Tag Archives: technology

Telecom ETFs Falling On Lackluster Earnings

The year has been rather mediocre for the telecom industry with lukewarm results coming up amid turbulent economic conditions. The industry has evolved as an intensely contested space where success depends largely on technical superiority, quality of services and scalability. Cut-throat pricing competition has put pressure on margins this earnings season. However, mixed results and global market concerns notwithstanding, the overall sentiment for the U.S. telecommunications industry for the rest of 2016 is positive. Telecommunications is one of the few industries to have managed to undergo rapid technological improvement even during depression. In this era of digitization and technology, the ever-growing demand for technologically superior products should see the sector through. Below we have highlighted in greater detail earnings of some of the major Telecom companies which really drive this sector’s outlook. (read more: What Lies Ahead for Telecom ETFs in 2016? ). Telecom Earnings in Details U.S. telecom behemoth AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T ) reported impressive results beating on both the top and bottom line. Adjusted earnings per share of 72 cents beat the Zacks Consensus Estimate of 69 cents. Quarterly total revenue increased 24.4% year over year to $40,535 million, outpacing the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $40,493 million. AT&T has gained 2.1% since reporting earnings (as of May 4, 2016). Although the company reported strong results, its U.S. postpaid wireless subscriber addition of 129,000 was down a significant 70.7% year over year. In contrast, U.S. telecom giant Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE: VZ ) reported mixed financial results wherein the top line lagged the Zacks Consensus Estimate, while the bottom line just met the same. Verizon’s adjusted earnings per share moved up almost 3.9% year over year to $1.06, in line with the Zacks Consensus Estimate. Quarterly revenue increased 0.6% year over year to $32,171 million, but missed the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $32,367 million. The stock has fallen 1.8% since reporting earnings (as of May 4, 2016). CenturyLink Inc. ‘s (NYSE: CTL ) first-quarter 2016 adjusted earnings per share of 71 cents surpassed the Zacks Consensus Estimate of 68 cents and were up 6% year over year. However, quarterly total revenue of $4,401 million fell 1.1% from the prior-year quarter and missed the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $4,426 million. The stock was down 4.71% during after-hours trading on May 4, 2016. ETFs in Focus Thanks to mixed results, telecom ETFs with considerable exposure to the three stocks above were all in the red in the last 5 trading sessions (as of May 4, 2016). Below we discuss four of these that will be in focus in the coming days (see all Telecommunication ETFs here ). iShares U.S. Telecommunications ETF (NYSEARCA: IYZ ) IYZ tracks the Dow Jones U.S. Select Telecommunications Index. The fund manages assets worth nearly $617.4 million and has an average trading volume of roughly 502,000 shares a day. The fund charges an expense ratio of 45 basis points a year. The fund holds 25 stocks and has more than one-fifth of its assets in the top 2 holdings while the others have less than 5.7% exposure. Among individual holdings, top stocks in the ETF include AT&T, Verizon and CenturyLink with asset allocation of 10.7%, 9.9% and 5.5%, respectively. The four major sectors of this ETF are Integrated Telecom, Wireless Telecom, Alternative Carriers and Communications Equipment with asset holdings of 50.5%, 24.7%, 18.2% and 3.8%, respectively. The product lost 0.9% in the past 5 days and currently has a Zacks ETF Rank #3 (Hold) with a Medium risk outlook. Fidelity MSCI Telecommunications Services Index ETF (NYSEARCA: FCOM ) This ETF tracks the performance of the MSCI USA IMI Telecommunication Services 25/50 Index. The fund manages assets worth nearly $164.8 million and has an average trading volume of roughly 64,000 shares a day. The fund charges an expense ratio of 12 basis points a year. The fund holds 32 stocks and has a concentrated approach in the top 10 holdings with 67.4% of the asset base invested in them. Among individual holdings, AT&T, Verizon and CenturyLink number among the top three with asset allocation of 22%, 20.8% and 4.3%, respectively. Diversified Telecommunication Services and Wireless Telecommunication Services are the two major sectors of this ETF with asset holdings of 84.9% and 15.1%, respectively. The product lost 1% in the past 5 days and currently has a Zacks ETF Rank #3 with a Medium risk outlook. iShares Global Telecommunications ETF (NYSEARCA: IXP ) This ETF tracks the S&P Global 1200 Telecommunications Services Sector Index. The fund has nearly $418.2 million of assets under management and an average trading volume of roughly 41,000 shares a day. The fund charges an expense ratio of 48 basis points a year. The fund holds 32 stocks in its portfolio and has a concentrated approach in the top 10 holdings with approximately 71.3% of the asset base invested in them. Among individual holdings, top stocks in the ETF include AT&T and Verizon with asset allocation of 18.5% and 15.9%, respectively. CenturyLink holds weight of 1.3%. Integrated Telecommunication, Wireless Telecommunication and Alternative Carriers are the three major sectors with asset holdings of 72.9%, 25.7% and 1.2%, respectively. It fell almost 1.8% in the last 5 days and currently has a Zacks ETF Rank #3 with a Medium risk outlook. Vanguard Telecommunication Services ETF (NYSEARCA: VOX ) This ETF seeks to track the performance corresponding to the benchmark MSCI U.S. Investable Market Telecommunication Services 25/50 Index. It has assets under management of nearly $1.5 billion and an average trading volume of roughly 135,000 shares a day. The fund charges an expense ratio of 10 basis points a year. The fund holds 31 stocks in its portfolio and has a concentrated approach in the top 10 holdings with 69.6% of the asset base invested in them. Among individual holdings, top stocks in the ETF are AT&T and Verizon with a combined share of almost 50%. CenturyLink has the third highest share with 4.6% weight. Integrated Telecommunication Services, Alternative Carriers and Wireless Telecommunication Services are the three major sectors with asset holdings of 67.1%, 20.3% and 12.5%, respectively. The fund lost 0.9% in the last 5 days and currently has a Zacks ETF Rank #3 with a Medium risk outlook. Link to the original post on Zacks.com

