Posts for Ticker ‘TSCM’

24/7 Wall St. TV: CNBC Manages To Lose 50% Of Its Audience

24/7 WallSt TVIt may be that when the stock market is not moving up or down 20% a month that people lose interest. That seems to be the case if the new CNBC ratings are any indication. They fell 50% in October compared to the same month a year ago, according to Nielsen. During “business day” viewing hours from 5 AM to 7 PM the drop was even worse at 52%.

Jim Cramer, whose popularity has been responsible for almost all the success of TheStreet.com (NASDAQ:TSCM), has carried CNBC on his back for some time due to the high ratings of his “Mad Money” show. The ratings for the program dropped 52% in October.

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Many Cult Stock Changes In Russell 3000 Rebalance (CPST, BCON, FNSR, RICK, SIRI, TSCM, URRE, VG)

burning-money-picThe Russell 3000 Index is being rebalanced and many cult stocks with low share prices that have a wide following and high trading volume are getting booted off the index. Beacon Power Corporation (NASDAQ: BCON), Capstone Turbine Corp. (NASDAQ: CPST), Finisar Corp. (NASDAQ: FNSR), Rick’s Cabaret International Inc. (NASDAQ: RICK), SIRIUS XM Radio Inc.(NASDAQ: SIRI), TheStreet.com, Inc. (NASDAQ: TSCM), Uranium Resources, Inc. (NASDAQ: URRE), and Vonage Holdings Corporation (NYSE: VG) are among the former high-flier stocks getting removed from the Russell 3000 that have become cult stocks with a large investor base.  We have given some color on these changes.
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Unusual Dividend Tracking (CAT, CLX, MSFT, TGT, TSCM, VMC, ACAS, IAF)

Money Stack ImageDividends in general are used as the historic underlying measurement of companies and their abilities to stay profitable at current levels.  Today and last night we have seen some rather unusual dividend news or “in addition to the dividend news” from the likes of Caterpillar Inc. (NYSE: CAT), Clorox Co. (NYSE: CLX), Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT), Target Corp. (NYSE: TGT), TheStreet.com, Inc. (NASDAQ: TSCM), and Vulcan Materials Co. (NYSE: VMC).  American Capital Ltd. (NASDAQ: ACAS) takes the cake for unusual dividends, and the payout at the Australia Equity Fund Inc. (AMEX: IAF) closed-end fund also borders one the unusual.

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Internet Advertising: After First Quarter Disaster, Industry May Throw In The Towel On Q2

bear1Internet display advertising had what may have been the worst quarter in its history. In the first 90 days of this year, by most measures, the cost-per-thousand that large websites charged advertisers dropped at least 25% . Any site that did not have significant traffic growth lost a quarter of its sales compared to the same quarter last year.

For companies such as Yahoo! (YHOO), TheStreet.com (TSCM), and IACI (IACI) the trend will be devastating to earnings. And, the worst may not be over. Read More »

Facebook Takes A Dive: Social Networks Never Had A Future

bearThe business of having online sites with content created by amateurs to be viewed by other amateurs never had a reasonable chance of making money. The fact that at one point Facebook had a $15 billion valuation, that Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp (NWS) bought MySpace, and that Google (GOOG) bought YouTube only proves the “greater fool” theory.

YouTube was started in 2005 and MySpace in 2003. Normally, having a social network where people go to share profiles of themselves, write blogs, and submit videos would not seem like much of a business. But, MySpace has well over 100 million users. People viewed over five billion videos at YouTube last month. Investors assumed that any medium with such a large number of users has to become a huge business. Millions and millions of users must be worth something. They can’t be worth nothing. That couldn’t be possible. Read More »

