Daily Archives: February 22, 2007

Cramer Says IBM’s Palmisano Needs To Go

ON CNBC’s MAD MONEY, Cramer went over his SELL BLOCK where he reviews stocks that are usually supposed to be sold.

He is singling out one name.  IBM’s (IBM) Palmisano is one CEO that would take his stock up if he would just resign.  Cramer is replacing Palmisano on his 5 CEO’s that need to go, and putting him there instead of Andrea Junjg of Avon (AVP).  On March 1, 2002 when he took over IBM was north of $102 and despite the stock coming up 25% off lows the stock is still under after a 40% gain in S&P 500 after dividends.  He thinks the CEO is overpaid.  Cramer said that Google (GOOG) Apps at $49 is not as good as Microsoft’s or IBM’s but it is cheap enough and getting some corporate accounts.  Cramer thinks that IBM is a SELL while its current CEO is at the helm.  Infosys (INFY) has gained more than 200% during the same time.  IBM fell 0.5% on this after-hours.

While I have my own list of 10 CEO’s That Need To Go (4 have now fallen since December when I posted it), this one is not as bad.  We haven’t gone out and attacked CEO’s that merely have not led the shareholders to gains or that we feel are just overpaid or have only underperformed.  We go out after the ones that have made horrific errors or that have been so inept that the company cannot win with them.  Yes IBM holders probably wish they were up more, but he hasn’t murdered the company.  It may be true that if Palmisano stepped down that the shares would jump, but he hasn’t led the company into the toilet bowl as bad as Cramer is calling it.

Jon C. Ogg
February 22, 2007

Busted Dot-com Ideas Breathe New Life

If you remember the dot-com bust pretty well you may recall a company called AllAdvantage. Back in the 1990’s this Internet start-up was one of the first to recognize that online advertising really was the wave of the future. AllAdvantage paid you to surf the web. The idea behind it was simply to install a toolbar on the screen, fill it with advertisements, and the company could pay you to surf the Internet with money it got from the advertisers, and still have some leftover for itself.

AllAdvantage caught on with web users quite easily, as one could imagine. Just install this bar on your screen, ignore it when browsing online, and get paid. Since AllAdvantage didn’t require you to click on anything, it was quite easy to take advantage of the system. College students would leave their Internet Explorer browsers open on their computers when they left for the day, allowing them to collect money for "surfing" when they were really all the way across campus attending class.

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80% of S&P 500 Stocks Above 20 and 200 Day Averages

From Ticker Sense

As of Tuesday’s close, over 80% of the stocks in the S&P 500 were trading above their 20 and 200-day moving averages.  In the chart below, we highlight prior occurrences since 2001 where the same thing occurred.  The last occurrence was in December 2004, after which the market began a 6% correction.  However, in 2003, we had a stretch where there were numerous occasions where 80% of the stocks in the S&P 500 were above their 20 and 200 day averages, and yet the market kept on chugging.

Sp_500_with_days_where_80_of_stocks_are_

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Bureau of Economic Analysis

From Ticker Sense

The Bureau of Economic Analysis has a great website that offers countless tables and databases.  We were able to extract out a few things from the website that we thought were interesting, but it would take months to peruse the entire site and take advantage of everything it has to offer.  In the first chart below, we highlight the percentage of GDP contributed by personal spending of durable goods, non durable goods and services on a yearly basis.  Breaking up the services category, we see that medical costs continue to make up a greater portion of GDP.

Perspen

Services

The site also has a breakdown of foreign investment in the US.  Below we highlight the percentage breakdown by country in 2005.

Foreigninvest

http://www.tickersense.typepad.com/

Will Microsoft Buy YouTube Rival

The New York Times and CNET are reporting the management from Microsoft are looking at Revver, a YouTube competitor.

Revver is much smaller than YouTube, but MSN would certainly have the ability to send traffic to the site.

With YouTube’s problems with Big Media, Wall St. has to wonder what attraction Revver would have for MSFT.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Cramer Actually Says to Buy Charter Communications (CHTR)

On tonights MAD MONEY on CNBC, Jim Cramer says that you should buy a really bad name: Charter Communication (CHTR).  He says it is a dog, and he has said it is a dog many times before.  It has so much debt that it is choking on it, but now it can actually refinance the mountain of debt.

