valuations of British companies given current exchange rates, rather than being driven by confidence in the British economy.
Sterling has taken the brunt of market concern since the Brexit vote on June 23, falling to a 31-year low in the aftermath of the vote.
"Clearly this is a buying opportunity," said Ben Ward, head of UK corporate at law firm Herbert Smith Freehills. "People with strong currencies – dollar, renminbi, yen – will no doubt be interested in acquiring sound sterling-denominated assets."
There have been dozens of other deals since the referendum.
South African retailer Steinhoff agreed to pay nearly 600 million pounds for British-based discount chain Poundland  on July 13, for example.
It came a day after AMC Entertainment Holdings - an American company majority-owned by a Chinese conglomerate - said it would buy London-based Odeon & UCI Cinemas Group to create the world's largest cinema operator, in a deal valued at about 921 million pounds.
On Thursday, China's Fosun International snapped up English football club Wolverhampton Wanderers.
DEFENCE FROM RAIDS
Some M&A bankers in London say they are working closely with British companies who feel vulnerable to hostile bids from cash-rich foreign buyers, in sectors including aerospace, housebuilding and retail. Others say they are trying to win advisory mandates at firms viewed as potential takeover targets.
"We're helping our UK clients think through the right fundamental value of their business in the current environment and shoring them up to prevent unwanted opportunistic situations where an international rival tries to buy them on the cheap," said Hernan Cristerna, co-head of global M&A at JPMorgan.
U.S. and Asian conglomerates are also stepping up efforts to secure bargain deals unseen in decades, sources said.
Some have hired banks to resurrect deals that were aborted in recent years because of price disagreements.
After the vote British companies have become 10-15 percent cheaper for overseas buyers due to the devaluation of the pound which was trading at $1.31 on July 22 against $1.50 the day before the referendum.
"When you have a material currency discontinuity it makes sense to dust off previous M&A analyses and crunch the numbers again," said Paulo Pereira, a partner at boutique advisory firm Perella Weinberg.
'POLITICAL FOOTBALL'
Surveys conducted in the run-up to the referendum had warned a Brexit vote would threaten M&A activity.
A study released on June 16 by Merrill Corporation, a provider of technology and services in the M&A industry, and market intelligence firm The M&A Advisor found a Brexit vote would have a "negative and tangible" near-term impact on UK dealmaking, with British companies becoming less attractive to overseas buyers.
A survey of 1,500 global dealmakers published the same day by technology provider Intralinks suggested a decision to leave the EU would lead to dealmaking "chaos", driving down M&A levels in Britain as well as the rest of Europe.
But the M&A drought has yet to materialize.
The sectors with the highest concentration of foreign takeovers in the past four weeks were technology, consumer, industrials and media, with an overall 37 sales valued at $33 billion. Industry sources said some had roots in discussions that began well ahead of the June referendum.
"If we have learned one thing from the global financial crisis it's that standing still means moving backwards," said Steve Krouskos, EY Global Vice Chair, Transaction Advisory Services, adding that companies need to carry on doing deals to boost their organic growth, build a global presence and stay ahead of the technology curve.
JPMorgan's Cristerna stressed that "boards still have strategic needs and ambitions and need to remain open to external sources of growth".
Pricing aside, however, dealmaking will still be tough for overseas buyers who must evaluate the uncertainty surrounding Britain's future relationship with the EU, and the prospects of a messy divorce that may take several years to conclude.
Additionally, any sizable takeover could face tighter government scrutiny, after May pledged to oppose foreign companies trying to buy British champions deemed "strategically important", citing the sale of chocolatier Cadbury in 2010 and Pfizer's attempted takeover of AstraZeneca in 2014.
But SoftBank's friendly takeover of ARM, which won the blessing of the government in less than 24 hours, established a useful blueprint for dealmaking following the Brexit vote, banking sources said.
The Japanese company made legally-binding commitments to double ARM's UK headcount in the next five years and preserve its Cambridge headquarters.
"There is so much 'political football' going on that if you want to pull off a significant transaction in a sensitive sector it is wise to start planning some concessions beforehand to ease government approval," said Perella's Pereira.
($1 = 0.7644 pounds)

Saturday, July 23, 2016

U.S. stocks inch up, as Wall Street closes higher for 4th straight week.

