Posts for Ticker ‘HIG’

Top Analyst Upgrades (AFL, AMX, GLW, KOF, GIS, HIG, TIF, TJX)

These are this Tuesday morning’s top pre-market analyst upgrades, initiations, or relatively positive research calls from Wall Street:

AFLAC (NYSE: AFL) Raised to Neutral from Sell at UBS.
America Movil (NYSE: AMX) Raised to Buy at Citigroup.
Corning (NYSE: GLW) Raised to Buy at UBS.
Coca-Cola Femsa (NYSE: KOF) Raised to Buy at BofA/Merrill Lynch.
General Mills (NYSE: GIS) Raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley
Hartford Financial (NYSE: HIG) Started as Buy at UBS.
Tiffany (NYSE: TIF) Started as Buy at Citigroup
TJX Companies (NYSE: TJX) Raised to Conviction Buy List (was Buy) at Goldman Sachs.

You can join our open email distribution list which goes out several times per week for reminders of the top day trader alerts, analyst upgrades and downgrades, IPO’s, key secondary offerings, guru investor data on Buffett and others, mergers, and more.

JON C. OGG
OCTOBER 6, 2009

Trader Crack: AIG Goes To $100 (AIG, C, BAC, HIG, MET, YHOO)

Bull and Bear ImageThe DJIA has risen for eight straight days and the verdict is still out as to how today’s close will go.  With major indexes trading over 50% above their March lows and with all the troubled and speculative financial stocks trading like the new ghetto replacement for crack, you know you are in the midst of a big bull market or a major bear market rally.  And this new call on American International Group, Inc. (NYSE: AIG) either proves that we are all going nuts in the euphoria or that this market cannot be scared and cannot be reasoned with.  AIG has doubled since August 19 and is up roughly 400% from lows.  And now here is the call we are starting to hear more and more as at least a possibility…. AIG at $100.

For starters, we are not just skeptical.  Call us, or call me, Thomas.  But after running the math, this is at least not out of the realm of possibilities.  This becomes a scary notion if you start interpolating the gains off of lows seen at some of the other troubled financial giants that took TARP money and had to get bailed out by Uncle Sam.

Citigroup, Inc. (NYSE: C) is actually up more than 400% from its lows; and it is still down more than 75% from its 52-week highs and down over 90% from its $50+ highs in 2007.  Bank of America Corporation (NYSE: BAC) is still down about 55% from its 52-week highs today and is down 66% from its highs in 2006. Hartford Financial Services Group Inc. (NYSE: HIG) also took TARP money and it is an insurer.  Hartford shares are actually up sixfold from their lows; yet the shares are still down about 66% from the 52-week high and down over 75% from the 2007 highs.  While AIG is in hock with Uncle Sam, and while it is perhaps the most hated company by most of Main Street of all surviving financial giants, imagine if you started just using the stock performance of other troubled financial giants to make price targets at AIG.
Read More »

Media Digest 6/16/2009 Reuters, WSJ, NYTimes, FT, Bloomberg

newspaperReuters:   The US outlined new financial market reforms.

Reuters:   Obama lobbied MDs on his new healthcare package.

Reuters:   Russia hosted the first BRIC summit.

Reuters:   B of A’s (BAC) BlackRock (BLK) stake is more appealing.

Reuters:   Samsung and Nokia (NOK) are pushing into smartphones. (MOT)(AAPL)(RIMM). Read More »

Top Analyst Downgrades (DNB, GG, HIG, MAS, MR, RMG)

These are some of the top pre-market analyst downgrades and cautious research calls we have seen early this Tuesday morning with about two hours until the open:

Dun & Bradstreet (DNB) Started as Neutral at Baird.
Goldcorp (GG) Cut to Neutral at UBS.
Hartford Financial (HIG) Cut to Hold at Citigroup.
Masco (MAS) Cut to Sell at UBS.
Mindray Medical (MR) Cut to Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
Risk Metrics (RMG) Started as Neutral at Baird.

JON C. OGG

Media Digest 6/5/2009 Reuters, WSJ, NYTimes, FT, Bloomberg

newspaperReuters:   Rio Tinto (RTP) has killed a deal with Chinalco for one with BHP (BHP).

