Posts for Ticker ‘PMCS’

Morgan Stanley’s Key Technology Upgrades & Downgrades (IBM, DELL, CTXS, ADSK, NVLS, TXN, STM, PMCS, QLGC, LRCX, XLNX)

Bull and Bear ImageMorgan Stanley has made several key downgrades in technology, as well as a few lesser upgrades.  Both IBM (NYSE: IBM) and Dell Inc. (NASDAQ: DELL) were downgraded to Equal-Weight from Overweight.  Also cut to underweight were Citrix Systems (NASDAQ: CTXS) and Autodesk (NASDAQ: ADSK).  Novellus Systems (NASDAQ: NVLS) and Texas Instruments (NYSE: TXN) were downgraded to Equal-Weight from Overweight; and STMicroelectronics (NYSE: STM) was cut to Underweight.

There were actually a few Morgan Stanley upgrades in the broader call as well.  PMC-Sierra (NASDAQ: PMCS), QLogic (NASDAQ: QLGC), Lam Research (NASDAQ: LRCX) and Xilinx (NASDAQ: XLNX) were all raised to Overweight.

JON C. OGG

Analysts Changing Semiconductor Ratings (ALTR, AMCC, ASML, BRCM, LSCC, MRVL, WFR, MU, PMCS, STM, XLNX)

We have seen many semiconductor and circuit calls this morning with upgrades and downgrades from Wall Street analysts.  Here are some of these upgrades and downgrades:

Altera (ALTR) Cut to Underweight at Morgan Stanley.
Applied Micro Circuits (AMCC) Cut to Underweight at Morgan Stanley.
ASML (ASML) Cut to Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
Broadcom (BRCM) Raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley.
Lattice Semiconductor (LSCC) Cut to Underweight at Morgan Stanley.
Marvell Tech (MRVL) Raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley.
MEMC (WFR) Raised to Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley.
Micron Technology (MU) Raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley.
PMC-Sierra (PMCS) Cut to Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley.
STMicroelectronics (STM) Raised to Buy at Goldman Sachs.
Xilinx (XLNX) Cut to Underweight at Morgan Stanley.

JON C. OGG

One Last Day of Chip Earnings (BRCM, IDTI, KLAC, MXIM, MCHP, PMCS, RMBS, VSEA)

Semiconductor_imageFor those who have felt that this earnings season was one of the more dismal moments for technology, today should mostly mark the end for the semiconductor companies and related stocks.  Not entirely, but mostly.  On deck after the close are Broadcom Corp. (NASDAQ: BRCM), Integrated Device Technology Inc. (NASDAQ: IDTI), KLA-Tencor Corporation (NASDAQ: KLAC), Maxim Integrated Products Inc. (NASDAQ: MXIM), Microchip Technology Inc. (NASDAQ: MCHP), PMC-Sierra Inc. (NASDAQ: PMCS), Rambus Inc. (NASDAQ: RMBS), and Varian Semiconductor Equipment Associates Inc. (NASDAQ: VSEA).

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Early Bird Technology Analyst Upgrades & Downgrades (ARUN, PMCS, RVBD, ALTR, CTRP, PMTC, SNWL, XLNX)

These are some of the key analyst upgrades and downgrades from Wall Street that we have seen so far this morning in technology stocks:

  • Aruba Networks (ARUN) Raised to Neutral from Sell at Goldman Sachs.
  • PMC-Sierra (PMCS) Raised to Buy at Goldman Sachs.
  • Riverbed Tech (RVBD) Raised to Neutral at UBS.
  • Altera (ALTR) Cut to Sell at Goldman Sachs.
  • Ctrip.com (CTRP) Cut target to $45 from $62 at Goldman Sachs.
  • Parametric Tech (PMTC) Cut to Neutral at Piper Jaffray.
  • SonicWALL (SNWL) Cut to Neutral at Baird.
  • Xilinx (XLNX) Cut to Neutral at Goldman Sachs.

