Posts for Ticker ‘TEL’

Analyst Upgrades & Downgrades in Tech & Telecom (AKAM, DRIV, IFX, LEAP, PCS, NETL, SAP, TEL)

These are the top upgrades, downgrades, and new coverage calls from Wall Street analysts in technology and telecom this Thursday morning:

Akamai Technologies (NASDAQ: AKAM) Cut to Hold at Jefferies; Cut to to Neutral from Buy at Merriman Curhan Ford.
Digital River (NASDAQ: DRIV) Cut to Hold at Deutsche Bank.
Infineon (NYSE:IFX) Raised to Buy at RBS.
Leap Wireless (LEAP) Cut to Neutral at RW Baird.
MetroPCS (NYSE: PCS) Cut to Neutral from Outperform at RW Baird…
NetLogic (NASDAQ: NETL) Cut to Neutral from Outperform at RW Baird.
SAP AG (NYSE: SAP) Raised to Hold from Sell at Societe Generale.
Tyco Electronics (NYSE: TEL) Raised to Buy from Neutral at UBS.

Jon C. Ogg
July 30, 2009

This Week’s Top Share Buyback Changes (SCHW, DRH, LCAPA, QCOM, TBL, TEL)

There was an absence of major buyback announcements this week.  That coincides with the lack of as many earnings reports as well.  Below are some of the standout buyback and repurchase announcements from this week:

Charles Schwab Corp. (NASDAQ: SCHW) boosted its buyback plan Thursday by approving an additional $500 million in buybacks, making the total buyback amount $619 million. Charles Schwab’s market cap is $23.6 billion.

DiamondRock Hospitality Co. (NYSE: DRH), a real estate investment trust (REIT), announced on Monday that up to 4.8 million shares were approved for repurchase. $1.24 billion is their current market cap.  It isn’t unique, but REIT’s rarely repurchase shares compared to other sectors because they have to distribute most of their income.

Liberty Media Capital (NASDAQ: LCAPA) has approved $1 Billion in repurchases of Liberty Entertainment common stock and $300 million of Liberty Capital common stock on Monday. Their market cap is $1.95 Billion.

QUALCOMM Inc. (NASDAQ: QCOM) approved a $2 Billion buyback plan Tuesday. The program will replace a $3 Billion buyback that currently had $2 million remaining. The current market cap for QUALCOMM is $64.9 Billion.

Timberland Co. (NYSE: TBL) authorized on Monday another 6 million shares for repurchasing. The apparel and footwear company currently has 1 million shares left from its previous 6 million share repurchase program. They have a market cap of $816 million so this would retire close to another 10% of its stock.

Tyco Electronics, Ltd. (NYSE: TEL) also upped its buyback plan on Thursday by $500 million, reaching $1.25 billion in authorized repurchases. Since September, Tyco Electronics has repurchased $512 of its common stock. Market cap sitting at $15.7 billion.

Rachel Lopez
March 14, 2008

Turnarounds That Haven’t Turned Around: Tyco International (TYC, TEL, COV)

Tyco International Ltd. (NYSE: TYC) is a hard turnaround to call as one that hasn’t turned around because it has already begun its long-term initiatives to enhance shareholder values.  The problem is that it has been unsuccessful so far.  The company completed the spin-off of Tyco Electronics (NYSE: TEL) and Covidien Ltd. (NYSE: COV) on July 1, 2007.  Because of these spin-offs, Tyco was a much harder stock to cover and to use valuations and historical data on.  In fact, analysts from large brokerages and bulge bracket firms have had a hard time breaking down the de-conglomerized conglomerate.  We also want to caution that many figures used actually vary from source to source and this made analysis not as straightforward here in this case.

First, let’s look at the spin-off companies.  Tyco Electronics (NYSE: TEL) traded at $39.81 on a dividend adjusted basis at the end of July 2 and have fallen down to the mid to low-$30’s before a recent recovery. But even north of $37.00 shares are still down.  Tyco Electronics has a equally mixed coverage spread between Buy/Hold and an average price target of roughly $41.00 from analysts.  Covidien (NYSE: COV), the medical products entity, shares traded at $43.24 on a dividend adjusted basis at the end of July 2 and have traded in mostly in a high-$30’s to mid-$40’s basis since.  With a $44+ handle this one still has a mixed verdict depending upon whom you ask.  Covidien has a mixed opinion from a thin group of analysts and an average price target of roughly $47.50.  It seems that offspring aren’t being thought of as great growth vehicles.

