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After Hours: Sturm Ruger, Texas Roadhouse, Apple Supplier IDT

Earnings reports from Sturm Ruger ( RGR ),  Apple ( AAPL ) supplier Integrated Device Tech ( IDTI ),   Monolithic Power Systems ( MPWR ), Texas Roadhouse ( TXRH ) and Qualys ( QLYS ) headline Monday’s after-hours session. Sturm Ruger Sturm Ruger reported $1.21 in diluted Q1 per-share earnings, a 49% spike, on a 26% revenue increase to $173.1 million, far above consensus views for 96 cents EPS on $147.7 million in sales. The gunmaker also declared a 48-cent per-share dividend, up from 35 cents in the prior quarter and 25 cents in the quarter before that. Sturm Ruger stock rose more than 4% in late trading to above 70 after closing up 5.5% in regular trade on the stock market today . That would put Ruger’s shares above their 50-day moving average for the first time since Ruger and rival Smith & Wesson ( SWHC ) crashed April 4 on fears of slowing gun sales. Smith & Wesson also rallied late after closing up 4.6%. IBD’s Take: How does Sturm Ruger stock stack up vs. objective targets and key rivals? Find out at IBD Stock Checkup Integrated Device Tech The Apple Watch supplier’s Q4 non-GAAP EPS popped 24% to 36 cents, surpassing analyst expectations for 33 cents but growth slowed for a fourth straight quarter. Revenue climbed 20% to $189.4 million, topping views for $187 million. Sales growth snapped a three-quarter string of deceleration. Integrated Device Tech shares rose 2% late after closing the regular session up 2.1%. Meanwhile, Apple shares closed down 0.1%, its eighth straight loss . Monolithic Power Systems Chip designer Monolithic Power said Q1 non-GAAP EPS jumped 22% to 45 cents, beating projections for 44 cents. Revenue grew 15% to $84.5 million vs. estimates for $83 million. For Q2, the Sony ( SNE ) PlayStation 4 chipmaker sees revenue in the range of $91 million-$95 million, with the $93 million midpoint ahead of views for $91.5 million. Monolithic Power shares were little changed in late trade after rising 1.8% in the regular session. Texas Roadhouse Texas Roadhouse reported Q1 EPS of 50 cents a share, including a 5-cent pre-tax charge. Wall Street had estimated 54 cents. Revenue increased 12% to $515.6 million, slightly below views for $515.9 million. Comparable sales grew 4.6% at company restaurants and 3.1% at franchise locations. Shares closed the regular session up 3.3% and jumped more than 4% late. IBD’s Take: How appetizing is Texas Roadhouse’s stock and how does it compare to rivals? Find out at IBD Stock Checkup Qualys Cloud-based security and compliance solutions provider Qualys ( QLYS ) notched a 40% per-share profit gain in Q1, with 21 cents a share on 23% revenue growth to $46.2 million. That topped estimates for 15 cents EPS and $45.1 million in revenue. For Q2, Qualys expects EPS of 15-17 cents, below views for 18 cents a share. The midpoint of revenue outlook of $47.6 million-$48.3 million — $47.95 million — is a hair above analyst forecasts for $47.91 million. For 2016, Qualys said it continues to see $195.6 million-$198.6 million in sales and 74-79 cents EPS, vs. views for $197 million in revenue and 77 cents EPS. The company also announced the appointment of Zynga ( ZNGA ) alum Melissa Fisher as its new CFO. Shares fell 4% late after rising 5.5% during the regular session. Anadarko Petroleum Anadarko Petroleum ( APC ) reported an adjusted Q1 loss of $1.12 a share vs. estimates for a loss of $1.16 a share. Revenue fell to $1.675 billion vs. views for $1.81 billion. Shares fell nearly 2% late after closing down 1.5%.

Sony PlayStation 4 Chipmaker Monolithic Power Systems Tops Q1 Views

Sony ( SNE ) PlayStation 4 chip supplier Monolithic Power Systems ( MPWR ) topped Wall Street’s Q1 expectations after the close Monday and issued current-quarter sales guidance that beat the consensus at the midpoint. Monolithic Power stock rose 1.75% in Monday’s regular session to 63.51, and was flat in after-hours trading. Shares are even for the year, but have recovered from an 8% dip through mid-February. Monolithic stock broke out of a cup-with-handle based last month at 65.36, so it’s down nearly 3% from the buy point. For Q1, Monolithic Power reported $84.5 million in sales and 45 cents earnings per share minus items, up 15% and 22%, respectively, vs. the year-earlier quarter. IBD Take: Monolithic Power gets great ratings of late, as you can see from IBD Stock Checkup. Both measures topped the consensus of eight analysts polled by Thomson Reuters for $83 million and 44 cents per share, and the midpoint of Monolithic Power’s earlier sales view for $81 million to $85 million. Current-quarter sales guidance for $91 million to $95 million would be up 12%-17% and beat analysts’ model for $91.5 million at the midpoint. Monolithic Power stock has an IBD Composite Rating of 97, out of a best-possible 99, trailing Nvidia ( NVDA ), Silicon Motion Tech ( SIMO ) and Maxlinear ( MXL ). Its chips are used in Sony’s PlayStation 4, Microsoft ( MSFT ) Xbox One and Blu-ray/DVD players. It competes against tech majors like Intel ( INTC ), Texas Instruments ( TXN ) and Qualcomm ( QCOM ), all Apple ( AAPL ) suppliers.

Has Apple Lost Its Mojo? Epic Stock Slide Continues For Eighth Day

Apple ( AAPL ) stock slid for the eighth straight trading session on Monday, as Wall Street analysts debated whether the consumer electronics giant has lost its mojo. Apple shares fell a fraction to 93.64 on the stock market today  and earlier were down as much as 1.4%, within pennies of a 22-month low. Apple stock has fallen in 11 of the past 12 trading sessions. Apple’s current eight-day losing streak is its longest since an eight-day losing streak ended July 28, 1998. Apple has been hammered since last Tuesday, when it reported its first year-over-year sales decline since 2003 and first-ever drop in iPhone unit sales in the March quarter. Bernstein analyst Toni Sacconaghi on Monday reiterated his outperform rating on Apple stock with a price target of 135. In the battle of bulls and bears over the stock, the bears are currently winning, he noted in a research report. Bears say Apple has lost its marketplace mojo, and that management’s inconsistent messages are increasingly worrisome and the company’s product innovation is too slow, Sacconaghi said. They also point to declining sales in once-hot China and signs that iPhone sales and profits have peaked, he said. Bulls say the iPhone business is still healthy and should return to growth with the iPhone 7. Also, the company is getting a lift from its growing services business, Sacconaghi said. “On net, while we believe that Apple will be challenged to grow earnings longer term, we do believe that the iPhone business is still healthy today, and that accordion-like replacement cycles between full refresh and S-cycles explain the majority of the year-over-year contraction we are seeing this year,” Sacconaghi said. “With the stock trading at trough valuation levels, we continue to see risk-reward as attractive at current levels.” RBC Capital Markets analyst Amit Daryanani on Monday maintained his outperform rating on Apple stock with a price target of 120. “With $200 billion-plus in cash, we believe the stock is undervalued at these levels,” he said in a report. “From a product perspective, we believe the company can continue to gain share in both the tablet and smartphone space.” RELATED: Apple Investors Worry That Glory Days Are Over