Posts for Ticker ‘LEN’

New Home Sales Highlight Softness (XHB, ITB, DHI, LEN)

Burning House ImageThe Commerce Department has just shown a report that new home sales for the month of September turned south.  This may increase the call for that first time home buyer $8,000.00 tax credit, but it also highlights that housing prices are not going to rocket higher and highlights just how sensitive the home-buyer sector of the economy is with or without a tax handout.  The report came in at 402,000 annualized units, down from the 417,000 annualized number for August and very far under the 440,000 expected according to Dow Jones and under the 440,000 expected from Bloomberg.  We are watching the SPDR S&P Homebuilders (NYSE: XHB) and the iShares Dow Jones US Home Construction (NYSE: ITB) ETFs fall in response.  DR Horton Inc. (NYSE: DHI) and Lennar Corp. (NYSE: LEN) are two of the hardest hit housing stocks today after the news.
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Top Day Trader Alerts (DPTR, AMGN, PER, DELL, LEN, POT, MOS)

These are this Monday’s top day trader and active trader alert stocks in the pre-market.  We have more details on each for volume and price moves at VSInvestor.com:

Delta Petroleum Corporation (NASDAQ: DPTR) is getting whacked and battered today on poor well results.  It was a very bad weekend as shares are down 35%.

Amgen Inc. (NASDAQ: AMGN) is up over 2% and actually close to 52-week highs on positive study data.

Perot Systems Corp. (NYSE: PER) is up huge by 65% or more, but traders are selling as this is a huge premium and above what many would have expected.  Dell Inc. (NASDAQ: DELL) is going to be accused of overpaying.

Lennar Corp. (NYSE: LEN) is down 4% on somewhat active volume after posting wider losses.

Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan (NYSE: POT) is down almost 5% and not as much as it could have been… Lower guidance is hurting shares, look at Mosaic Co. (NYSE: MOS) on this one as well.

You can join our open email distribution list which goes out several times per week for top day trader alerts, analyst upgrades and downgrades, IPO’s, key secondary offerings, guru investor data on Buffett and others, mergers, and more.  We also have an affiliate offering a top 10 trading lessons sign-up.

JON C. OGG

Top Analyst Upgrades and Downgrades (AET, APD, ADSK, ENOC, LEN, ERIC, MET, PRGO, PM, VECO)

These are the top Wall Street research calls with analyst upgrades and downgrades early this Tuesday morning:

Aetna (AET) Raised to Sell from Conviction Sell List at Goldman Sachs; no real upgrade.
Air Products (APD) Raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
Autodesk (ADSK) Raised to Buy at Jefferies.
EnerNOC (ENOC) Raised to Buy at Jefferies.
Lennar (LEN) Cut to Hold at Citigroup.
LM Ericsson (ERIC) Cut to Sell at UBS.
MetLife (MET) Cut to Neutral at BofA Merrill Lynch.
Perrigo (PRGO) Cut to Neutral at Credit Suisse.
Philip Morris (PM) Cut to Neutral from Buy at UBS.
Veeco (VECO) Raised to Buy at Citigroup.

JON C. OGG
JULY 28, 2009

Mini Earnings Season on Deck Thursday (PALM, ACN, MU, LEN, CAG, FINL, JTX, TIBX)

Money Stack ImageThursday is shaping up to be a miniature one-day version earnings season this week.  This is likely the last of the major earnings reports we’ll see for another three or four weeks until the real earnings season for Q2-2009 kicks off.  On deck are the likes of Palm Inc. (NASDAQ: PALM), Accenture Ltd. (NYSE: ACN), Micron Tech Inc. (NYSE: MU), Lennar Corporation (NYSE: LEN), ConAgra Foods, Inc. (NYSE: CAG), Finish Line (NASDAQ: FINL), Jackson Hewitt Tax Service Inc. (NYSE: JTX), and TIBCO Software Inc. (NASDAQ: TIBX).  Below are preview summaries for each company’s expectations and supporting notes.
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Top Analyst Upgrades (EAT, DAI, ENR, HS, LEN, LNC, MGM, RTP)

These are some of the top pre-market analyst upgrades we have seen from Wall Street early this Monday morning:

Brinker International (EAT) Raised to Overweight at Barclays.
Daimler (DAI) Raised to Buy at UBS.
Energizer Holdings (ENR) Raised to Neutral at UBS.
HealthSpring (HS) Raised to Outperform at Wachovia.
Lennar (LEN) Raised to Buy at Citigroup.
Lincoln National (LNC) Raised to Outperform at KBW.
MGM Mirage (MGM) Raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
Rio Tinto (RTP) Raised to Hold from Sell at RBS.

