YAHOO [BRIEFING.COM]: Today's
session was dominated by the sellers as disappointing third quarter earnings
continued to roll in. Equities opened lower, and spent the majority of the
session sliding to fresh lows. The sell-off came to an end once the S&P 500
hit the 1,430 level 90 minutes ahead of the close. The index then staged a
minor bounce during the final hour before closing with a loss of 1.7%.
The technology sector was the weakest performer, Advanced Micro Devices (AMD 2.18, -0.44) reported a loss of
$0.20, which was $0.04 worse than the Capital IQ consensus estimate. In
addition, the company's revenue of $1.27 billion was in-line with Capital IQ
analyst expectations. Also of note, the second largest manufacturer of
microprocessors issued downside guidance for the fourth quarter, and announced
restructuring plans in order to improve profitability. AMD shares settled lower
by 16.8%.
Marvell
Technology (MRVL
7.56, -1.26) slid 14.3% after lowering its third quarter guidance. The company
now expects revenue to fall between $765 million and $785 million. This is down
from the previous range of $800 million to $850 million, and below the Capital
IQ consensus estimate of $815.58 million. The management commented on the
lowered expectations by saying that "the continued slowdown in the global
economy during the third quarter is resulting in a weaker PC market than
previously anticipated." The guidance cut was met with a slew of
downgrades as Credit Suisse, Credit Agricole, JP Morgan, Lazard, Jefferies, Deutsche
Bank, and FBR Capital all lowered their rating of the semiconductor
manufacturer.
On the upside, SanDisk (SNDK 44.02, +1.16) advanced 2.7% after beating on earnings and
revenues. The flash memory maker reported earnings of $0.48, which was $0.14 ahead
of the Capital IQ consensus estimate. Meanwhile, the company's revenue of $1.27
billion was ahead of the $1.22 billion expected by the Capital IQ consensus.
Additionally, Piper Jaffray upgraded the stock to ‘overweight' from ‘neutral'
following the earnings release.
Looking at industrials, General Electric (GE 22.03, -0.78) slipped 3.4% after
reporting earnings and revenues below Capital IQ consensus. However, the
management noted that the company is performing well, and is on track to
deliver double-digit earnings growth in 2012.
Caterpillar (CAT 83.86, -2.76) slid 3.2% after
reporting a 6.0% increase in retail sales of machines during September. The
rate appears to be slowing as sales growth during the previous two months was
reported at 13.0% in August and 14.0% in July. Note that Caterpillar will
report its third quarter results before Monday's open.
On the upside, freight carrier Forward Air (FWRD 32.54, +1.93) gained 6.3% after
beating Capital IQ earnings estimates by $0.01, and reporting in-line revenue
at $143.5 million. In addition, the company issued in-line guidance for the
fourth quarter as it expects its earnings to fall between $0.48 and $0.52.
Following the report, Wolfe Trahan upgraded the stock to ‘outperform' from
‘peer perform.'
Staffing firm ManpowerGroup (MAN 39.53, +3.55) surged 9.9% after beating top and bottom
line expectations. In addition, the company raised its fourth quarter guidance
above Capital IQ consensus.
Quick service restaurants saw weakness following disappointing earnings from McDonald's (MCD 88.72, -4.14) and Chipotle (CMG 242.97, -42.96).
McDonald's dropped 4.5% after its earnings of $1.43 fell short of the Capital
IQ consensus estimate of $1.47. Meanwhile, the company's revenues were reported
at $7.15 billion, which was in-line with the Capital IQ consensus.
Meanwhile, Chipotle plunged 15.0% after missing on both earnings and revenues.
The management commented on the upcoming quarter by saying they do not expect
food inflation to be an issue. Following the earnings report, Wedbush
downgraded the stock to ‘neutral' from ‘outperform' with a $270 price target.
Peers Buffalo Wild Wings (BWLD 83.92, -2.21), Panera Bread (PNRA 161.85, -7.69), and Starbucks (SBUX 45.68, -1.72) all registered losses
between 2.6% and 4.5%.
The Dow Jones Transportation Average shed 1.4%, and outperformed the remaining
industrials. Kansas City Southern (KSU 78.43, +1.05) was the lone advancer
among the twenty transportation stocks. The rail operator settled higher by
1.4% after reporting earnings of $0.82, which was $0.03 below Capital IQ
consensus estimates. Meanwhile, the company's third quarter revenue of $577.4
million was in-line with the Capital IQ consensus. Peers CSX (CSX 21.10, -0.26), Norfolk Southern (NSC 65.64, -1.06), and Union Pacific (UNP 123.77, -1.57) all lost between 1.2%
and 1.6%.
Overseas
Shipholding Group
(OSG 3.25, -0.29) was the weakest transportation component. The oil tanker
operator slid 8.2% after trading near its all-time low of $3.13.
Existing home sales for September hit an annualized rate of 4.75 million units,
which is stronger than the rate of 4.70 million units that had been generally
expected by the Briefing.com consensus. The pace for September is down from the
prior month rate of 4.83 million units.
