Stock Market Beat

Our beat: The stock market. Our job: Beat it.

Subscribe to this blog

The Week Ahead (13 May 2007)

Tags: Stock Market, HPQ, AMAT, MRVL, INTU, BEAS, ADSK
13 May 11:12am

The Earnings Calendar is fairly light.

  • Tuesday’s CPI is estimated at 0.5%, 0.2% ex food and energy.
  • Wednesday’s Housing Starts are expected to come in at a 1.475 million rate.
  • Industrial Production, also on Wednesday, is expected to rise 0.2%.

Earnings season is winding down but there are still a few important reports due.

  • Applied Materials (AMAT - Annual Report) reports on Tuesday and is expected to earn $0.28 on $2.35 billion in sales. I’m stocked up on tequila.
  • BEA Systems (BEAS) reports on Wednesday but has already preannounced. Their guidance for next quarter needs to beat the estimate of $0.14, but investors will probably be disappointed by anything short of a buyout.
  • Hewlett Packard (HPQ - Annual Report) also reports on Wednesday, and preannounced in the other direction. Guidance for next quarter is as close to a lay-up to exceed current estimates (sequential decline and year/year deceleration) as one can typically find.
  • Intuit (INTU) reports on Thursday. Both earnings and guidance are anyone’s guess, but the long and short of it is that we expect tax refunds will be put to work.

There are a few other companies reporting (Autodesk and Marvell among them) in which I am interested but don’t have anything pithy to say about.

Disclosure: At time of publication author is long Intuit (INTU) call options.

Comments

Back to top

Post comment

Back to top

Post a comment

Please login to post a comment

About

BillTrent

Stock Market Beat editor William A. Trent, CFA, has been an equity analyst since 1996 and is co-author of Understanding and Evaluating Prospectuses, Offering Documents, and Proxy Statements. Prior to starting Stock Market Beat he was Senior Equity Analyst for New Amsterdam Partners LLC, a $6 billion institutional asset manager. His experience covers all market-cap sizes and is primarily within the TMT (Telecom, Media and Technology) and Transportation sectors. He is also the senior editor of Financial Education. He is available for freelance writing and consulting projects and can be contacted here. He is not, however, a registered investment advisor and will not accept funds for management.