Archive for 2006

  • Home Depot’s Earnings
    , August 17th, 2006 at 10:40 am

    I have a few quick comments about Home Depot’s (HD) earnings. For some reason, people think this company is suffering much worse than it really is. (I defended the stock last month).
    Home Depot has beaten Wall Street’s expectations for the past few quarters, and the company did it again on Tuesday. HD earned 93 cents a share, a penny better than expectations.
    The company said its earnings will come in at the low-end of its guidance, which was 10% to 14%. Last year, HD made $2.72 a share, so the stock is now going for less than 13 times trailing earnings. If the company makes $3 a share this year (a 10.3% increase), then the stock is trading at about 11 times this year’s earnings.
    I think investors are highly distrustful of the stock and they were ready to hear awful news. No such luck yet. I’m not a big fan of Bob Nardelli, but HD is a good stock at a good price.

  • July CPI +0.4%; Core +0.2%
    , August 16th, 2006 at 8:25 am

    Both are in line with estimates. Here’s how core and headline inflation have performed over the past few years:
    July CPI.bmp
    Sorry folks, but we’re still not out of the inflation-fested woods yet.
    The good news is that the year-over-year core rate is still lower than where it was during much of 2001. Over the last 12 months, the core CPI was up 2.69%.
    The bond market is happy this morning, and the yield on the 30-year Treasury is now close to 5%. The 30-year briefly dipped below 5% earlier this month, but it didn’t hold. This time may be different.
    For the record, Bernanke said that the Fed sees core CPI falling to 2.25% to 2.5% this year, and 2% to 2.25% next year. I don’t think that’s going to happen.
    The chain-weighted CPI was flat for July, although that’s not a seasonally adjusted number, the data series is too new to see a clear seasonal pattern. For the last 12 months, the chain-weighted CPI was up 2.54%.
    The Fed funds rate is now 2.56% above the trailing core CPI rate. That’s still pretty low for an expansion. During the 1990s, the economy was growing much faster than it is now, and real interest rates were much higher.
    I think Lacker was right, the Fed needs to raise rates again.

  • Dell’s Battery Recall
    , August 15th, 2006 at 1:48 pm

    kaboom.jpg
    I just checked Dell’s Web site, and I’m in the clear. My battery isn’t one of the exploding ones.
    Here’s more info from Dell on their battery recall.

  • Tame PPI Report
    , August 15th, 2006 at 12:07 pm

    The market is relieved today by a tame report on producer prices. The government’s PPI report showed that wholesale inflation rose just 0.1% last month. Economists were expecting a rise of 0.4%. Core wholesale prices fell -0.3%, the first decline since October.
    Blomberg surveyed 60 economists, not a single one was expecting a decline in core wholesale prices. The S&P 500 is up slightly over 1%. The NASDAQ 100 is up close to 2%. Bond yields across the board are much lower. The best sector today is tech, and energy is the only sector that’s trading lower.

  • The Yield Curve’s Impact on Stock Prices
    , August 15th, 2006 at 9:49 am

    The yield curve has a dramatic impact on equity prices. The steeper the yield curve, the better stocks perform.
    I looked at the S&P 500 data along with the yields on the 90-day and 10-year Treasuries. Since 1962, the yield curve has been negative (i.e., the 10-year minus the 90-day) for a total of five years. In that time, the market has lost about 37%.
    In fact, the S&P 500 is net flat (not including dividends) for all the periods when the yield curve is less than 78 basis points, which is about one-third of the time. The yield curve hasn’t been that wide since last November.
    Interestingly, the market also does poorly when the yield curve is at its steepest. At 286 basis points, the S&P 500 starts falling. Perhaps the market senses that the yield curve is about to turn around.
    If you want to geek out on the data, here’s my spreadsheet. I used weekly data, and I compared the S&P’s return to the prior week’s yield curve.

  • Exploding Dells
    , August 15th, 2006 at 9:20 am

    I recently read Copies in Seconds the brilliant biography of Chester Carlson, the inventor of the Xerox machine. The early machines were, I guess you could say, a tad bit unreliable. Xerox actually sold fire extinguishers along with the copiers for when, not if, the copiers burst into flames.
    If there’s any one thing to avoid in a product, it’s spontaneous combustion. Now Dell is recalling 4.1 million laptops because the batteries also burst into flames.

    The batteries were manufactured by Sony Corp. and used in Latitude, Inspiron, and Dell Precision portable PCs sold between April 2004 and July 18, 2006, Jess Blackburn, a spokesman for Round Rock, Texas-based Dell, said yesterday in an interview.
    The action follows Dell’s slowest sales growth in four years after US consumers complained that the company’s discounts are confusing and telephone hold times too long for service.
    Dell in May said it will spend $100 million to improve service and product quality to regain market share lost to Hewlett-Packard Co.
    “Dell is trying to bolster its image and this is certainly not going to help,” said Brent Bracelin, an analyst at Pacific Crest Securities in Portland, Ore., who rates the shares “sector perform” and doesn’t own them. “Another recall is yet another setback for the company that is struggling to regain share in the market.”