JON C. OGG

Looking for Next Homebuilder Merger? (DHI, TOL, NVR, MDC, LEN, KBH, RYL, MTH, HOV, MHO, SPF, XHB, ITB, PKB)

We won’t bother telling you about the homebuilder merger this morning, because we already covered it once.  But in a down and out sector, you will see that traders are looking to see if there will be other mergers in the battered group.  As you will also see, the lower market cap stocks are the ones where traders are guessing as to which will be the next take-out candidate.  Our cut off was a $100 million market cap as of yesterday and every stock in the sector that we track in the U.S. is higher.

DR Horton Inc. (DHI)….. $3.5B; +5.8% at $10.78
Toll Brothers Inc. (TOL). $3.1B; +4.5% at $18.86
NVR Inc. (NVR)……….. $2.6B; +4% at $6.86
MDC Holdings Inc. (MDC).. $1.5B; +4.5% at $30.95
Lennar Corp. (LEN)……. $1.2B; +11% at $7.98
KB Home (KBH)………… $1.1B; +6% at $14.30
Ryland Group Inc. (RYL).. $728.8M; +6% at $16.80
Meritage Homes Corp(MTH). $401.3M; +7.3% at $12.99
Hovnanian (HOV)………. $125.0M; +11% at $1.72
M/I Homes, Inc. (MHO)…. $121.7M; +2.2% at $8.72
Standard Pacific (SPF)… $100.6M; +11% at $1.00

Oddly enough, the SPDR S&P Homebuilders (NYSE: XHB) ETF is only up almost 4% at $11.37.  The other ETF, the iShares Dow Jones US Home Construction (NYSE: ITB) is up 3.5% at $9.25.  This is a slightly different ETF, but the PowerShares Dynamic Building & Construct (NYSE: PKB) is up 1.3% at $9.65 on very thin volume.

JON C. OGG

Top Pre-Market Analyst Upgrades (ARMH, BIIB, CAT, CVH, HCBK, LEN, MOH, TTEK)

Money_stack_picThese are some of the top analyst upgrades and positive research calls we have seen from Wall Street analysts with more than two hours until the market opens this Tuesday morning:

  • ARM Holdings (ARMH) Raised to Buy at UBS.
  • Biogen-Idec (BIIB) Raised to Buy at Goldman Sachs.
  • Caterpillar (CAT) Raised to Neutral from Sell at UBS.
  • Coventry Health Care (CVH) Raised to Outperform at Wachovia.
  • Hudson City Bancorp (HCBK) Started at Overweight at Barclays.
  • Lennar (LEN) Raised to Buy at Citigroup.
  • Molina Healthcare (MOH) Raised to Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
  • Tetra Tech Inc. (TTEK) Started as Buy at Piper Jaffray.

Jon C. Ogg
January 27, 2009

Media Digest 12/19/2008 Reuters, WSJ, NYTimes, FT, Bloomberg

NewspaperAccording to Reuters, GM (GM) and Chrysler are close to a loan deal with the government.

Reuters reports that Obama will ask for a major stimulus package focusing on infrastructure and helping state finances.

Reuters reports that BOJ cut rate to help the Japanese economy.

Reuters reports that oil is steady at $36, a four-and-a-half year low.

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Top Pre-Market Analyst Downgrades (ADTN, AZ, CY, F, GPS, GM, IFX, LEN, ERIC, MXIM, PGR, WFMI)

Burning_money_picThese are some of the key analyst downgrades and negative calls we have seen this Tuesday morning:

  • ADTRAN (ADTN) Cut to Neutral at Baird.
  • Allianz (AZ) Started as Underperform at Jefferies.
  • Cypress Semi (CY) Cut to Underweight at JPMorgan.
  • Ford (F) Started as Sell at Societe Generale.
  • Gap Inc. (GPS) Cut to Market Perform at FBR.
  • General Motors (GM) Started as Sell at Societe Generale.
  • Infineon (IFX) Cut to Neutral at UBS.
  • Lennar (LEN) Cut to Neutral at UBS.
  • LM Ericsson (ERIC) Cut to Sell at Deutsche Bank.
  • Maxim Integrated (MXIM) Cut to Underweight at JPMorgan.
  • Progressive (PGR) Cut to Sell at Citigroup.
  • Whole Foods (WFMI) Cut to Underweight at JPMorgan.