Jon C. Ogg
October 29, 2008

Stocks Which Could Drop 50% In 2008

It actually is not very unusual for a stock to lose half its value, especially if it is in the right sector. Shares in Countrywide Financial (CFC) are down over 75% in 2007. Several newspaper company stocks have dropped by more than half. Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) has gone from $22 to $8.

Usually a stock is affected because its industry is being pushed underwater, as has happened with the mortgage fiasco, or because of several bad decisions by management which simply do so much damage that shareholders hit the exits

We have listed ten companies which could fall by more than half next year. For each one we have given specific reasons. These are the issues that Wall St. has to debate when it considers whether these firms will face significant sell-offs.

Citigroup (C). It would be nice to think that Citi has already taken as much of a beating as it can. The stock has fallen from $57 to $31 this year. Now, could it go to $15? Moody’s recently downgraded Citi saying that it believed that the bank could post more net losses next year. The firm still has a $200 billion mortgage book. Citi might also have to cut its dividend to raise cash. That could make it a much less attractive investment, at least short-term. A deep recession or more trouble in the mortgage-backed securities market could halve Citi’s shares.It has happedned to the bank before three times in the last 35 years, most recently in 1990.

Baidu (BIDU) The Chinese search engine is well ahead of its top rival, Google (GOOG) in the world’s most populated country. That may be why the company’s shares have jumped from under $100 in April to $356. But, Baidu trades at 62 times sales. Google trades at 14 times. Baidu is so high because Wall St. expects online search to become the next big thing in China. But, right now that is not the case. Baidu’s revenue in the third quarter was $66 million. That was double the year before, but is still a tiny number. The Chinese company faces two challenges. One is that Google is going to do whatever it can to take share from Baidu. The US company can’t afford to be a distant second in a market as large as China Baidu has been helped by the fact that the Shanghai Composite is up almost 120% in the last year. If there is a big sell-off in China stocks, Baidu will get pulled down as well.

Journal Register (JRC) This company is probably weaker than most other newspaper chains. It trades at $2.25, down from its 52-week high of $7.76. The company’s operating income is shrinking because of the fall-off of newspaper advertising. In the last quarter, Journal Register had operating income of $17.6 million and interest expense of $10.7 million. Based on newspaper industry trends, the company’s revenue could drop another 8% next year. That means debt service could become a problem.

Ford (F) Ford is a turnaround which almost happened. The company brought in a new CEO and he was able to cut costs. The latest UAW contract should pare Ford’s annual costs by as much as $2 billion. This takes $23 billion in liabilities off Ford’s books. And, the company will pay $13.2 billion into the new UAW benefits fund. Ford’s problem is that it keeps losing sales. The company’s domestic unit sales dropped 12 consecutive months through October and made a small recovery in November. Ford now has about 15% share in the US market. Aside from the fact that Ford’s piece of the pie could keep shrinking, forecasters predict that US car and light truck sales could fall from just over 16 million units this year to 15.5 million next year. In a deep recession, that number could go below 15 million which would take about $25 billion in revenue out of total domestic vehicle sales. Ford’s shares are at $6.79, near a 52-week low, and the company only has a market cap of $14.3 billion.

VMWare (VMW) Almost everyone expects that VMWare shares will be up next year. The company owns the virtualization solutions market which can help servers run much more efficiently, saving enterprises substantial sums of money. After its IPO. the stock moved from $51.50 and peaked at $125.25. It trades at just over $86 now, which indicates that it already may be vulnerable to selling pressure. With a forward P/E of 74, maybe it should be. The market for VMW’s products could slow, but that is unlikely. One securities analyst recently pointed out that VMWare sells software licenses which involve large upfront purchases. That might hurt revenue in future years. And, Microsoft (MSFT) is coming to market with its own virtualization technology, which it calles Hyper-V. The product could be a bust, but Redmond does have a huge foot in the server door with it Windows platform.

