Author Archive

  • Consumer Confidence Surges In November
    , December 27th, 2011 at 11:05 am

    I hope everyone had a nice three-day weekend. On Friday, the stock market closed at its highest level in six weeks. That’s especially impressive to see investors willing to hold stocks over the long weekend. We also broke above the 200-day moving average.

    The S&P 500 is modestly higher this morning, although this should be a very quiet week of trading. The only major news is that shares of Sears ($SHLD) are getting clocked for a 20% loss this morning on the news that it’s closing 120 stores due to poor sales.

    I have a feeling that at the end of this week, the S&P 500 won’t be terribly far from 1257, which is where the index started the year.

    On Friday, the government reported that personal income and consumer spending both rose by 0.1% last month. Frankly, that’s pretty tepid but it basically fits with my view that the economy is recovering at a slow pace. The durable goods report was a bit stronger. It showed a 3.8% increase for November, which is the biggest gain in four months.

    Today’s consumer confidence report was very strong. The index popped from 55.2 to 64.5. Wall Street was expecting 59.

  • Morning News: December 27, 2011
    , December 27th, 2011 at 6:45 am

    Italians Cut Spending in Worst Christmas in 10 Years

    In Europe, Securities Overseer Spreads Gospel of Streamlined Regulation

    Currency Agreement for Japan and China

    China Investment Wave Unlikely to Swamp EU

    Iran Regime Profiting From Sanctions: U.S.

    Japan to Ease Ban on Arms Exports

    China 2012 Rare-Earth Export Quota Almost Same as This Year

    U.S. Rental Demand Lifts Housing Sector

    S&P Index in 2011 Moves Least Since 1970

    Obama Wins Most Demand for Debt Since 1995

    TV Prices Fall, Squeezing Most Makers and Sellers

    Sony to Cease Its Flat-Screen Partnership With Samsung

    E&Y Audit Panel Says No Violations in Olympus Handover

    Howard Lindzon: The Mattress ‘Sell’ Indicator…or What is the Stock Market ‘Sleep Number’

    Epicurean Dealmaker: TED’s Greatest Hits of 2011

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • The Decline of Education
    , December 26th, 2011 at 6:43 pm

    Here’s part of an interesting discussion with Alex Tabarrok and Russ Roberts:

    What’s wrong with our education system? Let’s talk about K-12. Here’s two remarkable facts, which have just blown me away. Right now, in the United States, people 55-64 years old, they are more likely to have had a high school education than 25-34 year olds. Just a little bit, but they are more likely.

    So, you look everywhere in the world and what do you see? You see younger people having more education than older people. Not true in the United States. That is a shocking claim. Incredible. And the reason is that the drop-out rate has increased? Exactly. So, the high school dropout rate has increased. Now, 25% of males in the United States drop out of high school. And that’s increased since the 1960s, even as the prospects for a high school dropout have gotten much worse.

    We’ve seen an increase, 21st century–25% of males not graduating high school. That’s mind-boggling. Why? One of the underlying facts relating to education, which is has stayed true, which is that the more education you get on average–and I’m going to talk about why on average can be very misleading–high school graduates do better than high school dropouts; people with some college do better than high school graduates; people graduating from college do better than people with some college; people with graduate degrees do better than college grads. And the differences are large. Particularly if you compare a college graduate to a high school dropout, there is an enormous difference. So, normally we would say: Well, this problem kind of solves itself. There’s a natural incentive to stay in school, and I wouldn’t worry about it. Why should we be worrying about it? It doesn’t seem to be working. Why isn’t it working and what could be done? I think there’s a few problems. One is the quality of teachers I think has actually gone down. So I think that’s a problem.

  • Morning News: December 26, 2011
    , December 26th, 2011 at 6:30 am

    Fair Trade Proving Anything But in $6 Billion Market

    S.Korea Delegation Heads North as Kim Jong Un Elevated

    Nigeria Christmas Day Bombings Kill at Least 26

    Yuan Hits All-time High, On Track for Over-4% Gain in ’11

    China May Establish Credit-Rating Companies

    Abu Dhabi Aldar Board to Discuss Sale of Some Assets, Projects This Month

    IMF’s Lagarde Warns Global Economy Threatened

    China, Japan to Back Direct Trade of Currencies

    Turkey, Azerbaijan Agree on 7 Billion Euro Gas Pipeline Plan

    American Firms See Europe Woes as Opportunities

    A Year of Disappointment at the Movie Box Office

    Sony to Sell LCD Venture Stake to Samsung for $940 Million

    Fukushima Probe Highlights Nuclear Regulator

    Cullen Roche: Will The Shorter Business Cycle Lead To Recession in 2012?

