Archive for November, 2011
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Stock Buybacks Surge
Eddy Elfenbein, November 14th, 2011 at 9:37 amI’ve said here many times that I’m not a fan of stock buybacks. I think they’re a waste of shareholder money and I’d much rather see that money flow to shareholders in the form of cash dividends. Unfortunately, the tax code isn’t very helpful in these matters.
Bloomberg notes that share buybacks have surged recently. This year may be the third-highest ever for buybacks. Only 2006 and 2007 were higher. Even Warren Buffett joined in the buyback parade, and just a few days ago, Amgen announced a very large buyback.
Buyback announcements reached $119.8 billion in the third quarter, up 67 percent from a year earlier, as the S&P 500 slumped 14 percent in the biggest drop since the end of 2008, according to data compiled by Birinyi and Bloomberg. Companies spent at least $150.6 billion on their own stock in the three months ending Sept. 30, more than any quarter since the final period in 2007, the data show.
This happens while the market is trading at some of the lowest valuations of the past two decades.
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Morning News: November 14, 2011
Eddy Elfenbein, November 14th, 2011 at 5:23 amWith Clock Ticking, an Economist Accepts a Mandate to Rescue Italy
France Keeps a Watchful Eye on Turmoil in Italy
EU Must Embrace ‘Political Union’: Merkel
Japan’s Economy Emerges From Post-Quake Slump on Export Rebound
Asia Stocks, Copper Rise on Japan GDP
Iraq Criticizes Exxon Mobil for Its Deal With the Kurds
‘Enough’s Enough’ on Undervalued Yuan: Obama
Banks Quietly Ramping Up Costs to Consumers
Boeing Cements Wide-Body Lead Over Airbus
Afren Rises After Completing Nigerian Oil Asset Purchase
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group H1 Net Profit Jumps, Raises Full-year Forecast
Mizuho Net Falls 25%, Plans 3,000 Job Cuts
J&J-Bayer Blood Thinner May Enter $1 Billion Market
Jeff Miller: Weighing the Week Ahead: Will the Volatility Continue?
Stone Street: SEC, NASDAQ, NYSE Finally Do, Er, “Something” To Combat Reverse Merger Abuse…
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Academic Study: Seeing a Scary Movie Can Cause You to Sell Your Stocks
Eddy Elfenbein, November 13th, 2011 at 12:24 amWatching a scary movie can frighten you into selling your stocks too soon, a new study suggests.
The researchers explained that this is due to something called “social projection,” in which people’s own current feelings and inclinations heavily influence their assessment of others’ state of mind and preferences.
This means that an investor who is scared assumes that other investors are also scared and that their fears will drive stock prices lower, prompting the investor to sell early, said study co-author Eduardo Andrade, an associate professor in the business school at the University of California, Berkeley.
“If I’m scared, I tend to project that you are scared,” he said in a university news release. “If I feel like selling, I project that you are also going to sell, and that pushes me to sell earlier rather than later in anticipation of a drop in stock value.”
In this study, the researchers examined whether emotions completely unrelated to the stock market could influence investor behavior. They had one group of volunteers watch horror movies while another group watched documentaries about Benjamin Franklin and Vincent Van Gogh.
After watching the movies, the volunteers participated in a stock market simulation experiment. Those who watched the horror movies were more likely to sell early than those who watched the documentaries, the investigators found.
But fear triggered early selling only when participants were told that the value of the stock was affected by other people, not when they were told the stock value was randomly determined by a computer, where social projection was not a factor.
The findings suggest that being able to control fear is beneficial for investors.
“Generally speaking, those who made more money were those who decided to stay longer in the simulation game,” Andrade said.
The study is published in the November issue of the Journal of Marketing Research.
I’m more than a little skeptical of overly-cutesy studies like this. The only comment I’d add is that a documentary on the life of Vincent Van Gogh could be pretty effing scary.
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Stryker To Cut 1,000 Jobs
Eddy Elfenbein, November 11th, 2011 at 12:07 pmFrom Reuters:
Medical device maker Stryker Corp said it will cut 5 percent, or about 1000 jobs to largely offset costs related to the scheduled implementation of the new Medical Device Excise Tax in 2013.
“While it is still uncertain whether the device tax will exist in its current form come 2013, we believe that companies across the space will make moves to mitigate the P&L impact of the new excise tax,” Susquehanna International Group analyst David Turkaly wrote in a note.
The maker of hip and knee replacements and surgical products, which expects to save about $100 million from the restructuring, said it will record $85-$95 million of the entire $150-$175 million charge in the current quarter.
Stryker expects to complete the restructuring activity by 2012-end.
