Sunday 25 March 2012

US Stocks Climb as Oil Prices Boost Energy Shares

http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20120323-710436.html


--Dow, S&P 500 gain as energy shares track higher with crude oil prices
--Nasdaq little changes as Apple shares weigh on the index after a brief trading halt
--BATS Global Markets shares halted on day of IPO as its exchange went haywire
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--U.S. stocks erased earlier losses and tracked higher after a rebound in energy shares overshadowed a decline in new-home sales in the U.S. that indicated the housing market remains shaky.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 48 points, or 0.4%, to 13094 on Friday afternoon as Caterpillar Inc. (CAT) jumped 1.8% and Chevron Corp. (CVX) ...

HIGH-TECH GAS LEAK DETECTION SYSTEM UNVEILED BY PG&E

http://micronassociates.net/hi-TECH/


PG&E unveiled high-tech equipment to better monitor leaks in its sprawling network of gas pipelines, saying it would help the beleaguered utility achieve its goal of becoming the world’s safest gas company. The system, which combines car-mounted instrumentation and software, can detect the tiniest of leaks a football field away and PG&E said it will enables the company to survey pipelines five times as frequently at no additional cost.”This mobile methane detection equipment is radical. It is unlike anything that exists in the world today,” said Nick Stavropoulos, executive vice president for Pacific Gas & Electric’s gas operations. According toMicron AssociatesStavropoulos was hired seven months ago to address safety problems that came to light in the aftermath of the deadly 2010 pipeline explosion of a PG&E gas pipeline in San Bruno, which killed eight people and destroyed 38 homes.
Currently, leak surveys along the company’s 6,000 miles of large gas transmissionlines and 44,000 miles of smaller gas distribution lines are conducted by crews with hip-mounted equipment and a handheld wand that is passed over the ground.The new equipment, developed by the Silicon Valley firm Picarro, is about 1,000 times more sensitive, company officials said. And because it is mounted in Micron Associates a car, the entire distribution network can be surveyed every year, instead of every five years. Picarro’s instruments can pick up a change in methane levels of just 1 part per billion within a second, said Picarro’s CEO, Michael Woelk. As the result instantaneous measurements of natural gas levels along the route of the car. During a demonstration Monday at Picarro’s headquarters in Santa Clara, a screen displayed on the wall of a conference room showed a blue line that tracked the route of the car. The line spiked as the car passed a canister of gas with a pinhole leak that was placed along the side of the road.PG&E paid about $250,000 for two pilot units. If Picarro can fine-tune the software to more precisely locate leaks, Stavropoulos said, PG&E could have 25 of the units running within a year. He is confident the programming to isolate the location of leaks can be done, given that Picarro has already surmounted much steeper challenges, he added.
The companies have not settled on a price for the equipment or what kind of package of training and maintenance will be wrapped into the transaction. But Stavropoulos said there will be no consequence on Micron Associates customers’ rates because the system will prove cheaper or the same cost as its current monitoring system. The leak-detection application of the technology was staggered upon by accident, Woelk said. Picarro, which makes equipment to measure gases, was trying to figure out a way to measure methane emissions from landfills, a requirement under California’s greenhouse gas laws. Woelk left a Sacramento-area landfill where he and two others were working to take his children to a Girl Scouts event. He forgot to turn the analyzer off, and when he came to work the next day one of his engineers had downloaded the data and displayed it on Google Earth. Spikes in the data showed up near sources of methane, like dairies and settling ponds, between the Sacramento landfill and his Livermore home, Woelk said.
“It was visual,” Woelk said. “It drove our curiosity.”
Methane is the standard component of natural gas. In tailoring the equipment to detect pipeline leaks, Picarro was able to configure its analyzer to filter out the other sources of methane so only natural gas is detected.Since the San Bruno explosion, PG&E has been heavily criticized for shortcomings in its gas operations. On Friday, the California Public Utilities Commission fined PG&E nearly $17 million for failing to properly survey gas lines along 14 miles of gas distribution lines in Antioch, Concord, Danville, Brentwood and Discovery Bay.The failure tosurvey the gas lines was reported by PG&E to state regulators under new rules adopted to enhance pipeline safety in the wake of the San Bruno disaster.
PG&E also has been criticized for relying on a pipe-inspection method that is good at spotting corrosion, but not good atMicron Associates detecting bad welds. Since the San Bruno explosion, which was attributed to poor quality welds, it has been under pressure to instead check its gas lines with water-pressure tests and robotic gadgets called pigs, which run inside pipes. Stavropoulos said the company is increasing its use of water-pressure tests.

