Doherty at the Close 6.22.2012

Late Thursday, Moody’s cited significant exposure to volatility and risk of large losses from capital markets activities in its ratings cuts.Despite the downgrade, analysts took a positive view on the market, sighting that the downgrades on the whole were slightly less negative than many had feared.

In Europe, markets were mostly lower, with the Stoxx Europe 600 down -0.7%, as more downbeat economic data weighed on sentiment.

In corporate news, Ryder System slid; leading the S&P 500 lower, after the truck-rental company lowered its second-quarter and full-year earnings outlooks, citing lower-than-expected demand for commercial rental products. This could be a major indicator as the trucking provider slows; a possible sign of slowing manufacture.

Facebook rose, extending its more-than-20% rally from its early-June lows, which followed concerns about the social network’s valuation and botched initial public offering.

Thomas Doherty is an undergraduate at Villanova University majoring in Finance and Economics. Thomas@KeeneOnTheMarket.com

Halftime Report 6.22.2012

U.S. stocks have been all over the place this morning with a net gain. S&P 500 futures were up 5.25 points (.4%) at 1323.50, NASDAQ futures gained 11 points (.43%) to 2562.75, and Dow Jones Industrial Average futures were up 59 points (.47%) to 12561.00.

WTI crude futures bounced $1.14 to $79.34 after yesterday’s decline. Gold futures fell $2.90 to $1562.60.

Sony Corp. (SNE) was up 5.68% after rumors that they may invest in Olympus, another Japanese tech company.

Bank of America Corp. (BAC) was down 4% after yesterday’s downgrade and was trading up .45% this morning, peaking up 1.3% in pre-market trading.

Ryder (R) was down over 12.5% after the transportation logistics company reduced its quarterly and full-year earnings expectations based on low demand. Ryder’s 2012 earnings expectations are between $3.65 and $3.85 a share.

Movers and Shakers (CCL) 6.22.2012

Revenues for Q2 2012 were $3.5 billion, compared with last year’s Q2 revenue of $3.6 billion, a strong number considering CCL’s Costa Concordia disaster that occurred over the winter. The stock’s 52-week low is $28.52 and the high is $38.83. Over the past quarter the shares have gained 9.40% of their value.

Yesterday, CCL had high options trading volume, breaking a 3-month options volume record of 9,131 call, and 22,833 put contracts traded. Usually high options volume like this is a sign that the underlying stock will move.


Morning Rage 6.22.2012

The Hang Seng dropped 1.4 today with its biggest loss going to Li & Fung Ltd of 5.48%.

Business activity in the Euro Zone fell for a fifth straight Month in June, along with the manufacturing
slowdown led Euro stock to fall with the FTSEurofirst 300 losing .4%. Leaders of Spain, France, Italy and
Germany are meeting in Rome today try and restore some confidence ahead of the EU Summit next
week. Like Japan, banks outperformed the market in Europe up 1.2% led by Spanish banks after the
latest rounds of audits yesterday showed a need of 62B Euros, not the anticipated 100B bailout.

In pre-trade Ford is hit by poor customer satisfaction ratings in JD Power place due to customer
confusion over its new technology MyFord touch infotainment system, lowering stock 3.6%.

Morgan Stanley is looking good after not getting hit by Moody’s’ yesterday up 3.4% before market open.

Commodities are looking alright to start with natural gas, crude and gold all starting in the green and
just silver looking down.

Contributer Chris Rygh is currently pursuing his MBA in Wisconsin and has a passion for the Market.
Comments can be directed to ryghcw19@uww.edu

Doherty at the Close 6.21.2012

Stocks slid to session lows after analysts at Goldman Sachs recommended that clients set up short positions in the S&P 500. The analysts set a short target for the benchmark index at 1285, about 4% lower than current levels, writing that Thursday’s soft U.S. reports “provides further evidence that weakness has extended into June.”

Energy and materials stocks led all 10 of the S&P 500’s sectors lower after reports showed that business activity in the euro zone and manufacturing activity in China each contracted in June.