  • Sysco Misses By a Penny a Share
    , August 14th, 2006 at 9:54 am

    From the AP:

    Sysco Corp., the largest foodservice distributor in North America, said Monday its fiscal fourth-quarter profit dropped 11 percent, hurt in part by higher fuel costs and pension expenses.
    Profit for the quarter ended July 1 fell to $254.1 million, or 41 cents per share, compared with a profit of $284.7 million, or 44 cents per share during the same period last year.
    Revenue grew 7 percent to $8.51 billion, from $7.98 billion during the year-ago quarter.
    Analysts predicted a profit of 42 cents on revenue of $8.63 billion, according to a Thomson Financial poll.
    Fuel costs and pension expenses led to an 8 percent increase in total costs and expenses year over year.
    For the full fiscal year, Sysco’s profit fell 11 percent, to $855.3 million, or $1.36 per share, compared to $961.5 million, or $1.47 per share a year ago. Revenue climbed 8 percent to $32.63 billion, from $30.28 billion last year.

  • The Hidden Bull
    , August 11th, 2006 at 9:57 am

    This came as a surprise to me but the Morgan Stanley Consumer Index (^CMR) is right at an all-time high. Earlier this year, the index took out its 2000 high, and it’s been slowly crawling higher ever since.
    Ironically, today’s report on consumer confidence showed that it dropped to a three-month low. According to the AP, “Economists blamed the deterioration in confidence mostly on galloping energy prices and a cooling in the once-hot housing market.”
    That may be true, but it’s not showing up in the shares of consumer stocks. Despite Wall Street’s sour mood, it’s important to remember that the market’s troubles since early-May have largely been confined to cyclical stocks (industrials, materials and technology in particular). Transportation stocks, like Expeditors (EXPD), have been especially ugly lately.
    We often talk about the stock market as if it’s one big stock that’s traded every day, but there are thousands of stocks in dozens of industries. Difficult markets don’t affect all stocks the same way.
    Health care has been a little unusual. Normally, health care moves with the other consumer stocks, but the sector starting dropping in March. The good news, however, is that health care seem to be making up lost ground.
    Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) is finally showing some life. I try not to be surprised by what I see the market do, but seeing these shares drop below $32 did catch me off guard.
    Next week, we’ll have a few more earnings reports from our Buy List stocks. Sysco (SYY) reports on Monday. Home Depot (HD) on Tuesday, and Dell (DELL) on Thursday. Medtronic (MDT) reports the following Tuesday.

  • New Ticker for Harley-Davidson: HOG
    , August 10th, 2006 at 5:17 pm

    On August 15, Harley’s ticker will change from HDI to HOG.

    The new symbol reflects the long-time nickname for the heavyweight motorcycles manufactured by the Milwaukee-based company. The current symbol is HDI.
    Harley-Davidson holds trademarks to the term HOG. H.O.G. is also the acronym for the Harley Owners Group. Started by the company in 1983, the Harley Owners Group has more than one million members and is the largest factory-sponsored rider organization in the world.

    In March, I listed my 10 favorite stock symbols:
    1. (BUD) Anheuser-Busch
    2. (WOOF) VCA Antech (veterinary services)
    3. (BOOM) Dynamic Materials
    4. (FIZ) National Beverage
    5. (LVB) Steinway Musical Instruments (in honor of Ludwig Van Beethoven)
    6. (ZEUS) Olympic Steel
    7. (CHUX) O’Charley’s Inc.
    8. (TAP) Molson Coors Brewing
    9. (BID) Sotheby’s Holdings
    10. (LENS) Concord Camera

  • The Election Cycle Revisited
    , August 10th, 2006 at 6:03 am

    A few months ago, I wrote about the stock market’s election cycle. This is one of those bits of market trivia that I usually don’t have much faith in. But I have to admit that the evidence is pretty strong that the market follows a four-year cycle.
    The indexes seem to have had several major bottoms during mid-term election years (see here). In April, I crunched the data from Ibbotson and Associates to see what the average cycle looks like, and this is what I got:
    Cycle.bmp
    You can see that the market runs into a wall in the year after an election, and stays flat through most of the mid-term election year. The theory is that the incumbent president tries to make the economy look great for Election Day, and everything goes to hell shortly afterward. This data was based on the market’s total return (dividends included) from 1926 through 2005.
    The data I had was monthly, and I wanted to see if I could narrow it down some. I looked at all the daily closings for the Dow Jones from the start of 1929 through this past Tuesday. That’s roughly 19-1/3 election cycles. This is slightly different because it’s just one index and dividends aren’t included, but I do have the benefit of zeroing in on a specific day.
    This is the average Dow election cycle looks like:
    image455.bmp
    You can certainly see a similar pattern here. The market hits its low on September 30 of the mid-term year (not too far away!) and peaks on August 3 of the post-election year. In that 14-month period, the market declines an average of 9.4%. The market is up 46.8% over the other 34 months.
    What I really found surprising is that the bullish period is very heavily concentrated within the first 12 months.
    From September 30 of the mid-term to September 13 of the pre-election year, the Dow is up an average of 31.6%. To put that in perspective, the Dow averages a gain of 33.1% over the entire four-year period. So every four years, 95% of the market’s capital gains is squeezed into a one-year period (on average).
    If you’re curious, the market’s best day during the four-year cycle is September 21 of the election year (+1.15%, thank you 1932) and the worst day is October 19 of the pre-election year (-2.04%, thank you 1987). And most importantly, Leap Day is slightly positive (+0.12%).