segunda-feira, 26 de julho de 2010

FedEx raises outlook, cites improving economy


(Reuters) - FedEx Corp. raised its outlook on Monday due to a surge in the number of packages flowing through its air and ground networks, boosting its shares and the broader market.
FedEx shares were up about 5 percent during afternoon trading after the economic bellwether said a "continued modest recovery" worldwide would boost its business in the first quarter. The Standard & Poor's 500 was up 0.9 percent on both FedEx's forecast and a June jump in new home sales.
"This is macro-related. It's a volume-driven story," said BB&T Capital Markets analyst Kevin Sterling, who has a "buy" on FedEx shares and a price target of $100.
Both FedEx and larger rival United Parcel Service Inc., the world's largest package delivery company, are considered proxies for global economic health because their businesses expand during boom times and shrink in recessions.
For the first quarter ending on August 31, FedEx raised its earnings per share forecast to a range of $1.05 to $1.25, up from a prior view of 85 cents to $1.05 and ahead of analysts' estimates of $1.01, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Demand for high tech electronics and their components out of Asia is driving an estimated 20 percent first-quarter volume increase in the company's premium "International Priority" service, which ships goods from country to country as fast as overnight, said spokesman Jess Bunn. Last quarter, International Priority volume rose 23 percent.
Reuters