Market Updates
Lennar Cuts Profit Outlook
Elena
26 Jun, 2006
New York City
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U.S. stocks opened strong on merger-and-acquisition activity. In earnings news, homebuilder Lennar repored 39% profit jump in Q2, but cut its 2006 profit forecast to range of $8 to $8.25 a share from a previous forecast of $9.25 a share. Walgreen posted Q3 earnings rise of 14% on increased sales from newly opened stores, beating expectations.
[R]9:45AM Stocks opened higher on merger-and-acquisition activity.[/R]
Stock markets advanced at opening. The positive market sentiment was generated by mergers-and-acquisition activity, which helped offset nervousness ahead of Fed Reserve meeting on Thursday. Gains by metal stocks contributed to the initial upward move, with shares of Inco ((N)) and Falconbridge ((FAL)) moving higher by 12% and 6% respectively on the heels of news that Phelps Dodge ((PD)) agreed to buy both companies in a three-way merger valued at $56 billion. The deal follows Anadarko Petroleum's move on Friday to buy two oil producers for $21.1 billion in cash. Dow component Pfizer ((PFE)) moved higher by 1.7% after the company agreed to sell its consumer healthcare business to Johnson & Johnson ((JNJ)) for $16.6 billion in cash. Mittal Steel and Arcelor ended a five-month takeover battle after Mittal agreed to pay $34 billion to combine the world's top two steelmakers. In the opening minutes, the Dow Jones industrials were up 9.21 points at 10,998.30, the Nasdaq Composite climbed 4.99 points at 2,126.46, and the S&P 500 gained .38 of a point at 1,244.88. Bonds were little changed after last week's record-setting selloff, with the yield on the 10-year Treasury note steady at a four-year high of 5.23% from late Friday.
[R]New home sales unexpectedly increased.[/R]
Monday morning, the Department of Commerce released its report on new homes sales in the month of May. The report showed that new homes sales increased unexpectedly compared to a downwardly revised reading for the previous month. The Commerce Department said that new home sales rose 4.6 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.234 million units in May from a downwardly revised rate of 1.180 million units in April. Economists had expected sales to fall to an annual rate of 1.145 million units compared to the 1.198 million unit rate originally reported for April. The report showed that the increase in new homes sales reflected sales growth in the Midwest, South, and West, which more than offset a 7.9 percent decrease in sales in the Northeast. The Commerce Department also said that the seasonally adjusted estimate of new houses for sale at the end of May was 556,000, down from 560,000 in April. The houses for sale at the end of May represent a supply of 5.5 months at the current sales rate.
[R]9:00AM Stock futures pointed to a higher start on merger deals.[/R]
U.S. stock futures moved higher Monday morning, supported by a series of multibillion dollar merger deals which helped offset concerns about the Fed Reserve policy-setting meeting on Thursday. Phelps Dodge ((PD)) shares dropped 5.1% in pre-market trading after the company said it would buy Inco ((N)) and Falconbridge ((FAL)) for about $40 billion in a deal to create a top global copper and nickel miner. Johnson & Johnson ((JNJ)) rose 2.6% as Pfizer Inc. ((PFE)) said on Monday it reached an agreement to sell its consumer health-care business to the diversified health-care company for $16.6 billion in cash. Pfizer shares jumped 3.3%. Elsewhere, European steelmaker Arcelor accepted an improved $32.2 billion bid from Mittal Steel ((MT)) after a number of rejected offers. In earnings news, home bulder Lennar Corp. ((LEN)) posted a 39% profit jump, well above forecasts but said Q2 new orders fell 3%. S&P 500 futures rose 1.30 points, above fair value. Dow Jones industrial average futures were up 12 points, and Nasdaq 100 futures rose 1.25 points.
Lennar Corp., ((LEN)), homebuilder, reported a 39% increase in Q2 net profit to $2.00 a share, and a 56% rise in sales, beating analyst estimate for earnings of $1.85 a share. The company said that it expects its fiscal year earnings in a range of a range of $8.00 to $8.25 a share, down from a prior estimate of $9.25 a share. Lennar downgraded its 2006 guidance after announcing that it expects the second half of the year to be more challenging in a slowing homebuilding industry, as evidenced by lower new orders and higher cancellation rates. New orders are currently down 3% at 11,757 homes, the company added.
Persimmon, ((PSN.UK)), U.K. homebuilder, reported that first-half sales advanced 34.8% to 2.4 billion pounds ($4.4 billion) as sales reservations jumped 7% from a year earlier. The company said it is on track to deliver further growth in 2006 in line with expectations. It also added the housing market continues to be active and it expects a modest level of price inflation in both selling prices and building costs.
Steelcase Inc, ((SCS)), maker of office furniture, reported Q1 earnings of 12 cents a share, up from a profit of 5 cents a share a year-ago. Q1 includes restructuring charges of $2.7 million related to facility rationalizations at the company''s North American and International operations. Revenue advanced 7.6% in Q1 to $727.3 million from $676 million in the same period a year ago. The company missed analysts’ estimate for a profit of 14 cents a share.
