Posts for Ticker ‘Google’

Media Digest 9/10/2008

Newspaper_2According to Reuters, the bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (FRE) was greeted with cautious optimism.

Reuters says the the Justice Department has hired a litigator to look into antitrust issues at Google (GOOG).

The Boeing (BA) strike is having an impact on suppliers and customers around the world, according to Reuters.

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Google’s Earnings, All About Expenses (GOOG, YHOO, MSFT)

Tonight’s headlines are going to be dominated by one event… Google’s (NASDAQ:GOOG) earnings.  First Call estimates on last look were $3.78 EPS and $2.94 Billion in revenues.  The revenue number is on an ex-Traffic Acquisition Cost basis.  We have recently seen many analysts up their targets on the stock, sothis ‘earnings estimate’ is now going to be a mere lower-end benchmarkwhere many are looking for a blowout number.

This stock has been on a rampage with shares up roughly 10% this month alone, and shares are up 20% since the end of August.  But the October 11 highs over $640.00 have been acting as resistance in the recent trading days. 

Options expire tomorrow, but it appears that as of mid-morning that options traders are braced for a move of up to about $20.00 in either direction.  The cost of an at the money $630.00 Straddle would run over $34.50 on last look.  At the end of September there were 6,626,105 shares listed in the short interest according to NASDAQ.  International revenues were 48% last quarter, up from 42% in the June 2006 quarter and up from 47% in the March 2007 quarter. 

As a reminder, last quarter the company had a slight miss on earnings and much of the blame was on the costs of adding personnel.  Its last headcount was 13,786 full-time employees (not counting contractors) at June 30.  The company has already tried to warn traders about expense growth exceeding revenue growth, so if any analysts come out with "we are disappointed with expenses growing fater than revenues" then they aren’t reading the filings and aren’t listening to what the company says.  Last quarter had a $62 million transferable stock option charge and Google has already disclosed that it sees an additional $160 million charge being spread out in the coming four years.  As per the last quarter filing: "As a result of all of the above, the growth rate of our costs and expenses may exceed the growth rate of our revenues in 2007…..  We expect our cost of revenues to continue to increase in dollars and may increase as a percentage of revenues in 2007 and in future periods, primarily as a result of forecasted increases in traffic acquisition costs, data center costs and credit card and other transaction fees, including transaction processing fees related to Google Checkout. In particular, traffic acquisition costs as a percentage of advertising revenues may increase in the future if we are unable to continue to improve the monetization of traffic on our web sites and our Google Network members’ web sites, particularly with those members to whom we have guaranteed minimum revenue share or other payments."

We are releasing the first part of our "Small Cap Internet Watch List" Friday for our subscribers of the "Special Situation Investing Newsletter" from 24/7 Wall St.  We do not believe these are all going to be active takeover candidates, but we feel under the right circumstances that these could be acquired By Google, Microsoft, Yahoo!, AOL, IAC/Interactive, or a dozen other US and international media players.  In this we’ll offer insight, related deals, potential parents, and even potential values down the road.  Companies that have been on this list (and as our BAIT SHOP candidates) that have been acquired are 24/7 Real Media, aQuantive, Web.com, and DoubleClick when they were all public.

As a reminder, Google does not offer guidance in its calls.

Jon C. Ogg
October 18, 2007

Cramer Now Calling For $750 Google…Or Is It $900?

On CNBC’s MAD MONEY tonight, Jim Cramer discussed Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) and said that it isn’t expensive despite many pundits calling it expensive.  The Lehman target of $714 and the Merrill Lynch target of $740 may seem high, but Cramer said his old $600 target that went recently to $701 is now at $750.00 so that he’s the highest target out there.  He even thinks ultimately it could even go higher to $900.00.  He thinks it is such a sustainable business that it isn’t even a growth stock.  This is one of Cramer’s "new four horsemen of tech" and even at a $200 Billion market cap it isn’t expensive, and he thinks that it is cheap compared to every stock in its league.  We just recently gave a forward multiple and read for what Google would look like if its stock instantly went to $700.00.