    Jeff Miller: Weighing the Week Ahead: A Respite from European Concerns?

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Merry Everything!
    , December 24th, 2011 at 12:19 pm

    I want to wish everyone a Merry Christmas and a happy, healthy and profitable New Year.

    The past year has been a great one for Crossing Wall Street. Our Buy List is in the black, and the e-letter has grown by leaps and bounds. I want to thank all my readers for their continued support.

    I also owe major thanks to Howard Lindzon, Phil Pearlman and the team at StockTwits. I also want to thank Marcia Hippen for her invaluable editing skills and for helping me get the e-letter out each week.

    Let’s hope 2012 brings us more profits—in all our endeavors.

  • CWS Market Review – December 23, 2011
    , December 23rd, 2011 at 7:16 am

    Merry Christmas!

    Santa Claus made an early arrival this year as the S&P 500 rallied for the last three days in a row, and we’re one good push from hitting our highest close in six weeks. The stock market will be closed on Monday so there are only five trading days left in 2011. As of now, our Buy List holds a slight lead over the S&P 500. As I’ve mentioned before, this could be our fifth-straight year of beating the market but it looks like it will come down to the wire.

    Unfortunately, our Buy List wasn’t helped this week by our two stocks that reported earnings. First, Oracle ($ORCL) got body-slammed for an 11.7% loss on Wednesday after the company reported earnings three cents short of expectations. This is especially embarrassing for me because I told you Oracle would beat expectations by at least three cents per share. Ugh! I’ll have more on Oracle in a bit but I’ll tell you now that I still like the stock and that it is a member of the 2012 Buy List.

    The other bad apple was Bed Bath & Beyond ($BBBY) which got a 6.3% haircut on Thursday. However, this story is very different from Oracle’s because I was very impressed with BBBY’s earnings report. They beat their forecast and raised full-year guidance for the third time this year. I’ll go into BBBY’s outlook in more detail in just a bit.

    While I’m keeping BBBY on next year’s Buy List, if you’re thinking of starting a new position here, I’d caution you that the stock is on the expensive side. The Street’s estimates for next year’s earnings strike me as overly-optimistic. Still, BBBY is an outstanding company.

    Remember that the 2012 Buy List will go into effect on Tuesday, January 3rd (the market will be closed on January 2nd). To reiterate, the new buys are CA Technologies ($CA), Hudson City Bancorp ($HCBK), CR Bard ($BCR), Harris ($HRS) and DirecTV ($DTV). The deletions are Abbott Labs ($ABT), Becton, Dickinson ($BDX), Deluxe ($DLX), Gilead Sciences ($GILD) and Leucadia National ($LUK).

    I like to pre-announce the new Buy List so that no one can claim I use any tricks in getting a head start. This is actually hurting me this year. Since I announced the new picks, Harris is up by 7% and Hudson City is up 9%. While these gains don’t count for my 2012 track record, there’s nothing stopping you from getting in on the action.

    Now let’s take a closer look at why stocks have been in a better mood lately. The reason is rather simple: the economic news continues to look promising. To be sure, we’re a long way from robust economic health, but things are looking better nearly every week. More importantly, the market is slowly realizing that we can prosper even as our friends across the pond are, shall we say…having difficulties.

    Last week, I highlighted the very good jobless claims report. It was even better this week. There were 364,000 claims for initial unemployment insurance which is the lowest number since April 2008. This probably means that about 200,000 net new jobs are being created each month. Goldman Sachs estimates that any jobless claims figure reading below 435,000 indicates that the economy is creating more jobs.

    The brighter economic news is having an important effect on consumers. This is crucial because consumer spending makes up 70% of the economy. So much of this is a game of psychology. People spend more when they feel more optimistic, and rising spending leads to greater optimism. (The Q3 GDP report was tepid, but remember that Q3 ended three months ago and that it started six months ago.)

