RVSN Radvision Ltd 10.69
ROX Castle Brands Inc 2.11
PEIX Pacific Ethanol Inc 6.49
OXGN OXiGENE Inc 2.87
OSP Osg Amer L P 18.50
OCCF Optical Cable Corp 4.20
NSTK Nastech Pharmaceutical Co 4.98
IMOS Chipmos Tech Bermuda Ltd 5.08
III Information Services … 7.00
IIG Imergent Inc 15.08
HOME Home Federal Bancorp Inc 12.43
HIA Highlands Acquisition … 9.05
HFWA Heritage Finl Corp Wash 20.52
HBNC Horizon Bancorp Ind 25.00
EYE Advanced Medical Opti … 24.58
EPIX Epix Pharmaceuticals Inc 3.33
EOF Merrill Lynch & Co Inc 9.31
ASFN Atlantic Southern Fin … 23.17
ASBI Ameriana Bancorp 7.25
ARM Arvinmeritor Inc 12.49
ANS Airnet Sys Inc 2.01
Category: Articles
A Citibank Rumor That Has Merit
Here is a rumor sent to me about Citigroup (C) that has some merit
Robert Rubin remains chairman
John Thain brought in from the NYSE (NYX) to run the commercial bank
Vikrim Pandit would run the investment bank after it is spun off
Brokerage are would be sold to JP Morgan (JPM)
This scenario, has real merit as Citi gets to keep Pandit, who is now likely to leave if the CEO jobs goes to anyone under 60 and investors get the breakup many have been clamoring for.
Hmmmmm..
Goldman Sachs Answers my Question.
Last month I speculated “Goldman is still short the CDO markets and if they are, that means they are still profiting handsomely from it.” Goldman Sachs (GS) affirmed that speculation today.
CEO Lloyd Blankfein said Tuesday that the firm maintains a short position in the subprime mortgage market and will not be taking any significant charges to write off losses on its position. He also said that the firm remains bearish on the mortgage backed securities market and that new accounting rules regarding certain assets the firm holds would not hurt the company’s business.
Since Goldman reported results, the mortgage markets has declined significantly with the majority of bank write-downs coming recently. This has to lead one to believe that Goldman should see even better results from these short position that they saw last quarter. shares have retreated from a high of $249 down to almost $200 recently but are surging in this news today up $10 to $225.
Goldman is the creme of the crop here….
Home Depot (HD) is just in a world of hurt. Shares are now down 30% this year and shareholders are looking at the 3rd consecutive year of losses.
Home Depot reported Q3 net income fell 27% and same store sales were down 6.2%. Net income was $1.09 billion or $0.60 a share, versus net income of $1.49 billion and EPS of $0.73 last year. Earnings from continuing operations came in at $0.59 less than expectations of $0.60 per share. Sales fell 3.5% to $18,96 billion, versus $19.65 billion last year again short of expectations of $19.43 billion.
The company now expects earnings from continuing operations to fall by as much as 11% in FY2007. To make matters worse HD continues to lose market share to arch rival Lowes (LOW).
Now, Home Depot shares currently trade at $28 and change, yields 3% and trades at 11 times earnings. Value? No, not really. Why?
Home Depot is deteriorating. Were it not losing market shares to Lowes, one could argue that “once housing turns around, HD will rally”. Since they are, Lowes will reverse its current course far faster. One does have to wonder though hoe long HD can or will continue to pay a $440 million quarterly dividend. Consider that Capex runs them roughly $800 million to $1 billion a quarter, the interest on their now exploding debvt will run about $125 million a quarter and they only pulled in $1 billion last quarter and things do not look to be getting any better anytime soon.
How long can the negative math continue to not add up? Either they have to cut capex and risk falling further behind Lowes, cut the dividend or drastically reduce or just put the buyback plans on hold. Either one of the options will only hurt shareholders more…
What happened? Simple. Short term thinking and the sale of HD Supply. I first spoke out against it in June when it was announced. Three months later they finally managed to sell it at a reduced price, were forced to keep some of it and guarantee some of its debt. Shrewed.
Once Nardelli was ousted, incoming CEO Frank Blake sought to appease Relational Investors who lead the Nardelli lynching and caved to their demands. This included the Supply sale and HD taking on massive debt to repurchase shares. Now both those move are coming back to haunt Blake.