Ten Stocks That Should Double (GE)(GCI)(AAPL)(YHOO)(MSFT)(COP)(XOM)(CVX)(BP)(TSCM)(CBS)(SONC)(M)(C)

bank19Now that final numbers from 2008 have been filed for most large US companies, 24/7 Wall St. is picking several stocks that are likely to double off of their lows, almost all of which were set over the last two weeks.  The time frame for these price increases is between now and the end of 2010, when many experts expect the economy to recover.  A number of the credit and financial issues facing the markets will remain for the near-term.   It may be well beyond the end of next year before the economy returns to the kind of GDP growth it had in 2006.  The other assumption used for picking these companies is a market bottom of 600 on the S&P 500.  If the index goes well below that, it is anyone’s guess how soon stocks will recover to the levels where they trade today. Read More »

Stocks That Should Double: Media (DISH)(TSCM)(CBS)(GCI)

newspaper9This week 24/7 Wall St. is picking several stocks that are likely to double off of their lows.  The  time frame is by the end of 2010, which is meant to coincide with some form of economic recovery next year.  This is not based on a sharp turn up in the economy. A number of the credit and financial issues facing the markets will be in place for the near-term or longer.  The other assumption used for choosing the stock prices is a market bottom of 600 on the S&P 500 Index.

These are the media stocks. Read More »

The 52-Week Low Club (TSCM)(EBAY)(GE)(SNTA)(ABK)(C)

sad_clown16Citigroup (C) Government will take a 36% share. Drops to $1.42 from 52-week high of $27.35.

AMBAC Inc (ABK) Market hates it earnings. Drop to $.56 from 52-week high of $12.37.

Synta Pharmaceuticals (SNTA) Drug trial suspended. Multiple broker downgrades. The daily double. Off to $1.31 from 52-week high of $10.30.

GE (GE) Cuts dividend. Falls to $8.40 from 52-week high of $38.52.

Ebay (EBAY) Concerns recession will hurt e-commerce. Sells down to $10.50 from 52-week high of $33.47.

TheStreet.com (TSCM) Financial advertising falling apart.  Down to $1.87 from 52-week high of $9.49.

Douglas A. McIntyre

TheStreet.com (TSCM) Highlights From Q4 Conference Call; Things Are Tough “But We Have Cash”

TheStreet.com (Nasdaq: TSCM) released its Q4 results tonight and reported EPS of breakeven, in-line with the analysts’ estimates. Revenue for the quarter was $16.5 million, versus the consensus of $17.34 million.

TheStreet has cut some of its overhead costs, but to be cash flow positive it may have to make additional cost cuts. TheStreet has office space that it could sublease and potentially could close other offices. The company is trading near cash value and likely will not see a major fall in its stock price after this quarter’s earnings.

Read more…

The Huffington Post Is Now Worth More Than TheStreet.com (TSCM)

Sad_clownIt makes a certain amount of sense. The Huffington Post has raised $25 million at a valuation that the media is putting at $115 million. TheStreet.com (TSCM), which is public, has a market cap of $100 million, but it has $80 million in cash and marketable securities. In other words, it has a lot more money in the bank than Huffington does.

The company’s figures bear out the valuations to some extent, but the Huffington number says more about its future than it does its present.

According to both Compete and Alexa, Huffington has about twice as many unique visitors as TheStreet. Compete puts that number at 5.4 million for Huffington and 3.1 million for TSCM as of October.

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Taking TheStreet.com Private (TSCM)

Cammonopoly_wideweb__430x3250TheStreet.com’s (TSCM) share price is down far enough that the company’s management must be giving some consideration to taking Cramer & Co. private. At $3 a share, the stock is down from a 52-week high of $16.74.

TSCM has a market cap of $92 million. The latest 10-Q shows $78 million in cash and marketable securities and taking out depreciation and amortization the company broke even last quarter. However, operating expenses were up 40% from the same quarter a year ago. That can probably be fixed.

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Can Forbes Keep Its Enterprise Value From Falling?

95129cIn 2006, Elevation Partners, the same venture firm which bailed out Palm (PALM) and counts U2 lead singer Bono as a managing director, put about $275 million into Forbes to get a 40% piece of the media company according to GigaOm and The New York Times. That would have put a price tag on Forbes at $700 million.

