
Amazon misses Wall Street Expectations
Tiny profit margins
Amazon announced a pretty good quarterly result and immediately suffered from a bad case of falling shares because the cocaine nose jobs of Wall Street think that its profit margins are too thin.

Microsoft beats Wall Street predictions
A cloudy future is now a good thing
Software King of the World Microsoft beat the predictions of the cocaine nose jobs of Wall Street by reporting a quarterly revenue and profit which was bolstered by cost cutting and growing demand for its cloud products and services.

Apple has disappointing results
Tame Apple Press spins it
Waking up this morning you might be surprised to learn that Apple had poor results yesterday, probably because the Tame Apple Press is spinning the poor results like a mad thing.

AMD profits still a long way off
Revenue expected to be at least 10 per cent down
AMD is expected to tonight announce that its fourth quarter revenues are down 10 per cent as the outfit continues to try to turn its fortunes around.

TSMC does rather well
Will out perform the industry average
While many expected TSMC to suffer from from the downturn in China it appears that the company is still doing rather nicely thank-you.

Intel disappoints Wall Street wows others
Jury is still out if it will have a good 2016
Chipzilla reported strong quarterly profit but the news was overshadowed by concerns about slowing revenue growth in its highly profitable data centre business.

Intel escaping from PC Hell
Tonight's results will prove it
Chipzilla has had a rough time of it over recent years mostly for missing the mobile revolution, but tonight’s results should show that the outfit has managed to change.

HTC had the worst month in 11 years
Remember remember the month of December
HTC is having a tough time lately, but it looks like December was its worst month in 11 years.

Micron makes surprise loss
Suddenly it became like everone else
While the bottom had dropped out of the PC market, Micron had been managing to do quite well. Today though it suprised observers by forcasting a surprise loss for the second quarter.

Intel does not need PCs for growth
Predicts it can make its cash elsewhere
Intel said 2016 sales will climb in the "mid single-digit" percent range and said it didn’t need a buoyant personal-computer market to make piles of dosh.