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Dow Chemical Earnings: What Matters

Believe it or not, Dow Chemicals (DOW) EPS tomorrow has become secondary.

We know eps will be weak, here is what we really want to know..

There are several questions that need to be answered:
1- What were equity earnings? These are the earnings from Dow’s various JV’s across the globe. Are they still growing?
2- The dividend. Now it is $1.68 a share for a 4.6% yield. Is it going up?
3- $9 billion. That is the amount Dow is getting from Kuwait for 50% of its commodity business. What is going to happen to it?
4- 2008. What is the outlook? We know the US will be weak but international growth will be strong. How will the JV with Kuwait affect earnings in 2008?
5- What else is in the works? Dow will be sitting on almost $12 billion after the Kuwait transaction, that means a major deal is possible. Could we have a stunning share repurchase of almost 20% of the outstanding shares? That would still leave plenty to do big time deals.
6- How much farther is Dow going to push into the AG business with its seeds division? Will they become an acquirer (DuPont (DD)?) with all their new-found wealth?

Liveris was very coy on CNBC last week when he instructed Becky Quick to “be sure you ask me about our strategy” when she inquired about Dow’s businesses. Liveris typically plays it close to the vest and this was an uncharacteristic statement from him.

This would lead me to believe plans are in the works and whatever it is, it is big…

Ought to be interesting tomorrow..

Disclosure (“none” means no position): Long DOW, None

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McDonalds: Another Oustanding Quarter

McDonalds has just enjoyed its 58th consecutive quarter of same store sales growth.

With Starbucks (SBUX) set to report dismal results this week, perhaps execs at the troubled coffee chain can finally admit they missed this one? By the way, going to an 8oz. $1 coffee is not the answer. If you claim to be upscale and want people to think of you that way, going low-scale in price is not the answer. Better service and larger less merchandise crowded locations are.

Back to Mickey-Dees:
— Global comparable sales increased 6.7%, on top of a 6.3% increase in
2006
— Growth in consolidated Company-operated and franchised restaurant
margins for the eighth consecutive quarter
— Consolidated operating income increased 22% (15% in constant
currencies)
— Earnings per share were $1.06, including $0.33 per share of income tax
benefits. Currency translation benefited earnings by $0.04 per share
— The Company repurchased over $1.3 billion of its stock

Full year 2007 highlights included:
— Revenues reached a record high of $22.8 billion on global comparable
sales of 6.8%
— Company-operated and franchised margins rose by 110 basis points and 80
basis points, respectively
— The Company returned $5.7 billion to shareholders through shares
repurchased and dividends paid

CEO Jim Skinner announced a change to the dividend structure. “Separately, given the substantial increase to the Company’s dividend over the last several years, McDonald’s Board of Directors has decided that beginning in 2008, dividends declared will be paid on a quarterly basis. On January 24, 2008, McDonald’s Board of Directors declared a dividend for the first quarter of 2008 of $0.375 per share payable on March 17, 2008 to shareholders of record on March 3, 2008. The Board of Directors will continue to review the Company’s dividend rate annually each fall.”

McDonalds also plans to return $17 billion to shareholders from 2007 to 2009 through both dividends and share repurchases.

Disclosure (“none” means no position): Long McDonalds, None

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Harley Davidson: Bought

Harley Davidson (HOG) reported results Friday and they were as expected, anemic. The guidance for 2008, was, too be honest a bit more rosy than I would have expected.

Here is the nitty gritty:

Fourth-quarter net income fell 26% to $186.1 million, or 78 cents a share, from $252.4 million, or 97 cents a share. Analysts expected earnings of 82 cents a share. Revenue fell 7.7% to $1.39 billion from $1.5 billion a year ago.

For 2008, the company said it expects “moderate” revenue growth and earnings per share growth of 4% to 7%, compared to 2007. The company said for the first quarter of 2008, it expects to ship between 68,000 and 72,000 Harley-Davidson motorcycles, compared to 67,761 units in the first quarter of 2007, and for the year overall it plans to ship fewer motorcycles than it expects dealers to sell.