    The latest report on consumer confidence showed a big uptick in November, and it’s now at a six-month high. One important reason for greater confidence is probably due to lower gas prices. As difficult as this may be to believe, prices at the pump have been heading lower. According to numbers from GasBuddy.com, the average price for regular gas is down to $3.20 per gallon from close to $4 last spring. Lower gas prices have a big impact on the economy. They act almost like an immediate across-the-board raise for millions of consumers.

    More good news may come out shortly. I’m writing this early on Friday and the durable goods and personal spending reports are due out later this morning. There’s even talk that Q4 GDP growth could top 4%. That would get 2012 off to a very nice start. I also noticed that the Volatility Index ($VIX), often called the Fear Index, dropped to 21.16 on Thursday which is its lowest close since July 26th. This is less than half of what it was during some of the hairy periods this fall. How quickly sentiment can change.

    Gold, which is probably the ultimate fear trade, has melted down over the past few weeks. The metal recently dipped below its 200-day moving average. This is another signal that investors are growing less fearful. Plus, this may be early speculation that interest rates could go up sooner than expected. If that happens, I would expect to see a major rush out of gold.

    Lots of people have foolishly called for a top in the bond market. They’ve all been wrong. So what did I do? Two weeks ago, I finally joined in. I think we’re going to see bond yields gradually move higher and this will be in tandem with renewed economic confidence. The yield on the ten-year bond has already dipped up by 15 basis points since Tuesday. This is a good omen because it will shake loose some of the scared money currently parked in Treasuries.

    Take a look at Johnson & Johnson ($JNJ) which currently yields 3.5%. Actually, it really yields even more than that. In April, I expect JNJ to announce its 50th consecutive annual dividend increase. Let’s say JNJ raises their quarterly dividend from 57 cents per share to 59 cents per share. That would give the stock a yield of 3.62% which is roughly four times what a five-year Treasury note gets you. Not to mention that JNJ is rated AAA which Uncle Sam is not. The important takeaway for investors is to understand that the bond versus stock equation clearly favors stocks right now.

    Now let’s return to Oracle ($ORCL). First, I must apologize for my awful prediction. Three months ago, Oracle said it expected to earn between 56 and 58 cents per share for their fiscal second quarter. Instead, they earned 54 cents per share. Sales came in at $8.81 billion which was well below the $9.23 billion expected by Wall Street. The plunge on Wednesday was Oracle’s biggest drop since 2002.

    What went wrong? Part of this was due to foreign exchange which the company can’t do much about. Part was also due to the weak economy which may have already passed, especially in tech. Part of this was surely due to poor execution on Oracle’s part.

    The company’s hardware business isn’t very strong at all. However, Larry Ellison said that hardware could start growing as early as next quarter. In recent years, Oracle has relied heavily on acquisitions. The problem now is that the company has been hurt as the approval process has been taking longer. That sounds like a lame excuse, but that’s what they said.

    I’m still an Oracle fan. The company is very profitable. Gross margins increased last quarter and they generated $2.3 billion in cash flow. Historically, Oracle has bounced back strongly whenever it’s had disappointing results. On the conference call, Oracle said that sales will grow between 1% and 5% this quarter which was below analysts’ estimates of 7.4%. The company also said it expects to earn between 55 and 58 cents per share. Wall Street was at 59 cents. Those really aren’t awful numbers. Right now, the Street is angry at Oracle because they missed their own numbers. I’m not pleased either, but I see the larger picture. I’m lowering my buy price on Oracle to $30 per share. This is a very good stock.

    The drop in Bed, Bath & Beyond’s ($BBBY) stock is a little harder to understand. The company had an outstanding quarter. For the three months ending in November, BBBY earned 95 cents per share which was six cents more than analysts expected. In September, the company told us to expect EPS between 82 and 87 cents per share.

    The only possible weak spot was that sales grew by 6.8% which was below Wall Street’s estimate. The important metric is comparable store sales and that was up by 4.1% which is a drop-off from previous quarters.

    I’ve been very impressed by the way BBBY has expanded its profit margins. The company has increased its year-over-year net margins for the last 11 quarters in a row. For the trailing four quarters, net margins are roughly at 10% and I doubt that can go much higher. In other words, the easy gains in pricing have already been made. That’s going to be a lot tougher from now on.