CHTR closed at $3.10, but it gapped up to $3.33 after Cramer touted it.  Its year range is $0.88 to $3.58.  Shares are up about 20% in the last 3 months.  Cramer says the debt issues are trading at higher levels than they have seen in years, and he says that is a great sign.  This paydown of debt may be enough to save them according to Cramer.

5 analysts are against it and 5 are holds, so he thinks they’ll start to upgrade the stock. If the businesses were running bad then he’d say no way, but their Triple Play package is helping the stock play catch-up to the rest of the cable names like Comcast and Time Warner.  Cramer did say Level 3 (LVLT) has ramped up big since he made the same sort of call on it, but he thinks LVLT is in later innings compared to the run here.

Jon C. Ogg
February 22, 2007

Cramer’s Uranium Pick (EMU)

On tonights MAD MONEY on CNBC, Jim Cramer had a nuclear power play that may still have a negative bias if the democrats comeinto power.  Cramer actually has a nuclear power play in Uranium despite this.  China has 30 nuclear power plants being built, and everyone else wants nuclear power plants except for the US.

I noted this uranium ’safety net’ hopes by Merrill Lynch for investors back in December.  Who knows how that research call out of Merrill Lynch is really going.

Cameco (CCJ) already had a huge problem with a floor, but Energy Metals (EMU-NYSE) is his play.  He says not to pay over $12.00 on it.  EMU is a speculative one for Cramer since they dont really produce uranium yet.  He thinks it could make 5 million pounds in 2012, but it could pay off big.  Cramer thinks it could be acquired too, maybe by Cameco since they have problems being able to supply.

Jon C. Ogg
February 22, 2007

Alcatel-Lucent Gets Lucky

Patent lawsuits can go either way. The near-dead telecom equipment company Alcatel-Lucent (ALU) won the lottery by besting Microsoft (MSFT) in a suit over the big software company’s use of MP3, and audio format used in the Microsoft Windows Media Player.

The envelop please. ALU gets paid over $1.5 billion in damages. Of course, Microsoft will appeal, but the award is more money that Alcatel-Lucent is likely to make over the next decade.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Cramer More Positive on Chip Stocks

On today’s STOP TRADING segment on CNBC, Jim Cramer noted that the SEC comments about market forces regulatiung hedge funds.  On SEMICONDUCTORS, Cramer was again saying the Analog Device (ADI) numbers caught the shorts by surprise.  This wasn’t factored in and now you can buy Texas Intruments (TXN).  He said he hates to admit it, but Qualcomm (QCOM) is one you can buy also.  Historically you don’t buy these in the first quarter but the shorts that were in place have not finished unwinding.

He also said JCPenney (JCP) is one to buy here.  He thinks they have it together.

Whole Foods (WFMI) is one he said is a great deal and that can be bought.

This echoes his earlier comments.

Jon C. Ogg
February 22, 2007 

Cramer Talks Chip Stocks

On today’s Wall Street Confidential video on TheStreet.com, Jim Cramer said this was a big chip day and he said here is how to play it: Chips can be played on inventories and when inventories are low you can buy and when they are high you don’t want to be in.  The next quarter may be good but not the rest of the year.  Texas Instruments (TXN) is the best analog name after Analog Devices (ADI).  He did say that he sold some Marvell (MRVL) yesterday and this big bump up in chip stocks was catching fund managers by surprise who were just betting on another nad earnings.  Even Seagate (STX) is moving up on this.  Cramer said he wasn’t sure about Taiwan Semi (TSM) doing better.

Conjecture:  This sounded a lot like a hedging of the "Chips and tech stock are dead" depending on how you evaluate Cramer.

on the Whole Foods & Wild Oats (WFMI/OATS) merger, Cramer said that this probably solved the next two quarters at Whole Foods because it gives them pricing power.  If their quarters are set ahead you have to be in it even up $5.00.  He goes over other restaurant and other merger names as well, but you can go listen to the merger picks on that.