Financial Services Segment
Harley-Davidson Financial Services (HDFS) reported fourth quarter operating income of $38.6 million, a decrease of $9.1 million or 19.1 percent compared to the year ago quarter. The decrease is primarily due to a $6.4 million write-down of retained securitization interests. HDFS full year operating income was $212.2 million, a 0.7 percent increase over last year’s $210.7 million.

Stock Repurchase
The Company repurchased 3.2 million shares of its common stock at a cost of $153.3 million during the fourth quarter of 2007. For the full year 2007, they repurchased 20.4 million shares at a total cost of $1.15 billion. On December 31, 2007, the Company had 238.5 million shares of common stock outstanding.

As of December 31, 2007, there are 23.1 million shares remaining on board-approved share repurchase authorizations. An additional board-approved share repurchase authorization is in place to offset option exercises. This is roughly 10% of outstanding shares.

Cash Flow
Cash and marketable securities totaled $405.3 million as of December 31, 2007. Cash flow from operations was $798.1 million, and capital expenditures were $242.1 million during the full year of 2007. In 2008, capital expenditures are expected to be between $240 and $260 million.

With the US market clearly going to be in the doldrums for at least the first half of 2008, HOG must be seeing very positive trends in international markets.

The stock was down after the news in a flat market. Trading at near 5 year lows and yielding over 3%, there is not much more downside to shares from here.

Time to buy for those who have been waiting. Now, the market has been trading in some wild swings lately and looks on Friday morning to be approaching its first winning week this year so expect a wild ride (inference intended). That being said, we have been waiting since shares approached $70 to buy Harley and the time is now.

We bought on Friday at $38.05 a share

Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long HOG

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Circuit City a Target?

Shares Circuit City (CC) surged over 20% last week on news that Hollywood Entertainment Corp founder Mark Wattles acquired a 6.5% stake.

According to a filing with the SEC, Wattles acquired the stake in Circuit City for “investment purposes and may buy additional shares, encourage the company to enter a merger, or nominate candidates for the board.”

Wattles, who owns 32 stores of the Ultimate Electronics Stores chain and his affiliated companies acquired 11 million shares of Circuit City after they met with management, the filing said. This comes on the heals of the Classic Fund Management Aktiengesellschaft, a Liechtenstein-based asset management company, disclosing it holds a 5.7 percent passive stake in Circuit City.

Wattles filed for a “blank check IPO” in December and wanted to raise up to $200 million “to focus on potential acquisition targets in the consumer products and retail industry.”

Is Circuit City a good takeover target? Yes, but only if current management is set free to “pursue other opportunities”. I have repeatedly written about management’s missteps and until it is clear they are gone, any speculation on the chain’s recovery because of who owns shares is a total gamble. I have said before CC has a great brand, good stores in great locations but they are just abysmally run.

Different people owning shares will not change that.

Disclosure (“none” means no position): None

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"Fast Money" for Monday


Monday’s Picks
Tim Seymour recommends buying Sasol (SSL) $43.11

Guy Adami prefers United Technologies (UTX) $72.75

Karen Finerman likes Golar (GLNG) $17.57

Pete Najarian thinks investors should trade alongside Warren Buffet and buy Burlington Northern (BNI) $81.8

Friday’s Results
Tim Seymour likes refiners such as Tesoro (TSO) $39.81 Close $39.29 LOSS

Guy Adami prefers Cisco Systems (CSCO) $25.11 Close $24.22 LOSS

Karen Finerman says get long Goldman Sachs (GS) $199.20 Close $191.37 LOSS

Pete Najarian thinks ConocoPhillips (COP) $74.47 Close $74.13 LOSS

2008 Records:
Brian Schaeffer= 0-1
Carter Worth= 0-1
Jon Najarian= 3-1
Jeff Macke= 6-4
Tim Seymore= 2-1
Guy Adami= 4-7
Pete Najarian= 3-5
Karen Finerman= 5-4

2007 Results (Since 6/21):
Guy Adami= 58-46 = 56%
Jeff Macke= 60-40 = 60%
Pete Najarian= 49-41 = 54%
Karen Finerman= 40-30 = 57%

