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Posts Tagged ‘GE’

Buy the Rumor, Sell the News

October 21st, 2009 Brian No comments

Great Earnings this morning (Tuesday, October 20) from CAT, UTX, PFE and KO. CAT guidance was the economy is improving much faster than expected and the risk of a double dip recession is now "very low" in 2010. CAT (a proxy for the export driven, industrial equipment market) beat earnings estimates by 85% and had higher revenues than forecast (which is supposedly what the market is begging for). So, what happened to its stock price? Sold off.

This earnings season has become the typical denial event by the Bears. The hardcore bear traders try and sell down every rally and discount any good news as either lies or misinterpretation. They first criticize the weakness of economic growth and unemployment levels, and then turn around and criticize the Fed for using accomodative policy to ramp back up the economy.  (Earth to Bears: you can't have it both ways, unless Armageddon is your objective, in which case, tight policy will deliver the economic disaster you are awaiting)

This market is still climbing a huge "wall of worry" and so it will continue climbing higher (until all the Bears throw in the towel). When I stop seeing Michael Pento, David Rosenberg , Peter Schiff, Joe Battapaglia, etc on CNBC blasting the Fed and the market, that is when I will Sell.  There is no Euphoria.  There are no "rose-colored glasses.  There are only Bears (likely still short since SP500 of 666) begging for their wishes to be fulfilled.  Please keep ripping the market and economy.  It is making me wealthy.

Today, I was able to roll my October FLRs that were exercised on Friday to November sold puts, and picked up another 0.50 per contract in the process. I also flipped my BHP for a 2.47 gain the past 12 days (closed my Nov 70 puts at 1.75 and opened same number of Nov 75 puts at 4.50 a few minutes later) during the morning sell off. I am now waiting to get back into EWZ as Brazil sold off big today (down to 70 from 76). I will wait for $67 to get back in with some DITM calls on Mar 2010.

I also doubled down on my GE Mar 2010 Calls ($10s) at $5.80. They had been almost $7 a few days ago. Now I have 10 contracts (1000 shares) plus another 500 shares of GE.

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Categories: Options, Trading

Doug Kass Leans Against the Market

August 5th, 2009 Brian 1 comment

One thing about Doug Kass, is that he is willing to stick his neck out. But it sure seems he will get it cut off this time. I don't know why he says that the advance is narrowing; instead, I see that it is rotating and broadening which is very bullish as sectors left behind are now beginning to catch up. If the break above 1000 on the SPY holds, as it did today, for another couple days (William O'Neil of IBD says 4 days are needed to confirm a breakout), it will probably head up to 1100 on its way to 1300. I don't know if it can get there by year end, but there are some that do.

Leadership is narrowing, speculative stocks are erupting, and shorts are pulling their hair out.~I still say the advance has a relatively small and finite life now....

A burgeoning fiscal deficit and the financial instability of our state and local municipalities are among two of the most significant of a number of nontraditional headwinds that consumers, corporations and investors face in the future. Though the bulls generally agree with these intermediate-term challenges (especially the spiraling deficit and a nervous U.S. dollar stalemate), they generally dismiss them both over the short term, favoring the belief that the current upside surprises in earnings will dominate the market landscape in influence.

I would argue that the aforementioned challenges are ever more predictable in consequence and will serve as a governor to further gains in market valuations. Not only are they inhibiting but they are also potentially oppressive influences that have been too readily put on the back burner in the face of a relentless market advance over the last five months.

An avalanche of spending by the public sector is now following an avalanche of spending by the private sector. In essence, we are (perhaps necessarily) fighting the slowdown with the same sort of incendiary kerosene that put us into the mess.

Profligate spending comes at a cost, a cost that we will experience sooner than later.  -  Doug Kass, August 3, 2009

There was a big move in financials and RE the past two days. Industrials are also perking up (I made a quick profit on Fluor, but would now like to get a little more before earnings on Monday). GE is both an industrial and a financial, so it has done very nicely the past 10 days, going from $12 to $14, which is almost a 20% move. I am adding to GE. Its 200 day EMA is 14.93 and if it breaks that barrier, I see it going to $20. I am using call options to add to my position (GEWLA). I also sold the Sept $17 puts today for $3.10.

Another stock to look at is the ETF for industrials: XLI. I sold puts on that today, but would also look at buying the stock or buying calls. Industrials are early cyclicals and are just now starting to move. Rather than buy BAC, I am adding to UYG by purchasing March 2010 calls at the $6 strike. UYG has a lot of BAC in it, plus the other big financial names like JPM, WFC and USB. They are at $0.70 a contract right now. If UYG goes to $10 by Jan. 1 (it was $20 last Sept), the return will be $3 on a $0.70 investment per share, which is a 400% return. But if it goes to $10, I will probably hold it till expiration because I think it might go back up to $20 while BAC is moving from $15 to $30.