It may not be worth that much today and its value is almost certainly falling in the current advertising environment.

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The 52-Week Low Club (GM)(C)(GS)(EBAY)(NT)(CC)(NYT)(TSCM)

Sad_clownGM (GM) plunges on concerns about Chapter 11. Falls to $3.02 from 52-week high of $32.80.

Citigroup (C) get caught in fears that big financials will have to raise more money. Sells down to $11.05 from 52-week high of $37.50.

Goldman (GS) gets pushed down on same fears. Dips to $68.51 from 52-week high of $240.05.

Ebay (EBAY) shows the internet and e-commerce are not escaping the recession. Runs off to $13.38 from 52-week high of $35.12.

Nortel (NT) announced big losses and big job cuts. Moves down to $.90 from 52-week high of $19.42.

Circuit City (CC) goes bankrupt and falls to $.11 from 52-week high of $8.24.

The New York Times (NYT) takes big write-offs from falling value of assets. Drops to $8.62 from 52-week high of $21.14

TheStreet.com (TSCM) still dropping for a poor quarter. Sells off to $3.35 from 52-week high of $16.74. May be time to go private.

Douglas A. McIntyre 

Where Will Jim Cramer’s Primary Responsibilities Go? (TSCM)

Cramer_picTheStreet.com Inc. (NASDAQ: TSCM) reported lackluster earnings after yesterday’s close with a third quarter loss of $0.04 per share as revenue rose 4% from a year earlier to $16.7 million.  But more importantly, Jim Cramer is now going to be the Chairman of the Board at TheStreet.com after the board decided to split the chairman and CEO roles.  Thomas J. Clarke Jr. previously held both positions before this announcement. 

Many on Wall Street have always said that Cramer was always the head honcho at TheStreet.com and this may just be a formality at this point.  But it also brings up the case where you have to wonder if Jim Cramer will have to better segregate his efforts between TheStreet.com and CNBC for his MAD MONEY and break-in segments throughout the day.

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Early Bird Analyst Downgrades (AAPL, RATE, COP, INFN, MOT, SMOD, TSCM, THO, WM, WGO)

These are not all of the analyst downgrades this Monday morning, but these are some of the standout calls we have seen affecting shares early with more than two hours to the open:

  • Apple (AAPL) Cut to Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley.
  • Bankrate (RATE) Cut to Neutral at Merriman Curhan Ford.
  • ConocoPhillips (COP) Cut To Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
  • Infinera (INFN) Cut To Sell at Goldman Sachs.
  • Motorola (MOT) Cut to Hold at Citigroup.
  • Smart Modular Tech (SMOD) Cut to Hold at Deutsche Bank.
  • TheStreet.com (TSCM) Cut to Neutral at Merriman Curhan Ford.
  • Thor Industries (THO) Cut to Underperform at Baird.
  • Washington Mutual (WM) Cut to Underperform at KBW.
  • Winnebago Industries (WGO) Cut to Underperform at Baird.

Jon C. Ogg
September 29, 2008

52-Week Low Club (ELY, GHS, GE, GM, GFI, MRK, Q, SHLD, JAVA, TSCM, VIA.B, CBS, AMR, AAI, DAL, UAUA)

Today’s 52-week low list was full of some of the usual suspects, and you can count airlines as the top group of 52-week lows after that breather in oil prices did not hold.  There were also many other stocks that hit 52-week lows today, and we didn’t even bother including any of the usual suspects in financials.  Here is a sample of the 200+ we saw today:

