Showing posts with label GE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GE. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

LargeCap Stocks to Watch Today

LargeCap Stocks to Watch TodayTomahawk, WI 4/4/12 (StreetBeat) -- General Electric's (GE) credit rating was downgraded a notch by Moody's because the agency said it sees risks associated with the funding model of GE's lending unit, General Electric Capital Corp.

GE was cut to Aa3 from Aa2. GE Capital's rating was cut by two notches to A1 from Aa2.

Moody's said because GE Capital is so big, it must rely on funding from financial markets, which aren't reliable and where risks remain.

Regulators are set to penalize JPMorgan Chase (JPM) for actions tied to the demise of Lehman Brothers in 2008, The New York Times reported, citing people briefed on the matter.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is expected this week to file a civil case against JPMorgan. The bank is expected to settle the matter and pay a fine of about $20 million, the newspaper said.

The action by the CFTC will be the first federal enforcement case to stem from Lehman's downfall, according to the Times.

The CFTC is expected to accuse JPMorgan of overextending credit to Lehman for two years leading up to its bankruptcy in 2008, the people briefed on the matter said.

Monsanto(MON), the agriculture giant, s expected by analysts Wednesday to post fiscal second-quarter earnings of $2.11 a share on revenue of $4.53 billion.

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Friday, March 9, 2012

Chesapeake Energy (NYSE: CHK) Drives Ahead with New Collaboration with GE

Chesapeake Energy (NYSE: CHK) Drives Ahead with New Collaboration with GEOrlando, FL 3/9/12 (StreetBeat) -- www.InvestorIdeas.com, a global investor research portal for independent investors, reports on ongoing developments in the natural gas fuel transportation sector. Following on its news in February of partnering with 3M (NYSE:MMM) to create a CNG Tank, incorporating 3M’s nanotech technology, Chesapeake (NYSE: CHK ) announced on Wednesday it has entered into a collaboration with GE (NYSE: GE) to advance its vision of adopting natural gas as a clean transportation fuel in the U.S. Chesapeake’s stock was up over 2% on the news.

GE (NYSE: GE) and Chesapeake (NYSE: CHK ) have signed a MOU on a product and services development partnership, representing a multi-year collaboration between the two companies to develop and bring to market compressed natural gas (CNG) and liquefied natural gas (LNG) transportation and natural gas home-fueling solutions. By improving access to CNG, which is most commonly used in light- to medium-duty vehicles such as pickups, vans, SUVs, taxicabs, transit buses, refuse and delivery trucks as well as consumer vehicles, along with LNG, which is commonly used for heavy-duty industrial purposes, dependence on foreign energy sources can be reduced while simultaneously lowering fueling costs and vehicle emissions.

Chesapeake Energy Corporation (NYSE: CHK) is the second-largest producer of natural gas, a Top 15 producer of oil and natural gas liquids and the most active driller of new wells in the U.S. Headquartered in Oklahoma City, the company's operations are focused on discovering and developing unconventional natural gas and oil fields onshore in the U.S. Chesapeake owns leading positions in the Barnett, Haynesville, Bossier, Marcellus and Pearsall natural gas shale plays and in the Granite Wash, Cleveland, Tonkawa, Mississippi Lime, Bone Spring, Avalon, Wolfcamp, Wolfberry, Eagle Ford, Niobrara and Utica unconventional liquids-rich plays. The company has also vertically integrated its operations and owns substantial midstream, compression, drilling, trucking, pressure pumping and other oilfield service assets directly and indirectly through its subsidiaries Chesapeake Midstream Development, L.P. and Chesapeake Oilfield Services, L.L.C. and its affiliate Chesapeake Midstream Partners, L.P. (NYSE: CHKM ). Further information is available at www.chk.com

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Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Scio Diamond’s (OTCBB: SCIO) Disruptive Technology a True Gem for Investors