Reuters:   US regulators insisted JP Morgan (JPM) and Amex (AXP) raise money to exit the TARP.

Reuters:   Countrywide’s Mozilo was charged with fraud.

Reuters:   The suspense is building ahead of one of Apple’s (AAPL) big annual events. Read More »

TARP Approved For Insurance Money: More Cash From The Taxpayer’s Pocket (LNC)(PRU)(HIG)(PFG)

bankThe Washington Post is reporting that the Treasury Department has granted approval for insurance companies to have access to TARP funds. It is not clear what that will do to the balance in the TARP “account.” By some estimates it is down to $115 billion. Some of the banks who have received funds plan to pay that money back in the coming months. Other banks may need additional capital from the TARP.

The news does mean that the financial bailout is spreading and that the Treasury must believe that there is some systemic risk to a failure of one or more of the large insurance companies.

Earlier reports are that the Hartford (HIG), Prudential (PRU), Lincoln National (LNC), and Principal Financial Group (PFG) will receive capital.

Now taxpayers can own shares in all of those companies, too.

Douglas A. McIntyre

TARP Revisit: Were Life Insurers On the Brink? (MET, PRU, HIG, LNC, GNW, AIG)

burning-money-pic13There is one question that keeps making the rounds after the news of yesterday’s TARP bailout money inclusion being offered to life insurers.  Are these really close to falling into the abyss, all over again?  You will see the large gains racked up yesterday, but there is a lot more to this than may meet the eye.

Insurer (Ticker)………… Gain… Mkt Cap.. Comment (year stock drop)
MetLife, Inc. (MET)……… 2.36%.. $20.2B.. down almost 66%
Prudential Financial (PRU).. 7.74%.. $10.1B.. down almost 75%
Hartford Financial (HIG)…. 13.5%.. $3.12B.. down over 80%
Lincoln National (LNC)…… 32.80%. $2.3B… rose on debt repayments
Genworth Financial (GNW)…. 11.48%. $1.0B… down almost 90%

The questions and discussions that came from the financial community to us yesterday about the TARP money were not so much around the “freshness” of the data.  Some insurers had been in line for months.  The TARP was meant to allow for inclusion of some insurers which had bank holding companies, and some insurers had been complaining that they were being left out or being put at a competitive disadvantage after American International Group Inc. (NYSE: AIG) was receiving so much bailout money.  The issue boils down to liquidity, capitalization, and the sheer need of more capital.
Read More »

Unemployment Picks Up Speed While Bailout Slows

bear6A new Reuters poll of economists does not offer much hope for an improvement in the nation’s financial condition. Many see unemployment topping 10%. The news service reports that “Median forecasts now assume gross domestic product will shrink an annualized 5.3 percent this quarter, following a brutal 6.2 percent decline at the end of 2008.”

On another front, data from the states shows that four now have unemployment rates above 10% and some have recorded joblessness well in excess of 9%. Read More »

The 52-Week Low Club (HIG)(CI)(AVP)(GLBL)(SYMC)(EXPE)

Sad_clownHartford Financial (HIG) Big analyst downgrade. Plunges to $8.23 from 52-week high of $98.70.

CIGNA (CI) Profit drops 53%. Stock off to $15.08 from 52-week high of $56.98.

Avon (AVP) Weak guidance. Falls to $19.85 from 52-week high of $45.34.

Global Industries (GLB) Bad earnings. Analyst downgrade. Daily double. Off to $2.27 from 52-week high of $27.06.

Symantec (SYMC) Misses on earnings and give poor outlook. Moves down to $11.85 from 52-week high of $22.80.

Expedia (EXPE) Big drop-off in its core market–travel.. Sells down to $9.66 from 52-week high of $34.66.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Media Digest 10/9/2008 Reuters, WSJ, NYTimes, FT, Bloomberg

NewspaperAccording to Reuters, the US Treasury may buy interests in large banks following the model set up by the UK.

Reuters reports that IBM’s (IBM) earnings strength helped calm tech investors.

Reuters reports that MetLife (MET) and The Hartford (HIG) may be in merger talks.

