Daily Archives: July 19, 2007

Cramer’s Chemical Picks (BF, NCX, LYO, DOW)

BASF (NYSE:BF) in Germany is the next stock that Cramer wants to visit as an EU play on tonight’s MAD MONEY on CNBC, but he also thinks this company will be acquiring companies.  He does not see this as the traditional takeover stock.  This is over $60 Billion in market cap and he wouldn’t be shocked if it goes to $150.00 on the ADR’s.  He noted it is also cheaper on P/E than Dow Chemical (NYSE:DOW) and it only gets 22% of its net from North America.  BASF’s earnings are also becoming more and more consistent, and that can command a P/E ratio premium from Wall Street if they can maintain that trend.

Interestingly enough, Cramer also gave us a chemical stock that could be an acquisition target.  We already say Lyondell (NYSE:LYO) fall to Basell, and Cramer thinks that Nova Chemicals (NYSE:NCX) is the other chemical stock that could easily be acquired.  The analyst at BB&T has picked the last two buyouts in the sector and he thinks Nova Chemical could be the next target.  This one has a $3.3 Billion market cap and is atthe top of its 52-week trading range.  It is far under the $50.00+ highs of early 2005.

Jon C. Ogg
July 19, 2007

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

Citigroup Earnings Projections Q2 2007 (C)

Citigroup Inc. (NYSE:), the largest bank by market cap in the U.S., is slated to post Q2 2007 earnings early Friday morning.  First Call estimates are listed as $1.13 EPS and almost $24.9 Billion in revenues.  If the bank offers guidance, the following quarter estimates are also $1.13 on EPS and $24.50 Billion in revenues.  This stock hasn’t been immune from the financial malais in the street, so it’s probably safe to expect at least some loan loss reserve increases as we’ve started seeing elsewhere.  The behemoth is also trading closer to its lower-end of the $48.05 to $57.00 range over the last 52-weeks.  Friday will be the first real look we will have seen that gives us a look at how the restructuring is going.

Once again, we’d like to extend the suggestion and invitation for a Chuck Prince resignation.  The current indication and path of the company is still for him to stay though, at least that is how it looks.  The truth is that Prince isn’t a horrible person from what I have been able to gather, but his time and place was in a different period.  He was the answer to help clean up after some Weill’s problems and make the regulators happy.  But that was a few years ago and it is now time for a new leader to take this into the next round of cost cuts and into the next growth phase.  These are battleships thatcannot easily be turned, but a new manager would be able to show that this battleship wasn’t moving all that fast to begin with.  If he leaves, it might add at least $2.00 to the stock.

Jon C. Ogg
July 19, 2007

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

AMD (AMD): Just OK

Going into its earnings report, investor bid AMD (AMD) up over 2% to $15.78.

The company reported financial results for the quarter ended June 30, 2007. AMD reported second quarter 2007 revenue of $1.378 billion, an operating loss of $457 million, and a net loss of $600 million, or $1.09 per share. Sales were up 13% from a year ago. Critical gross margin numbers were up from Q1 rising from 28% to 33%. These were down from 57% in the quarter a year ago.

Thomson Financial had espected revenue of $1.26 billion and and EPS loss of $.85.

Guidance had an air of mystery: "In the seasonally up third quarter, AMD expects revenue to increase in line with seasonality."

Shares rallied up over 3% at 4.53 New York time.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Charges Hit Microsoft’s Net, But Guidance Worth A Look (MSFT)

Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) just posted EPS as $0.31 net, but that would have been $0.39 before the $1 Billion+ Xbox charge that had already been noted.  It posted revenues of $13.37 Billion, and that compared to estimates of $13.27 Billion.  The company issued guidance of $0.38-$0.40 EPS, above the 0.38 estimate and put revenues at $12.4-12.6 Billion versus 12.5 Billion estimates.  It also put fiscal June-2008 Annual EPS at $1.69-$1.73 versus 1.71 estimates and put revenues in a $56.8-$57.8 Billion range versus $57 Billion estimates.

This marked the fiscal year-end for Microsoft and it acheived $50 Billion in annual sales.  The company said that strong Windows Vista sales and the Office 2007 sales were helping, but those are not broken out.  It also noted the strength in SQL Server, Windows Server, Visual Studio, and Xbox 360 consoles.  Microsoft closed up 1.9% at $31.51 on the day in normal trading, and shares initially traded up 0.5% at $31.67 in after-hours trading before going back into negative territory.