Scio Diamond’s (OTCBB: SCIO) Disruptive Technology a True Gem for InvestorsOrlando, FL 3/6/12 (StreetBeat) -- A diamond may generally be thought of for its value as a gemstone, but it is also the world’s most versatile engineering material because of its unparalleled properties and number of industrial and commercial applications. After all, it is the hardest material known to man and has a thermal conductivity (tremendous heat can pass through it without damaging the diamond) that is unmatched by any other known solid. Sure, the gem component of a diamond is sexy, but the stone is so much more to the industrial world. 150 million carats of diamonds are mined each year with De Beers and its now majority shareholder Anglo American plc (LSE: AAL) holding the reigns as industry stalwart for more than 100 years. But, the times are changing as miners like Rio Tinto (NYSE: RIO) and Petra Diamonds, Inc. (LSE: PDL) are steadily cutting into the market share of the De Beers cartel. On a broader perspective, all of the legacy miners are facing threats to lose market share as cultured diamond manufacturing by companies like Scio Diamond Technology Corporation (OTCBB: SCIO) has moved to the forefront of the industry for all that it has to offer.

The Dark Side of Diamond Mining

Because of the high value of a diamond, greed has fueled harvesting for centuries. De Beers, the beast of the market, has been frequently accused of antitrust violations and just eight years ago gave up on a ten-year fight by pleading guilty to charges of colluding with General Electric (NYSE: GE) to fix the price of industrial diamonds.

Diamond smuggling and illegal mining practices swirl through the media surrounding the precious stone. The “Blood Diamonds” of the civil war in the 1990’s and early 2000’s in South Africa garnered worldwide infamy as smuggled diamonds funded military operations of rebels and exposed the prevalence of diamond trafficking for military might. Diamond mining in Zimbabwe is in the news as mandated transparency of diamond mining is being ignored, leading to an investigation of miners hoarding profits for themselves by Finance Minister Tendai Biti.

The list for the dark side of the bright rock goes on and on, including illegal child labor, serious health and safety hazards and environmental damage as diamond mining turns the earth’s crust into Swiss cheese. Some of the largest manmade holes in history were done for the sake of diamonds, like the Mir Mine and Udachnaya Diamond Mine in Russia; “The Big Hole” and nearby Jagersfontein Mine in South Africa; and the Diavik Diamond and Ekati Diamond Mines in Canada. Unlike metal mining, where veins are identified and followed, diamond mining is akin to “finding a needle in a haystack” where massive amounts of earth are devoured in search of a single carat.

An American Solution

In simplistic terms, making a diamond is easy; put pure carbon under enough heat and pressure and it will crystalize into a diamond. That’s the way the Earth has been making them for millions of years. The technology to make real diamonds in a lab has been evolving for decades and is ready to go mainstream to provide an expandable product and solution to the ignominious ways of the diamond industry.

Yes, cultured diamonds are real diamonds. Whereas Moissanite is brilliant and the difference between it and a real diamond cannot be detected by the human eye, it is still basically a piece of glass. Cultured, lab-grown diamonds are made through earth’s natural processes of heating and compressing carbon far more efficiently to expedite and control the process to perfection.

Recognizing the possibilities of the disruptive technology, Stuart Brown, Finance Director at De Beers, told Bloomberg in 2007, “We don’t see synthetic diamonds as a threat, but you cannot ignore it completely.” Two years later the company acknowledged that they could not get diamonds out of the ground fast enough to meet demand.

Competition within the cultured diamond industry is somewhat scarce with Scio Diamonds perched atop the leaders. The company’s technology has been twenty years in the making under the guidance of Dr. Robert Linares of Apollo Diamond in Boston, with Scio buying certain assets of Apollo in April 2011 to commercialize the technology. The Intellectual Property of Scio’s Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) technology is protected through 17 issued and 40 pending patents in the U.S. and abroad.

Scio uses reactors and no artificial means or simulants to culture its diamonds in a process that has been proven to control outcomes to manufacture real diamonds of different shapes, sizes and colors to fit the required end product, whether it is a wafer for a semiconductor or a polished gem. Through this revolutionary technology inclusions are controlled, producing a higher quality diamond than most found in nature while still maintaining the identical features of mined diamonds in hardness, thermal conductivity and electron mobility.

How real are they? The Gemological Institute of America (GIA), the world’s foremost authority in gemology, provides a certificate with each diamond produced by Scio, just as they do with mined diamonds. The Institute of Gemology (IGI) and the European Gemological Laboratory (EGL) also rate Scio’s stones.

