Saturday, February 24, 2007

Newmont Mining









Gold Up Big: Stay With Newmont Mining

Yesterday, gold was up over $23 in trading, hitting a seven month high. A CPI report of 2.7% helped send gold flying.

The concern is that with energy and home prices having declined since the spring of 2006, that the CPI would be close to zero or even negative by now. Yesterday's data show there is still plenty of liquidity in the economy to keep it going and rate decreases are going to be pushed out for a while. The possibility of an increase or two exists if growth ticks up a bit too much.

We blogged in October about the merits of investing in Newmont Mining (NEM). Our rationale was the huge correction in its stock price and the discount it sold for relative to the value of its gold reserves. The value of its gold reserves are estimated to be 20% to 50% higher than its stock price.

Newmont reports earnings today, not that it really matters since it trades relative to the price of gold price. But it would be worth a listen.

There are a number of factors which favor the outlook for gold. Most countries have floating currencies or have their currencies backed by floating currencies. Central banking mistakes will lead to higher levels of inflation--and we know that central banks will make mistakes.

Newmont is a good hedge in a world of floating currencies and awash with cash.

Whole Foods












Holy Clarity

This Fly has never read an earnings release from Whole Foods Market (WFMI) prior to last night. I recommend those who have read plenty of them to read this one. The clarity and transparency is refreshing.


In particular is the table which breaks down the age of stores, their comp growth rate and the return on invested capital. For example, for stores open for 11 years, Whole Foods stores show a same-store-sales growth rate of 3.8%, which is pretty good for a store open that long.


More impressive, however, is the ROIC for stores open eleven years is 77%.


Whole Foods' stock peaked at $78 in December 2005. It is now around $46, a big correction. Despite increased competition in the organic food space, Whole Foods has built a powerful brand name. In addition, its acquisition of Wild Oats is not a bad idea. Wild Oats has been restructuring the past few years and should not require too much work to integrate these stores.


It is time to do more work on Whole Foods. This looks like a good growth stock selling at a low valuation.

Hewlett-Packard















Hewlett-Packard may Pull Back

Cost discipline and revenue growth go hand in hand, said CEO Mark Hurd during Hewlett-Packard's (HPQ) conference call last night. HP emphasized its unit volume growth for the quarter.

* Notebook units up 57%; 40% revenue growth
* Printer hardware units up 18%; revenue up 7%
* Personal system group, in total, was up 19% in units, with revenue up 17%

HP was able to gain market share gains while improving margins. The margin improvement in such a competitive market was impressive, as GAAP operating margin increased to 7.3% up from 6.6%.

However, the balance sheet and cash flow statement metrics showed signs which historically preceded difficult times for the PC business. Guidance was a bit weak and inventory has jumped up. In addition, there was concern about the apples to apples comparisons of gross margin due to the Mercury acquisition. In addition, there was some concern about sources and uses of cash. Particularly about $1.48 billion cash outflow for rebates and other uses--also a signal of a weakening PC business.

HP is a stock you do not have to rush into. There are warning signs that this stock might run into a couple of quarters of weak results. Stay on the sidelines for now.

Home Depot
















Home Depot Holds Up Despite Awful Results

The Home Depot (HD) declined a mere $0.37 in trading yesterday despite reporting awful results. Same store sales were down 6.6% for the quarter and in one month were down 11%--that is pretty bad.

However, despite these tough results, management appeared to be confident that the weakness is manageable and measurable. It appears the worst might be hitting Home Depot currently and the poor operating performance could bottom in the first half of 2007.

While Home Depot's supply business rolled over, the real concern appears to be its decision to enter the electronics appliance business. Home Depot mentioned this business was very disappointing. This could be a business line they exit.

Due to the relatively good stock performance following such awful results, investors need to start looking at this stock again. Home Depot will most likely be a Fed stock -- meaning when there is enough evidence that the Fed might start dropping rates, Home Depot stock might be off to the races.

The other thing to look for is a bottoming in its same store sales decline.

JetBlue Airways

Oddity Of The Airline Industry Comes Home To Roost

If you invest in turn around situations, you will have spent a lot of time focused on airline stocks during the last five years.

When interviewing airline executives, they universally say the same thing: the airline industry is different than other industries, as you grow there is point at which your costs substantially increase as a percent of sales. The old concept of economies of scale does not work the same way in the airline industry.

This appears to be happening at JetBlue (JBLU). When asking airline executives about JetBlue as a competitor, many said that at some point its costs are going to have to go up.

The JetBlue irony is that the start-up airline is having trouble when legacy airlines are actually raising prices. There is no price war going on.

What are the reasons cited for JetBlue's blues? Regulation, as pilots need to follow federally established rest rules; poor communications -- a big expense; failed reservation systems -- very expensive; employees are in locations where they are unable to provide a helping hand -- more expenses.

JetBlue appears to have reached a size where it needs massive infrastructure investment. It will be interesting to hear if management comes clean on how much all the investments will cost.

