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June 30, 2008

Fortune Brands... When Even Booze Spending Is Down (FO)

Fortune Brands, Inc. (NYSE: FO) has come clean with a lowered earnings guidance for the current quarter and full year of 2008.  The company noted that a weakening consumer sentiment in the U.S., the ongoing correction in the U.S. housing market, and a large and unexpected Australian tax increase on ready to drink spirits products have all culminated together to create a more challenging environment for the company’s products.

The company now expects pre-charge/gain earnings to be down at a high-teens-to-mid-20's percentage rate compared to diluted EPS of $1.51 before charges/gains for continuing operations in the year-ago quarter. This is worse than its previous forecasts of being down at a high-single-digit-to-mid-teens percentage rate.  If we maximized the warning and took a mid-20's percentage rate, this could generate an effective EPS report of $1.13.  First Call has estimates at $1.32 currently.

It does expect that results in the second half of 2008 will be better than the first half because of company-wide productivity initiatives and increased brand-building investments. For the full year 2008, the company now expects to generate diluted EPS before charges/gains that is down at a high single-digit to high-teens percentage rate compared to $5.06 in 2007. The company’s previous full-year target was for diluted EPS before charges/gains to be flat to down at a high-single-digit percentage rate versus 2007’s results. 

If we interpolate that earnings, this could be anywhere from around $4.10 to $4.60 depending on where your starting point is.  Current First Call estimates are $4,79 EPS, so either way this is a big shortage. 

Fortune closed up marginally by $0.04 in regular trading at $62.41 today.  Shares are now down almost 5.5% at $59.00 in after-hours trading.  Go ahead and chalk that up as another 52-week low.  The prior range was $62.01 to $90.80.  So much for good old fashioned booze as being a defensive sector.

Jon C. Ogg
June 30, 2008

EMCORE Corp. Unloads Part of Alternative Energy Holdings (EMKR, WWAT)

EMCORE Corporation (NASDAQ: EMKR) has announced after the close of trading that the company has agreed to sell 2,000,000 shares of Series D Preferred Stock of WorldWater & Solar Technologies Corporation (OTC Bulletin Board: WWAT.OB). 

It has sold this along with 200,000 Warrants, to The Quercus Trust, a major shareholder of both EMCORE and WorldWater, at a price equal to $6.54 per share of the Series D Preferred Stock.  The Series D Preferred Stock is convertible into WorldWater Common Stock at a ratio of 10 to 1, and each of the Warrants entitles the holder to purchase a share of Series D Preferred Stock for a price of $3.17 per share. 

The sale will take place through two different closings, one for 1,000,000 shares and 100,000 warrants, which closed on Friday, June 27, 2008, and one for an equal number of shares and warrants which should close before July 31, 2008.  The company has noted that the total proceeds from the sale should approximate $13.1 million.

Emcore had a tough day with shares closing down some 13% at $6.26, with a 52-week trading range of $5.31 to $15.90.  To put the size of this in perspective, Emcore's market cap is $484 million after today's sell-off.

Jon C. Ogg
June 30, 2008

The 52-Week Low Club (F, LEH, ABK, MER, C, WB)

Lehman (LEH) falls on rumors of sale to Barclays (BCS). Down to $19.64 from 52-week high of $76.99.

Ambac (ABK) drops on more concerns it will need additional capital. Sells off to $1.15 from 52-week high of $88.41.

Merril Lynch (MER) slips to $31.55 on speculation that it may write-off $5.4 billion in Q2.

Citigroup (C) runs down to $15.58 on rumors it may have to raise more capital. Has 52-week high of $52.97.

Wachovia (WB) drops to $14.70 on bad day for banks. The 52-week high was $53.10.

Ford (F) down to $4.46 on day before June sales announced. The 52-week high was $9.70.

Douglas A. McIntyre

US Auto Sales Coming With Free Rope (GM, F, TM, HMC)

On Tuesday, it won't just be the first day of the month nor just the first day of the quarter.  It is yet another reporting day for new car and truck sales in the U.S. For Ford Motor (NYSE: F), General Motors Corp. (NYSE: GM), Chrysler and so forth.  In a move that is becoming all too familiar, The Big Three might as well just count Toyota Motor Corp. (NYSE: TM) and Honda Motor Co. Ltd. (NYSE: HMC) in there as these two are becoming larger and larger sellers in the U.S.