Here was the full earnings preview for Microsoft, along with the Google comparison.

Jon C. Ogg
July 19, 2007

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

Expenses Keeping Google’s Net Down (GOOG)

Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) earnings are out, and traders are selling the news initially with shares down over 4% or $25.00 to under $525.00 in after-hours trading.

Its EPS came out as $3.56 on a non-GAAP basis and on an ex-TAC basis Google posted $2.72 Billion in revenues, and with the TAC its revenues were $3.87 Billion.  This was a revenue increase of 58% compared to Q2 2006 and an increase of 6% compared to Q1 of 2007.

Google was expected to post $3.59 EPS on revenues of $2.68 Billion on an ex-TAC basis.  Just for inference since the company does not issue guidance, the current expectation for Q3 is $3.76 EPS on $2.87 Billion revenues.

The bottom-line miss is due to greater operating expenses.  It currently estimate stock-based compensation charges for grants to employees prior to July 1, 2007 to be approximately $770 million for 2007; and it sees dilution due to equity grants to employees at or below 2% for this year.  It ended with some 13,786 employees on the payrolls and hired over 1,500 workers in the quarter.

Here was the full preview for Google today, comparing it to Microsoft.  Google shares closed down 0.15% at $548.59 unofficially today, down only about $10.00 or less than 2% from its recent all-time highs.

Jon C. Ogg
July 19, 2007

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

Sandisk (SNDK): Walk Off Home Run

Sandisk (SNDK) dropped during the regular session in a way that suggests Wall St. did not want to see its earnings. Shares fell 2% to $55.96. But,, the naysayers were wrong. Second quarter revenue increased 15% on a year-over-year basis to $827 million and net income. Net was $28 million, or $0.12 per diluted share, compared to GAAP net income of $96 million, or $0.47 per diluted share, in the second quarter of 2006.

Investors expected $0.15 EPS on revenues of nearly $793 million, according to First Call.

The company’s CEO said: "Product gross margins stabilized despite substantial price reductions in the second quarter. We expect product gross margins to improve gradually in the second half of the year, driven by more moderate price declines." And added: The flurry of new Flash memory enabled, highly innovative consumer and mobile products coming from our customers, our competitors, and ourselves, we believe, will fuel strong demand for our products in the second half of 2007 and in 2008."

The market cheered and shares rose more than 5% at 4.14 New York time.

Douglas A. McIntyre

IPO Investors’ Cold Shoulder to Orbitz (OWW, BX, TZOO)

Investors are waiting for the pricing of Orbitz (NYSE:OWW) tonight in its IPO, which no one is foolish enough to not know this is a re-IPO.  The official terms were for 34 million shares in a $16.00 to $18.00 range from lead managers Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Lehman, and JP Morgan.

This isn’t the first time Orbitz has been public.  If you will recall it was public before under the "ORBZ" NASDAQ ticker, and then it was acquired for some $1.25 Billion in 2004 by Cendant when it was still in its mish-mash conglomerate stage and rolled up into the Travelport unit with Galileo (which Cendant bought in 2001 for $2.9 Billion or so).  Cendant then sold the whole Galileo unit to Blackstone (NYSE:BX) for a sum of $4.3 Billion.

This deal is important for more than one reason.  It is Blackstone’s (NYSE:BX) first real IPO of a company that it is acquired since it came public itself.  Blackstone is trading at a post-IPO low today, and investors who buy shares of Orbitz know they are just giving money to Blackstone in a rewarding move in a regurgitated company.  That is limiting the interest.

The other issue that is hurting Orbitz is that Travelzoo Inc. (NASDAQ:TZOO) has been trading like a pig.  It was already well off its highs, but then has drifted lower since it issued an earnings warning because of its expenses in expanding internationally to France, Hong Kong, and Japan.  Maybe they think everyone is following Nixon to China and cheering "Vive la Godzilla!"

So far, it has been a chore trying to find eager beavers looking at Orbitz.  There is still quite a bit of value to Orbitz as an online travel portal.  It is just price sensitive and the fact that investors know they will get to buy more shares from Blackstone down the road is keeping IPO investor demand limited.

Jon C. Ogg
July 19, 2007

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

Did Alcoa Lose It Suitor

The Australian is just out with a piece saying BHP Billiton (BHP) will not pursue a buy-out of Alcoa (AA).