Stock Markets.

Wall Street, Dow Jones, NYSE, S&P 500, Nasdaq.

Investing.com -- U.S. stocks re-entered record territory on Friday, completing their fourth straight week of positive gains, as strong performances by a pair of telecom giants, outweighed losses from General Electric (NYSE:GE) following subdued quarterly earnings from the multinational conglomerate.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 53.62 or 0.29% to 18,570.85, while the S&P 500 Composite index added 9.86 or 0.46% to 2,175.03, as U.S. equities stayed on pace for their strongest month since March. The indices have remained in record territory for the majority of the last two weeks, as signals of slowing growth in the euro area and Japan, as well as plunging global bond yields have sent investors fleeing to safety into stocks on Wall Street. The S&P 500 ended the week at its highest closing level on record. The NASDAQ Composite index, meanwhile, rose by 26.26 or 0.52% to 5,100.16, moving approximately 2% from hitting a record-high.
On the S&P 500, nine of 10 sectors closed in the green as stocks in the Telecommunications, Utilities and Financials industries led. The telecom sector received a boost from AT&T Inc (NYSE:T) and Verizon Communications Inc (NYSE:VZ), which both gained more than 1% on the session. On Thursday evening, AT&T narrowly topped analysts' forecasts with its second quarter earnings, while increasing consolidated revenues by 22% to $40.5 billion for the three-month period ending in late-June. It came as the Dallas-based company reported a spike of 2.1 million wireless adds, 1.4 million of which came from the U.S.
Midway through the second quarter results period, approximately 3% of S&P 500 companies are reporting year-over-year earnings decreases, far below expectations for an aggregate decline of 4.5%, according to Reuters. Next week, roughly 40% of S&P 500 companies are set to report their quarterly earnings.
The top performer on the Dow was Visa Inc (NYSE:V), which added 1.12 or 1.42% to 79.91. Visa finished just ahead of Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT), which gained 0.77 or 1.38% to 56.57. Earlier this week, Microsoft topped analysts' earnings and revenue estimates after sales among its closely-watched cloud product more than doubled on the quarter. Microsoft shares are up roughly 6% since the Redmond, Washington-based company released their second quarter results on Tuesday night.
The worst performer was GE, which fell 0.53 or 1.63% to 32.06 in Friday's session, after failing to appease investor sentiments on Friday in spite of beating consensus forecasts with its quarterly results. Although GE's revenues rose sharply in the second quarter on an annual basis, investors placed closer attention to weakness in the locomotive and oil-field equipment segment, where orders fell 16%, ex-acquistion and currency shifts. GE had been one of the top components on the Dow since last May when it last hit all-time record highs.
The biggest gainer on the NASDAQ was Vodafone Group (LON:VOD) PLC (NASDAQ:VOD), which added 1.23 or 4.09% to 31.34. Shares in Vodafone are still down nearly 20% over the last year, including 10% during the last three months. The worst performer was Skyworks Solutions Inc (NASDAQ:SWKS), which tumbled 6.11 or 8.62% to 64.81. Shares in the Skyworks Solutions plummeted one day after the semiconductor manufacturer said its profits fell 9% last quarter on an annual basis. Skyworks Solutions, one of the top suppliers for the iPhone, reportedly has seen its revenues dented as Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL) looks to reduce its channel inventory ahead of the iPhone 7 launch, according to a report from Fool.com.
On the New York Stock Exchange, advancing issues outnumbered declining ones by a 1,958-996 margin.

