Oracle (Nasdaq: ORCL) Corp. (Nasdaq: ORCL) rose 1 1/16 to 28 9/16 Friday after the software maker reported solid results for the second fiscal quarter.
Analysts at Lehman Brothers and Prudential Securities reportedly repeated favorable recommendations on the stock following the news, with Lehman calling the shares a buy and Prudential touting them as a strong buy.
The Redwood Shores, California-based company said net income for the quarter ended November 30th rose 62 percent from a year earlier to US$623 million, or 11 cents per share. Revenue rose to $2.7 billion from $2.3 billion.
"Our applications business is strong and getting stronger," said chief executive officer Larry Ellison. "Oracle's new e-business suite puts every aspect of a business -- marketing, sales, service, procurement, supply chain, manufacturing, accounting, human resources -- everything, on the Internet."
Customers buying the suite, Ellison said, "don't need to do any systems integration."
"This quarter's results prove that we're winning more and more of these
best-of-breed battles against Ariba, i2, Siebel and other niche
specialists," Ellison continued. "Once a customer
uses one of our
applications, it's just a matter of time before they move to the entire
suite."
Oracle's cheery news came as software giant Microsoft Corp. (Nasdaq: MSFT) saw its shares
fall 6 5/16 to 49 3/16 after the company warned of a soft December quarter,
its first such warning in 10 years. Other companies in the computers,
components and software sector are also seeing tough times as sales
of personal
computers slow.
"We believe, like many other technology companies, that the current weakness
in worldwide economic conditions is resulting in a slowdown in PC sales,
corporate IT spending, and consumer online services
and advertising," said Microsoft chief financial officer John Connors.

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