Kass is stuck on his huge multi-year trading range theme (800 - 1000 on the SP500), just like Bill Gross. But if the Feds continue to support the economy and the Asian market continues its great growth and puts demand on our exports, there is no reason that the RE sector can't repair itself and unemployment can't move back down to around 6-7% over the next 12-18 months. That will ruin the bear arguments and will support a 1300 market as earnings continue to come back.

Keep an eye on the Feds. They are most important in the next 12 months in the market.

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Categories: Investing, Investment, Trading

Buffett Speaks on 2nd Stimulus Program

July 9th, 2009 Brian No comments

Warren spoke today, to the fabulous Julia Boorstin of CNBC (what great hair she has!). I don't particularly care for 's politics and his ideas on taxation. But when it comes to economics and business prospects, is without match, as his investing record shows.

I agree entirely with him about the outlook for our economy the next few years. He makes the statement: "I don't know if the movie is 2 or 4 hours long, but I know it has a happy ending". What a positive point of view. More of us should share that perspective.

I am piggy-backing on many of 's trades since late 2008 owning: GE, WFC, USB and GS.   These are all global franchises that for the most part, came through the crash without much damage (GE is much healthier than its stock price suggests and is a raging bargain).

Regarding the housing crisis and home building, makes the point that the housing crisis precipitated our economic crisis (but he did not lay the blame properly at the feet of a laissez faire Congress that eliminated the regulatory protections needed and cheerled the mortgage industry into the ground).  His medicine: don't build any more houses; a little simplistic, but maybe tongue in cheek.  We need to work off the inventory we already have. I think that is pretty obvious and goes without saying. But he said it by way of making the case that excess housing is the root of our problems and our economy won't truly mend until housing inventories are once again in balance.

Without saying any more, here is the interview:

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Ex-Con Mike Milken Shows Us the Way

April 22nd, 2009 Brian No comments

Why Capital Structure Matters

Companies that repurchased stock

Thirty-five years ago business publications were writing that major money-center banks would fail, and quoted investors who said, "I'll never own a stock again!" Meanwhile, some state and local governments as well as utilities seemed on the brink of collapse. Corporate debt often sold for pennies on the dollar while profitable, growing companies were starved for capital.

[Commentary] Chad Crowe

If that all sounds familiar today, it's worth remembering that 1974 was also a turning point. With financial institutions weakened by the recession, public and private markets began displacing banks as the source of most corporate financing. Bonds rallied strongly in 1975-76, providing underpinning for the stock market, which rose 75%. Some high-yield funds achieved unleveraged, two-year rates of return approaching 100%.

The accessibility of capital markets has grown continuously since 1974. Businesses are not as dependent on banks, which now own less than a third of the loans they originate. In the first quarter of 2009, many corporations took advantage of low absolute levels of interest rates to raise $840 billion in the global bond market. That's 100% more than in the first quarter of 2008, and is a typical increase at this stage of a market cycle. Just as in the 1974 recession, investment-grade companies have started to reliquify. Once that happens, the market begins to open for lower-rated bonds. Thus BB- and B-rated corporations are now raising capital through new issues of equity, debt and convertibles.

This cyclical process today appears to be where it was in early 1975, when balance sheets began to improve and corporations with strong capital structures started acquiring others. In a single recent week, Roche raised more than $40 billion in the public markets to help finance its merger with Genentech. Other companies such as Altria, HCA, Staples and Dole Foods, have used bond proceeds to pay off short-term bank debt, strengthening their balance sheets and helping restore bank liquidity. These new corporate bond issues have provided investors with positive returns this year even as other asset groups declined.

The late Nobel laureate Merton Miller and I, although good friends, long debated whether this kind of capital-structure management is an essential job of corporate leaders. Miller believed that capital structure was not important in valuing a company's securities or the risk of investing in them.

My belief -- first stated 40 years ago in a graduate thesis and later confirmed by experience -- is that capital structure significantly affects both value and risk. The optimal capital structure evolves constantly, and successful corporate leaders must constantly consider six factors -- the company and its management, industry dynamics, the state of capital markets, the economy, government regulation and social trends. When these six factors indicate rising business risk, even a dollar of debt may be too much for some companies.

Over the past four decades, many companies have struggled with the wrong capital structures. During cycles of credit expansion, companies have often failed to build enough liquidity to survive the inevitable contractions. Especially vulnerable are enterprises with unpredictable revenue streams that end up with too much debt during business slowdowns. It happened 40 years ago, it happened 20 years ago, and it's happening again.

Overleveraging in many industries -- especially airlines, aerospace and technology -- started in the late 1960s. As the perceived risk of investing in such businesses grew in the 1970s, the price at which their debt securities traded fell sharply. But by using the capital markets to deleverage -- by paying off these securities at lower, discounted prices through tax-free exchanges of equity for debt, debt for debt, assets for debt and cash for debt -- most companies avoided default and saved jobs. (Congress later imposed a tax on the difference between the tax basis of the debt and the discounted price at which it was retired.)

