Tag Archives: earnings

Applied Materials Q3 Guidance Tops By $300 Mil After Narrow Q2 Beat

No. 2 chip-gear maker Applied Materials ( AMAT ) toasted Wall Street’s current-quarter guidance expectations late Thursday and reported in-line Q2 metrics, prompting shares to rise in after-hours trading. Late Thursday, Applied Materials stock was up more than 4% in after-hours trading Thursday, after the company posted its Q2 earnings results. Shares closed down a penny in the regular session in the stock market today , at 19.91. Top rival ASML ( ASML ) stock fell 1.3% Thursday. Soon-to-merger KLA-Tencor ( KLAC ) and Lam Research ( LRCX ) stocks split the difference, down and up less than 1% each in the regular session. IBD’s 34-company Electronic Semiconductor-Manufacturing industry group fell nearly 1%. For the quarter ended May 1, Applied Materials reported $2.45 billion in sales and 34 cents earnings per share ex items, flat and up 17%, respectively, vs. the year-earlier quarter. Sales edged analyst views for $2.43 billion and EPS beat the consensus for 32 cents. Three months ago, Applied Materials guided to a 5%-10% sequential increase in sales, implying $2.37 billion to $2.48 billion, and 30-34 cents. Applied Materials guided to a 14%-18% quarter-over-quarter jump in current-quarter sales, implying $2.79 billion to $2.89 billion and topping the consensus of 22 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters for $2.51 billion. Sales would be up 14% vs. the year-ago quarter. EPS minus items guidance for 46-50 cents was a dime above Wall Street at the low point, and would be up 45.5%.

Apple Supplier Broadcom: ‘Multiple Ways To Win’ On iPhone 7 Gains

Apple ( AAPL ) supplier Broadcom ( AVGO ) likely gained another 20% in iPhone 7 content on top of continued increases in Samsung Galaxy smartphones, giving investors “multiple ways to win,” Credit Suisse analyst John Pitzer said Thursday. Broadcom is slated to report Q2 earnings on June 2 after the market close. Pitzer expects in-line Q2 sales, but he sees a “significant EPS cushion” on cost-cutting and synergies related to Broadcom’s merger with the former Avago. In February, Avago completed its $37 billion acquisition of Broadcom, with the merged company taking the Broadcom name, in a deal the companies said gives the combined entity an enterprise value of $77 billion. For Q2, the consensus of 30 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expects Broadcom to report $3.55 billion in sales and $2.38 earnings per share minus items, up 116% and 12%, respectively, vs. the year-earlier quarter. On Wednesday, fellow Apple supplier Analog Devices ( ADI ) reported year-over-year sales declines for fiscal Q2 and guided to another 5% sales dip for its July quarter. Pitzer expects Broadcom’s July-quarter sales view to likewise disappoint. But, like Analog Devices, Broadcom expects to grow its iPhone 7 content . Three months ago, CEO Hock Tan said Broadcom’s radio-frequency (RF) content in smartphones has increased by 20% every year, and that this year will be no exception. Tan’s view came before Apple reported its first-ever decline in iPhone sales, occurring in the March quarter. Pitzer sees Broadcom guiding to $3.39 billion in fiscal Q3 sales, below the consensus view for $3.72 billion. But he boosted his EPS-minus-items view to $2.64 from $2.51, matching the consensus model. For 2016 and 2017, he expects $11.16 and $12.86 EPS ex items, respectively. Wireless sales — including sales to Apple — have declined to 25% of total revenue from 50%. Less volatile data center sales now account for half of Broadcom’s revenue, he wrote. “Broadcom’s portfolio of businesses is significantly dampening the impact of any single headwind,” he wrote in a research report. “Broadcom can weather ‘isolated storms’ while maintaining the integrity of EPS upside.” Pitzer reiterated an outperform rating and a 180 price target on Broadcom stock. Broadcom shares were down 1%, near 142, in afternoon trading on the stock market today . RF rivals Skyworks Solutions ( SWKS ) and Qorvo ( QRVO ) were down a respective 1.4% and 0.4%. The trio fell amid fresh reports examining the effect slowing smartphone sales will have on chipmakers.

