Posts for Ticker ‘TZOO’

10 More Stocks That Could Double In 2008

It takes a lot for an active stock of an already established company to see the price of its shares double.  In fact, it usually means that a company has posted a significant recovery or that something incredible happened that wasn’t factored into traditional investment models.  Stocks that double are also frequently deemed as clunkers full of problems that staged a significant recovery.  But that has also been used as a description for many key companies like Apple and many more.

We created a primary list recently (see below), but our screen of stocks that could double yielded over 50  candidates and we wanted to run some of the less active stocks in this category.  Almost all of these are still quite active, so only a few may not ring a bell.  Here is the second list of stock candidates that could double with the explanations if the stars line up right inside each company or if certain outside developments come to fruition:

  • Capstone Turbine (NASDAQ: CPST); Dialysis Corp. of America (NASDAQ: DCAI); Palomar Medical Technologies Inc. (NASDAQ: PMTI); Qwest Communications International Inc. (NYSE: Q); Sanmina-SCI Corp. (NASDAQ: SANM); Smith & Wesson Holding Corp. (NASDAQ: SWHC); Travelzoo Inc. (NASDAQ: TZOO); YRC Worldwide (NASDAQ: YRCW);  Websense Inc. (NASDAQ: WBSN);  Xinhua Finance Media Ltd. (NASDAQ: XFML).

Capstone Turbine (NASDAQ: CPST) is one of those stocks which could actually make a significant comeback. This one used to trade many multiples higher.  We’ve covered this one in our "10 Stocks Under $10 Newsletter" for subscribers.  It was at $1.25 or $1.30 at the time and shares now sit close to $1.70.  This company is now producing revenues and its turbines are getting significant interest.  The initial re-screen on this one came to us after Lazard Capital Markets gave this a call for the stock to double to $2.50 in its alternative energy coverage.  After we dug around and reviewed all the past data and put in our own thoughts on alternative energy, we think that instead of this hitting $2.50 that it has a shot at being able to surge past that level.  This is highly dependent upon it announcing new orders, and recent customer order activity has us behind this one.

Dialysis Corp. of America (NASDAQ: DCAI) is another company that has fallen from grace. Shares were north of $30.00 back in 2005 and it’s seen its share of ugliness since then.  Shares are currently close to three-year lows.  A double from today’s prices would barely get it above the $14.16 52-week high.  The $78 million market cap makes this one trade close to three-times book value and under one-times 2008 revenues.  But we think that the company may actually have to go do a dilutive capital raise first so it can open more facilities.  This has severe risks tied to reimbursement rates, so any cuts in that area would drive this lower.  The problem of today’s treatment is that kidney dialysis is really the only option for renal patients with kidney failure and there isn’t another viable alternative widely available to the masses and widely covered by insurance.

Palomar Medical Technologies Inc. (NASDAQ: PMTI) is a risky cosmetic laser maker that could roar or flop in 2008. With shares under $16.00, this stock could double and still be down more than 40% from its $55 highs seen earlier in 2007.  It and P&G (NYSE: PG) recently agreed to extend the Launch Decision of a home-use, light-based hair removal device for women until no later than February 29, 2008 in place since February 2003. Gillette had until January 7, 2008 to make the Launch Decision and it is likely that this will end exclusivity.  Lasers are a competitive business and it will have to really ramp its sales overseas for this to double again.  But if the company gets another critical supply deal and if it secures this current P&G deal in limbo, then this could become one of the explosive growth prospects again.  If not, well then this could slide further down even if many feel the worst has been priced in.

Qwest Communications International Inc. (NYSE: Q) has had a rough time since September and it has only traded above $10.00 for a very brief time period in the last 5-years.  But it recently reestablished its dividend, and the ‘perceived’ yield was actually higher than the dividend of land-line rivals Verizon (NYSE: VZ) and AT&T (NYSE: T).  Shares are also about 75% higher than the mid-point of its old trading range from 2003 to 2005.  It still has a $13 Billion market cap, so it will take many institutional buyers to believe in this one for it to be a double.  But the performance of its two top rivals has not been sustained as far as the stocks go.  Its lack of a wireless offering has also been thought of as a hole in the business plan and analysts would either have to raise their targets or make cuts on valuation if Qwest got back to $10.00.  Any upside would make the valuations on Qwest seem paltry.  If the company wouldn’t have made its recent dividend gesture we would have passed on this one.  But that sure made us think more good news was coming because a dividend is not meant to be a one-time event for companies.

