Stock Market Wrapup Feb. 22
Stocks opened higher this morning but quickly fell into a funk on their way to a mixed close. There seemed to be little in the way of a strong catalyst to encourage the bulls to remain in the market. Oil prices put some pressure on stocks, rising for the second-consecutive day to push close to the $61 a barrel mark. The 10-year Treasury note was also weak today, pushing the yield up to 4.73%.
Makers of analog semiconductor chips were one of the day's most attractive sectors, spurred higher by a strong fiscal first-quarter profit report and encouraging guidance from Analog Devices (ADI, $xxxxx). The company, which makes chips used in cell phones, medical devices, and flat-screen TVs, reported a 26% increase in profits to $153 million, or 44 cents a share, up from $121 million, or 32 cents a share, in the year-ago period. The company said orders improved in the last month and it forecasted a strong current quarter. The results and a Citigroup upgrade to "buy" helped the stock climb 10%.
Other analog chipmakers moved higher on Analog Devices' profit report, including National Semiconductor (NYSE: NSM - News), up 6%; Maxim Integrated Products (Nasdaq: MXIM - News), which added 8%; and Linear Technology (Nasdaq: LLTC - News), up 10%. The strong showing helped the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index push 3% higher.
In other tech news, Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL - News) and Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO - News) agreed to share the iPhone name and to work together on "opportunities for interoperability in the areas of security, and consumer and enterprise communications." Neither company would elaborate on what that meant. Apple was sued by Cisco after the iPod maker introduced its iPhone smartphone product. Cisco said it owned the iPhone trademark and was already using it for a VoIP handheld phone. Both products will remain on the market under the iPhone brand name.
Luxury homebuilder Toll Brothers (NYSE: TOL - News) announced sharply lower fiscal Q1 earnings. The company's profit slumped -67%, driven lower by writedowns and other expenses as the slump in new home sales continued to hurt the builder's results. Toll Brothers said its profit declined to $54 million, or 33 cents per share, from $164 million, or 98 cents per share, a year ago. The results were better than the 29 cents EPS Wall Street expected, but the stock ended down -4%. Other companies in the new-home market slid on Toll Brother's report. Lennar (NYSE: LEN - News) was off -2%, while D.R. Horton (NYSE: DHI - News) and Centex (NYSE: CTX - News) both dropped -3%.
Retailer J.C. Penney (NYSE: JCP - News) slid -3% after it reported a weaker-than-expected fiscal Q1 and warned that it was seeing soft results this month. Penney's profit for the quarter ended February 3rd fell to $477 million, or $2.09 per share, from $551 million, or $2.34 per share, last year. Although February sales have been weak, the company predicted an upturn when it introduces its spring fashions.
In merger news, natural and organic foods supermarket operator Whole Foods Market (Nasdaq: WFMI - News) announced late yesterday that it would buy its smaller rival Wild Oats Markets (Nasdaq: OATS - News) for $535 million. Investors applauded the news, pushing shares of Whole Foods up 13%, while Wild Oats added 17%.
Published By Bullmarket.com
Labels: AAPL, CSCO, CTX, DHI, JCP, LEN, LLTC, MXIM, NSM, OATS, TOL, WFMI






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