11/10/05:
Dell CFO Jim Schneider on the Company's Declining Growth
SUSIE GHARIB: The world`s largest computer company is
slowing down. Dell reported today lower earnings just as it warned a week
ago. They`re good, but not great. Excluding charges, Dell earned $0.39 a
share in its fiscal third quarter, in line with revised analyst estimates.
Dell posted revenues of $13.9 billion, its sixth straight quarter of
declining growth. It now expects fourth quarter earnings of $0.40 to $0.42
a share on revenues of almost $15 billion. Shortly after the announcement,
I talked with Dell`s chief financial officer Jim Schneider, and asked him
about the strategy to improve the numbers.
JIM SCHNEIDER, CFO, DELL: Well, one of the important things for Dell
is to continue to execute very well internationally. We`ve been growing at
a rate of 20 percent plus internationally. And it`s very important for us
to do that because we`re very large in the United States. And you know,
there`s something when you get to be a company of our size, approaching $60
billion in revenue that, you know, it`s hard to grow at the same rates that
you did in the past. So we`re still growing. We need to make sure that
we`re working in every price point. So we want to be strong in every price
position from the low end through the higher end of computer buyers. But
we also need to be even stronger internationally. So that`s a big focus
area for us and to continue to expand our share in enterprise markets,
servers and storage.
GHARIB: Let me ask you about the growth rate, Mr. Schneider. You are
right, Dell is a much larger company so can`t grow at those high teens that
it was growing. What is a reasonable growth rate for Dell?
SCHNEIDER: Well, we`re thinking -- we`re not really giving guidance
right now in terms of longer-term growth rate, but I think we ought to be
able to continue to grow at a double-digit rate which for a company of our
size I think is exceptional. You know, this quarter we grew our EPS at 18
percent. So we`re still functioning very well. Again, 20 percent growth
outside the U.S., lower in the U.S. In this past quarter we had, you know,
negative growth in the consumer markets. So, you know, it something that
we`re going to pick up here. I think you`ll see better results there in
the fourth quarter and when you balance that higher growth rate outside the
U.S. with more reasonable and moderate growth here in the U.S., I think you
can balance this out to a growth rate that gets you into the double digits.
GHARIB: Now you mentioned the $60 billion, you are almost to $60
billion in revenues. That has been a goal of yours to reach that by the
end of this fiscal year and $80 billion in revenues over the next couple of
years. Are those goals still reachable?
SCHNEIDER: Well, actually the original goal that we set about five
years ago, we`re in the fourth year of that, so we`re actually still ahead.
That $60 billion was to be next year and if you look at the guidance we`ve
given out for the fourth quarter, it`s between $14.6 and $15 billion. So
if you annualize that, you can see we are almost on a run rate of $60
billion by the end of the fourth quarter. So we will surely make that next
year. And we have a goal of $80 billion. That is still a few years down
the line. But we`re continuing to grow, you know, very nicely. Again, if
you think about it, a $60 billion company even growing at 10 percent,
that`s a lot of revenue to add in a year.
GHARIB: We see that Lenovo has been picking up momentum. HP is
getting stronger. How would you describe the competitive landscape? Is it
getting a lot tougher for Dell?
SCHNEIDER: Well, I think our competitors have actually been narrowing
down. You just talked about companies that have had some mergers. You
know, I know they are working on their cost structures. But we`re really
focused on our own businesses. I mean, our business in any of the last few
quarters including this one, we`re still about three to four times as
profitable as these other companies and we`re still growing at an equal to
or better rate.
GHARIB: OK.
SCHNEIDER: So I think some of this maybe has been overdone as well in
terms of the growth rate.
GHARIB: Mr. Schneider just to wrap it up, talk a little bit about
your stock which has been down something like 24 percent this year. Today
you announced a big stock buyback program. Is this your strategy for
regaining investor confidence?
SCHNEIDER: We have had a continual stock buyback program over the last
few years. The number we talked about today is the largest number we`ve
talked about coming into a quarter. But it is part of our ongoing pattern.
I believe that with the strength of our business and the lower share price,
though, that we will be more aggressive buying our stock back this quarter.