    The best news was that BBBY raised its full-year forecast for the third time this year. The company now sees fiscal 2012 earnings-per-share coming in between $3.86 and $3.92. Wall Street currently thinks the company will earn $4.39 for fiscal 2013. I’m not so convinced. I suspect it will be closer to $4.25 but I realize I’m being conservative.

    The current quarter is the biggie for BBBY. On their earnings call, the company said they expect to earn $1.26 to $1.32 per share. That’s up from $1.12 per share a year ago. I’m keeping my buy price on Bed Bath & Beyond at $60 per share. I still like this company a lot but I want to hear what kind of outlook they have for next year before I feel that this is one of our most compelling buys. I should add that oftentimes our top-performing stocks in a given year are ones I thought were slightly overpriced. That’s precisely why we have a broadly diversified Buy List.

    I’m pleased to see that Nicholas Financial ($NICK) has started to perk up lately. The stock got as high as $12.90 on Tuesday. Expect another strong earnings report in another month. Abbott Labs ($ABT) also broke out to a new 52-week high on Thursday. Although ABT won’t be sticking around the Buy List next year, it’s handed us a nice 16.2% gain for this year (or 20.5% when we include the dividend).

    For an improving economy, I expect to see healthy gains from Buy List stocks like Ford ($F) and Moog ($MOG-A). Also, don’t overlook some of the high-yielding stocks on the Buy List like Reynolds American ($RAI) or Sysco ($SYY). Reynolds is our top-performing stock this year.

    That’s all for now. The stock market will be closed on Monday. 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

  • Morning News: December 23, 2011
    , December 23rd, 2011 at 7:15 am

    Italy to Kick the Cash Habit as Monti Cracks Down

    In Europe, Juggling Image and Capital

    IMF Urges Members to Boost Funding Under 2010 Plan

    China’s CIC to Get $50 Billion Boost

    Bank Of Russia Unexpectedly Cuts Refinancing Rate

    Egypt Misses Bills Sale Target as Yields Rise After Moody’s Cut

    The GOP’s Payroll Tax Fiasco

    Fed’s Once-Secret Data Released to Public

    Jobless Claims Drop, but 3rd-Quarter Growth Is Revised Down

    U.S. Consumer Spending Probably Increased on Autos

    Retailers Are Slashing Prices Ahead of Holiday

    Petronas in Talks With Oil Majors for Petchem Tie-up

    Netflix CEO Hastings’ Yearly Stock Option Allowance Cut 50%

    Akamai To Buy Network-Software Maker Cotendo For $268 Million

    Jeff Carter: Investors Do Create Jobs-Millions of Them

    Phil Pearlman: Quick Take on Yahoo Here: Rumors and Tumors

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • The Dow Adjusted for Inflation
    , December 22nd, 2011 at 3:51 pm

    Here’s the Dow divided by the Consumer Price Index over the last century. Of course, this doesn’t include dividends. Still, it’s interesting to see that in real terms, the market’s capital gain hasn’t been terribly much.

    While the Dow is still well below its inflation-adjusted high from 12 years ago, that’s not unprecedented. There have been other times when the Dow has wallowed for decades at a real loss.

    Of course we don’t know this yet, but it will be interesting to see if that March 2009 low turns out to be a generational low.

  • Peter Schiff’s 2011
    , December 22nd, 2011 at 12:19 pm

    Literally, every prediction was wrong.

    I don’t say this to be mean. After all, I just missed big time on Oracle’s earnings. Instead, I encourage investors to be wary of broad market forecasts.

    The sad fact is that extreme bearish forecasts are rarely held to account. You can make a big splash by calling for the end of the world.

    And hey, if it doesn’t happen, you can always push back the date.

  • Q3 GDP Revised Down to 1.8%
    , December 22nd, 2011 at 11:03 am

    The Commerce Department lowered its third-quarter estimate of real GDP growth from 2% to 1.8%.

    The numbers are sobering. Over the last 15 quarters, the U.S. economy has grown by a total of 0.04%. The economy has grown less over the last 11 years than in the four years before that.

    ZeroHedge adds: “And yet it added only $395 billion in debt over those four years, and $9.5 trillion over the 11.”