Jon C. Ogg
October 10, 2007

What a $700 Google Stock Looks Like (GOOG)

Last week we put together a brief description of what sort of multiples and what it would take for Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) to hit $600.00.  This was a mere century mark that was briefly surpassed today.  Perhaps we should have been evauating what a $700.00 Google stock price looks like.  For starters, Google’s market cap at that price would be roughly $218.5 Billion.  Here was the full note for the $600.00 where we gave the time intervals between each new "century mark" of $100 handles.  If Google’s stock price instantly rose to $700 tomorrow and with a static earnings estimate picture, the following ratios come about:

  • Based on $15.25 EPS and $11.5 Billion revenues for Fiscal 2007 estimates, shares trade at 45.9-times earnings and 19-times forward revenues.
  • Based on $19.50 EPS and $15.75 Billion revenues for Fiscal 2008 estimates, shares trade at 35.9-times forward earnings and 13.87-times forward revenues.

Just last week, Jim Cramer said he was giving this one of the new four horsemen of tech a $700 target, and then said $701 to be higher after Bear Stearns raised his 2007 target to $625.00 and $700.00 for 2008.  These numbers start getting quite high even for a great growth stock, but this assumes no raised revenue and earnings projections out of Wall Street and out of the company itself.

We are getting ready to release our "watch list" of small cap Internet stocks to subscribers of our Special Situation Investing Newsletter.  We do not believe they are current takeover targets, but under the right circumstances and prices these could all easily become subsidiaries of the current Internet giants.

Jon C. Ogg
October 8, 2007

What $600 Google Looks Like (GOOG, BIDU, YHOO)

Many are undoubtedly looking at Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) almost hitting $600.00 today.  Shares closed barely at a new high closing price $584.39 (old high was $584.35), but intraday today the high GOOG print was $596.81.  We wanted to see how shares have acted at each "$100" interval with so many looking at the $600 mark:

  • At $100 in 2004, shares ran to $200 in NOV-04.  Shares faltered around $200 until April 2005.
  • At $200+ in April 2005, shares ran to $300 by June 2005. Shares used $300 as a magnet until October 2005.
  • At $300+ shares made it to $400 by the end of 2005.
  • At $400+ at the end of 2005 it took the stock until November 2006 for shares to hit the $500 mark.
  • At $500+ at the end of 2006 shares have traded as low as under $450 in early 2007 and in this last major push shares are just today under that $600 mark.
  • This is one of Cramer’s "New Four Horsemen of Tech" and he’s calling for higher.

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InfoSpace Finally Sells, At Least Partly (INSP, IAR, GOOG)

InfoSpace (NASDAQ:INSP) has been one of the perpetual old "internet value stocks" that circulated as a takeover stock because of the relative market cap to asset value, but the value was somewhat skewed because the company is no longer profitable and isn’t expected to be for the near future.  Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) never made the company completely irrelevant, but the search functions that were available for free on Google bit into much of InfoSpace’s core operations that it led the pack in before 2002 or 2003 and that it was able to charge large premiums for.

This morning, InfoSpace (INSP) announced it is selling its Switchboard.com and other online directory assets to Idearc, Inc. (NYSE:IAR).  Idearc is paying $225 million from cash and short-term borrowings.  Shares of InfoSpace are up about 24% pre-market at $16.50, still in the lower-end of the $12.56 to $27.76 range over the last year.

unfortunately, InfoSpace hasn’t been profitable and analysts have been looking for losses in both 2007 and 2008.  It is also expected to see declining revenues.  As of June 30, the company had $197.79 million in cash and short term investments and total liabilities of $72.29 million; net tangible assets were listed as $350.89 million.  Its market cap before this was listed as $439.5 million, so an an interpolated basis it would have a new market cap of $550 million.

This is part of the Board of Directors’ ongoing review of our company and the opportunities available to enhance value for shareholders.  Upon completion of the transaction, InfoSpace expects to return the net proceeds from the sale to shareholders as a special cash distribution.  At closing, InfoSpace’s cash position is expected to be in excess of $400 million.