Countrywide Financial (CFC) The shares are already down to $9 from a 52-week high of $45.26. This is the most visible casualty of the mortgage mess. The housing market could still sink the company. Nearly half of the firm’s portfolio is backed by California property. If foreclosures continue to spike and the values in the housing market plummet further, Countrywide simply does not have the capital to weather another full year in this climate. Just count the defaults. If they get too high, CFC may not make it. Zacks and Citigroup recently issued negative research comments about the company.

Bidz.com (BIDZ) The company has been in a running fight with research firm Citron. The fight includes claims that that the company’s inventory levels are rising at least 300% higher than the company’s revenue run rate. The company recently reported a good third quarter with net revenue of $40.1 million, a 48% increase compared with $27.1 million reported for the third quarter of 2006. Barron’s has pointed out that short sellers are going after the company and will do whatever they can, within the boundaries of fair play, to keep the shares moving lower. Wall St. is clearly worried. The stock had a 52-week high of $22.50 and now trades at $8.56. There is a lot of evidence that online spending has not been as good as expected this holiday season. Audience research firm Alexa actually shows Bidz traffic falling from early November to mid-December.

Micron Technology (MU) The company has already lost close to half its value in the last year, with the stock going from a 52-week high of $14.31 to $7.82. The firm’s core business in memory chips is being seriously affected by sharply falling prices. Jefferies & Co recently made negative comments on MU and revised revenue down and losses up. The price cutting in the NAND and DRAM markets is furious now. MU needs reasonable operating income to fund R&D. That may not happen. With product pricing in some of its key markets down 40%, 2008 could be a very poor year.

LDK Solar (LDK) A former employee reported that the company had inventory problems. This crashed the shares and they moved from $74 in September to $27 in late November. An audit determined that there was no inventory problem and the shares moved back over $68. Several analysts think the news is a little too good. Goldman Sachs has a "sell" on the stock with a price target of $33. The investment house thinks that the company is giving away a lot of margin to get long-term contracts. CIBC also has a "sell" rating on the shares. LDK has additional market risk. Its shares are up, to some extent, because of the huge increases in the prices of most Chinese stocks. If there is a sell-off in Shanghai or Hong Kong, odds are that the stock goes out with the tide

PMC-Sierra (PMCS) The designer and marketer of communications semiconductors has not been doing well. Shares have dropped from a 52-week high of $9.83 to the current $6.76. Banc of America Securities recently rated the stock as a "sell". Short interest in the company rose sharply at the end of November. When the company released its third quarter results, the CEO announced that he would be leaving. In that quarter, revenue was flat at just over $117 million. Net income was a negative $5.9 million. PMC’s great risk is that spending in the telecom industry is slowing. If build-outs of new technology like 3G wireless continue to decelerate into 2008, the company can do little to find new revenue. With other struggling companies like Conexant (CNXT) in the same market, price cutting is a part of the business.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Top 10 Pre-Market Analyst Calls (BIIB, BMC, COF, CLNE, FSLR, PLT, PMCS, RHT, SLM, WM)

There are many other analyst calls today, but these are the main calls we are looking at this morning:

  • Biogen Idec (BIIB) raised from Underperform to Neutral at Credit Suisse.
  • BMC Software (BMC) raised from Neutral to Outperform at    Credit Suisse.
  • Capitol One (COF) downgraded from Buy to Hold at Jefferies.
  • Clean Energy Fuels (CLNE) started as Strong Buy at Broadpoint Capital.
  • First Solar (FSLR) started as BUY at UBS.
  • Plantronics (PLT) downgraded from Neutral to Underweight at J.P.Morgan.
  • PMC-Sierra (PMCS) started as Sell at Banc of America.
  • Red Hat (RHT) downgraded from Buy to Neutral at Banc of America.
  • SLM Corp. (SLM) raised to Outperform at at Keefe Bruyette Woods.
  • Washington Mutual (WM) downgraded from Neutral to Sell at Banc of America.

