• Brown & Brown Reported Earnings of 32 Cents a Share
    Posted by on July 24th, 2006 at 5:22 pm

    Brown & Brown (BRO) earned 32 cents a share for the second quarer compared with 27 cents last year. Sales jumped 12.7% to $220.8 million.

    J. Hyatt Brown, Chairman and CEO, noted, “We had a very good quarter. We are very pleased with the 6.8% internal growth rate of our core commissions and fees revenue. In fact, all but one of our seven business operating units showed improvement in their internal growth rates over the previous quarter. We are optimistic about the continued growth, development and strength of our company.”
    President and Chief Operating Officer Jim W. Henderson added, “We are also pleased with the performance of our Producers who have completed our in-house sales school, ‘Brown & Brown University.’ These sales professionals are contributing significantly to our organic growth and give us an encouraging glimpse of our future leadership. On the acquisition front, we have completed 12 transactions so far in 2006 with combined annualized revenue of approximately $32 million and we continue to be very positive about acquisition opportunities.”

  • Blogger Sentiment Poll
    Posted by on July 24th, 2006 at 1:04 pm

    The excellent Ticker Sense has started a Blogger Sentiment Poll. I’ve been invited to participate along with several others stock bloggers.
    Here’s the latest:
    bloggersentiment72406_2.jpg
    Blogger currently have a slightly bearish outlook for the next 30 days, which seems about right.

  • Brain Teaser
    Posted by on July 24th, 2006 at 12:56 pm

    Here’s a fun puzzle I found at Cafe Hayek, via The Stalwart:

    An American tourist goes to a remote island for a vacation. The natives live by a barter system-they have no money. When the tourist tries to pay for his lodging with a check, the owner laughs at first, but then decides that the design on the check is quite attractive and agrees to accept the check in return for lodging. This happens again when the tourist pays for food and some native artwork. The checks are never cashed. They begin to circulate on the island as money, replacing the barter system that had existed before.
    If the checks are never cashed, who pays for the vacation of the tourist? Or is it free?

    What do you think? My thoughts after the jump….

    Read more…

  • Media Star
    Posted by on July 24th, 2006 at 6:46 am

    If you caught Kudlow & Company on Friday, no, that wasn’t an imposter. It was really me! Thanks for all the e-mails. I was nervous, but once it started, it was a lot of fun.
    Here are some interesting numbers that I wanted to pass along. Right now, a one-year Treasury note is yielding 5.18%. That means you can “lock in” the equivalent of 563 Dow points for the next 12 months. The important point is, while doing this, you’re greatly reducing your market risk.
    Think about it. You can walk away from stocks right now, and say “enough of you.” You wouldn’t have to worry about oil prices or Hezbollah or elections, or any icky stuff like that. Those 563 points are locked in and it translates to a future Dow of over 11,430.
    Don’t worry. I’m not saying that investors ought to pull up stakes and head for the hills, but I want to show you how the markets work. There’s a constant battle going on between the stock and bond markets for your money. When bond yields creep up, and earnings growth slows, investors rotate out of stocks and gobble up bonds. When the opposite happens, investors drive stocks higher.
    Earnings growth has been impressive, and I think it will continue to be strong. But Price/Earnings ratios have been compressed. In fact, they’ve compressed and compressed, and compressed some more.
    That’s a rough environment for stock investing. It’s like a runner trying to fight a strong headwind. Even very profitable companies have seen their stocks flat line. But the reason I still like stocks is that earnings are projected to grow by 14.1% for this year, and 10.5% for next year. Plus, that 10.5% number seems a little low. This means that the Dow could advance by, say, 7% and P/E ratios would still have compressed.
    It’s never safe to expect earnings multiples to expand, but even if P/E ratios continue to fall, stocks can still beat bonds. The next thing to watch for is earnings guidance from companies for the third quarter.
    This week, six more Buy List stocks report earnings. Brown & Brown (BRO) reports later today. AFLAC (AFL) and Fiserv (FISV) are up tomorrow. Fair Isaac (FIC) and Varian Medical (VAR) follow on Wednesday. Then Respironics (RESP) on Thursday.

  • Private Equity Strikes Again
    Posted by on July 24th, 2006 at 6:36 am

    The HCA (HCA) deal is on again! I guess no one wants to be on the stock market anymore.
    Last week, the WSJ reported that the deal fell apart at the last minute. Now it looks like Bain, KKR and Merrill Lynch will offer $21 billion for HCA.
    The company is the largest hospital operator in the country. It was started by Bill Frist’s father and brother, although the senator no longer owns any HCA stock.
    Private equity is up 77% this year, and I think it will continue. Companies are sitting on huge amounts of cash. Microsoft (MSFT) currently has about $34 billion in the bank, and ExxonMobil (XOM) has $36 billion.

