Archive for April 25th, 2008

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Shares of tire maker Goodyear Tire and Rubber (NYSE: GT) are trading up nicely in the premarket after the Akron, Ohio based company posted a profit of 60 cents a share for its first quarter, easily surpassing analyst estimates.

During its first quarter last year, the company posted a $174 million dollar loss, or -94 cents a share, and going into today’s earnings report Wall Street had been looking to see the company show Q1 earnings of 47 cents. So with the actual numbers, Goodyear is looking for a good day in today’s action. Excluding one-time items, the company stated that it had earned 67 cents per share.

Currently the stock has moved up 4.5% in premarket trading following its earnings release.

One of the factors contributing to the dramatic reversal of fortunes from last year’s first quarter was the 12-week United Steelworkers strike that impacted its Q1 2007 quarter. To refresh your memory, the strike started in October 2006 and ran into the begin of 2007. Another difference is that the 2007 quarter contained the company’s engineered products business. Goodyear sold off almost all of this division in August to The Carlyle Group for a reported $1.4 billion.

The company noted that a big reason for this quarter’s knockout numbers was its focus on higher-end tire products which enabled it able to thrive despite the current economic slowdown in America. While the company sold fewer tires world wide, the average price per tire rose by an impressive 7%.

All in all a great quarter for America’s largest tire maker.

Michael Fowlkes has worked as a stock trader for seven years and spent the last four years working as an analyst for the on the internet investment advisory service Investor’s Observer.

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Dionysius, God of Wine and Leaf, points out a story about the Russian government’s interest in expanding anti-extremism laws to include the blocking of websites and ISPs. The laws would match those already in use for the country’s print media. Russian world wide web users may soon be forced to deal with the same issues facing Chinese citizens. Quoting: “An official at the Russian prosecutor’s general office, Vyacheslav Sizov, told the Russian-language newspaper Rossiiskaya Gazeta that any web site that’s determined to host what he terms ‘extremist material’ would be blocked from being accessible from within the Russian Federation. Given the Putin government’s history with the media, ‘extremist material’ might be very broadly interpreted as any content unfriendly to the interests of the Russian government.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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