Jon C. Ogg
December 16, 2008

Top Pre-Market Analyst Upgrades (AWK, BDK, ERII, FRED, LEN, PSA, WMT)

Money_stack_picThese are some of the positive analyst calls and upgrades we are seeing early this Tuesday morning:

  • American Water Works (AWK) Started as Buy at Societe General.
  • Black & Decker (BDK) Raised to Buy at UBS.
  • Energy Recovery (ERII) Started as Buy at Piper Jaffray.
  • Fred’s (FRED) Raised to Outperform at William Blair.
  • Lennar (LEN) Raised to Buy at UBS.
  • Public Storage (PSA) Raised to Buy at Goldman Sachs.
  • Wal-Mart (WMT) Raised to Outperform at William Blair.

Jon C. Ogg
November 25, 2008

Top Pre-Market Analyst Upgrades (EHTH, FFIV, FDRY, LEN, OXPS, SGP, TWTI)

These are some of the top upgrades or positive analyst calls we have seen this Tuesday morning in early pre-market trading hours:

  • eHealth (NASDAQ: EHTH) Raised to Perform from Underperform at Oppenheimer.
  • F5 Networks (NASDAQ: FFIV) Started as Buy at Pacific Growth.
  • Foundry Networks (NASDAQ: FDRY) Started as Buy at Pacific Growth.
  • Lennar (NYSE: LEN) Raised to Neutral from Sell at UBS.
  • OptionsXpress (NASDAQ: OXPS) Started as Market Outperform at JMP Securities.
  • Schering-Plough (NYSE: SGP) Raised to Overweight from Equal-weight at Lehman Brothers.
  • Third Wave (NASDAQ: TWTI) Cut to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank.

Jon C. Ogg
July 15, 2008

Stocks Which Could Double In Recession: An Industry Overview

It is not uncommon during a serious recession for the shares of many public companies to drop. 24/7 Wall St. has assumed, for the purpose of finding stocks which could rise sharply, that the current downturn will last from the second quarter of this year until the second quarter of 2009. We have gone though the stock market by industry looking for either sectors which have been damaged by present circumstance but could come out of a slump as a recession ends. We have also evaluated areas of the business world which tend to do well whether the economy is doing poorly or not.

Home Builders.. Among the most unlikely candidates for a big rebound are housing stocks, but, one of the hallmarks of a recession moving toward a recovery is first stability and then a rebound in home prices.

Wall St. could make the case that home-building stocks have nowhere to go but up, at least for those which remain independent businesses. The three strongest stocks in the sector are probably Pulte (PHM), KB Home (KBH), and Lennar (LEN). KBH and PHM are off over 45% during the last year and Lennar is off over 55%.

Home prices will drop between 15% and 20% from their peak in 2006, depending on which analysis investors use. The advantage that these three companies have is that they build homes expensive enough that they are not likely to be victims of subprime mortgage problems or the foreclosures which tend to be highest in low income areas.

KBH is a good example of what has happened across the industry. In the last quarter, the company lost $268 million. Sales fell 43% to $794 million. As a reaction to these numbers, KBH has sharply cut costs. The company still has over $1.3 billion in cash. Home-builders have, in many cases, been able to restructure debt payments and sell off some assets. The larger companies in the industry have relatively sound balance sheets.

The most likely set of circumstances for driving up the value of these three stocks short-term is aggressive intervention by the US government through more liberal practices for lending at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, new FHA practices, or Congressional action to put a moratorium on foreclosures for middle class as well as lower end homes.

Pulte traded at its current levels in mid-2003, before the three year run-up in housing. Can it move from $15 to $30 before the end of the recession? A reasonable housing market can make it a double.

