Posts for Ticker ‘FISV’

The Twenty Companies That Wall St. Can Trust The Least

Wall St. likes financial statements that give it deep insights into a company’s operations, especially its liabilities. It likes boards that make sure shareholders get as complete a picture as possible of a firm’s balance sheet and details of its P&L, cash-flow, and other critical financial measurements.

bear24/7 Wall St. asked Audit Integrity to put together a list of companies traded on US exchanges with market caps of more than $3 billion that do particularly poorly in the areas  of corporate governance, detailed disclosure of high-risk events including M&A and restructurings, revenue and expense recognition, and asset and liability valuation.

Based on the Audit Integrity model, 24/7 created a list of the twenty companies that Wall St. can trust the least.  Among the companies that the analysis flagged are Altria (NYSE:MO), Chevron (NYSE:CVX), Credit Suisse (NYSE:CS), GE (NYSE:GE), Blackstone (NYSE:BX), Wal-Mart (NYSE:WMT),  Wells Fargo (NYSE:WMT), and Dow Chemical (NYSE:DOW)

The list:

Read More »

Top 10 Analyst Upgrades & Downgrades (AMED, BNI, CMCSA, CSX, DCP, FISV, GMR, HLS, STJ, TWC)

These are ten of the top pre-market analyst upgrades, downgrades, and initiation calls we have seen from Wall Street early this Wednesday morning with close to two hours until the market opens:

Amedisys (AMED) Cut to Neutral at UBS.
Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNI) Started as Outperform at Baird.
Comcast (CMCSA) Started as Overweight at JPMOrgan.
CSX (CSX) Started as Outperform at Baird.
Dyncorp (DCP) Started as Buy at SunTrust.
Fiserv (FISV) Started as Buy at Citigroup.
General Maritime Corp. (GMR) Raised to Outperform at FBR.
HealthSouth Corp. (HLS) Started as Outperform at Baird.
St. Jude Medical (STJ) Raised to Outperform at Wells Fargo.
Time Warner Cable (TWC) Started as Overweight at JPMorgan.

JON C. OGG

Many Monday Pre-Market Downgrades (CEG, FIS, FISV, DNA, KBW, NKE, PSO, SHW, SWIR, SWK, WERN, WIT)

These are among the top analyst Downgrades or negative analyst calls affecting shares this Monday morning in pre-market trading:

  • Constellation Energy (NYSE: CEG) Downgraded to Underperform at Jefferies.
  • Fidelity National (NYSE: FIS) Cut to Perform at Oppenheimer.
  • Fiserv (NASDAQ: FISV) Cut to Perform at Oppenheimer.
  • Genentech (NYSE: DNA) Raised to Overweight at Lehman.
  • KBW (NYSE: KBW) Cut to Market Perform at FBR.
  • Nike (NYSE: NKE) Cut to Neutral at HSBC.
  • Pearson plc (NYSE: PSO) Cut to Sell at Deutsche Bank.
  • Satyam Computer Services (NYSE: SAY) Cut to Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley; Cut to Underperform at Credit Suisse.
  • Sherwin Williams (NYSE: SHW) Cut to Sell at Goldman Sachs.
  • Sierra Wireless (NASDAQ: SWIR) Target cut to $20 from $25 at CIBC.
  • Stanley Works (NYSE: SWK) Cut to Hold at Deutsche Bank.
  • Werner Enterprises (NASDAQ: WERN) Cut to Sell at UBS.
  • WIPRO (NYSE: WIT) Cut to Underperform at Credit Suisse.

Jon C. Ogg
July 21, 2008

Fiserv Sells Insurance Ops, To Shrink Float (FISV)

Fiserv Inc. (NASDAQ: FISV) has announced a rather interesting move, and interestingly enough all that will be accomplished on the surface is a direct shrinkage of the company.

The company has announced that it will sell a majority interest in insurance business operations to Trident IV, a private equity fund managed by Stone Point Capital LLC.  You can take that it gave that operation an implied new value of $1 Billion, because the company will receive a $510 million payment as net proceeds for a 51% stake. The equity valuation would be lower though, as it lists the proceeds being $205 million in equity and $335 million in debt.  Fiserv noted that this will free up capital and will allow it to focus on financial products.

Simultaneously, the company has announced that it will turn around and repurchase up to 10 million shares of common stock in a repurchase program of roughly 6% of its float.  Based upon yesterday’s close that would be $453 million if it used the entire sum at that fixed theoretical price. 

The company has said this action will dilute earnings in 2008 by $0.02 to $0.03 and it is backing GAAP EPS of $3.28 and non-GAAP EPS of $3.40.  First Call has estimates as $3.34 EPS on a non-GAAP basis.

Its 52-week trading range is $44.16 to $58.32.  Shares are indicated higher by roughly $1.00 in pre-market trading, although there are no shares that have yet traded hands.

