Categories
Articles

Apple: Playing Games is Hurting Shareholders

The recent slide in Apple (AAPL) shares can be attributed to one thing: Steve Job’s playing games with expectations.

For too long Steve jobs has played games with the guidance he offers investors and analysts. Now it is coming back to haunt shareholders. Here is how it typically goes. Jobs give guidance that he knows is too low and then Apple blows it away and the stock surges. Analysts have relied on those expectations to make their estimates and have traditionally been too low.

Not being idiots, they caught on to the game and have ratcheted their expectations higher than they expect Jobs to “guide them”.

A funny thing happened this week. Apple guided analysts lower than what they thought the “low ball” expectation would be. Now, Apple was trading at almost 50 times earnings on Jan. 1 and have lost over 20% in the 23 days since then and look to get slashed about another 10% at the open today. The problem is that people just do not believe what Jobs is telling them.

What if he is finally telling the truth and the guidance is right on? What if iPod sales which are basically flat, despite new products stay that way or decline? iPhone sales in both France and the UK have been disappointing, is there a larger issue? Is this the reason for the lower estimate? What if the analysts have over estimated the expected “beat” Apple will produce next quarter and earnings growth is indeed going to slow? Does Apple expect the consumer slowdown to take a bigger chunk out of sales?

In the current environment, indecision equates to fear and shareholders are suffering.

If you are going to give guidance, conservative is one thing but playing games like Jobs has with it is just wrong because eventually it comes back to bite you. No one can doubt his genius or showmanship, it was hubris that was his downfall once and is hurting him again now.

Does this mean Apple will not beat the lower expectations? No. It does mean that because of Jobs’s actions shareholders are in for a real unnecessarily rocky ride..

Disclosure (“none” means no position): Sold July $280 2008 calls on Apple when shares were at $166

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

Categories
Articles

Ackman’s Letter to Moody’s: A Must Read

Below is a copy of the letter Bill Ackman sent to Moody’s rating agency regarding MBIA (MBI) and Ambac (ABK). Marty Whitman can call him what he wants, but the guy knows his stuff.

January 18, 2008

Mr. Raymond McDaniel Mr. Stephen Joynt
Executive Chairman and CEO CEO and President Moody’s Corp. Fitch Ratings
99 Church St. One State Street Plaza
New York, NY 10007 New York, NY 10004

Mr. Deven Sharma
President
Standard & Poor’s
55 Water Street
New York, NY 10041

Re: Bond Insurer Ratings

Ladies and Gentlemen:

As a Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organization, Moody’s, S&P, and Fitch have been granted a level of authority that capital market participants and Federal and State regulators have historically relied upon in evaluating the safety and soundness of corporations, regulated financial institutions, and structured finance securities. To state the obvious, because of your critical role in the capital markets, it is essential that the ratings you publish are the result of comprehensive and accurate analysis.

As you well know, we have privately, in meetings and correspondence with you, and publicly in various presentations that we have made, called into question your ratings of the bond insurance industry, in particular, the ratings for MBIA Insurance Corp. and Ambac Assurance Corp. and their holding companies.

Each of you, according to your recent public statements, is in various stages of updating your ratings of the bond insurers. Unfortunately, however, your previous ratings assessments have erred materially in their omission of certain critical analysis and the inclusion of outright errors in your work. As you conduct your most recent revisions of your analysis on the bond insurers, it is vital that you conduct a thorough assessment of all aspects of the bond insurers’ business lines, their reinsurers, and investment portfolios so that the rating decisions that you ultimately publish can be relied upon by capital markets participants.

Below we highlight a number of factors that you have failed to consider in your prior assessments of the bond insurers’ capital adequacy:

1) Impact of Losses Should be Measured on a Pre-tax Basis

We believe that each of you overstates the bond insurers capital cushion due to tax benefits you include in calculating the impact of RMBS and CDO losses. For instance, in S&P’s recent press release update published yesterday, MBIA’s losses on RMBS and CDOs are expressed as “after-tax” losses. In order, therefore, to determine the actual cash losses implied by S&P’s after-tax estimate, one must gross up the reported $3.18 billion of after-tax losses. Assuming a tax rate of 38%, it appears that S&P is estimating MBIA’s actual cash losses at $5.13 billion, nearly $2 billion more than the losses adjusted for tax benefits.

Insurance claims must be paid in cash. A bond insurer is only able to obtain tax benefits if the insurer is a going concern and is able to generate sufficient taxable income in the current or future years to offset the losses from paid insurance claims. Your analysis makes the aggressive assumption that the bond insurers will remain going concerns and will therefore be able to continue to write new premiums and generate income in the future.