Tuesday 13 March 2012

Micron Associates: Industrials Weigh on Dow, But IBM Helps Restrain Losses

Micron Associates: Industrials Weigh on Dow, But IBM Helps Restrain Losses


  • NYSE Trader Looking Up
    Reuters
FOX Business: The Power to Prosper
Several industrial blue chips weighed on the Dow on Monday as traders reacted to a bout of weak economic data from China and Europe, but rising shares of technology heavyweight IBM helped to keep the losses in check.
Today's Markets
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 14.8 points, or 0.11%, to 12963, the S&P 500 slumped 5.3 points, or 0.39%, to 1364 and the Nasdaq Composite dipped 25.7 points, or 0.86%, to 2950.
Caterpillar (CAT: 108.94, -1.28, -1.16%) was the biggest laggard of the Dow components on a point basis, pulling 18.2 points from the blue-chip index. Meanwhile, falling United Technologies (UTX: 83.99, +0.44, +0.53%) and Boeing (BA: 73.60, +0.31, +0.42%) shares cost the Dow another 15.3 points. IBM (IBM: 201.00, +0.38, +0.19%), ExxonMobil (XOM: 85.55, +1.25, +1.48%) and Verizon Communications (VZ: 39.32, +0.22, +0.56%) helped to limit the losses, adding roughly 21.7 points between the three.
Apple (AAPL: 552.00, +6.83, +1.25%), with its massive half-a-trillion dollar market capitalization, helped shove the Nasdaq Composite and closely-tracked Nasdaq 100 index of non-financial companies fairly sharply to the downside. Other big-name technology companies like Netflix (NFLX: 106.20, -2.93, -2.68%), Micron (MU: 8.08, -0.25, -3.00%) and Nvidia (NVDA: 14.58, -0.24, -1.59%) performed poorly as well. Oracle (ORCL: 29.71, -0.42, -1.39%), Seagate (STX: 27.88, -0.45, -1.59%) and Garmin (GRMN: 47.46, -0.05, -0.11%) were the only technology stocks on the Nasdaq 100 to close higher.
Looking at the broader markets, materials shares were the biggest drags. For example, Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold (FCX: 38.26, -0.52, -1.34%), one of the world's biggest producers of copper and gold, dropped 3.8%. Certain consumer staples, like Kraft (KFT: 38.12, +0.17, +0.45%), managed to stave off a bigger fall. 
Global Economic Data Weigh
China sliced its target for 2012 economic growth from 8%, where it has stood since 2004, to 7.5% and said its top priority is increasing the pace of internal consumer demand to make the world's second biggest economy less reliant on foreign countries. Economists have long feared a so-called hard landing for China, in which expansion there will suddenly drop.
"It's a big deal to see that revised down," James Hughes, senior market analyst at Alpari said in an interview with FOX Business, adding that data from Europe also attributed to the "negative feel" among global market participants. 
A report by London-based Markit showed eurozone business activity contracting faster than initially anticipated in February. The gauge hit 49.3 in February, weaker than a preliminary reading of 49.7, and 50.4 in January. Readings above 50 point to expansion, while those below signal contraction. The individual data for the members of the 17-member currency bloc also raised concerns among economists. 
"The biggest disappointment in the euro area figures was not the aggregate number, but the divergence between the core and periphery economies; Germany and France continued to see moderate expansion ... while Spain and Italy remained weak," analysts at Nomura wrote in a note to clients on Monday. 
The euro dipped 0.08% to $1.3188, while the U.S. dollar fell 0.04% against a basket of six world currencies. 
Data from the Commerce Department showing U.S. factory orders fell 1% in January from the month prior, a slightly smaller fall than the 1.5% economists expected, did little to ease the economic malaise on the day. The report covers machinery and other big-ticket items and helps provide an idea of the investment manufacturers have been making in the first quarter, which will contribute to broader economic growth readings, such as gross domestic product. 
Volatile energy markets have been a major focus on Wall Street as well. Crude oil prices lurched higher amid worries about Iran, but then fell 2.8% in the largest decline since January last week as economic fears and unexpectedly high supplies took a toll. The benchmark futures contract traded in New York gained 2 cents, or 0.02%, to $106.72 a barrel. 
Wholesale New York Harbor gasoline fell 0.43% to $3.258 a gallon. A gallon of regular at the pump costs $3.767 on average nationwide, up from $3.475 last month and $3.503 last year, according to the AAA Fuel Gauge Report. 
In metals, gold fell $6.10, or 0.36%, to $1,704 a troy ounce. The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield rose by six basis points to 1.990% as traders moved out of the safe-haven asset. 
Foreign Markets
European blue chips fell 0.64%, the English FTSE 100 dipped 0.61% to 5875 and the German DAX slumped 0.79% to 6866. 
In Asia, the Japanese Nikkei 225 slid 0.8% to 9699 and the Chinese Hang Seng sold off by 1.4% to 21265.