Jon C. Ogg
July 2, 2008

Top 10 Pre-Market Analyst Calls (APC, FISV, IPCM, KR, RSH, RAI, SWY, SNDK, URBN, ZEP)

These are ten analyst calls we are focusing on in pre-market trading this Friday morning:

  • Anadarko Petroleum (NYSE: APC) Raised to Overweight from Equal-weight at Lehman.
  • Fiserv (NASDAQ: FISV) Raised to Market Outperform from Market Perform at JMP Securities.
  • IPC The Hospitalist (NASDAQ: IPCM) Cut to Market Perform from Outperform at Wachovia.
  • Kroger (NYSE: KR) Raised to Overweight from Equalweight at Morgan Stanley.
  • RadioShack (NYSE: RSH) Raised to Buy from Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
  • Reynolds American (NYSE: RAI)  Cut to Underweight from Neutral at JPMorgan.
  • Safeway (NYSE: SWY) Cut to Equal-weight from Overweight at Morgan Stanley.
  • SanDisk (NASDAQ: SNDK) Cut to Market Underperform from Market Perform at JMP Securities.
  • Urban Outfitters (NASDAQ: URBN) Cut to Equal-weight from Overweight at Lehman Brothers.
  • Zep (NYSE: ZEP) started as Buy at KeyBanc Capital.

Jon C. Ogg
May 16, 2008

Jon Ogg produces and edits the "10 Stocks Under $10" newsletter and he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Pre-Market Analyst Calls (October 4, 2007)

AAPL started as Buy at BMO Capital.
AVR cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.
BIOF cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.
CHIC cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.
CIEN raised to Neutral at UBS.
COO cut to Underperform at Bear Stearns.
ENDP cut to Hold at Jefferies.
ESL cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.
FCL started as Outperform at FBR.
FISV raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
HANS cut to Neutral at Goldman Sachs (see full note).
LIFC raised to Outperform at Piper Jaffray.
MOT target raised to $22 at Lehman.
MPWR raised to Buy at Goldman Sachs.
MXIM raised to Buy at Goldman Sachs.
MYL raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
NGLS removed from Goldman Sachs conviction buy list.
NHY raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
NTRI cut to Hold at Lazard.
PNRA raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
RAD raised to Neutral at HSBC.
SAP raised to Buy at Sun Trust; downgraded at Bernstein.
SHW raised to Buy at UBS.
SLAB cut to Hold at Citigroup.
SPF raised to Neutral at UBS.
WFT cut to Neutral at B of A.
WTSLA cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.
X started as Underweight at JPMorgan.

Wachovia initiated major technology companies today, but it appears that this was part of the A.G.Edwards transitioning this week (AMD, INTC, TXN, DELL, IBM, HPQ, NOK, QCOM, BRCM, MOT, JAVA).  Here is a full list.

Jon C. Ogg
October 4, 2007

How The CheckFree Buyout Killed An ETF (FISV, CKFR, BHH, MER)

Fiserv’s (NASDAQ:FISV) proposed cash buyout of CheckFree (NASDAQ:CKFR) for some $4.2 Billion, did at least make some CheckFree shareholders whole again.  The $48.00 cash buyout price is actually a ‘takeunder’ if you purchased CheckFree stock during much of 2006, but it makes everyone whole who purchased shares over the last year.  You can analyze the merger all you want and decide the closing times and percentages of the deal closing, but this is actually going to all but kill an exchange traded fund.

Enter the B2B HOLDRs (AMEX:BHH).  HOLDRs were some of the original exchange traded funds, or ETF’s, on the market.  This particular ETF launch was a product of the dot.com craze, and by the name "B2B" you can guess that many of the old components or would-be target components have died or been delisted.  HOLDRs can differ from many ETF’s in that the basket of stocks may not change as much as other ETF’s that track either a sector a stated index, and these were originally designed to where they could be unbundled into individual shares.  Unfortunately, you also receive all the underlying shareholder materials as if you were buying each underlying company. 

The B2B HOLDRs has had enough companies that would have fit the description go by the wayside, that it now only has four components that will ultimately become three components if no changes are made.  This ETF should now actually be called the CKFR HOLDRs.  According to the Merrill Lynch (NYSE:MER) website for HOLDRs (this one in particular) this one actually has 81% of its current weighting in CheckFree shares.  As noted, most of the old B2B pure-play stocks have gone and retired.  The actual underlying stocks didn’t start out this dominated if you look at the prospectus, but you will see on page 16 and 17 of the prospectus that the component count is low any way.

The B2B HOLDRs has only traded in a $1.81 to $2.46 range and it quite frequently trades fewer than 50,000 shares in a day.  If an ETF ever needed to be retired, the B2B HOLDRs is it.

Jon C. Ogg
August 8, 2007

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

Earlybird Analyst Calls (June 18, 2007)

ADP started as Sector Perform at CIBC.
ANDW cut to Neutral at B of A.
ASN cut to Sector Perform at RBC.
CKFR raised to Outperform at CIBC.
CPS cut to Sector Perform at CIBC.
EFD cut to Sell at Citigroup.
ENCY cut to Underperform at Rodman & Renshaw.
FCS raised to Outperform at RWBaird.
FIS started as Outperform at CIBC.
FISV raised to Sector Perform at CIBC.
GME raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
GPN started as Sector Perform at CIBC.
KDN raised to Buy at KeyBanc/McDonald.
KYPH cut to Market Perform at Wachovia.
NATI raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
TEK raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
WDC cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.

Jon C. Ogg
June 18, 2007