Tag Archives: request

Manhattan Associates Beats Street, Raises Guidance; Stock Jumps

Supply chain software developer Manhattan Associates ( MANH ) beat Wall Street’s first-quarter earnings and revenues estimates, then raised its full-year 2016 guidance after the market close Tuesday. Investors responded by bidding up the stock more than 7% after hours. Manhattan stock rose a fraction Tuesday and just fell short of a three-month high. CEO Eddie Capel said in the company’s earnings release, “(Manhattan’s) investment in multichannel, retail store and distribution management solutions continue to drive growth and extend our market leadership position in a subdued world economy.” Manhattan said that its Q1 non-GAAP earnings rose 23.5% to 42 cents per share on revenue of $149.9 million, up 12%. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had expected 39 cents and $145.5 million. For the year, Manhattan raised its adjusted EPS guidance to a range of $1.73 to $1.76, up 14% to 16%, from an earlier 11%-13% range. And it raised its revenue range to $615 million to $620 million, up 10.5% to 11.5% from an earlier 9.5%-10.5% outlook. Analysts had modeled $1.71 EPS minus items , up 12.5%, on revenue up 10% to $612 million.

Intel Will Slash Up To 12,000 Jobs After Q1 Sales Miss On PC Woes

No. 1 chipmaker Intel ( INTC ) lagged Wall Street’s Q1 revenue expectations late Tuesday on PC sales that grew minimally vs. the year-earlier quarter, and announced that up to 12,000 positions would be cut by mid-2017. The 12,000-cut represents 11% of Intel’s global workforce and will require “a combination of voluntary and involuntary departures and a re-evaluation of programs,” according to the press release. Most affected employees will be notified within 60 days. And CFO Stacy Smith will move to a “broader, new role within Intel” leading sales, manufacturing and operations, and reporting directly to CEO Brian Krzanich. Smith will remain in his role pending a formal CFO search, Krzanich said on Intel’s conference call with analysts, after it released results. Intel stock was down more than 2% after hours, having closed down 0.2% during the regular session. Shares are weaker by 8% for the year, having rebounded from a slide in January and mid-February amid reports of weak Taiwanese ODM sales. Krzanich detailed the restructuring in an email to employees, highlighting Intel’s stepping away from PCs to focus on high-growth segments like the data center, Internet of Things and memory which, together, brought in $2.2 billion in revenue growth in 2015. “We are evolving from a PC company to a company that powers billions of smart, connected devices,” Krzanich said on the call. “We do not take these changes lightly. We will be saying goodbye to employees who have played a great role in Intel’s success.” By restructuring, Intel plans to save $750 million in the first year, with an annual run rate savings of $1.4 billion by mid-2017, allowing Intel to “intensify” its investments in its key growth areas. Ultimately, “we expect an even more profitable client computing group (PC),” Krzanich added. PC sales comprised 55% of Intel’s Q1 sales, but have struggled in recent quarters amid stiff tablet and two-in-one competition. Q1 Sales Lag, But EPS Tops For Q1 ended April 2, Intel reported $13.7 billion in sales and 54 cents earnings per share, up 7% and 20%, respectively, vs. the year-earlier quarter. EPS topped analyst expectations by more than a nickel, but sales missed. The consensus of 45 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters modeled $13.83 billion in sales (against Intel’s non-GAAP revenue of $13.8 billion) and 48 cents EPS, in line with Intel’s earlier view for $14 billion in sales, plus or minus $500 million. Nonvolatile memory sales declined 6% vs. the year-earlier quarter, underperforming the struggling PC unit, which managed to climb 2% year over year. Intel’s high-growth units — data center and Internet of Things — grew a respective 9% and 22% year over year. Security sales popped 12% vs. the year-earlier quarter. Krzanich didn’t address recent rumors that Apple ( AAPL ) might tap Intel to supply 30 million-40 million iPhone 7 modems — a development that had sent Intel’s stock jumping. Qualcomm ( QCOM ) typically sources the iPhone modem and would retain the lion’s share of the iPhone 7, analysts say. Analysts largely doubt Intel’s mobile strategy, which hasn’t yet played out. But Krzanich, on the call, defended the mobile unit, which he said “is absolutely continuing to grow for us as a segment, and we’re increasing our profitability.” For the current quarter, Intel guided to $13 billion to $14 billion in sales, which would be up 2% at the midpoint vs. the year-earlier quarter. The company reduced its full-year guidance to mid-single-digit growth. Earlier, Intel saw mid- to high-single-digit growth. Pacific Crest and S&P Global Market Intelligence analysts had expected Intel to cut its full-year guidance on the ebbing PC market, which industry trackers IDC and Gartner recently saw dipping 11.5% and 9.6%, respectively, in Q1 shipments. Days after the forecasts emerged, rumors cropped up that Intel might be prepping to cut thousands of jobs.   Image provided by Shutterstock .    