Beaten-Down Financials.. While some financial stocks like JP Morgan (JPM) and Bank of America (BAC) have weathered the current market crisis fairly well, three of the big names in the industry have been driven down between 45% and 55%. Citigroup (C), Lehman (LEH), and Merrill Lynch (MER) had the largest exposure to mortgage-related paper and there have been legitimate concerns about whether they would survive. The case for these stocks moving up is based on the notion that most of the big write-offs in the sector will be over by the end of Q2 08 and that these companies will start to show positive earnings in the third quarter. If the firms have been aggressive in their write-downs and have raised adequate capital, they have a very strong chance of rebounding. Citigroup’s recent earning report did not indicate that the bank was in any danger and the shares traded up.

Another key to the future of the banks and brokerages is their ability to lay-off large numbers of people in hard times. Citi is talking about cutting 25,000 or more jobs. Merrill and Lehman have already cut a great many. Over the last few weeks the CEOs of Morgan Stanley (MS), Lehman, UBS (UBS), and Merrill Lynch have all said, in one way or another, that the worst part of the global crisis is over.

These three companies have good leverage if they cut costs far enough. The head of Citi recently told the Financial Times that he can take 20% of the cost base out of the conglomerate. If he is right, a fairly modest improvement in revenue should give the bank reasonable if not remarkable earnings in the second half of the year. Citi and Merrill have brought in new CEOs. They have a chance to engineer unprecedented turnarounds which gives them mandates to completely reorganize their companies.

E*Trade  (ETFC) is the online discount brokerage firm that lost its way by offering  mortgage products, getting too far into banking operations.  Even though it sold off much of its problems to Citadel, the company still is disclosing that it still has financial asbestos and it will potentially be paying for this for several years.  Its losses were wide and its revenues were shy, but the long and short of this company is that its "survival" is no longer in question.  How the company was able to continue opening new accounts and how it didn’t lose its total customer accounts is a testament to a business model success, and its catchy TV advertising campaign seems to have helped.  This one was truly deemed as being "at-risk of implosion" a few months ago.  ETFC also reported fairly positive firm quarter numbers

Healthy Living. One sector that goes out the door when times get tough is the "healthy living" sector.  When smoking stays high and drinking goes up, what else would you expect?  But people can only live off of cheap food, beer, and tobacco for so long. The second that things start looking better economically these stocks should have already started recovering.

NutriSystem Inc. (NASDAQ: NTRI) is an extremely well-known brand.  The company’s stock started seeing trouble before the economy fell off the cliff.  Its television commercials may irritate many watchers and its ad budgets have gone up to avoid a worse drop off.  This stock has been battered and the major growth period appears to be behind the company.  But its forward P/E ratios are actually under 9 for both 2008 and 2009. There is one other aspect to this company that many people actually do not take into consideration: you can actually live off of their food for cheaper than fast food.  An intro package for the first 28 days of NutriSystem for first time buyers currently runs $293.72 for women and $319.95 for men.  There is no free lunch out there, but to get that much food for that little may appeal to those on a strict budget even more.  At $20.01, this stock could double and then actually almost double again before going over its 52-week high.

Unitedhealth Group, Inc. (NYSE: UNH) has not enjoyed 2008.  As a health insurance provider, there are many risks to the model.  The sector has been pounded with earnings warnings; there is an election year with the threat of a potential trend toward some sort of universal health care mandates, and rising medical costs when insurers are under pressure to keep renewal rates low.  But there is a silver lining at Unitedhealth.  If the government does go in the direction of universal coverage it will almost certainly have to be via the private sector; Unitedhealth already is in that door.  Businesses have also cut back on certain premium plans, but that won’t last forever as the economy recover and employers once again have to offer better benefits.  With 70 million Americans served in some form or fashion, with its Medicare Plan D, and with its AARP contract it seems that some Americans already government health care.  Earnings come out late April with prior guidance for 2008 at $3.95 to $4.00, and analysts calling for $3.85 in 2008 and $4.35 in 2009.  At $37.25, that is a forward P/E of well under 10 and in a sector that many investors have paid much higher multiples for.  52-week trading range is $33.57 to $59.64.