Jon C. Ogg
September 17, 2007

Microsoft’s Dividend Hike Not A Bold Move (MSFT, GOOG, VMW)

Last night Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) announced that it was boosting its quarterly dividend from $0.10 to $0.11.  The dividend is payable December 13, 2007 to shareholders of record on November 15, 2007, and the ex-dividend date will be November 13, 2007.  Microsoft shares are up 0.35% after the open, about half of the gains in the broad market.

Raised dividends are usually a good thing, but it also shows the stage that the software giant has entered and we’d rather see more ’special dividends’ rather than a small incremental boost.  If you have read our take on things, you’ll know that this move is one we don’t have the world’s greatest opinion of.  The classical investing model shows that raised dividends lead to higher stock prices, but it also shows that Microsoft is farther and farther away from being a growth stock.  I have even hijacked a phrase "Microsoft isn’t a major growth company anymore, it’s a utility stock!" from a friend of mine at the Federal Reserve.  But we still think it can take a path that leads to higher share prices.

If Microsoft wants to be impressive on its dividend, it should hoard cash and pay these special dividends.  At the end of 2004, the software giant paid out a $3.00 special dividend.  Shares actually traded flat and lower for basically a year after that special dividend, but in the longer-term shares reached over $31.00 earlier this year.  The truth is that the two are unrelated.  The tie isn’t even relevant.  But this is the best way of returning cash to shareholders in what is currently a most tax efficient manner.  We don’t know if the dividend taxes or capital gains taxes will really go up after 2008 or not, but depending on election results there could be some big changes there.

As of June 30, Microsoft held $23.4 Billion in cash and short-term investments.  It also held over $10 Billion in longer-term investments, part of which are stocks in other large public companies.  It holds $8.3 Billion carried under ‘other’ and long-term debt, and its other $23.75 Billion in liabilities are all day to day operations.  After this, you have to back out the $6 Billion or so that the company paid for aQuantive that closed in August.

The company can do share buybacks, but with the size and average daily trading volume it just requires too much capital spent for it to make much sense.  Microsoft has roughly 8 Billion shares in the float and has 9.375 Billion shares outstanding.  If you do the math and do the projections out there for its earnings this year and next, the company could do a serious return of capital.  If investors know that every other year they might receive a $1.00 or higher special dividend they might get more excited than if they receive the $0.11 every quarter instead of the $0.10 previously.  The company should consider this for later in 2008.

The only reason the company wouldn’t want to do this is if wants to go make more and more multi-billion dollar acquisitions like aQuantive.  If it wants to do that, then all bets are off.  This special dividend versus a slight hike in a low normal dividend is also purely a matter of opinion.  Microsoft has been hampered by the likes of Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) and others, and the new virtualization efforts from it and VMware (NYSE:VMW) are going to end up being a mere footnote on a relative basis to Microsoft’s size for the next 12 to 18 months.  We also saw some of the plans in May for a post-Gates era.

We still think Microsoft can reach the mid-$30’s over the next 12 months if it can execute on its many initiatives, and the downside seems less than than the upside at current levels.  The problem is that we had the same viewpoint back in January when we laid out the path that could take Microsoft shares to $36.00.  A myriad of things can change that, and the calendar and upcoming industry trends will determine which side of the crystal ball is accurate.

Jon C. Ogg
September 13, 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.

Cramer’s Running Back Stock Picks (CSCO, AMZN, GOOG, FCX)

Jim Cramer continued his ‘fantasy football draft methodology’ to compile a stock portfolio that can survive through a coming recession.  He wants a stock that can deliver consistent and long-term growth for his four Running Back picks:

  • Cisco Systems (NASDAQ:CSCO) is going to keep delivering and he has broken out of his past quiet-man role.
  • Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) is just getting better and better after being held back a year, and it grew 9% year over year by comScore data. This is one of Cramer’s "New Four Horsemen of Tech" and he thinks it goes higher.
  • Freeport McMoran (NYSE:FCX) is growing from everywhere outside the U.S. that has a lock on the copper market.
  • Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN) is another pick from his "New Four Horsemen of Tech" that just hit a new year high today.