Jon C. Ogg
February 22, 2007

CMGI Earnings Preview: Has CMGI Tansformed Itself?

Recently CMGI Inc. (CMGI-NASDAQ) announced that it will report earnings after the close on Monday, February 26, 2007 and will present at the Robert W. Baird Business Solutions Conference on February 28.  The earnings will drive the stock more than the presentation, and keep in mind that this is one that is a ‘cult stock’ and is widely followed for such a small stock.

It is too dangerous to actually predict earnings on an incubator like CMGI, but the company is far different than its incubator-only past.  It has actual operations and has signaled it is investing in other non-webby sectors.  It is trying to transform itself, and traders are making their various bets ahead of the earnings and ahead of their presentation next week.  Despite the obvious risks and stigma of the past there are some compelling issues worth considering.

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15 Companies Management Can’t Fix: 3COM (COMS)

Even with the hint of decent news on the horizon, 3COM (COMS-NASDAQ) finds itself in a precarious spot.  The company virtually leveraged its entire cash balance to buy the remaining half of the H3C joint venture with Huawei in China so it could get 100% of the joint venture that sells the ‘poor-man’s Cisco router.’  This was one of the only good things that has happened to the company, but it came at a huge price.  To fund the purchase price it secured financing from its international banking partner for up to $500 million in Hong Kong-based senior secured bank debt. The remainder of the payment will come from the cash and short-term investments on 3Com’s balance sheet.  The biggest problem with H3C is that it will have Huawei free to compete against it in what looked to be too fast of a non-compete expiration.  Huawei also has the ability to secure competing relationships faster because of its inroads in China.  Most likely that partnership is already spoken for and just waiting for the expiration date of the non-compete agreement.

3COM is still embroiled in what has been almost a never-ending restructuring of operations where it has endured layoffs and worldwide location closures.  If you have followed this company over the last 11+ years and since before the spin-off of Palm (PALM-NASDAQ) you will remember that this is the Boulevard of Broken Dreams of the publicly traded networking stocks in the US.   

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24/7 Wall St. Break-Up Values: Level 3 $8.00 (Current Price $6.67)

By Ryan Barnes. Edited By Douglas A. McIntyre

Level 3 Communications Inc. (LVLT) – Price $6.67; Break-up Value $8

Level 3 is a play on bandwidth, pure and simple.  As the internet matures in content offerings, demand for higher bandwidth goes with it.  The company owns over 23,000 miles of fiber optic networks, the majority centered in nearly 40 major metropolitan areas.  They were also smart enough to leave room in the ground to add new fiber with minimal cost, as the biggest expenses in rolling out new underground lines are the actual construction and right-of-way costs.  Level 3 has 11 empty conduits for future fiber inlays; no other U.S. company has more than three.

Level 3 has been very acquisition hungry in the past few years, and it almost seems at times that they have adopted the strategy of “our balance sheet is already ugly, so might as well go for broke”.  But the fact remains that they were able to gobble up an extra 8-10,000 miles of network at depressed prices when nobody else wanted it.  Now it is time for Level 3 to take a breather, work on integration and debt refinancing, and look to control pricing as bandwidth demand increases.

It seems that we are finally getting to that point in the internet’s maturity that many investors thought would happen three or four years ago, where applications like VoIP and video eat up all the excess bandwidth and make the telcos and content providers go looking for more.  Even the major wireless carriers could jump into the game, as they will need a strong network backbone to piggyback their increasingly bandwidth-hungry content on between the cellular sites and switches.  This is precisely the environment that Level 3 was designed to make money in.  The revenue growth at LVLT is so fast at the moment (in the low to mid-teens sequentially) that we have to look forward a bit more than we normally would in a break-up analysis just to catch up to the momentum. 

With a market cap of $7.85b, nearly that much in long-term debt and no net income to speak of, Level 3 is by no means a classic break-up candidate. But considering the revenue leverage inherent in their business model, things could change quickly.  While the company’s current estimates don’t show them being cash flow positive during the next two fiscal years, a little debt restructuring and a slight uptick in pricing could cause big changes in a hurry.  And if we haven’t already turned the corner on bandwidth demand, then we’re standing at it right now.