Sanmina-SCI Corp. (NASDAQ: SANM) is an EMS (electronics manufacturing services) company where tech and non-tech companies come to have it manufacture for them.  It owns factories all over the world and it has been in a turnaround for quite some time.  If the company can make that turn then for this to double after a rough week the stock would still not even be at its 52-week highs. We covered this in our "10 Stocks Under $10" and its market cap has dipped back under that $1 Billion mark.  There are some pretty big risks that it won’t be able to turn around, so this one is a real coin toss.  The company has moved from being perceived as a tech-only manufacturer as it serves medical, defense & aerospace, automotive, and more.  Any major win could make this one turn or it could always become a potential acquisition from some of the other larger EMS players.

Smith & Wesson Holding Corp. (NASDAQ: SWHC) is one of the only gun plays in the entire U.S.  That is a bad spot right now as shares are down 75% from their highs.  So for this to double it would still be down 50% from its 52-week highs.  The company had already been in trouble as a stock goes, but then it failed to impress in October and then warned again for 2008 in early December.  Those each took nearly half of the value away each time.  What is interesting is that with a weak consumer and weakening economy expected in 2008, this could scare people about crime if lower-income wage jobs start to dry up.  That could make more homeowners want to buy a gun.  With a presidential election around the corner, we wouldn’t be shocked to see a rush of buyers try to load up on any remote gun desires if they feared that 2009 or 2010 might bring about stronger gun controls.  That HAS happened before.  We don’t know if it will come about again.  That why this is a COULD rather than a WILL.

Travelzoo Inc. (NASDAQ: TZOO) could end up being a Hail Mary pass for 2008 after posting a dismal 2007.  Shares are barely above 52-week lows and this stock would basically have to rise 200% before it took out its 52-week high of $40.68.  It only trades at about 17-times 2008 projected earnings and it is still expected to have revenue gains.  The beast of the sector is Priceline.com (NASDAQ: PCLN) and that stock has risen nearly five-fold over the last 24 months.  The company has what is deemed one of the lower-end online travel package and search features out there, but the beauty of the web is that ANY company can end up with a killer app or major consumer draw that sucks customers back to it.  That might not be the case and we think management isn’t as sharp as at other online travel sites.  But one bit of good news here could make this skyrocket with a flood of day traders, and it has over 25% of its float listed as being in the short interest.  It has also been the subject of takeover rumors in the past.

YRC Worldwide (NASDAQ:YRCW) is one of our favorite trucking stocks as a go-to play in the sector. The problem is that this sector just stinks right now and it has made warning after warning besides its CEO being generally very openly cautious.  But with shares at $17.00 and a trailing P/E of under 10, any upside surprise or even any ‘less bad’ news might make this look like the old flying trucks commercials from the early 90’s.  In fact, if YRCW stock doubled from here it would still be $13.00 short of its 52-week highs.  In January 2005 this even traded north of $60.00.  Are the rest of the bad headlines out? No.  We think times will remain tough. But at some point Wall Street realizes an overreaction and quickly fixes it.  This one may linger and may continue to slide.  So when or from level it doubles off of is anyone’s guess.  If that CEO would just be upbeat on TV once rather than negative, that might send the signal to others to buy as well.  Lastly, this one could actually be a takeover candidate.

Websense Inc. (NASDAQ: WBSN) is one of the old Internet hi-flyers that got sleepy and then became a Rip Van Winkle of a sleeper. With this being back close to $16.00, a double would only take it back to its highs at the end of 2005 and start of 2006.  But the company has still managed to grow while its shares have slumbered and its $400 million market cap is not ridiculous compared to sales estimates of $226 million expected for 2007 or more than $300 million for 2008.  It trades at less than 19-times 2007 EPS and less than 15-times 2008 earnings, yet EPS growth is expected to be 25%.  The company’s strength is also its weakness: it has the best enterprise-wide web filtering mechanism for enterprise Internet and Intranet access out there, but IT buyers have noted over and over how it is also quite expensive compared to second rate services. Is it fair to hint that Larry Ellison & Co. at Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL) or that his rivals like SAP AG (NYSE:SAP) or Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) might consider buying it?  Probably not.  But if a buyer stepped in they’d be getting a very valuable set of customers.  The company could always make a strategy of creating a more mainstream web filtering product that smaller organizations can afford or justify.  As web 2.0 applications are bandwidth intensive and as they become more and more prevalent, companies with bandwidth intensive businesses may also have to increase their web filtering efforts.