Here are his Tight End picks from last night that have upside with dividend stocks.  Yesterday he also gave his "wide receiver picks" that are the aggressive big scoring stocks.  Monday night he gave his picks that were not defensive, but still the leaders as the quarterback.  But before that he gave his solid Defensive linemen picks that are defensive stock picks

Jon C. Ogg
September 12, 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.

Taking Issue With Barron’s Cramer Cover Story (Aug 19, 2007)

It was a bit surprising to see Barron’s used Jim Cramer for the cover story.  The article points out that Jim Cramer’s picks have lagged the market.  For starters, Cramer rarely gives formal targets or entry points on every pick.  Sure he has his huge prediction level on the DJIA this year and he has given targets for the beloved Google (NASDAQ:GOOG).   This talks about his 3,458 picks on TheStreet.com, and the article points to you being better off in an index fund. 

Dow Jones (NYSE:DJ) owns Barron’s, and Dow Jones is about to become part of Rupert Murdoch’s giant News Corp. (NYSE:NWS).  It just seems hard to think that the article isn’t a bit of "getting in on the in with Rupert," particularly as News Corp is about to launch its own competing business news channel to compete against CNBC.  Here is a link to the whole article at Barron’s Online for your review.

The more stocks someone covers, the more ‘marketesque’ returns they will have and the commissions compared to an index fund may drag it lower.  But in good times and bad, people love to talk about their best stock pick.  Sometimes it will be better and sometimes worse, but it comes down to a basket and the more diverse and broad a basket gets the more it is going to look like the market.  It seems every media focus wants to slam Jim Cramer at some point.  Sometimes I agree with his picks and sometimes not, so creating a "Full Basket of Cramer Picks" and trying to assign a performance to it just seems beyond reality.  Besides that, media get great coverage when they slam another pundit.  He’s loud, highly opinionated, a risk taker, and boisterous.  But no critic seems to get the point of Jim Cramer, even though Barron’s lightly addresses the good side and his track record.  This is about a lifelong process, not about every single individual pick for a week or a month or a year.  He’s trying to get you to think about the process, and yes of course recommendations and opinions come into play. 

The main question the article raises is this: How are viewers supposed to know that they should pay attention only to this subset of stock picks each week and ignore the thousands of others that Cramer makes on his show?  The answer is as simple as the question: If a scenario is one you don’t understand or don’t agree with, then you don’t invest in it.  Better yet, if you are using it for an educational lesson about how to think over a lifetime and how to look at things from sometimes unconventional viewpoints, then you’d only want to try a coat tail riding when you have strong conviction.  Barron’s readers by and large tend to be more sophisticated readers than most other financial shows and publications, so you as a Barron’s reader would probably answer "I would only follow him if it made more than enough sense and I wish I had found this or thought of that." 

The article says that CNBC officials said stocks should be bought a well after the coverage and, that the show is mainly educational, and not just about stock-picking.  The article does take a little bit of both sides and points out that with 7,000 picks in a year it’s hard expect much else.  But doing any direct tracking is like applying unproven and unknown theory to generally accepted fact.  Sometimes a theory will do better and sometimes it won’t, but there are times and ways to show results that support whichever side you want to show.  The article talks about the "Cramer Effect" where shares gap up 2% on average and then tend to go sideways or down for a period.  Oddly enough, the same has been true quite frequently in a "Barron’s Effect" on Mondays and even a "Business Week Effect" on Friday’s.  On April 21, 2007, Barron’s ran a feature with the "BUY YAHOO!, IT’S CHEAP" and we took issue against their article with the thought that it was too soon to make that call; shares closed that Friday at $27.47, briefly traded north of $30.00, and now they sit at $23.54. 

The Barron’s article against Cramer also points out how some of the calculations on his returns were not correct. This is sort of funny because daily Cramer tells you to wait and do your own homework and not to chase his feature picks right after the gap and never in after-hours trading.  So any entry price is theoretical at best, and many positions are ones that investors strong on their own opinions would simply ignore.  When it comes down to certain features, those become worth tracking as they are pretty hard lines in the sand, there are some that tend to get more following:

Cramer’s "TOP NINE PICKS FOR 2007"

Cramer’s "MORTGAGE MADNESS INDEX"

Cramer’s review of Warren Buffett Picks, and a review of 10 more of his picks.

