amazon.com Inc.
NASDAQ symbol AMZN, is the leading bookseller on the Internet, as well as a leading video and music seller. It also has numerous other store categories, including electronics, computer games, toys and tools. Through Amazon Services, the company also offers programs that let sellers market on its web sites.
AEROPOSTALE INC., $16.73, symbol ARO on New York, is a mall-based retailer of casual clothing and accessories. The company has 919 Aeropostale stores in the U.S. and 70 in Canada and Puerto Rico. It mainly sells its clothing to 14-to17-year-olds. In addition, its 87 P.S. from Aeropostale stores in the U.S. are aimed at seven-to-12-year-old elementary-school children. Today, Aeropostale opened its first store in Quebec, at the Place du Royaume mall in the city of Saguenay. The company will open six more stores in the province through the rest of 2012. Additional locations include Place Laurier in Quebec City, Fairview Pointe Claire in Point-Claire, Promenades St. Bruno in St. Bruno De Montarville, Galleria D’Anjou in Anjou, Mail Champlain in Brossard and Les Galeries de la Capitale in Quebec City....
Most stock markets are down lately due to investor worries about a potential eurozone breakup, sluggish U.S. growth and a slowdown in China. Still, the long-term outlook is positive. One way to profit from a rebound is to add exchange traded funds (ETFs) that track major stock market indexes to your portfolio. ETFs trade on stock exchanges, just like stocks. Prices are quoted in newspaper stock tables and online. You must pay brokerage commissions to buy and sell ETFs, but their low management fees still give them a cost advantage over most mutual funds....
MICROSOFT CORP., $30.98, Nasdaq symbol MSFT, aims to enter the fast-growing e-book field through a new alliance with bookseller Barnes & Noble Inc. (New York symbol BKS). This week, Microsoft agreed to buy 17.6% of a subsidiary of Barnes & Noble that will operate Barnes & Noble’s Nook e-book business; Barnes & Noble will own the remaining 82.4%. This new firm will also include Barnes & Noble’s college textbook operations. Microsoft will pay $300 million for this interest. That’s equal to just 5.9% of the $5.1 billion, or $0.60 a share, that the company earned in the three months ended March 31, 2012. Still, this move should help Microsoft develop new software for the Nook e-book reader and other mobile devices. That would help it compete with the Apple iPad tablet computer and Amazon.com’s Kindle e-book reader....
AMAZON.COM $191.07 (Nasdaq symbol AMZN; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk) (206-266-1000; www.amazon.com; Shares outstanding: 455.1 million; Market cap: $87.0 billion; No dividends paid) has agreed to buy Kiva Systems for $775 million. Kiva makes small orange robots that help manage warehouse inventory. Amazon’s shipping volumes continue to rise. In response, the company plans to add 17 more warehouses, bringing its total to 69. The Kiva purchase will let Amazon better control its labour costs. Amazon can also sell the robots to other retailers. Kiva’s clients already include the Gap, Staples and Saks....
AMAZON.COM $191.07 (Nasdaq symbol AMZN; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk) (206-266-1000; www.amazon.com; Shares outstanding: 455.1 million; Market cap: $87.0 billion; No dividends paid) has agreed to buy Kiva Systems for $775 million. Kiva makes small orange robots that help manage warehouse inventory.
Amazon’s shipping volumes continue to rise. In response, the company plans to add 17 more warehouses, bringing its total to 69.
The Kiva purchase will let Amazon better control its labour costs. Amazon can also sell the robots to other retailers. Kiva’s clients already include the Gap, Staples and Saks.
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Amazon’s shipping volumes continue to rise. In response, the company plans to add 17 more warehouses, bringing its total to 69.
The Kiva purchase will let Amazon better control its labour costs. Amazon can also sell the robots to other retailers. Kiva’s clients already include the Gap, Staples and Saks.
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VITERRA INC., $15.91, symbol VT on Toronto, has agreed to a friendly takeover offer from Switzerland-based commodity trader Glencore International plc. The purchase price is $6.1 billion, or $16.25 per Viterra share. As part of the deal, Glencore will sell a number of Viterra’s assets, including about 90% of its Canadian fertilizer retail stores and all of its Australian outlets, along with Viterra’s 34% stake in a fertilizer plant in Medicine Hat, Alberta. Agrium (symbol AGU on Toronto) has agreed to buy all of these assets. Agrium is a recommendation of our Successful Investor newsletter....
