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Wal-Mart Making More Apparel Moves

Wal-Mart (WMT) said Friday that a high level apparel executive resigned after the transition to more trendy items from low-priced basics failed to do anything for clothing sales. Claire Watts, executive vice president of apparel merchandising, stepped down Thursday to “pursue other interests,” said Sarah Clark, a spokeswoman for the world’s largest retailer. Yeah, “other interests” like “looking for a new job”.

Promoted along with the company’s move to relocate clothing operations to NYC was GAP veteran Dottie Mattison, formerly chief merchant for Walmart.com. She will oversee women’s apparel, jewelry, shoes and accessories as well as product development. Let’s honest, even if she only manages to bring the apparel offering at Wal-Mart to average, it will be a huge plus for earnings. As it stands now other retailers like Target (TGT), Macy’s (M), Sears Holdings (SHLD) and JC Pennys (JCP) are miles ahead of Wal-Mart.

Many people, including yours truly feel the changes are due to pressure from Allen Questrom has suggested them since joining the board in early June. Questrom was chairman and chief executive of J.C. Penney Co. from 2000 to December 2004. Now, JC Penny has been a great turnaround story so let’s let a guy who was there for the genesis of it make some suggestions, like I said before, can they do any worse?

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Today’s Early Analyst Calls

Here are today’s early analyst calls

UPGRADES

HSBC Holdings HBC Lehman Brothers Equal-weight » Overweight
Navteq NVT UBS Neutral » Buy
Progress Energy PGN Robert W. Baird Neutral » Outperform
Piedmont PNY Robert W. Baird Neutral » Outperform
FPL Group FPL Robert W. Baird Neutral » Outperform
Anheuser-Busch BUD Citigroup Sell » Hold
Amgen AMGN Citigroup Sell » Hold
AFLAC AFL Lehman Brothers Underweight » Overweight

DOWNGRADES

Transalta TAC CIBC Wrld Mkts Sector Outperform » Sector Perform
Great A&P Tea GAP CIBC Wrld Mkts Sector Outperform » Sector Perform
Assoc Banc-Corp ASBC Lehman Brothers Equal-weight » Underweight
Ventana Medical VMSI RBC Capital Mkts Outperform » Sector Perform

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"Fast money " Picks for Monday

Here are the picks for Monday.

Jeff Macke tells investors to add to their position in Microsoft (MSFT) Open $31.16

Pete Najarian recommends Clorox (CLX) on recent options volume. open $61.90

Jon Najarian likes Zimmer Holdings (ZMH), Open $88.08 as well as Rowan (RDC) Open $44

Tim Seymour prefers buying Stillwater Mining Company (SWC) Open $11.25

Records:

Since my tracking began on 6/21 (1-1 means one up pick and one down pick and no results from my vacation week))

Adami= 7-5 Gain $30.56
Bolling= 6-6 Loss $5.46
John Najarian= 11-3 Gain $12.53
Macke= 13-7 Gain $6.22
Pete Najarian=3-0 Gain $20.20
Seymore= 1-0 Gain $.35
Finerman= 1-2 Gain $.68

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This Weeks Dividend Increases

Here are the payment increases for the past week

Renaissanse Learning Systems (RLRN)= 40%

Burlington Northern (BNI)= 28%

Fannie Mae (FNM)= 25%

M&T Bank (MTB)= 16.7%

Commonwealth Bankshares (CWBS)= 16.7%

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This Weeks Insider buys

Here are the insider purchases for the past week

Opko Health (OPK)= $5,308,000

Equity One(EQY)= $3,109,000

Chelsea Therapeutics (CHTP)= $2,671,000

Environmental Tectronics (ETC)= $2,228,000

Allied Nevada Gold (ANV)= $2,217,000

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Notable Dividend Hikes

Here are the notable boosts for the week ending July 15th.

Paychex (PAYX)= 43%

Cummins (CMI)= 39%

Walgreens (WAG)= 23%

Timberland Bancorp (TSBK)= 11%

Bank of NY (BK)= 9%

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Recent Insider Buys

Here are the notable insider buys for the week ending July 15th.

