COCO macht Euch poco loco :-)
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Eröffnet am: | 23.08.10 18:31 | von: thekey | Anzahl Beiträge: | 32 |
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Der eingezeichnete Abwärtstrend beginnt im Frühjahr 2010.
Sehr nettes Volumen gestern, ich bin gespannt, ob der Widerstand bei 5,50 als bewältigt gelten kann und sie sich jetzt mit den nächsthöheren Widerständen auseinandersetzen wird.
Übrigens hab ich auf der Webseite von coco den fälligen neuesten Quartalsbericht vermisst...?
(Quelle für die Zahlen ist www.barchart.com, die sich wiederum auf "Zacks" berufen).
(von www.barchart.com):
Sector Snap: Shares of for-profit schools sink
AP - Mon Jan 10, 9:48AM CST
Related Stocks
STRA - Strayer Education Inc.
Sym Last Chg Pct §
STRA 117.18 -36.06 -23.53% §
APOL 36.01 -1.97 -5.19% §
DV 42.56 -4.99 -10.49% §
EDMC 13.65 -2.97 -17.87% §
WPO 417.80 -24.76 -5.59% §
CPLA 53.89 -13.29 -19.78% §
COCO 4.60 -0.68 -12.88% §
CECO 18.60 -2.53-11.97%
§
NEW YORK (AP) — Shares of for-profit universities and training schools tumbled Monday after Strayer Education Inc. said new student enrollments for its winter term slid a steep 20 percent.
That's a marked change from last year, when new student sign-ups at Strayer jumped 16 percent during the winter term. They dipped just 2 percent during the most recent fall term. Strayer said that if the trends of its winter term continue throughout 2011, total student enrollment will be down 5 percent this year, resulting in earnings per share of $7.50 to $7.70. That's well below the $10.46 per share expected by analysts surveyed by FactSet.
The decline at Strayer, which the company's CEO attributed primarily to recent scrutiny by public policy commentators and media of the for-profit education industry, is likely going to drag down investor expectations for the rest of the sector, said UBS analyst Ariel Sokol.
Analysts, surprised by the significant drop in Strayer's enrollments, slashed earnings estimates and their ratings on the stock. Baird analyst Amy Junker cut her earnings estimate for 2011 to $8.15 per share from $11.38 per share. Sterne Agee analyst Arvind Bhatia cut his rating to "Sell" from "Neutral."
ANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) -- Corinthian Colleges Inc. said Wednesday that it returned to a profit in its fiscal second quarter as it slashed expenses in the face of slowing enrollment.
The results trumped Wall Street's expectations, and the company's shares rose more than 30 percent in morning trading.
Corinthian, which operates campuses under the names Everest, Heald and WyoTech, reported net income of $1.8 million, or 2 cents a share, for the three months that ended Dec. 31. That compares with a loss of $163.7 million, or $1.94 a share, a year earlier, when it reported $206 million in severance charges.
Excluding severance costs and other one-time items from both this year's second quarter and last year's, Corinthian's earnings amounted to 4 cents a share, compared with adjusted earnings of 23 cents per share in the second quarter last year, the company said.
Analysts polled by FactSet expected adjusted earnings of a penny a share.
Revenue for the latest quarter slipped almost 14 percent to $415.5 million but was in line with analysts' average forecast for $415.3 million.
Corinthian has cut its operating expenses by about $150 million over the past 18 months to help offset a decline in student enrollment, which fell almost 10 percent to 94,860 on Dec. 31, compared with 105,210 a year earlier.
The company's quarterly expenses for educational services, marketing and admissions and general and administrative functions all declined.
Management said new student enrollment declines slowed in the quarter, in part because of growth at Everest University Online. Quarterly new student enrollment fell 3 percent to 25,951 from 26,758, and the company expects it to rise slightly in the second half, which began Jan. 1.
For the current quarter, Corinthian expects adjusted earnings of 15 cents to 17 cents per share and revenue of $430 million to $440 million. For the year, it anticipates earning 30 cents to 33 cents per share.
Analysts expect third-quarter adjusted earnings of 13 cents a share and revenue of $424.8 million and full-year earnings of 23 cents a share and revenue of $1.67 billion, according to FactSet.
Corinthian shares jumped 95 cents, or 31.47 percent, to $3.98 by midday. The stock has traded in a range of $1.24 to $5.61 over the past 52 weeks.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/...ges-moves-2Q-apf-2208276350.html?x=0