Alibaba’s Audacious Goal To Reach $1 Trillion In Merchandise Sales

Alibaba ( BABA ) says it’s on a path to realizing its vision of achieving $1 trillion in gross merchandise volume in about four years, as it also pursues a goal of reaching 2 billion consumers on its e-commerce platforms. During the company’s conference call after posting its fiscal-fourth-quarter earnings on Thursday, company CEO Daniel Zhang cited reasons he’s optimistic of hitting the $1 trillion GMV goal. One big reason, he noted, is Alibaba’s successful transition from PCs to mobile devices. By comparison, e-commerce software firm ChannelAdvisor ( ECOM ) estimates Amazon.com ‘s ( AMZN ) GMV in 2015 at $225.6 billion, with 310 million users. At the time of Alibaba’s initial public offering in September 2014, mobile contributed less than 40% of GMV. Today, it’s 73%. Success also depends on international expansion and in continuing to transform its e-commerce business, along with continued investments and growth in its media and digital entertainment platforms, as well as its cloud computing business. Alibaba is one of the four largest Internet companies in China. The others are JD.com ( JD ), which runs a direct-to-consumer e-commerce site similar to Amazon ( AMZN ); China search-engine leader Baidu ( BIDU ); and Tencent Holdings ( TCEHY ), which dominates in gaming and mobile messaging. For all Zhang’s bravado, Alibaba is less than halfway toward its goal: For its fiscal year ended March 31, Alibaba had GMV of $485 billion, up 27%. And it said it had 423 million active buyers, up 21%. GMV is the total value of goods sold across Alibaba’s e-commerce platforms. Alibaba does not take part in direct sales, hold inventory or compete directly with its merchant base. Businesses and consumers use Alibaba’s e-commerce platform, and Alibaba takes about a 2.5% cut of GMV sales. It also makes money from advertising. Alibaba Counts On Growth For Tmall, Taobao Alibaba’s core e-commerce retail platforms are Taobao, Tmall and Juhuasuan. Together, they have 367 million active buyers, with about 90% of Alibaba’s revenue generated in China. Getting to $1 trillion will depend on the growth and expansion mainly of Tmall and Taobao. Tmall is China’s largest business-to-consumer website. Taobao is a consumer-to-consumer e-commerce website similar to eBay ( EBAY ). Taobao is the larger of the two. In fiscal 2016, it hit GMV of $295 billion, up 18%. Tmall reached $190 billion, up 43%. Part of Alibaba’s GMV growth is pegged to global expansion. Alibaba last month announced it acquired a controlling stake in Singapore-based Lazada, a leading e-commerce platform in Southeast Asia, for $1 billion. Lazada operates online retail platforms across Indonesia, Thailand, Philippines, Malaysia, Vietnam and Singapore, with GMV of $1 billion in 2015. “Our acquisition of a controlling stake in Lazada will allow access to 560 million consumers in one of the most promising markets for e-commerce,” said Chung Tsai, Alibaba executive vice chairman, in the earnings conference call. Alibaba in the March quarter showed its highest growth rate in a year, despite an economic slowdown in China. “In these challenging times for the global economy, Alibaba is bucking the trend,” said Tsai. He said Chinese households today have aggregate net cash reserves of more than $4.6 trillion. “This accumulated wealth and liquidity is the result of real double-digit wage growth over the past decade,” he said. Kerry Rice, an analyst at Needham, says Alibaba has a lot of room for growth ahead. “We expect the company’s core business to continue to be the engine of growth, and despite its scale and dominant market share, we believe it still has significant room for growth,” Rice wrote in a research report. Rice rates Alibaba stock a buy, with a price target of 95. Alibaba stock was up a fraction in afternoon trading in the stock market today , near 79.50. Alibaba stock is up nearly 30% since touching a seven-month low in early February. Alibaba’s stock has had a rocky trip since its blockbuster IPO raised $24 billion, the most ever. Shares priced at 68 and hit a peak of 120 in November 2014. RBC Capital Markets analyst Mark Mahaney has an outperform rating and price target of 105 on Alibaba stock, up from a previous target of 89. Based on its strength in mobile, “we believe this means Alibaba can sustain premium growth rates in its key retail segment for the foreseeable future,” Mahaney wrote in a research note.

