AT&T Der Mobilfunkanbieter AT&T Wireless meldete am Mittwoch die Ergebnisse zum abgelaufenen dritten Quartal. Der Verlust belief sich auf 2,0 Mrd. Dollar nach einem Gewinn von 77 Mio. Dollar im Vorjahreszeitraum. Exklusive Sonderaufwendungen und Abschreibungen fiel jedoch ein Gewinn von 131 Mio. Dollar oder 4 Cents je Aktie an. Analysten erwarteten ein ausgeglichenes Ergebnis. Die Umsätze stiegen auf 4,06 Mrd. Dollar von 3,50 Mrd. Dollar. Die Aktie schloss bei 5,45 Dollar und notiert nachbörslich bei 5,76 Dollar.
AMGEN Das weltgrößte Biotechunternehmen Amgen verdiente im Q3 34 Cents/Aktie nach 30 Cents im Vorjahr. Analysten hatten nur mit 32 Cents gerechnet. Der Umsatz konnte um 50% von 1 auf 1,5 Milliarden $ zulegen, Analysten erwarteten hier 1,44 Milliarden $. Im nachbörslichen Handel konnten AMGN Aktien zuletzt 10 Cents auf 50,10$ gewinnen.
AOL Das weltgrößte Internet- und Medienunternehmen AOL Time Warner gab am Mittwoch bekannt, dass man im 19 Cents/Aktie im Q3 erzielt habe, gegenüber 24 Cents/Aktie vor einem Jahr. Der Umsatz stieg zugleich um 6% auf 10 Milliarden $. Analysten hatten einen Umsatz von 9,98 Milliarden $ und einen Gewinn von 772 Mio $ oder 18 Cents/Aktie erwartet. Ferner berichtete man, dass die neue Version des AOL Softwareprogramms (8.0) nun auf dem Markt sei. Außerdem habe eine Untersuchungsgruppe herausgefunden, dass durch Fehler in der internen Rechnungslegung 190 Mio $ zuviel an Umsatz verbucht worden sind. Die Jahresabschlüsse von 2001 und 2000 müssten nun nachträglich korrigiert werden.
Computer Associates NEW YORK (Reuters) - Shares in Computer Associates International Inc. , closed up 22 percent on Wednesday a day after the software maker reported quarterly earnings that beat Wall Street's forecast and raised its earnings outlook. Shares of Computer Associates gained $2.65 to close at $14.75 and were among the top net and percent gainers on the New York Stock Exchange. The stock had reached $14.85 earlier in the day, its highest level since July 9. The stock helped lift rivals in the mainframe and distributed system software market. BMC Software Inc., which reports its earnings Thursday closed up $1.07, or 7 percent, to $15.70. Compuware Corp. , which already reported, closed up 18 cents, or 4 percent to $4.38 a share. "General market and CA in particular are giving a boost to the mainframe group," Bear Stearns analyst David Breiner said. After the close of the market on Tuesday, Computer Associates reported fiscal second quarter earnings, excluding items, of 4 cents a share compared analysts' average expectations of 2 cents a share. The company was able to close four $10 million-plus deals, giving hope that others also may be able to snare the large deals that had become so rare in the past year. Revenue rose 5 percent to $772 million. About $343 million of that came from deferred revenue, sales that had been booked previously but not recorded on its income statement. That was about 10 percent higher than Prudential Securities analyst John McPeake said he anticipated. New bookings during the quarter were $394 million, Despite the results, some analysts maintained lackluster ratings on the stock because of on-going investigations by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the U.S. Department of Justice into its past accounting practices. Also, some analysts said they remained concerned about the difficult climate for Technology spending and the company's $3.15 billion debt load. "Many of the key financial metrics indicate that CA is continuing to experience significant stress," Deutsche Bank Securities analyst Richard Zandi wrote in a research note, referring to headcount, change in residual value, change in deferreds, run rate cash flow and the like. "In light of the still difficult IT (information technology) environment, the weak balance sheet, and the continuing SEC/DOJ investigation, we maintain our Hold rating and our $12 price target," he said. McPeake maintained a "hold" rating on the shares and a price target of $11 a share.
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