The airline had scheduled 600 flights for Presidents Day, more than the 550 to 575 flights on a typical Monday. So far, 139 flights have been canceled.

Agilent Technologies








Solid Quarter For A Solid Company

Agilent (A), the tech equipment company that was spun-off from Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), reported solid results yesterday. While they might not drive the stock higher, it is a good stock to keep up to date with and buy on a market correction.

  • Handset test measurement business was weak, which should not be a surprise since we have been blogging about weakness in the handset market for the past three or four months.
  • Bio-analytical business is doing very well, having a "blow-out" quarter. Revenue was up 22% year-over-year. Operating profit in this business was up 69%. Sales to China and India were up 33% and 38%, respectively.
Many of the people who made HP into a great company decade after decade are with Agilent. The company is a strong product innovator and also is run increase shareholder value.

Keep an eye on Agilent and jump in during market sell-offs. Agilent has a strong balance sheet and good product innovation to be around for a long time.

Monday, February 19, 2007

Chipotle Mexican Grill



The McDonald's Of 2007

What Ray Kroc was to hamburgers, Steve Ells is to Mexican food. Ells, Chipotle Mexican Grill's (CMG) founder, has created a stock to buy and put away. This company is too early in its growth phase to be ignored. There is a long way to go with this stock.


Highlights for full year 2006 as compared to full year 2005 include:


  • Revenue increased 31.1% to $822.9 million
  • Comparable restaurant sales increased 13.7%, compared to 10.2% in 2005
  • Restaurant level operating margins increased 240 basis points to 20.9%
  • Income from operations approximately doubled to $62.0 million
  • Diluted earnings per share were $1.28, compared to $0.66 in 2005
There could be some negatives. Chipotle needs to invest heavily to get employees. Growing rapidly in a tight labor environment is extremely difficult. It will also have to deal with higher food costs and higher costs to open up new stores as it enters more expensive markets.


Getting Cheaper, But Not There Yet

Coca Cola (KO) has been dead money for years. After reporting solid results yesterday, the stock may be due for a good 15% rally.


Coke had a great 10-year run which ended 1998, when a bear market in value stocks began. When Warren Buffett built his position in the late 1980s, the stock sold for $4.50 per share, according to Yahoo's new charts. By 1998, the stock peaked at $89, an almost twenty-fold gain.


Since peaking in price in 1998, the stock has declined almost 50%. By 1998, the P/E on Coke exceeded 40 x earnings, a high-tech type valuation. Today, the P/E is at 19x. Getting cheap, but not very cheap.


Coke grew revenue 7% for the most recent quarter and its operating profit improved 10%, very solid for this $112 billion company. With the market rallying, these results will force large institutions to own this stock. Coke most likely has a good 10% to 15% rally ahead. But after that, take profits. Coke's valuation is not cheap enough to be a big winner yet.


February 15

Newell Rubbermaid



Newell Gets Across-The-Board Upgrades

Newell Rubbermaid (NYSE:NWL) held its analyst day with the investment community Tuesday. Today, Newell is getting across-the-board upgrades.

We began blogging about the merits of Newell's turnaround back in April when the stock was trading at $26, today the stock is around $31, up 19%. Merrill Lynch, Smith Barney and Oppenheimer have raised their targets to the $34-to-$35 price range.

In this Fly's opinion, the analysts’ price targets are too low. Estimates are for Newell to earn $1.95 per share, but Newell will most likely earn over $2.00. Also, as the company exceeds earnings expectations, the P/E investors are willing to pay will go from 18x to 20x. Look for Newell's target and stock price to approach $40 by 2007 year-end.

February 14



Applied Materials: Results OK; Semiconductor Equip Cycle Appears To Be Bottoming

Applied Materials (NASDAQ:AMAT), the semiconductor equipment powerhouse, appeared to show signs that the semiconductor equipment market is close to bottoming during its quarterly conference call. Equipment orders were guided to be up 2%-7%, a good sign for the industry.

Michael Splinter, AMAT's CEO said the logic, foundry and display businesses should be bottoming during the next few quarters. Splinter sees strong memory purchases as some 20 memory fabs are due to be constructed to meet the growing demand for new products, such as NAND, which are being used more often as a substitute for disk drives.

What is becoming more and more clear as you listen to AMAT's conference calls and meetings with the investment community is just how powerful a company this is: 90% of orders are 300-millimeter, as semiconductor equipment buyers continue to push toward using newer technologies. This allows AMAT to build a bigger and bigger moat to fend-off competition.

AMAT generated free cash flow of $322 million, which is at the lower end of its free-cash-flow generation cycle. AMAT expects free cash flow generation to move higher from here. The stock buyback is large and dividend increases are also up ahead. AMAT is a very powerful company in a very important industry. It is time to start chipping away at this company.

Feburary 15



Venezuela



Chavez Pays Market Price For Verizon Stake

Hugo Chavez, the socialist Venezuela leader, agreed on Monday to buy Verizon Communications' (VZ) 28.5% stake in the country's CANTV, the country's leading telecommunications provider.

