wall street
Western Union, symbol WU on New York, provides money-transfer and foreign-exchange services in over 200 countries and territories. You can get our full stock market trading advice on Western Union in our Wall Street Stock Forecaster newsletter. In the 2011 first quarter, Western Union reported revenue of $1.3 billion. That’s up 4.1% from $1.2 billion in the comparable 2010 period....
Every Wednesday, we publish our “Investor Toolkit” series on TSI Network. Whether you’re a new or experienced investor, these weekly updates are designed to give you specific investment advice. Each Investor Toolkit update gives you a fundamental piece of investing strategy, and shows you how you can put it into practice right away. Today’s tip: “How your stock research can benefit from price-to-sales ratios.” We display a price-to-sales or p/s ratio with every stock we cover in our newsletters, including Wall Street Stock Forecaster, our newsletter for investing in U.S. stocks....
PLEASE NOTE: We’ve put six sell recommendations, and our reasons for those recommendations, in the latest issue of Wall Street Stock Forecaster. Here are the sells: Harte-Hanks Inc., New York symbol HHS Liz Claiborne Inc., New York symbol LIZ...
Texas Instruments Inc. (symbol TXN on New York) makes chips for a wide variety of electronic devices, including cell phones, DVD players, digital cameras and handheld calculators. The company’s chips are also used in other products ranging from weapons-guidance systems to kidney-dialysis machines. We analyze Texas Instruments in Wall Street Stock Forecaster, our newsletter for investing in stocks in the U.S. market. In the three months ended March 31, 2011, earnings rose 1.2% to $666 million or $0.55 a share. A year earlier the company earned $658 million or $0.52 a share. The Japanese earthquake cut production at two of its factories. Earnings per share were reduced by about $0.02 because of costs associated with the earthquake. One factory is expected to resume full production shortly, and the other in July....
If you subscribe to Wall Street Stock Forecaster, our newsletter that recommends U.S.A. stock market picks, you’ll want to take a very close look at the current issue. In it, we reveal the names of 6 stocks you should sell right away—and avoid the potential for big losses. This is crucial investment advice you simply can’t afford to miss. (Note: if you are a current Wall Street Stock Forecaster subscriber or Inner Circle member, click here to view the latest issue, which contains these 6 sell recommendations. Be sure to log in first.)...
Apple Inc., symbol AAPL on Nasdaq, makes computers and a variety of other electronic devices. Portable devices, such as the iPod music player, the iPhone smartphone and the iPad tablet computer, dominate Apple’s overall sales. Users of these products also buy music, movie and video-game downloads at the tech stock’s iTunes online store. In its second quarter, which ended March 26, 2011, Apple’s earnings rose 94.8%, to $6.0 billion, or $6.40 a share. That easily beat the consensus estimate of $5.38 a share. The company earned $3.1 billion, or $3.33 a share, a year earlier. The tech stock’s sales jumped 82.7%, to $24.7 billion from $13.5 billion. Sales outside the U.S. accounted for 59% of the total. During the quarter, the company sold 18.6 million iPhone smartphones (up 113.1%) and 3.8 million Mac computers (up 27.8%). Sales of the tech stocks iPod music players fell 17.2%, to 9.0 million units. However, that’s because many iPod users are upgrading to the iPhone, which also plays music and videos....
Yum! Brands Inc., symbol YUM on New York, operates nearly 38,000 fast-food restaurants in over 110 countries. Its main banners include KFC (fried chicken), Pizza Hut and Taco Bell (Mexican food). Yum has announced it will sell its Long John Silver’s (seafood) and its A&W (burgers) chains. You can get our full analysis, including our clear stock advice, on Yum in Wall Street Stock Forecaster, our newsletter that covers the U.S. markets. In the three months ended March 19, 2011, Yum’s sales rose 3.4%, to $2.43 billion from $2.35 billion a year earlier. Overall sales rose 28% in China, where same-store sales rose 13%. Yum also opened 92 new restaurants there. The international division, which excludes China, opened 131 new restaurants....
International Business Machines Corp., symbol IBM on New York, reported higher-than-expected earnings in the latest quarter. In the three months ended March 31, 2011, the large cap stock’s earnings rose 10.1%, to $2.9 billion from $2.6 billion a year earlier. Earnings per share rose 17.3%, to $2.31 from $1.97, on fewer shares outstanding. Excluding one-time items, such as costs related to acquisitions, IBM earned $2.41 a share. On that basis, the latest earnings beat the consensus estimate of $2.29. Revenue rose 7.7%, to $24.6 billion from $22.9 billion a year earlier. That was higher than the consensus revenue estimate of $24.0 billion. Revenue from Brazil, Russia, India and China (which together account for 21% of IBM’s overall revenue), jumped 26%. The company is also seeing strong demand for its new System Z mainframe computer....
Genuine Parts Co., symbol GPC on New York, distributes auto parts through more than 5,700 NAPA Auto Parts stores in the U.S. and 690 wholesalers in Canada. The company also distributes industrial parts, office furniture, and electrical equipment. We analyze Genuine Parts in Wall Street Stock Forecaster, our newsletter that helps you find the best stocks in the U.S. markets. In the three months ended March 31, 2011, Genuine Parts earned $126.5 million. That’s up 25.7% from $100.6 million a year earlier. Earnings per share rose 27.0% to $0.80 from $0.63, on fewer shares outstanding....
We hardly ever recommend buying new issues when they are first sold to the public, and often stay away from them for months, if not years, afterward. That’s because new issues often come to market when it’s a good time for the company and/or its insiders to sell, but that’s not necessarily a good time for you to buy. Spinoffs are in many ways the opposite of new issues. Companies often do spinoffs when they feel it isn’t a good time to sell. Instead, they choose to hand out shares of the new firm to their shareholders. That often results in buying opportunities in undervalued stocks. (In a just-published issue of Wall Street Stock Forecaster, our newsletter for investing in the U.S. markets, we update our buy/sell/hold advice on a spinoff whose shares have soared 79% for us since September 2010. See below for further details on this potentially undervalued stock’s outlook.)...