Because of the rather unsightly balance sheet, Level 3 is much more likely to be bought out by another public company as opposed to private equity.  There have been scattered rumors of someone like a Google or a regional Bell coming in to buy Level 3, but most possible bidders seem content to wait and see how bandwidth demand plays out for the next couple of quarters before buying up a company with nearly $7 billion in junk bonds on the balance sheet.  As such, our breakup value will be focused on the value of the fiber network itself, as it would be the singular goal of any potential buyer. 

We have put together a range of estimates for the value of Level 3’s network based on the cost one would have to outlay to add the same amount of capacity.  To arrive at these figures we used both a weighted average of acquisitions, such as Looking Glass and Wiltel, and recent rollout announcements like Verizon’s FIOS plans.  Based on our calculations, the value per mile is between $500k and $700k for the metro areas, with the midpoint at $590,000.  Of course, something is only as valuable as what someone is willing to pay for it, but these values are based mainly on what other companies are spending in today’s dollars to build the same types of underground networks. 

In order to complete our break-up analysis, we’ll need to take care of the balance sheet.  Netting out the current accounts and subtracting LT debt comes to $5.2 billion that needs to be subtracted from the value of the metro network which, by using our midpoint, comes to $13.5 billion.  We’ve added in another $1 billion in value to estimate the worth of the long-haul network, which is rather commoditized but represents the relative cost spend by Level 3 to acquire the pieces of it.  Adding everything together we arrive at a total break-up value of $9.3 billion, or $8/share.  It is important to keep in mind these figures are still based on a relative trough in the industry; any major pulls from the demand side could up the value of the company in a very short time. 

Ryan Barnes

Ryan Barnes has over 10 years’ experience in portfolio management and investment research, covering equities, fixed income, and derivative products. Ryan spent the past 5 years working as an institutional trader & manager for high-net worth investors, working with Merrill Lynch, Charles Schwab, Morgan Stanley, and many others.  Ryan is currently working as a writer and financial modeling consultant on hedging and capital appreciation strategies, and does not own securities in the companies being covered.

Methodology

15 Companies Management Can’t Fix: Sirius/XM

There are certain companies that probably cannot be turned around no matter who runs them. They tend to be in industries where macro-economic trends are against them, like the buggy whip business 150 years ago.

Investors are not likely to get much out of these firms, unless and until the trend that is hurting them is reversed.

Someone once said "the tape doesn’t lie". Actually, a lot of people did. But, stocks, particularly those that are heavily traded usually reflect most of the news and information about the company. Sirius (SIRI) is trading at $3.88 today. It got as low as $3.73 yesterday, after its big "merger" run to $4.04. But, it now trades back where it did on January 23, and is still down from $7.88 in December 2005.

The issues with the merger go to whether the FCC will approve it. And, what the companies may have to give up. They may have to cap the percent that they can raise rates each year, which would limit revenue potential.

But, as BusinessWeek points out, satellite radio may be yesterday’s product.  And outside research would seem to support that: "Josh Bernoff, Forrester Research’s (FORR) savvy new media forecaster, last year did a survey that found that only about 13% of those asked really want satellite radio, a number Bernoff opines would head south in a hurry if the two services started selling ads."

The execution risks of the merger may also be beyond what most investors know. SmartMoney checked around on Wall St. and there are some real skeptics: "[E]ven a cursory analysis of the fixed and variable costs that might be impacted by the merger suggests that the near-term benefits are likely much smaller than what the rosier consensus estimates imply," wrote Bernstein Research analyst Craig Moffett in a research report.

But, the highest hurdle satellite radio has is one that it may not be able to jump. It is the "iPod phenomenon". The devices that consumers use to listen to music and other programming are radically different than they were when satellite radio started to become widely available five years ago. Now content is available over the airwaves to next generation handhelds, Zune’s, iPhones, and all manner of new multimedia device. As municipal WiFi is built out and WiMax networks like the one Sprint (S) is building come online, the ability to get programming on devices other than satellite radio will increase exponentially.