Read More »

The 52-Week Low Club 9/30/2008 (HIG)(CC)(RRI)(APPA)

Sad_clownHartford Finl Svcs (HIG) Downgraded due to exposure to debt at troubled financial firms. Drops to $31.26 from 52-week high of $99.21.

Circuit City Stores (CC) The end is near. Hard to see how the retailer hangs on. Drops to $.72 from 52-week high of $9.65.

Reliant Energy (RRI) Cuts outlook and needs to raise capital. Down to $4.69 from 52-week high of $28.74.

Ap Pharma (APPA) Drug trial fails. Drops to $.63 from 52-week high of $2.35.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Insurers Sell Risk Management Via Verisk IPO (HIG, TRV, CNA, AFG, AIG, ACE)

Verisk_logoA company called Verisk Analytics Inc. has filed to come public via an initial public offering in a securities sale of up to $750 million worth of class A common stock.  The company did not provide any reference on the shares being offered nor any price indications.  This is an amalgamated risk management company that is actually owned by many insurance and financial companies as follows:

  • Hartford Financial Services Group Inc. (NYSE: HIG)
  • The Travelers Companies, Inc. (NYSE: TRV)
  • CNA Financial Corporation (NYSE: CNA)
  • American Financial Group, Inc. (NYSE: AFG)
  • American International Group, Inc. (NYSE: AIG)
  • ACE Group Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: ACE)

Read More »

Major Buybacks This Week (CCOI, FOSL, HIG, KALU, OSG, URI, UTX)

As we have pointed out over and over, it appears that buyback announcements are on the decline in a serious way as far as "new buyback plans" being announced.  Ultimately we believe that the buyback paces coming to a crawl is for several factors, with the main issues being the need of cash and the embedded insurance policy this gives companies who want to shore up their capital during a weak economy.  We did not count the smaller buyback announcements, but these are the larger ones we saw  this week (alphabetically rather than chronologically):

Cogent Communication (NASDAQ: CCOI) completed its prior plan and added another $50 million to its buyback machine.  The market cap is about $682 million.

Fossil Inc. (NASDAQ: FOSL) announced that it would repurchase some 2 million shares, or roughly 3% of its shares outstanding.

Hartford Financial Services (NYSE: HIG) added $1 Billion to its prior plan, and its market cap is nearly $23 Billion.

Kaiser Aluminum Corp. (NASDAQ: KALU) is one of the old ones that would be easy to overlook or forget about.  But the company raised its dividend and announced a $75 million share repurchase program.  This is only about 1.1 to 1.2 million shares, but when you compare it to the $1.3 Billion market cap and the 390,000 share average daily volume it large on a percentage basis. 

Overseas Shipholding (NYSE: OSG) replaced its prior buyback plan with a $250 million stock buyback announcement, and it raised its dividend too.  This represents more than 3 million shares at current prices and compares to about a $2.4 Billion market cap.

The big kahuna buyback came from United Rentals, Inc. (NYSE: URI) announced it was doing a swap and buyback of some 27.16 million shares.  This represents close to 31% of its entire outstanding share count.

United Technologies (NYSE: UTX) was perhaps the largest buyback from the largest company this week.  The company announced it would buy back up to 60 million shares as a replacement to its prior plan.  Based on a near-$70 price, this implies a sum of up to $4.2 Billion if prices remained static.  This has roughly 973 million shares outstanding.

Jon C. Ogg
June 13, 2008

Implications Of Warren Buffett Panning Insurance Industry (BRK/A, BRK/B, ABK, MBI, AIG, RE, HIG, CB, PGR)

It is no great mystery that Warren Buffett of Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A, NYSE: BRK.B) is still one of the most followed and most revered "long term value investors" on the planet.  Any time there is Warren Buffet news you can count on every financial website having at least one story on him.  We even have our own "Buffett" index code.

His annual investor letter is always an important read, although investors should really note that this should be viewed and interpreted as a "macrocosm" of Microcosms.  Warren Buffett will be the first to tell you he cannot predict the stock market, cannot exactly predict the economy, cannot predict the weather, and cannot predict the short-term implications on every stock out there.  But he smooths out all the news and noise from the long-term vision.  That is what a long-term value and income manager is supposed to do, particularly if his holding period is "Forever." If you look over his latest public stock investment holdings, you’ll see he still goes for the simple and easy to understand. We gave a list of candidates that could fall under his ambitions of a "whale of a deal," although this seems more like the past rather than the present or future.

