wall street

Macy’s Inc., New York symbol M, operates 850 Macy’s and Bloomingdale’s department stores in 45 states. It also sells goods over the Internet. We analyze Macy’s in Wall Street Stock Forecaster, our newsletter that gives you stock market news and advice on U.S. stocks. In the three months ended July 30, 2011, Macy’s earnings rose 63.9%, to $241 million from $147 million a year earlier. Earnings per share rose 57.1%, to $0.55 from $0.35, on more shares outstanding. That was well ahead of the consensus estimate of $0.48 a share....
GOOGLE INC., $490.92, Nasdaq symbol GOOG, is buying Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. (New York symbol MMI). Motorola Mobility makes mobile phones and tablet computers that use Google’s Android operating system software. Google will pay $40.00 a share for Motorola Mobility, or a total of $12.5 billion. Google held cash of $39.1 billion, or $121.15 a share, on June 30, 2011, so it can easily afford this purchase. The company aims to close the transaction by the end of 2011. The purchase price is 63% more than Motorola Mobility’s trading price just prior to the takeover announcement. That’s why Google’s stock fell on the news. As well, investors are concerned that software specialist Google is buying a struggling manufacturing company. Moreover, Google has agreed to pay a $2.5-billion break-up fee to Motorola Mobility if the deal falls through....
Intel Corp., symbol INTC on Nasdaq, is the world’s largest computer-chip maker. About 80% of all computers use its chips. In the three months ended July 2, 2011, the tech stock’s revenue of $13.0 billion. That’s up 21.1% from $10.8 billion a year earlier. The company’s recent acquisitions of McAfee Inc. and Germany’s Infeon Wireless Solutions (now Intel Mobile Communications) contributed $1.0 billion to Intel’s revenue, or 7.7% of the total. The tech stock’s earnings rose 10.0% in the quarter, to $3.2 billion from $2.9 billion. Earnings per share rose 15.7%, to $0.59 from $0.51, on fewer shares outstanding. These figures exclude costs related to integrate acquisitions and other one-time items....
Sherwin-Williams Co., $76.72, symbol SHW on New York, is North America’s largest paint producer. It operates over 3,900 paint and finishing stores around the world.

Sherwin is one of the stocks we analyze in Wall Street Stock Forecaster, our newsletter for U.S.A....
In the August 5, 2011, Wall Street Stock Forecaster hotline, we updated our buy/sell/hold advice on one of our long-time top stock picks, Kraft Foods Inc. (symbol KFT on New York). Kraft is the world’s second-largest food company, after Switzerland-based Nestle. Its owns many well-known brands, including Philadelphia cream cheese, Maxwell House coffee, and Oscar Mayer meats

Top stock picks: Kraft breakup could unlock hidden value

Kraft just announced plans to break itself into two separate, publicly traded companies. One company will sell snack foods, such as Oreo cookies, Cadbury chocolates, Trident gum and Tang powdered beverages. This business will have annual sales of $32 billion, with 42% of that coming from fast-growing markets, such as China, Brazil and India....
MACY’S INC., $25.55, New York symbol M, operates 850 Macy’s and Bloomingdale’s department stores in 45 states. It also sells goods over the Internet. The company reported higher-than-expected sales and earnings this week. In the three months ended July 30, 2011, Macy’s earnings rose 63.9%, to $241 million from $147 million a year earlier. Earnings per share rose 57.1%, to $0.55 from $0.35, on more shares outstanding. That was well ahead of the consensus estimate of $0.48 a share. Sales rose 7.3%, to $5.9 billion from $5.5 billion. That beat the consensus sales estimate of $5.8 billion. Same-store sales rose 6.4%. The company continues to benefit from its plan to tailor its merchandise to local tastes. Its private-label products are also selling well. In addition, Macy’s has been improving its customer service. That helps build customer loyalty....
Texas Instruments Inc., symbol TXN on New York, is shifting its focus from digital chips for cellphones to faster-growing analog chips, which convert sound and images into digital signals that computers can understand. We analyze Texas Instruments in Wall Street Stock Forecaster, our newsletter that recommends companies for investors who invest in stocks in the U.S. markets. Revenue and earnings declined in the 2011 second quarter compared with a year earlier. This was mainly due to the disruption caused by the Japanese earthquake/tsunami in March. The earthquake reduced production at the company’s Japanese factories, and cost it $50 million to repair the damage....
Stanley Black & Decker Inc., New York symbol SWK, makes power and hand tools and security devices. It took its current form on March 12, 2010. That’s when Stanley Works bought the Black & Decker Corp. for $3.5 billion in stock. Stanley shareholders own 50.5% of the combined company, and Black & Decker investors own the remaining 49.5%. We analyze Stanley in Wall Street Stock Forecaster, our investing newsletter that recommends stocks in the U.S. markets. The company now expects efficiencies achieved by merging plants, distribution networks and purchasing systems will save it $450 million by the end of 2012....
3M Company, New York symbol MMM, makes over 55,000 consumer and industrial products, including Post-it notes, Scotch tape, Scotch-Brite cleaning products, Scotchguard fabric protection and Thinsulate insulation.

3M is one of the large cap stocks we analyze in Wall Street Stock Forecaster, our newsletter that recommends stocks for the part of your portfolio you devote to U.S....
When investors see a day like Thursday, with a drop of more than 500 points in the Dow Jones Industrials, they can’t help but wonder if we face a replay of the 2007-2009 market plunge. However, though today’s situation could turn out badly, that’s not inevitable. It’s much different from a few years ago. The 2007-2009 drop was mostly about the collapse of the housing boom and everything that went with it. Today there is no boom that could deflate and bring down the economy. Today’s problem grows out of government attempts at ‘fixing’ the economy in recent years. These fixes, which were mostly unsuccessful, bloated government spending and created huge debts. Today’s main market worry is how the U.S. federal government will attempt to fix its budget deficit and bring its debt down to a manageable level. To top things off, the Obama administration has also brought in big changes in health care, union and environmental rules and so on. Some of these changes face court challenges and political opposition. But some are sure to survive and go into effect. Others are sure to follow....