GHARIB: Mr. Schneider, thank you very much. We appreciate your time.
SCHNEIDER: Thank you.
Nightly
Business Report transcripts are available on-line post broadcast.
The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks. Updates may
be posted at a later date. The views of our guests and commentators
are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of
Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc. Nightly
Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented on Nightly
Business Report is not and should not be considered as investment
advice. Copyright
(c) 2005 Community Television Foundation of South Florida,
Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms of use.
11/10/05:
Analysis of Import Export Influences
PAUL KANGAS: The U.S. trade gap topped $66 billion in September. That`s a
new record as imports surged and exports dropped by their largest levels in
four years. Still, as Scott Gurvey explains, some unusual factors affected
the numbers.
SCOTT GURVEY, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: Imports rose 2.4
percent to $171.3 billion in September, while exports fell 2.6 percent to
$105.2 billion. The resulting trade gap was $66.1 billion; that`s 11
percent above the trade gap in August. There were special circumstances.
A strike at Boeing resulted in a $2.4 billion drop in aircraft exports.
That production will be made up in future quarters. Hurricanes Katrina and
Rita made their presence felt, causing a big jump in the dollar value of
oil and other energy imports, in spite of a decline in volume. Damage at
the port of New Orleans also caused declines in trade of agricultural
products.
DAVID RESLER, CHIEF ECONOMIST, NOMURA SECURITIES: I think the
magnitude of it was a bit stunning at first, but upon looking through the
data, we discovered that in real volumes, the deficit wasn`t quite as wide
as the headlines made it seem. These do however point toward a smaller net
export deficit -- I`m sorry, a larger net export deficit in the third
quarter and somewhat slower growth in GDP than from that source then we got
initially.
GURVEY: Long-term forecasts do not hold out much hope for a smaller
trade gap any time soon. Over the last five years, imports have risen at
an annual 4 percent rate, while exports have grown at a 1.6 percent pace.
That means America`s trading partners continue to accumulate dollars
instead of spending them on American made goods and services.
STEVEN WIETING, SR. ECONOMIST, CITIGROUP: In some respects, you have
to be concerned about how foreigners will look at that increasing share of
green paper in their portfolios and what you`d ideally like to see over
time is goods and services exports replace that portfolio investment, see
better growth in our exports abroad sort of recondition the U.S. economy
and reshape it to a little bit more production, a little bit milder
consumption.
GURVEY: China today announced another record trade surplus with the
United States for October. That in spite of a revaluation of the Chinese
currency in July. The Chinese central bank says it has no plans for
another currency move. Scott Gurvey, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT, New York.
Nightly
Business Report transcripts are available on-line post broadcast.
The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks. Updates may
be posted at a later date. The views of our guests and commentators
are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of
Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc. Nightly
Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented on Nightly
Business Report is not and should not be considered as investment
advice. Copyright (c) 2005 Community Television Foundation
of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms of use.
11/10/05: Soaring CEO Salaries Are Now A Capitol Concern
SUSIE GHARIB: On Capitol Hill today, lawmakers introduced legislation aimed
at reigning in the skyrocketing pay of America`s executives. A recent
survey found that the average CEO at an S&P 500 company earned nearly $12
million last year. As Stephanie Dhue reports, that doesn`t sit well with
some people.
STEPHANIE DHUE, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: Fed up with
soaring CEO pay, shareholder groups, regulators and lawmakers are talking
tough.
REP. BARNEY FRANK, RANKING DEMOCRAT, FINANCIAL SERVICES COMMITTEE:
Why of all the people in this economy, the top corporate executives, of
such weak moral fiber that we cannot expect them conscientiously to carry
out their duties unless they are substantially bribed each time they do the
right thing.
DHUE: Frank has introduced legislation to require public companies to fully
disclose top executives` compensation, including pensions and perks and
fully disclose short and long-term performance measures. The idea is to
crack down on what many view as abusive pay packages. For example,
Gillette CEO James Kilts could take home more than $185 million from its
sale to Procter & Gamble. Franklin Raines will receive millions of dollars
in pension and stock, despite being forced out as Fannie Mae CEO after it
restated $9 billion in earnings. John Castellani heads the Business
Roundtable. He says the nation`s top CEOs supports disclosure, but with
caution.
