• Barry Ritholtz Chats With Morgan Housel
    Posted by on December 18th, 2013 at 9:41 am

  • Nicholas Financial To Be Bought Out!
    Posted by on December 18th, 2013 at 7:48 am

    For $16 per share.

    Nicholas Financial, Inc. (the “Company”) (NICK) announced today that it has signed an arrangement agreement dated December 17, 2013 (the “Arrangement Agreement”) whereby the Company has agreed to sell all of its issued and outstanding Common shares to an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Prospect Capital Corporation (“Prospect”), pursuant to a plan of arrangement (the “Arrangement”) under the Business Corporations Act (British Columbia).

    Prospect (PSEC) (www.prospectstreet.com) is a closed-end investment company that lends to and invests in private and public middle market businesses. Prospect’s investment objective is to generate both current income and long-term capital appreciation through debt and equity investments.

    Prospect has elected to be treated as a business development company under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (“1940 Act”). Prospect is required to comply with a series of regulatory requirements under the 1940 Act as well as applicable NASDAQ, federal and state rules and regulations. Prospect has elected to be treated as a regulated investment company under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986. Failure to comply with any of the laws and regulations that apply to Prospect could have an adverse effect on Prospect and its shareholders.

    Pursuant to the terms of the Arrangement, the Company’s shareholders are to receive (subject to applicable dissenter’s rights under the Business Corporation Act (British Columbia)), in exchange for each Common share of the Company held immediately prior to the effective time of the Arrangement, the number of shares of common stock of Prospect (or fraction thereof) determined by dividing US $16.00 by the volume-weighted average price, or VWAP, of Prospect common stock for the twenty (20) trading days prior to and ending on the trading day immediately preceding the effective time of the Arrangement. In addition, each and every option to acquire Common shares of the Company outstanding immediately prior to the effective time of the Arrangement will be cancelled or transferred by the holder thereof to the Company (subject to applicable dissenters’ rights under the Business Corporations Act (British Columbia)) in exchange for a cash amount equal to the amount by which (i) the product obtained by multiplying (x) the number of Common shares of the Company underlying each option by (y) $16.00 exceeds (ii) the aggregate exercise price payable under such option.

    The transactions contemplated by the Arrangement Agreement will not be consummated unless certain conditions typical for this type of transaction are either satisfied or waived prior to closing. These conditions include, among other things, that the Arrangement Agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby are approved by the securityholders of the Company in accordance with the Business Corporations Act (British Columbia) and the Company’s Articles. An information circular providing further information regarding the Arrangement Agreement and the parties thereto will be mailed to securityholders of the Company in advance of the special meeting thereof expected to be held for the purpose of approving, among other things, the Arrangement Agreement and the Arrangement contemplated thereby.

    Nicholas Financial (NICK) will be bought out by Prospect Capital (PSEC) for $16 per share. The deal is expected to close in April. Note that shareholders won’t be getting cash but whatever shares of PSEC $16 works out to. You won’t be taxed when you get the shares of PSEC.

    I have to admit that I’m baffled by this. I think NICK is very much selling itself short. I can’t think of another company that sold itself for 10 times trailing earnings, and a dividend yield of 3%. Management clearly wanted out. Only two months ago, NICK traded for as much as $17.20 per share. Sixteen dollars is a premium of less than 5%.

  • Morning News: December 18, 2013
    Posted by on December 18th, 2013 at 7:13 am

    U.K. Unemployment Unexpectedly Falls to Four-Year Low

    Bitcoin Price Halves as China Clampdown Escalates

    Merkel Urges EU Treaty Change in First Speech of New Term

    Fed Said to Delay Bank Leverage Cap Until Basel Completed

    Fed Faces Tough Call on Bond Buying as Economy Strengthens

    Gold Climbs in London Before Fed’s Decision: Palladium Advances

    Consumer Prices Stay Nearly Flat

    CoreLogic Reports 791,000 More Residential Properties Return To Positive Equity In Third Quarter Of 2013

    Insurers Wary of New Obamacare Fix for January Health Plans

    Herbalife Investors Win Battle

    BP Flags Gulf of Mexico Find, $1.08 Billion Brazil Writedown

    William Morris Said to Have Won Auction for IMG, Sports and Talent Agency

    Shopping Marathons Coming: Stores Open 100+ Hours in a Row Before Christmas

    Credit Writedowns: Are Equity Markets in a Massive Bubble?