Chavez offered $17.85 per CANTV ADR versus the $16.08 per share Monday trading price, an 11% premium. Last year, Carlos Slim, the Mexican billionaire offered $21 per share.

The CANTV offer follows the government's agreement to pay $740 million for AES's 82% stake in Electricidad de Caracas which was again close to the current trading value.

Anyway you look at it, Venzeula is a country that simply cannot get out of trouble. If its run by capitalists, the rich keep all the money and the poor get poorer and poorer. If the country is run by an extreme reformist, like Chavez, the state runs the businesses into the ground. If you even have an opportunity to go to Venezuela to evaluate investment opportunities, don't go. It is too tough of a place to make money whether a capitalist or communist is running the country.


February 13

Wireless Software

A War In The Wireless Software Business Is About To Begin

Today, Nokia (NOK) and Vodafone (VOD) announced their collaboration on the development of S60 software on Symbian OS, with the release of the first Vodafone specific software package to all S60 licensees.


Comverse yesterday announced the expansion of its Converged Messaging portfolio with the launch of Comverse Instant SMS, which combines the worlds of SMS and Mobile Instant Messaging, or MIM.


Additionally, Openwave (OPWV) is launching a whole line of new products.


2007 and 2008 will be the battle between handsets and smartphones, those with the best software will win out. Wireless service providers have been slow to bring PC functionality to handset devices for fear of losing control of the handset. In the PC business, Microsoft (MSFT) and Intel (INTC) make all the money, with little left over for anyone else.


This means industry consolidation in the wireless software market is about to begin. Look for everyone to start making wireless software acquisitions, either acquiring or partnering, with Openwave, Comverse (CMVT) and Symbian. Also look for the big software companies like Microsoft and Sun Microsystems (SUNW), with its Java platform, to get into the M&A activity.

IP Phone



Looking To Invest In IP Voice: Stay Away From Vonage, Look At eBay

Vonage's (VG) woes continue as detailed in Barron's Follow-Up column this weekend. The stock is currently trading at $5 per share down from its $17 offering price.


The article cites the lack of triple-play offering -- voice video and data -- that the cables can offer and that the baby bells most likely are heading towards offering. However, from this Fly's perspective, the real play in voice over IP could be with Skype, which is owned by eBay (EBAY).


eBay completed the acquisition of Skype during the past year which is now part of its Power of 3 strategy -- marketplaces, payments and communications.


While the cable companies are adding hundreds of thousands or millions of customers, eBay has over 171 million customers around the world. Skype now offers phone numbers that work through your PC. In addition, there is, although it is still expensive, a Skype USB port phone that is wireless so you can walk around with your Skype device in your home.


Skype will be charging for services that go into public-switched networks, but the cost is virtually nothing when compared to cable and the baby bells.


eBay said in its year-end conference call that it is still figuring out the best way to monetize Skype. Any way it does it, it will be a lot cheaper and more profitable than any of its competitors.


February 13, 2007

Optical Stocks



Optical IPOs Are Slowly Coming Back

Opnext (OPXT), a maker of laser diodes, optical modules and pluggable modules, is expected to go public this week. Opnext is the second optical component company to come public in the last four months. Optium (OPTM), a Chalfont, Pa-based company, came public in October 2006 at $17.50 and is now trading at $24.95.


Opnext has been funded by Hitachi and venture capital firm Clarity Group. Hitachi will be transferring some 670 patents to this start up.


The stock is supposedly going to be priced around $14 per share. With only two optical companies recently coming public, as one would expect, the financials for the company are pretty solid.


Supposedly, Opnext is strong in the 10-Gigabyte optical space and has product for 40 gigabyte technology also.


These optical components are very cyclical as are most new higher growth industries. The upcycle in this space appears to be still in its early stage. It may be worth a spec on this IPO.


February 12, 2007

Level 3 Communications



Buying Opportunity

After Cisco's (CSCO) outstanding results, we blogged that another way to play the huge growth in IP traffic was through pure IP service providers such as Level 3 (LVLT), Global Crossing (GLBC) and Time Warner Telecom (TWTC). That day, these stocks rallied big, especially Level 3.

Yesterday, Level 3 reported outstanding results but the stock gave back all the gains made on Wednesday. Why? The company said EBITDA would be down sequentially.

Use yesterday's price weakness to get into this stock. Level 3 is going to spend a boat load of money in the first quarter to properly integrate the Broadwing and other companies it acquired during 2006. After that, operating results, along with the stock, should be off to the races again.

Sprint Nextel has been one disaster of a merger because it never bit the bullet and spent the money to properly integrate the two companies. Sprint, after years of poor performance, is finally going to do the ugly work. But it might be too late.