Yahoo Earnings Fall Less Than Expected; No Update On Takeover Bids

Giving no specifics on its efforts to find a buyer for its core, and perhaps other, businesses,  Yahoo ( YHOO ) late Tuesday reported Q1 earnings and revenue that topped Wall Street expectations despite what its CEO called “substantial noise.” Yahoo stock was up 1.5% in after-hours trading Tuesday after the company released its earnings, though its Q2 revenue outlook lagged analyst expectations. “Over the past two months, (CFO) Ken (Goldman) and I have spent time in person and on the phone with interested participants,” Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer said on the company’s earnings conference call. “We personally answered hundreds of requests for information. We are moving forward at the fastest possible pace.” The company reportedly had set a deadline of Monday for bids by potential acquirers, as the company has put all options on the table after failing to generate consistent revenue growth over the past decade.  Verizon Communications ( VZ ), which owns AOL, reportedly is among the most active bidders. For Q1, Yahoo said that its earnings per share minus items fell 47% to 8 cents from 15 cents in Q1 2015, but analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had expected just 7 cents. Revenue fell 11% to $1.09 billion, in the upper end of Yahoo’s guidance range of $1.05 billion to $1.09 billion and just above the $1.08 billion that analysts had expected. Yahoo posted revenue minus TAC — traffic acquisition costs, or what Yahoo must pay to other sites to carry its ads — of $859.38 million, down 17%. That’s above the $847 million that FactSet had forecast. But it’s below the $1.04 billion in ex-TAC revenue that Yahoo reported in Q1 2015. For Q2, the company forecast revenue of $1.05 billion to $1.09 billion, down 14% at the midpoint and lagging consensus views of $1.102 billion. Despite “substantial noise,” Mayer said on the conference call, the company has “made great progress.” CEO Said Company Aligned On Top Priority “Our 2016 plan is off to a solid start as we continue to focus on driving efficiency, lowering costs and improving long-term growth,” Mayer said in the company’s earnings release. “In tandem, we made substantial progress toward potential strategic alternatives for Yahoo. Our board, our management team and I are completely aligned on this top priority for shareholders.” Yahoo has formed a strategic review committee of independent directors to consider strategic alternatives for the company and for its big stakes in China’s Alibaba Group ( BABA ) and in Yahoo Japan. Yahoo stock fell a fraction in Tuesday’s regular session, to 36.33, but it’s up nearly 40% since touching a nine-month low in early February. S&P Global Market Intelligence analyst Scott Kessler, in a research report last week, said that he was bracing for disappointment, “given continuing fundamental challenges and questions about company leadership.” At the time, Kessler downgraded Yahoo stock to hold from buy. On the other hand, Yahoo stock received at least two price-target boosts in the past two weeks. Pivotal raised its price target to 40 from 35, primarily due to recent gains by Alibaba. Most of Yahoo’s value comes from its 15% stake in the China e-commerce titan. Yahoo’s total market cap is about $34 billion. SunTrust Robinson Humphrey analyst Robert Peck raised his price target to 44 from 40 on April 13 and maintained a buy rating, citing “hidden assets” that could drive up the bidding price for the struggling Web portal. Those assets, Peck said, include royalties from Yahoo Japan, thousands of patents and plentiful real estate. Minus a “potential upside” from those assets, SunTrust expects Yahoo to fetch bids in the $6 billion to $8 billion range for its core business. Some reports estimate that as many as 40 groups have expressed interest in the wilting Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Web portal, although Fortune said in a report on Friday that the number was too high. News site Re/Code said that documents Yahoo provided to potential bidders predict that Yahoo’s 2016 revenue will fall nearly 15% and its earnings by more than 20%. On Tuesday, Goldman said that Yahoo’s head count, including contractors, was down 42% from the start of 2012 to 9,200, and the company continues to cut costs. Yahoo reported that its revenue from Mavens rose more than 6% to $390 million and accounted for 38% of total revenue, up from 33% in Q1 2015. Mavens refers to Yahoo’s revenue from mobile, social, video and native advertising, where revenue is growing. The company hopes that the segment will offset declining revenue from its legacy advertising.