Jon C. Ogg
December 13, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Key Earnings Reactions (October 19, 2007)

(AMD) Advanced Micro Devices -$0.71 EPS vs -$0.62 est.
(BSX) Boston Scientific $0.20 EPS vs $0.07 guidance.
(CAT) Caterpillar $1.40 EPS vs $1.43 est.; narrows 2007 guidance.
(FITB) Fifth Third $0.71 EPS vs $0.68 est.
(GOOG) Google traded up 1% after beating earnings; added 2,100 jobs.
(HOG) Harley Davidson $1.07 EPS vs $1.05 est.; cautious near-term.
(HON) Honeywell $0.81 EPS vs $0.81 est.
(ISRG) Intuitive Surgical traded up almost 5% after beating earnings and raising guidance.
(MMM) 3M $1.29 EPS vs. $1.28 est.; guidance looks raised but that is on gains.
(PMCS) PMC-Sierra slightly beat estimates but CEO retiring; stock traded up marginally.
(SLB) Schlumberger $1.09 EPS vs $1.07 est.
(SNDK) SanDisk indicating down after beating earnings and seeing slight drop in pricing.
(WB) Wachovia $1.05 EPS vs $1.03 est.; was $0.90 after items.
(XLNX) Xilinx $0.30 EPS vs $0.29 est.
(XRX) Xerox $0.27 EPS vs. $0.26 est.

Jon C. Ogg
October 19, 2007

PMC-Sierra CEO Retires With Earnings… and Shares Rise (PMCS)

PMC-Sierra, Inc. (NASDAQ:PMCS) posted earnings of $0.09 on non-GAAP EPS on net revenues of $117.5 million, versus estimates of $0.06 EPS and $113.7 million.  On a GAAP basis the company posted -$0.03 EPS.  The company did not offer guidance in the release, so it it does in teh conference call estimates for next quarter are $0.08 EPS and $119.5 million in revenues.

PMC-Sierra simultaneously announced that Bob Bailey will be retiring as president and chief executive officer once a replacement has been named. He will remain chief executive officer in the meantime.

This saw shares rise more than 1% at $9.02 in normal trading.  In after-hours the stock is actually up 2.5% at $9.25.  The 52-week trading range is $6.06 to $9.27, so it is flirting with year highs.  This may be up significantly from the $5.00 lows of 2006, but shares were north of $20.00 at the end of 2003 and earky 2004.

Without guidance and with a retiring CEO (who is only around 50-years old) the verdict is still pending here. 

Jon C. Ogg
October 18, 2007

Pre-Market Analyst Calls (Oct. 3, 2007)

AMD started as Underweight at Morgan Stanley.
APH started as Buy at B of A.
ARW started as Neutral at B of A.
AVGN started as Neutral at Credit Suisse.
AVT started as Neutral at B of A.
CIEN raised estimates at Goldman Sachs; raised to Buy at Merrill Lynch.
CNX started as Buy at UBS.
CRL raised to Buy at UBS.
CVD cut to Peer Perform at Bear Stearns.
CYT cut to Hold at Jefferies.
CXG started as Buy at UBS.
DVAX started as Outperform at Credit Suisse.
GM raised to Neutral at B of A.
GMCR started as Outperform at Piper Jaffray.
GME cut to Hold at Citigroup.
GWW started as Neutral at B of A.
IART started as Outperform at RBC.
INTC started as Underweight at Morgan Stanley.
KALU raised to Outperform at Bear Stearns.
MOLX cut to Neutral at B of A.
MSM started as Neutral at B of A.
NDAQ started as Buy at Jefferies.
NRGN started as Neutral at Credit Suisse.
NVDA started as underweight at Morgan Stanley.
NVT cut to Neutral at B of A.
PH cut to Sell at UBS.
PMCS raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley.
RIMM target raised to $100 at Credit Suisse.
RIO cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.
SKT started as Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
SVNT started as Outperform at Credit Suisse.
TD cut to Peer Perform at CIBC.
TKC raised to Buy at Merrill Lynch.
TEL started as Buy at B of A.
TIN raised to Overweight at Lehman.
WCC started as Buy at B of A.