And, even Mel Karmazin can’t fix that.

Douglas A. McIntyre can be reached at douglasamcintyre@247wallst.com. He does not own securities in companies that he writes about.

S&P 500 50 and 200 Day Extremes

From Ticker Sense

Below is our list of the S&P 500 stocks currently trading furthest above and below their 50- and 200-day moving averages.  Vulcan Materials (VMC) is extended here, to say the least.

50200day_2

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Tick Tick Boom

From Ticker Sense

The S&P 500 Uptick-Downtick Index (TIKX) measures the number of stocks in the S&P 500 that have traded on an uptick minus the number of stocks that have traded on a downtick at any given time during the trading day.  When the number reaches the +/- 300 level, it generally indicates a large program trade.  The table below shows the daily high and low of the TIKX.  While we are at somewhat of a loss for an explanation, it is interesting to point out that in the past few weeks, we have seen an increase in the high/low spread of the TIKX.  This increase was preceded by a month or two of very low daily spreads.

Uptickdowntick

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Meckler Confirms Jupitermedia & Getty Image Talks (JUPM, GYI)

Jupitermedia (JUPM-NASDAQ) has confirmed that it is in discussions with Getty Images, Inc. (GYI-NYSE) regarding a potential sale of the company to Getty Images in a cash transaction that would be valued at $9.60 per share, subject to the negotiation and execution of a definitive agreement and other related agreements. Getty Images’ proposed acquisition is also conditioned on the JupiterWeb business and related assets being sold to a third party concurrently with the consummation of the transaction. Alan M. Meckler, Chairman & CEO of Jupitermedia, has indicated a willingness to acquire such assets at a price that Getty Images has indicated would be acceptable to it, in the event no third party bidder offers to purchase the JupiterWeb business and related assets at a higher price prior to the closing of the proposed acquisition of Jupitermedia by Getty Images.

Here is what is so ironic about this: This would mark Alan Meckler’s 3rd dancecard with Internet.com and JupiterWeb properties if this goes through in this manner.  He repurchased Internet.com back after the first sale, and this property has been regurgitated by him more than once.  While many would say he has gotten favorable treatment, if he can pull this off he should be nicknamed the Teflon Don.  This would be short of the ‘up to $11.00′ that Goldman Sachs just noted as fair and within Getty strategy in the morning research notes.

We would also note that JUPM is one that had actually made it onto an initial screen of Internet properties that could be for sale.  However after looking at the balance sheet the bulk of the ‘book value’ was all attributed to Goodwill, Intangibles, and ‘other’ assets.  Arguably, their goodwill and ‘other’ is where the value is, but these are arduous and highly subjective in calculations.  There are 2 basic stock photo buyers out there: Getty Images and Bill Gates. So we never took this above a "watch list" rating in our BAIT SHOP of buyout candidates.   

Jon C. Ogg
February 22, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Goldman Sachs Research (FEB 22, 2007)

GOLDMAN SACHS: raised Stereotaxis (STXS) to Neutral from Sell; dropped Catalina Marketing (POS) from coverage.

Increased estimates in ECOL, ABG, DO, SRCL, THE, MHS, WEN, CAR, GPC, PII, ZZ, VNO, GTXI, CMX, OSIP, MDT, STXS, AMSG, SUNW, HPQ, WBMD, ADI, AT.

Decreased estimates in ANR, FCL, GSF, GPI, ICO, LAD, NE, RSG, UAG, WPL, WDR, WMI, WFMI, STTX, ZLC, HD, PGIC, KFT, EP, UPL, FITB, IPCR, VICL, JNJ, PWAV, CBB, AMT, HA, JBLU.

Goldman feels that LBO’s are less likely than M&A in oil drillers and it sees a floor in the sector.

Goldman Sachs also says that it thinks investors should Buy March Semiconductor options ahead of mid-quarter updates and ahead of their technology symposium.

Goldman feels the Getty (GYI) rumored acquisition of Jupiter Media (JUPM) would make sense and could value JUPM at $11.00 per share in a $50 million deal after debt assumption.