Take-Two’s ‘Grand Theft Auto’ Still Has Gas In The Tank

Video game publisher Take-Two Interactive Software ( TTWO ) posted better-than-expected fiscal-fourth-quarter earnings late Wednesday, as older game titles continued to drive sales. Take-Two earned 46 cents a share excluding items on sales of $377 million in the quarter ended March 31. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had expected the New York-based company to earn 26 cents a share on sales of $306 million. On a year-over-year basis, earnings per share fell 6%, and sales fell 12%. The company faced tough comparisons to the year-earlier quarter, when “Evolve” was released. Take-Two’s fiscal Q4 earnings were bolstered by older titles like “Grand Theft Auto 5,” which first launched in September 2013; “NBA 2K16,” released last September; and “WWE 2K16,” released in October. The company’s “Grand Theft Auto Online” service also posted strong results. New game “XCOM 2” contributed to sales as well. Take-Two stock was up 4%, near 37, in midday trading on the stock market today . Its shares hit a record high of 38.52 on April 4. Two other big game publishers also are trading near all-time highs. Activision Blizzard ( ATVI ) was down 1.5% to below 38 midday Wednesday. Activision hit a record high of 39.93 on Dec. 29. And  Electronic Arts ( EA ) was down 1%, near 74, but it scored a record high of 77.15 on Monday. Take-Two’s guidance for the current fiscal year, however, disappointed, as the company will not release an anticipated sequel to its “Red Dead” Western game this year. At the midpoint of its guidance, Take-Two expects to earn $1.13 a share on sales of $1.55 billion in fiscal 2017. Analysts were modeling $1.91 and $1.76 billion, respectively. Take-Two’s game slate includes the release this month of “Battleborn”; “NBA 2K17” in September; and “Mafia 3,” Civilization 6” and “WWE 2K17” in October. Piper Jaffray analyst Michael Olson reiterated his overweight rating on Take-Two stock with a price target of 40. “While fiscal 2017 guidance is below consensus, most investors will likely give Take-Two a pass on the outlook, given it does not include a new version of ‘Red Dead,’ and management is hinting that fiscal 2018 will be a year of strong growth,” Olson said. In a statement, Take-Two CEO Strauss Zelnick said the company’s Rockstar Games studio is “hard at work on some exciting future projects that will be revealed soon.” Rockstar is the studio behind the “Red Dead” and “Grand Theft Auto” franchises. Take-Two noted that “Grand Theft Auto 5” to date has sold 65 million units, up 5 million in the last quarter. Take-Two Lacking Major Game Catalyst Rest Of Year The lack of a Rockstar game this year leaves Take-Two stock without a major catalyst, said Pacific Crest Securities analyst Evan Wilson. Fiscal 2017 will be the second consecutive year without a Rockstar game, he said in a research note. Wilson rates Take-Two stock as sector weight. Baird analyst Colin Sebastian maintained his neutral rating on Take-Two stock but cut his price target to 37 from 38. Wedbush analyst Michael Pachter reiterated his neutral rating on Take-Two but raised his price target to 32 from 30.50. “We continue to be impressed by Take-Two’s ability to consistently deliver upside to both its guidance and consensus expectations,” Pachter said in a report. “Grand Theft Auto 5’s phenomenal catalog sales and the ongoing robust performance of Grand Theft Auto Online position the company to deliver profits for the foreseeable future; however, we remain unwilling to recommend Take-Two shares until we have greater visibility into its long-term release pipeline.” RELATED: EA Scores Positive Reviews From Investor Day; Stock Gets PT Hike Activision Blizzard Ready To Rack Up Points From E-Sports Disney’s Exit From Toys-To-Life Video Games Could Boost Activision .