Jon C. Ogg
October 3, 2007

Top Earnings Next Week Part 2 (July 19-20, 2007)

THURSDAY
Advanced Micro Devices (NYSDAQ:AMD)
Ameritrade (NASDAQ:AMTD)
Bank of America (NYSE:BAC)
Bank of New York (NYSE:BK)
Cemex (NYSE:CX/ADR)
Continental Airlines (NYSE:CAL)
Cypress Semi (NYSE:CY)
Dow Jones (NYSE:DJ)
Fifth Third Bancorp (NASDAQ:FITB)
First Data (NYSE:FDC)
Gilead Sciences (NASDAQ:GILD)
Google (NASDAQ:GOOG)
Harley-Davidson (NYSE:HOG)
Honeywelll (NYSE:HON)
Illinois Tool Works (NYSE:ITW)
International Game Technology (NYSE:IGT)
Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT)
Motorola Inc. (NYSE:MOT)
NASDAQ Stock market (NASDAQ:NDAQ)
OptionsXpress (NASDAQ:OXPS)
PMC-Sierra (NASDAQ:PMCS)
Roche
Safeway (NYSE:SWY)
SanDisk (NASDAQ:SNDK)
SAP AG (NYSE:SAP)
Scholastic (NASDAQ:SCHL)
Seagate Tech (NYSE:STX)
SunPower Corp. (NASDAQ:SPWR)
SunTrust (NYSE:STI)
Telefonos De Mexico (NYSE:TMX)
Union Pacific (NYSE:UNP)
UnitedHealth Group (NYSE:UNH)
Wyeth (NYSE:WYE)
Xilinx, Inc. (NASDAQ:XLNX)

FRIDAY
Boston Scientific (NYSE:BSX)
Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT)
Citigroup (NYSE:C)
Ericsson (NASDAQ:ERIC)
Schlumberger (NYSE:SLB)
Wachovia Corp (NYSE:WB)

Jon C. Ogg
July 13, 2007

PLEASE NOTE: THSE DATES MAY CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE OR MAY HAVE ALREADY CHANGED

Shorting the NASDAQ Hi-Flyers (June 2007) (ATML, CNXT, CHTR, CMGI, FNSR, LVLT, PMCS, SIRI, SUNW, COMS)

Stock Tickers:    ATML, CNXT, CHTR, CMGI, FNSR, LVLT, PMCS, SIRI, SUNW, COMS

It is always interesting to see how short interest changes month to month in the lower priced more active stocks on NASDAQ that get attention from the fast money and retail investor with a degree of fervor.  Here is a list of the changes from May to June, and you can tell that the changes here show more short sellers increasing their activity over the last month.

Company (Ticker)                     JUNE      MAY      CHANGE
Atmel (ATML)                            10.67M   9.70M     +9.9%
Conexant (CNXT)                     45.8M    40.5M      +12.8%
Charter Comm. (CHTR)         90.8M    91.1M      (-0.25%)
CMGI (CMGI)                             33.5M    27.3M      +22.5%    
Finisar (FNSR)                         29.4M    25.2M      +16.6%
Level 3 (LVLT)                          119.9M   109.3M   +9.7%
PMC-Sierra (PMCS)                 28.1M    25.8M      +8.8%
SIRIS (SIRI)                               101M      91.2M     +10.7%
Sun Micro (SUNW)                   28.9M    30.2M       (-4.2%)   
3COM (COMS)                          25.8M     21.5M      +19.6%   

The NASDAQ 100 Trust (QQQQ) saw its short interest rise more than 26%, with its short interest carried at 197.6 million shares in June compared to 156.6 million in May.  Stay tuned Wednesday as we’ll have more of the sectors broken down for chips, Internet, biotech and more.

Jon C. Ogg
June 27, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.