Casual Dining Out. What is one of the first things that the consumer cuts back on when they bring their spending down?  Casual dining.  The good news is that this trend never lasts forever, and in cities like New York, Chicago, Houston, and other urban areas, the average adult eats out more than they eat in.  Why is Darden Restaurants (NYSE: DRI) not on this list? It has already recovered some 70% from lows.  As private equity firms went on a casual dining chain buyout spree, these have been shown to be steady earning companies through time.

One huge player that has felt the pinch is Brinker International, Inc. (NYSE: EAT).  This compnay owns major food chains such as Chili’s, Romano’s Macaroni Grill, On The Border Mexican Grill, and Maggiano’s.  As of December, 2007, it owned or franchised some 1,800 units in the U.S. and abroad, with some 100,000 employees and $4 Billion in sales.  The company has simultaneously been hurt by rising food costs at the same time that many consumers have been paring down their dining budgets. But with household brands that Joe Public likes to go to with regularity, this $1.9 Billion market cap might be a cheap franchise to acquire if private equity ever wants to go back into billion-dollar food deals.  Its below-market and below-peer forward P/E ratios of 13.2 for 2008 and 11.2 for 2009 also make this attractive for a steady food growth stock when consumers have fully recovered and gone back to normal habits.

Retail Apparel. The current economic environment is bad for most retail names, but it particularly hits mid-level and upper-middle level retail giants that have to still maintain inventory while many of their customers go discount shopping at clearance stores or at smaller chains.  While clothing expenses can be pared down for some time, it’s highly unlikely that eighteen months out we’ll be in an economy of loin cloths and flip-flops.

Macy’s, Inc. (NYSE: M) has had its share of hard times lately.  As its department stores are massive and as inventory level requirements are more than demanding, the company is simultaneously closing several stores, retooling its management ranks, and slowing its new store openings.  Its brands are also in the middle to upper-middle sector of retail, but aren’t in the lowest end, making it one of the more economically torpedoed stocks in mall-based retail and apparel.  Wall Street will likely give the company a pass now, like it did last quarter, as any great earnings for 2008 will be hard to imagine.  JPMorgan just downgraded this one this week to an Underweight rating and even called it a value trap, but the analyst’s under-street targets for earnings are still an under-market forward P/E of under 13 for 2008 and 12 for 2009.  A double from current levels would not even take the stock to new 52-week highs.  After the retail giants form a bottom, they just about always come back with a vengeance.

The other retailer that has seen its share of punishment in the mid-level apparel retail giant store formats is J.C.Penney Co., Inc. (NYSE: JCP).  Shares have been butchered more than 50% as consumers have dialed down spending.  The company has even launched its brand-new Ralph Lauren centers in the stores just in time to catch its customers when they were maxed-out and going to discounters.  But the company is still thought of as well-run with an entrenched team. Analysts have slashed and burned earnings projections.  Since estimates have been taken down so much, it trades at forward 2008 P/E ratios of 11.6 and a tad under 10 for 2009.  The other potential saving grace is that if there is one company in the group that was rumored to have private equity interest, it was J.C.Penney.  At one point, it was even thought that management and its employee pension plan would seek to take it private.  This one won’t turn around overnight, but with it in the lower part of its $33.27 to $83.64 trading range it looks like much of the bad news has been taken out of the stock.  A double from today’s levels would not even have shares at 52-week highs.

Douglas A. McIntyre and Jon Ogg

Home Builders Sucked Into Credit Crisis (LEN)(TOL)(KBH)

As the financial crisis spreads quickly from Wall St. to other industries, two large home building projected have received default notices. The problems involve developments in Las Vegas where house prices has collapsed.

A project involving KB Homes (NYSE: KBH), Lennar (NYSE: LEN), and Toll Brothers (NYSE: TOL) has failed to make interest payments on $765 million in debt.

According to The Wall Street Journal, the project is spear-headed by a private company, Focus Property Group.

It is not clear how many other large real estate developments involving public home builders are facing near-term margin calls, but with the falling price of real estate, the problem in Las Vegas is unlikely to be that last one.That means that already weakened firms could face a credit crisis of their own as home prices continue to drop and the potential value of homes under construction face going on the market for a fraction of what they may have brought just a year ago.

