posted by Yahoo! News Search Results for dividends on Feb 25
Feb. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Apple Inc. Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs said he prefers holding cash to paying dividends or doing buybacks. Apple is holding onto cash to take “big, bold” risks, Jobs said at the company’s annual meeting today.Archive for February, 2010
posted by Yahoo! News Search Results for dividends on Feb 25
"You have to always remind and re-educate. There are an awful lot of distractions in new vehicles - we always talk about cell phones and texting, but things like GPS systems and satellite radios and...posted by Douwe Miedema on Feb 25
A 20 billion euro project is great, but not if it costs 31 billion to deliver. Most companies don’t walk away from deals that bad. They run.
But Europe’s biggest and now most fraught defence collaboration, the A400M military transport plane, is no ordinary deal.
European countries haggled for years before agreeing on it, despite their desire for a home grown alternative to U.S. planes such as the C-130 Hercules.
Governments in the end wanted the jobs and sophisticated technology.
For manufacturer EADS it was a project so vast the firm overlooked one disastrous clause – it was a fixed-price deal.
The company’s current showdown with governments over the A400M centres on that clause – and the risk that EADS may have to absorb a big chunk of cost overruns now topping 11 billion euros.
U.S. President Jimmy Carter famously cancelled the B-1A bomber in 1977 citing its high costs but European governments have tied each other into the A400M. Hence the current impasse.
EADS is unlikely to simply walk away either, but the two sides could very well shrink the number of planes required.
At least 180 deliveries spread out over perhaps a decade, the very size of the project is EADS’ biggest problem. That’s a long time to work for less than nothing.
Rival BAE Systems could offer a tip or two on squaring off with government over fixed-cost deals.
BAE was forced to take a 750 million pound charge for cost overruns on submarines and spy planes in 2003.
But it demanded Britain shoulder risk in any future deal and has since looked mostly to the United States for work.
EADS will have to take a hit on the A400M, but if it’s wise, it too will seek a deal that safeguards itself from similar disaster in the future.
The company got rich building Airbus planes but has big ambitions in defence, where it has worked mainly in consortia making Eurofighter jets and MBDA missiles.
That ambition, much like its over-budget A380 superjumbo airliner, is now hurting EADS. It’s time for the company to think if not small, then at least smaller.
posted by Anupreeta Das on Feb 25
Palm Inc's stock swooned this morning after the smartphone maker said it expects third-quarter and full-year revenue to be lower than expected because not enough people are buying its phones. In Palm's exact words:
Revenues for the quarter and full year are being impacted by slower than expected consumer adoption of the company's products that has resulted in lower than expected order volumes from carriers and the deferral of orders to future periods.
Palm launched the Pre last year amid much fanfare, followed by the Pixi, with many celebrity tech columnists ooh-ing and aah-ing about the operating system, webOS, that could run multiple applications at once and perhaps even become the iPhone killer. But that enthusiasm has clearly not translated into sales, as Palm struggles to loosen Apple's vice-like grip on the consumer smartphone market -- even as newer competitors, such as Motorola's Droid and Google's new smartphones, based on its Android operating system, crowd the market.
In recent conversations, people close to Palm have said the company is single-mindedly focused on building scale and developing its "app store," the virtual shop where users can buy small programs for everything from calorie-counting to weather. To that end, Palm is seeking to build its geographic presence and build partnerships with more wireless phone carriers (Sprint and Verizon currently sell its devices, and AT&T also plans to sell them).
"Palm's just a little peanut with a good operating system," said T Rowe Price portfolio manager David Eiswert recently, when he stopped by our offices for a chat. Eiswert, whose fund owns about 12 percent of the company, is bullish on Palm, and calls himself a webOS guy. But while he believes that the recent tie-up with Verizon will help it gain "shelf space" from Research in Motion, which sells the BlackBerry device, Eiswert said that Palm has a long way to go.
"Is Palm's operating system where it needs to be? No," Eiswert said, adding that an upcoming version of the software could be a big improvement. "The question for Palm is, can they deliver a compelling product? Can they get distribution?" The hardware, too, he said, was just "OK, not compelling."
So then, do Palm's big shareholders, including private equity firm Elevation Partners and funds Fidelity, T Rowe Price and Capital World Investors, have a potential sale of the company in mind? The market clearly believes that the company could be sold any day; rumors about a deal have repeatedly driven the stock up and down in recent months.
A deal for Palm could make sense -- at least, that's what nearly every tech and telecoms banker I speak to seems to think. As for who would make a good fit, there is a list of potential suitors, of which Finnish cellphone giant Nokia may be the one who needs it most.
"The three companies driving the future of mobile computing -- Apple, Android and Palm -- are all in Silicon Valley," Eiswert said (BlackBerry maker RIM doesn't fit his bill because they make 2.5G phones that have less processing power than the newer smartphones). "Nokia doesn't have the software or expertise... they really have to reinvent themselves. If we wake up tomorrow and Nokia buys Palm, for $3 billion or $5 billion, it doesn't matter, Nokia's stock price (will) go up."
Other potential buyers of Palm include PC maker Dell, which is testing the mobile phone market with its own device, but it may need to step up its game to gain even reasonable market share.
Then, there are the Korean phone manufacturers, Samsung and LG. I was just reading an article in the March 1 issue of Bloomberg BusinessWeek that says Korea may be "losing its edge in the international market, despite its reputation as the epicenter of digital cool." Samsung and LG just don't have the smartphone software to compete, which is a growing concern for the country, the article states. Could they be interested in acquiring Palm too?
Photo: Palm.com
posted by Yahoo! News Search Results for dividends on Feb 25
Plymouth head coach Paul Mariner is hoping a different build-up will help his side maintain their three-match unbeaten Championship run at play-off-chasing Sheffield United.posted by Yahoo! News Search Results for dividends on Feb 25
Stephen Bland reviews figures from Moneysupermarket and A&J Mucklow.posted by Yahoo! News Search Results for dividends on Feb 25
Stephen Bland reviews figures from Moneysupermarket and A&J Mucklow.posted by Yahoo! News Search Results for dividends on Feb 25
Stephen Bland reviews figures from Moneysupermarket and A&J Mucklow.posted by Yahoo! News Search Results for dividends on Feb 25
Stephen Bland reviews figures from Moneysupermarket and A&J Mucklow.posted by Yahoo! News Search Results for dividends on Feb 25
Stephen Bland reviews figures from Moneysupermarket and A&J Mucklow.