Alcoa’s shares are down 4%. BHP is up almost 3%.

BHP shareholders seemed to hate the deal. Shares went from $68 before word that it was looking at Alcoa to as low as $65.

Alcoa’s shares are up 50% over the last year, so it is has become expensive by most measures.

Now, if they keep dropping, that won’t be a problem.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Cramer’s New Metals Strategy (AA, LMC, TCK, BHP)

On today’s STOP TRADING segment on CNBC, Jim Cramer said you need to lay back and look at the smaller sub-$5 Billion stocks in the metals sector since it looks like the huge mergers in thr group may have happened.  Two names he gave were Teck Cominco Ltd. (NYSE:TCK) and Lundin Mining (NYSE:LMC).  Lundin was one of those lesser known and lesser followed metals stocks we reviewed in May as an overlooked metals stock when shares were at $12.70 or so.  He still maintains that Alcoa (NYSE:AA) will not be a public company next year, despite the 3% drop today on word that BHP Billiton (NYSE:BHP) is not going to acquire it.

Jon C. Ogg
July 19, 2007

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

SanDisk Earnings Outlook: When Will They Rival Hard Drives (SNDK, INTC, WDC, STX)

SanDisk (NASDAQ:SNDK) is expected to post earnings of $0.15 EPS on revenues of nearly $793 million, according to First Call.  SanDisk usually offers guidance, and First Call pes next quarter at $0.28 EPS and almost $909 million in revenues. 

Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) already gave some mixed messages after saying flash memory prices have seen margin pressure, but it also noted the future of flash drives will ultimately rival much of the hard drive market that is currently dominated by Seagate (NYSE:STX) and lesser competitor Western Digital (NYSE:WDC).  As a reminder, Jim Cramer was talking up SanDisk yesterday ahead of today’s earnings, although shares are down 2% today.  We still think Moore’s Law has to come further into play for this to happen, but the trend has started in its its infancy stages.

Western Digital (NYSE:WDC) is still an active member of the 24/7 Wall St. BAIT SHOP of takeover candidates, despite it being involved in acquiring Komag (NASDAQ:KOMG).  We showed this as a position to lighten up half of the position in January and then noted on February 5 that shares might be getting close to a re-entry for that half of the stock.  Western Digital today is trading at 52-week highs and looks like it could make a run at the multi-year highs seen in early 2006.

Jon C. Ogg
July 19, 2007

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

Netezza Launches Out Of The IPO Gate (NZ)

Netezza Corp. (NYSE:NZ) has managed a strong debut in its IPO trading day.  The company priced 9 million shares at $12.00, and based on the initial performance it may be safe to assume that the 1.35 million share overallotment will be exercised.  If that holds true, then the company will have raised $159 million before the near 7% underwriting fees.  Shares have traded as low as $14.75 and are north of $16.00 mid-day.

Credit Suisse and Morgan Stanley acted as joint book-running managers with Needham & Co. and Thomas Weisel acting as co-managers.  Here is the summary of the filing back in March.

Netezza is an unprofitable provider of data warehouse appliances that sells large systems to enterprise-size companies. The Netezza Performance Server® system, or NPS®, integrates database, server and storage platforms in a purpose-built unit to enable detailed queries and analyses on large volumes of stored data. The results of these queries and analyses, often referred to as business intelligence, provide organizations with actionable information to improve their business operations.

Jon C. Ogg
July 19, 2007

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

The Newspaper Industry’s Hardest Choice (NYT)(GCI)(MNI)

Prisoners in an escape tunnel have two choices if the structure starts to collapse. Go back to jail or run for the light and hope not to get buried.

This week Scripps (SSP) said it would close its newspaper in Cincinnati on December 31. The daily in Savannah said it will shut down circulation in areas out of town. A column in BusinessWeek suggested that the San Francisco Chronicle shut down and go completely online. The same piece quotes management from the paper as saying it lost $330 million between mid-2000 and 2006. Yesterday, large real estate operator Realogy said newspapers will receive only 70 percent of its home-sale advertising by 2010, down from 84 percent this year.

The newspaper industry cannot decide its future based on collected anecdotes, but the hard figures out for Q2 are grim. McClatchy (MNI), which doubled down on the business by purchasing Knight-Ridder, showed pro forma numbers which said that total advertising at the chain dropped 9.8% during the three months ending June 30. Automotive, real estate, and employment classifieds were all down more than 15%. The company’s papers in California were off 16%. In Florida, the number was over 21%.

