ITworld.com
  Search  
ITworld Home Page ITworld Webcasts ITworld White Papers ITworld Newsletters ITworld News ITworld Topics Careers ITworld Voices ITwhirled Changing the way you view IT

Motorola confirms SEC inquiry

InfoWorld 4/2/01

Pia Landergren, InfoWorld

THE U.S. SECURITIES and Exchange Commission (SEC) is making an informal inquiry into why a number of analysts recently revised their earnings estimates down for Motorola, the company confirmed Friday.

On this topic

"The Securities and Exchange Commission has made an informal inquiry, and we are cooperating with them," said Motorola spokesperson Scott Wyman.

Various media reports on Thursday and Friday said that the SEC is looking into suspected violations of Regulation Fair Disclosure, a law that went into effect in October and which seeks to prevent companies from revealing information to analysts that could affect their stock price. All announcements on a public company's earnings and forecasts must be made to the public at the same time it's disclosed to analysts.

When asked if it was Motorola employees who had made the calls to analysts that led the analysts to revise their earnings estimates, Wyman said: "Not that I'm aware of." Employees from the investor relations department speak with analysts regularly, Wyman said. "But we don't believe there has been any violation of the full disclosure rule," he added.

"The key point here is that Motorola has not issued nor discussed any new information in addition to what we said on February 23," Wyman said.

On Feb. 27, a group of analysts polled by First Call/Thomson Financial predicted a loss of 4 cents per share for Motorola's first quarter. Then on March 8, analysts again revised their estimates down to a loss of 5 cents, on March 9 to a loss of 6 cents, and on March 10 to a loss of 7 cents, according to First Call/Thomson Financial. This is a long way down from the estimated 12 cents earnings per share that both Motorola and analysts had estimated before the company issued a profit warning on Feb. 23.

Motorola will announce its first-quarter earnings on April 10.

"We have no comment," said Carol Patterson, public affairs specialist at the SEC, when asked about the current inquiry. "As a rule, we don't comment on specific individuals or companies," she added.

Pia Landergren is the London bureau chief for IDG News Service.




Sponsored Links

IP Networks Boost Secure Health Communications
AT&T provides secure communication to keep health care moving forward.
Workflow Enabled Help Desk & IT Service Management
Automate service desk activities and integrate processes across IT. Learn more here.
SOLVE SUPPORT ISSUES on the First Call!
REMOTELY CONTROL AND CONFIGURE SYSTEMS. Easily install applications, updates. All from your Desktop!
Enterprise IP Goes Mobile
To maximize full productivity, companies must integrate their mobile applications with the IP network.
Used and Refurbished Cisco Routers
Purchase Your Routers From Network Liquidators. Savings of Up to 90% with a Lifetime Warranty!
» Buy a link now

Advertisements
Sponsored links
Top 5 Reasons to Combine App Performance and Security
KODAK i1400 Series Scanners stand up to the challenge
Locate Hidden Software on business PCs with this free tool
Bring harmony to your mix of UNIX-Linux-Windows computing environments
 Home   IT Management  Law and regulation  Regulatory organizations  SEC
www.itworld.com    open.itworld.com     security.itworld.com     smallbusiness.itworld.com
storage.itworld.com     utilitycomputing.itworld.com     wireless.itworld.com

 
Contact Us   About Us   Privacy Policy    Terms of Service   Reprints  

CIO   Computerworld   CSO   GamePro   Games.net   Industry Standard   Infoworld   ITworld  
JavaWorld   LinuxWorld  MacUser   Macworld   Network World   PC World   Playlist  

DEMO   IDG Connect   IDG Knowledge Hub   IDG TechNetwork   IDG World Expo  

Copyright © Computerworld, Inc. All rights reserved

Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of Computerworld Inc. is prohibited. Computerworld and Computerworld.com and the respective logos are trademarks of International Data Group Inc.