JOHN CASTELLANI, PRESIDENT, BUSINESS ROUNDTABLE: So the balance is
enough disclosure so that shareholders understand that there`s a system in
place and that the reward system is tied to performance, but not so much
that you disadvantage that same company by giving to its competitors
information that would be valuable to them.
DHUE: Shareholder advocates say current disclosures don`t give a
clear picture of how CEO performance is measured.
PAT MCGURN, INSTITUTIONAL SHAREHOLDER SERVICES: So it`s very
difficult for investors to tell where the bar has been set and indeed if
it`s been buried under the ground.
DHUE: Shareholders may not have to wait for Congress to act. The
Securities and Exchange Commission is working on greater disclosure rules
that could come by the end of the year. Stephanie Dhue, NIGHTLY BUSINESS
REPORT, Washington.
Nightly
Business Report transcripts are available on-line post broadcast.
The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks. Updates may
be posted at a later date. The views of our guests and commentators
are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of
Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc. Nightly
Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented on Nightly
Business Report is not and should not be considered as investment
advice. Copyright (c) 2005 Community Television Foundation
of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms of use.
11/10/05:"Las Vegas On A Roll"-Part 1 The Adventure
SUSIE GHARIB: Las Vegas is celebrating its centennial this
year-- 100 years of gaming and glitz. And beginning tonight, we`ll tell
you "What Happens in Vegas." NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT and fellow PBS program
"American Experience" will bring you the history and explore the future of
America`s gaming and entertainment Mecca. "American Experiences: "Las
Vegas: an Unconventional History" airs Monday and Tuesday on most PBS
stations. Tonight NBR`s Jeff Yastine kicks off our series "Las Vegas on a
Roll" with a look at how Las Vegas is reinventing itself to keep its
glittering neon streets filled with adventure seekers.
JEFF YASTINE, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: Las Vegas: those two
words mean different things to different people at different times. Turn
of the century frontier gambling town, the air conditioned 1950s cool of
Sinatra, Sammie and Dean. By the 1990s, Las Vegas was pitching itself as a
family- friendly playground -- part Disney, part danger. But like an aging
lounge-singer, the city needed a new schtick, a new image. And it found it
with commercials like these:
COMMERCIALS: I`m Candy, Charlotte, Miranda. Nice to meet you, I`m Xena.
Can I get a walkup call tomorrow morning, please? Here`s the thing,
I`m not quite clear sure if I`m going to be in my room tomorrow. So I just
thought if you could call my cell phone, it would cover all bases. Please?
YASTINE: Billy Vassiliades and his team at R&R Partners, based in Las
Vegas, came up with the city`s marketing campaign.
BILLY VASSILIADIS, CEO, R&R PARTNERS: I think what it did is it got
people back to that notion of needing to escape and needing to not have to
meet the societal pressures that you have to meet. I mean you`re not going
to wear a Speedo picking up your kid from school in Des Moines, but you
might here. Mom`s not going to wear the little black dress to the PTA
social, but she will here. And these spots keep reminding people that you
can come here and be someone else.
YASTINE: "What happens in Vegas" turned out to be a huge hit,
imitated and satirized on billboards, in print and on television.
ABC "LESS THAN PERFECT" It`s like the first rule of Vegas whatever
happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas.
CBS "TWO AND A HALF MEN" When were you planning on telling me about
this trip?
What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas.
YASTINE: Before the campaign started in 2003, tourist visits numbered
about 35 million a year. This year, an estimated 44 million people will
visit, a 25 percent increase. It`s just the latest second act for a city
that just keeps reinventing itself. From its earliest days as a gamblers
haven down here on Fremont Street, to the current period of mega-casino
resorts, marketing has helped put the city on the map and also helped to
keep it there. From early bathing beauty promotions, to the 1950s when
casino guests could watch nuclear bomb testing from rooftop platforms, Las
Vegas has always seized on whatever was available and interesting to sell
itself to the outside world -- a genius of marketing, according to some.
