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  • Morning News: November 10, 2016
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 10th, 2016 at 6:32 am

    Wall Street Rebounds After Donald Trump’s Victory

    Markets Rise as Investors Buy Into Trump

    Theresa May Promises ‘Golden Era’ in UK-Chinese Relations

    Oil Output Surge Piles Pressure on OPEC as IEA Warns on Price

    Egypt Issues $4 Billion Private Bond Placement, Mulls Eurobond Delay

    For Mexico, a Long List of Dangers Accompany Trump’s Presidency

    Trump Promised to Repeal Obamacare. Now What?

    Trump Expected to Seek Deep Cuts in Business Regulations

    Alibaba’s Singles’ Day Will Break Records Again This Year. Here’s What Donald Trump Can Learn From That

    Why Chinese Car Sales Are Surging Faster Than Expected

    Siemens Plans to Spin Off Health Unit as CEO Sharpens Focus

    Why Starbucks’ Christmas Cups Are Special This Year

    Yahoo Knew About the Breach in 2014

    Jeff Miller: Post Election: Pause, Reflect, and Act Carefully

    Howard Lindzon: The University of Donald Trump … How to Survive

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: November 9, 2016
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 9th, 2016 at 7:03 am

    Republican Donald Trump Is Elected President Of United States And Global Markets Plunge

    Trump’s Victory Shakes Europe’s Geopolitical Order

    What Trump’s Win Means for the Fed

    News Media Yet Again Misreads America’s Complex Pulse

    Why India Pulled Big Bank Bills From Circulation

    China Oct Factory Prices Rise More Than Forecast, Consumer Prices Also Pick Up

    Big Oil Looks Past Profit Crunch as Cash Flow Shows Recovery

    Alphabet Pushes Out Leaders of Drone-Delivery Project

    Carlsberg Upgrades Full Year Outlook Despite Sales Dip

    Dish Network Profit Jumps; Subscriber Loss Smaller Than Expected

    Warner Bros., Quietly Thriving, Recasts Its Own Story

    GoPro Recalls New Karma Drone

    Samsung Runs Newspaper Ads on Note 7 Fires: ‘We Are Truly Sorry’

    Josh Brown: Off the Lows ™

    Cullen Roche: What Does President Trump Mean for the Economy & Market?

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: November 8, 2016
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 8th, 2016 at 6:23 am

    Safeguarding As The ‘Fear Index’ Surges

    Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump Keep Asia Markets Guessing

    Mexico is Feeling Jitters Over the Prospect of a Trump Victory

    An Idea to Revolutionize Europe’s Debt Could Be Coming of Age

    Voters Take Note: China’s Trade Surplus With U.S. Is Shrinking

    Iran to Sign $6 Billion Gas-Field Deal With Total, CNPC

    Dubai, Hyperloop One to Study Potential for Abu Dhabi Line

    Toyota Raises Operating Profit Forecast, Says Cost Cuts To Curb Yen Impact

    US Senate Panel Urges FTC to Launch Antitrust Probe of Mylan

    News Corp Swings to a Loss

    CBS Taps Moelis, Goldman to Advise on Possible Viacom Merger

    Priceline Shares Hit All-Time High After Profit and Revenue Beat Estimates

    TV Networks Face a Skeptical Public on Election Night

    Josh Brown: How to Become a “2%” Investor

    Jeff Carter: The Oligopoly and Crony Employeeism

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Updates on Today’s Market
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 7th, 2016 at 10:40 pm

    I wanted to add a few comments on today’s market activity. The S&P 500 had its best day since March 1. The stock market had fallen nine days in a row, but those declines were quite modest. Today’s big gain won back more than 70% of what had been lost in nine days.

    Gold had its worst day in a few weeks, and the Dow retook 18,000. The Dow also crossed back above its 50-day moving average.

    big11072016

    Today was the best pre-election day for the market in 84 years. All 20 Buy List stocks closed higher. We had especially big gains from Biogen (BIIB) and Cognizant Technology (CTSH), the latter due to its impressive earnings report, and the former due to a positive drug study.

    A few weeks ago, shares of CTSH fell sharply after the company said it may have been involved in some illegal activities. Until now, we haven’t had any more news. Now we have some details from Reuters:

    IT services provider Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp said on Monday some senior managers may have participated in or failed to take action to prevent making about $5 million in “potentially improper payments” primarily related to real estate and procurement in India.

    Cognizant, whose shares were up 4 percent at $54.18 in early trading, said the material weakness existed as of Dec. 31, 2015, and continues to exist in subsequent interim periods.