But back to Tyco International Ltd. (NYSE: TYC).  Tyco International shares took a serious hit in late 1999, but they recovered sharply and hit new highs in 2001.  By early 2002 the accounting scandals and the Koz issues came full circle and shares were crushed.  On an adjusted basis the stock lost more than two-thirds of its value.  2003 to the end of 2004 were great years to own shares, but this hasn’t really been the case since then.

Back before these spin-offs were completed, we noted how there appeared to be a phantom premium in Tyco shares just because of the hype around the break-up and because of the craze surrounding private equity and shareholder initiatives.  What appears to have happened is that now the street has given it a more proper valuation or at least a more realistic one, and as we noted not all bad stories have to have sad endings.

On an adjusted basis Tyco International (NYSE:TYC) shares were over $50 at the July 1 date, but they have never been back.  Shares trade around $40 now and have been as low as $38-ish over recent weeks.  If you trust the "average price targets" from analysts, that appears to be around $50.00 from a much smaller group than in prior years.

Just last week a court approved some $3.2 Billion in investor class action law suit settlements over the accounting fraud took the company down.

We do caution against using any solid earnings forecasts because many analysts have not fully adjusted their opinions to reflect the "new" Tyco in a post spin-off world.  First Call has Fiscal September-2008 EPS at $2.61 (a 15.5 forward P/E ratio) and fiscal September-2009 EPS at $3.24 (a 12.5 forward P/E ratio), although we still question some of these since the spin-offs.  If the company can achieve those estimates, then there are few who could argue against this being one of the better value plays out there.

Most of our "turnaround stocks that haven’t turned around" are troubled companies in troubled predicaments that may have a very hard time making a turnaround come to fruition.  But Tyco may be one of the exceptions.  That phantom premium may be in the rear view mirror.  Its value is also now easier to see since the spin-offs have been completed and are basically two quarters on their own.  Who knows, maybe 2008 to 2009 will be Tyco’s time to shine.

Jon C. Ogg
December 28, 2007

If you want to see our previews for IPO’s, spin-offs, merger-arb, reorganization, and more, you can sign up for our free email distribution list.  If you want detailed information with actionable trading information along with ideas for hedging risk, you can sign-up for our Special Situation Investing Newsletter with much more detail, projections, and an expected time-line.

Pre-Market Analyst Calls (Oct. 3, 2007)

AMD started as Underweight at Morgan Stanley.
APH started as Buy at B of A.
ARW started as Neutral at B of A.
AVGN started as Neutral at Credit Suisse.
AVT started as Neutral at B of A.
CIEN raised estimates at Goldman Sachs; raised to Buy at Merrill Lynch.
CNX started as Buy at UBS.
CRL raised to Buy at UBS.
CVD cut to Peer Perform at Bear Stearns.
CYT cut to Hold at Jefferies.
CXG started as Buy at UBS.
DVAX started as Outperform at Credit Suisse.
GM raised to Neutral at B of A.
GMCR started as Outperform at Piper Jaffray.
GME cut to Hold at Citigroup.
GWW started as Neutral at B of A.
IART started as Outperform at RBC.
INTC started as Underweight at Morgan Stanley.
KALU raised to Outperform at Bear Stearns.
MOLX cut to Neutral at B of A.
MSM started as Neutral at B of A.
NDAQ started as Buy at Jefferies.
NRGN started as Neutral at Credit Suisse.
NVDA started as underweight at Morgan Stanley.
NVT cut to Neutral at B of A.
PH cut to Sell at UBS.
PMCS raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley.
RIMM target raised to $100 at Credit Suisse.
RIO cut to Neutral at JPMorgan.
SKT started as Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
SVNT started as Outperform at Credit Suisse.
TD cut to Peer Perform at CIBC.
TKC raised to Buy at Merrill Lynch.
TEL started as Buy at B of A.
TIN raised to Overweight at Lehman.
WCC started as Buy at B of A.