Supply, while not a fast grower contributed to HD’s cash and profits substantially. What cash HD received from the sale was used to repurchase huge blocks of stock and then additional debt was added to buy more. While I am a fan of buybacks, they must be done intelligently. This one wasn’t. With it’s business environment deteriorating rapidly and its position in that business falling just as fast, loading up on debt and making promises you might be able to keep was less than wise.
One cannot even say with confidence that when housing turns around Home Depot will be a winner. If you are making a bet here, Lowes is the pick because they are at least managing their way through the housing downturn.
Miss Nardeli yet?
I just cannot understand why Wal-Mart(WMT) CEO Lee Scott is not plowing money into the international operations. The best news is at the end of the post though.
Here are the sales growth numbers:
Sam’s Clubs= 6.1%
Wal-Mart= 6.4%
International= 16.9%
International sales, last year at 23% of sale currently stand at 27% this year. That is a significant jump when you are talking about $92 billions in sales, 4% of that is a huge number. Earnings per share from continuing operations was $0.70, up from $0.62 per share last year. Earnings per share from continuing operations for the third quarter were impacted positively $0.01 per share due to the recognition of $46.5 million in after tax gains from the sale of certain real estate properties.
Earnings for Q4 to be between 99 cents per share and $1.03 per share and the full year should be between $3.13 and $3.17. Analysts project quarterly earnings per share of $1.02 and full-year profit of $3.09 per share.
Earnings growth increases:
Sam’s Club= 6.2%
Wal-Mart= 11.1%
International= 8.6%
Wal-Mart gave the usual lowball 0% to 2% same store sales growth going forward and it is getting to the point that this projection is becoming meaningless.
Now, one might say hey, the Wal-Mart stores profit growth was in excess of the international operations, what gives? Why are the international operations more important?
Wal-Mart has induced heavy price cutting in US locations and the upcoming holiday shopping season has boosted results there. The question that needs to be asked is how much is left there? How much further can they cut? We know that there is saturation of locations in the US but internationally, there is hug
e room.
Admittedly Wal-Mart has not been successful in all markets but where they are a hit, they are huge and the results quarter after quarter are proving that.
What makes me the most happy? The company repurchased than 63 million shares in the third quarter, worth $2.8 billion. For the nine months, the company has repurchased almost 115 million shares, worth $5.3 billion.
In October I said, “I am looking for at least $1.5 to $2 billion in the current quarter, anything less is unacceptable. If current management is serious about shareholders, the almost $3 billion reduction in capex spending ought to go directly to repurchasing stock.” Nothing like getting what you ask for at Christmas. Since the new $15 billion repurchase plan was announced in June, Wal-Mart has now bought about $3.8 billion of it.
That being said, Q4 will have cash flooding Wal-Mart coffers. With prices still at decade low levels, there is no reason we should not expect $3 billion plus to be repurchased.
Despite a recent $1.1 billion write on on mortgage backed securities, business at Wachovia (WB) is just fine.
Wachovia’s chief risk officer, Don Truslow said recently regarding consumer loans,”The housing market certainly has been deteriorating very quickly in certain parts of the country, and we are not immune from that deterioration.”
But, buffering Wachovia from some of the more severe declines other institutions are seeing is the acquisition of option-ARM lender Golden West Financial last year. Truslow said the bank continues to take comfort from the historically low level of charge-offs in the Golden West portfolio. Even in a “worse case scenario” in which the amount of bad loans in Golden West’s portfolio doubled to the high levels hit in the mid-1990s, the business “is still a very profitable and attractive business for us,” said Truslow. How profitable? The segment has accounted for $2.1 billion in pre-tax profits during the first nine months of 2007.
The asset backed institutions like Bank of America (BAC), Citigroup (C) and Wachovia will weather this current situation fine. Those like Countrywide (CFC) who rely almost 100% on credit markets to finance its operations, will see pain from it for considerably longer. Scores have already close operations and in a “flight to quality” scenario, the big institutions will pick up the pieces on even more favorable terms.
News today that Blackstone (BX) is forming a unit to look at the current CDO markets in a desire to “go long” on it ought to be a sign that these instruments ought to be currently valued appropriately. If that is so and investors begin to by them, then the value of them has nowhere to go but up. When they go up the end result will be the opposite of what we have seen the past two months.