The Dow had rallied 6.1% from June 4 through the session before the Fed’s policy decision, largely on hopes for stimulus measures.

European markets turned lower after the weak U.S. data. The Stoxx Europe 600 fell -0.5% and broke four-day winning streak. Most Asian stock markets fell on worries about the Chinese economy after the gauge of China’s manufacturing activity showed more weakness.

Thomas Doherty is an undergraduate at Villanova University majoring in Finance and Economics. Thomas@KeeneOnTheMarket.com

Halftime Report 6.21.2012

Gold futures fell $43.70 to 1572.10 and WTI crude futures broke the significant $80 barrier by dipping down $2.19 to $79.26 at 12:13 PM CDT.

Rising coffee futures prices caused a slide in major coffee companies share prices. Peet’s Coffee (PEET) fell 7.3% to $60.75, Green Mountain Coffee (GMCR) was down 5% to $20.39 and Caribou Coffee (CBOU) slid 3.3% to 12.34. Coffee futures were trading at $157.60, up $5.2 on the day.

CarMax Inc. (KMX) fell $1.77 (-6.34%) to $26.13 as its earning missed expectations. The used car dealer had rising costs and a decline in sales.

Under Armour Inc. (UA) missed earnings expectations and declined $5.85 (-5.56%) to $99.33.

David Cornes holds a degree in economics from the University of Montana.

Movers and Shakers (BBBY) 6.21.2012

Their first quarter EPS was 89 cents, up 24% from the previous year, while analysts predicted earnings of 85 cents. Sales rose to $2.22 billion (about 5%), a bit short of analysts’ estimates of $2.25 billion. BBBY has been trading in the 52-week range of $48.75 and $75.84.

They expect their EPS to increase around 10% for the full year. Forecast earnings reports exclude the announcement of BBBY’s acquisition of a similar home decorating retailer, Cost Plus Inc. for $550 million. Bed Bath & Beyond CEO Steven Temares said “despite the ongoing economic challenges that are affecting consumers, our fundamental business strategy remains unchanged: to offer a broad assortment of merchandise at everyday low prices with superior customer service.”

David Cornes holds a degree in economics from the University of Montana.

Destined to Die – Part 2

One thing to note with all of these stocks is that many value investors look at them as real estate plays. However I see an over-abundance of shopping malls and big box stores. They all can’t be real estate plays.

Best Buy

Best Buy’s troubles have been well documented. Their business is going through a fundamental shift and it isn’t good news for Best Buy. The mobile revolution is hurting Best Buy big time. Fewer people are buying PC’s and instead opting for tablets, and more specifically iPad’s. Instead of being one of the primary resellers of the iPad, they have to compete with the Apple stores which give the consumer a much better shopping experience. The whole Apple “ecosystem” is hurting Best Buy in other ways as well. Very few people buy CD’s anymore and a majority of those that don’t go through iTunes. Video games are also migrating towards online as well.
Take away PC sales, music album sales, and you are left with a TV and appliance store; therein lies the problem. Best Buy has way too much floor space. This creates unnecessary overhead and decreases their margins.

Best Buy needs to be smaller and that could take years to work out of their long term lease’s and sell any real estate that they own into a depressed market. I see Best Buy having a 50/50 chance that it is not in business in the next five years. I would also give it about a 25% chance that it is acquired by someone else but I think there is a glut of commercial real estate on the market but you could see a private equity play.

Radio Shack

This is a little more of an obvious one than Best Buy as Radio Shack’s stock has been pummeled the last couple years by over 75% or so. There have been some big name value investors take a stab at it and fail over the last few years. Really the only thing going for Radio Shack is that they sell mobile phones and service plans for multiple companies. Other than mobile plans, I don’t really see any reason why anyone would ever go into a Radio Shack store. If you’ve been in one of their stores recently I’m assuming you would agree.

This is a company that really has no niche or nothing unique to distinguish itself from other electronics retailers.
I see Radio Shack with an 80% chance that it is out of business in the next two years. I suppose it could be acquired but I’m not sure by whom.