    The company also said its ongoing internal investigation had identified a material weakness in its internal control over financial reporting.

    If the payments are limited to $5 million, this would probably be well below investors’ worst case, Cowen and Co analysts said in a research note.

    Cognizant said in September it was conducting an internal investigation into possible violations of U.S. anti-corrupt practices laws related to payments in India.

    The company also said that the people possibly involved with the payments are no longer with the company or in a senior management position.

    The company said in September that President Gordon Coburn had resigned, giving no reason for his departure, and that he would be replaced by Rajeev Mehta, the head of IT services.

    Cognizant said in a regulatory filing on Monday that it had not maintained an “effective tone at the top”.

    “We will continue the investigation until we are confident that we have tracked it all down,” Chief Financial Officer Karen McLoughlin said on a conference call, adding that it was “early days” in the investigation.

    I think this is very good news. It shows that CTSH is on top of it, and it doesn’t appear to be a very large deal in financial terms. Bear in mind that CTSH plunged more than 13% when the news first came out on September 30.

  • The Power of One Stock
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 7th, 2016 at 2:11 pm

    Here’s a good lesson on what one stock can do to your portfolio.

    In 1939, IBM was taken out of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. It was put back 40 years later, in 1979. Over those four decades, IBM was an outstanding stock. It gained over 220 fold!

    So what if IBM had stayed in the Dow? Bryan Taylor at Global Financial Data ran the numbers. First we assume that IBM replaced AT&T. Technically, two stocks left in 1939 (IBM and Nash Motors) and two came in (AT&T and United Aircraft).

    The DJIA stood at 151.1 on March 14, 1939 and 841.98 on June 29, 1979. Since the DJIA is price weighted, you can remove the impact of AT&T on the DJIA by subtracting out the price of AT&T allowing for the splits, and replacing this amount with the value of IBM stock, allowing for the splits in IBM. If you do this, you would find that the DJIA would have been at 23,582 in June 1979, not 841.98. In other words, IBM would have added 22,740 points to the DJIA had it never been removed.

    (Update: Now that I’ve looked this over, I’m not sure the math is correct. I think IBM’s price needs to be adjusted for the Dow’s divisor. I’m not positive, but it’s a strong suspicion. Still, the larger point stands that one huge long-term winner can do wonders for a portfolio.)

    (Update to the previous update: Dividend Investor passes along two articles (here and here) which suggest I’m correct.)

  • WSJ: “Why the Math Behind Passive Investing May Be Wrong”
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 7th, 2016 at 12:19 pm

    Wesley R. Gray has an interesting piece at today’s WSJ: “Why the Math Behind Passive Investing May Be Wrong.” It’s zeroes in on the research of William Sharpe who was an early advocate of passive investing. Here’s a sample:

    A recent essay by Druce Vertes at the CFA Institute, and more formal research by NYU Professor Lasse Pedersen, suggests that Mr. Sharpe’s conclusions might be incorrect. Dr. Pedersen offers a very powerful critique in a new white paper entitled, “Sharpening the Arithmetic of Active Management.” Dr. Pedersen argues Mr. Sharpe’s arithmetic relies on the faulty assumptions that the market never changes and passive investors never need to trade.

    Objectively, these assumptions are false: The market is not static, as new firms are created through IPOs, new shares are issued or repurchased, and indexes are reconstituted all the time. Additionally, passive investors must sometimes rebalance their portfolios, for instance to raise cash or reinvest dividends. In short, passive managers must, and do, trade with active investors.

    As evidence for the need of passive investors to trade, Dr. Pedersen cites the case of a theoretical passive investor in 1927, who never trades. After 10 years, this investor owns only 60% of the market. And this ongoing market turnover is persistent: The average turnover for all equities from 1926 through 2015 was a whopping 7.6% per year. Last year, the Vanguard 500 Index Fund reported turnover of 10%. Clearly, the assumption that passive investors never need to buy and sell is false. And this mechanical need to trade opens passive investors up to exploitation by active investors.

  • Cognizant Earns 86 Cents per Share
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 7th, 2016 at 7:10 am

    This morning, Cognizant Technology Solutions (CTSH) reported third-quarter earnings of 86 cents per share. That was two cents better than estimates. They earned 76 cents per share in last year’s Q3. Cognizant’s quarterly revenue climbed 8.4% to $3.45 billion. Operating margin was 19.3%.

