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Morning News: June 15, 2015
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 15th, 2015 at 7:12 amGreece Contagion Sweeps Euro Zone Bond Markets, Hits Shares
Out of Options and Time, Tsipras Faces Greece’s Moment of Truth
Alibaba Plans to Create China’s Version of Netflix, HBO
Fed Hones Tricky Message as It Nears Boosting Rates
Tale of Two Job Markets Makes Fed’s Liftoff Timing a Tough Call
Homebuilders Standard Pacific, Ryland Group to Merge
United Technologies Says It Will Exit Sikorsky Helicopter Business
Colt Files for Bankruptcy, Seeks August Auction
GM to Return to U.S. Medium-Truck Market
CVS to Buy Target’s Pharmacy, Clinic Businesses For $1.9 Billion
EasyJet Chief Carolyn McCall Leads Airline Through Turnaround
With CEO Shakeup, Twitter Under Pressure to Please Advertisers
Geneva Whodunit Has Chinese Up in Arms Over $1.2 Billion Lost in Alleged Scam
Jeff Carter: Is A Cyber Attack An Act of War?
Jeff Miller: Weighing the Week Ahead: A Market Message for the Fed?
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Ross Stores Splits 2-for-1
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 12th, 2015 at 9:31 amShares of Ross Stores (ROST) have split 2-for-1 today. Shareholders have twice as many shares while the share price has fallen in half.
I always try to be as transparent as possible with our Buy List. For tracking purposes, I assume the Buy List is a $1 million portfolio at the start of the year. That’s 20 positions of $50,000 for each stock. For Ross Stores, that meant 530.4477 shares at $94.26 (the closing price on December 31).
To adjust for the split, the Buy List portfolio now holds 1,060.8954 shares of Ross with $47.13 as the purchase price.
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CWS Market Review – June 12, 2015
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 12th, 2015 at 7:08 am“If you have trouble imagining a 20% loss in the stock market, you shouldn’t be in stocks.” – Jack Bogle
The good news is that good news is once again bad news. Before, bad news was actually good news because the bad news was worse than had been expected. Since the expectations of bad news had in fact been expected, that was actually good news.
Follow?
Don’t worry. I’ll try to untangle the mess for you. On Planet Wall Street, the rules of what’s good or bad are constantly changing. It’s like a $20 trillion game of Calvinball.
In this week’s CWS Market Review, I’ll take a closer look at the May jobs report. The headline numbers were pretty good, but there’s still a lot of weakness out there. I’ll also discuss the bond market’s recent drop. The yield on the 10-year Treasury is flirting with nine-month highs (see below). On Wednesday, as the bond market was retreating, stocks had their best day in more than a month. Bonds and stocks are decoupling. As I explained in last week’s issue, this is part of an important rotation unfolding on Wall Street that’s impacting our portfolios.
Speaking of which, I’ll preview upcoming earnings reports from Oracle (ORCL) and Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY). The tech world will be especially interested in how Oracle has been doing. This week, we got a 9% dividend increase from CR Bard (BCR). I love a good Buy List dividend hike! The medical-equipment company has increased its dividend every year since 1972. Not many companies can say that but we like those long-term winners on our Buy List. But first, let’s take a step back and look at the macro picture.
More Americans Are Working, but Wage Growth Is Slow
Last Friday, the government said that the U.S. economy created 280,000 net new jobs in May. That’s a strong report; economists had been expecting an increase of 222,000. On top of that, the poor payroll number for April was revised higher by 34,000, while the May figure was revised a little bit lower.
The increase in jobs is especially good considering the big cutbacks in the energy sector. The plunge in crude hit the energy sector hard. Jobs in drilling and mining fell by 17,000 last month. That’s the fifth month in a row of job losses in that sector. Energy stocks are still looking rough.
For the overall jobs market, the problem area continues to be wage growth. More people are working, but folks aren’t seeing much in the way of raises. In May, wages rose by only 0.3%. In the last year, wages are up 2.3%. That’s not much, and it’s actually the best year-over-year increase since 2013. Though, as Josh Brown reminded us this week, wage growth usually comes in the latter stages of an economic recovery.
What really concerns Wall Street is inflation. Despite numerous predictions that inflation is about to come back, prices are still well contained. However, a tighter jobs market should lead to higher wages, which will in turn lead to higher prices. There’s been news recently of high-profile employers like McDonald’s (MCD), Walmart (WMT) and Target (TGT) raising worker pay. This week’s JOLTS report showed that job openings jumped to a record high (the data series began in 2000).