Everything still has a bottom and as Citigroup CFO Gary Crittendon remarked recently “it is strange to see these things valued below their cash flows”. Simply put, the value lowering has been overdone.
Investors are treating the banks like they are all Countrywide’s and on the precipice of failure. Nothing could be further from the truth. Bank after bank has commented on the strength of every other facet of their business and for an operation like Citigroup, almost 60% of its profits are coming from international activities that have no relation to US housing.
Does that mean there will be no pain? Of course not. What it does mean is the current dividend yields, with the exception of Washington Mutual (WM), many now around or well over 6% are safe and the businesses will rebound.
I keep repeating Buffett over and over in my head “buy fear”….and because of it we bought Wachovia shares and added to our Citigroup holdings recently. Both are yielding 6.5% and are doing just fine. It may take a while to pay off but it will, of that I am sure.
I was asked by a reader to consolidate the current state of Sherwin Williams (SHW) lead paint litigation. In order to do that I turned to the one person any lead paint watcher would when asked a question on the subject. Jane Genova.
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS LITIGATION UPDATE, as of 11/9/07
Prepared by blogger Jane Genova
Rhode Island:
The appeal of the Rhode Island lead paint trial II verdict to the RI Supreme Court is moving along very slowly. The holdup seems to be getting a complete copy of the official transcript.
On October 31, 2007, Sherwin-Williams departed from its low-profile public relations strategy. It went high profile with two motions to RI Superior Court.
One was to request two portions of DuPont’s agreement with the state be removed because they only served the state attorney general Patrick Lynch’s interest. This is being referred to as a “Slush Fund.”
The second is to stay the abatement process until another company Cyanamid goes to trial. Only then, contends Sherwin-Williams, will each of the defendants know what it must contribute to abatement.
Ohio:
The opposition to “117” has failed because of lack of interest. Therefore, the law stands that the state’s public nuisance law can’t be applied to the former lead paint companies. The state’s public nuisance is dead. All Ohio cities have withdrawn their individual public nuisance lawsuits.
The “117” opposition could plead with the OH Supreme Court for more time to try to get enough signatures for a referendum and/or it can challenge the constitutionality of “117,” claiming its focus is more than one issue.
Missouri/New Jersey:
Because of Supreme Court rulings Sherwin-Williams is no longer a defendant in public nuisance lawsuits.
Wisconsin:
The defendant victory in the personal injury trial Thomas v Mallet is to be appealed by the plaintiff.
There are 35 other personal injury cases pending. Some involve Sherwin-Williams.
California:
The public nuisance case remains pending as the plaintiff attempts to appeal the Santa Clara court’s ruling against the use of contingency in public nuisance. ARCO is the key defendants in the case but if the plaintiff wins, this public nuisance approach could spread throughout California.
"Fast Money" for Tuesday
Tuesday’s Picks
Jeff Macke liked Procter & Gamble (PG).Open $70.77
Guy Adami thought Cisco (CSCO) is a buy.Open $29.11
Pete Najarian and Karen Finerman recommend buying Ameritrade (AMTD).Open $18.89
Monday’s Results
Guy Adami recommends BorgWarner (BWA).Open $98.32 Close $99.13 LOSS
Pete Najarian prefers Energy Conversion Devices (ENER) Open $ 31.11 Close $29.18 LOSS as well as AGCO Corp. (AG) Open $63.35 Close $57.62 LOSs.
