Internet Stocks That Could Make You Mad Money
The information superhighway is proving to be a fast track to wealth for some investors.
While many still shudder when remembering their losses in the dot-bomb of 2000-01, tech earnings have helped bolster the stock market the past few months.
And exchange traded funds that group tech company stocks are shining.
One of the brightest performers for the past several weeks has been Merrill Lynch's Internet Architecture HOLDRs Trust (AMEX:IAH - News). It's up 24% for the year.
The seven-year-old fund tracks the performance of companies that have helped build and maintain the Internet. Of its 20 stocks, nearly 99% of its holdings are in the fund's top 10. Those 10 include some of the tech world's heaviest hitters.
Big Blue
And the heaviest of all is IBM (NYSE:IBM - News), the fund's top-weighted holding. Its stock climbed 4% last month after the company announced a second-quarter profit of $1.50 a share on better-than-expected earnings.
On Thursday, Big Blue launched a new ePedigree system to strike back at drug counterfeiters. The black market in counterfeit drugs is estimated to reach $75 billion by 2010.
The system will also help companies follow new track-and-trace regulations, which will be in effect in some states by 2009. Tagging each bottle or package with serial numbers will allow the system to track each stop on the supply chain, from manufacturer to distributor to point 15f sale at a pharmacy or hospital.
Recent mainframe simplifications and increased use of Linux have also helped boost IBM's stock performance, analysts say.
Another top holding, Juniper Networks (NasdaqGS:JNPR - News), continued to hit new highs this week. The uptrend follows a 12% surge last month after the network equipment maker raised its sales forecast to more than $2.7 billion from $2.6 billion.
The company recently announced an $86.2 million profit for the second quarter of 2007. Over the same period last year, Juniper lost $1.21 billion. The turnaround came as Juniper released new products and pushed service sales during the quarter.
Cisco Systems
Technology touchstone Cisco Systems (NasdaqGS:CSCO - News), another of the fund's top holdings, saw its stock climb more than 7% this week on huge volume. At 31.84, the stock is the highest it's been since 2004.
The swell came after officials announced Tuesday that the company's earnings per share leaped 32% to $1.17 in fiscal '07 from 89 cents in fiscal '06.
Companies' increased need for network upgrades helped fuel Cisco's earnings jump, said Chairman John Chambers. Investors were especially pleased that the company also raised its long-term revenue forecast.
Published by IBDLabels: CSCO, IAH, IBM, Internet Companies, JNPR
Internet Stocks That Could Make You Mad Money
The information superhighway is proving to be a fast track to wealth for some investors.
While many still shudder when remembering their losses in the dot-bomb of 2000-01, tech earnings have helped bolster the stock market the past few months.
And exchange traded funds that group tech company stocks are shining.
One of the brightest performers for the past several weeks has been Merrill Lynch's Internet Architecture HOLDRs Trust (AMEX:IAH - News). It's up 24% for the year.
The seven-year-old fund tracks the performance of companies that have helped build and maintain the Internet. Of its 20 stocks, nearly 99% of its holdings are in the fund's top 10. Those 10 include some of the tech world's heaviest hitters.
Big Blue
And the heaviest of all is IBM (NYSE:IBM - News), the fund's top-weighted holding. Its stock climbed 4% last month after the company announced a second-quarter profit of $1.50 a share on better-than-expected earnings.
On Thursday, Big Blue launched a new ePedigree system to strike back at drug counterfeiters. The black market in counterfeit drugs is estimated to reach $75 billion by 2010.
The system will also help companies follow new track-and-trace regulations, which will be in effect in some states by 2009. Tagging each bottle or package with serial numbers will allow the system to track each stop on the supply chain, from manufacturer to distributor to point 15f sale at a pharmacy or hospital.
Recent mainframe simplifications and increased use of Linux have also helped boost IBM's stock performance, analysts say.
Another top holding, Juniper Networks (NasdaqGS:JNPR - News), continued to hit new highs this week. The uptrend follows a 12% surge last month after the network equipment maker raised its sales forecast to more than $2.7 billion from $2.6 billion.
The company recently announced an $86.2 million profit for the second quarter of 2007. Over the same period last year, Juniper lost $1.21 billion. The turnaround came as Juniper released new products and pushed service sales during the quarter.
Cisco Systems
Technology touchstone Cisco Systems (NasdaqGS:CSCO - News), another of the fund's top holdings, saw its stock climb more than 7% this week on huge volume. At 31.84, the stock is the highest it's been since 2004.
The swell came after officials announced Tuesday that the company's earnings per share leaped 32% to $1.17 in fiscal '07 from 89 cents in fiscal '06.
Companies' increased need for network upgrades helped fuel Cisco's earnings jump, said Chairman John Chambers. Investors were especially pleased that the company also raised its long-term revenue forecast.
Published by IBD
While many still shudder when remembering their losses in the dot-bomb of 2000-01, tech earnings have helped bolster the stock market the past few months.
And exchange traded funds that group tech company stocks are shining.
One of the brightest performers for the past several weeks has been Merrill Lynch's Internet Architecture HOLDRs Trust (AMEX:IAH - News). It's up 24% for the year.
The seven-year-old fund tracks the performance of companies that have helped build and maintain the Internet. Of its 20 stocks, nearly 99% of its holdings are in the fund's top 10. Those 10 include some of the tech world's heaviest hitters.
Big Blue
And the heaviest of all is IBM (NYSE:IBM - News), the fund's top-weighted holding. Its stock climbed 4% last month after the company announced a second-quarter profit of $1.50 a share on better-than-expected earnings.
On Thursday, Big Blue launched a new ePedigree system to strike back at drug counterfeiters. The black market in counterfeit drugs is estimated to reach $75 billion by 2010.
The system will also help companies follow new track-and-trace regulations, which will be in effect in some states by 2009. Tagging each bottle or package with serial numbers will allow the system to track each stop on the supply chain, from manufacturer to distributor to point 15f sale at a pharmacy or hospital.
Recent mainframe simplifications and increased use of Linux have also helped boost IBM's stock performance, analysts say.
Another top holding, Juniper Networks (NasdaqGS:JNPR - News), continued to hit new highs this week. The uptrend follows a 12% surge last month after the network equipment maker raised its sales forecast to more than $2.7 billion from $2.6 billion.
The company recently announced an $86.2 million profit for the second quarter of 2007. Over the same period last year, Juniper lost $1.21 billion. The turnaround came as Juniper released new products and pushed service sales during the quarter.
Cisco Systems
Technology touchstone Cisco Systems (NasdaqGS:CSCO - News), another of the fund's top holdings, saw its stock climb more than 7% this week on huge volume. At 31.84, the stock is the highest it's been since 2004.
The swell came after officials announced Tuesday that the company's earnings per share leaped 32% to $1.17 in fiscal '07 from 89 cents in fiscal '06.
Companies' increased need for network upgrades helped fuel Cisco's earnings jump, said Chairman John Chambers. Investors were especially pleased that the company also raised its long-term revenue forecast.
Published by IBD
Labels: CSCO, IAH, IBM, Internet Companies, JNPR