Former Fed Chairman William McChesney Martin famously described the Fed’s job as taking away the punchbowl once the party gets going. It looks like the Fed is getting ready to take away the punchbowl before the party has even started. Heck, I don’t think the invitations have even been sent out!
But that hasn’t stopped the bond market from taking its cue. On Wednesday, the 10-year Treasury yield came within a whisker of breaching 2.50%. The 10-year hasn’t yielded that much since last September. This is part of the market’s rotation. Stocks and bonds are moving in completely different directions.
To go back to my introduction, we’ve reached another classic impasse on Wall Street when good news may actually be bad news. Or more specifically, good economic news is bad news for the financial markets, since it means that the Fed is more inclined to hike interest rates.
But I want to reiterate my view since it seems to be in the minority on Wall Street, and that’s that the economy is doing better than a lot of people realize. Please don’t take this as a political stand. Rather, I’m looking at the numbers. For example, the retail-sales report for May was pretty good. Last month, sales rose 1.2%. Excluding gasoline, retail sales were up 1.0%. The numbers for March and April were revised higher as well.
I was also pleased to see that Corelogic reported that homes in foreclosure are at their lowest level since November 2007. Foreclosures are 67% below their peak. That’s very good news. The broad economic stats for Q2 should be quite good. The Atlanta Fed has a GDP model. Currently, the model sees GDP growth for Q2 coming in at 1.9%. I think it will be closer to 3%.
The weakness in the bond is perhaps the strongest clue that the economy is getting better. It’s also interesting to note that financial stocks have been leading the market over the past few weeks. The Financial Sector ETF (XLF) has been outperforming the overall market since late April (think Quadrant 2 from last week’s chart).
Earnings Preview for Oracle and Bed Bath & Beyond
I’m pleased to see that our Buy List continues to lead the overall market this year. A few of our stocks like Cognizant Technology (CTSH), Wells Fargo (WFC) and Fiserv (FISV) are having excellent years so far. I expect more good results when the second-quarter earnings season begins next month. Before that happens, two of our Buy List stocks, Oracle and Bed Bath & Beyond, are due to report earnings. These are our only two stocks that report on the February/May/August/November reporting cycle.
Oracle (ORCL) is set to report their fiscal Q4 earnings after the closing bell on Wednesday, June 17. This will be a closely-watched earnings report for the entire tech sector.
Three months ago, Oracle reported earnings of 68 cents per share, which matched expectations. The problem was that they were clipped by the strong dollar. There’s been a lot of that going around. But the best news was that the software giant raised its dividend by 25%.
For Q4, Oracle said they see earnings ranging between 90 and 96 cents per share. Wall Street had been expecting 88 cents per share. I’ve been especially impressed with how well Oracle’s cloud business has been progressing.
Unfortunately, shares of Oracle have been locked between $43 and $45 for much of the last three months. I don’t feel confident saying Oracle will beat their earnings forecast. The question mark is the impact of currency. Outside that, I have a great deal of confidence in Oracle. I also want to see what they have to say for Q1 (which ends in August). Wall Street currently expects 62 cents per share.
I like Oracle a lot, but I want to be cautious here before we see solid evidence. Oracle remains a buy up to $46 per share. I want to keep a tight range here.
Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) is due to report fiscal Q1 earnings on Wednesday, June 24, exactly one week after Oracle. The home-furnishings store is in an odd spot. The company generates tons of cash. They’ve been using much of it to buy back stock. Unlike many other companies, BBBY actually reduces their share count. I like that. What I don’t like is their spending tons of money on a stock that’s no longer such a bargain.
The company told us to expect fiscal Q2 earnings to range between 90 and 95 cents per share. I’m not wild about that guidance. BBBY sees comp-store sales rising between 2% and 3% for the quarter and the entire fiscal year. For full-year earnings, BBBY expects flat to mid-single digits. Let’s say that means 0% to 5%, so that implies an EPS range of $5.07 to $5.32. Wall Street had been expecting $5.43 per share.
Honestly, I’m a little frustrated with BBBY, but I won’t give up on them. I’m especially interested to hear what guidance they have to offer.