Based on recent industry developments – including Berkshire Hathaway’s entrance into the business – it appears unlikely that MBIA, Ambac and many of the other bond insurers will be able to continue as going concerns. In a runoff scenario, we do not believe that the bond insurers will generate sufficient taxable income to offset the net operating losses generated by paid losses. While U.S. corporations can receive tax refunds by carrying back tax losses up to two calendar years, the amounts that could be refunded from carrying back losses are de minimis relative to claims payable. Even in the event the bond insurers generate taxable income in future years, it may be many years before these tax benefits can be realized, if ever, particularly in the event of corporate ownership changes caused by capital raising or stockholder turnover.

Net operating loss carryforwards are not cash and are not available to pay claims and should therefore not be deducted from losses in calculating bond insurer capital adequacy. By using after-tax loss estimates rather than pre-tax losses – the amount that will need to be paid in cash – you are understating the actual losses payable by more than 60%.

Your updated rating assessments should be adjusted to exclude tax benefits in your calculation of capital adequacy

2) Covenant Violations and Loss of Access to Liquidity Facilities

As a result of recent losses, both MBIA and Ambac have triggered covenant violations on their liquidity facilities. As a result, Ambac has lost access to $400 million of funding and MBIA to $500 million of capital. The impact of the loss of these facilities is material to the liquidity profile of the holding companies and their insurance subsidiaries and must be considered in your credit assessment.

3) Loss Estimates Must Incorporate Reinsured Exposures

Your ratings of the bond insurers are based on the bond insurers’ net credit exposures. That is, you reduce their credit exposure by those exposures that have been reinsured. This is best understood by example.

As of September 30, 2007, MBIA has re-insured approximately $80 billion of par value
of its exposures. More than $42 billion of this reinsurance was purchased from Channel Re, a Bermuda- based reinsurer whose only customer is MBIA. The two most senior officers of Channel Re are former executives of MBIA. MBIA owns 17% of the company and has two representatives on Channel Re’s board of directors.

On recent conference calls, Moody’s and S&P have stated that they have not yet updated their ratings of the monoline reinsurers including Channel Re. Earlier this week, on January 16th, Partner Re and Renaissance Re, the majority equity owners of Channel Re, wrote off the entire value of their investments in Channel Re due to losses it has recently incurred that substantially exceed Channel Re’s capital, an impairment that Channel Re’s two majority owners have concluded is “other than temporary.”

Despite the fact that Channel Re has negative book equity and $42 billion of MBIA’s credit exposure – $21.5 billion of which is CDOs of ABS or CLO/CBOs – Moody’s and S&P continue to rate the company Triple A with a stable outlook. Fitch does not rate Channel Re and apparently relies on S&P’s and Moody’s stale Triple A ratings in its
analysis of MBIA’s capital adequacy.

Captive reinsurers whose ratings are not regularly updated offer the potential for abuse.

We believe that MBIA reinsured on a quota share basis 25% of its 2007 CDO transactions with Channel Re. As a result of Moody’s and S&P not updating its ratings of Channel Re, these exposures do not appear on MBIA’s list of exposures and have not been included in your calculation of MBIA’s capital adequacy.

MBIA’s second largest reinsurer is Ram Re which has reinsured $11 billion of par as of September 30, 2007. While the rating agencies have not updated their credit ratings of Ram Re, the market appears to have already done so. The publicly traded stock of Ram Holdings Ltd., the parent company of Ram Re, has declined 92% in the last year. The company currently trades as a penny stock with a market value of $32 million.

We believe that Ram Re is substantially undercapitalized and therefore, like Channel Re, is unlikely to be able to meet its obligations to MBIA.

We also note that MBIA reinsures Ambac, and Ambac reinsures MBIA. You must also consider the iterative impact of downgrades of one on the other with respect to both reinsurance and their respective guarantees of each other’s investment portfolio assets which we discuss further below.

In your updated assessment, it is critical that you update your ratings of the bond insurers’ reinsurers and reconsolidate and calculate the losses on these exposures that have been reinsured with reinsurers that are inadequately capitalized.

4) Investment Portfolios are Riskier Than They Appear

As you are well aware, the investment portfolios of the bond insurers include a substantial amount, often a majority, of bonds that are guaranteed by either the bond insurer itself or by other bond insurers. The bond insurers include these guarantees in calculating the weighted average ratings of their investment portfolios. We note that a minimum average Double A rating is a key rating agency criterion for the insurers’ Triple A rating.

A guaranty to oneself is of course worthless and therefore you should exclude the bond insurers’ guaranty of its own investment obligations and use the underlying ratings of these instruments in determining the portfolios’ credit quality.

You should also carefully calculate the impact of a downgrade of the bonds held by one bond insurer that are guaranteed by other insurers in your calculation of capital adequacy. In light of the general distress in the industry, we believe that the rating agencies should evaluate the bond insurers’ investment portfolios as considered on an underlying rating basis.