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This Week’s Insider Purchases


Goodrich Petroleum Corp (GDP)= $2,244,000
Lions Gate Entertainment Corp (LGF) = $ 1,685,000
Smithfield Foods Inc (SFD)= $ 1,500,000
Arbinet Thexchange Inc (ARBX) = $1,400,000
Biofield Corp (BZET)= $1,299,000
Monsanto Co New (MON) = $ 1,029,000
Ruby Tuesday Inc (RT)= $ 1,026,000

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The Weeks Top Stories at VIN

Here are the top stories this week at Value Investing News

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Leucadia Purchases AmeriCredit Shares

In an SEC filing Friday after close, Leucadia (LUK) disclosed the purchase of 975,000 shares of AmeriCredit (ACF) at $11.59 a share.

This brings Leucadia’s total holdings to 17,884,300 shares as of 1/23.

The 17,884,300 shares reflects 5,593,100 shares of common stock of the Issuer directly owned by Baldwin Enterprises, Inc. (“Baldwin”) and indirectly owned by Phlcorp, Inc. (“Phlcorp”) and Leucadia National Corporation (“Leucadia”), the Reporting Persons’ obligation to purchase 11,316,200 shares of common stock of the Issuer on February 25, 2008 pursuant to the terms of a share forward transaction.

The agreement between Baldwin and Jefferies & Company, Inc., dated January 11, 2008, and the Reporting Persons’ obligation to purchase 975,000 shares of common stock of the Issuer on the earlier of (i) February 15, 2008, and (ii) the termination of all waiting periods applicable to Baldwin under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976, as amended, pursuant to the terms of a share forward transaction agreement between Baldwin Enterprises, Inc. and Ramius Capital Group, L.L.C. and its affiliates, entered into on January 23, 2008.

Disclosure (“none” means no position): None

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52 Week Low’s 1/25

Not much today…
(YDNT)= Young Innovations Inc
(USAK )= USA Truck Inc
(STKL )= Sunopta Inc
(PEBK )= Peoples Bancorp N C Inc
(NSE)= Mexco Energy Corp
(BHO )= B+H Ocean Carriers Ltd.
(BCRX )= BioCryst Pharmaceutic …
(ALO )= ALPHARMA Inc
(ACET )= Aceto Corporation

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Buffett Donates Shares

In an SEC filing today, Berkshire Hathaway’s (BRK.A) Warren Buffett disclosed donations of 3,090 shares of Class B Common Stock to charity.

The donation dates are:
8/28/07= 120 shares
9/5/2007= 1,080 shares
9/14/2007= 805 shares
10/10/2007= 10 shares
10/31/2007= 1,000 shares
12/19/2007= 75 shares

The charity(s)that received the shares were not disclosed.

Disclosure (“none” means no position):None

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4 Million iPhones? Really Steve?

Here is an article that gives serious doubt to Apple’s (AAPL) recent numbers.

The full article can be found here:

“The talk among Apple (AAPL) watchers today is Toni Sacconaghi’s dogged pursuit of the 4 million iPhones Steve Jobs claimed to have sold as of Jan. 15, the date of his Macworld keynote speech.

AT&T (T), the iPhone’s exclusive U.S. carrier, reported yesterday that it had activated “just at or just slightly under 2 million” iPhones. That’s quite a discrepancy.

Sacconaghi, Sanford Bernstein’s Apple specialist, did the math and concluded in a report to clients that there are roughly 1.4 million iPhones “missing in action,” either unlocked or sitting in inventory. Assuming that 20% of those iPhones were purchased to be unlocked (a generous assumption given that a jailbreak for the latest iPhone firmware was only released yesterday), he believes that there are at least 650,000 gathering dust somewhere — in warehouses, perhaps, or in closets, as unwanted Christmas presents waiting to be returned.

Here’s how he gets that number:

* 3.75 million iPhones sold as of Dec. 29 (per Apple’s Q1 report)
* minus 2 million iPhones activated through AT&T as of Dec. 31 (per AT&T)
* minus 350,000 iPhones sold in Europe via O2, T-Mobile and Orange
* minus 750,000 iPhones purchased to be unlocked
* equals 650,000 unaccounted for.

