Posts for Ticker ‘BEAS’

Nasdaq Short Interest (LVLT)(MSFT)(SIRI)(INTC)

Below is the short interest for selected stocks traded on the Nasdaq. The figures are as of September 28 and compare to numbers as of September 14, 2007.

Largest Short Positions

Company                                         Shares Short

Level 3 (LVLT)                                  128.0 million shares short

Charter Comm (CHTR)                        91.0 million

Microsoft (MSFT)                                82.9 million

Sirius (SIRI)                                        82.4 million

Intel (INTC)                                         72.3 million

Sun (JAVA)                                        64.9 million

Yahoo! (YHOO)                                   51.8 million

Comcast (CMCSA)                              50.5 million

Cisco (CSCO)                                     46.0 million

Oracle (ORCL)                                    41.6 million

Amazon (AMZN)                                 36.8 million

Largest Increases In Short Position

Company                                           Increase In Shares Short

BEA Systems (BEAS)                        8.5 million increase

Level 3                                               6.0 million

Dell (DELL)                                        3.9 million

Amgen (AMGN)                                 3.6 million

Novell (NOVL)                                    2.9 million

Largest Decreases In Short Position

Company                                          Decrease In Shares Short

Comcast                                           52.0 million share decrease

Take-Two (TTWO)                               8.1 million

Sun                                                   4.6 million

Charter                                              4.4 million

Data from Nasdaq and WSJ

Douglas A. McIntyre            

The Week In Review (BEAS, ORCL, MCD, C, GE, MSFT, BIDU, VMW, ERTS, TSCM, VM, WMT, COST, BA, VLO, EBAY)

This was a long and crazy week for stock traders, but the Bond weasels got Monday off and only had a four-day work week.  Thursday was the mystery tank day when the beleaguered tech stocks dove, only to recover Friday.  PPI came in on a nominal basis at +1.1% instead of the +0.4% estimate, but when you look at core PPI without food and energy you only had a +0.1% read in September.

Here were the top stories of the week, sorry if itn’t kept to only 10.

Baidu.com (NASDAQ:BIDU)…… Traded north of $350.00 after a move that just wouldn’t quit, only to tank Thursday down to $300-ish and see a Friday recovery after Jim Cramer gave a $500.00 figure for conjecture. Here we posted some lessons from the dot.com bubble days.  Chinese stock craziness didn’t end.

BEA Systems (NASDAQ:BEAS) got a $17.00 buyout offer from Larry Ellison & Co. or Orcale for some $17.00 per share in cash and then rejected it as undervalued.

McDonald’s (NYSE:MCD) raised guidance again.  What a story.

Citigroup’s (NYSE:C) Chuck Prince fired management, but he didn’t fire himself ahead of Monday’s earnings.
http://www.247wallst.com/2007/10/why-citi-c-cant.html
Deutsche Bank cut Citi to a SELL rating.

24/7 Wall St. took the heads and the tails sides of the General Electric (NYSE:GE) earnings report, and McIntyre’s "tails" appears to have won the better call.  GE may also unload NBC Universal, but not until after the 2008 Olympics.

Electronic Arts (NASDAQ:ERTS) is having some serious Halo-envy as it made an $800 million acquisition.

No wonder Jim Cramer was happy all week, besides getting one day off for the CNBC Republican Presidential Debate….. His TheStreet.com (NASDAQ:TSCM) rose to seven-year highs.

Virgin Mobile (NYSE:VM) of billionaire Richard Branson made its IPO debut.

Wal-Mart (NYSE:WMT) sales were not good, but it cut costs amply and raised EPS targets.  Now that the market has stopped treating this as a grwoth stock, the earnings story is the focus.  Costco (NASDAQ:COST) posted better than expected sales.

Microsft (NASDAQ:MSFT) wants to go after VMware’s (NYSE:VMW) dominance in virtualization, but it wont be ready until later in 2008.  The big deal in VMware breaking $100 we gave some projected valuations even if you put the upside surprise on top of the expected growth rates.

Boeing (NYSE:BA) delayed the launch of the Dreamliner by another 6 months, and its suppliers got hit harder than the aerospace, defense, and jet maker itself.

Valero (NYSE:VLO) warned that feedstocks were killing margins and it gave an earnings warning, butthe stock rallied.

eBay (NASDAQ:EBAY) launched its own social networking site, and the reviews are not that encouraging with a "doomed to fail" consensus from our circles.

Jon C. Ogg
October 12, 2007

Jon Ogg produces the 24/7 Wall St. Special Situation Investing Newsletter; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

BEA Already At Premium To Offer (BEAS, ORCL)

BEA Systems Inc. (NASDAQ:BEAS) is already trading north of the $17.00 cash buyout offer from Oracle (NASDAQ:ORCL).  Almost 30 million shares have already traded hands, and there is more than 30 minutes to the market open.  Oracle proposed to acquire BEA Systems for $17.00 per share in cash.   

Carl Icahn just got vindicated for his persistence.  The $17.00 pershare offer is a 25% premium over yesterday’s closing price.  But whatis interesting is that a "letter being sent" is no assurance that adeal will be approved by management at BEA Systems.  The 52-week high is $16.77.  Management can hold out here if they want, but at some point they’ll have to roll over if the deal gets too sweet. Pre-Market trading had shares up over the $16.00  level right after the offer was announced.  Shares are now trading right at $18.00, $1.00 above the buyout price.  Wall Street is thinking the offer will get bumped up, or maybe even that another suitor would step in.

Jon C. Ogg
October 12, 2007

Jon Ogg produces the 24/7 Wall St. Special Situation Investing Newsletter; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Oracle Wants to Acquire BEA Systems (ORCL, BEAS)

Oracle Corporation (NASDAQ:ORCL) has delivered a letter to the Board of Directors of BEA Systems, Inc. (NASDAQ:BEAS) on October 9 whereby Oracle proposed to acquire BEA for $17.00 per share in cash.  Oracle is prepared to proceed immediately to a process that leads to a definitive agreement.

Carl Icahn just got vindicated for his persistence.  The $17.00 pershare offer is a 25% premium over yesterday’s closing price.  But whatis interesting is that a "letter being sent" is no assurance that adeal will be approved by management at BEA Systems.  The 52-week high is $16.77.  If managementwants to hold out, they’ll probably be able to.  Shares are indicatednorth of $16.00 in very early indications.

Oracle President Charles Phillips: "We have made a serious proposal including a substantial premium for BEA. We believe our all cash offer provides the best value for BEA’s shareholders and the best home for BEA’s employees and customers. This proposal is the culmination of repeated conversations with BEA’s management over the last several years. We look forward to completing a friendly transaction as soon as possible.  We intend to protect the investment customers have made in BEA’s products by supporting those customers and products for years to come.  Our continuing support commitment has been amply demonstrated with all of our previous acquisitions, including PeopleSoft and Siebel. BEA will be no different. The acquisition of BEA by Oracle will enable an increase in engineering resources that will in-turn accelerate the development of our world-class suite of middleware. Both Oracle and BEA customers will benefit from this increase in engineering investment as they migrate to modern SOA technologies."

Jon C. Ogg
October 12, 2007

Jon Ogg produces the 24/7 Wall St. Special Situation Investing Newsletter; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Ahead of BEA Systems Investor Presentation, Carl Icahn May Be Wasting His Time (BEAS)

Carl Icahn is a powerful investor when he wants to be.  As far as BEA Systems (NASDAQ:BEAS) he increased his stake in a filing on Friday to more than 33 million shares to what amounts to an 8.5% stake in the company.  His take on BEA Systems is that consolidation has hurt growth and that the company would do better as a unit of a larger parent. 

BEA Systems used to be one of the perpetual takeover rumor stocks out there.  But the problem is that this company cannot be bossed around.  The company is still delinquent in some of the required filings, and it is deemed to be a company that Alfred Chuang (the Founder, Chairman, CEO, and President) can enact anti-takeover provisions.  That may have changed, but that is still the belief of many tech investors.

We previously asked if BEA Systems was any closer to a buyout offer.  BEA has been a perpetual stock where the company has said it wants to remain independent, and the belief is that this can ONLY be done on a friendly basis.

Shares closed up almost 4% at $13.25 on Friday and are up marginally at the end of today.  It seems that many others also that Carl Icahn may only be marginally successful in this particular instance.  BEA Systems’ head of investor relations is set to speak at a Bank of America conference Tuesday. September 18, at 4 PM Pacific Time, so this may be one to watch later today if this gets addressed.

Jon C. Ogg
September 17, 2007

What To Expect Ahead of VMware’s VMWORLD Conference

Even if VMware (NYSE:VMW) sees its stock go sideways or even if it gets soft from here, it has a long way to go before many would be able to say this was not a successful IPO.  The valuations are now just too high for the sector to longer have a focus in I.T.  This is also true regardless of the VMware stock conundrum we noted recently. If you haven’t read up on and learned much about virtualization, as an investor you should read up on it as the next ‘next thing’ in software and IT. If you look at the competitors that some existing partners (and owners) are invested in, you’ll really understand.

One week from today, and possible over the coming weekend, we should start seeing many more companies announce "Partnering with VMware" or "Supplying VMware" or "Strikes key partners for virtualization" and the like.  Next week from September 11 to September 13 is the VMWORLD 2007 Conference at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, and the roster is a Who’s Who in Techland.  There is also a Technology Day symposium ahead of it. 

Keynote speakers here will be from such tech heavyweights as John Chambers of Cisco Systems (CSCO), Patrick Gelsinger of Intel Corp. (INTC), and Hector Ruiz of Advanced Micro (AMD).  Other sponsors are major tech giants like Dell (DELL), H-P (HPQ), NEC, IBM (IBM), and of course the parent EMC (EMC).

Network Appliances (NTAP) is also a sponsor, and it already issued its press release to signal its involvement.

Some of the gold sponsors that are not quite as prominent are BEA Systems (BEAS), Brocade (BRCD), EDS (EDS), Emulex (ELX), Sun Microsystems (JAVA).  Further down the list of sponsors and exhibitors are BMC Software (BMC), Avocent (AVCT), CA (CA), Citrix Systems (CTXS) (which also recently made a virtualization buyout of XenSource), Novell (NOVL), Patni Computer Systems Ltd. (PTI), QLogic (QLGC), Microsoft (MSFT), Symantec (SYMC), and more.

What is interesting is that this virtualization conference includes almost all of VMware’s key competitors.  So they are not blocking out competitors, at least not this year.  For whatever it is worth, there are many overlaps out there in what would be deemed partners and competitors.  It has XenSource, Microsoft, Symantec, and others. 

It also sold out of sponsor and exhibitor opportunities some time ago.  Here is a full list of exhibitors.  It is probably safe to assume that many more virtualization partnerships will be coming ahead of, out of, and after this key industry event.

Stock Tickers: VMW, EMC, CSCO, INTC, AMD, DELL, HPQ, NTAP, IBM, BEAS, BRCD, EDS, ELX, JAVA, SUNW, BMC, AVCT, PTI, CA, CTXS, NOVL, QLGC, MSFT, SYMC

Jon C. Ogg
September 4, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he produces the 24/7 Wall St. Special Situation Investing Newsletter and he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Pre-Market Stock News (August 13, 2007)

(BEAS) BEA Systems trading up 6% pre-market on 3 upgrades: Raised to Buy at B of A; raised to Buy at UBS; raised to Outperform at Bear Stearns.
(BX) Blackstone earned posted revenues $975M vs $1.06 Billion.
(C) Citigroup disclosed $500+ million in credit losses, yet stock indicated higher.
(EMC) EMC trading up 2% ahead of VMware IPO pricing (as of now VMware IPO should price today and trade Tuesday).
(GS) Goldman Sachs is adding $3 Billion in additional capital into one of its ‘undervalued’ hedge funds.
(HOV) Hovnanian said quarterly net contracts are down 24% and forecast higher cancellations.
(IDEV)  Indevus Pharm announced receipt of a $49.9 Million milestone payment from Esprit Pharmaceuticals.
(LCRY) LeCroy $0.12 EPS vs. $0.06 est.
(MOT) Motorola signed contracts with China Mobile for nearly $400 million.
(NITE) Knight Trading said that Goldman Sachs invested for a minority interest in its Direct Edge ECN.
(PHTN) Photon Dynamics raised mid-point of range.
(Q) Qwest Communications names Edward A. Mueller Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
(SHLD) Sears is lowering KMart and Sears sales.
(SYY) Sysco Foods $0.49 EPS vs $0.46 est.
(USBE) US Bioenergy $0.15 EPS vs $0.12 est.

Jon C. Ogg
August 13, 2007

Pre-Market Analyst Calls (July 17, 2007)

AMR raised to Neutral at UBS.
BEAS raised to Outperform at Credit Suisse.
BHP cut to Hold at Deutsche Bank.
BTU cut to Neutral at HSBC.
COGN raised to Strong Buy at JMP Securities.
CPA raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
CRZO cut to Hold at Jefferies.
DAL raised to Neutral at UBS.
DK started as Hold at Deutsche Bank.
EME started as Buy at KeyBanc/McDonald.
GFIG cut to Hold at Citigroup.
GSIC started as Hold at Jefferies.
IACI started as Neutral at B of A.
JEC started as Buy at KeyBanc/McDonald.
NLS cut to Sector Perform at RBC.
ORB raised to Outperform at Wachovia.
PWR started as Buy at KeyBanc/McDonald.
RCI started as Overweight at JPMorgan.
ROH raised to Buy at Citigroup.
SAPE raised to Outperform at FBR.
TWB raised to Outperform at FBR.
UAUA raised to Neutral at UBS.
VSCN cut to Sell at Deutsche Bank.
WAT started as Hold at Deutsche Bank.
WTSLA started as Buy at Merriman Curhan Ford.

Jon C. Ogg
July 17, 2007

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

Earlybird Analyst Calls (June 19, 2007)

ACLI cut to Hold at Deutsche Bank.
ACOR raised to Buy at B of A.
AGO cut to Underweight at JPMorgan.
ANAD started as Buy at Oppenheimer.
ANET cut to Neutral at Baird.
ATHR started as Buy at Oppenheimer.
AV cut to Mkt Perform at JMP Securities.
BAC raised to Buy at UBS.
BEAS cut to Neutral at UBS.
CHD started as Buy at Sun Trust Robinson Humphrey.
CI raised to Neutral at B of A.
EGLE started as Neutral at JPMorgan.
EPIC started as Buy at Sun Trust Robinson Humphrey.
GNK started as Overweight at JPMorgan.
GNTX raised to Buy at B of A.
KNX raised to Outperform at Wachovia.
LCC raised to Neutral at UBS.
MCHP cut to Mkt Perform at Piper Jaffray.
QMAR started as Neutral at JPMorgan.
SDXC started as Buy at Kaufman Bros.
SKH started as Buy at Jefferies.
SRE raised to Buy at Citigroup.
TZIX started as Buy at Deutsche Bank.
WERN raised to Outperform at Wachovia.
YRCW cut to Mkt Perform at Wachovia.

Jon C. Ogg
June 19, 2007

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

BEA Systems Still in Hide & Seek Mode (BEAS)

Investors have to wonder about BEA Systems Inc. (BEAS) after yesterday’s earnings announcement.  The company slightly exceeded revenue targets with $345.8 million, but its ongoing options review has yet again prevented it from wanting to report earnings. 

To top it all off the company announced it was expanding its share buyback plan by $500 million to a new total of approximately $620 million.  Either the SEC or the NASDAQ should step in and tell these guys they can’t do one single thing until they get their financials in order and get caught up.  This was either he third or fourth "no earnings today because of our options review" and in a real world this stock should have to change its stock ticker to a "BEASD."  That would make them get current.  The obvious fact is that they are buying more and more time to let all the options issues with the SEC blow over so they don’t get caught up with penalties that would be worse than a slap on the wrist.

Things don’t sound that great either.  Alfred Chuang, BEA’s founder and Chairman/CEO started out his quotes as follows: ""In the first quarter, we saw a tough selling environment in the Americas, and we made several changes to the Americas field organization. We aligned the organization correctly for the SOA opportunity; however, the changes impacted us in the short-run beyond our expectations……" 

The total cash is currently listed as $1.286 Billion, up about 16 million from the same quarter last year.  The problem is that they do not disclose liabilities or other assets because they are so delinquent in filings.  The days sales outstanding is now 79 days, up from 68 days outstanding last year.

BEA Systems is one we have noted as one that a buyer would look at depending on the price and depending upon the company’s willingness to do it.  This buyback will deplete cash if it goes through, and what is becoming more and more obvious is that the charges from the options review are not going to be large.  They are probably huge and who knows what sort of fines might be involved.

Here is the older data with the notation that even after a drop, it still might not be any closer to getting a bid.

