'direction'에 해당되는 글 2건

  1. 2009.02.24 Garmin Moves In The Right Direction by CEOinIRVINE
  2. 2008.12.19 Markets Teeter-Totter At Midday by CEOinIRVINE

While Garmin's global-positioning gear can pierce the fog to pinpoint your location, the company's financial officers can't see through the murky economic scenario, and the electronics maker said Monday it would not offer guidance for its 2009 results until the clouds clear.

In the current climate, that, combined with a fourth-quarter earnings report that missed estimates by a nickel, wasn't so bad.

People have been fearing the worst, but it wasn't so bad," said Scott Sutherland, an analyst at Wedbush Morgan Securities, "things have been down, but it hasn't been the disaster people have been pricing into the stock."

Investors were so impressed, they pushed Garmin's stock up 9.6%, or $1.46, to $16.63, in midday trading. That's still a far cry from the $120 level near which it peaked in 2007.

The highlight of the the quarter ending Dec. 27 was Garmin's ability to maintain margins, despite its sales falling by a fifth. It recorded a gross margin of 41.1%, down only modestly from 44.3% in the third quarter, and 41.8% in the fourth quarter of 2007.

Times have been tough for Garmin (nasdaq: GRMN - news - people ). Though its car-navigation systems were hot items for the 2007 holiday season, prices fell fast last year as consumers pulled back and spent their electronics dollars on laptops and televisions.

For the quarter, Garmin's sales totaled $1.0 billion, 20.0% below the $1.2 billion reported in the previous year's corresponding period, and just shy of the $1.1 billion Wall Street had forecast.

Earnings dropped 48.7%, to $157.7 million, or 78 cents per share, from $307.3 million, or $1.39 per share. Excluding foreign-exchange considerations, earnings only fell 93 cents per share, from $1.31 cents per share. That, however, was below the 98 cents analysts had predicted.

Earlier this month Garmin and Asustek Computer announced they will make phones based on global-positioning satellite technology, which is what powers Garmin's navigation devices

Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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Wall Street struggled to find direction Thursday morning as mixed reports from the economy and the corporate sector had the market wobbling.

With the holiday week fast-approaching, volumes were light and investors appeared to shy away from aggressive moves in the equity markets, but there was plenty of action in commodities, currencies and government debt.

The Labor Department kicked off the day, reporting that initial jobless claims inched down to 554,000 last week, from 575,000 the week before. Meanwhile, continuing claims edged back below 4.4 million. The decline was positive news, but the hits keep coming; health insurance outfit Aetna (nyse: AET - news - people ) said it will cut its workforce by 1,000 jobs. (See "December 2008 Layoffs.")

A closely-watched reading on manufacturing activity was not as bad as feared; the Philadelphia Fed index came in at negative 32.9 for December. The figure indicates regional activity in the sector slowed less than expected, following a negative 39.3 reading in November.

Major indexes were little changed by midday, as the Dow was down 10 points, or 0.1%, to 8,814; the S&P 500 was up 2 points, or 0.3%, to 907; and the Nasdaq gained 3 points, or 0.2%, to 1,582. There was more action in other markets during the seesaw session though.

Traders scoffed at Wednesday's production cut of 2.2 million barrels of oil a day by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, sending crude down $1.98, to $38.08 a barrel. United States Oil Fund (nyse: USO - news - people ), an exchange-traded vehicle that seeks to mirror the movement of crude and other products, lost $1.64, or 4.7%, to $33.17. (See "Russia Dashes OPEC's Hopes.")

Treasury yields and the dollar continued to soften, after the Federal Reserve slashed its benchmark fed funds rate effectively to zero on Tuesday. The 10-year note's yield was down to 2.10%, from 2.20% Wednesday. The iShares Lehman 10-20 Year Treasury Bond Fund (nyse: TLH - news - people ), which tracks longer maturities, was up $1.92, or 1.6%, to $123.80. The euro sustained recent strength early, trading over $1.44 Thursday morning, but shed its gain and fell back to $1.429 by midday. (See "Helicopter Ben Goes ZIRP!")

Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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