Author Archives: Scalper1

Red Hat Warms Up, And Microsoft Azure Hasn’t Even Kicked In Yet

Didn’t take long for investors to follow analyst Gregg Moskowitz’s upgrade clue. Red Hat ( RHT ) stock turned red hot again briefly, up 3% in morning trade in the stock market today , before cooling to close up 1.4% at 68.62 Thursday, 19% off a 16-year high of 84.44 touched Dec. 30. An analyst for Cowen, Moskowitz had just issued a research report Thursday morning, making the case that Red Hat’s “valuation looks compelling once again” and upgrading the stock to outperform from market perform with an 86 price target. Red Hat, based in Raleigh, N.C., is the fast-growing developer of software, built on the open-source Linux operating system, that manages vast enterprise data, be they in the cloud or in traditional on-premise operations. Microsoft ( MSFT ) announced in November that it would run Red Hat hybrid software on Azure, Microsoft’s cloud service. How fast is Red Hat moving? Earnings grew 14% and revenue 15% in the third quarter ended Nov. 30, although analysts polled by Thomson Reuters think that for the current quarter, Q4, profit will moderate to 9% growth from a year earlier of 47 cents per share minus items, on sales up 15.7% to $537 million. “While we have been positive on the stock for a long time, our recent market perform rating was largely valuation-based,” Moskowitz said. “However, the stock has significantly underperformed this year (down 18%, vs. the Nasdaq down 10%), which has presented investors with a favorable risk/reward once again.” Moskowitz said that his crew’s recent checks with midsize and big IT customers suggest that Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) — its core software, first issued 13 years ago — is likely to grow faster than the 2% annual pace that research firm Gartner gives the overall Linux market. “Meanwhile, though not yet inflecting, demand for OpenStack continues to rise, and we expect another year of high growth (off a still relatively low base),” Moskowitz wrote. OpenStack is a free, open-source software platform for cloud computing. “We also believe RHT’s recent partnership with Microsoft Azure (not in our numbers) should create significant revenue synergies for RHEL (and Azure) over time,” Moskowitz added. “Further, one of our public cloud contacts we recently spoke with sees material upside from the partnership and believes the power of Microsoft’s distribution could also drive an inflection in sales for RHT’s CloudForms hybrid cloud management software. “Longer term, we believe containers will become increasingly prevalent and that RHT is very well placed to benefit from this unfolding trend, with native support built into RHEL and OpenShift, and with RHEL Atomic Host specifically targeting the opportunity.” Containers allow software to run reliably in a variety of computing environments. OpenShift is a Red Hat platform-as-a-service product; RHEL Atomic Host is an operating system. With a market cap of $12.5 billion, Red Hat is the third largest member of IBD’s Computer Software-Desktop industry group — led, of course, by Microsoft with about a $409 billion market value. Adobe Systems ( ADBE ) is second-largest at just over $43 billion. Red Hat’s stock, however, earns a 79 Composite Rating, which means that it performs better than 79% of all publicly traded firms on a variety of metrics. Microsoft carries a slightly better Composite Rating of 83 and Adobe a strong 96. Microsoft closed down 0.4% Thursday and Adobe fell 1.3%.        