Numbers from The New York Times (NYT), Gannett (GCI), and Dow Jones (DJ) are a bit different, but all tell fundamentally the same story.

Almost any investor can find a story every day about the death of the newspaper industry. Almost none offer any solutions.

But, the industry may be able to salvage itself and find a way to make money long term.

Based on some conversations with an industry expert, a road out might look like this.

Circulation in areas any real distance from printing presses has to be cut. If the people want to read the news, they can do so on the newspaper website. Circulation in areas closer to plants would be cut into two pieces. People who want to continue to get the physical paper can have it delivered, but their rates would rise to cover more of the costs of paper and distribution.

Newspapers would continue to use their presses and distribution networks to deliver mini-papers to all of the households in the geographic area near the plant. The same delivery system that distributes paid subscribers the entire paper would drop a smaller paper, perhaps eight pages, at every home. The newspapers are already incurring the expense of driving down these streets, so the additional cost of this distribution is de minimus. The program would increase the footprint of the paper without adding a great deal of cost. These mini-papers would also be used to distribute pre-printed inserts, a big revenue base for the industry.

The goal of the mini-paper would be to push readers to the internet. Each story would be a summary with a web address attached. The entire story would run in the online version. Print would exist to feed web versions of the paper.

As costs for the full paper increase over time, more and more people get the mini-paper and readers are pushed online.

The easy argument against this program is that internet revenue, even with this kind of promotion, would not rise fast enough to offset print advertising. But internet advertising is only about 5% of total newspaper ad revenue, so on its own it is not growing fast enough.

It has been obvious since the advent of the internet that getting web traffic for specific sites is difficult without using other media or internet properties. While newspapers still have fairly large readerships, they have that opportunity. But, it won’t be there forever.

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

Hershey, Hitting New 52-Week Lows (HSY)

Hershey Company (NYSE:HSY) is actually putting in new 52-week lows, and not even a new coffee chocolate with Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX) is helping the chocolate-maker’s shares.  The company posted sales of $1.05 Billion, almost identical to 2006, and its net income was $0.01 GAAP and $0.35 EPS before charges.  Unfortunately, even though First Call was expecting $0.35 EPS and $1.07 Billion in revenues, that is well over a 10% drop from last year.  Adverse dairy prices and the slower-to-improve economy were the culprits, and that global supply chain transformation was a significant charge.

The outlook is the main issue here.  The company forecast is now expecting sequential improvement in organic net sales that will result in full year 2007 growth in the low-single digit range. But Hershey said that higher dairy costs will continue to pressure margins for the balance of the year, and branding investments will result in a mid-single digit decline in earnings per share-diluted from operations for 2007. 

Let’s pretend the company managed to actually hit the estimate of $2.45 for fiscal 2007.  Even after the near 3% drop today, that represents a forward P/E ratio of 19.8.  If it can meet the 2008 target of $2.68, its forward P/E for 2008 is going to be 18.11.  It sure doesn’t sound like the company is expecting to hit at least 2007 estimates, so that theoretical forward P/E ratio is lower then reality.  Unfortunately this is somewhat comparable to Coca-Cola NYSE:) and Pepsico (NYSE:PEP), but those businesses are solid and growing.  For Hershey, anything south of $48.96 will mark a new 52-week low close and even worse if you look at a two-year picture.

As a reminder, Hershey is one of those companies that is also immune from excessive outside control or influence and is deemed equally immune to any hostile outside buyout as super-shares are controlled by the founding family members.

Jon C. Ogg
July 19, 2007

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

Earnings Duel: Google vs. Microsoft (MSFT, GOOG, YHOO)

Today is going to be a challenging earnings day, and it is no coincidence that Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) is reporting earnings simultaneously with Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT).  Google has already trumped Yahoo! (NASDAQ:YHOO) as we saw earlier this week, and now it can go after software behemoth Microsoft.  Since the close of 2006, Microsoft shares are up only about 5% and Google shares are up about 19%.  Microsoft’s average price target from analysts is close to $35.00 and Google’s average price target from analaysts is close to $600.00.

