Stocks held onto fractional gains as the regular session closed after
some weekend profit-taking failed to overtake investor optimism,
allowing the major indexes to notch fresh 2009 highs. Wall Street is
looking ahead to next week's Federal Reserve monetary policy meeting.
During the regular session, analyst upgrades and higher guidance
from some companies kept investors buoyant about the prospect of an
economic recovery. There was no major economic news.
Palm (
PALM) closed down near 3% after the company topped estimates
with a smaller-than-expected loss but said it would issue more stock.
Palm reported Q1 non-GAAP revs of $360.7 mln, down from $366.8 mln in
the year ago quarter. Non-GAAP loss was $0.10 per share, vs. a year ago
loss of $0.12 per share. The Street view was revenue of $291 mln and a
loss of $0.25 per share. IMAX (
IMAX) dropped after shares get cut to
"neutral" from "buy" at Merriman Curhan Ford.
Among stocks getting a lift from analysts JP Morgan boosted its
view on the homebuilder sector to positive from negative. "While
fundamentals will likely not demonstrate an uninterrupted solid rate of
improvement over the next six to 12 months, we believe that not only is
housing solidly past its trough, but over the next 24 months will
continue to recover and drive further upside to the current rally in
the home-builder stocks," the analyst said in a note, according to
MarketWatch. The analyst upgraded Toll Brothers (
TOL) and KB Home (
KBH)
to "overweight" from "neutral." M.D.C. Holdings (
MDC) is dropped to
""underweight" vs "overweight."
Citi raises its rating on Procter & Gamble (
PG) to "buy" vs
"hold," saying the move is more a call on the shares than on company
fundamentals, according to a report on MarketWatch. Citi also raised
its price target from $54 a share to $66. It closed up 3.22%
SanDisk (
SNDK) gained after BofA/Merrill reportedly raised its
rating on the stock to "buy" from "underperform." Callaway Golf
(ELY)was upgraded to "outperfrom" from "neutral" at Wedbush Morgan.
e*Trade (
ETFC) jumped after Goldman Sachs raised its rating on the
shares to "buy" due to impressive trading data for the month. On the
flipside, Schwab (SCHW) is down after Goldman cut its rating to "sell"
because Goldman expects SCHW's asset management and net interest income
revenue to remain under pressure for another year.
Starbucks (
SBUX) is firmer on an upgrade to "overweight" from
"neutral" at Piper Jaffray. Piper believes mid-teens EPS growth is
possible.