The diamond industry is once again flourishing as a result of mined diamonds becoming harder to find and demand outpacing supply in the $13 billion dollar industry. There is, of course, the gem factor, but approximately 80 percent of diamond demand is for industrial uses with new technologies poised to increase that figure. For example, laptop computers and mobile phones are plagued with heat dissipation issues that can be resolved by using diamonds in heat sinks and other components to transfer the heat more quickly. Today’s microprocessors have reached terminal velocity as they can’t spin any faster and run any hotter without failing. Diamonds are the answer to these and many more of today’s technology dilemmas.

That’s just a glimpse at possibilities. Other, immediate uses include the de-ionization of water, high power lasers, ultraviolet LEDs and countless defense and energy applications. Advancing these technologies with mined diamonds is simply not economically feasible, but it is through cultured diamonds. Scio has even developed a scalpel with a diamond cutting edge that is unparalleled by any modern scalpel today in form and function.

Scio is knocking down milestones at a frantic pace since acquiring Apollo. New executives and managers have been hired to build upon the $4.5 million in revenue that Apollo had in 2010. The company struck deals to move their lab from Boston to Greenville, South Carolina; a succinct move that garnered Scio huge savings through 85% less power costs. While the production lab moved to SC, the R&D side of Scio moved into a new facility in Hudson, Massachusetts and will be conducting additional research on even larger reactors than the 3 and 6-inch ones that it currently owns.

Distributor deals have been consummated and Scio is working on finalizing a manufacturer agreement with a leading jewelry chain for a line of environmentally friendly diamonds. Additionally, the company expects to make an immediate and high volume splash in medical surgical devices, high thermal conductivity applications (essential to the development of efficient green energy technologies) and water treatment. After building a base in these verticals Scio plans to broaden their scope to capitalize on the almost endless industrial uses for diamond.

The company is debt-free with cash on hand as it nears full-on commercialization and expands revenue from Apollo’s legacy agreements. Scio’s existing reactors are being shipped to the new SC facility and slated for arrival on March 9. “Meanwhile, we continue to build demand for our cultured diamonds as we reach out to distribution and sales prospects, and work to meet their technical specifications,” said Scio CEO Joe Lancia in a recent corporate update.

Much like cultured pearls have moved to complete domination of the industry compared to natural pearls (natural pearls account for less than 1/1000th of a percent of pearl sales today), cultured diamonds possess the same threats to mined diamonds. At worst, cultured diamonds are equal to its natural counterpart, while bringing too many superior qualities to the industry to go overlooked as they are customizable to the end user’s desires at a fraction of the cost. Factor in all of the environmental impacts that can be eliminated and cultured diamonds could be the wave of the future.

For Oppenheimer, diamonds weren’t forever as it bailed from its 40 percent stake in De Beers last year after 80 years of ownership, perhaps signaling where it thinks the mined diamond industry is going. Juxtaposing natural and cultured diamonds reveals an exponential upside for a company like Scio Diamond Technology Corporation in the near term. The diamond industry isn’t going anywhere – in fact it’s going to expand – but where the world gets them from will be the major change.

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Monday, February 13, 2012

Apple's (Nadaq: AAPL) Stock Surges to $500; Market Value Near $500 Billion

Apple's (Nadaq: AAPL) Stock Surges to $500; Market Value Near $500 BillionOrlando, FL 2/13/12 (StreetBeat) – Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL), whose price hit $500 for the first time on Monday, could be the first company ever to reach a trillion dollar valuation.

The tech giant's valuation is now nearly halfway to the 10-figure mark, with speculation Apple will launch iTV later this year driving shares to new record highs. Yet, Apple still has a way to go to become the most valuable company of all time.

Apple shares are up more than 20 percent year to date.
And with its price now around $500, the company's valuation is about $460 billion-roughly $8 billion more than the market caps percent of Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) ($198 billion) and Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) ($257 billion) combined.

If Apple shares continue to hit new record levels, its market cap will reach $500 billion when the price reaches $537. Still, shares will need to rise another $100 above that level to put Apple in contention for the most expensive company ever.

According to Standard and Poor's, ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM) was the most recent company to see a valuation north of $500 billion, back in 2007 when oil prices were at record highs.

Not surprisingly, it was the Tech Bubble of the last decade that first launched companies into rarified half trillion dollar market valuations levels. Between 1999 and 2000 Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO) and General Electric (NYSE: GE) all saw their valuations peak at around $500 billion. (GE is a minority shareholder in NBCUniversal)

While Microsoft may not excite investors like it did in Y2K, the software behemoth still holds the record for the most expensive valuation. Its market cap closed out 1999 at just over $600 billion according to Standard and Poor's, before peaking north of $650 billion during the tech bubble in 2000.