Xinhua Finance Media Ltd. (NASDAQ: XFML) is another stock that could garner a double if it can prove it is worthy. But we want to warn you that it could also see another 50% drop.  It was a runner up on the "Worst IPO’s of 2007" this week and many investors are not convinced that all the bad stuff out there is fully reflected in today’s prices.  But the Chinese financial and traditional media could end up being a major sleeper as media is still very under-penetrated in China where it is located.  Management is also fairly well heeled in the media circles in China and its media properties and ancillary services all hold significant values independently if it wanted to divest into a more focused company (unlikely to us). If Xinhua Finance Media doubled from today’s prices it still would be short of that $13.00 high.  2008 is either going to be a year of forgiveness and acceptance, or it is going to hurt.  This one is risky enough that we might only want to look at long-dated (May) calls to limit any potential downside if there are more land mines in this one.

Jon C. Ogg
December 28, 2007

You can join our free email distribution list to get previews for other issues around IPO’s, spin-offs, merger-arb, turnarounds, and more.  Jon Ogg produces the Special Situation Investing Newsletter; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.   

Credit Market Woes Killing Expedia’s Buyback Ambitions (EXPE, OWW, TZOO, PCLN)

Expedia (NASDAQ:EXPE) is showing that credit market woes (and probably online travel stock weakness) aren’t limited to its competitors.  The company came clean this morning by saying it is decreasing its number of shares sought in a tender offer.  The reason couldn’t be worse: due to the lack of available financing at satisfactory terms as a result of current conditions in the credit markets.  This could all be part of the tie-in and part of the reason that no one wanted Orbitz Worldwide (NYSE:OWW) shares last week, and you know the Travelzoo (NASDAQ:TZOO) weakness in its outlook probably didn’t help matters here.

Expedia’s amended "Dutch tender" offering is to purchase up to 25,000,000 shares of its common stock at a price per share not less than $27.50 and not greater than $30.00.  This now represents approximately 9% of the number of shares of common stock currently outstanding and approximately 8% fully diluted. The tender offer is set to expire on August 8, 2007. This is a huge disappointment.

Shares rocketed much more than 10% back in June after the company said it was buying back up to $3.5 Billion in stock.  This was to represent 116.7 million shares at the time of the announcement, so 25 million now is going to be deemed paltry in comparison.  This even has Priceline.com (NASDAQ:PCLN) shares indicated down almost 1% on thin volume in early indications.  Shares of Expedia are down 6% at $27.50 in pre-market indications. 

Jon C. Ogg
July 23, 2007

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

New 52-Week Lows (July 20, 2007)

STOCK TICKERS: ABK, ACA, BZH, LEN, DHI, RYL, CC, BX, FIG, FINL, HGSI, HSY, HW, JNY, NLS, REDE, TRMP, UBET, TZOO, WB

The DJIA may have hit 14,000 earlier.  A pullback here, some bad news there, and all of a sudden there are still many little piggies being sold off.  Here are some of the main stocks hitting 52-weeks lows today, and it is even an edited-down list:

AMBAC (ABK) $80.05
Whoops, insuring and guaranteeing debt.

ACA Capital (ACA) $6.40
Yep, still no word out of the company yet.  Trading and guaranteeing CDO’s and derivates isn’t what it was cracked up to be, and we still don’t know their real situation.

Beazer Homes (BZH), Lennar (LEN) DR Horton (DHI), Ryland (RYL)
One of its comps calling for crummy to 2009…ouch.

Circuit City (CC) $13.63
You knew this one wasn’t bottomed out yet.

Blackstone (BX) $25.95
Schwarzman isn’t responsible for this added drop, but he’ll do for the blame.

Fortress Inv. Group (FIG) $22.28
This hedge fund, boy…are they in private equity and CDO’s?  Not an intraday low, but its lowest close.

Finish Line (FINL) $7.88
Glad I removed it from the BAIT SHOP of buyout candidates when I did, this one must have 10 piggies in each of their shoes.

Human Genome Sciences (HGSI) $8.61
Maybe genomics is such a 1990’s term.