DAVID SCHWARTZ, DIR., GAMING STUDIES RESEARCH CENTER, UNLV: because it
convinced people to say "OK, you`re going to come, drive or fly to
someplace that, in the middle of the summer is 115 degrees. You`re going
to lose money at gambling because of the house advantage and you`re going
to love it, and you`re going to come back again and again and again." That
takes genius.
YASTINE: And it takes a flair for publicity, personified these days
by the man on this motorcycle. Before his election in 1999, Las Vegas
Mayor Oscar Goodman was a lawyer whose main practice was defending accused
mobsters. Today, he promotes the city and new businesses like this club
opening, an unconventional mayor for a city profiting from an
unconventional past.
OSCAR GOODMAN, MAYOR, CITY OF LAS VEGAS: You know, it`s a shame
if the folks think of Las Vegas without including the Elvis component or the
mob element, those kind of things, because that`s what created the mystique
that made us unique and made us different than other places. I`d like to
incorporate that in what we`re doing today. That`s why I sort of like our
slogans: "what happens here, stays here."
YASTINE: What also stays here is the $33 billion that legions of
tourists spend in the city each year. Increasingly, much of that money is
not even spent on gambling, but on other leisure activities. It`s just the
latest way Las Vegas continues to reinvent itself, keeping its streets
filled with gamblers, tourists and adventure-seekers. Jeff Yastine,
NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT, Las Vegas.
Nightly
Business Report transcripts are available on-line post broadcast.
The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks. Updates may
be posted at a later date. The views of our guests and commentators
are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of
Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc. Nightly
Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented on Nightly
Business Report is not and should not be considered as investment
advice. Copyright (c) 2005 Community Television Foundation
of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms of use.
11/10/05:"Commentary"-You're Never Too Big To Learn
SUSIE GHARIB:Tonight`s commentator says even the world`s biggest companies could
learn some basic lessons. Here`s Tom Stewart, editor of the "Harvard
Business Review."
TOM STEWART, EDITOR, HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW: Wal-Mart is under fire
because of a memo about healthcare costs written by its benefits head.
Critics say Wal-Mart is nickel and diming employees, who are relatively
low-paid already. I saw something else in the memo. At one point it says
this, Quote, the cost of an associate with seven years of tenure is almost
55 percent more than the cost of an associate with one year of tenure, yet
there is no difference in productivity. Moreover, because we pay more as
tenure increases, we are increasing the likelihood that he or she will stay
with Wal-Mart.
That struck me odd. First, it says that after a year, employees stop
learning. In six years, there`s no productivity gain that makes you worth
more. I don`t believe that. Maybe you won`t be 55 percent more
productive, but surely you`ll learn something and surely Wal-Mart`s HR
department should try to close that gap with training and development,
rather than show you the door. That`s the second odd thing. Wal-Mart said
it`s bad when employees stick around. Yet research in just about every
industry, including retailing, shows that employee loyalty is associated
with improved results.
Wal-Mart has always focused on costs. But obsessing about costs can
blind you to opportunities to invest, in this case to invest in the value
of long-term employees. The victims of this cost mentality may include
Wal-Mart`s shareholders. If you bought Wal-Mart six years ago, you paid
$58. Today, it`s about $47. That`s the kind of everyday low pricing the
company doesn`t want. I`m Tom Stewart.
Nightly
Business Report transcripts are available on-line post broadcast.
The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks. Updates may
be posted at a later date. The views of our guests and commentators
are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of
Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc. Nightly
Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented on Nightly
Business Report is not and should not be considered as investment
advice. Copyright (c) 2005 Community Television Foundation
of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms of use.
11/10/05:
"Paul Kangas' Stocks In The News"
PAUL KANGAS: The record trade gap, Cisco`s cautious outlook and more bad
news from General Motors deflated stocks this morning. Early on, the Dow
fell as much as 20 points; NASDAQ lost 10. But then the market rallied as
oil broke below $58 per barrel and a strong Treasury note auction sent
interest rates tumbling. The Dow industrial average came in with a gain of
93.89 points at 10,640.10. The NASDAQ Composite jumped 20.87 points ending
at 2196.68. Standard & Poor`s 500 Index rose 10.31 ending at 1230.96.