The strong underlying trends in Level 3's business are too powerful to ignore. The core IP communications business is growing 25% to 30% per year, its growth rate and operating margins are the best in the industry and it continues to attract better and better customers--the who's who of the Internet era. In addition, Level 3 will substantially improve the debt-to-EBITDA ratio by 2008.

Yesterday's sell off was an overreaction. Use it as a buying opportunity.


February 9, 2007

Merrill Lynch




Mortgage Market News & Insider Selling Most Likely Connected

Merrill Lynch's (MER) top executives have been selling a lot of stock, according to Barron's Online. So far this month, the top three execs have grossed $29.7 million. Supposedly, this is the highest level of monthly selling since January 2001.

Yesterday, HSBC increased its reserves for the blow-up of its mortgage portfolio. New Century Financial also reported blow-up results. Both of these companies are in the higher risk part of the mortgage market, but that is where the trouble always starts.

Brokerage firm results have been utterly spectacular for the past five years. A lot of that success can be attributed to the fixed-income business. However, the flat yield curve is most likely going to start impacting results as steep-yield curve trades begin to expire and cannot be replaced in this flat-yield curve environment.

The old-line brokerage firms are too big to report the results they have been reporting for so long. The law of large numbers has to apply at some point. The insider selling is pointing to a tough time ahead for fixed income traders and the brokerage stocks.


February 9, 2007

Mortgage Market



Mortgage Market Getting Ugly

HSBC Holdings PLC (HBC) said late last night that its loan impairment charges and other credit risk provisions in 2006 are now expected to be 20 pct above the consensus estimate of $8.8 billion made by analysts, due to higher-than-earlier expected provisions for its US mortgage business.


HSBC now expects their mortgage loss to be $10 billion.


New Century Financial (NEW), a large subprime mortgage lender, projected a fourth-quarter loss, and said it expects to restate each of the previous three quarters' earnings lower because it did not set aside enough money to buy back subprime loans that went bad.


This unwinding of the mortgage market is just beginning. Large financial institutions have been reporting spectacular results due to gains in fixed income and credit related trading. It appears this era is over. While investors often refer to equity bubbles bursting, credit bubbles are equally as ugly. Watch out for more blow ups.


February 8, 2007

Sun Microsystems



Analysts Not Impressed With Analyst Day

Sun Microsystems (SUNW) held its annual investor's day with the investment community yesterday. Analysts seemed not to share Jonathan Schwartz's, CEO of Sun, enthusiasm for where the company is headed.

Here are some opinions from analyst reports which were posted on Barron's
Tech Trader Daily:

Richard Gardner of Citigroup believes Schwartz continues to adopt the view that Sun’s decision to open source its entire software stack will drive developers and users to its platform(s), eventually creating opportunities to monetize R&D investments. Gardner agrees with the premise that volume drives value, but how much value, for whom and over what time period is still unclear.

Thomas Weisel analyst Kevin Hunt still has concerns regarding the "lackluster" storage business (tape market and integration of StorageTek), and as a result, maintains a Market Weight rating on Sun's shares.

Deutsche Bank’s Chris Whitmore believes that Schwartz and his team are driving operational and product line improvements, but that this is more than reflected in Sun's shares. Whitmore believes Sun’s operating margin goal requires double digit revenue growth through F09, and maintains a Hold rating with a price target of $5.50.

Goldman Sachs’s Laura Conigliaro said, "There are significant execution elements to be hurdled and timing could be lumpy.”

While analysts reports are peppered with optimistic caveats, they are few and far between. Also, analysts and investors are still questioning the reasoning behind the convertible bond offering with KKR.

Sun's stock has had a massive rally recently, it might be time to take some profits.

Internet Protocol

Investing in Internet Protocol

Cisco's (CSCO) quarter-after-quarter of strong results is due to its focus and domination in developing the best Internet Protocol (IP) networking technology. Are there other ways to invest in IP and profit? Look at the remaining pure IP service providers:
  • Level 3 (LVLT)
  • Time Warner Telecom (TWTC)
  • Global Crossing (GLBC)
  • Qwest (Q)

Level 3 still has the most bang for the buck. Also, do not forget about Qwest which owns an old Baby Bell but also owns a sizable nationwide IP backbone.

Chambers mentioned a number of interesting stats during Cisco's conference call. Cisco's optical business grew 40% and its sales to service providers jumped 20%. Chambers went as far as to say that there are signs in the enterprise space that look very much like that of the mid 1990s before technology stocks went through the roof.

If Chambers forecast proves to be correct, this most likely means a shortage of pure IP capacity could be on the horizon.

February 7, 2007

Cisco Systems

Simply Amazing Results

Of all the boom stocks from the 1990s, Cisco (CSCO) is the only one that has maintained the stellar growth:
  • Sales up 27%, the fastest stand-alone growth in years. Way above Cisco’s long-term growth objective of 10 to 15%
  • $2.1 billion in net income, up 28%
  • Cash flow from operations of $2.7 billion
  • Cisco has $20.7 billion in cash and repurchased 121 million shares for a total purchase of $3.3 billion
  • Gross margins stayed strong at 65%

Stand-alone service provider orders are up big, clearly suggesting that the old-time telcos continue to move away from Alcatel-Lucent-type stuff to pure IP technology. Alcatel-Lucent’s results were awful.