    Cullen Roche: Updating Warren Buffett’s Favorite Valuation Metric

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  • Fiserv Splits 2 for 1
    Posted by on December 17th, 2013 at 9:06 am

    Fiserv ($FISV) split its stock 2 for 1 this morning. The new Buy Below is $56 per share.

    For tracking purposes, I assume our Buy List is a $1 million portfolio that’s equally weighted at the start of the year. For this year’s Buy List, the “buy price,” meaning the price as of the close of 2012, on Fiserv drops from $79.03 per share to $39.515 per share. The number of shares in our tracking portfolio doubles from 632.6711 to 1,265.3422 (hence to give us a $50,000 position at the beginning of the year).

  • Technological Miracles Will Keep Generating Profits and Jobs
    Posted by on December 17th, 2013 at 7:24 am

    Over the weekend, I booked a pair of airline tickets from Seattle to south Florida – over 3,300 miles – for under $330, round trip, or just five cents per mile. I used the Internet to shop among competing airlines, dates, times and warm-weather transfer points. It’s tempting to complain about TSA delays, bad food and tight seating, but I appreciate these cheap, long flights – fruits of our reasonably free market in air travel.

    This brings to mind an event 110 years ago this morning. At 10:30 am on December 17, 1903, two Dayton bicycle mechanics flipped a coin to see who got the first chance to fly like a bird on the beach of Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. Shortly thereafter, Orville Wright took a short (and VERY slow) flight, for a man, while creating a giant leap for mankind. He “flew” (a few feet above the sand) 40 yards in 12 seconds. That works out to 10 feet per second, or less than seven miles per hour – slower than your average jogger.

    Wilbur and Orville made a total of four flights that day in 1903. The longest jaunt covered 852 feet in 60 seconds, ending in a nose dive. That’s less than 10 miles per hour. Even the lightest of today’s planes would stall at under 10 miles per hour, but the Wrights’ 605-pound bird was not much heavier than air.

    For nearly five years, few believed the Wrights, because nearly everyone else failed in flight and the Wrights kept their invention under wraps, fearing patent infringement. Finally, in the summer of 1908, in France, Wilbur flew his plane 40 miles in 90 minutes, or 27 miles per hour. This flight was astounding to its viewers, but no more astounding than a half dozen other technological innovations from 1901 to 1905.

    Planes, Cars, Radio and Other Innovations Took Time to Mature

    America is particularly suited to invention, especially at that time in our history. In 1900, most guys had access to a shop or a tool barn, and most loved to tinker, looking for better, easier and cheaper ways to get a job done. America had a system of patents that encouraged innovation. The Wright brothers were bicycle makers first, tinkerers second. Henry Ford was a mechanic with Edison Electric in the 1890s, but he was also a nocturnal tinkerer. He spent nights reading manuals about the new internal combustion engine. Ford asked for a loan in 1903, but the president of the Michigan Savings Bank told him that “the horse is here to stay, but the automobile is a novelty.” Ford failed often, but Ford Motor finally opened.

    When Ford started making cars, Detroit had a speed limit of 8 miles per hour, and fines of $100 – two months’ wages – for a first infraction, so Ford’s cars and Wright’s planes were incredibly slow at first.

    Innovation does not directly lead to profitable commercial applications, but innovation is vital for the continuation of long-term economic growth. Airplanes didn’t become useful or profitable until World War I forced plane makers to develop a series of technological innovations, improving speed and safety.

    You can see the same delayed payoff in other early 20th Century technologies. Ford Motor incorporated in 1903, but Ford’s continuous assembly line did not emerge until 1913. Guglielmo Marconi sent the first transatlantic radio broadcast on December 12, 1901, but radio did not captivate the public until the 1920s.