5) Commercial Mortgage Backed Securities (CMBS)

To date, you have limited your analysis to RMBS securities and other structured finance securities with exposure to RMBS (CDOs). This limited review of exposures ignores the fact that the same lending practices and flawed incentive schemes that fueled the subprime lending bubble have been very much at work in CMBS and corporate finance.

On January 17, 2008, Fitch commented that it believed that CMBS delinquencies are “likely to double, and perhaps even triple, by the end of 2008.” As of September 30, 2007, MBIA had insured $43 billion net par of CMBS securities, the vast majority of which was underwritten in the past two years. Failing to consider the potential for losses in this portfolio in your calculation of capital adequacy is simply negligent.

6) Claims-Paying Resources Definition Overstates Capital Available to Pay Claims

The rating agencies have adopted the bond insurance industry’s definition of capital in the form of “Claims Paying Resources” or “CPR.” We believe there are significant flaws with the calculation of CPR used by the industry and the rating agencies.

First, bond insurers include the present value of future premiums discounted at extremely low discount rates ~5% in their calculation of claims paying resources. Substantially all of these premiums are from structured finance guarantees. We believe that the bond insurers and the rating agencies do not adequately consider the facts that:

(1) when structured finance obligations default, accelerate, or otherwise prepay ahead of schedule these premiums disappear,
(2) purchasers of secondary market guarantees are likely to terminate their periodic premium payments because of the deteriorating credit quality of the bond insurers,
(3) the reserves for losses on these exposures (for example 12% of premium for MBIA) have proven to be inadequate and therefore overstate the net premium income, and
(4) there is no provision for overhead, remediation, legal or other costs required for the bond insurers to run their business going forward.

There is also no mechanism whereby the bond insurers can borrow against these potential future premiums to be used to pay claims in the present day.

There is no other financial institution in the world which takes the present value of interest spread income on loans in its portfolio and adds it to its capital. For all of the above reasons, we believe that the present value of future premiums should not be included in CPR.

CPR includes the bond insurers’ so-called depression lines of credit. As you well know, depression lines of credit can only be drawn to pay claims on municipal obligations and only after a substantial deductible. In that the losses are occurring primarily on structured finance obligations, these lines of credit should not be included in CPR

The Capital Base included in CPR is also likely to be overstated because the investment assets of the bond insurers consist primarily of bond insurer guaranteed obligations that are valued inclusive of the guarantee, when they should be valued on an unwrapped basis. The high degree of balance sheet leverage for certain bond insurers means that small changes in the values of these portfolios have a large impact on the bond insurers’ capital base.

You should adjust your estimate of CPR for each insurer to reflect the above factors in order to accurately establish the capital available to pay claims.

7) MBIA’s $1 Billion Surplus Note Issuance

Last Friday, MBIA priced an offering of surplus notes at par with a 14% yield. Within one week the notes traded down to the mid-70s and have a yield to call of more than 20%. Previous to their pricing, the notes were rated by Moody’s and S&P at Double A.

The MBIA surplus note issuance is perhaps the clearest example of the failure of the rating agencies to accurately assess the creditworthiness of a bond insurer. MBIA is still rated Triple A by all three raters. The notes received a Double A rating because of their subordination to the other obligations of MBIA Insurance Corporation. That said, how can a billion dollars of Double A rated obligations sell in a cash transaction between sophisticated parties at a 14% yield, and then trade to yield of 20% or more — a rate consistent with a Triple C or near-to-default obligation?

Bank of America 5 ¾% bonds due 2017, obligations of a financial institution that is also rated Double A, closed today at 5.55% yield, a more than 15 percentage point lower rate than the MBIA surplus notes. This is prima facie evidence that your ratings of MBIA are overstated.

8) Billions of MBIA’s CDO Exposure Require Payment on Default

You have stated that bond insurers have no accelerating CDO guarantees and that all of their contracts are structured as “pay-as-you-go.” I quote S&P from a paragraph entitled, “Time is On Their Side,” in their December 19, 2007 report: “Detailed Results of Subprime Stress Test of Financial Guarantors.”

“As for swap exposure, except for ACA there are no collateral posting requirements and swaps are written in pay-as-you-go format.”

On January 9, 2008, MBIA filed a copy of a powerpoint presentation which was used in the Surplus Notes offering road show. On page 8, MBIA states that $8.1 billion of its Multi-sector CDOs require payment with “Credit events as they occur.”

The liquidity demands of accelerating CDO exposure create extreme liquidity risk and must be considered in the context of the bond insurer ratings. We encourage you to examine all of the bond insurers CDS/CDO exposure to determine the amount of exposure that is not pay-as-you-go, but rather accelerates, and consider the liquidity demands of such exposures in your rating assessments.

9) Holding Company Liquidity Risk

In light of recent events, we believe it is likely that most bond insurers will be prevented from upstreaming dividends to their holding companies as a result of regulatory intervention, as regulators work to preserve capital for policyholders.