Chambers said business remains strong. Most analysts expected Cisco to show signs of slowing growth, however, it is hard to find. While it is tough to chase Cisco’s stock after such strong performance, its business remains strong. Chambers continues to do one of the most amazing corporate management jobs in US business history.



Eastman Kodak













Confidence Building at Kodak

Eastman Kodak (EK) will be hosting its annual meeting with the investment community on Thursday in New York. It would be a good idea to listen to or attend this meeting. It appears the turnaround is very much underway.

  • Net cash generation of $592 million versus an estimate of $400 million to $600 million, hitting the higher end of the estimate
  • Digital earnings grew five-fold, albeit only hitting the lower end of guidance
  • Intellectual property development doing well, as it makes progress with its CMOS business and generates profits from its other IP businesses

The negative side of Eastman Kodak's earnings release was slower digital growth than expected as management decided to focus on profitability versus chasing the lower end of the digital camera market.

Kodak ended the year with $1.5 billion of cash on the balance sheet. And will receive $2.35 billion in cash from the health care business disposition.

Antonio Perez, although focused on his task, has demonstrated some nervousness with the investment community as his turnaround strategy hit bumps in the road. However, it appears the biggest bumps have been hit and smoother roads are ahead. Investors need to revisit Eastman Kodak. It is no longer an asset intensive, slow moving company.

Feburary 6, 2007

Solar Power





Making Money In Solar Power

SunPower (SPWR), the Cypress Semiconductor founded company, has performed well since going public. The stock has moved up to $43, increasing from the mid-20s when it initially started trading.

SunPower makes solar electric power products based on semiconductor technology. Due to the strong growth of these semiconductors, management has cited that getting access to the much needed materials might limit SunPower's growth.

In this weekend's Barron's interview, Michael Cahill, portfolio manager of Chilton Investment, has found a way for investors to possibly profit from any supply shortages that SunPower might face.

Cahill recommends the purchase of MEMC Electronic Materials (WFR). For SunPower to make its chips, it needs a lot of polysilicon, the material used to manufacture semiconductor wafers. However, as this new solar application for semiconductors takes off, polysilicon will most likely be in short supply.

MEMC Electronic earned $2.07 for 2006 and Cahill expects earnings to hit $3.00 in 2007 and $4 per share by 2008. MEMC Electronic appears to be a way to profit from the take off of the solar semiconductor business.


February 6, 2007

High Technology

Interesting Technology Data Points

Barron's interviewed Michael Cahill, portfolio manager of Chilton Investment, on the outlook for tech stocks. Cahill made some interesting points:
  • From 2004 to 2006, the Nasdaq has been the single worst performing major index.
  • The Nasdaq is up only 23% versus 35% for the S&P 500, 47% for the Russell 2000, 47% for Japan, 60%-range for the European Indexes and over 100% for emerging markets.
  • Cahill also points out that tech stocks have had serious multiple compression in addition to a huge accumulation of cash on their balance sheets. When adjusting for cash, tech valuations become even more attractive.
  • In 1999, there were 282 tech IPOs; in 2000 there were 205; in 2005 there were 23 and in 2006 there were 26.

Cahill concludes that with the massive share buybacks and the lack of new supply coming to market via IPOs, the supply and demand balance for tech stocks is becoming more and more favorable. Further, Cahill says most of the liquidation of tech shares by mutual funds in the post-tech bubble environment is completed.

The area he particularly likes is broadband wireless. Companies he likes are Anadigics (ANAD) and EchoStar Communications (DISH).

February 5, 2007

Internet Stocks













The Big Internet Companies Are Here To Stay

If one theme came out of this earnings season it is the big Internet players are for real and they are here to stay.

eBay (EBAY), Amazon (AMZN) and Google (GOOG) all reported results that show that their business models are sustainable. Even Yahoo (YHOO), which continues to struggle, has value as a takeover candidate.

eBay for 2006 reported $6 billion in revenue, up 31%. It bought back $1.0 billion in stock and announced it would increase the buy back to $2.0 billion. This is the first big stock repurchase program in the company's history.

Amazon forecasts revenue to exceed $13 billion up from $10.7 billion in 2006, a 21% increase. Amazon looks to earn $355 to $505 million in operating profit next year.

Google's revenue grew 67% in the fourth quarter and earnings for the quarter reached $1.0 billion. That means, unless something goes terribly wrong, Google will earn over $4.0 billion next year. I think Google will be around for a while.

For most of the 1980s and 1990s investors did not believe Microsoft, Oracle, Intel and Dell would grow to the size they have become. When companies become dominant players in new industries, it is often best to go with the trend and ride these stocks for the long haul.

