Meg Whitman, CEO of Hewlett-Packard, shares insight on the firm's corporate earnings and turnaround plan. She tells CNBC's David Faber that revenue growth is possible in fiscal 2014.
Earnings estimates for the S&P 350 are at their lowest point in 2012. Christine Short, senior manager at S&P Capital IQ, discusses whether the gloomy outlook is justified.
Shares of Research In Motion are soaring after its earnings announcement. CNBC's Jon Fortt says RIMM really needs to "wow" investors with its BlackBerry 10, and that its defensive strategy is working a lot better than people expected.
CNBC's Julia Boorstin provides a preview of Groupon's earnings and discusses the outlook on social tech stocks, in general. With Herman Leung, Susquehanna Financial Group analyst, and Mark May, Barclays senior analyst.
Simon Burge, CIO at ATI Asset Management, focuses on Rio Tinto ahead of its earnings report and says the company still looks promising despite its recent headwinds.
Although P&G’s guidance for the current quarter fell short of estimates, one analyst said the Street is sort of blowing it off as investors look to see if the traditionally insular company can adjust its growth strategy successfully.
Shayndi Raice, The Wall Street Journal, discusses whether investors should be concerned about Facebook's first earnings report, after Zynga's big miss yesterday. CNBCs Kayla Tausche and Julia Boorstin, weigh in.
Gene Munster, Piper Jaffray analyst, provides a preview of Facebook's first earnings report since going public, and discusses why he is optimistic about the social networking company and has a "buy" rating on the stock with a $41 price target.
Almost half of France's biggest companies report quarterly earnings between Thursday morning and Friday evening, the first set of numbers since socialist President Francois Hollande took office in May in the midst of en economic crisis.
The Farmville maker delivered disappointing earnings and its outlook fell far short of expectations, sending its shares and shares of Facebook tumbling after-hours.
What should investors be watching this week? Stephanie Link, TheStreet; David James, James Advantage Funds; and Jacob Frydman, United Realty Partners CEO, weigh in.
The "Squawk on the Street" team discusses Boeing & Caterpillar's bright earnings data, Apple's big miss on the top and bottom lines, and the Glass-Steagall debate on bank regulations.
CNBC's Julia Boorstin provides a preview of Facebook's first quarterly results as a publicly traded company, and a look at what investors and Wall Street expect from the social media giant, with CNBC's Kayla Tausche and Jon Steinberg, BuzzFeed president & COO.
CNBC's Jon Fortt provides a preview of the tech giant's numbers, while Shaw Wu, Sterne Agee analyst, explains why he has a "buy" rating on the stock and a $780 price target.
Will Power, Robert W. Baird analyst, provides a preview and the play on tech giant, Apple, ahead of the company's earnings report, after the closing bell today.
McDonald's is battling higher costs, and a weaker consumer, with CNBC's Mary Thompson; and previewing Texas Instruments and Apple ahead of earnings, with CNBC's Jon Fortt.