We have looked over the forecasts at Edmunds.com and seen forecast of The Big Three domestic  market share of 45.4% in June, which would be down from June 2007's 51.4% but up from May 2007's 45.3%.  Unfortunately it seems as though we are stuck with bad news for a while in the US Auto sector.  As we noted over at Volume Spike, traders are still betting against GM and Ford with options trading.

The latest individual estimates from Edmunds.com are expected to look grizzly:

  • GM will sell 240,000 vehicles in June, down 25.2% from June 2007 and down 10.8% from May 2008.
  • Ford will sell 181,000 vehicles in June, down 24.8% from June 2007 and down 15.2% from May 2008.
  • Chrysler will sell 126,000 vehicles, down 31.2% from June 2007 and down 15.0% from May 2008.
  • Toyota will sell 217,000 vehicles in June, down 11.7% from June 2007 and down 15.7% from May 2008.
  • Honda will sell 147,000 vehicles in June, up 4.0% from June 2007 and down 12.8% from May 2008.

These ghastly numbers are even worse if you do not adjust for the fewer number of selling days on the calendar if you look at the table that Edmunds.com gives there. 

It seems that 52-week lows day after day (actually multi-decade lows now) aren't any interpreted floors.   

Jon C. Ogg
June 30, 2008

Sirius (SIRI): The Market Dumps On Merger Forecasts

Sirius (SIRI) told the world how things would look at the company after its proposed merger with XM Satellite (XMSR). The world greeted the forecast with scorn.

The company called the savings synergies, an overused word. SIRI guessed that it would have "total synergies, net of the costs to achieve such synergies, for the combined company are expected to be approximately $400 million in 2009." It went on further to day The new firm is expected to achieve positive free cash flow, before satellite capital expenditures, for the full year 2009.

SIRI left out the most important part of its guessing--revenue. With out that as part of the equation given to Wall St., the forecasts are merely speculation. No one will buy them without numbers covering the top line.

Both Sirius and XM are down sharply after they released the information. That may be because skeptics think the satellite radio business has seen its best days. It gets most of its new business from car sales, which are doing as poorly has they have in two decades. And, many consumers want an Apple (AAPL) iPod or a music phone from one of the handset companies.The need for satellite radio is disappearing.

The projection are probably false because the revenue needed to make the numbers won't be there.

Douglas A. McIntyre

MBIA Tries Yelling All Clear (MBI)

MBIA Inc. (NYSE: MBI) decided to speak out against some recent speculation and some recent reporting on its overall health.  The company has said that as a result of Moody’s downgrade of MBIA Insurance Corporation’s insurance financial strength rating from Aaa to A2, it expected that it would be required to post additional eligible collateral and fund potential termination payments under its outstanding Guaranteed Investment Contracts (GICs).

The company announced that sales of approximately $4 billion of investment assets during the second quarter has given it sufficient eligible collateral and cash to satisfy these additional requirements.  As part of this, its entire remaining GIC portfolio will be fully collateralized (subject to exercise rights).  The repositioning activity in the portfolio did not include the broad sale of municipal securities.

MBIA taking this a step further by saying it "is not in a tenuous situation” and that the holders of insurance policies, GICs, medium-term notes and other debt instruments can rest assured that MBIA will meet its obligations "on time and in full."

It has also broken down some portfolio numbers.  ALM portfolio liabilities declined from $25.1 billion at March 31, 2008 to $24.1 billion at June 27, 2008 through normal amortization of the portfolio. The $24.1 billion balance at June 27 consists of $15.8 billion in GICs ($8.3 billion were collateralized prior to Moody’s downgrade), $7.3 billion in medium-term notes (MTNs) issued by MBIA Global Funding, LLC, and $1.0 billion in fixed term collateralized repurchase agreements.