Ten years into the Internet, the results reported by eBay, Amazon, Google and even Yahoo, show that the industry and these companies are for real.


February 2, 2007

Amazon

A Real Business Model Might Be Evolving

For those who have not looked at Amazon (AMZN) for a while, here are some interesting stats.

Revenue:
  • 2007 - $13.0B to $13.7B (estimated)
  • 2006 - $10.7B
  • 2005 - $8.5B
  • 2004 - $6.9B
  • 2003 - $5.3B
  • 2002 - $3.9B

Amazon is turning into a large company from a revenue perspective and its growth rate is very impressive. In addition, the company is profitable and generates a good amount of cash.

While revenue growth is quite impressive, its ability to forecast operating profits is interesting. Amazon is guiding for first quarter operating profit of $88 million to $122 million, for either a 22% decline or 16% growth versus last year.

For the year, Amazon is forecasting operating profit to decline 9% or to increase 30%. Management expects $355 million to $505 million in operating profit for 2007.

Amazon has a market cap of $16 billion. So it is selling for 1x sales, which is OK for a retailer. However, from the operating guidance, Amazon's business model is still a work in progress. With that said, if the company does get its model figured out, which it appears it will during the next couple of years, this stock could become a big winner.

Start following this stock again, the numbers are too good to ignore.

February 2, 2007




Dell Inc










Michael Dell Back In Charge; Do Not Chase Stock Yet
Michael Dell finally decided to step back into an operating role at Dell (DELL). This follows a tough period for Kevin Rollins and Jim Schneider, both of whom had a tough time anticipating where technology was going.

The old Wayne Gretzky line "you have to skate where the puck is going to be" was seriously lacking with Rollins and Schneider. Both were good executives and diligent but were not tech guys.

Do not chase today's rally in Dell's stock. Dell needs to hire a whole new management team. Wait to see if he can convince executives to join him or if he can find people from within Dell to run the company. It will take a couple of quarters for Michael Dell to have an impact.

February 1, 2007

Google











Spectacular Results Any Way You Look At It
  • 47% market share of search business, Google continues to grow share

  • 67% growth in revenue

  • Earned over $1 billion in net income for the quarter—A Big Number

Google’s strategy of letting users develop content continues to work. Yahoo and old-line media continue to believe only large institutions with deep pockets can generate content for the masses.

During the conference call, Google decided to spend time discussing its ad platform in which it paid over $3.0 billion to its partners during the past year. It was clearly an effort to distinguish between Google and Yahoo!’s Project Panama—which is just being introduced.

Any way you slice it, Google is becoming more and more powerful of a company. It’s ability to share revenue with partners based on algorithms built by the company is very powerful. Yahoo is going to have a tough time catching up.

February 1, 2007

Saturday, February 17, 2007

Microsoft

New Product Launch Will Re-accelerate Growth

Microsoft (MSFT) reported revenue growth of 6% , but if you include the big jump in deferred revenue, revenue increased 20%, according to the company. Bookings growth was also up over 20%.

Microsoft will be launching the consumer version of Vista in February. As a reminder, Microsoft has also launched a new Office and Exchange Server. This broad product launch is huge for Microsoft.

Chris Liddell, Microsoft's CFO, said he expects an excellent year. He also cited that hardware sales for the December quarter was strong, another positive data point for the sofware giant.

Going forward, Microsoft expects double digit revenue growth and for earnings per share to exceed revenue growth.

Microsoft's stock has had a good run anticipating the launch of Vista. However, it appears results are already exceeding most expectations. It appears Microsoft has its growth back and the stock has more to run. Investors have to ride the Vista launch.

January 26, 2007

SAP

SAP's Weak Results Point To Oracle's Success

SAP AG (SAP), which warned earlier in the month, made comments in yesterday's Q4 earnings conference call point to Larry Ellison's prognostication of SAP's demise being more and more correct.

Back in September, after reporting a blow-out quarter, Oracle's (ORCL) Ellison said SAP is a number of years behind. Ellison went as far to say that if Oracle doesn't screw up, SAP is in big trouble.Since Ellison made those comments, more and more evidence is coming out supporting his view.

Since late 2006, SAP has reported poor results and IBM has reported weak results in businesses that work closely with SAP.

SAP said it is going to spend an extra 300 to 400 million euros over the next eight quarters for new software development. This further supports Ellison's claim of SAP beginning behind the curve.

Oracle's stock had a good year in 2006 with industry spending in a lull. But now it appears the lull is over and Oracle could be off to the races again.

January 25, 2007

eBay Inc.

The Power Of 3 Is Powerful

The "Power of 3" is what Meg Whitman calls eBay's (EBAY) 3 primary businesses -- marketplaces, payments and communications. Any way you slice it, the Power of 3 is working.
  • For 2006, $6 billion in revenue, up 31%
  • Purchased $1.0 billion in stock and is upping it to $2.0 billion -- eBay has never repurchased its stock prior to July 2006
  • eBay has 220 million users and Skype is now up to 171 million users, both growing nicely
  • Other eBay names that it owns or has interest in or relationships with are doing well like Shopping.com, Craigslist and VeriSign

Of the many positive points for eBay, the most important to drive this stock higher is that growth is now re-accelerating. Historically, large growth companies perform best when the growth rate picks up. The company is guiding to 18% to 21% growth for 1Q07, which appears too conservative.