Hudson Technologies (HDSN)= $10,186,000

Management Capital Investments (MGT)= $5,000,000

Books A Million (BAMM)= $1,985,000

Amicus Therapeutics (FOLD)= 1,892,000

Liberty Media (LCAPA)= $1,764,000

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Sprint Customer Service Still Sucks

So here I am on vacation and I brought my laptop so if the mood hit me I could whip out a post or two. One problem, I cannot access the internet with my PCS card. No problem I think, I will just call Sprint (S) customer service and they will help me out.

DUH!!! This is Sprint we are talking about. For two days now I have either been on eternal hold or told "we cannot take your call at this time" by the computer that answers the phone. I never thought I would be relived to get blown off by a robot, at least it saves my wireless minutes.

These guys just do not get it. "Customer" should not be a four letter word and I am really not the enemy.

Now we are going to have to talk about refunds if they ever take my call.

I think the customers Sprint "fired" last week may just may up being the lucky ones.

Todd Sullivan

Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device

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On vacation

Valueplays is on vacation for the week. Here is wishing a safe week for all.

Todd Sullivan

Sent from my BlackBerry® wireless device

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The Fallacy of "Buffett Can’t Buy More"

Since my initial post of Berkshires’ (BRK.A) WEB and the replies, there has been quite a bit of discussion on the topic out there. I will not specify any bloggers because I have no desire to have a virtual battle with anyone, but, as before, I invite anyone to refute me and I will be happy to post it here. The more diverse discussion the better, right? If any blogger wants to have public discourse about this, I am happy to do so, I just am not the type to blindside someone.

Here are the initial posts, here and here, read them so at least we are on the same page.

Recently the line of thinking out there is that due to Berkshire’s size and the various SEC regulations surrounding stock purchases, this prohibits large stakes in public companies at prices Buffett is willing to pay. It says that because Berkshire can only buy up to 1% of a companies daily volume without disclosing it is doing so, it cannot make purchases of a percentage to Berkshire size that it did in the past. Essentially, when you are a $100 million company investing 20% in a single stock is a whole lot easier than investing 20% of the approx. $50 billion Buffett sits on today. This is all very true, but, here is the rub: If we look at a few of the Berkshire purchases the last few years, this reasoning for Berkshire not buying more just does not hold water.

In order to continue we need to some to agreement on a few things:

1- Buffett only buys stocks he considers a value
2- He would not invest expecting only a “small return” on an equity. This is despite his public proclamations, this is called “under promising and over delivering”. He has been saying essentially the same things for the past two decades. Not buying it anymore.

WalMart (WMT)

Berkshire first announced a Walmart stake in 6/2005 and added to it in 9/2005 for a total of 34 millions shares at an average price of about $48 a share. The prevailing thinking out there now is that Buffett just could not buy more once the initial stake was announced because copy-cats poured into the stock and pushed the price above a level Buffett would be willing to pay. But WalMart has essentially traded at or below Buffett’s purchase prices since he bought shares! He could easily have made WalMart a substantial Berkshire holding. When you consider WalMart trades 13 million shares a day, Buffet could have bought about 760,000 shares a day.

Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)

In the spring and summer of 2006, Buffett bought 26 million shares of JNJ at $59 a share. He sat there for the next year as the stock price fluctuated around the almost $64 a share price he bought another 22 million shares at in the spring of 2007. Berkshire now owns 48 million JNJ shares that represent just under 3% of Berkshire’s assets. Could Berkshire have bought much more at prices it clearly was willing to pay in the past year and a half? Yes. JNJ trades almost 9 million shares a day and even with Buffett gobbling up 22 million more shares, the price of JNJ stock fell precipitously during the spring of 2007 from $67 to $60. This means that even with him purchasing just about the maximum number of shares in order to avoid public reporting, his activity did nothing to cause a “jump” in the stock price.

