Posts for Ticker ‘LZB’

The 100 Hardest Working Brands In The World

hersheyThere are a number of ways to rank brand values. One of the most important is the level at which a brand contributes to the market value of a public company.

24/7 Wall St. asked Corebrand, the brand research and consulting firm, to look at the top 100 brands based their contribution to market capitalizaton. Using this method, the hardest working brand was Hershey (NYSE:HSY), followed  by Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO) and Harley-Davidson (NYSE:HOG)

Corebrand described the process briefly to 24/7 Wall. St.

24/7 Wall St.: Corebard often refers to the brands on this list as the”hardest working brands”. How did you come to that description?

Corebrand: There are a lot of people measuring and examining the “strongest brands” or the “most valuable brands”.  Our opinion is that examining one without the other is somewhat meaningless.  How “strong” a brand is nice to know but not very relevant unless you understand how that strength benefits business.  Similarly, “value” is little more than a measure of corporate size unless you understand the drivers of that value and how to influence it. By examining the strength of the brand and it’s contribution to total market value, we can help companies and their leadership manage that strength and value over time.

24/7 Wall St.: Is there any advantage or disadvantage to having a brand value be a very large percentage of market cap in the present and as an indication of a company’s future performance?

Corebrand: The brand will need to be in balance with the rest of the company’s assets.  A company should strive to have it’s brand strong enough to fend off competitors or changing market conditions but not so strong that it becomes overly dependent on the brand as a single driver of value.  If a company can achieve and maintain its appropriate maximum strength without becoming over-dependent, it will see greater returns in bull markets and retain greater value in bear markets.

The list: Read More »

The 52-WeeK Low Club (ZEP)(LZB)(TNC)(SINA)

Old_carZep (ZEP) Shares downgraded. Drops to $13.17 from 52-week high of $21.80.

La-Z-Boy (LZB) Shares in industry downgraded. $1.82 from 52-week high of $11.76.

Tennant (TNC) Still falling due to accounting concerns. Guidance cut. Shares downgraded. Falls to $13.70 from 52-week high of $43.94.

Sina (SINA) No news. China portal stock plunges to $20.20 from 52-week of $58.50.

Douglas A. McIntyre

La-Z-Boy Clients On Recliners Instead of Shopping (LZB, STLY, ETH)

It’s of no surprise when you see a furniture maker or anything at all tied to "in home buying" very weak.  But some of these sell-offs go from mild, to bad, to outright atrocious.  Enter La-Z-Boy Inc. (NYSE:LZB).  La-Z-Boy shares are down another 1% today at $5.40, and the 52-week trading range is $5.46 to $15.20.  The maker of the good old recliner isn’t immune from a weak housing and consumer discretionary spending environment.  Despite there being a very soft environment, La-Z-Boy’s books are actually in decent shape even after its revenue warning last month.  It would seem that this company could easily trim costs to keep the bottom line better. 

This was briefly a $30 stock in 2002, and it has again been cut in half since this summer.  How far back on the chart do you have to go before you find these recent stock prices? The early 1990’s.  Other furniture makers are in the same negative spending environment soup:

  • Stanley Furniture Co. Inc. (NASDAQ:STLY) shares are $10.92, under its $10.98 to $23.74 range over the last 52-weeks.
  • Even on a positive day for the stock higher-end furniture maker Ethan Allen (NYSE:ETH) up 2.6% at $29.31 is at the lower-end of its $27.46 to $39.56 trading range over the last 52-weeks.

Jon C. Ogg
December 3, 2007

52-Week Lows Today (November 23, 2007)

DJIA           12,980.88 (+181.84; +1.42%)
S&P500    1,440.70  (+23.93; +1.69%)
NASDAQ   2,596.60  (+34.45; +1.34%)

These didn’t all close on 52-week lows, but here is a list of stocks that managed to hit new 52-week lows today despite a strong stock market, and on what was otherwise a quiet news day.  This list only includes stocks that were down right before the end of the day rather than stocks that hit or touched 52-week lows and then recovered:

  • Adaptec (NASDAQ:ADPT)
  • Advanced Medical Optics (NYSE:EYE)
  • Cott Corp. (NYSE:COT)
  • Diebold (NYSE:DBD)
  • Dialysis Corp. of America (NASDAQ:DCAI)
  • eLong (NASDAQ:LONG)
  • Gluu Mobile (NASDAQ:GLUU)
  • iBasis (NASDAQ:IBAS)
  • La-Z-Boy (NYSE:LZB)
  • Shoe Carnival (NASDAQ:SCVL)
  • Webzen (NASDAQ:WZEN)

Jon C. Ogg
November 23, 2007

The 52-Week Low Club

Hartmarx  (HMX) Maker of casual and golf apparel cuts guidance. Shares fall to $4.90 from 52-week high $8.69.

Standard Pacific (SPF) Home builder. Drops to $5.45 from 52-week high of $30.52.

La-Z-Boy (LZB) Tough economy means people don’t have time to sit down. Down to $7.30 from 52-week high of $15.60.

Bigband (BBND) Broadband infrastructure provider misses all targets. Down to $5.89 from post-IPO high of $21.63.

Douglas A. McIntyre