Goldman Sachs to invest $184 million in Brazil storage company: executive

Stock Markets

SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Goldman Sachs Group Inc (N:GS) will invest 600 million reais ($184 million) in Brazilian storage company Metrofit over the next 6 years, betting on a recovery from the harshest recession since the 1930s, a company executive said on Friday.
Metrofit, founded in 2012, is a joint venture between Brazilian real estate company TRX (SA:TRXL11) and U.S. company Metro Self Storage. The terms of the agreement with the U.S. investment bank were not disclosed.
The self storage business is growing in Brazil, despite the recession. Metrofit plans to build up to 10 storage sites a year in different state capitals, TRX's chief executive officer Luiz Augusto do Amaral said.
Metrofit's competitors GuardeAqui, controlled by Sam Zell's Equity International, and GoodStorage have announced expansion plans, taking the opportunity to buy cheap real estate during the recession.
"Goldman Sachs is betting on a longer term recovery", Amaral said. "And the timing is good to expand, since this year there is a lot of new real state coming to the market with prices lower than expected."
Metrofit owns two self-storage sites in the rich Sao Paulo metropolitan region and is building two others. The company may use part of the cash injection to fund acquisitions, Amaral said.
Earlier this week, Brazilian technology startup CargoX announced that Goldman Sachs had led a 35 million reais ($11 million) investment round for the company to help it fund an expansion.

L'Oreal acquires New Jersey-based IT Cosmetics in $1.2 billion cash deal

Stock Markets

Acquisitions and takeovers.

Investing.com -- L'Oréal (PA:OREP) S.A., the world largest cosmetics company, bolstered its vast inventory of unique, distinctive beauty products on Friday with the acquisition of IT Cosmetics.
On Friday afternoon, the Paris-based cosmetics giant announced that it came to terms on a definitive agreement to acquire the Jersey City, New Jersey-based beauty brand for $1.2 billion in cash. Founded only eight years ago, IT Cosmetics was developed by top plastic surgeons nationwide to help empower women with top of the line skincare and makeup products. IT Cosmetics offers more than 300 beauty products, ranging from color cosmetics and skincare items to brushes and tools, the company said in a statement.
"IT Cosmetics shares L'Oréal's passion for product innovation and our belief that offering beauty for all is a deeply purposeful mission," said Frédéric Rozé, President and CEO of L'Oréal USA. "The brand has earned the devotion of its highly engaged consumers and we see potential for significant growth in the years to come."
IT Cosmetics, which was founded in 2008 by Jamie Kern Lima and Paulo Lima, will become part of the Luxe Division of L'Oréal, the companies said. The brand will continue to operate out of its Jersey City, New Jersey headquarters under the current leadership team, IT Cosmetics said.
"At IT Cosmetics our mission is to make the world more beautiful through our products, through our actions and through our belief that every woman is beautiful and deserves to feel her most beautiful," said Jamie Kern Lima, Co-Founder & CEO, IT Cosmetics.
"Our makeup and skincare products are not only game-changing in their innovation, they are also life-changing for real women everywhere. Partnering with L'Oréal and utilizing the power of their global infrastructure will help us scale our mission in an even bigger way and we couldn't be more excited," Lima added.
Shares in L'Oreal closed Friday's session at €174.55, up 1.20 or 0.69%.

Silicon Valley leads avalanche of quarterly reports.

Stock Markets

Wall Street. Quarterly report.