Most bond insurer holding companies have limited cash, have lost or will lose access to liquidity facilities, and have substantial cash needs for interest payments, operating expenses, and dividends (for so long as they continue to be paid). In addition, bond insurers with substantial investment management or swap operations have additional liquidity needs in the event of a downgrade.

We believe that both MBIA and Ambac have substantial collateral posting obligations in the event of a holding company downgrade. For example, MBIA has $45 billion of derivative obligations at the holding company that relate to currency, interest-rate, and credit default swaps that the holding company has entered into. The combination of volatility in each of these markets and the increased collateral demands required in holding company downgrade scenarios will put a severe strain on holding company
liquidity.

The bond insurers’ muni-GIC business is also a large potential liquidity strain as municipalities withdraw funds from these GIC programs, assets must be liquidated, and/or collateral must be posted. Various MTM programs also create liquidity risk as assets may have to be sold to meet redeeming bondholders. The liquidity risks of these programs and the underlying assets should be carefully examined.

ACA’s immolation is but one example of what happens to a once-investment grade bond insurer which, if downgraded, is required to post collateral.

In addition, as a result of shareholder, bondholder, and/or surplus noteholder litigation, we expect holding company legal expenses and eventual litigation claims to rise substantially. Because the holding companies typically provide indemnities for employees and directors, we would expect that directors would be loathe to allow liquidity to leave the holding company estate, depriving directors and employees of the resources to protect themselves from claims. In these circumstances, we would expect companies to seek bankruptcy as a means to protect the allocation of value among various stakeholders.

10) MBIA – Warburg Pincus Transaction

You have assumed in your analysis that the Warburg Pincus deal and follow-on rights offering are certainties even though neither transaction has closed. While Warburg has made affirmative statements about the transaction, both publicly as well as privately, to surplus note buyers and the media, we believe there continues to be transaction closure risk for both the initial stock purchase and future rights offering, with the rights offering having greater uncertainty.

You have also assumed that 100% of the $1 billion Warburg deal will be downstreamed to the insurance subsidiaries and this, too, is not a certainty. You should receive assurances from MBIA and require it to contribute the full billion dollars to its insurance subsidiaries before you include the funds in calculating insurance company capital.

With the collapse in MBIA’s stock price and today’s downgrade of Ambac, we believe it will be difficult for MBIA to execute the rights offering, particularly before the March 31st, 2008 drop dead date. With the stock at $8.55 per share and the market aware that the $500 million in rights offering proceeds is insufficient to adequately capitalize the company, it will be difficult to set a market-clearing price. Assuming for a moment the price is set at $5.00 per share, the company would have to issue 100 million shares and may sell control to Warburg at a discount in the event shareholders elect not to participate. We believe a shareholder vote and approved registration statement will likely be required in such a circumstance, delaying the ability to consummate the transaction beyond the March 31st Warburg backstop drop dead date.

11) Future Business Prospects and Franchise Value Have Been Irreparably
Destroyed

Following the dramatic decline in share prices, widening of credit protection spreads, dismal performance of the high yield surplus note issuance, and recognition of multibillion dollar losses in a supposed “no-loss” business, the ability of bond insurers to market their “AAA” seal of approval has been permanently undermined. As uncertainty has grown, municipalities have raised capital without insurance and found that they can borrow at attractive rates as compared to historical insured bond issuances.

The entrance of Berkshire Hathaway is a devastating competitive reality that will capture the lion’s share of an already shrinking market for municipal bond insurance. While some commentators have suggested that this might create a pricing umbrella that will benefit the existing bond insurers, this is demonstrably false. Because Berkshire Hathaway already possesses a real Triple A rating, the bonds that are wrapped with its guarantee will trade with a tighter spread when compared to a bond insured by a traditional bond insurer, even one without legacy structured finance exposure.

Consequently, Berkshire will be able to charge higher premiums than the other monolines by taking a higher percentage of the spread (perhaps as much as 80% or more) that is saved through the use of insurance, and still provide the issuer with an overall lower cost of borrowing that if they bought insurance from a traditional monoline. As such, we believe that Berkshire Hathaway will likely quickly reach an 80%-90% market share of municipal bond insurance.

12) Going Concern Opinion

In light of all of the above and other current developments, we believe it will be difficult for MBIA, Ambac, and certain other bond insurers to obtain going concern opinions from their auditors. You should consider the likelihood of the insurers’ obtaining clean opinions and the implications if they do not in your rating assessments.

Lastly I encourage you to ask yourself the following question while looking at your image in the mirror:

Does a company deserve your highest Triple A rating whose stock price has declined 90%, has cut its dividend, is scrambling to raise capital, completed a partial financing at 14% interest (now trading at a 20% yield one week later), has incurred losses massively in excess of its promised zero-loss expectations wiping out more than half of book value, with Berkshire Hathaway as a new competitor, having lost access to its only liquidity facility, and having concealed material information from the marketplace?