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CWS Market Review – November 11, 2011
Eddy Elfenbein, November 11th, 2011 at 8:49 amJust when I thought the market was getting back to something resembling normal, the S&P 500 got hit for a 3.67% loss on Wednesday. In the five weeks preceding that (more precisely, from October 3rd to November 8th), the index gained 16.1% which is an impressive rally for such a short period of time. But once again, Europe’s mess is our pain.
The latest worry is Italy and truthfully, the story in Italy is basically the same as the story in Greece, except that it’s much larger which means that it’s potentially far worse. If need be, Greece can be tossed aside. Italy can’t. It’s perfectly positioned in no man’s land: too big to fail and too big to save. Italy is the third-largest economy in Europe and it holds $2.6 trillion in debt. That’s more than Greece, Ireland, Spain and Portugal combined. If that’s defaulted, well…people notice that sort of thing.
Investors have grown very weary of holding Italian bonds and I don’t blame them. The yield on the ten-year bond there shot up past 7% which is the trigger point at which other countries have sought bailouts. In the realm of international finance, the bond market is the court of no appeal; once that’s turned against you, the end is certainly near. Your business or economy can be a complete wreck but as long as someone is willing to lend you money, you can stay alive. But once the money train ends, you’re done. James Carville, the former political advisor to President Clinton, once said that he’d prefer to be reincarnated as the bond because “you can intimidate everybody.” He’s right.
To their credit, the Italian government has gotten intimidated. They’ve promised to fast-track reforms and that helped the markets recover a bit on Thursday. The European Central Bank has jumped in, starting to buy Italian debt in an effort to push down yields. Also, Prime Minister Berlusconi has promised to step down after a new budget deal is reached. Yesterday the Italian government auctioned off some one-year debt and that went much better than expected.
As I said last week, my fear is that all these moves merely treat the symptoms without curing the disease which is an inherently dysfunctional currency union. In fact, I’m not sure that the ECB can ultimately help Italy. We might really be seeing the end of the euro. In last week’s CWS Market Review, I said that the currency might be able to survive in a smaller union. Now we learn that France and Germany have been talking about exactly that for the past several months. For the euro to live, the periphery of Europe needs to start growing again and soon, and that won’t be easy with their new-found austerity. For now, I think the most-probable path will be a much weaker euro. This mess is going to get worse before it gets better.
One beneficiary of the nervousness in Europe is the U.S. bond market. Two weeks ago, the yield on the 10-year note broke above 2.4%, and that was a move I was happy to see. Investors are well-advised to shift out of these safe assets in exchange for riskier assets like high-yielding stocks. On Wednesday, however, the yield on the 10-year got as low 1.93%. Things could be changing. On Thursday, the Treasury auctioned off a new batch of 10-year notes and the demand was the lowest it’s been in nearly two years.
Now let’s turn to our Buy List. Some of the higher-yielding stocks I like right now include AFLAC ($AFL), Johnson & Johnson ($JNJ), Reynolds American ($RAI) and Sysco ($SYY). This week we had a last trickle of earnings reports for this earnings season. On Friday, Moog ($MOG-A) delivered a great earnings report. For their fiscal fourth quarter, Moog made 83 cents per share which was 10 cents more than Wall Street’s estimate. That also represented 17% growth over last year.
The more I look at Moog’s number, the more I like them. For all of 2011, Moog earned $2.95 per share. For 2012, the company sees sales increasing by 8% to $2.52 billion and EPS rising 12% to $3.31. Wall Street had been expecting $3.25 per share.
As a business Moog is very profitable, but as a stock it’s dull as dirt and that suits me just fine. The shares are basically flat for the year, but if you’re able to get MOG-A for less than $40 (which is 12 times forward earnings), then you’ve gotten yourself a good deal.
On Monday, Sysco ($SYY) reported quarterly earnings of 55 cents per share which topped Wall Street’s estimates by thee cents per share. Overall, the company had a very good quarter though demand wasn’t nearly as strong as I’d like. The good news, though not for consumers, was that Sysco’s bottom line was helped by higher food prices. I’m not so worried about factors that may impact Sysco’s business in the short term.
Here’s the important part: Sysco has raised its quarterly dividend for the last 41 years in a row, and I expect to see #42 very soon. However, the increase will probably be very modest. My guess is that the board will bump up the quarterly dividend from 26 cents to 27 cents per share. That would give the shares a yield of close to 4%. In this environment, that’s not bad. Sysco is a good buy up to $30 per share.
After the closing bell on Tuesday, Leucadia National ($LUK) reported a loss of $291 million for the third quarter. I have to explain that LUK refuses to play the quarterly earnings game. Since no analysts on Wall Street cover the stock, which is basically a large closed-end fund, the earnings report can be misleading. What’s hurt Leucadia lately is its holding of Jefferies ($JEF). LUK’s stock dropped more than 12% on Wednesday.