ALIMENTATION COUCHE-TARD, $31.94, symbol ATD.B on Toronto, reported sharply higher sales and earnings in the latest quarter. The company is the largest convenience store operator in Canada, with over 2,000 outlets. It also has nearly 3,700 U.S. stores. The Canadian stores operate under the Couche-Tard and Mac’s banners, while the U.S. stores mainly use the Circle K brand. In the three months ended January 29, 2012, Couche-Tard’s earnings rose 24.7% to $86.8 million from $69.6 million a year earlier (all figures except share price in U.S. dollars). Earnings per share rose 28.9%, to $0.49 from $0.38, on fewer shares outstanding....
POWERSHARES QQQ ETF $61.02 (Nasdaq symbol QQQQ; buy or sell through brokers; www.invescopowershares.com), formerly called Nasdaq 100 Trust Shares, holds the stocks that represent the Nasdaq 100 Index. That index is made up of the 100 largest shares on the Nasdaq exchange, based on market cap.
The Nasdaq 100 Index contains shares of companies in a number of major industries, including computer hardware and software, telecommunications, retail/wholesale trade and biotechnology. It does not contain financial companies. The fund’s expenses are about 0.20% of its assets.
The index’s highest-weighted stocks are Apple, Microsoft, Qualcomm, Google, Cisco Systems, Intel, Amazon.com, Oracle Corp., Comcast Corp. and Amgen Inc.
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The Nasdaq 100 Index contains shares of companies in a number of major industries, including computer hardware and software, telecommunications, retail/wholesale trade and biotechnology. It does not contain financial companies. The fund’s expenses are about 0.20% of its assets.
The index’s highest-weighted stocks are Apple, Microsoft, Qualcomm, Google, Cisco Systems, Intel, Amazon.com, Oracle Corp., Comcast Corp. and Amgen Inc.
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WYNDHAM WORLDWIDE $42.99 (New York symbol WYN; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk) (973-753-6000; www.wyndhamworldwide.com; Shares outstanding: 154.0 million; Market cap: $6.6 billion; Dividend yield: 2.1%) is one of the world’s largest hospitality companies, with 7,205 franchised hotels worldwide. Aside from Wyndham and Ramada, it owns a variety of other brands, including Days Inn, Super 8, Wingate, Baymont Inn & Suites, Microtel Inns & Suites, Hawthorn Suites, Howard Johnson, Travelodge and AmeriHost Inn. In addition to hotels, Wyndham manages vacation resorts, rental properties, luxury clubs and time-shares. Wyndham now has 100,000 vacation rental properties worldwide. This wide range of operations gives the company more consistent cash flow than most of its competitors, which mainly focus on hotels. In the three months ended December 31, 2011, Wyndham’s revenue rose 6.7%, to $1.0 billion from $937.0 million. The company gets most of its revenue from vacation rather than business travel, and vacation bookings rose in the latest quarter. That helped push up Wyndham’s occupancy rate by 3.8%. Before one-time items, earnings rose 2.2%, to $0.47 a share from $0.46. Wyndham continues to buy back its shares. In the latest quarter, it repurchased 6.7 million shares for $225 million. In all of 2011, it bought back 28.7 million shares for $902 million. The company has also raised its quarterly dividend by 53.3%, to $0.23 from $0.15. It now yields 2.1%....
AMAZON.COM $184.47 (Nasdaq symbol AMZN; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk) (206-266-1000; www.amazon.com; Shares outstanding: 454.8 million; Market cap: $83.9 billion; No dividends paid) is a major online retailer. Books, music and videos make up about 40% of its sales. Other products, including electronics, computer games and toys, make up the other 60%. Amazon Marketplace lets other companies sell their products through Amazon’s websites.
In the three months ended December 31, 2011, Amazon’s earnings fell 57.5%, to $177 million, or $0.39 a share. A year earlier, it earned $416 million, or $0.93 a share. The decline came despite a 34.6% jump in sales, to $17.4 billion from $12.9 billion.
During the quarter, the company spent $862 million on “technology and content,” up 66.1% from $519 million a year earlier. That was the main reason for the lower earnings. This additional spending included investments in new models of its Kindle electronic book reader, including the Kindle Fire tablet computer.
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In the three months ended December 31, 2011, Amazon’s earnings fell 57.5%, to $177 million, or $0.39 a share. A year earlier, it earned $416 million, or $0.93 a share. The decline came despite a 34.6% jump in sales, to $17.4 billion from $12.9 billion.
During the quarter, the company spent $862 million on “technology and content,” up 66.1% from $519 million a year earlier. That was the main reason for the lower earnings. This additional spending included investments in new models of its Kindle electronic book reader, including the Kindle Fire tablet computer.
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