By Rex Crum
Technology stocks closed with broad gains Wednesday as the
sector advanced on a day highlighted by Federal Reserve Chairman
Ben Bernanke's appearance before Congress to detail his outlook for
the U.S. economy.
In the first of two days of congressional testimony, Bernanke
said that the Fed needs to maintain its current course on interest
rates and that the economic recovery is still dependent on consumer
confidence and spending patterns.
Tech stocks turned away from the previous session's losses, with
gains coming from Research In Motion Ltd. (RIMM), Apple Inc.
(AAPL), Intel Corp. (INTC), Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO) and
Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ).
One of the day's standouts was design-software maker Autodesk
Inc. (ADSK) The company's shares climbed $2.23, or 8.7%, to $27.89
after earlier reaching a 52-week high of $28.36.
Late Tuesday, Autodesk reported a fourth-quarter profit of $50.1
million, or 21 cents a share, on revenue of $456 million, reversing
a year-earlier loss. Excluding one-time items, Autodesk would have
earned 30 cents a share, ahead of analysts' consensus forecast.
Needham & Co. analyst Richard Davis raised his rating on
Autodesk to buy from hold, saying the long-term outlook for the
company remains positive.
Micron Technology Inc. (MU) also put in a strong performance, as
the memory chipmaker's shares rose 48 cents, or 5.6%, to $9.09.
While Autodesk and Micron were performed well, STEC Inc. (STEC)
shares got crushed, falling $3.15, or more than 23%, to $10.27.
STEC, which makes solid-state memory storage products, suffered
at the hands of its own forecast as well as inventory carryovers
from EMC Corp. (EMC), its largest customer. Late Tuesday, STEC said
that a previously announced carryover of orders from EMC could
continue through the first half of 2010 and put a damper on overall
sales.
STEC also said that for the first quarter, it expects to earn
between 11 cents and 13 cents a share on revenue of $33 million to
$35 million. Analysts had forecast the company would earn 20 cents
a share on $70.3 million in sales.
At least three analysts who cover STEC cut their rating on the
stock.
Garmin Ltd. (GRMN) shares also retreated, falling $2, or almost
6%, to $32.45.
Late Tuesday, the maker of GPS and personal-navigation devices
warned that profit margins this year could be hurt by falling
prices and more competition.