Tim Seymour says Powershares Water Resources ETF (PHO) .Open $20.91 Close $20.47 LOSS
Karen Finerman likes Kaiser Aluminum (KALU). Open $67.96 Close $66.27 LOSS
Since my tracking began on 6/21 (1-1 means one up pick and one down pick and no results from my vacation weeks). The percentage is the percentage of successful picks
Guy Adami= 44-26 = 63%
John Najarian= 13-4 = 76%
Jeff Macke= 47-33 = 58%
Pete Najarian= 32-32 = 50%
Tim Seymore= 5-5 = 50%
Karen Finerman= 27-17 = 61%
Stacey Briere-Gilbert= 3-0 = 100
Ned Riley= 1-0 = 100%
Carter Worth= 0-1 = 0%
Monday’s 52 Week Lows
SMI Semiconductor Mfg Int … 5.26
SMG The Scotts Company 37.47
TXA Tribune Co New 57.14
TWC Time Warner Cable Inc 24.81
TTI TETRA Technologies Inc 15.60
TSN Tyson Foods Incorporated 14.15
LSCC Lattice Semiconductor … 3.82
LL Lumber Liquidators Inc 9.25
LGBT Planetout Inc 5.88
JHX James Hardie Inds N V 27.60
JBL Jabil Circuit Inc 18.96
CFNB California First Ntnl … 11.38
CEM Chemtura Corp 8.25
CVC Cablevision Systems C … 25.57
CTHR Charles & Colvard Ltd 2.49
CRRB Carrollton Bancorp 11.27
COOP Cooperative Bankshare … 14.33
S Sprint 15.99
Blackstone Reports Loss: Rangell Looms
Blackstone (BX) investors must really feel like they stepped in it. The form reported a loss today and the news out of Washington is that the House passed Charlie Rangell’s latest wealth distribution ponzi scheme.
Back in June, they day before their IPO, I noted, ” If you believe in the “greater fool” theory then this would be an indication that these firm are at the top and the people in the know are cashing in” and that “I will stay away…”
Shares currently trade 30% below their IPO high and if today’s loss is not bad enough (due mainly to IPO one time charges), the news out of Washington ought to scare investors even more. The House voted 216-193 to approve a bill, introduced by House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charles B. Rangel, a New York Democrat, that would tax carried interest, through which alternative-asset managers (private equity) derive the bulk of their income, at the 30% rate ordinary income is taxed rather than the 15% capital gains rate they now pay.
Why does this matter? PE has been good for the economy and business. Taxing the income derived from this business will not result in the tax revenue increase Rangell says it will. Why? If these folks recognize they are going to see a 100% tax increase, do we really think they will continue to operate the same way? Do we think they will find an alternate venue to invest their savings? I do. Tax increases never result in the additional revenue they claim to produce because those being taxes will always find a perfectly legal way to avoid the “new” tax.
That being said, if PE is forced to redefine the way it does business the result may be a dramatic decline in investor money that is currently pouring into it. Without new funds and with severely declining credit options, PE will see a huge decline in activity and thus profits.
Now, the senate will not take up the bill until December but, it has passed the House and the specter of its possibility ought to be enough to cause well heeled investors a pause until they know for sure one way or another what will happen. That alone will cause an activity contraction at firms. Chairman and Chief Executive Stephen Schwarzman said “it will be difficult to structure very large leveraged transactions in corporate private equity and real estate until the credit markets improve, pricing of assets is more favorable.”
Other PE firms like Fortress Investment Group (FIG) has shares down 45% this year and a planned IPO from Kolber Kravis Roberts (KKR) seems to have just disappeared.
The Blackstone IPO indeed was the peak of the PE market for the foreseeable future and if Rangell gets his way, much longer than that.
Monday’s Links
Bloggystyle, Google $700?. Oil, Toxic iPhone?, Tax Cuts Work
– Adam has a nice section on Bartiromo and Citigroup..
– An interesting take on the worth and possible destruction of Google.
– An interesting piece on the cost of oil for oil companies.
– The iPhone appears to have violated California laws for toxicity.
– Stephen Moore make the convincing case for cutting taxes to spur economic growth.
Six Flags: It’s God’s Fault
This one was easy to see coming. Oh yeah, the excuses management is giving you? Ignore them.
Six Flags (SIX), which operates 21 amusement parks, reported a third-quarter net profit of $84.2 million, or 61 cents per share, compared with $159.3 million, or $1.08 per share, a year ago. The year-ago period included a one-time gain of $36.8 million from discontinued operations. With the prior year gain subtracted, EPS in 2006 was 85 cents and 2007 EPS declined 28% on a comparable basis. Net loss for the first nine months of 2007 was $142.7 million, or $1.51 per share, compared to a net loss of $132.4 million, or $1.41 per common share last year.
Revenue fell 2% to $465.2 million. Management blamed this on bad weather in July cutting attendance at its Texas and Georgia parks, and bad publicity from an accident at its park in Kentucky. Attendance for the nine months ended September 30, 2007 was 22.1 million, flat with last year.
The total of Texas, Kentucky and Georgia parks equal 7, or 1/3 of total locations.