These are just two quick examples. Now there may be many reasons Buffett did not take bigger stakes. Since he has never said, we will never really know. What we do know, is that the common excuse “he just can’t do it because of SEC regulations and reporting requirements” just does not wash. Even Munger inexplicably jumped on this bandwagon recently when he claimed as much. Now, for some of the smaller companies Berkshire has taken stakes in this is entirely true but the above reasoning is being used to eliminate any conversation of why Berkshire stopped “swinging for the fences” almost decades ago. If you did deeper into purchases that past three years there are many examples of companies Berkshire took stakes in that the opportunity to take much larger stakes at or below the original purchase price was there (USB, for example), they just chose not to. It had nothing to do with the recently espoused reasons. Let’s not forget additionally that Buffett is one of the few folks out there that the SEC actually allows to delay reporting of purchases while he finish building his positions. Even without this grace period and even after his stake has been announced, a larger position in Budweiser (BUD) was available.

Warren “can” build Berkshire portfolio changing positions, he just “chooses” not to. That is ok, but let’s just admit that and let go of the excuses.

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Top Sories At VIN- July

Here are the top 5 at VIN to date:

1- Value Creation Or Destruction

2- Valuing the Tyco Spinoffs

3- 4kids Entertainment

4- Chipotle Mispricing

5- Fly, Don’t Buy Airlines

Please visit this great site Value Investing News

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52 Week Lows

S&P hits a record high, regional banks keep setting yearly lows

ILA Aquila Inc
IHR Interstate Hotels
HDL Handleman Company
RSTO Restoration Hardware
REDE Redenvelope Inc
OPOF Old Point Finl Corp
FMAR First Mariner Bancorp
FFSX First Fed Bankshares
FFNM First Fed Northern Michigan
FBNC First Bancorp North Carolina
CCBD Community Central Bank
CBIN Community Bank Shares
CBHI Centennial Bank Holdings
BFBC Benjamin Franklin Bank

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Upgrades / Downgrades

Here are the late Thursday and early Friday calls

UPGRADES:

Del Monte DLM Matrix Research Hold » Buy
Fleetwood FLE BB&T Capital Mkts Hold » Buy
Fedrl Rlty Inv Trst FRT Cantor Fitzgerald Hold » Buy
MRV Comms MRVC Roth Capital Hold » Buy
National Instruments NATI Thomas Weisel Market Weight » Overweight
BJ’s Wholesale BJ Lehman Brothers Underweight » Equal-weight
AT&T T Davenport Neutral » Buy
Lockheed Martin LMT JP Morgan Underweight » Neutral
Seagate Tech STX Brean Murray Hold » Buy
Hartford Financial HIG AG Edwards Hold » Buy
BMC Software BMC Credit Suisse Underperform » Neutral
Merck MRK AG Edwards Hold » Buy
Robbins & Myers RBN Matrix Research Hold » Buy

DOWNGRADES:

Vimicro VIMC Susquehanna Financial Neutral » Negative
Tenaris TS Credit Suisse Neutral » Underperform $50
Charles River CRL Cowen & Co Outperform » Neutral
Thor Industries THO Matrix Research Strong Buy » Sell
Warner Chilcott PLC WCRX Oppenheimer Buy » Neutral
US Cellular USM Soleil Hold » Sell
Frontline FRO UBS Neutral » Reduce
BCE Inc BCE Davenport Neutral » Reduce/Sell
Big 5 Sports BGFV DA Davidson Buy » Neutral
PFF Bancorp PFB Friedman Billings Outperform » Mkt Perform
Huntsman HUN BB&T Capital Mkts Buy » Hold
China Petroleum (Sinopec) SNP Bear Stearns Peer Perform » Underperform
Gerdau AmeriSteel GNA RBC Capital Mkts Outperform » Sector Perform
XL Capital XL AG Edwards Buy » Hold
Ruby Tuesday RT Sun Trust Rbsn Humphrey Buy » Neutral
Denbury Resources DNR Calyon Securities Add » Neutral
Delek US Holdings DK HSBC Securities Neutral » Underweight
Cubic CUB Friedman Billings Mkt Perform » Underperform
Gerdau AmeriSteel GNA CIBC Wrld Mkts Sector Outperform » Sector Perform

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"Fast Money" Picks For Friday

Here are today’s picks

Jeff Macke is buying McDonald’s (MCD). Open $51.65

Pete Najarian preferred New York Bancorp (NYB). Open $17.56

Guy Adami recommended EMC Corp. (EMC). Open $19.25

Eric Bolling didn’t have a stock pick.