Can this possibly make sense?

Please call me if you have any questions about the above. As usual, I will make myself available at your convenience.

Sincerely,

William A. Ackman

Disclosure (“none” means no position): None

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

Categories
Articles

Borders New Board Member: The Details

Here are the details of Richard Mcguire’s addition to the Board of Directors of Borders (BGP)

From the SEC filing:
“On January 17, 2008, the Issuer and Richard T. Mcguire, III, a partner of
Pershing Square, entered into the January 17, 2008 Letter Agreement, in
connection with the appointment of Mr. Mcguire to the Board. The January 17,
2008 Letter Agreement
provides that it is intended solely for the benefit of the
Issuer and contains a series of undertakings by Mr. Mcguire, Pershing Square,
and the investment funds that Pershing Square advises, including the Pershing
Square Funds, which will be effective while Mr. Mcguire is a director of the
Issuer.

The January 17, 2008 Letter Agreement contains undertakings, including,
among other things, that relate to certain confidentiality and regulatory
issues. The January 17, 2008 Letter Agreement also provides that while Mr.
Mcguire serves on the Board, and for two weeks after notice of his resignation,
Pershing Square and any of the investment funds Pershing Square advises will not
cross the 20% beneficial ownership threshold with respect to the Common Stock,
unless two weeks’ prior notice is given to the Issuer of Pershing Square’s
intent to do so, and if Pershing Square and the investment funds Pershing Square
advises dispose of their interests in the Common Stock such that they cease to
own at least five percent of the Common Stock, Mr. Mcguire will offer his
resignation to the Board.

This summary of the January 17, 2008 Letter Agreement
is qualified in its entirety by reference to the January 17, 2008 Letter
Agreement, a copy of which is attached hereto as Exhibit 99.1 and is
incorporated herein by reference.”

As of January 17, 2008, Pershing had direct ownewrship of 10,597,880 shares of Common Stock (approximately 18.0% of the outstanding shares) and total economic exposure on 15,403,343 shares (approximately 26.2% of the outstanding shares).

Disclosure (“none” means no position): None

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

Categories
Articles

Bank of America’s Earnings Call: Eye Opening

There were some things said on the Bank of America (BAC) call that has to make anyone investing in financials feel real good.

Bank of America, trading at just under 9 times 2008’s estimated (by the company) earnings ($4 a share), yielding a very safe 6.8% and trading at 1.1 times book value, may be a screaming buy.

Here are some of the notables:

Dividend:
Mike Mayo – Deutsche Bank
“And then lastly, this is not just unique to you, but you intend to raise capital yet the dividend level seems kind of precious to maintain, I just conceptually, why is the dividend so important to maintain when you’re raising so much more capital and your tangible equity ratios at 3.6%?”

Ken Lewis
“Well just because, you know if you’ll think about over a broader term or have a longer term perspective, we’ll get back to the capital levels pretty quickly and return to a more normal state with where we think earnings will go, so it’s just, we think it’s so temporary that that’s a better way to go Mike.”

Raise More Capital vs Acquisitions:
Meredith Whitney – Oppenheimer
“Okay, I’m sorry I lied, one last follow up. If you guys look at the option that you have on your CCB ownership and then look at the capital levels that you have now and the opportunities that come about because we are in a distressed market for financials, what’s your priority in terms of securing the capital levels to the 8% or taking advantage of an opportunity that may come about this year? That’s it and I’m done.”

Ken Lewis
“It’s a combination Meredith.”

On what type of economic growth is going into earnings expectations:
Betsy Graseck – Morgan Stanley
“Okay and just, a little bit bigger picture, what kind of economic environment do you have baked into your tier one ratio outlook?”

Ken Lewis
“Very, very modest growth, virtually none in the first half and then picking up in the third and fourth quarters to possibly get to a 2% growth rate by year end. But very modest growth but not a recession.”

While folks are running around screaming about the “death of financials” those very institutions are quietly expecting a modest year. Now when you have catastrophic expectations baked into share prices and get modest results, you can get dramatic share price appreciation. We have heard from Wells Fargo (WFC) and Wachovia (WB) and both are optimistic about 2008.