Barnes & Noble

Amazon is taking Barnes & Noble to school. Other than for gifts or last minute shopping, most people buy their books from Amazon for 30% less than going into the store to buy them. Barnes & Noble has way too big of stores with way too much inventory. With Amazon’s cost advantages and presence, this just isn’t a viable business anymore. We’ve already seen Borders bite the dust and it won’t be long before Barnes & Noble has the same fate. Their online presence is there but they rarely beat Amazon on price or shipping affordability and speed. The Nook is inferior to the Kindle and the iPad. While some like it, it just isn’t going to be what saves Barnes & Noble. I’d only give Barnes & Noble 25% chance of staying in business. It may take a few years but they will suffer a slow death. They may be able to keep it going through restructuring and closing some poor performing stores, but eventually the significant advantages Amazon holds over them will drive them out of business.

Sears

The best thing you can say about Sears is that it has Eddie Lampert as the majority owner. Lampert has a long track record of enhancing shareholder value but as of yet a turnaround at Sears has eluded him. Sears has a great brand in Craftsman tools but other than that its department stores offer really no reason to shop there. Their appliance and electronics don’t lead the industry and don’t offer any compelling reason to shop Sears rather than a Home Depot or Lowe’s.

Sears is a stale brand and under Lampert’s reign they have done nothing to enhance the look of the stores or their merchandise.
The biggest claim to value that has been made with Sears is the real estate value. Again I’ll say that there are too many malls and big box stores out there for this to be very credible of a claim. While there are some ideal properties, I doubt there are excited borrowers in this real estate and retail market ready to knock down the doors to pay a premium price for their locations. Sears is just quite simply going to be another in a long line of big department stores that goes the way of the dodo bird. I would give Sears a 100% chance of going belly up in the next five years if it wasn’t for Eddie Lampert at the helm. I still don’t see the long term value in Sears and I could see them disappearing quite easily, especially should we see a further downturn in the economy.

Staples

In my opinion there are way too many office supply stores out there. The Office Depot may go before Staples but I wanted to include one “unthinkable” on this list. Staples caters to small and medium sized businesses but their pricing, to me, seems high and the internet is changing the landscape of the office supply business. Most small businesses I know order their supplies online.
While many of those sales are going to Staples, the stores themselves turn into an expensive way to run a distribution system. While the stores allow them to have quick delivery, same day in some cases, I don’t think delivery time will be what wins business, it will be price.

Like I mentioned, I believe Office Depot will go out of business, but you could give a 15% chance that Staples could be hard pressed to stay the same company that they currently are with a lot of retail stores that never seem to be all that busy. An online company with distribution centers seems a better approach. If they don’t go that route then they could eventually die.

Conclusion

Will all nine of the companies I listed go out of business? No, but a strong case can be made for many of them to disappear within the next 3-5 years.

These companies may appear to be “cheap” either because they are trading at their multi year lows or they are “cheap” on an earnings basis. Either way, I wouldn’t recommend trying to catch a falling knife here. There are much better opportunities out there in the market than these companies.

Morning Rage 6.21.2012

The Hang Seng under paced the Nikkei today on news that the Chinese manufacturing sectored
continued to slow for its eighth straight month. The index lost 1.3% today with only Espirit Holdings and
China Resources Power Holding trading in the green but less than 1% each.

The European rally built on expectations of another round of stimulus came to its 4 day end today
after weak German and Chinese data and Bernanke’s speech yesterday putting an end to Fed bailout
hopes. The FTSE is down .7% with basic resources being the worst performing industry dropping 2.8% on
Chinese data showed it eighth straight contraction for the world largest consumer of metals.

The Rupee fell to a record low against the dollar today of 56.53 per USD, making it a good time to visit
India.

The commodities are starting out weak with natural gas trading up where crude, gold and silver are all
down.

Contributer Chris Rygh is currently pursuing his MBA in Wisconsin and has a passion for the Market.
Comments can be directed to ryghcw19@uww.edu