Of the remaining $7.5 billion in previously uncollateralized GICs, $3.9 billion are now being collateralized and $3.6 billion are now being terminated.  The $7.3 billion in outstanding MTNs do not require collateral posting and are not subject to termination upon any downgrades; they mature over 34 years and have an average life of approximately 5.3 years.

Based upon the sales, MBIA estimates that it will record pre-tax net realized losses on its second quarter income statement of approximately $300 million and the sale of assets is not expected to have a material impact on shareholders’ equity.  MBIA saids it also continues to hold approximately $1.4 billion in cash at the holding company level.

MBIA shares had been trading down some 10% on all of these liquidity concerns.  Shares are now down 5% at $3.94 on the day.  Unfortunately, if this level holds, it will mark a new 52-week low close as the prior 52-week trading range was $4.03 to $68.98.

Unfortunately, this baseball game is still in the beginning innings, and it looks like it might easily be a low-scoring game that could go into extra innings.

Jon C. Ogg
June 30, 2008

IPO Withdrawn: BCD Semiconductor

BCD Semiconductor Manufacturing Limited has filed with the SEC to formally withdraw its prior registration statement.  In short, the company has determined not to proceed with its planned initial public offering.

You can guess the reason for the withdrawal: Market conditions.  The company said it does not plan to sell securities in a public IPO for the foreseeable future due to the difficult market conditions for initial public offerings.  The company did note that it advised it may undertake a subsequent private offering of securities in the future.

This might not be permanently out, but it likely won't be coming public any time soon.

Jon C. Ogg
June 30, 2008

Bank for International Settlements Paints Bleak Picture

No one hears much about the Bank for International Settlements but It deals with central banks worldwide and probably has as good a fix on the global economy as any single entity.

There is still an opinion war being waged between the head of money center banks. Over the weekend, the chiefs a BNP Paribas and Barclays (BCS) tried to make the case that the worst of the credit crisis has passed. In the opponent's corner, the CFO of Merrill Lynch (MER) said that the brokerage would look at selling its pieces in Blackrock and Bloomberg. MER has nothing but lint in its pockets after record write-offs.

Daily reports on the rising prices of agricultural commodities and oil and the slowing GDP in many nations tends to favor the pessimists. If the stock market does indeed rise and fall based on what investors think the economy and corporate earnings will look like six months out, traders are predicting the racketing down of hope to continue.

When the Bank for International Settlements annual report came off the presses today, there was no good news in it. One section summarized the agency's view: "While difficult to predict, their interaction does appear to point to a deeper and more protracted global downturn than the consensus view seems to expect."

BIS should be considered a dispassionate observer. It does not make money in the financial sector. It is third party observer with the ability to watch the global economy from above the fray.

The fray is looking worse.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Lehman Runs the GE Value Gauntlet (GE)

General Electric Co. (NYSE: GE) is seeing a rise of nearly 1% today, and this is after several days of hitting the 52-week low list and almost seeing its stock trade with $25 handles for the first time in five years. 

Lehman has come out defending the stock saying shares could be near a bottom.  The research noted that it is rather cheap comparatively when you factor in current concerns over its financial service business all the way back to the 1989 to 1992 period.  It noted that similar concerns over exposure to leveraged buyout and real estate lending pushed shares to a 25% discount to the S&P500 at that point, and GE is currently trading at an 18% discount to the S&P500.

What is more interesting about this call than the "relative valuation" being close to a trough is that Lehman notes that there is a potential GE could trade at a premium again.  It even throws out a 20% after its returns to the double-digit earnings growth that its expects over the long term.

Lehman has also noted that it thinks the sale of GE's US private label credit card business could get done this year at a solid price.  Whether or not that occurs, well that is a different animal all together.  But there have been many trying to figure out which units GE will jettison.

Regardless of which units get kept and which get punted, the GE of tomorrow is looking like a far cry from your father's GE.  Many have tried defending GE all the way down.  Shares have literally come off almost 40% from their highs.  Whether or not this marks the true bottom won't be known, but someone will eventually be right there.

