Posts for Ticker ‘ADS’

Top 10 Analyst Upgrades and Downgrades (ADTN, ADS, BA, LFC, DB, EMC, FCX, FSYS, WFR, RVBD)

These are the top ten analyst calls of upgrades, downgrades, and initiations we have seen from Wall Street early this Wednesday morning with more than two hours until the market opens:

  • ADTRAN (ADTN) Started as Buy at Auriga.
  • Alliance Data (ADS) Cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.
  • Boeing (BA) Cut to Underperform at Oppenheimer.
  • China Life Insurance Co. Ltd. (LFC) Cut to Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
  • Deutsche Bank (DB) Raised to Hold from Sell at Citigroup.
  • EMC Corp. (EMC) Raised to Overweight at Barclays.
  • Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. (FCX) Raised to Outperform at FBR.
  • Fuel Systems Solutions (FSYS) Raised to Buy at Janney Montgomery Scott.
  • MEMC (WFR) Cut to Underweight at JPMorgan.
  • Riverbed Technology (RVBD) Started as Market Perform at FBR.

Jon C. Ogg
June 24, 2009

Top Pre-Market Analyst Upgrades (ADS, AUTH, BRCM, EXC, NVLS, SAI, SNDA)

These are the top upgrades and positive analyst calls we are seeing this Thursday morning:

  • Alliance Data (ADS) Started as Buy at B of A.
  • AuthenTec (AUTH) Started as Buy at S&P Equity Research.
  • Broadcom Corp. (BRCM) Started as Outperform at Credit Suisse.
  • Excelon (EXC) Raised to Buy at Jefferies.
  • Novellus Systems (NVLS) Raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley.
  • SAIC (SAI) Raised to Outperform at at Wachovia.
  • Shanda Interactive (SNDA) Raised to Outperform at Oppenheimer.

Jon C. Ogg
September 4, 2008

Top 10 Pre-Market Analyst Calls (ADS, GRMN, HST, JEF, MHS, NCC, RHT, CRM, BRLC, VLTR)

These are some of the top analyst calls that we are focusing on this Tuesday morning in pre-market trading hours:

  • Alliance Data (NYSE: ADS) raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
  • Garmin Ltd. (NASDAQ: GRMN) started as Neutral at JPMorgan.
  • Host Hotels & Resorts (NYSE: HST) Cut To Hold From Buy By Deutsche Bank.
  • Jefferies Group (NYSE: JEF) Cut to Neutral at Banc of America.
  • Medco Health Solutions (NYSE: MHS) raised to Buy at Jefferies.
  • National City (NYSE: NCC) raised to Buy at Deutsche Bank; Downgraded to Underperform at Bear Stearns.
  • Red Hat (NYSE: RHT) started as Buy at Piper Jaffray.
  • Salesforce.com (NYSE: CRM) started as Buy at Piper Jaffray.
  • Syntax-Brillian (NASDAQ: BRLC) raised to Outperform at Robert W. Baird.
  • Volterra Semi (NASDAQ: VLTR) raised to Buy at Piper Jaffray.

Jon C. Ogg
April 22, 2008

Jon Ogg is a producer of and editor for both the Special Situations newsletter and the "10 Stocks Under $10" weekly newsletter for 247WallSt.com; he can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com and he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Top 10 Pre-Market Analyst Calls (ADS, COF, CTL, CSCO, CYMI, F, GM, BEN, GPS, GOOG, MKSI, TXT)

These are not all of the analyst calls affecting shares, but these are the initial calls we are focusing on early this Friday morning:

  • Alliance Data Systems (NYSE: ADS) Raised to Buy From Neutral at Piper Jaffray.
  • Capital One (NYSE: COF) Cut to Neutral from Buy at Piper Jaffray; Cut to Underperform from Market Perform at KBW.
  • CenturyTel (NYSE: CTL) Raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley.
  • Cisco Systems (NASDAQ: CSCO) Started as Buy at Lazard.
  • Cymer (NASDAQ: CYMI) Cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.
  • Ford (NYSE: F) and GM (NYSE: GM) losses widened out at JPMorgan.
  • Franklin Resources (NYSE: BEN) cut to Underweight at JPMorgan.
  • Gap Inc (NYSE: GPS) Cut To Equalweight From Overweight at Lehman Brothers.
  • Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) raised to Buy at Jefferies; Merrill Lynch raised price target to $600.
  • MKS Instruments (NASDAQ: MKSI) raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
  • Textron (NYSE: TXT) Cut to Neutral from Outperform at Credit Suisse.