Somebody is way wrong here…I think the doubters are

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

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

Categories
Articles

Wednesday’s Upgrades and Downgrades


UPGRADES
Blackboard (BBBB)= Sun Trust Rbsn Humphrey Neutral » Buy
Openwave (OPWV)= Brean Murray Hold » Buy
QLT Inc (QLTI)= BMO Capital Markets Market Perform » Outperform
Ensign Group (ENSG)= Stifel Nicolaus Hold » Buy
CF Industries (CF)= JP Morgan Neutral » Overweight
NYMEX (NMX)= JP Morgan Neutral » Overweight
Netflix (NFLX)= JP Morgan Underweight » Neutral
Lowe’s (LOW)= Bernstein Mkt Perform » Outperform
Kohl’s (KSS)= Bernstein Mkt Perform » Outperform
Barrick Gold (ABX)= Credit Suisse Neutral » Outperform
Occam Networks (OCNW)= Merriman Curhan Ford Neutral » Buy

DOWNGRADES
Northstar Neuroscience (NSTR)= Jefferies & Co Buy » Underperform
Cheesecake Factory (CAKE)= MKM Partners Buy » Neutral
Bryn Mawr Bank (BMTC)= FTN Midwest Buy » Neutral
American Equity Investment Life (AEL)= Citigroup Buy » Hold
Mobile TeleSystems (MBT)= Credit Suisse Outperform » Neutral
Penson Worldwide (PNSN)= JP Morgan Overweight » Neutral
Oxford Industries (OXM)= Piper Jaffray Buy » Neutral
American Express (AXP)= Citigroup Buy » Hold
Medco Health Solutions (MHS)= UBS Buy » Neutral
NCI Building Sys (NCS)= UBS Buy » Neutral
Luxottica (LUX)= Lehman Brothers Equal-weight » Underweight
Kendle (KNDL)= Jefferies & Co Buy » Hold
Superior Offshore (DEEP)= Johnson Rice Overweight » Equal Weight
Lululemon Athletica (LULU)= BMO Capital Markets Market Perform » Underperform

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

Categories
Articles

Wachovia is Optimistic

Wachovia’s (WB) fourth-quarter net income plummeted 98%, as the company’s deteriorating lending portfolio forced it to dramatically increase its loan-loss provision. Anyone surprised?

The Numbers:
* Reported net income of $51 million, or three cents a share, versus $2.3 billion, or $1.20 a share, a year earlier. Excluding items, earnings from continuing operations were 8 cents a share, versus $1.19 a share a year earlier.
* Increased its loan-loss provision to $1.5 billion from $206 million.
* Revenue fell 17% to $7.2 billion amid $1.7 billion in mortgage-related losses.
* Capital-markets business, which includes brokerage and asset-management operations, rose 42% to $350 million.
* Net interest margin, the difference between interest earned on loans and paid on deposits, dropped to 2.88% from 3.09%.

Chairman and Chief Executive Ken Thompson said “The continued turmoil in the capital markets and the dramatic change in the credit environment diminished our fourth quarter results substantially. We took active and prudent steps in the second half of the year to deal with the market disruption and credit deterioration, and we believe this allows us to move forward from a position of strength despite the uncertain economic environment.”

Thompson seems much more confident that other banks executives. Bank of America (BAC) Ken Thompson said after todays results were released “We are cautiously optimistic about 2008, though we believe economic growth will be anemic at best in the first half.”

Wells Fargo President and CEO John Stumpf said “We expect the environment to remain challenging in 2008, particularly in the consumer sector, but we’re as committed as ever to satisfying all our customers’ financial needs and believe we have the right strategy and team in place to do just that.”

Citigroup (C) CEO Vikrim Pandit said, well, it did not matter what he said because until the bank has a stated direction, no one is listening.

Merrill Lynch’s John Thain said, “as I look ahead to 2008, the firm is intensely focused on continuing this momentum and delivering growth and increased profitability for our shareholders and employees.” Thain really did not say anything, it just sounds like he did. They all are “focused”, what do you expect for results, John.

JP Morgan’s (JPM) Jamie Dimon commented, “We remain extremely cautious as we enter 2008. If the economy weakens substantially from here – for which, as a company, we need to be prepared, it will negatively affect business volumes and drive credit costs higher.”

So, Thompson is either living in lala land or Wachovia has wrote down assets to ludicrous levels and recognizes that the downside is virtually non existent from here. I am in the “write down” camp. If one listened to Merrill’s Thain last week he stated their CDO’s are written down to “interest only valuations” which is pennies on the dollar.

Now is the time for them to do it, clear the deck and move forward. The Fed gave them a big boost with the 75 point cut today and more is on the way. This ought to boost margins immediately and may stimulate new business in refinances and new mortgages, both good for banks.

Thompson has put himself out there more than once for 2008. His track record at Wachovia has been a very good one and until that changes, I will figure he has a handle on his bank.

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

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

Categories
Articles

Leucadia Ups Stake in AmeriCredit to Almost 20%

Leucadia (LUK) commit to purchase almost 20% of AmeriCredit (ACF) shares in an SEC filing Tuesday night.

From the filing:
“As of the close of business on the date of this Statement, the
Reporting Persons (Leucadia and its owned entities) may be deemed to beneficially own collectively an aggregate of 22,159,300 shares of Common Stock, representing approximately 19.4% of the shares of Common Stock presently outstanding. All percentages in this Item 5 are based on 114,162,314 shares of Common Stock outstanding as of October 31, 2007, as set forth in the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended September 30, 2007.”