Sometimes it is best not to think -- just buy and put a stock away. That is what investors should do with eBay.

January 25, 2007

Sun Microsystems

Sun's Results solid, but KKR Convert Raises Questions

Sun (SUNW) reported a solid 7% increase in revenue for its second quarter, citing good demand for its SPARC chip multithreading (CMT) servers and x64-based servers as well as the increased acceptance of the Solaris 10 Operating System.

More importantly in the tech world, the company showed strong gross margins, coming in at 45%, up from 43% last year.

Sun generated cash from operations of $153 million and had cash and marketable securities at the end of the quarter of $4.8 billion, a lot of cash.

However, despite good cash generation, improved margins and a strong balance sheet, Sun decided to go forward with a $750 million convert with KKR. During the earnings conference call, analysts could not figure out why Sun did the deal.

Jonathan Schwartz, Sun's CEO, said the KKR transaction will allow it to better explore strategic opportunities. He added there could be some cross selling opportunities between KKR's portfolio companies and Sun. Analyst did not appear to believe him.

The reality is the only reason for Sun to need this extra cash is to make a sizable acquisition. Despite an improved operating performance, the growth metrics for Sun, especially within the US, are still weak.

Look for Sun to do another big transaction this year.

January 24, 2007

Yahoo!

Worth Chipping Away At: Good Risk-Reward Bet

Buying Yahoo’s (YHOO) stock is a bet on Project Panama, its new advertising platform. If it succeeds, the stock goes up. If it fails, Terry Semel gets fired and the stock goes up. Therefore, investors are almost in a win-win situation.

In addition, the downside risk is protected by the powerful cash flow machine that this company is. For 2006, Yahoo generated revenue of $6.4 billion, EBITDA of $1.9 billion and free cash flow of $1.27 billion. Any way you look at it, Yahoo's cash generating ability is not going away over night.

For the stock to take off, Project Panama needs to be able to better dynamically link search with advertisers, thereby driving growth again. However, investors will not see this growth until 2Q07. Yahoo stated that 1Q07 will be a transition period.

Waiting for Project Panama to show positive results could prove to be a big risk. If the new advertising platform takes hold the stock might have already discounted the success, making it too late to profit. With little downside risk, Yahoo is worth purchasing and putting away. If the new advertising platform begins to work, this stock will quickly come back into favor.

January 24, 2007

Texas Instruments

Weak Results at TI; Waiting For New Product Ramp

The handset market is maturing and Texas Instruments (TXN) results clearly showed this:
  • 5% decline in semiconductor sales sequentially
  • Wireless was the primary reason for the weakness, declining 10% sequentially. Handset growth is shifting to lower end products
  • Orders down 10% -- weak
  • Book to bill is at .89 -- weak
  • Expect revenue to decline for 1Q07 of 5% to 13% -- weak
  • Growth at TI is coming from a low-cost integrated chip for low-end phones sold in emerging markets. While this business is growing, it does not offset the weakness of the higher end 3-G business.

For TI to grow again, it needs a higher end product to take hold. Specifically, a mass market RIMM, Treo, or Q-type device. This most likely will not happen until the 2007 holiday season.

No need to rush into TI's stock. Wait for seasonally weak summer season to look at this stock again.

January 23, 2007

Lyondell Chemical

Lyondell's Got it All: Earnings, Cash Flow and a Huge Refinery

Lyondell Chemical (LYO) was mentioned twice as a stock to buy in this past weekend's Barron's roundtable, recommended by both Archie MacAllaster and John Neff.

At $25, the stock is selling for 6.25x earnings versus the S&P 500 selling for 15x to 16x earnings. What is particularly attractive about Lyondell is that it bought out its Venezuelan partner's 41% stake in the Citgo refinery and now fully owns this sizable refinery. This asset should generate a lot of cash flow for Lyondell's shareholders for years to come.

Lyondell put a good chunk of debt on its balance sheet to purchase the Citgo refinery stake, but has already reduced debt by $2 to $3 billion, according to MacAllaster, who put a $40 price target on the stock.

January 23, 2007

The U.S. Dollar

Dollar Weakness Is Not Necessarily Bad

Bill Gross, of Pimco fame, joined the chorus of Warren Buffett and others saying the U.S. dollar is "doomed." Gross made these comments in this weekend's Barron's Roundtable.

Gross repeats the same comments as many others: the twin deficits (federal and trade) will force the country to inflate its way out of the deficits. This is pure hogwash.