SunPower Keeps Full-Year View Despite $400 Million Q2 Guidance Lag

Late Thursday, SunPower ( SPWR ) kept its full-year outlook despite offering Q2 guidance that lagged Wall Street’s view by $400 million, indicating a back-end-loaded 2016 for the No. 2 solar developer, says Credit Suisse analyst Patrick Jobin. SunPower and First Solar ( FSLR ) stocks were both flat in early afternoon trading on the stock market today , but IBD’s 26-company Energy-Solar industry group was down more than 1%, touching a three-year low for the third straight day. SunPower-First Solar yieldco 8point3 Energy Partners ( CAFD ) stock was down 2%. For Q1, SunPower reported $433.6 million in sales ex items, topping analysts’ model for $328.5 million, boosted by revenue recognized from the sale to 8point3 of the 50-megawatt Hooper Project. Solar firms form yieldcos to own their operating assets. But SunPower’s 30-cent loss per share ex items was wider than the 20-cent projection of 16 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters, and that swung from a 13-cent gain in the year-earlier quarter. SunPower said it deployed 236 megawatts in the quarter, above guidance for 180 MW to 210 MW and up 8% year over year. Of that, Jobin estimates 75 MW was residential, 35 MW commercial and 205 MW power plant. The latter two segments missed views for 43 MW and 210 MW. Residential deployments fell 23% on Japanese weakness, partially offset by 50% growth in the U.S. market, Jobin wrote. But lease bookings (37% of U.S. deployments) fell 18%. For the current quarter, SunPower guided to $310 million to $360 million in sales, down 11% year over year at the midpoint. That was far off the analysts’ model for $722 million. SunPower didn’t offer an earnings view, but the consensus expected 22% growth to 22 cents. During Q2, SunPower expects to deploy 360 MW to 385 MW. For the year, the company maintained its view for 1.6 gigawatts to 1.9 GW and $3.2 billion to $3.4 billion in sales “implying a second-half weighted year,” Jobin wrote. SunPower also shed light on 650 MW in projects. The lion’s share, 436 MW, will be completed in Q4. The project list includes 241 MW slated for sale to 8point3, 151 MW for third parties and 255 MW to be divvied up. The company also announced a $200 million revolver facility to focus on commercial and small-scale utility projects that will be able to fund up to 100% of construction projects. Jobin retained his outperform rating and 32 price target on SunPower stock, which was near 17 Friday afternoon.