  • Callaway Golf (NYSE: ELY) is seeing the same old same old, fewer golf club and accessories being bought as consumers are strapped and have to actually work rather than play golf.
  • Gatehouse Media (NYSE: GHS) keeps sliding… is Chapter 11 near?
  • General Electric Co. (NYSE: GE) is getting farther and farther away from that $33.75 fair value we assigned for the end of 2008.
  • General Motors (NYSE: GM) is still appearing here, poorer consumers can’t qualify for new cars.
  • Gold Fields Ltd. (NYSE: GFI) is a surprise with high gold prices.
  • Merck Co. Inc. (NYSE: MRK)
  • Qwest Communications (NYSE: Q), wasn’t too long ago they juiced a huge dividend.
  • Sears Holdings (NASDAQ: SHLD) hit a 52-week low but that didn’t hold.
  • Sun Microsystems (NASDAQ: JAVA) is learning that the reverse stock split game isn’t a winning formula.
  • TheStreet.com (NASDAQ: TSCM) as financial subscribers may be less willing to shell out hundreds of dollars if their bullish investments have a hard time being that bullish.
  • Viacom (NYSE: VIA.B) and CBS Corp. (NYSE: CBS) as Sumner Redstone can’t save a crummy environment.

This list was far longer looking than you would guess by this short review.  Here are some of the airlines that hit new 52-week lows:

  • Airtran Holdings Inc. (NYSE: AAI), AMR Corp. (NYSE: AMR), Delta Air Lines (NYSE: DAL), and UAL Corp. (NASDAQ: UAUA).

Jon C. Ogg
June 12, 2008

TheStreet.com Earnings Miss Estimates (TSCM)

TheStreet.com (NASDAQ: TSCM) has reported earnings this morning.  Jim Cramer’s offspring posted a 19% drop in net income to $2.4 million, or $0.07 EPS, but the company posted a 31% increase in revenues to $18.9 million.

First Call had estimates of $0.10 EPS on revenues of $19.95 million.

The initial drop in earnings is so far being tied to the launch of MainStreet.com and other online sites for finance, so it is always possible that the earnings may have some smaller items inside that could be deemed as "extraordinary" expenses.  The revenues were shown as a 18% gain in ads to $6 million, a $2.2 million interactive marketing services revenue from promotions.com (acquired in 2007), a 2% drop in subscription revenues of $8 million, and syndication & licensing rose 290% to $2.7 million (mainly from acquisition of Bankers Financial Products).

As of March 31, 2008, cash, cash equivalents and restricted cash stood at $82.2 million, with essentially no debt.  The company generated cash flow from operations of $4.9 million, and free cash flow totaled $3.5 million.

No trades have been seen pre-market, but shares closed at $9.48 yesterday; its 52-week trading range is $7.46 to $16.74.

Jon C. Ogg
April 29, 2008

TheStreet.com Signs 3-Year Cramer Contract (TSCM)

Many people think of Jim Cramer as being MAD MONEY on CNBC now, but his full-time gig is still at TheStreet.com, Inc. (NASDAQ: TSCM).  The company gave an SEC filing this morning that shows the company has secured his contract ahead.  After all, he is the co-founder and chief voice of the company.  Many would argue that he IS the company.

Jim Cramer has entered into a new employment agreement with a retroactive effective date of January 1, 2008 to author articles for the ad-supported and paid publications (Action Alerts PLUS) product and to "provide reasonable promotional and other services…"

Cramer will receive an annual salary of $1,300,000, $1,560,000 and $1,872,000, respectively, for the three successive years of the agreement.  Cramer will also receive a signing bonus in the amount of $100,000 and will be eligible for an annualized target bonus equal to 75% of salary based upon achievement of company determined financial targets.

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Bleak House: Despair On The 52-Week Low List (GE)(VZ)(GOOG)(C)

Those rummaging through the garbage of 52-week low lists are usually bottom-fishing investors or desperate CEOs. But, the list is so broad that it has become a tableau of the market as a whole, especially the breadth of the market’s decline across almost every industry.

Not a single person in the world is surprised that financials like Bear Stearns (NYSE: BSC), Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), Citigroup (NYSE: C), and Cigna (NYSE: CI) hit bottoms last weak. Over in the car business both Ford (NYSE: F) and GM (NYSE: GM) dropped to lows. Perhaps more surprising Toyota (NYSE: TM), the world’s most successful car company, came close. Given its vast resources and cash position, that news said more than the GM or Ford numbers did.