The truth is that there are too many areas and sectors each is in to try competing in all of them.  Google took the search lead long ago, but now it has the focus online software and services that can nibble at Microsoft’s Office software sales.  Google has no operating system it sells in boxes in stores.  Microsoft paid a huge sum to acquire aQuantive (NASDAQ:AQNT) after Google acquired DoubleClick.  Microsoft has Explorer.  The other thing Microsoft has is direct ownership in many technology, communications, and media companies.  Microsoft has Xbox, Vista, and enterprise software solutions.  You can banter back and forth all day as far as which company will win in which arena, which is easier to work with, where they really compete, and more.  The world is a giant neighborhood and there is room for both giants.

Microsoft is expected to post earnings of $0.39 and $13.27 Billion in revenues.  Next quarter is expected to be $1.39 EPS on $13.5 Billion revenues.  The company may also readdress its annual JUN-2008 Fiscal projections, and the estimates there are roughly $1.71 EPS and $57 Billion in revenues.

Google is expected to post $3.59 EPS on revenues of $2.68 Billion.  Just for inference, the current expectation for Q3 is $3.76 EPS on $2.87 Billion revenues.  The problem with even making forward numbers is that Google does not offer guidance, and it has been a serial-exceeder compared to EPS numbers.  Remember you have to back out the TAC (traffic acquisition costs) to get to the true revenue number that Wall Street cares about.

While Wall Street considers these companies arch-rivals, this is somewhat arguable now in today’s world if you consider how these are classified even if they are going after each other.  Google is where growth investors flock, and now Microsoft is held by value and income investors who view the company as an earnings play.  Microsoft is buying back and retiring shares while it is still making acquisitions when it sees fit, and Google will probably be taking the views for quite some time that they can spend cash to buy companies like YouTube and DoubleClick rather than spend cash on its own shares.

The good news is that companies did not insist on holding each conference call at the exact same time.  Google’s webcast is being held at 4:30 EST (1:30 Pacific).  Here is the link for the Microsoft webcast, which starts at 5:30 PM EST (2:30 Pacific).

Jon C. Ogg
July 19, 2007

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

Enthrust Becomes Rodman & Renshaw (EFSV, RODM)

Rodman & Renshaw, a boutique brokerage firm, has effectively come public via a reverse merger with a shell company.  The company has filed to sell up to $86.25 million in security sales.   The company acquired Enthrust Financial Services, Inc. (NASDAQ-OTC:EFSV) in a reverse merger earlier this month, but upon completion of this securities offering it will trade on NASDAQ under the ticker "RODM."   

Sandler O’Neill & Partners, L.P. will act as lead underwriter for the offering, and Rodman & Renshaw, Fox-Pitt Kelton, and Paulson Investment Company will act as co-underwriters for the offering.  Enthrust will continue to operate Rodman & Renshaw’s current business under the leadership of Rodman & Renshaw’s executive management team. Enthrust intends to change its name to Rodman & Renshaw Capital Group, Inc.  Rodman & Renshaw is a full service boutique investment bank.  Its AcumenBioFin(TM) division is an investment banking firm to the biotechnology sector, as well as a leader in the PIPE (private investment in public equity) and RD (registered direct placements) transaction markets.

R&R posted 2006 revenues of $63.958 million, and net income before unrealized gains from investments was $16.518 million.  For the forst quarter of 2007, R&R posted $20.69 million in revenues and net income before a $1 million reclassification charge of $6.82 million.  Due to the nature of a boutique operation and deal participation, these charges and items look like they will keep earnings on a net-net basis a bit volatile and that is quite normal for companies in this sector.

Jon C. Ogg
July 19, 2007

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

MF Global’s (MF) Train Wreck

MR Global’s (MF) IPO was one of the largest of the year.

The futures broker got off to a poor start when it priced at $30 and not the expected $36 to $30. It still raised $2.9 billion.

But, that was only the beginning of the disaster. The stock opened down and trades just above $28 at 10.05 AM New York time.

The easy excuse is that, in a world were futures and derivatives are unpopular because portions of the market like sub-prime securities that have fallen apart, an IPO for a futures trading firm was going to get dinged.

That is not an excuse for mis-pricing the deal and hammering early investors.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Viacom (VIA): Sumner Redstone, Lose A Daughter, Gain Some Sense

It appears that Sumner Redstone’s daughter, Sheri, is leaving the Viacom (VIA) board. It was assumed that she would take over once Sumner passed.

Since Sheri appeared to know absolutely nothing about running a media company, perhaps the move will be a relief for shareholders.

The stock is up 6% on the news.