Jon C. Ogg
June 30, 2008

SPAC Goes Operational: Hicks Acquisition Becoming Graham Packaging (TOH, BX)

Hicks Acquisition Company I, Inc. (AMEX: TOH) has reached an agreement in principle to go from SPAC to operational.  The deal and terms are subject to execution of a definitive agreement, although the company noted that this is expected to be finalized in the next few days.  Hicks Acquisition will merge with Graham Packaging Holdings Co. through a transaction with Hicks Acquisition.  Interestingly enough, this will be in partnership with The Blackstone Group L.P. (NYSE: BX) and the Graham Group.

Hicks Acquisition is a Dallas-based special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, that was founded and headed by Thomas O. Hicks.  This is also going to be one of the larger SPAC transactions that has ever been announced.  With the debt and financing from partners, this SPAC merger will be valued at approximately $3.2 Billion.  This may even be a record for a SPAC, or at least for the sector it is entering.

After the transaction, the combined enterprise will be renamed Graham Packaging Company and will list on the New York Stock Exchange.

Blackstone has also agreed that it will maintain the largest ownership stake for at least two years as it continues to play an important role in guiding the company strategically and operationally.

Graham Packaging was founded in 1972 and is based in York, PA.  Its 2007 sales are represented as roughly $2.5 Billion.  Graham Packaging is a market leader in custom plastic containers, producing more than 20 billion container units annually at 83 manufacturing plants in North America, Europe and South America. It calls itself the leading supplier of plastic containers for hot-fill juice and juice drinks, sports drinks, drinkable yogurt and smoothies, nutritional supplements, wide-mouth food, condiments, beer, liquid laundry detergent and motor oil.  Certain key customer names are Pepsi, Coca-Cola, Danone, Ocean Spray, Heinz, Abbott, Nestle, Anheuser-Busch,and many more.

Hicks Acquisition I has been public since its IPO in October 2007.

Jon C. Ogg
June 30, 2008

Goldman Sachs Positive on CommTech (CSCO, QCOM, RIMM, PWAV)

Goldman Sachs has come out with some positive calls in the communications technology group, and one of the stocks has been given an upgrade. 

Specifically, Goldman Sachs noted that it is maintaining a bias toward the large-cap stocks in the communications tech universe with stocks like Cisco Systems (NASDAQ: CSCO), Qualcomm (NASDAQ: QCOM), and Research-in-Motion (NASDAQ: RIMM).  The firm is starting to see some opportunities in small-caps in the sector and the firm has listed Powerwave (NASDAQ: PWAV) as its top idea.

PowerWave was RAISED TO BUY FROM NEUTRAL and it has a premium over Wall Street's consensus estimates for 2008 and 2009.  The firm believes that PowerWave can grow its top-line at least 10% over the next 2 to 3 years. Price target is $5.30, about 30% above current levels.

The firm noted that Small-cap stocks in its CommTech coverage are down 36% so far in 2008 and down 19% in June. Goldman Sachs believes this current underperformance is due to their greater sensitivity to macro headwinds as customers consolidate around larger vendors, and rising investor risk aversion.

Jon C. Ogg
June 30, 2008

Top 10 Pre-Market Analyst Calls (ALU, ATHR, HUN, LVLT, MAA, RSOL, TER, TEVA, TWTI, WFMI)

These are ten of the analyst calls we have seen in the early hours of trading this Monday morning:

  • Alcatel-Lucent (NYSE: ALU) Raised to Neutral from Underperform at Merrill Lynch.
  • Atheros Communications (NASDAQ: ATHR) Raised to Buy from Neutral at Piper Jaffray.
  • Huntsman (NYSE: HUN) raised to Hold from Underperform at Jefferies & Co
  • Level 3 Communications (NASSDAQ: LVLT) Cut to Sell from Hold at Citigroup.
  • Mid-America Apartment (NYSE: MAA) raised to Outperform at Robert W. Baird.
  • Real Goods Solar (NASDAQ: RSOL) started as Perform at Oppenheimer.
  • Teradyne (NYSE: TER) Raised to Buy from Neutral at Piper Jaffray.
  • Teva Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: TEVA) raised to Overweight at HSBC.
  • Third Wave (NASDAQ: TWTI) Cut to Neutral at Piper Jaffray.
  • Whole Foods Market (NASDAQ: WFMI) Cut to Neutral from Buy at UBS.