Over in the bond market, the 10-year note gained 22/32 to 97 20/32,
lowering the yield all the way down to 4.56 percent.
Most active issue on the New York exchange, General Electric (GE)
moving up $0.58.
Followed by Nortel Networks (NT) with a $0.06 loss.
Then came General Motors (GM) at that 23-year low, down $1.12. To make
matters worse, Standard & Poor`s and Bank of America both repeated a "sell"
recommendations on GM.
ExxonMobil (XOM) down $1.05 along with those lower oil prices.
Lucent Technology (LU) dropped a penny, fifth in big board volume.
Then Citigroup (C) moving up $0.91.
Pfizer (PFE) a nickel gain.
EMC Corp (EMC) was down $0.24.
Time Warner (TWX) gained $0.05.
And Wal-Mart Stores (WMT), tenth in volume, was up $0.84.
Target Corp (TGT) up $2.29. Third quarter earnings, $0.49, well above
last year`s $0.36, $0.04 above the Street estimate, although the company
doesn`t think the fourth quarter will be quite as strong, but does plan to
buy back up to $2 billion worth of its own stock.
Then Dept 56 (DFS), in collectables and giftware up $1.92. Third
quarter earnings jumped to $0.81, versus $0.68 a year ago. Revenues shot up
88 percent, largely due to the acquisition of Lenox and incidentally, DFS
or Department 56 will be changing its name to Lenox Group.
Lincoln National Corp (LNC), the insurance company, up $1.11, traded
as high as $53.50 during the day after Citigroup issued a report suggesting
Prudential financial might make a takeover bid.
Spectrum Brands (SPC) tumbling $2.28, used to be called Rayovac and
it`s in the battery business and the company not very positive on the
outlook. As a matter of fact, reported a fourth quarter loss today of $0.06
versus earnings of $0.52 a year ago.
International Game Technology (IGT) in the game machine business, up
$1.83. Fourth quarter earnings doubled $0.30 versus only $0.15 a year ago.
Four Seasons Hotel (FS) down $5.26 after Lehman Brothers downgraded it
from "overweight" to just an "equal weight" rating.
Continental Airlines (CAL) up $1.29. The whole airline group boosted
by those lower oil prices, a lot of good gains in that group.
Flowers Foods Inc (FLO) down $2.26. Third quarter earnings the same as
last year, $0.22 despite a 10 percent rise in sales. The company blamed
higher costs due to the hurricanes.
And Chesapeake Corp (CSK) in the packaging business bagged (ph) for a
loss of $2.93 after reporting third quarter earnings excluding one-time
items half of what they were a year ago, $0.14 versus $0.28 then.
Google (GOOG) topped the active list, snapping back nearly $12 after a
few days of profit taking.
Cisco Systems (CSCO) down $0.60. After the close yesterday, it did
have higher first quarter earnings, but its guidance was rather
disappointing.
Intel (INTC) $0.44 gain. The company`s boosting its quarterly dividend
from $0.08 to $0.10, going to buy back an additional $25 billion worth of
stock, not much movement in the stock today.
Microsoft (MSFT) up $0.13.
Apple Computer (AAPL) gained $1.07.
Whole Foods Market (WFMI) down $7.12 on the close, traded as low as
$132.19. Fourth quarter earnings dropped to only $0.13 versus $0.43 last
year due to hurricane-related factors. But Whole Foods set a two for one
stock split. It`ll boost the regular dividend 20 percent and also declared
a $4 per share special dividend, also plans to buy back up to $200 million
of its own stock.
Dell (DELL) up $0.19 on the close. You heard about the earnings. Stock
dropped about $0.30 in after hours.
Sandisk (SNDK) down $0.12.
Nvidia (NVDA) off $1.29.
And Research in Motion (RIMM) snapping back $4.63.
And that`s our look at stocks in the news tonight.
Nightly
Business Report transcripts are available on-line post broadcast.