Read more: http://www.foxbusiness.com/markets/2012/03/05/industrials-weigh-on-dow-but-ibm-helps-restrain-losses/#ixzz1p07OOsSg

Micron Associates: Deals of the Day: Authorities Investigate Top Goldman Sachs Manager

Micron Associates: Deals of the Day: Authorities Investigate Top Goldman Sachs Manager


Deals of the Day compiles this morning’s biggest news about mergers and acquisitions, banking, bankruptcy and more. Catch us on Twitter, @WSJDealJournal.

Mergers & Acquisitions

GM-Peugeot: GM plans to extend a $335 million lifeline to struggling French auto maker PSA Peugeot Citroën as part of a tie-up that each hopes will aid turnarounds at their struggling European car operations. [WSJ]
Related: With General Motors limited in what it can do about its woeful European operations, taking a stake in France’s No. 2 car maker might not be such a bad idea. [Heard on the Street]
Ahlsell: CVC Capital is spending €1.8 billion to acquire Swedish building materials firm Ahlsell from Cinven and Goldman Sachs Capital Partners. [Financial News]
Micron-Intel: Micron Technology will pay $600 million to buy back Intel’s stake in two wafer factories as the chipmaker bets on the fast-growing NAND flash market to offset margin erosion in its mainstay memory chips. [Reuters]
BankAtlantic: BB&T purchase of BankAtlantic’s lending business was blocked by a Delaware Chancery Court judge, who agreed with hedge-fund investors that the deal favored BankAtlantic’s management over debtholders. [Reuters]

Financial Institutions

Banks are lending: U.S. banks increased lending by $130 billion in the last three months of 2011, posting the largest quarterly pickup in four years and marking a possible upswing in the economic rebound. [WSJ]
Deposits keep rising: Deposits continued growing at a brisk pace in the fourth quarter. The danger is that too much hot money eventually leaves banks feeling cold. [Heard on the Street]
AIG: The Federal Reserve Bank of New York sold the last distressed mortgage bonds from an entity that aided the bailout of American International Group Inc., reaping a $2.8 billion gain for U.S. taxpayers on the sales over the past year and closing a controversial chapter in the central bank’s response to the financial crisis. [WSJ]
Goldman Sachs: The firm disclosed for the first time the gross value of credit-default swaps the firm purchased and sold relating to Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain. [Bloomberg]
Related: Goldman recorded trading losses on 17 days in the fourth quarter, down from 21 days in the prior period. [Bloomberg News]
Wall Street pay: The smaller bonus checks that hit accounts across the financial-services industry this month are making it difficult to maintain the lifestyles that Wall Street workers expect. [Bloomberg]