Now if Sumner would only leave. They could put Tom Cruise in charge

Douglas A. McIntyre

Will Anyone Even Bother Looking At Apple’s Earnings? (AAPL)

Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) is a stock that keeps going and going.  Shares opened up at an all-time high at $140.38 today and we don’t even have its earnings until next week, and that really makes you wonder if this earnings report matters outside of what the company guides for the rest of calendar 2007.  The iPhone came out literally with about 30 hours left in the quarter and its operating system delay was noted early enough for damage to be minimized.  Apple has also been gaining market share in Mac computer sales.

What is amazing is that there was not even a "sell the event" reaction in Apple shares other than what ended up being less than a 1% stock drop after nearly a 50% gain in 2007 before the iPhone launch.  In fact, that was only a 1-day drop and shares are up almost another $20.00 from that day.  We’ll be doing an Apple earnings preview next week, but it’s a real wonder if the actual earnings will even be looked at.  Making any bets against this company other than a very short-term trade here and there would have been a painful experience.

Jon C. Ogg
July 19, 2007

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

Local.com Spreads Its Wings, Acquires PremierGuide (LOCM)

Local.com (NASDAQ:LOCM) has been a crazy stock this year with a trading range of $3.05 to $13.74, and has been a bit of a cult stock because of its narrow local scope in search for many things in metro areas.  Shares are up 4% pre-market on news that the company is acquiring PremierGuide, a provider of online business directories to regional media publishers such as newspapers, TV and radio stations, and city portals.  If the company can integrate and execute this, it could give it a leg up over Local’s current model.

The acquisition price is said to be $2 million for 100% of the company.  PremierGuide’s unaudited revenue was approximately $800,000 for the last twelve months with net income of approximately $300,000 excluding salaries paid to founders.  PremierGuide launched in 2003, and its CEO Malcom Lewis, will become Local.com’s vice president of private label.  The company says this will make Local.com one of the largest syndicated private-label local search and directories with a network of over 400 regional media websites.  Premier has directories on over 350 sites including Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc., GateHouse Media, Inc. and Washington Post.  Local.com claims 10 million visitors per month already.

This will integrate into LocalConnect, which allows local newspapers, radio and television stations and yellow pages companies to incorporate Local.com’s local search technology into their websites via a customized, private label local business directory platform. 

Interestingly enough, if you think the company can achieve its goal you could make the argument that because this has a media focus Local.com could have just integrated a business that could act as an instant secondary or tertiary PR machine since local media could end up saying "Powered by Local.com."  That is assuming the company does actually have its name front and center, and how successful that is will depend upon its ability to secure that in its private-label agreements.

Jon C. Ogg
July 19, 2007

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

Pre-Market Stock News (July 19, 2007)

(AMTD) TD Ameritrade trading up 1% after beating and raising target.
(AVCI) Avici Systems trading up 29% on higher revenue guidance after earnings.
(BAC) $1.28 EPS vs $1.20 estimate.
(CAL) Continental $2.10 vs 1.84 estimate.
(CTXS) Citrix trading up 11% after beating revenues and two upgrades so far.
(EBAY) eBay trading down 1% after beating earnings, but lower listings.
(F) Ford bids due today for Rover and Jaguar units.
(HOG) Harley Davidson $0.14 EPS vs $0.13 estimate.
(IBM) IBM traded up 4% after beating earnings.
(JNPR) Juniper Networks trading up 8% after earnings and upgrade.
(LOGI) Logitech $0.14 EPS vs $0.16e.
(NAFC) Nash Finch $0.70 EPS vs $0.63 estimate.
(MOT) Motorola $0.02 EPS vs $0.00 estimate, but had already lowered.
(SAP) SAP trading up 8% after earnings rose 8% and a gain in market share.
(SCHL) Scholastic Corp. $0.93 EPS vs $1.02 estimate; sees 2008 $2.35-2.85 vs. $2.67 estimate.
(SPWR) SunPower $0.25 EPS vs $0.21e; down from $0.29 last year.
(UNH) UnitedHealth $0.87 vs $0.81 estimate.
(UNP) Union Pacific $1.65 EPS vs $1.62 estimate.
(VMC) Vulcan Materials lowerials lowered guidance.
(WIT) Wipro $0.12 EPS vs $0.12e.
(WMT) Wal-Mart is reportedly interested in acquiring China’s largest retailer Beijing Hualian, although companies have denied this.

Jon C. Ogg
July 19, 2007

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