Jon C. Ogg
April 18, 2008

Jon Ogg is a producer and editor of the Special Situation newsletter and the "10 Stocks Under $10" weekly newsletter for 247Wallst.com.

Alliance Data (ADS) Goes After Blackstone (BX)

Alliance Data (NYSE: ADS) had given Blackstone (NYSE:BX) notice that the private equity firm is no longer negotiating in good faith to complete a buy-out. The charge probably has the benefit of being true.

ADS stated its issues in a letter picked up by The Wall Street Journal: "The terms of the agreement are very clear. Instead, Blackstone and its affiliates continue to refuse to meet reasonable and customary regulatory requirements as an excuse to avoid completing the transaction," said Robert Minicucci, chairman of the special committee of ADS’s board of directors.

Blackstone says that the Office of the Comptroller of Currency has put conditions on the deal which make it harder and more expensive to complete. The buy-out firm indicated that it would entertain closing the transaction to buy ADS, but at a lower price. Now Blackstone has simply disappeared.

Who can blame Blackstone? The current credit markets make it nearly impossible to close without paying huge interest rates to reflect the risk. A poor private equity market has dropped shares in Blackstone down almost two-thirds since its IPO.

The trouble with all of those excuses is that institutions put money with firms like Blackstone because they have analysts who are smarter than everyone else. People like these could not have missed the potential issue of a government body making the deal more expensive.

Blackstone wants out. It does not want the risk. And, clearly it is willing to take its chances in court.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Media Digest 3/18/2008 Reuters, WSJ, NYTimes, FT, Bloomberg

Accoding to Reuters, the Fed is set for a large rate cut in the face of the financial crisis.

Reuters writes that Google (GOOG) says it is well positioned for an economic slowdown.

Reuters reports that Paulson defended that government’s role in rescuing Bear Stearns (BSC)

Reuters reports that a big federal bail-out of housing is gaining momenturm.

The Wall Street Journal writes that the federal govenment is likely to try to curb the drop in the economy with  corporate bailouts, fiscal incentives and regulation.

The Administration is proposing easing lending restraints on Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE) as a way to help the housing market.

The WSJ writes that Delta (DAL) and Northwest (NWA) pilot unions cannot come to an agreement, blocking a merger of the airlines.

The Wall Street Journal writes that Abu Dhabi has agreed to a sovereign investment code not to use it fund for political purposes.

The Wall Street Journal writes that Intel (INTC) has a plan to build several more powerful processors.

The Wall Street Journal writes that Alliance Data (ADS) notified Blackstone (BX) that it was in breach of finshing a buy-out deal.

The New York Times writes that Ford (F) is now desparate to get back buyers who defected to Asian and European brands.

The FT reports that the pressure is on the Fed to cut up to 1.25 points.

Bloomberg writes that oil rose again with the recovery in US stocks.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Failed Private Equity Deal Blow-Ups, Major Share Erosions Remain (COMS, ADS, BX, SLM, URI, CCU)

There is a menagerie of companies with stocks that look like the boulevard of broken dreams because of the woes in the stock market and economy in January.  But no group looks as bad as the group of the recently failed private equity buyouts.  Some of the losses here may seem excessive compared to what would have been the buyout price, but that is the new private equity M&A world for you. 

You can see how wide these spreads would be if they magically reappeared.  And NO, these prices won’t come back any time soon.

The freshly failed acquisition of 3Com Corp. (NASDAQ: COMS) by Bain Capital Partners LLC & Huawei was originally $5.30 cash, although the last ditch effort to please CIFIUS via a unit sale would have resulted in a lower price. If that magically came back, you’d be looking at an 82% gain.

The deal for Alliance Data Systems Corp. (NYSE: ADS) from The Blackstone Group, LP (NYSE: BX) may or may not happen, but the original price of the buyout offer was $81.75.  It is nearly impossible to think that price would ever be a buyout price in today’s environment, but that would represent a 54% premium to current prices.