Walgreen Co., ((WAG)), drug store chain, reported that Q3 income advanced to 46 cents a share, up from 40 cents, a year ago. Sales increased to $12.2 billion from $10.8 billion, while same-store sales advanced 7.6%. The company topped analysts’ forecast for earnings of 44 cents a share on sales of $12.14 billion.
Mair Holdings Inc, ((MAIR)), airline holding company, reported a Q4 loss of $2.63 a share, deeper than a loss of 8 cents a share a year-ago. Q4 reflects a loss of $45.6 million from the company''s Mesaba Aviation unit, including $19.6 million in income tax expense, $20.2 million in reorganization-related charges, an $8.9 million asset impairment change and $6.2 million in operating losses. Revenue plunged 95.1% in Q4 from the same period a year earlier.
[R]8:00AM Phelps Dodge agreed to buy mining companies Inco and Falconbridge.[/R]
One of the largest copper producers in the world, Phelps Dodge Corp.((PD)), announced Monday it is buying Canadian mining companies Inco Ltd. ((N)) and Falconbridge Ltd. ((FAL)) for $40 billion in a cash and stock. As part of the deal, Phelps Dodge will initiate a share buyback program of $5 billion. The final deal is expected to close in September, with Phelps Dodge shareholders owning about 40% of Phelps Dodge Inco, current Inco shareholders owning about 31%, and current Falconbridge holders owning about 29%. The companies forecast combined annual cost savings of $900 million by 2008. The deal would also add to earnings from 2008 onward.
The new company, to be called Phelps Dodge Inco Corp., is expected to be the world''''s biggest nickel producer and largest publicly traded copper producer. Under the terms of the agreement, Inco shareholders will receive 0.672 shares of Phelps Dodge stock plus 17.50 Canadian dollars ($15.59) per share in cash for each share of Inco stock, representing a premium of 23% to Inco''''s closing price on June 23. Simultaneously, Inco will increase its previous offer for Falconbridge to 17.50 Canadian dollars ($15.59) from 12.50 Canadian dollars ($11.14) and the exchange ratio to 0.55676 shares of Inco, from 0.524 shares, for each share of Falconbridge.
[R]7:30AM Asian stocks close mostly higher on merger activity.[/R]
Asian markets closed mostly higher. Japan''s major indexes inched higher in late afternoon after having been lower most of the day. Led by domestic demand-sensitive issues such as banks and real-estate developers, the Nikkei 225 Index advanced 0.19% to close at 15152.40. Investors grabbed large industrial issues on expectations the companies could become targets in the consolidation wave. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries rose 1.7%, while Kawasaki Heavy Industries advanced 3%. Sumitomo Metal Industries gained 2.2%. Japanese financial shares declined, though, with Resona Holdings shedding 1.7%. Consumer finance firm Aiful, consumer lender, fell 2.5%. South Korean shares closed higher bouncing back as leading exporters, including information and technology companies, rallied on positive corporate news and in anticipation of improved earnings after the second quarter. The Korea Composite Stock Price Index, or Kospi, gained 0.8% to 1238.05. Taiwan shares also finished higher on bargain hunting. The Taipei Index advanced 1.1% to 6523.68. In Hong Kong, stocks closed little changed Monday as investors stayed on the sidelines anticipating the expiry of June index futures later this week, but telecommunications operator PCCW outperformed on the prospect of its asset sale. The Hang Seng Index slipped 0.03% to 15804.81.
[R]6:30AM Mittal and Arcelor deal lifted Europe.[/R]
European markets traded higher in mid-morning. The U.K. FTSE 100 index rose 0.2% at 5,701, the German DAX Xetra 30 index advanced 0.2% at 5,543, and the French CAC-40 index gained 0.2% at 4,827. On the corporate front, Mittal Steel and Arcelor deal drew early attention on the steelmaking sector after the companies agreed to an improved offer on Sunday night. The new business, to be called Arcelor Mittal, will have an annual output of more than 100m tonnes of steel. Germany''s ThyssenKrupp advanced 1% and Anglo-Dutch Corus Group rose 1.6%. Diversified mining stocks such as BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto also gained, following a report in The Wall Street Journal stated that Phelps Dodge is set to make a $40 billion bid for Canadian miners Inco and Falconbridge.
Oil inched down on Monday, following signs of improved Iraqi production, but kept near $71 a barrel as demand from the United States and China is still growing despite near-record prices while traders are concerned about supply disruptions. Crude traded down 7 cents at $70.80 a barrel by 0436 GMT, after an increase of 3 cents on Friday that took gains for last week to 1.4%. London Brent crude shed 8 cents to $69.85. The euro opened up against the dollar on Monday, pushing back the U.S. currency from a rally it staged late last week. The euro purchased $1.2566, up from $1.2515 in New York late Friday. The British pound slipped against the dollar, purchasing $1.8237, down from $1.8281 in late trading last week. The dollar was stronger against the Japanese yen, purchasing 116.25, up from 116.08 in New York at the end of last week.
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