That’s all for now. The bond market will be closed on November 11th in honor of Veterans’ Day. Next week will be the last full week of trading before Thanksgiving. Be sure to keep checking the blog for daily updates. I’ll have more market analysis for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review!
– Eddy
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Morning News: November 11, 2011
Eddy Elfenbein, November 11th, 2011 at 6:48 amEconomist Named to Lead Greek Unity Government
Italy Looks to New Government Led by Mario Monti
Europe’s Banks Turned to Safe Bonds and Found Illusion
Invisible Bank Run Becomes Conversation With 7% Italy Yield
China New Loans Rise More Than Expected in Loosening Signal
APEC CEOs to World Leaders: Boost Trade and Growth
In MF Global’s Wake, Regulators to Audit All Futures Firms
US Stocks Rise As Jobs Data Fuel Optimism
Jobless Claims in U.S. Fall to Lowest Level in Seven Months
Sinopec to Pay Galp $3.5 Billion for Brazilian Oil Stake
GE Predicts Growth Above 10% in Emerging Markets
Zynga Leans On Some Workers to Surrender Pre-IPO Shares
Latest Starbucks Concoction: Juice
Disney Profit Jumps 30% on Theme Parks, TV
Layoffs Tip Spain’s Telefónica Into Loss
Phil Pearlman: Apple and the Genius Premium
Howard Lindzon: Timestamps Matter and Sometimes You Just Have To Call the Authorities
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The S&P 500 Peaks Above 1,240
Eddy Elfenbein, November 10th, 2011 at 12:10 pmAfter yesterday’s bloodbath — which mostly happened in the afternoon — the S&P 500 has slowly gained back some territory.
What I find interesting is that for now, there seem to be buyers willing to defend the market above 1,200. That didn’t happen a few weeks ago.
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Morning News: November 10, 2011
Eddy Elfenbein, November 10th, 2011 at 5:19 amInvestors Around the World Flee Stocks
Italy’s Senate Speeds Austerity Vote
China’s Trade Surplus Widens, Falls Short of Forecast
Trade War in Solar Takes Shape
E.U. Poised to Overtake U.S. as Biggest Oil Importer
Corporate Japan Rocked by Scandal at Olympus
Sweden’s Tough Love of Banks is World Model
G.M. Posts Quarterly Profit, but Chief Calls It Insufficient
Deutsche Telekom Net Profit Rises
Siemens Sees Stagnant Profit as Growth Slows
Aegon Net Drops 95%, Hurt by Falling Stocks, Interest Rates
Wal-Mart to Start Its Sales at 10 P.M. on Thanksgiving
Google’s Chief Works to Trim a Bloated Ship
Jeff Carter: Yet Another Buying Opportunity?
Stone Street: Analyzing the Popular Proposals for Mortgage Principal Writedowns, Part I, Part II, Part III
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The Stock Market’s Gain Has Come on One Day in Every 21 Months
Eddy Elfenbein, November 9th, 2011 at 1:04 pmThe Dow’s entire 3,066% gain since the 1929 top came on just 46 days. On average, that’s being long on just one day every 21 months. The other 99.78% of the time, the Dow has been flat.
While this fact is technically correct, it’s very misleading. For one, I’m using the market’s top in 1929, plus I’m not including dividends.
But what really makes the stat work is the market’s volatility. Those 46 days were all days of greater than 5.3% rallies. In fact, 34 of those 46 days occurred from 1929 to 1933.
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Italian Bond Market Sinks U.S. Stocks
Eddy Elfenbein, November 9th, 2011 at 9:57 amThe market is down sharply this morning on the news of a seriously freaked out bond market in Italy. If the bond market ain’t happy, ain’t nobody happy.
Ten-year bonds are now paying more than 7% which is the highest since the euro came along. This comes after Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said he would step down after a budget deal was reached. Initially, markets rallied on the news. (Note to self: It’s usually not a good sign when the news of your departure sparks a rally.) So where are folks seeking shelter? You guessed it—U.S. Treasury bonds.
Our 10-year note is now back below 2%. There’s going to be a big auction of 19-years by the Treasury later today. Yesterday’s three-year auction had some pretty intense demand.
Shares of General Motors ($GM) are lower after the company said that its third-quarter profits dropped 15% from one year ago. This is the company’s seventh-straight profitable quarter and they topped expectations. GM is taking a bath in Europe and they said they don’t expect to break even this year in Europe.
It’s still early, but the S&P 500 has been as low as 1,240.99 which is a drop of 2.74%.
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