Tag Archives: etf

Oracle Beats On Earnings, Ups Buyback: Tech ETFs In Focus

After the closing bell yesterday, tech bellwether Oracle (NYSE: ORCL ) reported mixed third-quarter fiscal 2016 results. The company beat the Zacks Consensus Estimate for earnings but missed on revenues due to negative currency translations and persistent weakness in traditional software sales. Additionally, Oracle boosted its share buyback program by $10 billion (see: all the Technology ETFs here ). Oracle Q3 Earnings in Focus Earnings per share came in at 59 cents (accounting for stock-based compensation), a penny ahead of the Zacks Consensus Estimate. Revenues declined 3.4% year over year to $9.01 billion and were below our $9.17 billion estimate. While the company’s long process of shifting to the Web-based cloud computing business is paying off, it is unlikely to make up for the decline in the software business. Additionally, a strong dollar is continuously posing challenges to the company’s performance. Excluding the impact of unfavorable currency rates, revenues would have grown 1%. Cloud software platform sales climbed 57% from the year-ago quarter and accounted for 6% of the total revenue. Notably, Oracle is selling more cloud software platforms than any other company in the world, providing it an edge over the software ace Salesforce.com Inc. (NYSE: CRM ). For the fiscal fourth quarter, the world’s largest database software maker expects revenues to be down 2% to up 1% in constant currency and earnings per share between 82 cents and 85 cents. The lower end of the earnings guidance is well above the Zacks Consensus Estimate of 78 cents, reflecting some optimism in the company’s future growth. Currency headwind is expected to impact 2% growth in revenues and dilute earnings per share by a couple of cents. Impressed by solid cloud computing growth and an earnings beat, the Board of Directors of Oracle authorized additional repurchase of as much as $10 billion of stock under its existing buyback program. As per Bloomberg, it is the first expansion of the repurchase plan since September 2014 (read: Face-Off: Dividend Growth & Buyback ETF ). As a result, Oracle shares climbed as much as 5.4% in after-hours trading. Smooth trading is expected to continue in the days ahead given that the stock has a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold) and a solid Industry Rank in the top 27%, suggesting room for upside. Given this, ETFs with the highest allocation to this software giant will be in focus in the days ahead. Investors should closely monitor the movement in these funds and avoid these if the stock drags them down: iShares North American Tech-Software ETF (NYSEARCA: IGV ) This ETF provides exposure to the software segment of the broader U.S. technology space by tracking the S&P North American Technology-Software Index. The fund holds a basket of 58 securities with Oracle taking the top spot at 9.3% of total assets. It is quite popular with AUM of $639.1 million while volume is moderate as it exchanges nearly 201,000 shares a day. The product charges 48 bps in annual fees and has lost 6.3% so far this year. IGV has a Zacks ETF Rank of 1 or ‘Strong’ rating with a High risk outlook. First Trust ISE Cloud Computing Index ETF (NASDAQ: SKYY ) This fund provides exposure to cloud computing securities by tracking the ISE Cloud Computing Index. Holding about 34 stocks in the basket, Oracle takes the fifth spot at 4.2% of assets. Software firms dominate this ETF, accounting for 37.5% share while Internet software services (16.7%) and communication equipment (13.5%) round off to the next two sectors. The product has been able to manage $531.3 million in its asset base while sees good volume of about 102,000 shares a day. It has 0.60% in expense ratio and has a Zacks ETF Rank of 2 or ‘Buy’ rating with a High risk outlook. First Trust NASDAQ Technology Dividend Index ETF (NASDAQ: TDIV ) This fund provides exposure to the dividend payers within the technology sector by tracking the Nasdaq Technology Dividend Index. The product has amassed about $482.9 million in its asset base while trades in volume of around 83,000 shares per day. The ETF charges 50 bps in annual fees. In total, the fund holds about 96 securities in its basket. Of these firms, ORCL takes the seventh position, making up roughly 4.0% of the assets. In terms of industrial exposure, the fund is widely spread out across semiconductor and semiconductor equipment, diversified telecommunication services, technology hardware, storage & peripherals, and software. The fund has added 3.2% so far this year. PureFunds ISE Big Data ETF ( BDAT ) This product targets the niche corner – the big data and analytics industry – in the broad technology space. The fund follows the ISE Big Data Index, holding 32 securities in its basket. Of these, ORCL takes the sixth spot with 4% allocation. The U.S. firms dominate the portfolio with 81% share while Germany, Israel, Canada, and China make up for a decent exposure. The fund has accumulated $1 million in its asset base so far and charges a bit higher fee of 0.75%. Average daily volume is paltry at nearly 1,000 shares and BDAT is down 13.8% in the year-to-date timeframe. Link to the original post on Zacks.com

