2.9.08

Oracle releases enterprise pack for Eclipse

Oracle has expanded its Fusion Middleware with new components aimed at Java developers. The Enterprise Pack for Eclipse combines technology from Oracle Fusion Middleware and BEA Systems, which was acquired by the company in January for $8.5 billion.

It includes a set of Eclipse plug-ins to accelerate database, Java, Java EE, and Oracle WebLogic Server development. It will enable users to develop, debug, and deploy applications to Oracle WebLogic Server 10g R3, and supports new development features of Oracle WebLogic Server including FastSwap and the ability to redefine Java classes without redeployment.

It also supports developers working with web services, XML, the Spring Framework, JavaServer Faces, Cascading Style Sheets, and JavaScript.

Earlier this month, the company introduced Oracle WebLogic Server 10g R3, which also combines technology from Fusion Middleware and BEA Systems.

Ted Farrell, chief architect and senior vice president of tools and middleware at Oracle, said: "Continuing to enhance Oracle's Eclipse developer tools for Oracle Fusion Middleware demonstrates our commitment to providing developers productivity with choice. The Oracle Enterprise Pack for Eclipse helps to expand our offerings for the Eclipse and open source developer community."

Source: www.cbronline.com


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1.9.08

Breakout gains 'foreseen' for Oracle (ORCL)

"Technically, Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL) is now set up nicely in a base for a breakout," says Leo Fasciocco, a technical analyst who specializes in stocks breaking out above previous resistance levels.

In his Ticker Tape Digest, the newsletter advisor explains, "ORCL is in a good spot to be accumulated for a breakout, supported by favorable earnings prospects. And as a big cap play, it is most suitable for conservative investors."

"Oracle, based in Redwood City, California, sells a wide range of enterprise software solutions, including databases, middleware, and applications. With annual revenues of $22.4 billion, ORCL is one of the largest software companies. Its updates and product support are the most profitable segment of its operations. It accounts for 46% of revenues.

"The company has an active acquisition program that is a fundamental component of its strategy. ORCL has spent more than $28 billion in acquisitions the last four fiscal years.

"The stock's long-term chart shows a powerful run up to 40 during the 2000 bull market. It then went south with the stock market. It has since been working its way back. Short-term, the stock rallied from 18 to 23 and has formed a cup-and-handle base. That type of pattern is sometimes found with big caps. The stock is now set up nicely in a base for a potential breakout.

"The handle portion of the base has shown a nice contraction in volume, showing that selling pressure is drying up. That reflects itself in the accumulation-distribution line which is still trending higher.

"The company will be reporting a big jump in quarterly earnings soon. This fiscal year ending May 2009, analysts forecast a 17% increase in earnings to $1.48 a share from $1.26 a share a year ago. The stock sells with a price-earnings ratio of 14, which is low given the growth rate.

"What makes ORCL look good at this point is that earnings for the upcoming fiscal first quarter ending August 30 should jump 30% to 26 cents a share from 20 cents a year ago. The growth rate for the quarter is well above the norm and could attract attention and buyers for the stock.

"The highest estimate for the quarter is at 27 cents a share. We see chances for a modest upside surprise. The past three quarters, ORCL topped the consensus estimate by one to four cents a share.

"The stock's institutional sponsorship is excellent. The 5-star rated American Funds Fundamental Investors was a recent buyer of 1.7 million shares. Also 5-star rated Janus Twenty Fund added 19 million shares."

Author: Steven Halpern @ http://www.bloggingstocks.com


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29.8.08

Oracle shareholders criticize CEO Larry Ellison's $72-million pay package

They are pressing for a say on compensation at the software maker, whose 29% profit growth last fiscal year trailed the chief executive's 38% pay increase.

Oracle Corp. co-founder Larry Ellison, the fourth-richest man in America, is drawing criticism from some shareholders for a $72-million pay package that is 12 times bigger than the median pay of chief executives in the technology industry.

Ellison, who proposed the 38% raise and won approval from a committee of board members, is now the second-best-paid CEO of a public company in the U.S. He received about $1.7 million less than Merrill Lynch & Co. chief John Thain did in 2007. Oracle's market value is almost three times Merrill's.

Shareholders are pressing for a say on compensation at Redwood City, Calif.-based Oracle, the second-largest computer software maker, whose 29% profit growth last fiscal year trailed Ellison's pay increase. The proposal, by the religious group Marianist Province of the U.S., is winning support from activist shareholders such as the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees and the California Public Employees' Retirement System, or CalPERS.

"Ellison's compensation was already sky-high and didn't need to go higher," said Scott Adams, the American Federation's pension and investment analyst in Oakland.

The "say on pay" plan, which goes before investors at an Oct. 10 meeting, could get at least a third of the votes, Adams said. Even though that would fall short of the majority needed to pass, it still would show shareholder concern about Ellison's pay, he said. The American Federation's fund held 73,000 shares of Oracle as of May 15.

Groups filed similar proposals at 92 companies this year, up from 54 in 2007, Adams said. The insurance provider Aflac Inc. and phone carrier Verizon Communications Inc. are among the companies now adding such advisory votes.

The pay for Ellison, 64, doesn't include the $544 million he made last year by exercising stock options. His package was examined and ranked in a study by Graef Crystal, a former executive compensation consultant who is now a columnist for Bloomberg.

Crystal included Ellison's $1-million salary and $10.8-million bonus, plus $1.45 million in "other pay" to cover the cost of items such as his home security system and air travel. The study valued Ellison's options granted during the year at $58.8 million, a more conservative estimate than Oracle's figure, $71.4 million.

Oracle did not respond to requests for comment. In the Aug. 20 filing outlining Ellison's compensation, the software company said he had requested the pay increase, which was approved by compensation committee members Jeffrey S. Berg, Hector Garcia-Molina and Naomi O. Seligman. They cited an "objective of providing incentives for superior performance."

Forbes magazine estimated Ellison's worth at $26 billion in September, putting him behind Bill Gates, Warren E. Buffett and Sheldon Adelson, chief of Las Vegas Sands Corp.

Ellison's stake in the company he co-founded in 1977 accounted for most of that wealth. Gates is chairman of Microsoft Corp., the world's biggest software producer; Buffett is chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway Inc.

Ellison held 1.15 billion Oracle shares as of Feb. 15, more than 22% of the stock outstanding, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Oracle awarded Ellison an additional 7 million options in fiscal 2008, filings show.

"That kind of package becomes a red flag for investors," said Charles Elson, director of the John L. Weinberg Center for Corporate Governance at the University of Delaware.

"Would he leave if they didn't give him that much?" Elson asked. Would he work less hard?"

Source: Bloomberg News


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