“I’m proud of the advances we continue to make at Six Flags despite a temporary setback within the third quarter due to inclement July weather and extensive negative publicity stemming from the accident at our Kentucky park,” said Mark Shapiro, Six Flags President and CEO. “With revenue per guest and consumer satisfaction scores at all-time highs and a powerful park-wide capital expansion plan on deck, we are well positioned to deliver on the promise of this company’s turnaround in 2008.” Right, as long as it does not rain?
Shapiro then contradicted himself to a point in the conference call when he said “Secondly, with regard to attendance, yes, the East Coast which is where we usually have the most risks because we have so many parks really on the East Coast, we are great in East Coast. We had great weather and the parks did well with it.” Now, if the weather was great there, why did Georgia and Texas matter so much?
Here is the thing. You can’t blame the weather because it will always rain. The overall weather picture was not that bad this summer and as bad a they claim July was, June and August were just a good and the simple fact is they just did not “get it done” when the weather was good. We have not had a hurricane in two years now and Six Flags still cannot turn a profit. What they did not tell you was that the weather in September for almost the entire nation was the best in several years.
So, if from June to October you only have 1 bad month for 1/3 of your locations and it causes the whole house of cards to fall, things just are not working. What happens when we finally get an active hurricane season? It will happen sooner or later and they normally hit the east coast where Six Flags has it “greatest risk”. If they cannot turn a profit in near perfect conditions almost all summer and into fall for the vast majority of its parks, what happens when these conditions turn imperfect. Answer? More, larger losses.
Disney (DIS) just reported a 5% guest increase at its Domestic parks over 2006.
They did triumph the fact that they got more from each customer. How? Per capita guest spending increased $0.04 during the quarter to $37.13 as guests spent 3% more in-park, primarily on food and beverages, parking, and games. Yea… we know. I detailed this robbery in October.
I’ll check in on the call on provide any updates of note…….
Note to executives at Blockbuster (BBI): PEOPLE DO NOT WANT TO GO TO THE VIDEO STORE ANYMORE!!
Hasn’t the butt whipping they have received from NetFlix (NFLX) the past few years convinced them of that yet?
Blockbuster said on Thursday it was testing pricing for its rental formats and will experiment with store layouts to add downloading stations, books or beverages in a bid to shore up its customer base. CEO Jim Keyes said “Are we raising prices? No, as of today, what I don’t want to do is raise them three or four times.” The ideas mentioned for its new retail format include an interactive area in stores for children, a destination for downloading entertainment to portable media devices or a kiosk for Sony Corp’s (SNE) PlayStation 3 game console.
Then something was said that was incredible. Keys noted the retail success of Apple Inc (AAPL), which has a far smaller store base and sells its iPod digital media players, iPhone mobile phones and personal computers. “I get excited about what we could do with what is some of the most choice real estate,” Keyes said. Yeah, how about selling it and reinvest that money into the online operations!! The fact that Keyes even mentions his company and Apple in the same sentence illustrate a certain lack of grasp on reality.
Keyes said the company is still considering ways to build up a digital distribution channel for films. Proposals include merging its Blockbuster.com Internet site for ordering films by mail with its Movielink download service, and partnering with telecom and cable companies. This ought to be the sole focus of the company right now. This is the future, not a revamped “old way”. Any money being plowed back into the stores is just wasted. Stop trying to reinvent the wooden wheel and and admit the rubber ones are the one folks want.
Keyes also said that the change would not be “an overnight success”. Translation? More dismal performance for shareholders.
I think this is in part why shares are down 11% Thursday and are almost cheaper than a rental.
