Ron Slaymaker News
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Texas Instruments Inc., the largest maker of analog chips, predicted second-quarter profit and sales that may fall short of analysts’ most bullish estimates as some consumer-electronics makers hold off on component purchases.
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Texas Instruments Inc., the largest maker of analog chips, forecast second-quarter sales and profit that may top some analysts’ estimates, helped by increased orders from makers of automotive and industrial-machine parts.
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Texas Instruments Inc. , the second- biggest U.S. chipmaker, said sales and profit will be at the upper end of earlier targets, buoyed by demand for industrial machinery.
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Texas Instruments Inc., the largest maker of analog chips, gave an updated fourth-quarter sales forecast that was in line with analysts’ estimates as customers seek to keep inventory low amid lackluster demand.
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Manufacturing in the U.S. probably kept expanding in March as business investment and consumer spending improved, economists said before a report today.
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Manufacturers boosted production in February heading into U.S. budget cuts and political squabbles this month that hurt consumer sentiment, reports today showed.
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Manufacturing grew less than forecast in March as orders and production cooled, highlighting the risk of a U.S. economic slowdown this quarter as federal budget cuts take effect.
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Manufacturing in the New York region expanded for a second month in March and industry managers grew more optimistic about the future, indicating the area’s factories are rebounding.
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Texas Instruments Inc., the largest maker of analog chips, raised the lower end of its forecasts for first-quarter sales and profit, as customers increase orders ahead of a projected rebound in electronics demand.
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Texas Instruments Inc., the largest maker of analog chips, forecast third-quarter sales and profit that may beat the low end of analysts’ estimates, defying predictions that a weaker economy would crimp orders.
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