What does Leucadia think AmeriCredit may be worth? Consider this nugget:

“Baldwin (Leucadia subsidiary) and Jefferies (broker)have entered into a share forward transaction agreement, dated January 11, 2008, pursuant to which Baldwin will acquire an aggregate of 11,316,200 shares of Common Stock at a price of $12.90 per share on February 25, 2008. Baldwin paid $72,989,490 to Jefferies on January 11, 2008 as a prepayment and will pay an additional $72,989,490 to Jefferies on settlement
of the share forward transaction.”

On 1/11 AmerCredit opened at $10.88 and close at $11.99. Leucadia, one of the best value investing firms out there are willing to buy shares at a premium to the market to be able to acquire enough fast enough. It should be noted that the 11.3 million shares are over 2X the daily volume so it would have taken Leucadia significantly longer to accomplish this on the open market. One has to conclude Leucadia has a significantly higher valuation than the $10.28 share trade at today.

Leucadia also used my favorite “acquisition” option strategy, the naked put:

“On December 13, 2007 and December 17, 2007, RCG Sextant and RCG
Enterprise (Leucadia subsidiaries) sold exchange-traded put options underlying Common Stock, pursuant to which they are obligated to purchase, but have no right to acquire, an aggregate of 261,600 shares of Common Stock and 38,400 shares of Common Stock, respectively, at a price of $7.50 per share. The put options are exercisable by their holders at any time prior to their expiration on May 17, 2008. RCG Sextant
and RCG Enterprise received $1.15 for each share of Common Stock covered by the
put options.”

AmeriCredit deserves a much closer look…

Disclosure (“none” means no position): None

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

Categories
Articles

"Fast Money" for Wednesday


Wednesday’s Picks
Jeff Macke recommends getting long the Financial Select Sector SPDR (XLF) $26.05 with a stop out at 25.

Guy Adami prefers Wachovia (WB) $31.91

Karen Finerman thinks investors should take a look at Macy’s (M) $24.30

Tuesday Results

No Picks
2008 Records:
Brian Schaeffer= 0-1
Carter Worth= 0-1
Jon Najarian= 3-1
Jeff Macke= 4-3
Tim Seymore= 2-1
Guy Adami= 3-5
Pete Najarian= 3-3
Karen Finerman= 3-3

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%

Disclosure (“none” means no position):

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

Categories
Articles

52 Week Low’s 1/22


(WYN) Wyndham Worldwide Corp = $20.03
(WYE ) Wyeth =$42.29
(WPZ ) Williams Partners LP= $96.80
(TLGD) Tollgrade Communicati ..=$. 6.74
(TLF ) Tandy Leather Factory Inc =$ 2.60
(SYMC) Symantec Corp =$14.98
(SWWC) Southwest Water Company =$11.00
(SWHC ) Smith & Wesson Hldg Corp =$4.18
(SLE ) Sara Lee Corporation =$14.06
(SJM ) Smucker J M Co =$44.52
(RHT ) Red Hat Inc =$17.65
(RFMD) Rf Microdevices Inc=$ 3.18
(REP ) Repsol, S.A. =$29.93
(PFE ) Pfizer Inc =$22.12
(NYT ) New York Times Company=$ 14.45
(NWS ) News Corp =$19.08
(MNST) Monster Worldwide Inc =$26.56
(LXK ) Lexmark International … =$ 28.45
(KONA) Kona Grill Inc =$10.22
(KFT ) Kraft Foods Inc =$29.80
(K ) Kellogg Company =$47.59
(HMC) Honda Motor Co., Ltd.=$ 28.78
(HMA ) Health Management Ass .=$. 5.07
(GIS ) General Mills, Inc =$53.07
(DOM) Dominion Resources Bl ..=$ 16.43
(DNN ) Denison Mines Corp =$6.69
(DNB ) Dun & Bradstreet Corp …=$ 80.93
(DBD ) Diebold, Incorporated =$24.18
(DB ) Deutsche Bank Ag =$111.91
(DAVE) Famous Dave’s of Amer …=$ 9.93
(CPB ) Campbell Soup Company =431.12
(CAKE) The Cheesecake Factor … =$18.21
(CAG) ConAgra Inc =$21.54

Disclosure (“none” means no position):

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

Categories
Articles

Fed Statement

Here is what the Fed had to say as it cuts rates 75 basis points.

Banks like Wachovia (WB), Bank of America (BAC) are lowering their prime rates today as a results of the surprise Fed cut. Expect Citigroup (C), Wells Fargo (WFC) and others to follow if not later today, then this week.

“The Federal Open Market Committee has decided to lower its target for the federal funds rate 75 basis points to 3-1/2 percent.