    “We see ongoing client demand for our services across industries and geographies,” said Francisco D’Souza, Chief Executive Officer. “As the physical and digital worlds converge, we have made it easier for clients to work with us by aligning our organizational structure and capabilities around the broader focus of assisting clients drive digital transformations. Our new President, Raj Mehta, who has been a key member of our senior leadership team for two decades, and the broader team of executives are leading our strategic initiatives. They have a proven track record of innovation, execution and an unwavering focus on client service and satisfaction.”

    For Q4, Cognizant sees revenues between $3.45 billion and $3.51 billion, and EPS between 85 and 88 cents per share. That works out to full-year revenue of $13.47 billion to $13.53 billion, and 2016 EPS between $3.38 and $3.41.

    “Third quarter revenue was within, and non-GAAP EPS was slightly above, our guided range, indicating that we continue to execute well on our stated strategy,” said Karen McLoughlin, Chief Financial Officer. “Our solid performance was also reflected in another strong quarter of cash flow generation as cash and investments, net of debt increased by $390 million.”

  • Q3 2016 Earnings Calendar
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 7th, 2016 at 7:03 am

    Sixteen of our 20 Buy List stocks have been reporting Q3 earnings over these past few weeks. Here’s a list of reporting dates, Wall Street’s consensus estimates and actual reported results:

    Company Ticker Date Estimate Result
    Wells Fargo WFC 14-Oct $1.01 $1.03
    Signature Bank SBNY 20-Oct $2.03 $2.11
    Microsoft MSFT 20-Oct $0.68 $0.76
    Alliance Data ADS 20-Oct $4.44 $4.74
    Snap-on SNA 20-Oct $2.15 $2.22
    Wabtec WAB 25-Oct $0.99 $0.94
    CR Bard BCR 25-Oct $2.56 $2.64
    Express Scripts ESRX 25-Oct $1.74 $1.74
    Fiserv FISV 26-Oct $1.13 $1.14
    Biogen BIIB 26-Oct $4.97 $5.19
    AFLAC AFL 27-Oct $1.74 $1.82
    Stericycle SRCL 27-Oct $1.17 $1.24
    Stryker SYK 27-Oct $1.37 $1.39
    Ford Motor F 27-Oct $0.20 $0.26
    Cerner CERN 1-Nov $0.60 $0.59
    Cognizant Tech CTSH 7-Nov $0.84 $0.86
  • Morning News: November 7, 2016
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 7th, 2016 at 6:49 am

    Wall Street Is Expecting Another Down Year for Bonuses

    Oil Leaders Meet in Abu Dhabi, Hoping Market Now at Bottom

    Saudi Aramco Suspends Egypt’s Oil Shipments Until Further Notice

    May’s Indian Outreach Falters as Modi, Tata Play Hard to Get

    Ahead of Brexit, Some Banks Quietly Shift M&A Bankers to Frankfurt

    Emerging Markets Rebound as Mexican Peso Surges on FBI Statement

    Toxic Smog in World’s Most Polluted City May Soon Hit Economy

    China’s Internet Controls Will Get Stricter, to Dismay of Foreign Business

    Yuan Slumps Most in a Month as Depreciation Pressures Intensify

    Can a Media Merger Bring Success? Comcast and NBCUniversal Say Yes

    HSBC’s Capital Growth Lifts Buyback Prospects

    Nissan Profit Falls 16% on Stronger Yen, Higher Incentives

    Beware, iPhone Users: Fake Retail Apps Are Surging Before Holidays

    Cullen Roche: The Failing Pursuit of the Truth…

    Jeff Miller: Time For Some Clarity?

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • October Jobs Report
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on November 4th, 2016 at 8:59 am

    This morning, the government reported that the U.S. economy created 161,000 net new jobs last month. The NFP number for September was revised higher by 35,000.

    The unemployment rate fell 0.1% to 4.9%. In 12 of the last 13 months, the unemployment rate has been either 4.9% or 5.0%. We now have the second-lowest unemployment rate since 2008. The unemployment rate is lower now than it was in every single month from December 1973 to July 1997.

    Average hourly earnings rose 0.4% in October, and are up 2.8% in the last year.

    Get ready for some charts. Here’s the unemployment rate:

    Here’s the change in non-farm payrolls:

    Here’s the year-over-year change in average hourly earnings. Note the recent acceleration:

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  • Eddy ElfenbeinEddy Elfenbein is a Washington, DC-based speaker, portfolio manager and editor of the blog Crossing Wall Street. His Buy List has beaten the S&P 500 over the last 20 years. (more)

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