Market Updates
Factory Orders Decline 0.3%
Elena
23 Jun, 2006
New York City
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Oracle reported Q4 earnings, in line with the upwardly revised guidance that the software company provided last week. Oracle posted net income of 24 cents per share on revenue of $4.85 billion to 20 cents per share on $3.88 billion in revenue last year. Excluding special items, the company earned 29 cents per share, a penny above analyst estimates.
[R]9:00AM Stock futures pointed to a lower start on economic data.[/R]
U.S. stock futures moved down Friday on key economic data. A weaker-than-expected durable goods reports in May offset news of proposed acquisitions in the energy sector totaling more than $22 billion. The Commerce Department said that durable goods orders fell 0.3% in May following a revised 4.7% decrease in April, below the expected 0.4% increase. Anadarko Petroleum ((APC)) dropped in pre-market trading after the company agreed to acquire Kerr-McGee ((KMG)) and Western Gas Resources ((WGR)) in separate all-cash transactions totaling $23.3 billion. The decrease was mainly contributable to a steep decline in orders for transportation equipment, which fell 2.6%. In earnings news, Oracle ((ORCL)) reported Q4 earnings in line with the upwardly revised guidance that the software company provided last week. Oracle posted net income of 24 cents per share on revenue of $4.85 billion to 20 cents per share on $3.88 billion in revenue last year. Excluding special items, the company earned 29 cents per share, a penny above analyst estimates. S&P 500 futures fell 0.80 point, but stood slightly above fair value. Dow Jones industrial average futures dropped 8 points, and Nasdaq 100 futures slipped by 2 points.
[R]Durable goods orders unexpectedly declined.[/R]
Friday morning, the Department of Commerce released its report on durable goods orders in the month of May. The report showed that durable goods orders fell unexpectedly after a notable decrease in the previous month. The Commerce Department said that durable goods orders fell 0.3 percent in May following a revised 4.7 percent decrease in April. Economists had expected orders to increase 0.4 percent compared to the 4.4 percent decrease originally reported for April. The decrease was largely due to a notable decline in orders for transportation equipment, which fell 2.6 percent in May following a 12.7 percent decrease in April. Orders for commercial aircraft and parts fell sharply, dropping by 17.9 percent. Excluding orders for transportation equipment, orders for durable goods rose 0.7 percent in May compared to a 1.0 percent decrease in April. Orders for primary metals, machinery, and communications equipment saw notable growth.
[R]8:00AM Univision Communications remained cool to $10.7 billion offer.[/R]
Univision Communications Inc. remained cool to a proposal from a consortium of private investors, offering $10.7 billion to acquire the Spanish-language broadcaster on Wednesday. The consortium includes private equity firms Madison Dearborn Partners LLC, Thomas H. Lee Partners LP, Providence Equity Partners Inc., Texas Pacific Group Inc. and media mogul Haim Saban. Reportedly, Univision rejected the proposed bid, telling the group it needed to increase its offer. The group''''s offer was slightly more than $35 per share and below the $40 per share the company had reportedly been seeking. Wall Street analysts estimated the company could fetch between $11 billion and $12 billion. On Thursday, a second investor group was still trying to put together an offer after losing three of its private equity firms. The remaining investors in that group were Mexican media giant Grupo Televisa SA and Venezuelan broadcaster Venevision, which are two of Univision''''s largest shareholders and programming suppliers, as well as two private equity firms: Bain Capital Partners LLC and Cascade Investment LLC. After a more than 4% drop on Wednesday, shares of Los Angeles-based Univision slid another $1.04, or 3.1%, to close at $32.80 Thursday on the Nymex.
[R]7:10AM Asian shares finish broadly lower on overseas concerns.[/R]
Asian markets closed mostly lower. The Nikkei 225 in Tokyo inched down 0.08% to finish at 15,124.04. Japan''s automaker, Nissan Motor dropped 2.3%. Rival Honda Motor lost 1.2%. In the electronics sector, Sony Corp pulled back from morning losses to settle up 0.2%, while Fujitsu Ltd slipped 1.49%. Hong Kong''s Hang Seng Index declined 0.11% in a day of weak trading, closing at 15,808.81. In Hong Kong, local telecom company PCCW Ltd was off 4.35% in a developing takeover battle involving Australia''s Macquarie Bank and U.S. private-equity firm TPG Newbridge. Hong Kong''s Television Broadcasts Ltd surged 6.8% on local media reports that PCCW CEO Richard Li may acquire the TV company if he manages to sell his telecom firm. South Korea''s Kospi shed 0.82%, while Australia''s S&P/ASX 200 was down by 0.92%. Shanghai''s Composite Index advanced 0.6%. In Shanghai, Datong Coal Industry debuted on the exchange in the mainland''s second IPO since a one-year suspension on capital raising was boosted last month. Datong Coal shares advanced 63% in their first day of trading.
[R]6:30AM Europe edges higher in early trade on oil stocks.[/R]
European markets were higher in early trading Friday. The London FTSE 100 inched up 0.3% at 5,699, the German DAX 30 rose 0.2% to 5,545, the French CAC 40 advanced 0.4% to 4,821. Oil producers including France''s Total, 1.6% higher, led markets up after Deutsche Bank said the sector as a whole was undervalued and upgraded Royal Dutch Shell and Statoil. Shell advanced 1.5% and Statoil rose 1.2%. One company benefiting from the Merger and acquisition theme was Associated British Ports which agreed to be bought for 910 pence a share, or 2.8 billion pounds ($5.17 billion) from a consortium led by Goldman Sachs. AB Ports shares rallied 3.8%. Mittal Steel remained flat in Amsterdam due to increasing media speculation that Arcelor over the weekend will agree to another improved Mittal offer.
Crude oil futures slipped slightly but remained firm at $70 a barrel on Friday, anchored by strong fuel demand, refinery glitches and jitters about the unresolved tension between the U.S. and Iran. Gold bullion opened Friday at a bid price of $583.10 a troy ounce, lower than $586.00 late Thursday. The dollar was trading at 116.17 yen by midday in Europe, up from 116.08 late Thursday in New York. The euro purchased $1.2558, compared with $1.2582, while the British pound slipped to $1.8247 from $1.8281.
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