Cramer’s 5 CHINA PICKS, although he makes the point over and over that this is only if you insist because he doesn’t trust investing there.

Cramer’s "New Four Horsemen of Tech"

He even gave a review of DJIA component stocks in 3 batches to come to his year-end target: the first batch of 10; the second batch of 10; and the third batch of 10.

Some will certainly send in emails on both sides of this, because italmost always happens since the Cramer followers and critics are often so polarizing.  None of those emails will be opened or responded to.  I will be the first to admit that no one should follow every pick from anyone.  Not from Cramer.  Not from us.  Not from bulge bracket brokerage analysts.  Not from independent boutiques.  Not from your bar buddy with a tip.  Do only what makes sense.  That doesn’t mean you can’t learn something along the way. 

Personally I know people that have made money both ways off Cramer: where they have made money by going where they wouldn’t have but it seemed right, and others who have shorted his stock picks after a 10% gap-up.  So take it for what it is meant for instead of using his picks as a dart board and then looking for someone to blame if it doesn’t work out.

Jon C. Ogg
August 19, 2007

Yahoo! Briefly Hit 52-Week Lows (YHOO, GOOG)

Yahoo! (NASDAQ-YHOO) almost joined the ranks of the 52-week low club today.  It actually did hit new 52-week lows, although it looks like Yahoo! stock isn’t going to actually close down at 52-week lows.  It may just have the bottom fishers in there to thank, and a 190 point rise in the DJIA probably didn’t hurt it today.  Its shares are still in negative territory with less than 30 minutes to the close.

It seems that despite Panama and despite new management that shareholders just aren’t going to give the company a pass for a few quarters.  Jerry Yang stepped back in and the company hasn’t had a good run at all since then.  The prior 52-week low was $22.65 intraday and shares reached as low as $22.44 earlier today before recovering. 

Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) trades at a discount on forward numbers compared to Yahoo!.  Yahoo! is also only cheap if you consider that its shares traded north of $40.00 about 18-months ago.  So the stock appears to be on sale when the underlying business isn’t.  Yang has his work cut out for him even more now Chief Yahoo! and it’s a wonder that no one has said "Could we please get Semel back?".

Jon C. Ogg
August 6, 2007

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

Mamma.com Up on Rumors (MAMA, GOOG, YHOO)

Mamma.com, is getting lots of trading interest because of re-rumors that it may be a takeover candidate.  Google (GOOG) is the rumored suitor this time around, although that has been noted previously as Yahoo! (YHOO) and even Time Warner’s (TWX) AOL.  Mamma already has a contract with Yahoo!.  This one is probably going to do many times its average daily volume now, particularly now that CNBC just gave it a nudge.

Shares are up roughly 10% to $5.10, but the 52-week range is $0.86 to $8.60.  We won’t try to kill the notion of this and we don’t want to add more fuel to the fire.  But it should be noted that this name has been out there before and nothing really surfaced.  At one point this one got its fame (or notoriety) from Mark Cuban taking a stake and subsequently selling on the pop before the ink was dry from stories being printed that he had taken a stake.  Anything is possible, but there are as many skeptics in this name as there are believers.

Jon C. Ogg
April 4, 2007

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

After DoubleClick; Who Could Be the Next Buyout Target?

DoubleClick is now not just under potential bidding by Microsoft (MSFT-NASDAQ).  Google (GOOG-NASDAQ) is now interested according to reports, and our own Douglas McIntyre was pointing out earlier how Microsoft “can’t afford to lose the bidding” for DoubleClick.  The reported prices are said to be near $2 Billion, but Time Warner’s (TWX-NYSE) AOL unit and Yahoo! (YHOO) may be (or may have been) interested.

Let’s pretend for a moment that Google ends up winning.  This will be a blow to Microsoft and to Yahoo!, but the good news is that DoubleClick has competitors too. 

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