The Committee took this action in view of a weakening of the economic outlook and increasing downside risks to growth. While strains in short-term funding markets have eased somewhat, broader financial market conditions have continued to deteriorate and credit has tightened further for some businesses and households. Moreover, incoming information indicates a deepening of the housing contraction as well as some softening in labor markets.

The Committee expects inflation to moderate in coming quarters, but it will be necessary to continue to monitor inflation developments carefully.

Appreciable downside risks to growth remain. The Committee will continue to assess the effects of financial and other developments on economic prospects and will act in a timely manner as needed to address those risks.

Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were: Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman; Timothy F. Geithner, Vice Chairman; Charles L. Evans; Thomas M. Hoenig; Donald L. Kohn; Randall S. Kroszner; Eric S. Rosengren; and Kevin M. Warsh. Voting against was William Poole, who did not believe that current conditions justified policy action before the regularly scheduled meeting next week. Absent and not voting was Frederic S. Mishkin.

In a related action, the Board of Governors approved a 75-basis-point decrease in the discount rate to 4 percent. In taking this action, the Board approved the requests submitted by the Boards of Directors of the Federal Reserve Banks of Chicago and Minneapolis.”

In early Jan I wrote
“that “nothing cures high prices like high prices”. The simple explanation of that is that as prices climb, demand decreases. As milk climbs to $5 a gallon, people buy less of it sand the price falls. As oil climbs to and then past $100 a barrel, people will decrease gas use and the use of products that are affected by the price of oil. That will slow the economy and that slowdown ought to crimp the inflation that seemed to rise in December”

Oil has eased down to $90 a barrel and looks to be heading lower. This is the reason for the outlook that inflation has eased and the flexibility for a big cut. It is a double edged sword as poor growth necessitate the rate cuts that we all love.

Recession? Just talk. We need 6 months of negative growth for one. To date we have not even had one. We are getting way ahead of ourselves with that talk… way ahead…

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

Categories
Articles

Tuesday’s Links

Fear, iPhone, Farmers, Judgment

– Chad Brand has a great point about all the “doomsdayers” out there.

– First France’s sales are below expectations and now the UK’s are…

– The Brazilian farmer is becoming the world’s best…

– People make the oddest choices

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

Categories
Articles

KIVA Loan Payment Made

Ada Laura Zumaeta De Toguchi has repaid 17% of her loan..

From KIVA:
The business you have loaned to, run by Ada Laura Zumaeta De Toguchi, has made a repayment of $171.00. The total amount repaid is now $171.00. This repayment will be divided amongst all the lenders who helped to fund this business, depending upon the percentage each lender contributed.

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

Categories
Articles

Get Ready

Hold on tight…..today has the makings of a crazy day..

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

Categories
Articles

Who Will Buy Sprint?

With shares down 61% the last 6 months and a market cap of just $24 billion now, just how long will the nations 3rd largest wireless carrier, Sprint (S) remain independent?

Who would want them? Two main candidates.
Google (GOOG):
Reports are Google is going to bid $4 billion for wireless spectrum in an upcoming auction. At this point and price, why not take Sprint’s spectrum and get 54 million subscribers to boot? With the gPhone launching soon, wouldn’t a cheap Sprint be the perfect platform? Sprint’s main problem is subscriber losses, if current subscribers thought they might get first crack at a new phone, that exodus would if not halt, be severely curtailed.

Google was first rumored to be interested in Sprint when late last year when shares were more than twice their current level and the company sported a near $50 billion market cap. If they are interested, time is wasting. At these levels, a bunch of folks may begin sniffing around.

Comcast (CMCSA):
With both Verizon (VZ) and AT%T (T) encroaching on their cable TV subscribers, would not a tie up between the two be advantageous for both. Comcast would instantly be a player in the wireless game and Sprint would be able to offer wireless services bundled into Comcast’s cable subscriptions. Comcast currently sports a $52 billion market cap and could do the deal. Indiviually, Sprint and Comcast cannot offer the breadth of services Verizon and AT&T are, together, they would be a very formidable foe.

Disclosure (“none” means no position): None

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

Categories
Articles

Is Anyone Watching LIBOR?

Lost in all the wailing over Fed funds rate, a stimulus plan, the election, and bank rights off has been perhaps the most important news facing home owners with ARM’s.

The LIBOR rate, the interest rate that most adjustable rate mortgages are tied to has fallen from a multi year high of near 6% in early 2007 to a level of 3.9%, the lowest since Sept. 2005.

What this means is that the $385 billion in mortgages tied to it that will reset in 2008 will do so at far lower levels than homeowners were looking at less than a year ago. Of all the news we have been assaulted with in the past three weeks, this news is what really matters most.

While Bernanke has been constantly criticized by stock investors this months, his actions at the Fed ought to be cheered by homeowners. The stabilizing of this market will help all our home values and in turn our stock portfolios.

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

↑ Grab this Headline Animator

Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books