Updates on Other Buy List Stocks
Don’t forget that Ross Stores (ROST) has split 2 for 1. You should now have twice as many shares. The deep discounter is a good buy up to $52 per share.
Last week, I highlighted Signature Bank (SBNY) as one of our Buy List stocks that looks especially attractive. The stock has now rallied for five days in a row, and it’s gained more than 5.2% in the last week. On Thursday, the bank hit another 52-week high. SBNY is now our second-best performer on the year. This week, I’m nudging up my Buy Below price on Signature to $150 per share.
Remember that stodgy, old-fashioned, boring dinosaur Snap-on (SNA)? Yep, new all-time high on Thursday.
Two weeks ago, I told you to expect another dividend increase soon from CR Bard (BCR). This week, Bard announced a 9% dividend increase. The quarterly payout will rise from 22 to 24 cents per share. That means the yearly dividend is 96 cents per share, which works out to a yield of 0.56%. That’s still pretty small.
I was able to predict Bard’s dividend increase based on my uncanny powers of prognostication, and also due to the fact that Bard has increased their dividend every year since 1972.
Bard also authorized a $500 million share buyback , which is about 4% of Bard’s overall market cap. My view is that Bard should put more of that towards the dividend, but I’m not about to complain. The company has performed very well for us.
That’s all for now. The Federal Reserve meets again next week. Don’t expect any move on interest rates, but Janet Yellen will a hold a post-meeting presser. The Fed will also update its economic projections, which tend to be pretty bad. The more interesting news will be the industrial production report, which comes out on Monday. IP has fallen for the last five months in a row. I hope this streak came to an end in May. Also, the CPI report for May will come out on Thursday. Be sure to keep checking the blog for daily updates. I’ll have more market analysis for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review!
– Eddy
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Morning News: June 12, 2015
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 12th, 2015 at 7:02 amIMF Quits Greek Debt Talks; No Deal In Sight Due To Continuing Disagreements
Fearful ECB Starts Countdown on Greek Funding Lifeline
Merkel Urges Greece and Creditors To Keep Pushing For Deal
Kuroda Seen Capping Yen Slide as Officials Hint Limit Close
You Need 35 Quadrillion In This Currency to Buy $1.00
Five Reasons Why Twitter’s CEO Needed to Fire Himself
Shares of Axovant, Alzheimer’s Drug Developer, Surge on Trading Debut
Goldman Gets Serious About High-Speed Trading
Airbus Forecasts Stronger Long-Term Aircraft Demand
Organic Farmers Object to Whole Foods Rating System
Rupert Murdoch to Put Media Empire in Sons’ Hands
These Are Wall Street’s Must-Read Books of the Summer
Joshua Brown: The Keynesian Ugly Contest
Ben Carlson: The Struggle to Define Risk
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Morning News: June 11, 2015
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 11th, 2015 at 7:11 amGerman Central Bank Chief Says Time Running Out For Greece
German Holders of Greek Bonds Can Seek Compensation: European Court of Justice
New Zealand Dollar Sinks To 5-Yr Low on Rate Cut
China May Investment Up 11.4% Year-on-Year
Luxury Goods Face a Global Reckoning
Alibaba’s Ma Sees $1 Trillion in Transactions in Five Years
EU Opens Investigation Into Amazon’s e-Book Selling
J. Crew Names New Head of Women’s Design, Eliminates 175 Jobs
Top Executive at Kleiner Perkins to Make Rare Silicon Valley Shift, to Menlo Ventures
American Billionaire Takes On Samsung
Sidewalk Labs, a Start-Up Created by Google, Has Bold Aims to Improve City Living
No Need to Be Industry Number One, Says Spotify Founder
Jamie Dimon: I’m Not Sure Elizabeth Warren Understands Banking
Howard Lindzon: Goldman Sachs and ShittyBank…
Credit Writedowns: Are Bond Investors Crying Wolf?
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Morning News: June 10, 2015
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 10th, 2015 at 7:02 amGreece Looks to Merkel to Break Impasse as Plan Snarls Talks
U.S. Shifts Stance on Drug Pricing in Pacific Trade Pact Talks, Document Reveals
Did A Judge Just Undermine The Administrative State With SEC Ruling?
