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May 9, 2008 Nicholas Financial's Earnings Yesterday, Nicholas Financial (NICK) reported quarterly earnings of 20 cents a share. That's for the company's fourth quarter which ended on March 31. For the same quarter one year before, NICK earned 29 cents a share. Revenue dropped 6% to $12.7 million. Yes, I still think this is an absurdly undervalued stock. For the entire fiscal year, NICK earned 94 cents a share. That still means the company is going for about seven times earnings. Nicholas Financial has now reported revenue increases for 18 straight years. Posted by Eddy at 3:09 PM | Permalink May 7, 2008The Cyclicals are Still Overpriced Here's a look at something I wrote a lot about last year, it's the ratio of the Morgan Stanley Cyclical Index (^CYC) to the S&P 500 (^GSPC):
The ratio peaked on July 19 and started falling for the next few months. It eventually reached a bottom on January 9 and has been steadily climbing ever since. Posted by Eddy at 12:38 PM | Permalink Signs of Health in the Credit Markets In the course of a three-and-a-half- hour dinner at Manhattan's Smith & Wollensky steakhouse, Emil Assentato went from also-ran to the top of the world's fastest-growing credit market. Posted by Eddy at 10:42 AM | Permalink Harry & David's Withdraws IPO Another victim of the stock market, Harry & David's has withdrawn its IPO due to "market conditions." Although the market has improved considerably over the past two months. Posted by Eddy at 10:37 AM | Permalink Looking at Inflation In today’s NYT, David Leonhardt makes some interesting points about inflation. The things that are rising in price and the ones we pay most attention to. The ones that are flat or falling, we tend to ignore. There is also something particular to inflation that aggravates loss aversion. Price increases are obvious. But price declines are often hidden. The cost of an item stays about the same for years, while everything else gets more expensive and nominal incomes rise. The whole idea of trying to measure inflation is a very difficult task. The reason is that if, say, chicken rises more than beef, consumers will start eating more beef and less chicken. In other words, as prices change, the weighting for each grouping changes. Posted by Eddy at 9:37 AM | Permalink May 6, 2008The World's First Billion Dollar Home
Posted by Eddy at 3:11 PM | Permalink Shorting Puts I've always thought that shorting puts is a fascinating options strategy. A few years ago, I edited a book on the topic. Here's part of the intro: It then occurred to me that there is a great way to acquire stocks without trading what you've got or using borrowed funds. Simply stated, the method involves the sale of long-term options on highly rated companies, using the premiums received to further your investment program. There is no interest paid on the funds received; the funds never have to be repaid (because they have not been borrowed); and the equity requirements needed to do this are much lower than those for regular margin buying. Although I adapted and perfected this technique to suit my own needs and situation, it can be used by any investor who has built up some measure of equity and would like to acquire additional stocks without contributing additional capital. As we shall see later, the potential benefits far outweigh any incremental risks, especially when appropriate hedges and proper safeguards are incorporated. Now I learn that Warren Buffett is using the same strategy: Buffett arranged his multibillion-dollar positions by selling puts on these indexes. Berkshire will only have to make payments if the respective indexes fall below the levels they were issued at. "In the meantime, the premiums we have received are ours to invest freely," Buffett says in the quarterly report. At the end of 2007, the conglomerate had $4.5 billion in premiums and $4.6 billion in liabilities. Posted by Eddy at 10:25 AM | Permalink Morgan Stanley Is Being Sued Over James Brown's Estate How can you not like this story? Brown’s estate has been at the centre of legal controversy. The 16-month scrap over his money has included allegations of embezzlement by some of his managers, wives, partners and offspring, as well as a fight over the veracity of the will. Posted by Eddy at 10:19 AM | Permalink Commodity Prices in Historical Perspective Here's an interesting report on commodity prices from Wachovia. They point out that surges in commodity prices are fairly common. In fact, that latest rally pales in comparison to some recent rallies. The report also includes the CRB Index adjusted for inflation (Exhibit 2), a chart I've run a few times here. Over the long haul, commodity prices have consistently underperformed inflation. Posted by Eddy at 10:06 AM | Permalink May 5, 2008Best Lede I've Read Today From Reuters: At least two analysts said Bank of America will likely lower its purchase price for Countrywide Financial , with Friedman, Billings Ramsey analyst saying the bank may bring down its deal price to the $0 to $2 level or completely walk away from the deal. I like that: They're lowering their offer to the $0 level. Didn't that also happen in Godfather 2? Posted by Eddy at 3:12 PM | Permalink How Much Not to Have Tea With Him How would you like a film role with Johnny Depp, tea with Alan Greenspan or tennis lessons from Andre Agassi? If their home is in foreclosure, then yes, they probably did get investment advice. Here's the page to place a bid. Posted by Eddy at 12:20 PM | Permalink RIP: Robert Vesco Robert Vesco, one of the great financial