FeedPosted Nov 20th 2009 11:40AM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst reports, Analyst upgrades and downgrades, Intel (INTC), Analyst initiations
Analyst upgrades:
- Pali Capital upgraded Lazard (LAZ) to buy from neutral, citing a healthy restructuring environment, improving M&A and strength in the asset management segment. The firm has a $46 target on shares.
- Baird upgraded Scansource (SCSC) to outperform from neutral, citing strength in the channel business and growth drivers from improved telephony and security. The firm has a $30 target on shares.
- Citigroup upgraded Liberty Interactive (LINTA) to buy from hold, citing the company's QVC unit's return to growth. The firm raised its target on shares to $13.25 from $12.
- Hess Corp (HES) was upgraded to overweight from equal weight at Morgan Stanley.
- Vulcan Materials (VMC) was upgraded to buy from neutral at UBS.
- Dillard's (DDS) was upgraded to buy from hold at Deutsche Bank.
Continue reading Analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations: BRCM, D, FRED, INTC, LAZ, SCSC ...
Posted Nov 19th 2009 4:00PM by Jon Ogg (RSS feed)
Filed under: Intel (INTC), Sears Holdings (SHLD), E*TRADE (ETFC)

Today's jobs data was
not bad, relatively any way, but the housing delinquencies and foreclosure rates was just awful and not representative of anything good. The overseas selling had the markets soft this morning and despite a recovery off lows the 'positive green line' was never really in the cards at the end of the trading day. The retailers are also running soft because of
excessive discounting and promotions before the holiday season even starts.
Here are the unofficial closing bell levels:
Dow 10,341.44 -84.87 (-0.81%)
S&P 500 1,094.90 -14.90 (-1.34%)
Nasdaq 2,156.82 -36.32 (-1.66%)
Top Analyst CallsTop Day Trader AlertsTop Stock/Market RumorsContinue reading Closing Bell: The grinch comes early (INTC, HOTT, MVIS, ETFC, SHLD)
Posted Nov 19th 2009 11:30AM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst reports, Analyst upgrades and downgrades, Intel (INTC), Texas Instruments (TXN), Analyst initiations
Analyst upgrades:
- Oppenheimer upgraded Momenta Pharmaceuticals (MNTA) to outperform from perform as it finds the stock attractive ahead of FDA's decision on M-enoxaparin. The firm has a $15 price target on the stock.
- Wells Fargo upgraded Symmetry Medical (SMA) to market perform from underperform. The firm cited several factors for the upgrade, including valuation and its belief that Symmetry's customers have begun to deplete their inventories.
- Piper Jaffray upgraded Myriad Pharmaceuticals (MYRX) to neutral from underweight after the company announced Phase 2a date for Azixa. The firm has a $5 price target on shares.
- AvalonBay (AVB) and Mid-America Apartment (MAA) were upgraded to outperform from sector perform at RBC Capital.
- GSI Commerce (GSIC) was upgraded to overweight from equal weight at Morgan Stanley.
- FICO (FICO) was upgraded to equal weight from Underweight at Stephens.
Continue reading Analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations: CVS, FICO, HOTT, INTC, MNTA, TXN ...
Posted Nov 19th 2009 8:15AM by Jim Cramer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst reports, Analyst upgrades and downgrades, Dell (DELL), Intel (INTC), Market matters, Texas Instruments (TXN), Limited Brands (LTD), Honeywell Intl (HON), United Technologies (UTX), Cramer on BloggingStocks
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says the world's economies are getting too strong to obey these downgrades of Intel and TI. When Wall Street starts looking at tech companies as they would industrials -- as they should be scrutinized -- then we will not get downgrades like Bank of America/Merrill's takedowns of Intel (
INTC) (
Cramer's Take) and Texas Instruments (
TXN) (
Cramer's Take).
The essence of these two downgrades is the looming inventory correction that everyone has feared from $14 a share onward for Intel and $18 for Texas Instruments at the start of the summer. At every step I have heard of this coming breakdown, the double ordering and the decline in demand as one analyst after another has warned us of the apocalypse around the corner.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Dismiss the latest tech downgrades
Posted Nov 12th 2009 4:00PM by Jon Ogg (RSS feed)
Filed under: Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), General Electric (GE), Wal-Mart (WMT), Intel (INTC), Bank of America (BAC)
Continue reading Closing Bell: Can't go up every day (BAC, HE, HPW, COMS, BRCD, WMT, AMD)
Posted Nov 10th 2009 10:00AM by Jim Cramer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Microsoft (MSFT), Apple Inc (AAPL), Cisco Systems (CSCO), Dell (DELL), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), Intel (INTC), Home Depot (HD), Motorola (MOT), Market matters, International Business Machines (IBM), JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Goldman Sachs Group (GS), Lowe's Cos (LOW), Cypress Semiconductor (CY), Stocks to Buy, Cramer on BloggingStocks
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says that as numerous stories are mulled over anew, the reasons for selling seem silly. The lack of important data today forces market participants to revisit stories that got tossed out over the last few weeks simply because of earnings ennui. People are now doubling back to see what they have forgotten, or more important, why they sold certain stocks they most likely shouldn't have.