The U.S. dollar will go down relative to some currencies due to other countries becoming wealthier. This is a good, not a bad thing. Emerging economies will provide goods and services at competitive prices and the market will reward those countries with a stronger currency.

This is exactly what happened to Japan in the post-World War II era. Japan started off making low-end trinkets and then moved up the value chain, becoming a powerful global economic participant. Its currency appreciated relative to the dollar along the way.

The same will happen to other currencies. China was the prime example in 2006 as it began to manage the appreciation of the yuan.

When you hear all this negative babble that the U.S. currency is doomed, take it with a grain of salt. The dollar weakening because other economies are doing smart things is a good, not a bad thing. History has shown that as long as the U.S. keeps inflation between 2% to 2.5%, then a weaker dollar is manageable.

January 22, 2007

Pioneer Natural Resources

Start Looking At Select Commodity Stocks

TheFly blogged to avoid commodity stocks back in the spring. Our timing was quite good. However, a lot of these stocks have corrected significantly and they are beginning to represent good value.

Pioneer Natural Resource (PXD) was mentioned by Archie MacAllaster in this weekend's Barron's Roundtable. Pioneer is the third largest independent oil and gas producer in the U.S. and its stock has come down from a high of $54 to $38 -- a big correction.

According to MacAllaster, Pioneer had forward sold a lot of its output considerably below today's prices. Therefore, as these contracts come off, Pioneer can sell their gas at much high prices and earn greater profits, despite the recent natural gas price pullback. Pioneer's reserves are all domestic, so they will benefit from better prices due to the inevitable decline in U.S. reserves.

Also, Pioneer has shrunk it shares outstanding from 145 million to 125 million and is supposedly on its way to 100 million shares outstanding.

January 22, 2007

JDS Uniphase

Guidance Raised: A Sign Optical Is Coming Back

JDS Uniphase (JDSU) raised its revenue guidance last night. The company had seen Q2 revenue of $332M-$352M and now sees revenue at $360M-$365M; consensus is for $343.29M.

The company cited strong performance by its communications test and measurement segment, which has been an area of focus for JDSU CEO, Kevin Kennedy, a former top executive at Cisco (CSCO).

However, JDSU's test and measurement business is focused more on IP and optical traffic than the test and measure tools used in the semiconductor space. Two different businesses.

This is another data point that the optical business continues to improve. Ciena (CIEN) should also benefit from this news.

Written January 19, 2007

Apple Inc

Numbers Beat Expectation, But Are They Strong Enough To Drive Stock Higher?

Apple (AAPL) reported very solid numbers last night. Revenue hit $7.1 billion, up from $5.7 billion last year, or a 24% increase. Apple beat the consensus estimate of $6.4 billion. It appears Apple, once again, set the bar pretty low.

iPod sales jumped to 21 million units, up from 14 million units last year, for a 50% increase.

It appears a lot of the Apple-hype ran out last week at MacWorld and the next catalyst appears to be the launch of iPhone.

Apple's stock, historically, has waited to appreciate until data is available on the success of a new product. Obviously, iPhone is the next big push. Wait for data points on the iPhone launch before getting into this stock. iPod is entering a seasonally weaker period and Apple needs the next great product to drive this stock higher.

January 18, 2007

Consumer Vs. Business

Consumer Vs. Business

Consumer Has Been Driving Technology This Decade: Is It Time For A Change?

Intel, last night in its conference call, said that the consumer will be driving the first ramp in demand for Microsoft's Vista operating system. Tonight, Apple reports results whose huge success has obviously been driven by iPod, a consumer product.

However, beneath the headlines, Intel mentioned that its server business is doing quite well. Also, other large-volume high-end companies such as Sun Micro, Level 3, IBM and possibly EMC are seeing improvement in their operating performances.

While investor attention is still focused on Apple, the iPod and the consumer, the revenue and operating performance of technology companies focused on the business customer appear to be improving nicely for the first time in a long time.

January 17, 2007

Cotton

Compelling Argument To Go Long Cotton

Art Samberg, of Pequot Capital fame, provided a compelling argument to go long cotton in this weekend's Barron's investor round table.

For you commodity traders out there, Samberg said go long the December '07 cotton contract. His reasoning is while cotton consumption in the US has been in decline, China consumption which has been growing nicely, is picking up more steam.

Cotton consumption in the US has fallen from 12 million to 5 million bales a year due to the growth of polyester and other materials. Conversely, Textile spending is on a big upswing in China - up 27% in '06, after jumping 36% in '05. Chinese consumption which had been growing 4% to 6% per year is now growing 15% per year.

According to Samberg, China's cotton consumption has increased from 25% to 39%-40% of world cotton consumption.

Because of strong prices of corn and soybeans--corn being used for ethanol production, US farmers are going to remove acreage from cotton to earn better profits in higher priced corn and soybeans. Supposedly, there have only been four times since 1913 when cotton was this cheap relative to grains like corn and wheat. The last time being 1974. From 1974 to 1976, cotton tripled in price.

Written January 16, 2007