Market Updates

Red Hat Profit down 37%, Tops Estimates

Elena
22 Dec, 2006
New York City

    The company said earnings dropped to $14.6 million, or 7 cents per share, down from $24.6 million, or 12 cents a share last year. Excluding stock options expenses and income tax provisions, profit totaled $29.6 million, or 14 cents per share, exceeding estimates of 12 cents a share. Revenue rose 45%.

[R]8:30AM Red Hat posted 37% profit drop in Q3 but beat estimates.[/R]
Red Hat ((RHT)), a provider of the open source Linux operating system and services, reported Q3 profit drop of 37% because of stock options expenses and tax provisions. The company said earnings dropped to $14.6 million, or 7 cents per share, down from $24.6 million, or 12 cents a share last year. Excluding stock options expenses and income tax provisions, profit totaled $29.6 million, or 14 cents per share, exceeding estimates of 12 cents a share. Revenue rose 45% to $105.8 million from $73.1 million in the year-ago quarter.

The company attributed its Q3 performance to strong market demand and solid execution.The company said it added 12,000 net customers in the quarter and continued integrating JBoss, a middleware maker Red Hat acquired in April. The company is planning to introduce a new product lineup in the first six months of 2007. Red Hat shares rose $2.45, or 13.6%, to $20.41 in after-hours trading.


[R]7:30AM Asia finished higher with autos advancing in Japan and utilities in HK.[/R]
Asian markets finished higher on Friday. The Nikkei 225 Index in Tokyo closed 0.3% higher at 17,104.96, its highest level since May 9. Toyota led the advance, up 1.6%, an all-time high closing price, after the auto maker announced that its production for next year is estimated to total 9.42 million vehicles, on that may exceed General Motors as the world''s No. 1 auto maker. Other advancers were steelmaker JFE Holdings, which added 0.8% and Japan''s largest non-life insurance company Millea Holdings, which gained 0.2%.

The Hang Seng Index advanced 0.5% to 19,320.52. The China Enterprises Index advanced 0.9% to 9,589.71. Utilities hog the limelight after HongKong Electric said it will increase its local tariffs 2.5% next year because of high fuel costs. HongKong Electric gained 1.1%. Although CLP Holdings stated it would not increase its tariffs, it rose 0.8%. Port-equipment maker China Communications Construction advanced 4% and Jin Jiang Hotels added 3%.

The Korea Composite Stock Price Index, or Kospi, in South Korea gained 0.1% to 1,437.49. Posco, the world''s third-largest steel maker by output, fell 1.9% after China largest steel firm Shanghai Baosteel Group agreed to a 9.5% increase in iron ore prices in 2007 with Brazil''s CVRD. Kookmin Bank gained 0.3% and Shinhan Financial Group was up 1.6%.

Shares New Zealand dropped 0.2% to 4,019.20, while Australia S&P/ASX 200 Index advanced 0.3% to 5,577.80. Singapore Straits Times Index gained 0.7% to 2,942.39 and Taiwan Weighted Price Index moved up 0.4% to 7,652.47.

[R]6:30AM European shares dipped Friday trading in a tight range before Christmas.[/R]
European markets were lower on Friday. In morning trade, London FTSE 100 was fractionally lower at 6,181.2, Frankfurt Xetra Dax fell 0.3% to 6,556.66 and the CAC 40 in Paris shed 0.3% to 5,493.96.

Advancers

Irish media group Independent News & Media advanced 2.1% having said that it expects its 2006 adjusted earnings per share to increase by more than 10% compared to a year ago. Also, engineering group Alstom advanced 2.3% on reports that it could be strike a deal for a locomotive order from China.

Decliners

Vodafone Group dipped 0.5%. The mobile company reaffirmed its interest in making a bid for a controlling stake in Hutchison Essar, the Indian mobile operator majority owned by Hutchison Telecom.

Sacyr-Vallehermoso led the Spanish construction sector lower having revealed that it had taken a five-year syndicated bank loan for 5.175 billion euros to pay for its 20% stake in Repsol, the oil company. JPMorgan gave the stock an underweight rating The broker stated Sacyr looked expensive at current valuations. The stock shed 1.7%.

Cintra, the Spanish motorway construction group, slipped 2.8%. The company, a unit of construction group Ferrovial, was downgraded earlier in the week by UBS. Ferrovial dipped 0.4%.

Oil and gold

Oil prices held below $63 a barrel on Friday after dipping from a three-month high in the previous session on unusually warm weather in the United States Northeast. U.S. crude was up 15 cents at $62.81 a barrel in early trade in London. London Brent crude rose 14 cents to $62.60 a barrel.

Gold was steady in thin trade on Friday, with many dealers already away for Christmas holidays. Gold was at $618.70/619.70 in early trading, steady near the $618.20/619.20 seen in late New York trade on Thursday.

Currencies

The U.S. dollar was trading at 118.30 yen on on Friday, down from 118.36 yen from late Thursday in New York. The euro rose to $1.3194, from $1.3175.

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