Jon C. Ogg
October 3, 2007

The Tyco Aftermath (TYC, TEL, COV)

Tyco International Ltd. (NYSE:TYC) is one of those strange spin-off and restructuring stocks that has not done well since the company broke itself up.  The Tyco Electronics (NYSE:TEL) and Covidien (NYSE:COV) stocks have also fallen more than the overall market since the spin-off.  But not all bad stories have sad endings.  We will be sending out a tie to one of the new companies next week to subscribers of our Special Situation Investing Newsletter.

Before the Tyco (NYSE:TYC) break-up we had many inquiries for higher and higher price targets on Tyco, but the fundamental problem was that no matter how we crunched those numbers the math just didn’t work for Tyco’s stock price at the time.  We even called it a ‘phantom premium running Tyco shares’ ahead of the event because investors were too much in love with the private equity, mergers, and break-ups at the time.  That stock had a phenomenal run from last summer to this summer as the deal was quite well telegraphed, but nonetheless there existed a phantom premium. 

Tyco’s Parts One Week Later (TYC, TEL, COV, GE, MMM)

As you will see, so far the markets have greeted the post-Tyco with a bit of a thud.  This is one we were a bit cautious on the valuations as being fully valued and perhaps even having a phantom premium just because of the break-up itself.  Here you’ll see the pieces:

The remaining Tyco International Ltd. (TYC-NYSE) after a 1:4 reversesplit is down marginally at $53.00.  It opened at $52.92 Monday andhave managed to close up north of $53.00 per share each day since.Unfortunately each close has been slightly lower than the day before.

Tyco Electronics (TEL-NYSE) is trading at $39.30, barely above the opening price on Monday at $39.20.  Shares have briefly traded over $40.00 since the spin-off, but based on the trading activity it looks like the specialist was more than happy to give shares away there.

Covidien Ltd. (COV-NYSE) is up an entire penny today at $42.21 and have traded down from roughly a $43.00 open (conflicting opening prices).  It looks like the specialist was more than eager to give away shares at $43.00.

In all fairness, shares of other conglomerates haven’t exactly been lighting up the road: General Electric (GE-NYSE) has seen shares stuck in a $38.00 to $38.79 range for the last week, and 3M (MMM-NYSE) has seen only an $87.13 to $88.40 range in the same time.

Jon C. Ogg
July 6, 2007

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

Previewing Tyco Spin-Off Ahead of Analyst Meetings

Stock Tickers: TYC, COV, COV-WI, TEL, TEL-WI, GE

Tyco International Ltd. (TYC-NYSE) hosts its analyst meetings on Tuesday, June 19, to showcase its new spin-off companies.  Late last week we saw trading begin in the two spin-offs.  The "Tyco Healthcare" is named Covidien Ltd. and is trading under a when-issued ticker "COV" or on most symbols as "COV-WI."  The "Tyco Electronics unit" is appropriately named Tyco Electonics and trades as "TEL" or "TEL-WI."   The remaining company for all of the security and fire company is remaining Tyco International and keeping the "TYC" ticker.

Covidien (COV) closed out at $46.50 on Friday and Tyco Electronics (TEL) closed out at $38.80 on Friday.

In our free email newsletter we sent out last week, we noted that the break-up value for all of the combined Tyco International units could could fetch up to $36.00 or $37.00, but the stock was looking like it was set in a bumper car range of $32.00 to $35.00.  It just seems as though there is a phantom premium in the stock based solely on the actual spin-offs as an event rather than as the spin-offs’ true values.

Last week we also noted that Goldman Sachs had reiterated a "Buy" rating on the stock with a much more positive outlook.  Goldman noted that Tyco could even have a premium to their $35.00 target, which they even noted as ‘conservative.’    Our $36.00 to $37.00 note was sent on June 12 when the market was trading off, so the better stock market will be a boost for it.  Here was what we noted: If the market was not in a back-and-forth mode and if this wasn’t taking place into the 4th of July it might be a tad different.  But, only a tad.

A group of dissident bondholders late last week also noted that they are trying to get Tyco’s deal delayed, but the company said they remain on track after two delays already.  The company is also taking a $370 million after-tax charge this quarter related to sale of a power systems unit out of the electronics unit

We’ll send out more individual previews before and after the analyst meetings when we get to see the full presentations and hear what other plans are coming for each unit. 

Tyco trades too in-line with General Electric (GE) for the relative value to be incredibly higher than the market value of today, and shares have come up more than 36% from the lows over the last year before the spin-off was set in stone.

Jon C. Ogg
June 17, 2007

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