Airlines, as expected, were crushed. AMR (NYSE: AMR) was at the front of the Charge of the Light Brigade. Retail would also expected to be down and many stocks in that sector were at bottom including the previously popular Best Buy (NYSE: BBY).

The newspaper industry, the dying art of people reading information off something other than a computer screen, also had a number of lows, led by Gannett (NYSE:GCI) and McClatchy NYSE: MNI).

If the painful trend ended here, with these sectors, it would at least be in line with what might be expected in troubled industries in a slowing economy. But, it does not.

Communications companies, in both telecom and cable, hit bottoms. Verizon (NYSE: VZ) did the limbo. So did Comcast (NYSE: CMCSA). These firms are known for the breadth of their businesses, astonishing cash flow, and iron-clads balance sheets. By the market’s logic, that data meant little.

Tech also was sucked under. That included some of the first class companies in the sector like Adobe (NYSE: ADBE), Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA), and Infosys (NASDAQ: INFY). This is worth some analysis. NVDA is expected to have a 37% increase in revenue this quarter and EPS that will move from $.28 last year to $.39. The company is down almost 50% from its 52-week high. Analysts expect Infosys revenue to be up 32% for the current period. Wall St.’s whirlpool is taking under strong companies as it pulls down the weak.

The same might be said for Big Pharma. Bristol-Myers (NYSE: BMY), Pfizer (NYSE: PFE), and Merck (NYSE: MRK) all posted lows. The markets have been worried about their product pipelines, but that issue has not become more acute recently and these companies are still, for the time being, cash machines. Most have yields above 1.5% and some are much higher.

Deep trouble has also extended to the internet content business which has done well since the tech crash of 2000. Last week TheStreet.com (NASDAQ: TSCM), CNET (NASDAQ: CNET), and IACI (NASDAQ: IACI) dropped to 52-week lows. Given the low fixed costs that these companies sport along with pristine balance sheets, they would seem to be due some break.

Older line media companies, which have said they are not seeing any profound slowing in their businesses we sold off in a near panic dropping CBS (NYSE: CBS) and Time Warner (NYSE: TWX) to the lowest end of their charts.

Alternative energy stocks, not so long ago darlings, pushed to new bottoms. Verasun (NYSE: VSE) and Trina Solar (NYSE: TSL) could not hold on. Even the high cost of oil could not give them buoyancy

The most stunning part of all of this is the capitulation of the blue chips. Boeing (NYSE: BA) hit a 52-week low. The Air Force contract it lost is not worth enough spread over its life to do any real damage. Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) bottomed telling Wall St. that a company with 60% market share and 50% earnings growth was not worth some premium.

And, General Electric (NYSE: GE), the market’s poster boy for American services and industry, hit its low for 52-weeks. It has not backed off its robust projections for EPS improvement. It credit ratings remain the envy of almost every other company in the world. Its business and geographic diversity are supposed to make it the business equivalent of Plato’s ideal of the perfect state.

To look for investor concern about how deep and long the recession will be, the 52-week low list may be the most telling set of numbers available. It is an unusually broad and deep data-base. It is about money, and without emotion.

The list is saying that things are worse off than they seem.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Record Revenues on TheStreet.com (TSCM)

TheStreet.com (NASDAQ: TSCM) has just posted earnings at $0.17 pro forma EPS on a 38% jump in revenues to a record $19.9 million.  First Call had estimates at $0.16 on $19.95 million in revenues.

TheStreet.com reported a 125% year-over-year increase in non-financial advertising revenue, which is now 52% of ad revenues; total advertising revenue reached a record $6.8 million, which is a 43% increase over Q4-2006.  Paid services revenue in the fourth quarter of 2007 (subscription, syndication, licensing and information services) rose 8% to $10.4 million for the quarter.  Syndication is winning out over subscriptions it looks like: subscription revenues fell 4% to $8.5 million while syndication, licensing, and info services rose 142% to $1.9 million.

Jon C. Ogg
February 21, 2008