So what are the implications of the Oracle of Omaha panning the insurance sector.  Of his $2.35 Billion in net earnings for the last quarter, $1.44 Billion of the total $2.35 Billion came from insurance underwriting and insurance investment income (61%).  For Q4 2006, the percentage of insurance-tied numbers was 60% of the $2.868 Billion in operating earnings.  For all of 2007, the percentage of insurance-tied numbers was 59% of the $9.634 Billion in operating income.

In his annual letter to shareholders, Mr. Buffett noted specifically that margins in insurance were going to be lower even if we had another disaster free year.  He even noted, “If the winds roar or the earth trembles, results could be far worse.”  In the past two years he has joked about having the foresight to benefit from no disasters.  If that prediction isn’t harsh enough, try this one: “It is a certainty that insurance-industry profit margins, including ours, will fall significantly in 2008. Prices are down, and exposures inexorably rise.”  Or better yet, "That party is over." 

Mr. Buffett has even gone out on a limb to predict the future Berkshire Hathaway as a whole will have breakeven or positive earnings.  He admitted the law of large numbers has caught up with Berkshire Hathaway.  But what happens if you are an executive or bean counter at OTHER insurance companies?

Berkshire Hathaway from best we can tell has not gotten mixed up with all of the leveraged and crazy CDO structures that couldn’t be explained.  That isn’t true elsewhere.  But every portfolio manager talks his or her own book.  There are many things that have yet to be resolved and there are likely to still be at least some failures from all this fallout.  Insurance companies will be in that boat too as their financial bets are frequently much farther out than that of banks. 

  • Mr. Buffett has already made a backstop offer for the bond insurers to pick up their municipal assets on the cheap, which were rebuffed faster than the offers were made.  MBIA (NYSE: MBI) and Ambac Financial (NYSE: ABK) are still a "pending situation" as far as ultimate long-term viability, and Berkshire Hathaway decided to open a competing municipal bond insurance operation to compete.
  • American International Group (NYSE: AIG) has been hamstrung by leveraged loan and CDO exposure that was first disclosed as immaterial and somehow has grown to a quarterly loss of some $5 Billion.  It also has noted a total of $42.2 Billion of exposure to the troubled bond insurers, and it has written roughly $61 Billion of credit default swaps on CDO’s with some subprime collateral.  They are far from immune, AIG stock fell some 6.5% Friday alone to $46.86, and its 52-week trading range is $44.10 to $72.97.
  • Everest Re Group, Ltd. (NYSE: RE) is one of the largest pure-play reinsurers out there, another arena in which Berkshire Hathaway is a giant.  It only fell 1% Friday to $96.88, and its 52-week trading range is $90.27 to $115.86.  They would not at all be immune, particularly after its profits fell some 90%.
  • Hartford Financial Services (NYSE: HIG) is another insurance monster that saw shares fall another 3.75% to $69.91, and its 52-week trading range is $65,76 to $106.23.  Chubb (NYSE: CB) is yet another that saw a 3.1% drop Friday to $50.90, while its 52-week trading range is
  • $45.65 to $55.99.
  • Progressive Corp. (NYSE: PGR) competes head to head with GEICO and it too saw a 3% drop on Friday to $18.33, while its 52-week trading range is $16.98 to $25.16.

Realistically, this list could just go on and on.  There is no reason to.  Most of the reports out there merely just cover his comments in case everyone doesn’t have the time to read through his endless letter.  We have one solid rule when we question anything in the financial markets, and the answer is almost always "FOLLOW THE MONEY."  Mr. Buffett is a great manager, and those who bash him based only upon the "today" really look like clowns.  Regardless, it’s almost like he is trying to prepare his holders for the worst again after two years of no catastrophes.  Maybe he is trying to talk down other insurance operations so he can buy them on the cheap or show how Berkshire Hathaway insurance subsidiaries have better balance sheets.  Either way, he’s talking up his book even if it was meant to sound cautious.

The fact that we noted "Buffett’s Loss Could Be Your Gain" after Barron’s panned this one change nothing about the situation.

Jon C. Ogg
March 1, 2008