By Noel Randewich
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A quartet of technology heavyweights will be part of an avalanche of quarterly corporate earnings reports next week that, along with a meeting of Federal Reserve policymakers, could hold the key to whether Wall Street extends its record-breaking rally or loses steam.
With second-quarter reporting season kicking into high gear, scorecards from Apple (O:AAPL), Alphabet (O:GOOGL), Amazon.com (O:AMZN) and Facebook (O:FB) will be front and center for investors eyeing the S&P 500's already-stretched valuation following a nearly 9-percent rally since June 27.
"These are very widely owned companies by institutional investors and there could be selling if the news is bad," said Tim Ghriskey, chief investment officer of Solaris Group in Bedford Hills, New York.
A total of 194 S&P 500 companies are expected report their quarterly earnings next week; that is much higher than normal for any one week, even during most reporting seasons.
Of reports in so far, 54 percent have shown revenue above expectations, slightly better than the 48-percent beat rate over the past year.
Expectations for earnings also appear to be on the mend after over a year of declines caused by slumping oil prices and a strong dollar. Second-quarter profits are now forecast to dip 3.0 percent, less than the 4.5 percent drop expected at the start of July, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
With the S&P 500 trading at about 17 times expected earnings, valuations appear stretched, with some investors saying current stock prices presume better-than-expected results and forecasts from major companies.
Apple, Alphabet, Amazon and Facebook account for around 7 percent of the S&P 500 and a fifth of the Nasdaq Composite, which has lagged the broader stock market so far this year.
The S&P 500 is up 6 percent in 2016 while the Nasdaq has gained just 2 percent.
Many on Wall Street expect those leading technology firms to at least meet or slightly exceed analysts' forecasts, strategists said. A series of big surprises in either direction could lead to steep stock swings.
Indeed, shares of Amazon have whipsawed following its most recent reports, slumping 6 percent in one day after its December quarter profits missed expectations and surging 10 percent the day after its March-quarter results blew away forecasts.
Wall Street widely expects sales of Apple's iPhones to fall this year for the first time ever as it competes with cheaper rivals in China. But investors are banking on the release of a new smartphone later this year to return Apple to revenue growth in 2017.
"I'm looking at the numbers coming in next week, and Facebook, Google and Amazon should all be strong. Apple is the only one I'm concerned out because of the some of the issues they've had with lost market share," said Daniel Morgan, senior portfolio manager at Synovus Trust Company in Atlanta. His firm owns shares of Apple, Amazon and Alphabet.
On Tuesday and Wednesday the Federal Reserve holds its next policy meeting, with futures prices implying most investors expect no interest rate hike until March 2017. Following the market's quick rebound from Britain's unexpected June vote to leave the European Union, a minority of investors predict an increase as soon as September.
"They're going to start setting people up for September. The economy is clearly getting better and we're seeing less concern about international events," said Stephen Massocca, Chief Investment Officer of Wedbush Equity Management LLC in San Francisco.
Apple hands in its results on Tuesday, while Facebook reports on Wednesday and Amazon and Alphabet report on Thursday.

Friday, July 22, 2016

Exclusive: De Beers puts Canadian Snap Lake diamond mine up for sale

Stock Markets

By Susan Taylor and John Tilak

TORONTO (Reuters) - Anglo American Plc's (L:AAL) De Beers has put its Snap Lake diamond mine in Canada up for sale after suspending operations at the unprofitable mine last December, a spokesman said on Friday.
De Beers has hired Bank of Montreal (TO:BMO) to market the underground mine in Northwest Territories, said spokesman Tom Ormsby, but he did not provide financial details.
Snap Lake, which has not made money since production began in 2008, produced 1.2 million carats last year and was initially planned to operate until 2028.
In June, De Beers Canada received approval to flood the mine tunnels, reducing maintenance costs, under a revised suspension plan. The flooding has not yet happened but planning work continues.
"Before we get into that actual flooding of the mine ... we thought it would be prudent, certainly, to see if there was an interest," Ormsby said.
De Beers Canada spent C$2.2 billion ($1.67 billion) on mine construction and operation up to year-end 2014.
If no qualified buyer is found, De Beers Canada may proceed with the flooding plan in the fourth quarter, Ormsby said.
De Beers, 85 percent owned by Anglo American and 15 percent by the government of Botswana, has been hurt by waning demand and slumping prices in the diamond industry.
Snap Lake was De Beers' first mine built outside Africa and is 220 kilometers (137 miles) northeast of Yellowknife, the capital of the Northwest Territories.
Accessible only by air and an ice road that operates for two months of the year, the mine was plagued with groundwater problems from extracting diamonds below Snap Lake. It employed 595 staff and 200 contractors before its suspension.
The level of interest is unclear, said one legal source familiar with the matter, with another person adding that the mine's remote location, technical challenges and high reclamation liability have diminished its luster.
The sources said potential buyers could include Stornoway Diamond Corp (TO:SWY), which is poised to open Quebec's first diamond mine, and Peregrine Diamonds Ltd(TO:PGD), which is exploring for diamonds in Canada's Arctic and is backed by high-profile miners Eric and Robert Friedland.
Other diamond miners operating in Canada's Arctic include Rio Tinto Ltd (L:RIO) and Dominion Diamond Corp (TO:DDC).
De Beers Canada also operates the Victor diamond mine in Ontario, which is set to close in 2018 unless an expansion proceeds. It is also building the Gahcho Kue diamond mine in the Northwest Territories.
Gahcho Kue, 49 percent owned by Mountain Province Diamonds Inc (TO:MPV), is expected to start production within the next month with annual output averaging 4.5 million carats.