Hershey (HSY) $47.84
This one was very overvalued for something you eat, so it squirts.

Headwaters (HW) $16.43

Jones Appareal (JNY) $26.62
Weren’t these guys supposed to sell out?

Nautilus (NLS) $9.14
When will a growth exercise and fitness company that warned be touted as a value stock?

Redenvelope (REDE) $5.05
Still don’t know anyone who has used this online e-tailer.

Trump Entertainment (TRMP) $9.50
The Donald’s casino operator can’t find a bottom without reaching under his back.

YouBet.com (UBET) $2.04
Bet this one isn’t done?

Travelzoo (TZOO) $23.00, prior intraday low was $23.16; high was $40.00+.
Online travel carnage continues….maybe France, Hong Kong, and Japan aren’t worth it.

Wachovia (WB) $49.98 close..prior 52-week low was $50.32.
Banks, they need someone to "Watch-ova-ya"

Jon C. Ogg
July 20, 2007

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

Orbitz, A Busted IPO Out Of The Chute? (OWW, BX, TZOO)

Orbitz Worldwide Inc. (NYSE:OWW) came public as planned, but so far that is the only good news.  This was an anticipated IPO as the company used to be public, but most shareholders knew that the IPO commitment money was just going to Blackstone Group (NYSE:BX) to let Schwarzman do more things to garner negative press.

Shares opened under the $15.00 pricing and have traded as low as $14.25 so far in early trading on more than 4 million shares.  That makes this a busted IPO by definition right out of the chute.  What is even more disappointing is that Orbitz priced under the initial $16.00 to $18.00 range.  That doesn’t mean the IPO will stay a busted deal as it is impossible to know if this closes up or down on the day. 

The weakness in Travelzoo (NASDAQ:TZOO) and the new 52-week lows there probably isn’t helping either.  Orbitz priced under the $16.00 to $18.00 range at $15.00, and based on the initial reaction after the open it would appear that the IPO subscribers wished this one priced even lower.  These private equity firms may need to start letting at least a portion of IPO proceeds go to the underlying companies rather than going to pay back debt and pay a one-time looting dividend all to themselves.

Jon C. Ogg
July 20, 2007

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

Orbitz Prices IPO (OWW, BX, TZOO)

Online travel hub operator Orbitz did price its IPO of 34 million shares at a price of $15.00 per share.  Orbitz will trade under the "OWW" ticker on NYSE.  Unfortunately the original range was indicated as $16.00 to $18.00, so this is going to be deemed as a poor IPO pricing.

Morgan Stanley & Co. Incorporated, GoldmanSachs & Co., Lehman Brothers Inc. and J.P. Morgan Securities Inc.are the global coordinators with Credit Suisse and UBS Investment Bankacting as joint lead managers. Thomas Weisel Partners LLC, PacificCrest Securities, Piper Jaffray, and Stifel Nicolaus are co-managers ofthe offering.

Blackstone (NYSE:BX) is receiving basically all of the IPO proceeds as they are regurgitating the company in a re-IPO.  Here is the backgrounder on the company explaining the history since this was public before, then was acquired by the old Cendant, and then became part of a larger sale to Blackstone just last year.  The weakness in Travelzoo (NASDAQ:TZOO) is also partially to blame for a weak IPO here in the same space, as well as the relation to Blackstone and Wall Street’s poor reception of the private equity beast.

Jon C. Ogg
July 20, 2007

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

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.

Mixed Bag in Online Travel Short Sales (May 2007) (PCLN, EXPE, TZOO, CTRP)

Stock Tickers: PCLN, EXPE, TZOO, CTRP

The online travel sector is a bit of an odd bird.  The travel sector itself is of course very cyclical and one of the first expenses that can be trimmed without taking a hit to your status is lavish travel.  Not all travel of course, but the high end travel.  Because of the growth in online activities, online travel has been a bit of a perpetual growth sector.  With Orbitz being potentially back on the IPO radar, we wanted to see what was happening in short selling in the online travel sector.

Stock (Ticker)                    MAY        APRIL  CHANGE
Expedia (EXPE)             14.97M    14.83M    0.9%
Priceline.com (PCLN)    7.12M     7.77M     -8.35%
Travelzoo (TZOO)            2.14M     2.01M      6.5%
Ctrip.com (CTRP)            968K      1.42M     -32%

Jon C. Ogg
May 25, 2007

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