SLM Corp. (NYSE: SLM), or Sallie Mae, was being J.C. Flowers & Co. before that merger was called off.  The company was originally being offered $60 per share and then it was briefly revised lower to $50 per share before being ditched altogether.  If that $50 number magically came back, that would represent a whopping 127% premium.  If that $60 pipe dream ever came back, the gains compared to today would be a whopping 172% gain.

United Rentals (NYSE: URI) buyout from Cerberus was $34.50, but it at least looks like it got its $100 million deal termination fee.  If that premium magically came back, that would be more than an 80% premium compared to today.

Clear Channel Communications Inc. (CCU), Thomas H. Lee Partners LP/Bain Capital Group is not yet a busted deal, although this $39.20 cash price is roughly 25% above today’s share prices.  This one has taken long enough that it seems Methuselah is in charge of this approval and decision process.

For whatever this is worth, investors looking at any of these companies better be looking at each company individually.  It isn’t like there weren’t some problems that either kept these mergers from happening, even if the buyout firms have had to gear down their efforts to more of true private equity firms instead of LBO firms.

Jon C. Ogg
February 21, 2008

On our open email distribution list you can see more detailed merger-arb spreads and other key issues in private equity, M&A, IPO’s, spin-offs and more.

Analysts Defend Alliance Data Systems After Earnings (ADS)

Alliance Data Systems Corp. (NYSE: ADS) is seeing shares surge in pre-market trading this morning.  Alliance is suing Blackstone Group (NYSE: BX) over the likely merger failure.  Alliance also posted its earnings yesterday after the close.

The company posted a 14% drop in earnings after losses from a business unit sale and from its failed buyout.  It made $0.42 EPS, down from $0.48 EPS the year before on a net basis, but it posted $0.93 cash earnings versus a $0.93 estimates.  Revenues were up about 15% to $602.7 million, while estimates were looking for almost $601 million.

Alliance also maintained its stance that it could clearly generate double-digit organic growth in both operating and adjusted EBITDA.  The company noted a "combined impact of double-digit organic growth, reductions in capital expenditures and the implementation of additional free cash flow initiatives" will all result in a significant increase in cash flow during 2008. 

Analysts are defending the stock this morning.  There are upgrades from both Bear Stearns and JMP Securities raising ratings to "Outperform" and SunTrust Robinson Humphrey is raising its rating to a Buy from Neutral.  Shares closed at $42.70 yesterday and shares are up over 8% pre-market at $46.40 in early trading.  This was cut in half after the failed Blackstone buyout and the 52-week trading range is $39.54 to $80.79.

Jon C. Ogg
January 31, 2008

Top 10 Pre-Market Analyst Calls (ADBE, ADS, JRJC, GILD, HES, JWN, MNST, NEU, RL, YUM)

These are not all of the pre-market research calls during a busy earnings morning, but these are the top calls that 247WallSt.com is looking at:

  • Adobe Systems (NASDAQ: ADBE) downgraded to Underperform from Buy at Jefferies.
  • Alliance Data Systems (NYSE: ADS) upgraded to Outperform at Bear Stearns and upgraded to Outperform at JMP Securities.
  • China Finance Online (NASDAQ: JRJC) started as Buy at Jefferies.
  • Gilead Sciences (NASDAQ: GILD) raised to Outperform at Wachovia.
  • Hess (HES) raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
  • J.W. Nordstrom (NYSE: JWN) raised to Outperform at Bear Stearns.
  • Monster Worldwide (NASDAQ: MNST) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank.
  • NeuMarket (NYSE: NEU) started as Outperform at Oppenheimer.
  • Polo Ralph Lauren (NYSE: RL) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Banc of America.
  • YUM! Brands (NYSE: YUM) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank.

Jon C. Ogg
January 31, 2008

The 52-week Low Club (ADS)(IKN)

Alliance Data Systems (ADS) Deal for buy-out may be falling apart. Shares fall to $39.54 from 52-week high of $80.79.

Image Entertainment (DISK) Dispute with creditors. Drops to $1.04 from 52-week high of $4.50.

Discovery Laboratories (DSCO) Recently named a "death bed" stock by Motley Fool. Sells off to $1.75 from 52-week high of $3.75.

IKON Office (IKN) Rough quarterly numbers. Down to $8.35 from 52-week high of $16.11.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Read More »

Alliance Data (ADS) Deal Falls Apart

Shares of Alliance Data (ADS) are trading off 42% before the open. The Blackstone Group (BX) and Aladdin Solutions have informed Alliance Data that they do not anticipate the condition to closing the merger relating to obtaining approvals from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) will be satisfied.