Issuing new equity can of course depress a stock's value in two ways: It increases the supply, thus lowering the price; and it "signals" that management thinks the stock price is high relative to its true value. Conversely, a company that repurchases some of its own stock signals an undervalued stock. Buying stock back, the theory goes, will reduce the supply and increase the price. Dozens of finance students have earned Ph.D.s by describing such signaling dynamics. But history has shown that both theories about lowering and raising stock prices are wrong with regard to deleveraging by companies that are seen as credit risks.

Two recent examples are Alcoa and Johnson Controls each of which saw its stock price increase sharply after a new equity issue last month. This has happened repeatedly over the past 40 years. When a company uses the proceeds from issuance of stock or an equity-linked security to deleverage by paying off debt, the perception of credit risk declines, and the stock price generally rises.

The decision to increase or decrease leverage depends on market conditions and investors' receptivity to debt. The period from the late-1970s to the mid-1980s generally favored debt financing. Then, in the late '80s, equity market values rose above the replacement costs of such balance-sheet assets as plants and equipment for the first time in 15 years. It was a signal to deleverage.

In this decade, many companies, financial institutions and governments again started to overleverage, a concern we noted in several Milken Institute forums. Along with others, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, we also pointed out that when companies reduce fixed obligations through asset exchanges, any tax on the discount ultimately costs jobs. Congress responded in the recent stimulus bill by deferring the tax for five years and spreading the liability over an additional five years. As a result, companies have already moved to repurchase or exchange more than $100 billion in debt to strengthen their balance sheets. That has helped save jobs.

The new law is also helpful for companies that made the mistake of buying back their stock with new debt or cash in the years before the market's recent fall. These purchases peaked at more than $700 billion in 2007 near the market top -- and in many cases, the value of the repurchased stock has dropped by more than half and has led to ratings downgrades. Particularly hard hit were some of the world's largest companies (i.e., General Electric, AIG, Merrill Lynch); financial institutions (Hartford Financial, Lincoln National, Washington Mutual); retailers (Macy's, Home Depot); media companies (CBS, Gannett); and industrial manufacturers (Eastman Kodak, Motorola, Xerox).

Without stock buybacks, many such companies would have little debt and would have greater flexibility during this period of increased credit constraints. In other words, their current financial problems are self-imposed. Instead of entering the recession with adequate liquidity and less debt with long maturities, they had the wrong capital structure for the time.

The current recession started in real estate, just as in 1974. Back then, many real-estate investment trusts lost as much as 90% of their value in less than a year because they were too highly leveraged and too dependent on commercial paper at a time when interest rates were doubling. This time around it was a combination of excessive leverage in real-estate-related financial instruments, a serious lowering of underwriting standards, and ratings that bore little relationship to reality. The experience of both periods highlights two fallacies that seem to recur in 20-year cycles: that any loan to real estate is a good loan, and that property values always rise. Fact: Over the past 120 years, home prices have declined about 40% of the time.

History isn't a sine wave of endlessly repeated patterns. It's more like a helix that brings similar events around in a different orbit. But what we see today does echo the 1970s, as companies use the capital markets to push out debt maturities and pay off loans. That gives them breathing room and provides hope that history will repeat itself in a strong economic recovery.

It doesn't matter whether a company is big or small. Capital structure matters. It always has and always will.

Mr. Milken is chairman of the Milken Institute.

 

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Trading Update – April 15, 2009

April 15th, 2009 Brian No comments

This market is looking very strong. Every day there is another challenge by the bears, and every day, the bulls shake it off and drive the market further up.

Today, the challenge was to Intel (INTC). It reported good earnings (well above consensus) and also decent future prospects, which is a big change for people in the tech space. The future prospects, though, were less than what some analysts expected, so the stock was sold off on profit taking. But now it is bouncing back along with the tech sector and the whole market.

Same thing happened with the financials this week. Goldman reported great earnings on Monday, stock sold off from $140 to $115 by this morning, and has now bounced back to $120 as of noon. JPM reports tomorrow and we may see a big day after the knee-jerk sell-off.

I am positioned for all of this as I have bought more Proshare Ultra Financials (UYG) today at $3.33 (sold off 1000 shares on Monday at $3.58 to take some profit, after buying for $3.15 last Friday). I have another order in at $3.05, should it fall that far, but I don't think it will. I also have an order in for INTC at $15.05 trying to catch a bounce down from a high of $16.40 yesterday leading up to earnings. To catch more of the tech rally, I also have another order in for both (tech ETF) stock at $16.30 and put options for the May 17 (XLKQQ) at $1 a contract.

I am still of the belief that we will trade up like this in sawtooth fashion with a bullish trend through April and into May. Then, we will bump into the 200 day EMA for SP500 at around 970. That will represent long term resistance coinciding with the typical summer selling season. We will then move down to around 760 through the summer selloff. But until then, we have another 15% to rally and good trading opptys.

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Categories: Trading