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4 Stocks Trading Near Or In Buy Range Before Earnings

Loading the player… Alphabet ( GOOGL ), Microsoft ( MSFT ) and Starbucks ( SBUX ) were all near buy points ahead of their most recent quarterly reports, but have since dropped from those levels after issuing weak results. On the other hand, Facebook ( FB ) and Amazon ( AMZN ) had formed bases and were propelled higher by their strong earnings. Here’s a look at four stocks that are trading near or in buy range ahead of their quarterly reports later this week: Applied Materials ( AMAT ), Autodesk ( ADSK ), Eight By Eight ( EGHT ) and Campbell Soup ( CPB ). Campbell Soup You may not think of Campbell Soup when you think of top stocks, but the maker of packaged food has a high IBD Composite Rating of 92 out of 99. The company is expected to report Friday an earnings increase of 3%, a big slowdown from two quarters in a row of roughly 30% bottom-line growth. Revenue is expected to fall a fraction. Campbell breached support at the 50-day line Wednesday in above-average volume but was able to finish the session just above the line. Shares are now about 5% below their all-time high reached as the stock cleared a flat base buy point of 65.58. The stock is trading 3% below that pivot. Eight By Eight Eight By Eight is a telecom services firm with an 85 Composite Rating. Earnings are expected to drop 60% while revenue climbs 25% when it reports Thursday. Shares tried to break out of a cup-with-handle base with a 12.05 buy point Wednesday, but closed the session below that level. The stock is 13% below its January peak. Applied Materials Applied Materials is expected to see earnings grow 10% on a fractional sales decline. The chip equipment maker, which reports Thursday, has a Composite Rating of 66. Shares are trading in buy range from a cup base the stock initially cleared in March. The stock ran up as much as 11% in the following weeks, but has since pulled back about 8% from its high reached one month ago. Autodesk And computer software firm Autodesk is expected to swing to a loss of 14 cents a share on a 21% decline in revenue when it reports Thursday. The company has a 49 Composite Rating. Shares recently breached support at the 50-day line and are dipping back below buy range from a cup-with-handle base. The stock is now about 12% below its December peak.

HP 3D Printers A Disruptor, Not A Slam On 3D Systems, Stratasys

The entry of HP ( HPQ ) into the 3D printer market is a disruptive force against 3D Systems ( DDD ) and Stratasys ( SSYS ), but it’s not an overwhelming slam, as the two market leaders have time to react, say analysts. HP’s entry is a “negative” for 3D Systems and Stratasys, but it’s “been expected and the real competitive impact could take years to develop,” wrote Pacific Crest Securities analyst Weston Twigg in a research note late Tuesday. The long-awaited entry of HP into the 3D printer market began Tuesday, with partners that include Nike ( NKE ), Autodesk ( ADSK ), ProtoLabs ( PRLB ) and Materialise ( MTLS ). HP said the printers are 10 times faster and half the cost of current 3D printing systems. HP is offering two 3D printers, one for prototyping and the other for prototyping and short-run manufacturing needs. HP has vast resources and a strong desire to turn 3D printing into a growth business, Twigg wrote. “The technology could be disruptive, and customers have shown a high desire to partner with HP on the development of the printer,” he said. The HP announcement is a “modest positive” for Materialise, a 3D printer maker that is partnering with HP on software and other areas, Twigg said. It’s also a modest positive for ProtoLabs, which focuses on the commercial market and offers industrial 3D printing as a service. Though not a direct competitor, Proto Labs is a close peer to 3D Systems and Stratasys and can quickly adopt HP printers if it makes economic sense, as Proto Labs is building out its additive manufacturing service bureaus. Sales of 3D printers totaled $5 billion last year, according to HP. It expects to ship and recognize 3D printing revenue by the Oct. 31 end of its fiscal 2016,  and ramp up the business in fiscal 2017. But HP does not expect 3D printing revenue to make a material revenue contribution in either year, wrote RBC Capital Markets analyst Amit Daryanani in a research note. HP’s new lineup poses a threat to 3D Systems and Stratasys in price and speed, but the threat is not overwhelming, said Piper Jaffray analyst Troy Jensen. “We do believe the aggressive pricing HP is promoting could cause pipelines to shrink over the next couple quarters as customers review HP’s printing capabilities,” Jensen wrote in a report. But select printers from 3D Systems and Stratasys “are better in certain applications,” he said. 3D printing technology is being increasingly embraced by corporations, governments and universities. The market for 3D printers, including supplies, will grow 33% to $7.3 billion and will approach $10 billion in 2017, according to Wohlers Associates, which provides technical, market and strategic analysis on the 3D printer market. HP stock fell a fraction on Tuesday but was up a fraction in midday trading in the stock market today , near 11.50. HP stock has been below its 50-day line most of this month. 3D Systems stock, up nearly 1% Tuesday, was down nearly 1.5% midday Wednesday. Stratasys stock, up nearly 2% on Tuesday, was down nearly 2% midday Wednesday.

HP Makes Long-Awaited Entry Into 3D Printer Market

The long-awaited entry of HP Inc. ( HPQ ) into the 3D printer market began Tuesday, with partners that include Nike ( NKE ), Autodesk ( ADSK ), ProtoLabs ( PRLB ) and BMW. The new printer line, called HP Jet Fusion 3D Printing Solution, “revolutionizes design, prototyping and manufacturing, and for the first time, delivers superior quality physical parts up to 10 times faster and at half the cost of current 3D print systems,” HP said in its press release . HP will compete with 3D Systems ( DDD ) and Stratasys ( SSYS ), the two largest providers of 3D printers, among others. HP is offering two 3D printers. They are the HP Jet Fusion 3D 3200 printer, designed for prototyping, and the Jet Fusion 3D 4200 printer, designed for prototyping and short-run manufacturing needs. Pricing on the 4200 model starts at $155,000 and will be delivered in late 2016. Pricing on the 3200 model starts at $130,000, with deliveries in 2017, HP said. Besides Autodesk, software partners include   Materialise ( MTLS ) and Siemens. Besides Nike, BMW and Proto Labs, co-development partners and strategic partners also include  Jabil  Circuit ( JBL ), Johnson & Johnson ( JNJ ) and Shapeways. HP stock fell in the stock market today , to 11.53. HP stock has been below its 50-day line most of this month. 3D Systems stock, though, rose nearly 1% Tuesday, and Stratasys stock rose nearly 2%.