    In 1904, the diesel engine debuted in St. Louis. In 1905, Einstein developed the theory of relativity and several other insights, but they were not proven true until 1919 or later. For the most part, the major inventions of 1901 to 1905 did not reach the consciousness of the general public until the 1920s.

    Likewise, many of the greatest breakthroughs of the 1950s and 1960s – like Xeroxing, faxing or color TV transmission – were developed in the late 1930s, but it took decades to reach commercial viability.

    Ben Bernanke’s Most Important 2013 Speech was Not about QE or Tapering

    Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has taken a lot of heat for his expansive policies over the last eight years, but last May he said something far more important than anything he said before Congress or during some FOMC meeting. Four days before he introduced “tapering” last May 22, Bernanke give a commencement address at Bard College. His subject was technology, and he referred back to the time of the Wright Brothers and Henry Ford, saying that innovation didn’t die with Edison, Ford or the Wrights.

    Bernanke told Bard graduates and their families that “the modern industrial era, which lasted from the mid-1800s well into the years after World War II….featured multiple innovations that radically changed everyday life, such as indoor plumbing, the harnessing of electricity for use in homes and factories, the internal combustion engine, antibiotics, powered flight, telephones, radio, television, and many more.” The result, he said, is that our output per person increased by about 30 times between 1700 and 1970.

    Bernanke concluded his talk by saying that “pessimists may be paying too little attention to the strength of the underlying economic and social forces that generate innovation in the modern world…. Moreover, because of the Internet and other advances in communications, collaboration and the exchange of ideas take place at high speed and with little regard for geographic distance…. [T]he economic rewards for being first with an innovative product or process are growing rapidly. In short, both humanity’s capacity to innovate and the incentives to innovate are greater today than at any other time in history.”

    Other academic experts echo Bernanke’s optimism. In a September BusinessWeek survey (“Is Innovation Leading to a New Age of Productivity in the U.S.?”), we hear from Chad Syverson, an economics professor at the University of Chicago, who has charted the cycle of productivity in the development of technology, citing the many “lags between the introduction of new technologies and productivity gains.” MIT Management Professor Erik Brynjolfsson agrees, saying: “In my papers, we found that companies that installed big, new enterprise information systems didn’t get the full benefits for five to seven years.”

    Technology is vital to create future profits, but any new technology may take several years to generate profits. A Bloomberg BusinessWeek chart shows that productivity gains run in cycles. From this 50-year chart, we can see sharp declines in 1972, 1982 and 1992, followed by significant productivity booms.

    Here’s a safe prediction: We don’t know what the world will look like in 50 years, but the most important innovations are probably taking shape now, in the form of the 50th or 100th failure in some university or corporate laboratory, or in some tinkerer’s garage. Creativity did not die with Steve Jobs. What we once considered wildly innovative – like phones with cameras or a talking GPS in your car – are considered normal now. What’s next? Bitcoins you can trust? 3-D imaging for something more beautiful than guns (violins, perhaps), delivered in 30 minutes by an Amazon drone? Or how about a hyper-loop bullet car taking you 300 miles in 30 minutes? Or a trip to space, orbiting the earth or shooting off to the moon?

    We have no idea what tomorrow will bring, but somebody, somewhere, is inventing tomorrow today.

    – Gary Alexander

  • FactSet Research Earns $1.22 Per Share
    Posted by on December 17th, 2013 at 7:19 am

    FactSet Research Systems ($FDS) just reported fiscal Q1 earnings of $1.22 per share. That’s an increase of 10% over last year’s Q1. Three months ago, FDS gave us an earnings range of $1.21 – $1.24 per share, so they’re hitting their internal objectives. Technically, this was below Wall Street’s estimate of $1.24 per share.