Some of the large home building company stocks have lost over two-thirds of their value over the last year, and that may only be the beginning.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Lehman Starts Homebuilders (DHI, HOV, KBH, LEN, PHM, RYL, TOL)

Lehman Brothers has initiated coverage of some key homebuilders this morning:

  • DR Horton (NYSE: DHI) started as Overweight.
  • Hovnanian (NYSE: HOV) started as Underweight.
  • KB Home (NYSE: KBH) started as Equal-Weight.
  • Lennar (NYSE: LEN) started as Equal-Weight.
  • Pulte Homes (NYSE: PHM) started as Equal-Weight.
  • Ryland Group (NYSE: RYL) started as Overweight.
  • Toll Brothers (NYSE: TOL) started as Overweight.

Just yesterday we noted how the sector has seen a major recovery and were pondering if the sector had bottomed.

Jon C. Ogg
February 27, 2008

Did Homebuilders Finally Bottom? (DHI, TOL, LEN, CTX, HOV, BZH, XHB)

If you have been watching homebuilders of late, you’ll notice a sharp disconnect between the headlines still coming out and the stock prices of many homebuilders.  The move today is partly attributed to Sam Zell’s interview on CNBC saying this spring should mark the bottom in housing.  The SPDR S&P Homebuilders (AMEX: XHB) ETF shares are up 6.3% at $22.56 today, and its 52-week low is $15.22.

Keep in mind that Zell has that Gafisa SA (NYSE: GFA) as one of his big plays in Brazil, which we recently noted as one of Jim Cramer’s top picks in Brazil.  We have also noted how many of these stocks had doubled from lows.  Banc of America recently was the first to upgrade several of these in the homebuilder sector as well.

Today, shares of these are up big, which you can see in comparison to their 52-week lows:

Stock/Symbol          Trade    Change    52-wk Range   Market Cap   
DR Horton (DHI)    $16.44    +6.06%    $9.78-27.26    $5.18B   
Toll Bros (TOL)      $23.24    +6.02%    $15.49-32.00   $3.68B   
Lennar (LEN)         $20.40    +8.63%    $11.98-51.43   $3.26B   
Centex (CTX)          $26.10    +9.53%    $17.77-49.85   $3.19B   
Hovnanian (HOV)  $10.91    +10.20%   $4.25-33.32    $679.76M   
Beazer (BZH)         $8.74       +12.48%   $4.53-42.42    $342.68M

We have noted over and over that this sector would bottom and start to recover long before the news starts to look like anything resembling good news.  That may or may not be now, but when you see an ETF recover 50% from lows you have to wonder how much worse things would have to get for that recovery to not at least partially hold up. At one point, things were getting so bad we even asked "which would hit zero first?"

We still expect more bad headlines with no end in clear site.  But a 50% recovery in an ETF that measures a sector has to be telling you something, even if there will be more bad days on and off and even as more headlines still look bad.

Jon C. Ogg
February 26, 2008

Many Homebuilders Up 100% From Lows (MTH, PHM, LEN, WCI, SPF, HOV, XHB)

Everyone knew homebuilders would turn one day and when they turned it would be fast and in a flurry of buying volume.  Much of this may attributed to short covering, but much is because the good old Fed and another 125 basis points in rate cuts within a 10-day period.  You know you can’t pay attention to the headlines on home sales or even the earnings out of these, because that is dismal.  But traders are taking aim here.  In fact some of these are up 100% off of lows already.

  • Meritage Homes (NYSE: MTH) up 12% at $15.26, up over 100% from lows; 52-week range $7.04 to $46.65.
  • Pulte Homes (NYSE: PHM) up 14% at $15.52, up over 80% from lows; 52-week range $8.20 to $35.56.
  • Lennar (NYSE: LEN) up 8% at $19.70, up over 60% from lows; 52-week range $11.98 to $56.54.
  • WCI Communities (NYSE: WCI) up 14.5% at $5.98, up over 200% from lows; 52-week range $1.35 to $24.20.
  • Standard Pacific Corp. (NYSE: SPF) up 22% at $3.78, up over 100% from lows; 52-week range $1.47 to $30.52
  • Hovnanian Enterprises Inc. (NYSE: HOV) up 10% at $9.68, up over 100% from lows; 52-week range $4.25 to $37.58.

We even ran the key ETF for the sector.  The SPDR S&P Homebuilders (AMEX: XHB) is up over 8% today to $22.10.  But even this is up almost 50% from the recent lows; 52-week trading range $15.22 to $40.03.  That low was just on January 9, 2008.

