Tag Archives: orcl

Google’s Android Plea: Oracle Took No Risk, Wants Big Payday

Alphabet ’s ( GOOGL ) Google says Oracle ( ORCL ) “took none of the risk” in developing and marketing Android software, but now wants “a lot of the money” from the mobile operating system’s success, says a report from tech website Ars Technica . In closing arguments to a jury, Google attorney Robert Van Nest said the copyright infringement case’s outcome is important for the software industry, reported Ars Technica. Oracle is seeking nearly $9 billion in damages from Google. It’s slated to make its closing statement Monday afternoon. Oracle claims that Google violated its copyright on parts of the Java programming language when it created the Android mobile operating system, now used in mobile phones worldwide. Oracle acquired Java when it purchased Sun Microsystems in 2010. “This is a very important case, not only for Google, but for innovation and technology in general,” Van Nest told the jury. “What Google engineers did was nothing out of that mainstream. They built Android from scratch, using new Google technology, and adapted technology from open sources. “Now we’re in a situation where Oracle, which had no investment in Android, took none of the risk — they want all the credit and a lot of the money. And that’s not fair.” Oracle says Google has earned $21 billion in profit from Android-based smartphones. At its I/O developer’s conference last week, Google showcased the Android N software upgrade, which includes an automotive variant and a virtual reality mode for smartphones. If Oracle wins its court case, it might also seek royalties, analysts say. Shares of both Alphabet and Oracle were down a fraction in afternoon trading in the stock market today .

Apple Has Largest Cash Stockpile, Twice That Of Microsoft’s

Apple ( AAPL ) continues to reign as the Scrooge McDuck of the corporate world, keeping a virtual treasure vault of gold coins that it can swim in. Apple accounted for $215.7 billion, or 12.8%, of total corporate cash in 2015, Moody’s Investors Service reported Friday. That’s up from $178 billion, or 10.7%, in 2014, and $159 billion, or 9.7%, in 2013. The top five U.S. companies stockpiling cash, all tech companies, collectively held $504 billion, or 30% of the total corporate cash balance among non-financial companies. That’s up from $440 billion, or 27%, in 2014 and $404 billion, or 25%, in 2013. The top five are: Apple, Microsoft ( MSFT ), Google parent Alphabet ( GOOGL ), Cisco Systems ( CSCO ) and Oracle ( ORCL ). U.S. non-financial companies rated by Moody’s held $1.68 trillion in cash at the end of 2015, up 1.8% from $1.65 trillion at the end of 2014. But much of the cash is parked overseas, and U.S. companies are reluctant to bring it home, lest they face stiff tax penalties. Overseas cash is estimated at $1.2 trillion, or 72% of total cash. That’s up from $1.1 trillion, or 64% of cash in 2014, and $950 billion, or 58% of total cash, in 2013. Technology, health care/pharmaceuticals, consumer products and energy are the most cash-flush industries, with $1.3 trillion, or 71%, of the corporate cash total. The tech sector has the largest cash pile, at $777 billion, or 46%, of the total, Moody’s said. Microsoft, the second-most cash-rich company in the U.S., had $102.6 billion, less than half of Apple’s total. Alphabet came in third with $73.1 billion, followed by Cisco ($60.4 billion) and Oracle ($52.3 billion). Apple shares ended Friday trades up 1.1%. Microsoft and Alphabet finished the day up less than 1% on the stock market today . Cisco and Oracle each climbed 1.5%.

Salesforce.com Q1 Beats, Hikes Revenue Outlook, Stock Rises

Salesforce.com ( CRM )  late Wednesday reported Q1 earnings and revenue that topped expectations and raised its full-year revenue guidance, sending the business software provider’s stock up 6% in after-hours trading. Salesforce, the leading provider of customer relationship software, said Q1 profit jumped 50% to 24 cents per share minus items. Revenue in the three months ended April 30 rose 27% to $1.92 billion, the company said.  Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had modeled 23 cents and $1.89 billion. In the current quarter, Saleforce forecast earnings ex items of 24 cents to 25 cents per share, up from 19 cents in the year-ago quarter, and revenue of $2.005 billion to $2.015 billion, up 23%. Analysts had estimated 25 cents and $1.98 billion. Salesforce increased its full-year revenue guidance to $8.2 billion from $8.16 billion, “given the strong response to our Customer Success Platform,” Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff said in the earnings release. San Francisco-based Salesforce  garners mainly subscription revenue from on-demand software delivered via the Internet, or cloud. “Salesforce’s  increased penetration of very large organizations and vertical-focused strategy, led by President and COO Keith Block, may mark the beginning of a trend of consistency in enterprise sales execution,” Jefferies analyst John DiFucci said in a pre-earnings research report. Salesforce has a strong IBD Composite Rating of 95, putting it among the top 5% of all stocks on key metrics such as sales and earnings growth. Its Computer Software-Enterprise group, though, ranks just No. 138 out of 197 industry groups tracked by IBD. Salesforce competes with Microsoft ( MSFT ), SAP ( SAP ), Oracle ( ORCL ), ServiceNow ( NOW ) and others. Salesforce last week said it would offer a new “Internet of Things” service using AWS, the cloud computing business of  Amazon.com ( AMZN ). Salesforce’s service, expected to launch this fall, collects data from Web-connected devices. AWS is the No. 1 cloud services provider.