Sacconaghi concludes:

This is negative in two ways: (1) it indicates end-user demand for iPhone is lower than many investors may think based on Apple’s sales figure; and (2) it points to slower iPhone sales in the current quarter, since much of this inventory is likely to be drawn down.

Of course, compared to other Apple analysts, Sacconaghi is something of a bear. One day before the Q1 earnings report and the subsequent run on Apple shares, he went out on a limb and predicted that the company would sell only 7 million iPhones in 2008. That’s considerably less than the 10 million target Steve Jobs set — a goal COO Tim Cook said on Tuesday he remained “very confident” they would hit.

Most Apple watchers shared Cook’s confidence, given the 4 million number Jobs had trotted out at Macworld. Today they’re singing a different tune.

“Apple might have a demand problem,” writes Tom Krazit at CNET.

Russell Shaw at ZDNet says the iPhone is at a “crossing the chasm” moment, stuck between early adopters and the mainsteam, and predicts that to survive its price will have to come down to $299 by the end of May at the latest.

Ewan McLeod at the U.K.’s SMS Text News waxes positively elegiac in a post entitled “The Apple iPhone will only ever be a bit player”:

The geeks have all bought one and many have got theirs unlocked. The Nike wearing Soho crowd have splurged the cash. The wannabes and the I-must-have-that crowd have weighed in, swapped networks and got their devices. But that’s it. There’s a ton of people all sitting staring at the iPhone and — SADLY — (this is the bit that’s winding me up), turning their backs and walking away. (link)

This may be premature. A lot could change in the next 50 weeks. New apps. A 16 GB iPhone. A 3G model. New price points. New markets in Canada, Thailand, and maybe even China.

But one thing is certain: having promised and repromised to sell 10 million iPhones in 2008, there will be hell to pay in 2009 if Apple falls even a little bit short.”

Has anyone heard this stuff before? I really like the “lower the price to $299” comment. Didn’t I say that in May of 2007?

Disclosure (“none” means no position): Sold Apple $280 July calls when stock was at $165

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Friday’s Links

Stockmaster’s, WSJ, Sprint, “Under The Radar”

– A lot on bloggers “claim” results but these guys document their stuff.

– Good. A free site would have become clogged with ads and junk..

– This is really good news, the house cleaning has begun..

– For those who do not get it (it is free), Seeking Alpha has a great email they end out daily that contains the news you will not hear 10,000 times before lunch. I highly recommend it.

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The Case for Borders

Whitney Tilson was kind enough to send this to me regarding Borders (BGP)

Borders Group (BGP), Kian Ghazi, Hawkshaw, 9/07

Here’s a pitch on Borders…we’ve taken advantage of a significant pull back to ramp the position to one of the larger investments in our fund. We’ve been involved with Borders (BGP) for over a year now. Currently trading at ~$15.50, we believe BGP is worth at least $30/share with scenarios that could make it worth $35-45/share over time. Importantly, our view is in no way predicated on a merger or sale of BGP.

BGP has three divisions: Super Stores, Walden Books and an International Division (primarily UK and Australia). In March 2007, BGP management proposed a turnaround plan for the business that called for the divestiture of the International business, the closing of 250 of 564 Walden locations, and a renewed focus on every operational aspect of the Super Store business. BGP is in the midst of a multi-year capital spending program that has depressed historically strong free cash flows. However, we believe that the capital spending in the areas of inventory systems, store remodels to reduce sq. ft. to music (a major drag on comps the last few years), and development of an online channel represent the proper strategy to allow the Super Stores to generate a 9% EBITDA margin by 2009. This 9% margin is below past peak margins of 9.5-10% achieved as recently as 2004-2005. To generate this margin, one has to believe that the Super Stores can achieve a 2% comp and generate a 28.5% gross margin (vs 29.5% GMs in 2004-2005) as they reduce exposure to music and refine the loyalty program, which was launched in 2006.

