Stocks to Watch: Stocks to watch: Oracle, Smith & Wesson, Family Dollar

Stock Market

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) — Among the companies whose shares are expected to see active trade in Friday’s session are Oracle Corp., Smith & Wesson Holding Corp., and Family Dollar Stores Inc.

After Thursday’s closing bell, Oracle
ORCL,
+1.45%

 said its fiscal fourth-quarter profit fell to $3.65 billion from $3.81 billion a year earlier. Per-share earnings were unchanged at 80 cents a share while adjusted earnings came in at 92 cents a share, short of 95 cents a share forecast by analysts in a FactSet survey. Revenue rose $11.3 billion from $10.95 billion. Oracle shares declined more than 6% in after-hours trading.

Oracle Corp. signage is displayed outside of the company’s headquarters in Redwood City, Calif.


Bloomberg

Smith & Wesson
US:SWHC
 reported fiscal fourth-quarter profit of $25.1 million, or 45 cents a share, compared with $25.2 million, or 39 cents a share, a year ago. Revenue fell to $170.4 million from $178.7 million. In the current quarter, the company expects to earn between 23 cents and 25 cents a share and between $1.30 and $1.40 a share for the full year. Analysts are projecting earnings of $1.50 a share for the full year. Shares of Smith & Wesson dropped 12% in after hours.

Activist investor Carl Icahn released a letter to Family Dollar Stores’ Chief Executive Howard Levine in which he noted their differences over the future of the company. Icahn, who holds a 9.4% stake in the discount retailer chain, believes the company can do more to be competitive and warned that “consolidation in this space is inevitable.” Shares of Family Dollar
US:FDO
 rose 2.7% in after hours.

More must-reads from MarketWatch:

Oil’s surge might ‘tip the scale toward a correction’ – video chat highlights

10 founders booted out of their own companies

Stocks’ rise to records fails to lift Wall Street forecasts

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Starmer touts relationship with Trump as he seeks US-UK trade deal
Mortgages, credit cards, auto loans: Expert predictions for interest rates in 2025
Hindenburg Research founder says he’s closing short-seller research shop
Louisiana, with bond plans, will seek Fitch upgrade
What the Israel-Hamas ceasefire means for the world

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *