Posts for Ticker ‘DE’

Next Week’s Top 10 Earnings on Deck (HPQ, TSN, CPB, LDK, TECD, BKS, BGP, JCG, DLTR, DE)

Earnings season has mostly wound down, but as always at least some major companies are reporting earnings.  Some are actually market-movers as well and it is a short week with earnings out only Monday and Tuesday, with a few on Wednesday.  On deck are Hewlett-Packard Company (NYSE: HPQ), Tyson Foods Inc. (NYSE: TSN), Campbell Soup Co. (NYSE: CPB), LDK Solar Co. Ltd. (NYSE: LDK), Tech Data Corp. (NASDAQ: TECD), Barnes & Noble, Inc. (NYSE: BKS), Borders Group, Inc. (NYSE: BGP), J. Crew Group, Inc. (NYSE: JCG), Dollar Tree Inc. (NASDAQ: DLTR), and Deere & Co. (NYSE: DE).

We have included estimates from Thomson Reuters, relative data on peers and recent developments, and relative performance on each where it was applicable.
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52-Week High Club (AMD, ASMI, ALV, CHS, GGWPQ, LFT, DE)

Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (NYSE: AMD) rose over 10% to a yearly high of $7.33 after the computer processor maker announced today that it would offer $500 million in senior notes, the cash from which will be used to purchase its 5.75 percent convertible notes due in 2012.

ASM International N.V. (NASDAQ:ASMI) rose over 5% to a yearly high of $24.69 after the semiconductor equipment maker was upgraded by Fortis Bank Nederland NV.

Autoliv Inc. (NYSE: ALV) rose over 3% to a yearly high of $41.84 after the airbag manufacturer said that production is holding up well in the fourth quarter.

Chico’s FAS Inc. (NYSE: CHS) rose over 14% to a yearly high of $15.43 after the women’s clothes retailer announced 3Q earnings of $0.13 per share, nearly doubling analysts expectations.  

General Growth Properties Inc. (OTC: GGWPQ) rose over 35% to a yearly high of $6.19 after Simon Property Group Inc. (NYSE: SPG) announced that it had hired Lazard Ltd to lookk into buying assets from General Growth.  

Longtop Financial Technologies Limited (NYSE: LFT) rose nearly 10% to a yearly high of $35.30 after the Chinese software developer said that it had added 3.7 million additional American depositary receipts priced at $31.25.

Deer & Company (NYSE: DE) rose over 6% to a yearly high of $52.28 after Jim Cramer recommended buying shares in the tractor maker, arguing that the company would benefit from increased agricultural activity.  

Garrett W. McIntyre

Top Analyst Downgrades (DE, EHTH, HMY, HOV, REP)

These are this Thursday’s top analyst downgrades seen from Wall Street research calls early this morning:

Deere & Co. (DE) Cut to Underweight at JPMorgan.
eHealth (EHTH) Cut to Hold at Argus.
Harmony Gold Mining (HMY) Cut to Underweight at JPMorgan.
Hovnanian (HOV) Cut to Underperform at Credit Suisse.
Repsol (REP) Cut to Underperform at Credit Suisse.

JON C. OGG

Top Analyst Upgrades and Downgrades (GLW, CPN, DYN, DE, EIX, IR, LM, STX, SLM, WOOF)

These are this Thursday’s top ten independent analyst calls with upgrades, downgrades and initiations from Wall Street brokerage firms with more than two hours until the market opens:

Corning (GLW) Started as Outperform at Morgan Keegan.
Calpine (CPN) Cut to Underperform at Jefferies.
Dynegy (DYN) Cut to Underperform at Jefferies.
Deere (DE) Raised to Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
Edison (EIX) Cut to Hold at Jefferies.
Ingersol-Rand (IR) Raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
Legg Mason (LM) Raised to Hold at Deutsche Bank.
Seagate Tech (STX) Raised to Hold at Deutsche Bank.
SLM Corp. (SLM) Raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
VCA Antech (WOOF) Raised to Buy at Sun Trust Robinson Humphrey.

Jon C. Ogg
June 25, 2009

Top Analyst Upgrades & Downgrades (BIDU, CERN, CLF, DE, DIET, LDK, MRVL, MCHP, NVO, YSI)

These are the top pre-market analyst upgrades and downgrades we have seen early this Tuesday morning with about two hours until the market opens

Baidu.com (NASDAQ: BIDU) Started as Buy at Deutsche Bank.
Cerner (NASDAQ: CERN) Cut to Hold at Auriga.
Cliffs Natural Resources (NYSE: CLF) Raised to Outperform at FBR.
Deere (NYSE: DE) Started as Buy at Jefferies.
eDiets (NASDAQ: DIET) Cut to Hold at Canaccord.
LDK Solar (NYSE: LDK) Cut to EqualWeight at Morgan Stanley.
Marvell Tech (NASDAQ: MRVL) Started as BUy at Deutsche Bank.
Microchip Tech (NASDAQ: MCHP) Raised to Overweight at Thomas Weisel.
Novo Nodisk (NYSE: NVO) Raised to Hold at Citigroup.
U-Sture-It Trust (NYSE: YSI) Raised to Outperform at Baird.

Jon C. Ogg
March 24, 2009

Early Bird Analyst Downgrades (ADBE, BLKB, GLW, DE, ERIC, PCG, PPDI, PLD)

Burning_money_picThese are some of the analyst downgrades we have seen from Wall Street this Tuesday morning with more than two hours until the open:

  • Adobe Systems (NASDAQ: ADBE) Cut to Underperform at FBR.
  • Blackbaud (NASDAQ: BLKB) Started as Sell at Maxim Group.
  • Corning (NYSE: GLW) Cut to Market Weight at Thomas Weisel.
  • Deere & Co. (NYSE: DE) Cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.
  • Ericsson (NASDAQ: ERIC) Cut to Sell at UBS.
  • PG&E (NYSE: PCG) Cut to Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
  • Pharmaceutical Product Development (NASDAQ: PPDI) Cut to Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
  • ProLogis (NYSE: PLD) Cut to Underweight at JPMorgan.

Jon C. Ogg
January 13, 2009

GE’s (GE) Earnings, Immelt, And Jack’s Ghost

For reasons that are impossible to explain, much of the mythology of the late 20th Century American CEO was placed Atlas-like on the shoulders of John Francis Welch, GE’s head man from 1981 to 2001. He was physically small but sported a two handicap, was unusually brilliant and could slit a competitor’s throat as easily as he could read a balance sheet. Only Lee Iaccoca could be considered a popular rival, because he had turned around a deeply troubled company at Chrysler. Welch had done something far more difficult. He had taken a great company and made it far greater.

Welch became what every CEO wanted to be. He became the vessel for skills he did not have and became the symbol of things he had never been. The wide-spread notion was that Welch could run any company better than its incumbent management. Welch’s skill and guile trumped the experience of all other managers.

Welch’s sloganeering, backed by the cagey skills of the GE public relations machine, pushed his fame beyond Wall Street. “Never be in a business where you are not No.1 or No 2”. “Change before you have to.” “Control your own destiny or someone else will.” Whatever his great talents may have been, his penchant for fame and the adulation of the business world matched it.

Welch was actually the antithesis of the CEO who had been educated and groomed for the top job at a huge American corporation. Welch did not go to Harvard Business School, the birthplace of many of the men who ran the Fortune 500 during that time when he ran GE. Welch had a degree in chemical engineering and graduated from the University of Massachusetts. He added to his degrees at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, located in a town best known for its large number of fluorescent light bulb recycling locations. Welch was not part of the club and this probably added to the chips on his shoulder.  This assured some degree of his success when he took over the top spot at GE from Reginald H. Jones, an Ivy League man from Penn.

GE was founded by Thomas Edison, a genius far more inventive than Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, or the West Coast software engineers who began Google and Yahoo!. Edison slept under his desk, worked for 20 hours each day, and amassed 1,093 US patents. His favorite film was “Birth of a Nation”, making it unlikely that, as he grew old and rich, he was a friend of anyone other than those who were rich, powerful, and insular.

Edison was GE’s most famous employee until Welch turned himself into America’s most admired businessman.

Under Welch, GE’s revenue rose from $27 billion to $130 billion and the market cap of the company went from $14 billion to $410 billion. He needed no myth makers to embellish that record. He has remained well-regarded since, save for the management self-help column that he writes with his third wife. It runs on the last page of BusinessWeek and appears to be Welch’s only contact with the outside world.

                                   ********                                 ********            **********

Fairfield, Connecticut is a single Superfund site covered by a massive strip mall located along Long Island Sound about halfway between New York City and New Haven. The local cops spend their time busting drunks and harassing pot smoking teenagers. Fairfield is a monument to the mediocrity in which Americans are willing to live, believing that the good life is made up of McDonald’s and schools which can get their children into state universities. If the people who live in Fairfield could live in a richer suburb like Greenwich, they would.

Fairfield is a step down ward from the American Dream. It is also the home of the world headquarters of General Electric, which is still considered by some as the most widely admired company in the world.

                       *******                         ********                         ********

When Welch’s fame was at its peak, he stepped down from GE. Jeff Immelt, Welch’s hand-picked successor, had run the company’s medical systems unit.  Immelt was a graduate of Dartmouth and Harvard Business School. It may be telling that he was also the president of his fraternity, Phi Delta Alpha, known for its secret handshake and the bizarre rituals of its Winter Rush. Immelt was chosen over Bob Nardelli, who subsequently went to Home Depot and nearly destroyed the company while looting it out of $250 million in compensation. To this day, Welch calls Nardelli “the best operational executive I have ever met,” which begs that question of why he was not given the top job at GE. It is as if Welch had undermined the future fortunes of company as he left.

There is no telling whether Immelt has the talent to run a company as massive as GE, or whether it can be run at all. The knee jerk evaluation of the company by Wall St. analysts is that GE is in too many businesses, and that many of them are crummy. About once a month, a brokerage firm which has run out of other companies to analyze puts together a plan to break GE into pieces. Every analyst falls victim to the adage that the parts are worth much more than the whole. As recent break-up calculations for companies like Motorola and Yahoo! show, the parts are often worth less.

Even under Immelt, GE has usually “made its numbers” avoiding anything that might deeply disappoint investors. Last quarter, that changed. On April 1, the stock traded above $38. After earnings hit, it moved to below $32. For the first time in a long time, GE had become unreliable. As the market has dropped recently, GE’s shares have fallen below $27.

As the business press looks at GE, it cannot calm itself. How could a company be so well-regarded and perform so far below the market averages?  Almost any press report on the firm runs the same sentence: “GE trades below where it did when Welch left”.

While Immelt and his management group have not solved the puzzle of how to improve GE’s stock, neither has the company’s board. It is a blue ribbon panel that includes the head of MIT and the CEOs of Procter & Gamble, Avon, and Deere & Company, all of them ideal agents of radical change.

As GE releases second quarter earnings, it is likely to be hung, drawn, and quartered by its critics. The company’s measure of good will with investors is exhausted.  But, if Immelt can post strong numbers and can beat expectations time and again from here on out, he could become the worthy successor he was supposed to be the day he stepped into his job.  Almost no one is betting in that direction.

If Q2 earnings and GE’s forecasts are poor, the judgment of Immelt’s tenure will no longer be one of mediocrity. Instead, it will likely be viewed as the dismantling of the company’s decades-old image as the Hercules of the business world. The whispers about Immelt’s future will begin to grow louder, and, at some point, they will be legitimized by a mention in a big business magazine the way the criticism of the Vietnam War escalated after Walter Cronkite attacked the conflict on the CBS Evening News. If that happens, GE will have gone from being an institution to being a turnaround candidate, all in less than half a generation.

Each and every time there is a discussion of the best way to solve GE’s problems, the recurring theme is that the weaker divisions of the company should be sold off. This usually includes the firm’s Industrial division and NBC Universal. Radical thinkers also want GE out of many of its financial services operations. The reckless destruction of American banks and brokerages has left them terrified that one huge write-off could substantially damage GE earnings. Almost no one wants the firm out of its Infrastructure business which grew 22% last quarter against the firm’s overall growth rate of 8%. This division was also over 41% of GE’s segment operating profit for the period.

For the quarter about to be reported, none of these changes will have been made. The earnings release will be the numbers for the business largely as it has existed for several quarters. The results may be OK, but the general economy is too poor for the numbers to be spectacular. GE has become a company in a difficult position run by gentlemen.

If there is a Mount Rushmore of business leaders, Welch has Jefferson’s place—ambitious beyond a fault, wildly narcissistic, and deviled by measuring up to standards set by a world of class distinction. Welch would not have been allowed into Phi Delta Alpha, nor would he have been invited to Edison’s winter mansion at "Seminole Lodge". But GE had been founded by a younger Edison, born in Milan, Ohio, with next to nothing to his name. He became a member of the American establishment much, much later.

Welch was the most talented CEO of his generation because he was obsessively ambitious, refused to be bested, was remarkably able to operate in the chaos that is part of all huge corporations, and was willing to leave his wounded behind in order to stay on the march.

What troubles GE is not the businesses it is in, it is how the business is run.

Douglas A. McIntyre

A Deere, a Cat & a Titan All Stuck in the Headlights (DE, CAT, TITN)

Deere & Co. (NYSE: DE) shares are going to be a drag today.  The giant manufacturer of farm and construction machinery posted $1.74 EPS on a 19% revenue fain to $7.47 Billion.  First Call had estimates at $1.75 EPS and $$7.61 Billion in revenues.

The company said that equipment sales are projected to increase about 20% for Q3 and up about 20% for Fiscal 2008.  Included in the forecast is about 5% of currency translation impact for the year.  Its previous guidance of +17%. 

The company has noted that rising material costs and the availability of various parts and components will pressure results for the rest of 2008. 

This can’t be a shock to anyone, except maybe that it wasn’t even worse, but Deere is looking for a 3% drop in equipment tied to housing and forestry.

If agriculture infrastructure companies can’t out-pace materials costs in the current Ag-trade environment, then what does this tell you about investing in that sector from here with new money after this sector has seen huge gains????

Deere shares are down almost 6% at $84.92 after closing at $90.19 yesterday; its 52-week trading range is $56.50 to $94.89.

This is also pulling shares of Caterpillar Inc. (NYSE: CAT) down by about 1.25% at $83.00 in pre-market trading; its 52-week trading range is $59.60 to $87.00.

But the real impact from this is going to be in Titan Machinery Inc. after its hugely successful post-IPO trading. Titan owns and operates full service agriculture and construction equipment stores. Its shares are down over 3% at $20.25 pre-market; and its post-IPO range is $11.50 to $24.50.

Jon C. Ogg
May 14, 2008

Cramer On Agriculture, Interviews Deere CEO (DE)

On tonight’s MAD MONEY on CNBC, Jim Cramer wanted to feature agriculture by interviewing Deere & Co. (NYSE: DE).  If you want to own a company that wins off of food for fuel and the that wins off of agricultural machinery, Cramer said you want Deere & Co. (NYSE: DE).  He noted that this is up 149% since he started recommending it in 2005, and the company outperformed on last earnings.  Last night he discussed some of this in a Hillary Clinton interview, and he also gave his five favorites earlier this week to profit off of agriculture.  He interviewed Bob Lane, CEO of Deere, and here are the paraphrased answers:

Why is there sustainability this time in a boom and bust historical business?
People around the world are doing better and when they do better they eat better.

As far as emerging markets?
The company can help improve and can deliver ag equipment to many, and there is a secular change of people wanting to eat better.  There will be ups and downs, but the change is here to stay.

As far as alternatives and the price of grain, are you concerned that prices can only go down?
There will be changes in price, many down, but one-quarter of the world is doing significantly better and demand will stay strong.

As far as twin tailwinds from ethanol and worldwide rising up of people who want better food, which is more important?
The growing demand for food is more important, but biodiesel and other food for fuel matter.

As far as candidates not liking NAFTA, are you not concerned that NAFTA could change?
The large combine in Illinois ships one-quarter of the units outside of the U.S., and without global markets many customers are not prospering any more.

Cramer said you have his blessing to BUY Deere stock anywhere below $100.00, because you’ll keep making money with this one long after the show.  Deere shares closed up 0.8% today at $86.97, and shares were up marginally at $87.40 after the interview.  Its 52-week trading range is $51.59 to $94.77.

Jon C. Ogg
February 28, 2008

Cramer Stays High on Agriculture (MON, POT, AGU, DE, MOS, MOO)

On CNBC’s MAD MONEY tonight, Jim Cramer went over the agriculture sector.  We recently noted ourselves about Ag-flation as wheat prices have more than doubled over the last year.  Cramer noted that Cargill suspended plans for a new ethanol plant.  Cramer says that this is going to create a sell-off, but it won’t mean the sector is dead and will create buying opportunities.  He thinks the famine watch may end up with rationing to keep a lid on prices in a world where demand is rising rapidly.  The possible famine and growing demand for food and crops for energy is driving these.  After these stocks take a share price hit this week, he wants you to look at buying some of these that are still at the start of a multi-year trend as now our food supply is competing for energy.  His favorite stocks right now in the sector are:

  • Mosaic (NYSE: MOS) as a potash winner with major pricing power.
  • Potash (NYSE: POT) as another potash winner with major pricing power.
  • Agrium (NYSE: AGU) also in nutrients and fertilizers like Potash.
  • Monsanto (NYSE: MON) as the biotech of Agriculture.
  • Deere & Co. (NYSE: DE) for the machinery.

We would also note that if you are a true lover of agricultural trading, there is an ETF that tracks this sector called  Market Vectors Global Agribusiness ETF (AMEX: MOO), which is up 50% since its launch just 6-months ago.  You would also want to know that Four of his five top picks in that group above are in the top ten holdings in this ETF. There are many other Agriculture pieces here, and some are Cramer and some are not:

Jon C. Ogg
February 26, 2008

Birinyi’s Top Equity Holdings (MO, AAPL, CVX, DE, XOM, GS, GOOG, MA, SLB, UTX)

Laszlo Birinyi of Birinyi Associates, Inc. is one of the more frequently watched portfolio managers by the public.  The reason is not that he is one of the largest fund managers.  But he is watched because of his (and his firm’s) prowess on recognizing substantial inflows and outflows of capital at the onslaught of a trend.  Some might argue that this is more reactionary and following, but many have used this method for years and years.  Frankly, we have watched his investing activities for years and years.

These are not at all of Birinyi’s holdings, but there many of the top holdings noted in an SEC filing this week covering his positions as of December 31, 2007.  We also did not include any of the ETF positions.  Keep in mind that many of these may have already changed, but here is the list:

  • Altria Group Inc. (NYSE: MO) 55,821 shares; $4,219,000
  • Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) 45,691 shares; $9,050,000
  • Chevron Corp (NYSE: CVX) 48,420 shares; $4,519 ,000
  • Deere & Co (NYSE: DE) 39,750 shares; $3,702,000
  • Exxon Mobil Corp. (NYSE: XOM) 75,772 shares; $7,099,000
  • Goldman Sachs Group (NYSE: GS) 50,325 shares; $10,822,000
  • Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) 36,000 shares; $24,893,000
  • Mastercard Inc (NYSE: MA) 17,250 shares; $3,712,000
  • Schlumberger Ltd (NYSE: SLB) 53,785 shares; $5,291,000
  • United Technologies Corp (NYSE: UTX) 55,329 shares; $4,235,000

Other key market pundits and their holdings:
Bill Gates
Carl Icahn
Warren Buffett
George Soros

Jon C. Ogg
February 16, 2008

Deere Beats Earnings, Shares Indicated Lower (DE)

Deere(NYSE: DE) posted earnings at $0.83 EPS versus the First Call estimate of $0.78 EPS.  Its revenues rose 17.5% from Q4-2006 to $5.2 Billion versus $5.07 Billion consensus.

As far as guidance, Deere noted that equipment sales should increase by about 17% for full-year in 2008 and should be up approximately 23% for the second quarter. Deere’s net income is forecast to be about $2.2 billion for the year and in a range of $700 million to $725 million for the second quarter.  The company did realize gains from currency of roughly 3% of the sales increase for both periods.

Deere shares closed up over 2% yesterday to $86.48 and shares are down roughly the same amount in early pre-market trading at $84.25.  The 52-week trading range is $51.26 to $94.77.

Jon C. Ogg
February 13, 2008

Backward & Forward, Cramer In 2007 To 2008

2007 was one volatile year and for now it appears that will be the norm for at least the start of 2008.  Everyone’s favorite market pundit or least liked pundit is obviously Jim Cramer.  If you love Cramer or can’t stand him it really doesn’t matter.  He signed a new multi-year deal with CNBC recently.  Here are some of his major calls this year that will still be referred to in 2008:

Here were Cramer’s TOP 9 STOCKS FOR 2007, with a call broken down for each one.  Borat would say HI FIVE on some and NOT SO NICE on others, as would be expected.  Cramer’s 14,582 year-end DJIA target…..Friday’s close was 13,365.87……although we did hit 14,279.96 on OCT11, 2007.  Cramer also gave a batch of price targets on most of theDJIA components:

Cramer’s Stock Picks FOR 5-YEARS OUT:

SOME LISTS: His list of recession proof stocks compared to ours.  We are updating our
Defensive Stocks For The First Half Of 2008" currently.  Cramer gave a huge list of companies he expects to benefit from the alternative energy traders (SGR, FWLT, BWA, OMG, FSLR, FTEK, WFR, TTEK, ZOLT, BP, SPWR, CY, CPST, ITRI)… Jim Cramer pondered which US companies China would want to acquire, about 3 months before sovereign funds started buying into US companies.  Cramer’s mortgage winners and losers…… Here were his MAJOR BULL MARKET STOCK PICKS(MHS, CVS, AGN, CELG, GENZ, CEPH, RIG, HAL, EMR, CAT, CMI, UTX, KO,PEP, CL, GS, SKS, VFC, UNP, CSX, BA), some of which are DJIAcomponents.  Cramer produced a "MUST OWN" list of stocks, many of whichare up significantly and some are down (WHR, BDK, ATI, BGC, HON, ASD, JCI, MDR, FWLT, CAT, TEX, DE, QCOM)

Cramer spent lots of time on International stocks that most US investors might not cover on their own.  He made a big call on Mercadolibre (MELI) (also BIDU, GOOG) with some emphasis on buying immediately, right before it made a huge run up.  Cramer’s Hidden Video Game Investment Perfect World (PWRD, ATVI, ERTS, VIA) was one he said could run more than 50% for 2008.  Cramer made 5 TOP CHINESE PICKS (CEO, CHL, SSW, FMCN, BIDU, GMR).  We’ll see in 2008 if any of his Canadian OIL TRUSTS get acquired in 2008 (BTE, CNE, PGH, PVX, PWE, AAV, GDI).  Cramer also went over his top picks from Europe for American investors (TOT, SI, ABB, PHG, BF)

ON TECHNOLOGY:  Cramer’s NEW HORSEMEN OF TECH…. will the list change in 2008???  Did Cramer Say $1,000.00 on Google, Or Is It $600.00? That was in May 2007.  Cramer Gave Monster Price targets to Baidu.com (BIDU, GOOG).. will these targets change in 2008? Cramer was very positive on all the GPS stocks,although we’d expect that Cramer will change his tune in 2008 now thatthe holiday madness is behind us (GRMN, UA, CROX, NVT, TRMB, SIRF).

Would it be fair not to include the Barron’s attack on Cramer from summer for those of you that criticize his every word?

ON WARREN BUFFETT…. Cramer noted that BROOKFIELD ASSET MANAGEMENT in Canada may be the next Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRK/A) NYSE: BAM). Cramer reviewed 10 Warren Buffett stocks for analysis and then reviewed 10 More Warren Buffett stocks:

Will his buyout of ALCOA (AA) prediction come true in 2008??? Cramer gave a list of stocks that had bought back so much stock that they might be taking themselves private.

Join our free email distribution list for other Cramer calls or for updates we send out regarding IPO’s, spin-offs, restructuring, reorganization, activist investors and more.

Happy New Years from the 247WallSt.com team!

Jon C. Ogg
December 31, 2007

Top 10 Pre-Market Analyst Calls (AET, RATE, CELG, DE, FNM, FRE, GRP, ISIL, PHG, SGP, TDW)

Aetna (AET) raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
Bankrate (RATE) raised to Outperform at Bear Stearns.
Celgene (CELG) raised to Buy at Banc of America.
Deere (DE) raised to Buy at Banc of America.
Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac both Downgraded to Neutral from Buy at UBS.
Grant Prideco (GRP) raised to Buy at UBS.
Intersil (ISIL) downgraded to Hold at Jefferies.
Philips Electonics (PHG) raised to Buy at Deutsche Bank.
Schering Plough (SGP) started as Buy at Goldman Sachs.
Tidewater (TDW) raised to Buy at Jefferies.

Jon C. Ogg
November 26, 2007

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

Extra-Strong Results From Deere (DE)

Deere (DE) announced worldwide net income of $422.1 million, or $1.88 per share, for the fourth quarter ended October 31, compared with $277.3 million, or $1.20 per share, for the same period last year.

Worldwide net sales and revenues increased 20 percent to $6.141 billion for the fourth quarter. Net sales of the worldwide equipment operations increased 21 percent for the quarter

Wall St. expected EPE of $1.55 on revenue of $5.8 billion.

Company equipment sales are projected to increase by about 12 percent for the full year and to be up approximately 25 percent for the first quarter of 2008. Deere’s net income is forecast to be about $2.1 billion for 2008 and about $325 million for the first quarter.

Shares were up about 2% in the pre-market

Douglas A. McIntyre

Wall St. Faces Bleak Q4 Earnings

In the past month, fourth-quarter earnings expectations for companies in the S&P 500 have fallen by nearly half, according to Thomson Financial. So says the FT.

The problem has several sources and none of them is likely to go away soon. High oil prices are likely to hurt revenue at auto companies like GM (GM) and airlines. Companies like UPS (UPS) and Fedex (FDX) are also going to be set-back. And, with refinery margins low, high oil prices may not help Big Oil earnings much.

Housing and financial stocks are unlikely to recover from the mortgage crisis, at least this year. Large banks and investment houses face billion of dollars in write-downs in Q4 related to mortgage-backed fund pools.

Companies like GE (GE) and Deere (DE) might expect goods sales outside the US, but sales in this country are likely to drag total results down.

There is, of course, tech. Microsoft (MSFT) and Google (GOOG) may continue to do well, but Cisco (CSCO) indicated that its orders from financial clients were off. PC sales are robust now, so HP (HPQ) and Intel (INTC) may do well, for the time being.

All in all, perhaps a quarter of the major sectors of large companies have a chance at much better earnings. The leaves 75% in the "so so" to "really bad" columns.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Cramer Takes Some Jabs (UA, CAT, XOM, CLB, DE)

On Jim Cramer’s STOP TRADING segment on CNBC, Jim wanted to talk which oil companies were better than others with oil nearing $100/barrel. The ExxonMobil (NYSE:XOM) quarter wasn’t all that bad and shares are actually back up now.  CoreLabs (NYSE:CLB) is great domn $8 from highs. 

On Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT), Cramer said they executed poorly while others executed on target.  He thinks the company is not performing as it should.  Deere (NYSE:DE) is more agricultural but is doing well.

On Under Armour (NYSE:UA), Cramer addressed the insider sales and said the insider sales were too aggressive and he’s sick of seeing the insiders do it.  He agrees with the Morgan Stanley "underweight rating" now.  He said that the insiders explained the situation and then sold stock.  He said he feels like he got hosed, and now he has no confidence in it. Under Armour shares are down over 3.5% today at $49.50.

Join the 24/7 Wall St. open email distribution list for analysis of special situations such as split-ups, buyouts, reorganizations, and special news not posted on the public web site.

Jon C. Ogg
November 6, 2007

Cramer’s Recession Draft Picks 2 (XOM, SLB, HPQ, DE, UTX, FWLT)

On tonight’s MAD MONEY, Jim Cramer went over Defensive Stocks that will be immune to FED rate cut dependence.  Cramer already gave his fantasy football draft list for the defensive linemen, but here are his draft picks for Quarterback as the first to rally off the bottom:

  • Exxon Mobil (NYSE:XOM),
  • Schlumberger (NYSE:SLB),
  • Hewlett-Packard (NYSE:HPQ),
  • Deere (NYSE:DE),
  • United Technologies (NYSE:UTX),
  • Foster Wheeler (NASDAQ:FWLT).

I gave a huge list of 17 defensive stocks on Friday that we edited from prior defensive stock lists, so that is why some of these names will sound familiar.

Jon C. Ogg
September 10, 2007

Pre-Market Stock News (August 15, 2007)

(AMAT) Applied Materials trading down 3% after yesterday’s earnings.
(CSC) CSC said it is part of a large government pact that will result in close to $900 million to CSC.
(DE) Deere $2.37 EPS vs $1.99 est.; sees 2007 inline with estimates.
(ERJ) Embraer SA $0.36 EPS vs $0.45 est.; unsure if comparable because of ADR.
(ETFC) E*TRADE said July averagge trades grew 20.8% sequentially, but said total retail assets decresed 1.9% and margin debt rose 5.5%; has been increasing share buyback activities.
(GNW) Genworth is meeting with investors to discuss its investment portfolio, including subprime and alt-A mortgage loans.
(HW) Headwaters CFo is leaving to becoming CFo of a private company.
(IAG) IAMGOLD $0.04 EPS vs $0.07 est.
(M) MAcy’s $0.29 EPS vs $0.26 est.
(SIRI) SIRIUS Satellite Radio Introduces the Stiletto 2.
(SLE) Sara Lee $0.17 EPS vs $0.13 est.; 2008 earnings guidance may be light.
(TSEM) Tower Semi -0.28 EPS vs -$0.31 est.
(WBSN) Websense names new CFO.
(ZOLT) Zoltek priced a 4M share secondary at $38.76.

Jon C. Ogg
August 15, 2007

Top 5 Earnings For This Coming Week (BX, AMAT, WMT, DE, HPQ)

This coming week is going to be dominated by 5 top earnings.  We have included the name and a link through to a full earnings preview we did for each on Friday, although we are providing the basic estimates for basic numbers expected.  There are many others reporting, but you’ll notice thta there are 5 top earnings for traders to focus on and these are the ones that will impact elsewhere:

On Monday morning, you’ll get to see THE BLACKSTONE GROUP (NYSE:BX), and this is the one to watch for hints on private equity going forward.  Basic Estimates: $0.46 EPS.

On Tuesday morning we get earnings out of Wal-Mart (NYSE:WMT).  They might be boring, but their earnings and forecast can still be used as a guage for about 40% of the economy.  Basic Estimates: $0.77 EPS and $92.75 Billion in revenues.

On Tuesday, get ready for Applied Materials (NASDAQ:AMAT).  This one didn’t get the down market memo, so watch what Applied has to say to see if it can keep its upward momentum.  Basic estimates:  $0.32 EPS and $2.53 Billion in revenues.

On Wednesday, Deere & Co. (NYSE:DE) will show us earnings and let is know if they deserve to go back up from being on a long-term uptrend up until last week.  Basic estimates: $1.99 EPS and $6.65 Billion revenues.

On Thursday, you’ll get to see Hewlett-Packard (NYSE:HPQ) results.  Great expectations are going to be demanded, particularly since it has held up so well. basic estimates: $0.65 EPS and revenues of $24 Billion.

Jon C. Ogg
August 11, 2007

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