    Our investment discipline and proven business model continues to generate shareholder value as illustrated by our 10% adjusted EPS growth. Our buy-side client base is experiencing a healthy business cycle, but we are facing a challenging sell-side environment, which reduced organic ASV,” says Philip Hadley, Chairman and CEO. “As we continue to generate record levels of quarterly free cash flow, I’m pleased to announce a $300 million expansion to our existing share repurchase program. We also completed the acquisition of Revere Data in September and acquired a 60% ownership interest in Matrix Data Limited in December 2013.

    Here are some details: Cash flow for the quarter rose 18% to $53 million. The key number to watch in FactSet’s earnings is Annual Subscription Value, or ASV. Last quarter, ASV rose 5% to $890 million. Of that $890 million, $609 million was domestic and $281 million was foreign. FactSet bought back 530,000 shares last quarter for $57.8 million. These are good numbers.

    Now for Q2 guidance. FactSet revenues ranging between $225 million and $228 million. They see earnings coming in between $1.20 and $1.23. FactSet added that the ending of a tax credit for R&D should take a three-cent bite out of earnings. Wall Street’s consensus was for $1.25 per share. Overall, this was a solid quarter for FDS.

  • Morning News: December 17, 2013
    Posted by on December 17th, 2013 at 7:03 am

    Germany to Propose Bundesbank Deputy for ECB Board Seat

    German Investor Sentiment Hits Seven-year High in December

    Turkish Police Detain High-Profile Figures in Probe Into Alleged Bribery

    The Luxembourg Tax Break That Helps Firms Profit From Loss

    Should Investors Trim Positions in Banks as Rate Hike Looks Imminent?

    Dollar 1% From 5-Year High Versus Yen on Taper Bets; Krona Falls

    Fed’s $4 Trillion Assets Draw Lawmaker Ire Amid Bubble Concern

    S.E.C. Calls for Stiff Penalties Against Tourre

    First Volcker Victim? Zions Dumping Its Hedge Funds

    Will AIG’s $5.4 Billion ILFC Sale Lift Shares?

    GlaxoSmithKline to Spend $1 Billion to Raise Stake in Indian Pharma Unit

    Boeing Will Shovel Billions Of Dollars In Cash Back To Its Investors

    Herbalife Clean Audit a Setback for Ackman’s Pyramid Case

    Howard Lindzon: How to Move a Stock – by Carl Icahn

    Joshua Brown: Sundown at the Permabear Alamo/a>

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  • Industrial Prodcution Hits All-Time High
    Posted by on December 16th, 2013 at 9:31 am

    Still more good economic news. The Industrial Production data series had been one of the major series that had failed to top its pre-Recession high. That came to an end today.

    Industrial Production for November jumped 1.1% which is the largest rise in a year. It also edged out the reading from December 2007 to hit a new all-time high.

    fredgraph12162013

  • Morning News: December 16, 2013
    Posted by on December 16th, 2013 at 6:58 am

    Euro-Area Manufacturing Grows More Than Forecast on Germany

    Germany Will Decide Quickly on New ECB Executive

    ‘Abenomics’ Gets Thumbs Up: Japan Business Mood at Six-year High

    China Manufacturing Index Unexpectedly Drops on Output

    November WPI at 14-Month High: Case For RBI Rate Hike Strengthened, Say Analysts

    Global Bitcoin Conference Calls for Reserve Bank of India Recognition

    Fed Taper Message Succeeds With Bonds Adjusting to Economic Data

    Inflation Still Low as Wholesale Prices Fall for 3rd-straight Month

    Amazon’s German Workers to Protest in Seattle

    AIG Plans to Sell Aircraft Leasing Unit to AerCap for $5 Billion

    Carrefour to Buy Shopping Malls in $2.8 Billion Deal

    NPR Gets $17 Million in Grants to Expand Coverage and Develop Digital Platform

    Beyonce Rejects Tradition for Social Media’s Power

    Roger Nusbaum: Why Doesn’t the Dividend Growth ETF Grow Its Dividends?

    Jeff Miller: Weighing the Week Ahead: A Turning Point for the Fed?

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  • Peter Lynch Talks With Charlie Rose
    Posted by on December 14th, 2013 at 2:55 pm