THURSDAY’S RESULTS:

Guy Adami likes EMC Corp. (EMC). Open $18.92 Close $19.25 Gain $.33

Pete Najarian prefers PDL BioPharma (PDLI)Open $23.48 Close $23.74 Gain $.26

Jeff Macke recommends buying Saks (SKS). Open $20.71 Close $20.44 Loss $.27

Records:

Since my tracking began on 6/21 (1-1 means one up pick and one down pick)

Adami= 7-4 Gain $30.61
Bolling= 6-6 Loss $5.46
John Najarian= 10-3 Gain $12.36
Macke= 12-7 Gain $5.96
Pete Najarian=3-0 Gain $20.20
Seymore= 1-0 Gain $.35
Finerman= 1-2 Gain $.68

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WalMart’s Recent Moves Beginning To Pay Off

After what seemed to be a never ending series of missteps, WalMart (WMT) would seem to be getting it mojo back. On Wednesday, WalMart.com CEO Raul Vasquez said the company’s “Site to Store” program that lets shoppers order online and ship for free to nearby stores was very successful. Yesterdays same store sales results, gave a whole lot of credence to those remarks. Sales of flat panel televisions, MP3 players, video game hardware and accessories, laptops and desktop computers had significant year-over-year gains. Computer sales were fueled by the introduction of select Dell computers now sold at WalMart stores and Sam’s Clubs throughout the United States. Less than a month ago I commented on the significance of the Dell (DELL) move and it seems to be a winner.

For months prior to recent events, investors including yours truly had been screaming for a reduction in new store growth and a meaningful share buyback. At the annual meeting in June executives finally acknowledged they are no longer a growth company and have scaled back those plans and announced a $15 billion share repurchase plan. Yet, the stock had been stagnant as investors waited to see the results of their actions. The answer came today and investor liked those results.

The final piece of the WalMart gripe is clothing. To be frank, virtually every other retailer trounces WalMart here. Whether it be JC Penny (JCP), Target (TGT), Sears (SHLD), or Macy’s (M), WalMart offerings are woefully inadequate in comparison. The questions begs to be asked, what would happen to sales if they ever got clothing right? The answer should make investors salivate.

Maybe we have the beginnings of something here now. WalMart has agreed to a 12-year lease for a new 47,000 sq. ft. studio in Manhattan that will replace two nearby studios that combined are only a fraction of the new one. This demonstrates a long-term commitment by WalMart to attract more top talent to pick and design its fashions that had been hampered by the location of WalMart’s headquarters in Bentonville. It seems they now recognize Bentonville, while a very nice community is not a particularly big attraction for those in the fashion scene.

This event, while not very widely reported may be the most significant move they have made long term to date. Along with slowing store expansion, many of us begged them to invest in apparel and get it right. This is a first and a huge step. WalMart, who can squeeze a profit out of a penny like no other retailer will not let this sit for 12 years and not produce. They are going to put the money necessary into it to make it work. Locating the facility in NYC will give them access to top and upcoming talent that being in Bentonville just prohibited.

While nothing is certain, WalMart is on a roll recently and the potential for this move to pay off is staggering. If people ever though of WalMart for quality and stylish clothing instead of just cheap, company sales would explode. For proof just look what the Dell move did for their electronics sales almost immediately.

The stock buyback, the slowed expansion plans, the Moneycenter announcement, selling Dell’s , the Site -to -Store program all have been great moves and Thursday’s results mean that their effects are beginning to show up on the bottom line.

I said before that WalMart was getting real hard not to buy and I did just that only a few days later. Now I am saying that it is real hard not to buy more.