Legal & Regulatory

Goldman Sachs: Criminal authorities are investigating whether a top Goldman Sachs manager passed inside information about technology stocks to the firm’s hedge-fund clients. [WSJ]
Mortgage bonds: Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan and Wells Fargo have been told U.S. securities regulators may sue them in civil court over allegedly shoddy disclosures of the risks of subprime mortgage bonds tied to the financial crisis. [WSJ]

Companies & Industries

Yahoo vs. Facebook: Yahoo’s attempt to wring patent fees from Facebook reflects the increasing worth of social networking sites, legal experts say. [WSJ]
Related; Call him the long lost Winklevoss triplet—Yahoo chief Scott Thompson looks like the latest sore loser that wishes he invented Facebook. [WSJ]
Wynn Resorts: Las Vegas Sands chief Sheldon Adelson said offering complimentary rooms is common practice in the gambling industry, suggesting that Wynn Resorts may have gone too far in ousting co-founder Kazuo Okada. [WSJ]

Boss Talk

Reid Hoffman: It sometimes feels as though LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman has been involved in every major tech start-up in the last decade, either as an entrepreneur, investor or adviser.

http://utterbackpac.wordpress.com/2012/03/13/micron-associates-industrials-weigh-on-dow-but-ibm-helps-restrain-losses/

http://utterbackpac.wordpress.com/2012/03/13/micron-associates-industrials-weigh-on-dow-but-ibm-helps-restrain-losses/


  • NYSE Trader Looking Up
    Reuters
FOX Business: The Power to Prosper
Several industrial blue chips weighed on the Dow on Monday as traders reacted to a bout of weak economic data from China and Europe, but rising shares of technology heavyweight IBM helped to keep the losses in check.
Today's Markets
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 14.8 points, or 0.11%, to 12963, the S&P 500 slumped 5.3 points, or 0.39%, to 1364 and the Nasdaq Composite dipped 25.7 points, or 0.86%, to 2950.
Caterpillar (CAT: 108.94, -1.28, -1.16%) was the biggest laggard of the Dow components on a point basis, pulling 18.2 points from the blue-chip index. Meanwhile, falling United Technologies (UTX: 83.99, +0.44, +0.53%) and Boeing (BA: 73.60, +0.31, +0.42%) shares cost the Dow another 15.3 points. IBM (IBM: 201.00, +0.38, +0.19%), ExxonMobil (XOM: 85.55, +1.25, +1.48%) and Verizon Communications (VZ: 39.32, +0.22, +0.56%) helped to limit the losses, adding roughly 21.7 points between the three.
Apple (AAPL: 552.00, +6.83, +1.25%), with its massive half-a-trillion dollar market capitalization, helped shove the Nasdaq Composite and closely-tracked Nasdaq 100 index of non-financial companies fairly sharply to the downside. Other big-name technology companies like Netflix (NFLX: 106.20, -2.93, -2.68%), Micron (MU: 8.08, -0.25, -3.00%) and Nvidia (NVDA: 14.58, -0.24, -1.59%) performed poorly as well. Oracle (ORCL: 29.71, -0.42, -1.39%), Seagate (STX: 27.88, -0.45, -1.59%) and Garmin (GRMN: 47.46, -0.05, -0.11%) were the only technology stocks on the Nasdaq 100 to close higher.
Looking at the broader markets, materials shares were the biggest drags. For example, Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold (FCX: 38.26, -0.52, -1.34%), one of the world's biggest producers of copper and gold, dropped 3.8%. Certain consumer staples, like Kraft (KFT: 38.12, +0.17, +0.45%), managed to stave off a bigger fall. 
Global Economic Data Weigh
China sliced its target for 2012 economic growth from 8%, where it has stood since 2004, to 7.5% and said its top priority is increasing the pace of internal consumer demand to make the world's second biggest economy less reliant on foreign countries. Economists have long feared a so-called hard landing for China, in which expansion there will suddenly drop.
"It's a big deal to see that revised down," James Hughes, senior market analyst at Alpari said in an interview with FOX Business, adding that data from Europe also attributed to the "negative feel" among global market participants. 
A report by London-based Markit showed eurozone business activity contracting faster than initially anticipated in February. The gauge hit 49.3 in February, weaker than a preliminary reading of 49.7, and 50.4 in January. Readings above 50 point to expansion, while those below signal contraction. The individual data for the members of the 17-member currency bloc also raised concerns among economists. 
"The biggest disappointment in the euro area figures was not the aggregate number, but the divergence between the core and periphery economies; Germany and France continued to see moderate expansion ... while Spain and Italy remained weak," analysts at Nomura wrote in a note to clients on Monday. 
The euro dipped 0.08% to $1.3188, while the U.S. dollar fell 0.04% against a basket of six world currencies. 
Data from the Commerce Department showing U.S. factory orders fell 1% in January from the month prior, a slightly smaller fall than the 1.5% economists expected, did little to ease the economic malaise on the day. The report covers machinery and other big-ticket items and helps provide an idea of the investment manufacturers have been making in the first quarter, which will contribute to broader economic growth readings, such as gross domestic product. 
Volatile energy markets have been a major focus on Wall Street as well. Crude oil prices lurched higher amid worries about Iran, but then fell 2.8% in the largest decline since January last week as economic fears and unexpectedly high supplies took a toll. The benchmark futures contract traded in New York gained 2 cents, or 0.02%, to $106.72 a barrel. 
Wholesale New York Harbor gasoline fell 0.43% to $3.258 a gallon. A gallon of regular at the pump costs $3.767 on average nationwide, up from $3.475 last month and $3.503 last year, according to the AAA Fuel Gauge Report. 
In metals, gold fell $6.10, or 0.36%, to $1,704 a troy ounce. The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield rose by six basis points to 1.990% as traders moved out of the safe-haven asset. 
Foreign Markets
European blue chips fell 0.64%, the English FTSE 100 dipped 0.61% to 5875 and the German DAX slumped 0.79% to 6866. 
In Asia, the Japanese Nikkei 225 slid 0.8% to 9699 and the Chinese Hang Seng sold off by 1.4% to 21265.