The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks. Updates may
be posted at a later date. The views of our guests and commentators
are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of
Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc. Nightly
Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented on Nightly
Business Report is not and should not be considered as investment
advice. Copyright (c) 2005 Community Television Foundation
of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms of use.
11/10/05:
Market Stats
NET PERCENT CLOSE CHANGE CHANGE
DOW CLOSE 10640.10 +93.89 + .9
HIGH 10655.53
LOW 10519.39
NASDAQ COMP. 2196.68 +20.87 +1.0
HIGH 2196.75
LOW 2162.65
VOLUME 1,756.2
PREVIOUS 1,618.4
UP VOLUME 1,097.1
DOWN VOLUME 645.3
DOW TRANSPORTS 4043.90 +39.53 + 1.0
DOW UTILITIES 391.16 -4.70 - 1.2
CLOSING TICK +756
S&P 500 1230.96 +10.31 + .8
S&P 100 567.18 +4.29 + .8
MIDCAP 400 716.98 +3.42 + .5
REUTERS/CRB 314.53 -2.01 - .6
NYSE COMPOSITE 7530.13 +29.14 + .4
VALUE LINE 403.29 +2.25 + .6
RUSSELL 2000 664.93 +5.10 + .8
DJW 5000 12324.98 +97.97 + .8
U.S. TREASURIES
5-YEAR NOTE 4.50%
Nov. 15,2010 100 3/32 +11/32 4.48
10-YEAR NOTE 4.25%
Aug. 15,2015 97 19/32 +21/32 4.56
30-YEAR NOTE 5.375%
Feb. 15, 2031 109 9/32 +1 15/32 4.75
LEHMAN BROS.
LONG BOND INDEX 1737.11 +13.09
DOW CLOSE 10640.10 +93.89 + .9
ADVANCES 1962
DECLINES 1329
NEW HIGHS 139
NEW LOWS 131
NET PERCENT
NYSE MOST ACTIVES 4PM CLOSE CHANGE CHANGE
GE GE 34.50 +.58 +1.7
NT Nortel Networks 3.15 -.06 -1.9
GM GM 23.51 -1.12 -4.6
XOM Exxon Mobil 56.45 -1.05 -1.8
LU Lucent Tech 2.77 -.01 -.4
C Citigroup 47.73 +.91 +1.9
PFE Pfizer 22.21 +.05 +.2
EMC EMC 13.87 -.24 -1.7
TWX Time Warner 17.71 +.05 +.3
WMT Wal-Mart Stores 49.04 +.84 +1.7
NASDAQ CLOSE 2196.68 + 20.87 + 1.0
VOLUME 1,988.3
PREVIOUS 1,657.5
ADVANCES 1800
DECLINES 1209
NASDAQ ACTIVES
GOOG Google 391.10 +11.95 +3.2
CSCO Cisco Systems 17.15 -.60 -3.4
INTC Intel 25.24 +.44 +1.8
MSFT Microsoft 27.09 +.13 +.5
AAPL Apple Computer 61.18 +1.07 +1.8
WFMI Whole Foods Mkt 139.66 -7.12 -4.9
DELL Dell 29.21 +.19 +.7
SNDK SanDisk 59.63 -.12 -.2
NVDA Nvidia 33.49 -1.29 -3.7
RIMM Rsch In Motion 65.85 +4.63 +7.6
AMEX CLOSE 1681.89 - 6.01 - .4
INDEX SHARES
DIA DIAMONDS TRUST 106.58 +.98 +.9
QQQ NASDAQ 100 40.60 +.44 +1.1
SPY S&P DEP.RECEIPTS 123.34 +.95 +.8
STOCKS IN THE NEWS
TGT Target 58.85 +2.29 +4.1
DFS Dept 56 13.15 +1.92 +17.1
LNC Lincoln Natl 50.98 +1.11 +2.2
SPC Spectrum Brands 18.00 -2.28 -11.2
IGT Intl Game Tech 27.85 +1.83 +7.0
FS Four Seasons 51.41 -5.26 -9.3
CAL Continental Air 14.73 +1.29 +9.6
FLO Flowers Foods 25.99 -2.26 -8.0
CSK Chesapeake 17.14 -2.93 -14.6
|