For example, why did JPMorgan (
JPM) (
Cramer's Take) go from $47 to $44? Bad loans? Credit quality? No, not really. Nothing like that. Why did Goldman Sachs (
GS) (
Cramer's Take) go from $192 to the $170s? Some of it was Meredith Whitney, but there is also a sense of entitlement that makes the firm hated, as if somehow it is too much of a pariah to invest in.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Investors are rethinking their snap judgments
Posted Oct 28th 2009 10:30AM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst upgrades and downgrades, Intel (INTC), Target Corp. (TGT), Archer-Daniels-Midland (ADM), Analyst initiations
Analyst upgrades:
- Target (NYSE: TGT) was upgraded two ratings to Buy from Sell at Citigroup, and it raised its price estimate on shares to $61 from $44. The firm sees significant earnings upside as the company's same-store sales improve and finds the valuation attractive at current levels.
- Motorola (NYSE: MOT) was upgraded to Outperform from Sector Perform at RBC Capital citing valuation, new product launches, and expectations that the Mobile Devices division will be profitable. The price target is $11.
- AK Steel (NYSE: AKS) was upgraded to Buy from Hold at Citigroup as it believes the company's Q3 results were solid and the China steel market is stabilizing. The firm raised its target to $21 from $17.
- Ceradyne (NASDAQ: CRDN) was upgraded at Wells Fargo to Market Perform from Underperform. The firm thinks that earnings expectations for the company have now reached more reasonable levels, limiting risk.
- FormFactor (NASDAQ: FORM) was upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at FBR Capital ahead of the company's Q3 results due to valuation as it views the risk/reward on shares compelling. The firm raised its price target to $25 from $19.
- Texas Instruments (NYSE: TXN) was upgraded at Goldman to Buy from Neutral, citing 2H10 margin expansion and analog share gains. Target was raised to $29 from $27.
- Barrett Business Services (NASDAQ: BBSI) was upgraded to Buy from Hold at Roth Capital as the firm thinks the company will benefit from a labor market recovery next year. Roth notes that the stock's valuation has lagged behind most of its peers in recent months and it set an $18 target.
Continue reading Analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations: ADM, CIEN, INTC, MOT, TGT, TXN ...
Posted Oct 27th 2009 11:00AM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst upgrades and downgrades, Intel (INTC), Verizon Communications (VZ), Texas Instruments (TXN), Analyst initiations
Analyst upgrades:
- Verizon (NYSE: VZ) was upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Wells Fargo, which believes Verizon wireline margins troughed in Q3 and that Street estimates have been reset to more achievable levels.
- Texas Instruments (NYSE: TXN) was upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at FBR Capital, which believes the company is gaining analog market share and shares are attractively valued at current levels. The firm maintains a $31 price target.
- Cablevision (NYSE: CVC) was upgraded at Wells Fargo to Outperform from Market Perform. The firm believes this year's run-up in the stock was primarily due to the company's spin-off of MSG, but the firm believes the stock can rise further based on fundamentals.
- Cabot Oil & Gas (NYSE: COG) was upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at JPMorgan following the company's Q3 results due to valuation and its above-average growth. The firm raised its target to $51.50 from $47.
- RadioShack (NYSE: RSH) was upgraded to Hold from Underweight at KeyBanc, which said that its recovering sales trends were encouraging.
- Travelzoo (NASDAQ: TZOO) was upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Wedbush as it believes the divestiture of its Asian business coupled with growth in its Fly.com unit will drive 2010 growth. The firm raised its target to $17 from $13.
Continue reading Analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations: DRI, INTC, PALM, RSH, TXN, VZ ...
Posted Oct 26th 2009 10:00AM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Intel (INTC), Stocks to Buy

Bellwether
Intel (NASDAQ:
INTC), the world's largest semiconductor manufacturer, is signaling that the global economic recovery is strengthening, which is why I'm Reiterating my Buy rating for the company, first recommended
on March 30, 2009 at a price of $14.72. If you bought Intel in late March, you're up 34%.
Look for Intel's FY2010 revenue to increase 10-15%, as customers re-build inventories to prepare for ramping demand for computers, and chip-laden devices, each of which thoroughly explains why institutional investors (IIs) have looked past INTC's poor FY2009 results. The First Call FY2009/FY2010 EPS estimates for INTC
are 80 cents to $1.46.
Continue reading Intel: Back up the truck
Posted Oct 20th 2009 10:00AM by Jim Cramer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Google (GOOG), Intel (INTC), Market matters, Scandals, Sun Microsystems (JAVA), Akamai Technologies (AKAM), Cramer on BloggingStocks
The Street.com's Jim Cramer says that it's awful knowing that Galleon had every single nuance of the next Intel call. The call. The edge. The inside scoop. At one point, you could have it. At one point, before Regulation Fair Disclosure (FD), persistence, hard work, going to meetings, doing everything you could to learn a company entitled you to a callback from the company. The rules were clear: If you got something that was material and non-public, you couldn't trade on it, you were frozen. But there were some blurred lines and the intensive research shops with great industry contacts could get an ever-so-slight heads up that could make a difference. Or you could go to a one-on-one where management might let slip something no one had, and you could have that momentary head start.
But Regulation FD ended all that. All the insider calls, the disclosure at one-on-ones, anything that smacked even of proprietary information. The rules were no longer voluntary. It wasn't a question of freezing. It was a question of talking. You couldn't talk to "them." Hedge funds could not talk one-on-one to anyone of authority at a company. The insider would face prosecution, do you weren't even supposed to try.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: A mockery of the game
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