  • Dell Delivers Another Profit Warning
    Posted by on July 21st, 2006 at 12:06 pm

    From Reuters:

    Dell Inc. slashed its outlook on Friday, warning that quarterly earnings would fall about 30 percent short of forecasts because of a slowdown in the computer market, driving its stock to nearly five-year lows.
    Shares of the world’s biggest personal computer maker fell 12 percent after it issued the disappointing outlook, which it blamed on discounting in a softening market for computers. The result, it said, would be second-quarter earnings of 21 cents to 23 cents a share on revenue of about $14 billion.
    The company, whose sales have slowed in recent quarters amid tough competition from Hewlett-Packard Co. and complaints about poor after-sale services, had been expected to earn 32 cents a share on revenue of $14.2 billion, according to analysts polled by Reuters Estimates.
    “Dell, they are having problems because internally they are in disarray,” said Eric Ross, an analyst at ThinkEquity Partner, who has a “sell” rating on the stock.
    “Dell has done an amazing job of growing, but they don’t know how to retrench very well. Inside Dell, they don’t know where to turn,” he said.
    Rather than its own problems, Dell pointed to broader industry challenges as the reason for its earnings warning. Analysts said those issues could indeed bite rivals like HP, whose stock fell 3.5 percent.
    But they also said any industry troubles would hurt Dell more than others, exacerbating problems that have already caused the company to post disappointing revenue in four straight quarters.

  • At Least the Brits Are Impressed
    Posted by on July 21st, 2006 at 6:40 am

    The London Telegraph looks at U.S. corporate earnings reports for the second quarter, and is impressed:

    America is on track to record its longest unbroken run of profits growth with most of the country’s biggest companies continuing to beat expectations in the unfolding second-quarter results season.
    The better than expected numbers will quell fears that high energy prices and a housing slowdown are holding back the US’s economic expansion. Figures from Thomson Financial show that for every company disappointing Wall Street forecasts, more than five are coming in ahead of target.
    With results already announced by a fifth of the companies in the S&P 500 index, average earnings growth of 13pc so far puts the consensus forecast of 12.8pc growth for the second quarter within reach.
    Hitting that target will see Wall Street celebrating a 12th consecutive quarter of double-digit earnings growth, matching the 1992 to 1995 winning streak. With gains of about 15pc already pencilled in for the third and fourth quarters, the current surge is set to be the longest run of success since 1950.

  • From the New York Times Conference Call
    Posted by on July 20th, 2006 at 7:42 pm

    Courtesy of Seeking Alpha:

    Peter Appert – Goldman Sachs
    Is the newsprint — can you just give us a rough idea of percentages from each of those?
    Leonard P. Forman
    No, Peter. We don’t disclose that information.
    Peter Appert – Goldman Sachs
    Well, you’re leaving, so now could be the time. By the way, we’re going to miss you a ton, Len.
    Leonard P. Forman
    I signed a non-disclosure agreement, Peter.
    Peter Appert – Goldman Sachs
    Okay, thanks.

  • It’s Earnings Time
    Posted by on July 20th, 2006 at 4:21 pm

    Three of our Buy List stocks reported earnings today. Here’s the rundown.
    Danaher (DHR) earned, after a few icky charges, 80 cents per share, two pennies more than estimates. The company also raised its estimate range for the year from $3.07 to $3.17 a share, to $3.15 to $3.22 a share.
    I never say I love a stock, but I’m in seriously like with Danaher. The company pegged third-quarter earnings at 77 cents a share to 82 cents a share. The shares gapped up to $65 this morning.
    SEI Investments (SEIC) earned 57 cents a share, also two cents more than estimates. The stock pulled back today, but it had a big day yesterday. The stock is our second-best performer year-to-date.
    Finally, Golden West Financial (GDW) earned $1.25 a share which was four cents below estimates. The stock is down, but there’s not too much to worry about. Since Wachovia (WB) announced the merger, shares of GDW have traded as a proxy for shares of WB. Wachovia, incidentally, reported earnings of $1.18 a share, three cents ahead of estimates.

  • The Bambi Cam
    Posted by on July 20th, 2006 at 12:41 pm

    Marketwatch’s tech writer, Bambi Francisco, is in France right now cycling behind the Tour de France.
    Check out these videos she made (here, here and here) from her helmet camera.