There are many other names that were equally charged.  But these were the ones that fir the screen today.

Jon C. Ogg
January 31, 2008 

Pre-Market Stock News (January 24, 2008)

We are full blown into earnings season now.  These are not all of the stocks in the news, but this is a good portion of the news in individual stocks for traders to review this morning:

  • Annaly Capital Management, Inc. (NLY) priced its secondary of 51,000,000 shares of common stock at $19.25 per share.
  • AT&T (T) $0.71 EPS vs. $0.71 estimate; new share buyback plan of up to 400 million shares.
  • Becton Dickinson (BDX) $1.07 EPS vs $1.04 estimate; raised guidance before charges.
  • Cabot Micro (CCMP) $0.51 EPS vs $0.47 estimate.
  • Cubist Pharmaceuticals (CBST) shares rose another 7% to $21.72 after beating earnings and raising guidance.
  • Danaher (DHR) $1.12 EPS vs. $1.12 estimate.
  • DuPont (DD) noted as strong value without earnings risk according to Cramer on CNBC’s Mad Money.
  • eBay (EBAY) shares fell over 5% after beating earnings but lowering guidance; Meg Whitman retires as CEO but stays on board.
  • F5 Networks (FFIV) shares rose almost 20% after beating earnings.
  • Ford (F) -$0.20 EPS vs. -$0.19 estimates; CEO will be on CNBC at 12:15 PM EST.
  • IBM (IBM) noted as strong value without earnings risk according to Cramer on CNBC’s Mad Money.
  • Lennar (LEN) -$0.42 EPS vs, -$1.61 est.; but losses were before -$7.50 per shares in charges; sees 2008 continuing weakness.
  • Lockheed Martin (LMT) $1.89 EPS vs. $1.69 estimate; sees 2008 EPS $7.05 to $7.25 vs. prior guidance $6.19 to $7.15 and vs. $7.29 estimate.
  • Microsoft (MSFT) reports earnings after the close today with estimates at $0.46 EPS on revenues of $15.94 Billion.
  • Napster (NAPS) msic rental service is now available to NTT DoCoMo subscribers.
  • Netflix (NFLX) earnings were above plan and guidance was too; shares indicated up slightly.
  • Nokia (NOK) announced its market share rose to 40% and posted a 57% gain in earnings overseas.
  • Plexus Corp. (PLXS) raised guidance to $0.46 to $0.51 EPS on revenues of $440 million to $460 million, compared to estimates of $0.42 & almost $430 million;shares rose 8.3% to $21.50 in after-hours trading.
  • Polycom (PLCM) posted $0.42 EPS on revenues of $263.3 million vs. estimates of $0.39 & $252.5 million; shares rose some 7.7% to $24.00.
  • Potash (POT) announced it would repurchase up to 5% of its outstanding shares.
  • Qualcomm (QCOM) posted $0.46 EPS and non-GAAP EPS at $0.52 EPS on $2.44 Billion in revenues.  Estimates were $0.53 EPS on revenues of $2.41 Billion, 6% to $38.90 after-hours.
  • Symantec (SYMC) beat earnings; raised guidance; shares rose 8.5% at $16.55.
  • THQ (THQI) traded down 8% after disclosing net profit drops on charges from discontinued titles.
  • Trimble Navigation (TRMB) shares rose 15% at $27.45 after raising current guidance and reaffirming 2008 revenues.
  • Western Digital (WDC)  $1.35 EPS vs. $1.04 estimate; sees next quarter $0.85 to $0.91 EPS  & $2 Billion revenues vs. estimates of $0.80 & $1.9 Billion; shares rose by almost 7%.
  • World Acceptance (WRLD) $0.54 EPS vs. $0.46 estimates.
  • Xerox (XRX) $0.41 EPS vs $0.41 estimate; sees next quarter $0.25 to $0.28 vs. $0.28 estimate; sees 2008 $1.31 to $1.35 EPS versus $1.31 estimates.