Monday’s Upgrades and Downgrades
UPGRADES
Hearst-Argyle TV HTV Barrington Research Underperform » Mkt Perform
j2 Global JCOM BMO Capital Markets Underperform » Market Perform
PACCAR PCAR UBS Sell » Neutral
Clear Channel CCU Stanford Research Hold » Buy
Powerwave PWAV Lehman Brothers Equal-weight » Overweight
Broadcom BRCM AmTech Research Sell » Neutral
Corn Products CPO BMO Capital Markets Market Perform » Outperform
Furniture Brands FBN Stifel Nicolaus Sell » Hold
Hansen Natural HANS Stifel Nicolaus Hold » Buy
Sprint Nextel S Stifel Nicolaus Sell » Hold
Hutchinson HTCH Caris & Company Average » Above Average
Limited LTD Caris & Company Below Average » Average
Avocent AVCT Morgan Keegan Mkt Perform » Outperform
Estee Lauder EL Bear Stearns Peer Perform » Outperform
Shuffle Master SHFL Morgan Joseph Sell » Hold
CAE CGT CIBC Wrld Mkts Sector Perform » Sector Outperform
Perini PCR Morgan Joseph Hold » Buy
Kenexa KNXA Cantor Fitzgerald Hold » Buy
Canadian Pacific CP CIBC Wrld Mkts Sector Perform » Sector Outperform
Sappi Limited SPP Citigroup Sell » Hold
Powerwave PWAV Piper Jaffray Market Perform » Outperform
eBay EBAY Piper Jaffray Market Perform » Outperform
Applied Materials AMAT Citigroup Hold » Buy
Applied Materials AMAT JP Morgan Neutral » Overweight
National Atlantic Holdings NAHC Citigroup Hold » Buy
Sonus Networks SONS Merriman Curhan Ford Sell » Neutral
DOWNGRADES
World Fuel Svcs INT Wedbush Morgan Buy » Hold
Wachovia WB Friedman Billings Mkt Perform » Underperform
JC Penney JCP Bear Stearns Outperform » Peer Perform
Nordstrom JWN Bear Stearns Outperform » Peer Perform
Isilon Systems ISLN Friedman Billings Outperform » Mkt Perform
Biovail BVF Broadpoint Capital Buy » Neutral
Finisar FNSR Jefferies & Co Buy » Hold
Allscripts MDRX Jefferies & Co Buy » Hold
Cephalon CEPH JMP Securities Strong Buy » Mkt Outperform
Home Diagnostics HDIX Deutsche Securities Buy » Hold
Supertel Hospitality, Inc SPPR JMP Securities Mkt Outperform » Mkt Perform
Comtech COGO Piper Jaffray Outperform » Market Perform
Mannkind MNKD JP Morgan Overweight » Neutral
Allscripts MDRX JP Morgan Overweight » Neutral
Entergy ETR Credit Suisse Outperform » Neutral
Edison EIX Credit Suisse Outperform » Neutral
NRG Energy NRG Credit Suisse Outperform » Neutral
Tellabs TLAB Lehman Brothers Overweight » Equal-weight
Pioneer Natural PXD Citigroup Buy » Hold
Sierra Pacific SRP Citigroup Buy » Hold
RPM Inc RPM Banc of America Sec Buy » Neutral
Turkcell TKC UBS Buy » Neutral
Financial Federal FIF Friedman Billings Mkt Perform » Underperform
Limelight Networks LLNW Friedman Billings Outperform » Mkt Perform
Supertel Hospitality, Inc SPPR Robert W. Baird Outperform » Neutral
"Fast Money" for Monday
Monday’s Picks
Guy Adami recommends BorgWarner (BWA).Open $98.32
Pete Najarian prefers Energy Conversion Devices (ENER) Open $ 31.11 as well as AGCO Corp. (AG) Open $63.35 .
Tim Seymour says Powershares Water Resources ETF (PHO) .Open $20.91
Karen Finerman likes Kaiser Aluminum (KALU). Open $67.96
Friday’s Results
Tim Seymour recommended Alcoa (AA).Open $37.66 Close $37.09 LOSS
For the second day in a row Guy Adami said Short Dow30 ProShares(DOG) was a buy. Open $59.95 Close $60.77 GAIN
Karen Finerman liked Watts Water Technologies (WTS).Open $27.80 Close $28.32 GAIN
Pete Najarian preferred Boston Scientific (BSX). Open $12.49 Close $12.66 GAIN
Since my tracking began on 6/21 (1-1 means one up pick and one down pick and no results from my vacation weeks). The percentage is the percentage of successful picks
Guy Adami= 44-25 = 65%
John Najarian= 13-4 = 76%
Jeff Macke= 47-33 = 58%
Pete Najarian= 32-30 = 52%
Tim Seymore= 5-4 = 55%
Karen Finerman= 27-16 = 62%
Stacey Briere-Gilbert= 3-0 = 100
Ned Riley= 1-0 = 100%
Carter Worth= 0-1 = 0%