Jon C. Ogg
May 17, 2007

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

Earlybird Analyst Calls (MAY 15, 2007)

AMGN cut to Neutral at Baird.
AOG cut to Hold at Jefferies.
BEAS cut to Neutral at Credit Suisse.
BHE started as Neutral at Credit Suisse.
CLS started as Underperform at Credit Suisse.
COGO started as Overweight at Lehman.
DCX raised to Buy at UBS.
EPIC started as Buy at UBS.
FLEX started as Outperform Credit Suisse.
GLP cut to Equal Weight at Lehman.
GM raised to Equal Weight at Lehman.
ICFI cut to Hold at Jefferies.
JAH started as Overweight at Lehman.
JBL started as Neutral at Credit Suisse.
MRO raised to Buy at B of A.
PGR started as Reduce at UBS.
PLXS started as Neutral at Credit Suisse.
SANM started as Neutral at Credit Suisse.
SLR started as Underperform at Credit Suisse.
SOFO started as Buy at Cantor Fitzgerald.
STEC cut to Hold at Deutsche Bank; cut to Sector Perform at CIBC.
TIBX cut to Neutral at Credit Suisse.
TSO cut to Neutral at B of A.
VRAZ started as Equal Weight at Lehman.
VLO cut to Neutral at B of A.

Jon C. Ogg
May 15, 2007

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

Is BEA Systems Any Closer To An Offer? (BEAS)

BEA Systems (BEAS-NASDAQ) is a name that just came back under fire yesterday after lowering its quarterly revenue projections.  The drop in the stock was not massive as estimates were $348+ million and the company guided to $342 to $347 million.  Shares closed down only 3% or more, but they had traded down over 10% early yesterday.  The licensing revenues are a disappointment: the guidance was as low as $111 million versus prior forecasts of $132 million. 

It is blaming the reorganization and saleforce realignment, but the likely issue is that Oracle (ORCL-NASDAQ) is taking more of the middleware market share away or that other competitors are winning.  The company also competes against H-P (HPQ) via H-P’s Mercury Interactive, SAP’s (SAP) NetWeaver, Tibco Software (TIBX), and IBM (IBM). You can now interpret that Salesforce.com (CRM) is more into the space than in prior years. BEA Systems has been a "rumored and speculated" takeover name literally back into the 1990’s and valuations were always in the way.  The balance sheet and income statements are both somewhat guesswork because BEA has been delinquent in filings over stock options and much of the current numbers are best ‘guestimates.’  If the balance sheet is still close to $900 million in tangible book value, we can at least take a stab at "valuations."

This has been a BAIT SHOP member in the past (of takover candidates) at much lower prices and before the options backdating was an issue, and has been removed because of valuations getting higher than a perceived buyer would have paid.  If the company is feeling more competitive pressures then it could finally decide to be more open to a deal.  That is most likely not yet the case.  The problem would boil down to the price: it would probably take close to $14.00 in today’s money as is for an "entry-level" bid that would keep the board from laughing a buyer out of the room.  This is one we have noted as needing to go lower and "staying lower" because of sales or industry pressure before management would be considered very vulnerable to a predator or before they would capitualte. 

Let’s take the warning a bit further to determine more conservative base-line forward valuations.  If we were going to price in competitive pressures and a slower environment and trim off 10% of earnings and revenues, then here is what the company would lool like in valuation (these numbers reflect a 10% discounting to forward street estimates): $0.55 EPS for JAN-08 fiscal year on revenues of $1.39 Billion; so forward multiples would come in at 20.5 times forward discounted EPS, 3.2-times forward revenues, and 17-times discounted cash flow from operations.  These levels aren’t exactly overvalued for a software company, but they aren’t good enough alone for a larger competitor to get a free assassination of a competitor.  They also might not be good enough without knowing what the real charges will end up being because of stock options, and it requires trusting the past financial data without current numbers being precise.

With a $4.45 Billion market cap today it is within the constraints of a doable deal.  The ‘unknowns’ probably still negate the "acquirable size."  Another problem is that the company has maintained that it wants to remain independent and a buyer might not be interested if the company begins implementing measures that could make the company less attractive.  As far as we are concerned, BEA Systems’ stock still needs to get current with the SEC and the stock needs to settle in at lower levels before we’d start looking at it as any serious takeover candidate with an actionable and hedged call. 

Jon C. Ogg
May 2, 2007

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