Calgon Carbon, DXP Enterprises and Herley Industries among 52-week highsCalgon Carbon Corp. (Nasdaq:CCC), DXP Enterprises Inc. (Nasdaq:DXPE) and Herley Industries Inc. (Nasdaq:HRLY) are among the new 52-week highs in Friday's trading among companies with market capitalizations under $1 billion. Also included among the results: Chardan 2008 China Acquisition Units (Nasdaq:CACAU), BWAY Holding Co. (Nasdaq:BWY), First of Long Island Corp. (Nasdaq:FLIC), Navios Maritime Acquisition Corp. (Nasdaq:NNA), Global Brands Acquisition Corp. (Nasdaq:GQN) and New York & Company Inc. (Nasdaq:NWY). Here are the new 52-week highs among small caps:
Transact Technologies Inc, Trans India Acquisition Ord Shs and K-Tron International Inc among 52-week highsTransact Technologies Inc. (Nasdaq:TACT), Trans India Acquisition (Nasdaq:TIL) and K-Tron International Inc. (Nasdaq:KTII) are among the new 52-week highs in Thursday's trading among companies with market capitalizations under $1 billion. Here are the new 52-week highs among small caps:
IPO Watch: GT Solarwww.gtsolar.com I’m starting to think that solar power deals are on par with special-purpose acquisition companies (or SPACs) and dry bulk shipping this year. After all, there have been two others to date: Real Goods Solar (Nasdaq:RSOL), which raised $55 million in May, and ReneSola (NYSE:SOL), which brought in $130 million in January. In a year with only 35 IPOs, that makes solar power a bona fide hot spot. GT Solar makes equipment used to fabricate photovoltaic cells, which collect sunlight and convert it into electricity. These are big machines needed to produce solar cells but sold to only a handful of buyers worldwide. For the fiscal year ended March 31, 2008, 62% of the company’s revenue came from just one customer. In years past, the customer base has been more diversified, but just barely. In fiscal 2007, for example, three customers contributed 70% of revenue. No matter how big the solar power industry becomes, GT Solar will always face a concentrated customer base. A good analogy is semiconductors, which are in everything these days but are fabricated by just a few companies. The company made $36.1 million in net income on $244.1 million in revenue for the March 31, 2008 fiscal year, its first profit ever. The year before, it had a net loss of $18.4 million on revenue of $60.1 million. The outlook for fiscal 2009 is good; the company has an order backlog of about $1.3 billion and deferred revenue from equipment shipped but not yet billed of $164.2 million. Profits should stay . . . spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer
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