Saturday 10 March 2012

Equity Research on Most Popular Searches: Sprint Nextel, Ford, Micron, GrafTech International, and Arena Pharmaceuticals

Sprint Nextel Corporation S +6.92% : Sprint Nextel Corporation S +6.92% and its no-contract brand Boost Mobile have recently been rated highest among full-service and non-contract providers in J.D. Power and Associates' Wireless Purchase Experience Study, Volume 1. Sprint share prices reached US$2.52 on Thursday, with 13% up. There were 100.51 million stock shares traded, which was 2.3 times more than average volume. Do you want to know when company insiders will buy their shares? Want to add and monitor this company on an on-going basis? It can be done for free by registering below.
Ford Motor Company F +0.96% : According to Ford Motor Company F +0.96% 's yearly report filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, the company expects to place US$3.8 billion into its global pension plans in 2012, which includes US$2 billion distributed to the U.S. pension plan and the remaining US$1.45 billion put into other plans across the globe. Ford Motor Company has a market cap of 47.13 million. Pennystocksinsiders.com thinks that it is a clever way to check if insiders like CEOs, CFOs, and Directors in F are starting to buy more company shares. See insider trade report for F here.
Micron Technology, Inc. MU +2.08% : In the past 52 weeks, Micron Technology, Inc. MU +2.08% share prices have been bracketed by a low of US$3.97 and a high of US$11.89 and are now at US$7.82, 97% above that low price. The stock slipped 2.74% to US$7.82 with heavier than usual volume traded. Want to trace the activities of company insiders from now on? Check out the insider trading here.
Today Pennystocksinsiders.com also observed abnormal trade volume for the following companies; insiders may involve trading in these companies. It will take some time for insiders to report their trades. Read these reports and add these companies into your Insider Trade Radar.
GrafTech International Ltd. GTI -0.08% :
Arena Pharmaceuticals, Inc. ARNA +1.16% :
Insider Filing Source Reference: All observations, analysis and reports are based on public information released by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.