DoubleLine’s Gundlach Sees Odds of Fed Hike By December Under 50%
Wall St. Courts Start-Ups It Once May Have Ignored
Tokio Marine Holdings to Acquire HCC Insurance Holdings in $7.5 Billion Transaction
Bayer to Sell Diabetes Unit to KKR Unit for $1.15 Billion
Spotify Raises $526 Million Amid Battle With Apple
Jack Ma Says Alibaba Has No Plans To Invade America, It’s The Other Way Around
Sears — Retailing Takes A Back Seat To Real Estate
Gen X Was Right: Reality Really Does Bite
Zara Owner Profits Up on Sales Surge
Regulators Pressed For Exit of Deutsche Co-Chiefs
Roger Nusbaum: Does It Make My Portfolio Better?
Joshua Brown: The 2nd Stage of Recovery: Wage Negotiating Power
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Morning News: June 9, 2015
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 9th, 2015 at 7:14 amGreece Delivers Reform Plan to EU, Warns on Cost of Failure
Pensions in Greece Feel the Pinch of Debt Negotiations
Iceland to Lift Capital Controls Imposed After Financial Crisis
The $6.5 Trillion China Rally That’s Making Stock-Market History
GE to Sell Buyout Unit to Canada Pension Fund for $12 Billion
McDonald’s Sales Top Estimates After Europe Outperforms U.S.
Six Reasons Why Anshu Jain Quit Deutsche Bank
Apple Works to Refocus Its Devices at Nexus of Entertainment
Chipotle’s Hourly Workers Are Getting Paid Sick Leave And Vacation
HSBC to Cut 50,000 Jobs in Quest For Higher Dividends
Uber Spends Heavily to Establish Itself in China
Mergers Might Not Signal Optimism
Howard Lindzon: The Profit Bubble…Late is the New Early
Jeff Carter: Have American Marketers Pulled a Fast One?
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eBay Lower on Downgrade
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 8th, 2015 at 1:46 pmShares of eBay (EBAY) are down about 4% after the online auction house was downgraded by Piper Jaffray.
The firm reiterated an “underweight” rating with a $50 price target.
Analysts believe investor optimism will rise into the PayPal spin-off this fall, but will fall after the move.
Piper added that half of PayPal’s payments will be through mobile devices by the end of 2016 amid greater competition from Google’s (GOOGL) Android Pay and Apple’s (AAPL) Apple Pay.
eBay gave guidance for the PayPal spinoff. They see sales growth of 0% to 5% for eBay with operating margin between 32% and 34%. For next year, they again project revenue growth of 0% to 5% but operating revenue of 31% to 35%. For PayPal, they project revenue growth of 15% to 18% with operating margin between 20% and 21%.
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Morning News: June 8, 2015
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 8th, 2015 at 7:14 amIf You Think Greece’s Crisis Will End Soon, Think Again
Japan GDP Revised to Annualized 3.9% on Surge in Capital Spending
Dollar Falls From Its 13-Year High Against Yen
Souring China Business Climate Risks U.S. Investment Treaty Talks
Bond-Market Game of Chicken With Fed Is Riskier Than Ever
Lending Euros to Warren Buffett Can Hurt Your Financial Health
G.E. Nears Private Equity Sale to Canadian Pension Fund
G.E. Nears Deal on Major Step In Retreat From Banking
Britain’s FTSE Recovers Two-Month Low After Diageo Shares Rally on Bid Report
Hermes EOS Backs Deutsche Bank CEO Change
Sears Holdings’ Sales Swoon Continues, Though Profit Improves
Syngenta Rejects Second Takeover Approach From Monsanto
Protections for Late Investors Can Inflate Start-Up Valuations
Jeff Carter: Fair and Balanced
Jeff Miller: Weighing the Week Ahead: Time for a Consumer Rebound?
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May NFP = +280,000
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 5th, 2015 at 10:05 amThis morning’s jobs report was a good one. The U.S. economy created 280,000 net new jobs last month. The number for March was revised higher by 34,000 and April was revised up by 32,000. The economy created 501,000 jobs in April and May.
The jobs-to-population ratio ticked up to 59.41%. That’s the best reading in nearly six years. The fact remains that a lot of people have dropped out of the labor force. They’re not even looking for a job.
The workforce participation rate appears to be stabilizing, and it bumped up a tiny bit last month. As a result, the unemployment rate rose to 5.5% despite the growth in jobs.
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Eddy Elfenbein is a Washington, DC-based speaker, portfolio manager and editor of the blog Crossing Wall Street. His