Netflix About-Face Smoothes Charter-TWC Approval Process

As goes Netflix, so goes regulatory approval of cable TV industry mergers? The notion that the Web video streamer is a bellwether for government approval could gain credence if  Charter Communications ’ ( CHTR ) proposed acquisition of Time Warner Cable ( TWC ) gets the OK. Netflix ( NFLX ), which opposed Comcast’s proposed purchase of TWC, is fine with Charter’s deal. The Department of Justice and Federal Communications Commission thwarted Comcast ’s ( CMCSA ) TWC acquisition in April 2015. Netflix’s endorsement aside, the deal has plenty of opponents. Consumer groups and local phone companies in January stepped up criticism of a Charter-TWC merger. Satellite TV broadcaster Dish Network ( DISH ) and AT&T ( T ) had earlier warned about the combined Charter-TWC’s clout over Internet video. And even former TWC parent, media giant Time Warner ( TWX ), has voiced similar worries. Yet many analysts contend the Charter-TWC deal stands a high chance of approval, even if California regulators delay a closing until June. And Netflix’s stance is one big reason analysts expect approval. Bryan Kraft, an analyst at Deutsche Bank, cited Netflix when saying Charter has garnered support from “key tech constituents.” And said Craig Moffett, senior analyst at MoffettNathanson, in a research report: “Netflix’s 180-degree turn to support Charter speaks volumes.” Besides TWC, Charter is also seeking approval to buy privately held Bright House Networks. Charter must pay TWC a $2 billion break-up fee if the deal is blocked. On Charter’s Q4 earnings conference call early Thursday, Charter CEO Tom Rutledge said the company is aiming to close the TWC deal in late March. Charter has petitioned California regulators to move up a hearing date. He says Charter expects a green light from the Department of Justice and FCC. “We remain hopeful that the process can be completed in March,” Rutledge said. Charter stock closed down 3.7% Thursday at 169.93. Netflix Likes Charter’s Net Neutrality Stance What’s behind Netflix’s change of heart on cable consolidation? Critics say that a Charter-TWC deal would create a broadband duopoly. No. 1 cable firm Comcast and a combined Charter-TWC, which would be No. 2, would reach more than 70% of U.S. homes with broadband service, says a Barclays report. Combined, Comcast-Charter would have nearly 43 million high-speed Internet customers. Charter, whose biggest shareholder is John Malone’s Liberty Broadband, has aimed to disarm critics. For one, it is not following the lead of Comcast, which is forging ahead with “usage-based” data pricing — charging for data consumption like wireless phone companies do, with caps on monthly usage. In a growing number of markets, Comcast now charges an extra fee if customers go over a 300 gigabyte monthly limit. Charter, on the other hand, has promised not to impose data caps on customers. Netflix likes that, says Moffett. On Netflix’s Q4 earnings conference call last month, CEO Reed Hastings said, “I think it (Charter-TWC) would be a tremendous positive for the (over-the-top Internet TV) industry, because Charter has agreed to a multiyear, strong net neutrality policy, something no one else has publicly agreed to, and that would cover not only the Charter footprint, but the Time Warner cable footprint.” Charter has promised that it will provide free connections to its network for Netflix and others for three years. Interconnection fees were an issue in Netflix’s opposition to the Comcast-TWC deal. The FCC, meanwhile, imposed new public-utility-type regulation on broadband services this summer. These revised net neutrality rules are being challenged in federal court by Internet service providers. Net neutrality rules bar ISPs from throttling, blocking or prioritizing Web traffic. The worry is that the FCC will extend its authority over broadband pricing in the long run. Most of the conditions of Comcast’s purchase of NBCUniversal expire in 2018, so the Charter-TWC deal presents a new opportunity for the FCC to clamp down on the industry. While analysts expect approval of the Charter-TWC deal, they also expect that approval to come with many conditions. Some conditions could involve Liberty’s Malone. Liberty Broadband ( LBRDA ) would own 20% of the new Charter. Malone’s sprawling media and telecom holdings include stakes in Liberty Global ( LBTYA ), Discovery ( DISCA ), All3Media, Starz ( STRZA ) and Lionsgate ( LGF ). “Malone’s ownership of distribution and content assets globally implicitly has a scale larger than even Comcast, but with a much more fragmented ownership structure and working relationships,” says a Barclays research report. Analysts say that the FCC’s study of the Charter-TWC deal could go beyond ownership structure and board overlaps and into strategic relationships. Besides the FCC, state regulators have been taking a close look at Charter’s deals. In December, New York granted approval for the Charter-TWC deal. Charter agreed to expand its broadband service to more areas and provide discounts to low-income households. Charter, like Comcast, has expanded voluntary low-income programs. California, however, might not hold a key hearing on Charter’s TWC deal until June. “The California PUC (public utility commission) appears to be the long pole in the tent,” Mike McCormack, a Jefferies analyst, said in a report.

Symantec Rallies On Q3 Beat, $500 Mil Silver Lake Investment

Symantec ( SYMC ) stock rallied late Thursday after the cybersecurity firm reported fiscal-third-quarter sales and earnings that topped Wall Street views, while also announcing a that it will get a $500 million investment from private equity firm Silver Lake Management. In after-hours trading, Symantec stock jumped more than 9%, trading near 21 after closing down a fraction during regular-session trading. Shares were down 8.7% for the year as of Thursday’s closing bell. For its fiscal 2016 third quarter, ended Jan. 1, Symantec reported $909 million in sales and 26 earnings per share ex items, beating the consensus of 29 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters for $905.8 million and 24 cents. During Q2, enterprise security revenue grew for the third consecutive quarter, CFO Thomas Seifert said in a statement. Current-quarter guidance for $885 million to $915 million in sales and 24-27 cents EPS ex items met the consensus model for $901.7 million and 25 cents. The Silver Lake investment boosts Symantec’s capital return program to $5.5 billion. Through the program, Symantec plans to return all after-tax cash proceeds of its Veritas sale to shareholders by March 2017. Veritas, Symantec’s former data storage unit, sold to the Carlyle Group on Jan. 29 for a lowered purchase price of $7.4 billion. After-tax cash proceeds came out to $5.3 billion, according to Symantec. Symantec CEO Michael Brown said the company is undergoing a transformation. Analysts have suggested Symantec could mount an M&A attack to beef up against newer next-generation software offerings. “Silver Lake’s investment in Symantec validates the significant progress we’ve made in our transformation and is a tremendous vote of confidence in the company,” he said in a statement.