swindlers, is dead. Given that it's Vesco, I guess I should say that he's allegedly dead. It's takes a real genius to flee to Cuba. Then get arrested in Cuba for double-crossing Castro. If Mr. Vesco indeed eluded the American authorities until his final day, it was the fitting end to his nearly four decades on the run. He was wanted for, among other things, bilking some $200 million from credulous investors in the 1970s, making an illegal contribution to Richard M. Nixon’s 1972 presidential campaign and trying to arrange a deal during the Carter administration to let Libya buy American planes in exchange for bribes to United States officials. Posted by Eddy at 11:57 AM | Permalink JobVent On NICK I noticed this posting on Nicholas Financial (NICK) at JobVent, a site where you can complain about your company. Certainly one of the poorest managed companies I've ever experienced. The executive management is way too young and inexperienced and has never worked in any significant roles for other companies, so they only know one way to manage - through fear & intimidation. They install branch managers and expect them to turn a branch around in 60 days or they're pretty much out the door. Talk about cheap? This company expects its employees to scrub the toilets, change the light bulbs, sweep the floors, etc..You name it they are too cheap to out-source to a 3rd party. Probably could be a highly successful company if the CEO would get out of the way, hire some outside executive management and spend more time developing employees. Obviously, since I don't know the source, I can't say how reliable it is. However, sometimes these rants can tell you a lot about the firm. Posted by Eddy at 11:15 AM | Permalink Yahoo Plunges I don't have much to add to the Yahoo/Microsoft story beyond the obvious. I can't believe Yahoo (YHOO) can be so out-of-touch. Microsoft (MSFT) was willing to pay $33 a share, and Yahoo wanted $37. I wouldn't have paid $15. The company simply isn't worth it. Yahoo is going to get smacked, and they really deserve it. Posted by Eddy at 11:10 AM | Permalink May 4, 2008Media Self-Absorption Watch Check out this unintentionally hilarious paragraph from a completely fatuous editorial in today’s Washington Post. Chelsea has been winning kudos in this campaign as an effective surrogate for Hillary Rodham Clinton, but I keep wondering whether she's an effective representative for us. Like me, Chelsea's a twentysomething (28 to my 29), a member of the generation that, as it happens, I spend a lot of time learning and writing about. We're ironic, sarcastic and self-deprecating, a reflection of the pop culture and politics that played out while we grew up in the 1980s, 1990s and onward. We were weaned on Chevy Chase movies ("Spies Like Us," of course, being the best), grunge and MTV's "The Real World" (seasons 1 and 2 only, please) and trained by the Onion, Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert to detect spin in the most banal comments. People my age shed privacy at the nearest high-speed Internet connection and, more often than not, display the very grown-up qualities of self-awareness and self-reflection. Allow me to translate: "Me! Me! Me! Me! Me! Me!" I have a feeling that self-awareness somehow escaped this writer. His description of his generation probably accurately describes about, say, 0.3% of the population. I'm having a hard time deciding what's the worst sentence. Maybe this? Maybe Chelsea reached this workplace ideal of neatly combining altruism with affluence at her first job at McKinsey, an elite consulting firm, where she specialized in health care, or possibly now, at her hedge fund. I won't even go into the part where he talks about his near-stalking of Ms. Clinton. After that, it gets kinda creepy. Posted by Eddy at 9:22 PM | Permalink May 3, 2008Virtual Recession Sparks NY Times Ad Sales Halt With the nation on the verge of "a near-virtual likely recession", The New York Times stopped selling advertising today in an effort to help readers conserve “what little money they have left.” Posted by Eddy at 11:03 AM | Permalink May 2, 2008What Recession? An editorial from the New York Sun: The common definition of a recession is two consecutive quarters of negative economic growth, as we reminded readers in a January 24, 2008, editorial, "Recession Looms?" Well, despite the determination of politicians in Washington to deliver a "stimulus" to counter a recession, despite the persistence of the huffing and puffing from Paul Krugman about how the economy is about to go into a recession, despite the harrumphing of even the likes of Alan Greenspan, somehow the recession is proving elusive. Posted by Eddy at 11:15 AM | Permalink May 1, 2008Ricepec Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Myanmar and Laos are thinking about creating a rice cartel: The plan appears to be in a nascent stage. “I think it’s time to do it, probably within the term of this administration,” Noppadon Pattama, Thailand’s foreign minister, said Wednesday. Posted by Eddy at 2:58 PM | Permalink The S&P 500 Total Return Index Including dividends, the S&P 500 is down -5.0% for the year, and up 8.3% for the decade.
Here's the same chart adjusted for inflation. The CPI for April hasn't come out yet so I assumed 0.5%.
Posted by Eddy at 2:26 PM | Permalink Timmay Radio Is Born If you’ve never heard of Tim Sykes, at this point, that’s probably your fault. He’s a one-man media, blogging and trading empire. Tim has redesigned his site which now includes a podcast with yours truly. Enjoy. |
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