Comcast, AT&T Not Always To Blame For Millennial Buffer Rage

Many millennials suffer from video buffer rage more frequently than road rage, says a survey by IneoQuest, a provider of quality monitoring and assurance services for Internet video companies. Fifty-one percent of the 1,000 consumers surveyed who watch streaming video have experienced “a state of uncontrollable fury or violent anger”  as a result of buffering problems, says IneoQuest. And more than one-third of those surveyed under age 35 have had meltdowns when video streaming stops. But the next time your Netflix ( NFLX ) movie or YouTube video streams inconsistently, don’t automatically  blame your Internet service provider such as Comcast ( CMCSA ), AT&T ( T ) or Verizon Communications ( VZ ), says Kurt Michel, senior marketing director at Mansfield, Mass.-based IneoQuest. The problem could be with the content itself and the server that is providing it;  the mobile device or PC; or there could be an issue with the CDN (content delivery network) that Internet video companies such as Netflix or Hulu use. CDN providers include Akamai Technologies ( AKAM ), Limelight Networks ( LLNW ) and Level 3 Communications ( LVLT ). According to IneoQuest’s study, in many cases viewers were not able to begin playing streaming content at all, with 27% of respondents claiming that buffering most often occurs before a video starts and 34% experiencing buffering in the first 15 seconds.  More than 40% of consumers say they will wait only 10 seconds or less before clicking out of a buffering video. Nearly a quarter of all consumers surveyed said buffering during live sporting events causes the most rage.

ETF Winners And Losers As Fed Stands Pat

By Max Chen and Tom Lydon With the Federal Reserve keeping short-term interest rates unchanged, rate-sensitive exchange traded funds popped while some trades dependent on higher rates went out of favor, according to industry analyst ETF Trends . The Fed kept short-term rates unchanged at a range of between 0.25% and 0.5%, pointing to ongoing global economic and financial risks. Fed officials also suggested there will only be two more rate hikes this year, according to their projections, down from previous estimates of four hikes as policymakers grow more cautious in the wake of weakening overseas growth and volatility in financial markets. With the Fed holding off on further rate hikes, the PowerShares DB U.S. Dollar Index Bullish Fund (NYSEArca: UUP ) , which tracks the price movement of the U.S. dollar against a basket of currencies, lost momentum and dipped 0.6% Wednesday. A Fed rate hike would have diminished the supply of money floating around the economy and strengthened the greenback, but without the Fed’s support, the USD’s outlook looks less certain. Additionally, the Financial Select Sector SPDR (NYSEArca: XLF ) was down 0.6% Wednesday. Without high rates to support loans, banks will continue to see squeezed margins in a low rate environment. On the other hand, yield-generating assets popped as the Fed maintains lower rates. For instance, on Wednesday, the Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (NYSEArca: VIG ) rose 0.4%, Vanguard REIT ETF (NYSEArca: VNQ ) gained 0.9% and Utilities Select Sector SPDR (NYSEArca: XLU ) increased 1.0%. Dividend-generating assets were among the best performing areas of the market as a prolonged period of low interest rates typically make relatively riskier equities attractive to more conservative fixed-income assets. Additionally, the weakening dollar helped bolster commodity assets, with the broad PowerShares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund (NYSEArca: DBC ) 1.6% higher on Wednesday. The SPDR Gold Shares (NYSEARCA: GLD ) advanced 1.5%. Gold assets would typically weaken on rate hikes since investors would shift away from non-yield-generating assets like gold, especially on a stronger dollar and lower inflation outlook. The United States Oil Fund (NYSEArca: USO ) , which tracks West Texas Intermediate crude oil futures, also pushed higher, rising 4.9% Wednesday on the weaker dollar. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.