Goldman adds Diamond Offshore (DO) and dropped Tidewater (TDW) to and from Conviction Buy List: DO added to Buy and TDW added to Sell.

Jon C. Ogg
February 22, 2007

Early-Bird Stock News (FEB 22, 2007)

(AAPL) Apple & Cisco settled their iPhone trademark issue.
(ADI) Analog Devices traded up 4% after beating estimates and signaling strengthening orders.
(AMR) American Airlines raises its NYC-based flights after the JetBlue problems.
(BEAS) BEA Systems reports earnings ($0.15 EPS estimate).
(BRKR) Bruker Bio
(BRNC) Bronco Drilling $0.72 EPS vs $0.76e.
(CEGE) Cell Genesys and Medarex (MEDX) announced encouraging follow-up results on Phase I combo therapy with GVX and MDX-010 for prostate cancer.
(DCX) DaimlerChrysler may be selling Chrysler to GM as a whole.
(DNA) Genentech announced positive international Phase III Avastin studies on advanced lung cancer.  A Genentech patent for making monoclonal antibodies was revoked by the Patent Office.
(DRH) Diamondrock Hospitality $0.40 EPS vs $0.38e.
(FDC) First Data will officially exit the check and money order businesses.
(GOOG) Google plans selling more powerful “Word and Excel” comparables for business solutions.
(HEPH) Hollis-Eden Pharm presents additional positive data with novel steroid hormone in models of prostate and breast cancer.
(HMA) Health Management $0.29 EPS vs $0.29e.
(HRB) H&R Block reports earnings ($0.12 EPS estimate).
(HTX) Hutchison Telecom announced a special $6.75 per share dividend.
(INTU) Intuit reports earnings ($0.42 EPS is estimate).
(LAMR) Lamar Advertising $0.07 EPS vs $0.09e.announced special $3.25 dividend and $500M share buyback.
(MEDX) Medarex and (CEGE) Cell Genesys announced encouraging follow-up results on Phase I combo therapy with GVX and MDX-010 for prostate cancer.
(NBL) Noble Energy $1.03 EPS vs $1.01e.
(NM) Navios Maritime switches from NASDAQ to NYSE under “NM” ticker.
(NUAN) Nuance Communications is paying $140 million to acquire BeVocal.
(OATS) Wild Oats is being acquired by Whole Foods for $18.50 by WFMI.
(PWR) Quanta Services $0,20 EPS vs $0.20e; was loss after items.
(TOL) Toll Brother s $0.72 EPS vs $0.29e; unsure if comparable; but lowered full 2007 guidance.
(WBMD) WebMD $0.15 EPS vs $0.11e; raised 2007 guidance.
(WFMI) Whole Foods traded up 4% after reporting earnings and acquiring Wild Oats.
(WMB) Williams Cos says replaces 216% of 2006 U.S. natural gas production.
(WOOF) VCA Antech raised 2007 guidance.

Jon C. Ogg
February 22, 2007

Early-Bird Analyst Research (FEB 22, 2007)

ARDM started as Buy at Merriman Curhan Ford.
ASCA started as Outperform at Wachovia.
CMA started as Neutral at JPMorgan.
CBH started as Neutral at JPMorgan.
ED raised to Buy at Jefferies.
FLDR cut to Mkt Perform at JMP Securities.
GG raised to Neutral at Prudential.
GPIC started as Buy at First Albany.
HAE started as Positive at Susquehanna.
IVGN cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.
MI started as Underweight at JPMorgan.
PGTI cut to Hold at Deutsche Bank.
PLXS started as Underweight at Lehman.
QMED raised to Buy at Stifel Nicolaus.
RAH cut to Equal Weight at Lehman.
SNV started as Overweight at JPMorgan.
STX raised to Buy at AGEdwards.
TCF started as Underweight at JPMorgan.
VCLK cut to Neutral at Oppenheimer.
WAT cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.
WFMI raised to Buy at UBS; raised to Outperform at William Blair.
ZION started as Overweight at JPMorgan.

Jon C. Ogg
February 22, 2007