The high analyst price target on the street for Apple right now is $700. At that price, its market cap will handily surpass Microsoft's Y2K record.

The Apple TV was one of the last product initiatives spearheaded by Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, before his death. If the entertainment device and platform prove as big a game changer as the company's iTunes, iPhone and iPad, Apple shares could well continue their record run.

With its current float of about 932 million shares outstanding, Apple shares would need to top $1073 to reach the Trillion Dollar mark.

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Friday, October 21, 2011

Foreign Growth Fuels General Electric (NYSE:GE)

Foreign Growth Fuels General Electric (NYSE:GE)Tomahawk, WI 10/21/2011 (PennyPayDay) – General Electric Co. (NYSE:GE) reported an 18 percent profit rise that met Wall Street's expectations, helped by strong revenue growth in key foreign markets including Brazil, Russia and China.

The largest U.S. conglomerate said on Friday it expects earnings to rise at a double-digit percentage rate next year, following peer United Technologies Corp in trying to assuage investors' fears about Europe's brewing debt crisis.

"We continue to successfully navigate a volatile global economy," Chief Executive Jeff Immelt said in a statement.

Investors took heart in the company's 16 percent growth in industrial equipment orders -- an important indicator of future revenue, and in the 25 percent rise in international sales. GE has been counting on strong demand in rapidly developing economies to offset weak U.S. and European demand.

"The revenue number was strong and the organic growth rate in industrial was strong," said Jack De Gan, chief investment officer at Harbor Advisory Corp in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. "Those are telling and they give us a little bit of a look into next quarter and beyond."

But GE shares declined 1.4 percent to $16.40 in premarket trading as some raised concerns that its profit margins were weaker than expected in the quarter, with a low tax rate helping the company to meet expectations.

"Margins missed our forecast and were down year on year in the four big industrial businesses," said Jeffrey Sprague, managing partner at Vertical Research Partners. "There is little or no operating leverage in GE's portfolio due to low priced equipment in backlog and R&D headwinds."

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Wednesday, September 14, 2011

LargeCap Stocks to Keep an Eye on Today

LargeCap Stocks to Keep an Eye on TodayTomahawk, WI 9/14/2011 (PennyPayDay) – The board of Internet company Yahoo! plans to meet Wednesday in Silicon Valley to discuss a wide range of issues, including the search for a new CEO, according to a report.

Shares were gaining 2.3% to $14.58 in premarket trading Wednesday.

Conglomerate General Electric said it will pay $3.3 billion plus accrued and unpaid dividends to redeem preferred stock sold to Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway during the height of the financial crisis in 2008.

Shares were rising 1% to $15.56.

Cisco Chief John Chambers said he's willing to stay another three years at the networking giant.

Shares were up 0.5% to $16.43.

Medical devices maker Boston Scientific has chosen Michael Mahoney, Johnson & Johnson's worldwide chairman of the medical device and diagnostics group, as its new CEO.

PC giant Dell announced an additional $5 billion buyback authorization.

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Monday, February 14, 2011

Some LargeCap Stocks to Keep an Eye on Today

Some LargeCap Stocks to Keep an Eye on TodayEmergency Medical Services will be acquired by private-equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice for $64 a share, or $3.2 billion plus debt. The stock fell $7.33, or 10.4%, to $63.33 in premarket trading Monday.

EchoStar agreed to buy Hughes Communications, a provider of broadband satellite networks, for about $2 billion, plus debt. Shares of Hughes fell in premarket trading Monday to $59.05, off 4.4%. EchoStar closed at $29.88 on Friday; there were no premarket trades for the stock.

General Electric agreed to buy the well support division of the U.K.'s John Wood Group for about $2.8 billion. GE shares rose 7 cents to $21.40 in premarket trading Monday.

Shares of Nokia fell 4.7% to $8.97 in premarket trading Monday after getting downgraded to underweight from overweight at J.P. Morgan Cazenove.

MGM Resorts is expected by analysts Monday to report a loss of 22 cents a share in the fourth quarter. The stock rose 21 cents to $15.75 in premarket trading Monday.

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