Jon C. Ogg
January 24, 2008

Lennar Monster Charges, Yet EPS & Revenue Not As Bad As Some Forecasts (LEN)

Lennar Corporation (NYSE: LEN) has posted its results and the initial loss reported is huge at -$7.92 per share.  But the loss is from writedowns and charges of $7.50 per share (outlined below); so earnings per share from operations are being counted as -$0.42 EPS and fourth quarter revenues were down 49% to $2.2 Billion.  First Call had estimates pegged at -$1.65 EPS on $2.06 Billion in revenues.

The $7.50 per share charges related to valuation adjustments and other write-offs are as follows: pretax valuation adjustments and other write-offs: Morgan Stanley land transaction of $740.4 million; Land $229.7 million; Option deposits and pre-acquisition costs of $217.6 million; Homebuilding charge $224.8 million; Investments in unconsolidated entities of $277.3 million; Goodwill fell $173.7 million

Lennar also noted that deliveries of 7,044 homes were down 50% and its new orders of 4,761 homes was also down 50%.  Lennar’s cancellation rate was 33%, so 1 in 3 contracts are falling through.  The CEO of Lennar noted that while he hopes rate cuts will have a stabilizing impact, its operations continued a downward slide through the end of the fourth quarter.

The only good news in such wide losses that the company said these generated losses have resulted in the receipt of a cash tax refund of $852 million subsequent to the close of the quarter.  Stuart Miller, CEO, also addressed 2008’s expectations for another hard year:

  • "As we look ahead to 2008, we are not expecting market conditions to improve, and perhaps might continue to decline in the near term. Nevertheless, the strength of our balance sheet, bolstered by the cash generated through our fourth quarter strategic moves, will keep us well positioned to weather these turbulent times. Additionally, our management focus on right-sizing our business, revising our product offering and reducing construction costs, together with our restated land positions that reflect current market conditions, will provide the springboard from which we will rebuild margins once the market does stabilize."

Weak markets, lower cost, revising products…. If you bought a new home from Lennar over the last couple of years, you aren’t going to be seeing any price appreciation quite yet.  The good news is that its operating numbers were just really bad rather than "far worse than really bad."

Jon C. Ogg
January 24, 2008

Top 10 Pre-Market Analyst Calls (AXP, COF, DFS, ATVI, HANS, JCP, LEN, MFE, SWHC, TGT, YGE)

These aren’t the only analyst calls we are watching, but these are the top ten that 247wallst.com is reviewing:

  • Activision (NASDAQ: ATVI) raised to Buy from Neutral at Piper Jaffray.
  • Hansen Natural (NASDAQ: HANS) started as Buy with $58 target at UBS.
  • JC Penney (NYSE: JCP) raised to Overweight from equal weight at Lehman.
  • Lennar (NYSE: LEN) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank.
  • McAfee (NYSE: MFE) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at FBR.
  • Smith & Wesson (NASDAQ: SWHC) downgraded to Neutral at Cowen & Co, and downgraded to Underperform at Rodman & Renshaw.
  • Sunpower (NASDAQ: SPWR) raised to Buy from Hold at Jefferies.
  • Target (NYSE: TGT) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Banc of America.
  • Yingli Green Energy (NYSE: YGE) raised to Buy from Neutral at Banc of America.
  • CREDIT CARD DOWNGRADES: Merrill Lynch downgrades American Express (NYSE: AXP), Capital One (NYSE: COF), and Discover Financial (NYSE: DFS).  Capital One (NYSE: COF) also downgraded to Underweight at Morgan Stanley.

Jon C. Ogg
December 7, 2007

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

Lennar (LEN) Sells Some Valuable Real Estate

It is never good news when a home-builder sells a big portion of its real estate. Lennar (LEN) sold 11,000 home sites for $525 million. A company controlled by Morgan Stanley (MS) will take control of the land. Lennar will be able to buy-back some of the properties.

The home-builder may get a tax break from the action. If can take the losses on the land to shelter past profits. But, that is hardly reason to dump valuable property. Lennar is doing it because of the balance sheets of the company and its peers are facing sale of assets to keep solvent.

"There is a lot of money out there right now trying to do deals like this," says John Burns, a home-building consultant based in Irvine, Calif., who consulted with Morgan Stanley on the sale told The Wall Street Journal.

Buy land, they ain’t making any more of it. Lennar doesn’t seem to be able to afford the advice.

Douglas A. McIntyre