ADS looks ready to put up a fight. It said it "strongly disagrees with Blackstone’s stated assertions that (i) the OCC’s most recent written proposal to Blackstone’s counsel embodied the OCC’s "final position" with respect to the terms on which the required approvals would be granted and (ii) the OCC is "demanding that extraordinary measures be taken by ADS and various Blackstone entities in connection with the Change in Control Notice" that "represent operational and financial burdens on ADS, Blackstone and it affiliates that cannot be reasonably assumed." Moreover, the Company believes that Blackstone has the ability to cause the condition to closing cited in Blackstone’s letter to be satisfied.

According to the company, Blackstone’s notice did not assert any breach of the merger agreement by Alliance Data or the occurrence or anticipated occurrence of any material adverse effect.

It looks like a nice, big lawsuit.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Pre-Market Stock News (January 28, 2008)

Alliance Data Systems (ADS) was informed by Blackstone that conditions likely won’t be satisfied to complete the merger; stock trading down close to 40%.
American Express (AXP) reports earnings today with estimates at $0.71 EPS.
Biogen Idec (BIIB) said that Carl Icahn has given notice that he wants to nominate 3 directors to the board.
Black & Decker (BDK) $1.06 EPS vs. $1.03 estimate; lowered guidance for 2008 to $5.40 to 5.90 vs. $6.10+ estimates.
Bluelinx (BXC) now sees wider losses than expected.
Corning (GLW) $0.40 EPS vs. $0.39 estimate; Revenue $1.58B vs. $1.55B est.
eBay (EBAY) announced that PayPal has agreed to acquire Fraud Sciences Ltd. in Israeli for roughly $169 million.
FPL Group (FPL) $0.71 EPS vs. $0.67 estimates.
Halliburton (HAL) $0.74 EPS vs. $0.69 estimates.
Matria Healthcare (MATR) is being acquired by Inverness Medical (IMA) for $39.00 per share, with a breakdown of $6.50 per share in cash and $32.50 per share in convertible preferred stock.
McDonalds (MCD) set to report earnings, estimate $0.71.
Napster (NAPS) announced the launch of the Napster Mobile music service with Ericsson phones at Telecom Italia through its mobile brand TIM.
Sallie Mae (SLM) received commitments for $31 Billion from a consortium of banks led by Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Barclays Capital, Deutsche Bank, Credit Suisse, and The Royal Bank of Scotland, and from UBS; new financing will replace the $30 billion interim financing put in place; will drop suit related to past failed merger.
Sears Holdings (SHLD) Aylwin Lewis is stepping down as CEO of Sears.
Stanley Works (SWK) $1.11 EPS vs. $1.10 estimate; reaffirmed 2008 EPS at $4.20 to $4.40 versus $4.37 estimate.
Superior Offshore (DEEP) announced E. Donald Terry will be Interim President/CEO effectively immediately.
Synta (SNTA) and GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) announced elesclomol for metastatic melanoma was granted orphan drug designation by FDA; SNTA trading up 17%.
Ultralife Batteries (ULBI) received $4.4 million in military battery orders from the U.S. Defense Department.
Verizon (VZ) $0.62 EPS vs $0.62 estimate; added 2 million total net wireless customers; now has over 1 million FiOS TV customers.

Jon C. Ogg
January 28, 2008

Cramer’s Got 2 More Financial Service Buyout Picks (TSS, ADP, ADS, BSG, FDC, SNV)

Cramer came on MAD MONEY saying he thinks that Total Systems Services (TSS-NYSE) is one that can be taken over next in a sector and $40.00 would be a fair price based on Alliance Data prices.  Synovis (SNV) is the parent and Third point is now being an activist investor.  The earnings growth of 18% is reason enough to own this.  The only issue he has in the sector is that Automatic Data Processing (ADP) might be acquired first.  Alliance Data Services (ADS) was just acquired, First Data (FDC) is going private, and even Bisys Group (BSG) got gobbled up.  We’ll see, but investors need to keep in mind that some of the premiums in this sector have been pidly.  ADS was nearly a 20% stock jump, but BSG was a horrible low-premium buyout.

Jon C. Ogg
May 21, 2007

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