BGP also has a significant working capital opportunity in the form of increasing inventory turns. BGP currently turns inventories at 1.6-1.7x vs. competitor Barnes and Noble at >2.5x. This gap represents a ~$500mm opportunity (vs the current EV of $1.3bn using average debt and cash). Importantly generating at least $200mm of this improvement is firmly with management’s control as they redefine current store level inventory management decisions and invest in new IT systems to go along with the recently added new distribution center.

Assuming that BGP can:

1. Get to 9% EBITDA margins in 2009 in its super store segment,
2. Generate $200mm of working capital from improved inventory turns.
3. Sell its International Business for $100mm [~0.2x estimated 2006 revs of assets for sale], and
4. Reduce current capex spending to ~$100mm starting in 2008,

Then:
Applying a 7.5x EBIT multiple to 2009 EBITDA-Maintenance Capex of $250mm (we use $75mm of maintenance capex to be conservative vs. management guidance of ~$50mm) suggests a value of $30 share. We use EBITDA less maintenance capex because depreciation is overstated.

The ~$40/share scenario comes from the possibility that BGP may be able to close the sales productivity gap between it and BKS. The $30 scenario assumes no improvement in relative productivity. However we believe that if BGP management can address the current problems in the business, it will then have a credible operating platform to attempt to address this productivity gap, which we believe is largely driven by BKS’ seasoned loyalty program, superior Starbucks productivity, and higher margin merchandise mix. In addition, a more rationale pricing posture between Borders and Barnes and Noble could dramatically improve the ROIs of both companies.
************************************************************************************

Now, with Ackman pushing his ownership to 18% and his economic stake to 26%, I think it is time to get on board here. These number make sense and are doable. With Pershing on the Board now, one can only assume management will begin to take step to accomplish these metrics.

Disclosure (“none” means no position):None

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Rick Santelli Calls Out Jim Cramer

Priceless…ypu have got to see this..

Adam Warner found this originally and has more commentary on his
site
.

Here is another Cramer Classic:

Disclosure (“none” means no position):Agree with Santelli

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Netflix: Video Stores On The Way Out

When you compare Netflix’s (NFLX) recent results to those of Blockbuster (BBI), you can only shake your head.

Netflix said Wednesday that its fourth-quarter profit rose 6% as subscribers increased. Net income was $15.8 million, or 24 cents a share for the quarter ended Dec. 31, compared with a profit of $14.9 million, or 21 cents a share a year earlier. Revenue rose to $302.4 million from $277.2 million, an increase of 9%. Subscriber acquisition costs in the quarter were $34.60 per gross add, down from $37.91 in the third quarter.

Analysts were expecting a profit of 14 cents a share on revenue of $301.7 million. Subscribers rose to 7.48 million from 6.32 million a year earlier.

On the conference call CEO Reed Hasting said, “For 2008, we expect to have more net adds than 2007, with a positive factor being less aggressive competition from Blockbuster Online ….”

He continued “Blockbuster Online is still active and still has several million subscribers. While they appear to have shifted to valuing profit over growth, they can change their mind again at any time. We are widening the gap between us however, and any further attack is unlikely to be as painful as their 2005 or 2007 thrusts.”

Even he does not expect Blockbuster to get its act together online for the next year

Since December 2005 the subscriber base has grown by 79% to 7.5 million subscribers., revenue has grown by 77% to $1.2 billion and they have nearly doubled free cash flow to $46 million.

It would appear based on ALL evidence to date Netflix took Blockbusters best shot (twice) and has come out the clear victor. Now it is on the the online game. Hastings did say that they are seeing good business from their younger subscribers in downloads and should in 2008, have the downloads ready for the Mac, high-definition DVD players, to game consoles and to dedicated Internet set-top boxes broadening the audience further.

A note: Not once in the entire call did they once mention “getting into the video store game”. The reason? It is over…

As a matter of fact, Hastings actually said “Unless video stores are reinvented, it may be that in five years, there are tens of thousands of kiosks, millions of online DVD renters and very few video stores.”

I have been saying this since last summer, get rid of the stores Blockbuster!!

Disclosure (“none” means no position): None

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