Third Quarter Earnings Season Enters Full Force
The first busy week of the Q3 earnings season has concluded, featuring many
bellwethers in the financial, technology and industrial sectors. As expected,
earnings are down year over year. Meanwhile, last quarter's trend of most
companies beating earnings expectations and missing sales estimates has held
up.
Banks once again came in with relatively solid results, due in part to the
Fed's accommodations. Financials have reported modest sequential improvements
amid meager economic growth.
However, disappointing reports from high profile, large cap names like Intel (INTC 21.26, -0.40), IBM (IBM 193.36, -1.60), Google (GOOG 681.79, -13.21), Microsoft (MSFT 28.64, -0.85), General Electric (GE 22.03, -0.78), and McDonald's (MCD 88.72, -4.14) have since stolen the
headlines and added to bearish sentiment.
So far, earnings from the 117 companies in the S&P 500 that have reported
third quarter results are down approximately 4.0% year-over-year. Roughly 63.0%
have beat earnings expectations while only 38.0% of companies have beat sales
estimates. At the same juncture last quarter, about 68.0% of companies had beat
earnings expectations while 42.0% beat sales expectations.
Looking to next week, about 700 companies covered by Briefing.com are expected
to report Q3 results, including more than 150 companies in the S&P 500. Apple (AAPL 609.84, -22.80) will report on
Thursday afternoon.
Crude oil and precious metals
dropped today on pressure from a stronger dollar and weakness in the broader
market. The energy component fell off its session high of $92.99 per barrel set
in morning action and trended lower for the remainder of floor trade. It
settled at $90.02 per barrel, or slightly above its session low of $89.93 per
barrel, booking a loss of 2.0% for the week.
Gold slid as low as $1716.00 per ounce in morning action and was unable to
recover much of the loss. It closed the week 2.0% lower at $1724.00 per ounce
as action in the dollar index, various economic data, and the EU Leaders Summit
weighed on prices in previous sessions. Silver brushed a session low of $31.94
per ounce and settled at $32.10 per ounce for a 4.7% weekly loss.
Natural gas chopped around in positive territory and brushed a session high of
$3.65 per MMBtu just before settling at $3.62 per MMBtu. It closed higher for a
third consecutive session bringing the total gain for the week to 0.3%.
Weekly Recap: Stocks Rise Ahead of Friday's Sell-off
On Monday, equities got off to a slow start as the major averages spent the
first 90 minutes near their respective unchanged levels. The day's economic
data was mixed, and did little to move the markets. After early indecision, the
three indices rose to their session highs, and maintained those levels into the
afternoon. The S&P 500 saw brief afternoon weakness before late-day buying
lifted the index to a gain of 0.8%. Financial stocks showed strength after Citigroup (C 37.16, -1.26) beat its earnings
expectations by $0.07 and reported revenue of $19.4 billion.
Tuesday's session opened on a higher note after reports indicated Spain may be
willing to ask for access to precautionary credit. The reports were followed by
comments out of Germany which suggested the country's officials believe
additional hurdles remain in Spain's way. Separate reports indicated the old
continent's other troubled sovereign, Greece, is far from reaching an agreement
with the Troika on its next bailout tranche. The European news did little to
curb optimism as buyers lifted the major averages to midday highs, which were
maintained into the close. As a result the S&P 500 registered a gain of
1.0%. Citigroup
(C 37.16, -1.26) advanced 1.6% after announcing Chief Executive Officer, Vikram
Pandit, and President and Chief Operating Officer, John Havens, have resigned.
The resignations were effective immediately and the company's board elected
Michael Corbat as the new CEO.
Wednesday's session began on a negative note after two technology bellwethers
reported disappointing earnings. However, the cautious sentiment was
short-circuited when the housing starts report revealed its highest reading
since 2008. The major averages reacted by staging a steady climb to their
respective session highs. A brief afternoon stumble followed, but the move was
promptly retraced as the S&P 500 returned to its prior level, and closed
higher by 0.4%. The technology sector was the worst performing group in the
S&P 500 and Intel (INTC 21.26, -0.40) slipped 2.5% despite beating its earnings and
revenue expectations.
On Thursday, stocks opened modestly lower after the weekly initial claims
report missed expectations by 28,000. The early weakness was erased before
midday as the major averages rallied to their respective session highs.
However, the slim gains were short-lived as disappointing quarterly results
from Google
(GOOG 681.79, -13.21) hit the wires early and weighed on the markets. The
tech-heavy Nasdaq saw the biggest impact, as the index tumbled to fresh session
lows before closing with a loss of 1.0%. Google fell 8.0% after its earnings
were reported at $9.03, which fell $1.63 short of the Capital IQ consensus
estimate. Meanwhile, revenues came in at $11.87 billion, which represents a
shortfall of about $540 million when compared to the Capital IQ analyst
forecast.DJ30 -205.43 NASDAQ -67.25 SP500 -24.15 NASDAQ Adv/Vol/Dec 474/2.15
bln/1981 NYSE Adv/Vol/Dec 673/945.8 mln/2381