Jon C. Ogg
June 30, 2008

Detroit Drowns The UAW

The UAW's members have become prisoners of the economic war, used now as galley slaves rowing a fleet of doomed ships of into the hellish center of an oil-crazed war between OPEC and the US dollar. All of them will drown shackled to their ships.

It was supposed to be different. The union cut a deal to save some jobs and take control of its own pension and retirement packages. A part of the consideration meant to fund those pools was to come in the form of car company stock.

Now, the industry is falling apart, and the UAW has no chance to get out.

Car expert Edmund.com expects domestic sales to drop 17% in June. According to MarketWatch, Edmunds forecasts "that Chrysler -- the automaker most reliant on truck sales -- will take the hardest hit, down 31.2%. Ford and GM are both expected to post 25% declines."

Auto executives at the companies formally known as the Big Three say they could not have seen the oil crisis coming. They believed they are absolved because the world has changed so fast.

Detroit forgot the lessons of 1973 and the oil embargo. They decided not to follow their Japanese competition and have lines of cars which got good gas mileage. Instead, they took the quick buck for a few years and lived to regret it.

The UAW cannot escape responsibility either. They were a sea lamprey attached to the big car companies, living off the success of their hosts. They showed no alarm when Detroit moved almost its entire production cycle to SUVs and pick-ups.

The top auto executives will not lose their jobs, but the workers on the assembly line will.

Douglas A.McIntyre

The Buffoons In The Auction Rate Markets Look For Excuses

All of the corporate CFOs and treasurers who bought auction-rate securities from the salesman from their investment banks need a scapegoat. When the credit crisis hit, the financial firms which had kept the market liquid since 1985 walked out. The banks would hold some of the securities between auctions to keep the market trading. With huge losses hitting their P&Ls, the risk was not worth the commissions they earned in the auction-rate market.

When the market dried up, auditors made the CFOs write-down the value of the securities.

A new study indicates that most corporate financial chiefs thought that the value of the securities would be protected if the market unraveled. According to the FT, "More than 85 per cent of companies that invested in the collapsed market for auction-rate securities thought Wall Street banks would provide support during crises." The research was done by the Association for Financial Professionals.

CFOs have themselves to blame. If their boards are troubled by the losses their companies have taken, they have no reason to turn to the banks that marketed the securities.

One of the definitions of a sucker is someone who does not read the fine print. There was nothing in auction-rate contracts which said that the value of the paper would be protected if the market dissolved.

It was just a mad wish by people who thought they could make a little extra money and not take risk in the process.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Citigroup's New Bonus Structure: What Happened To "Greed Is Good"

Citigroup (C) has decided to change its bonus structure so that senior management will be paid on the results of the entire bank instead of the success of their individual operations. It will lump the "all stars" in with the mediocre and cause the kind of executive revolt that Citi can ill afford.

According to the FT, the big money center bank "is planning to overhaul its bonus system for hundreds of top managers in an effort to increase co-operation and minimise in-fighting among the disparate parts of the sprawling financial services conglomerate."

The program will undermine the key element to what makes Wall St. a great money machine. Groups of bankers who do well contribute huge sums to their firm's earnings. They make tens of millions of dollars for doing so, but it is capitalism at its best, a systems which fosters short-sightedness and back-stabbing. But, the system makes money.

The argument against the current pay-for -performance programs is that they cause trouble like the mortgage-backed paper catastrophe. But, that collapse was systemic. Every banker on Wall St thought the investments were golden. Even it they were sharing bonuses with IT department at their firms they would not have seen the carnage coming.

On occasion, the current compensation structure fails to produce results, but likely over the history of the money community it has made a lot of people rich and their employers along with that.

Douglas A. McIntyre

China's Inflation Threat

During the 19th century, the West began a brisk trade relationship with the Chinese though Canton. It has been a good deal for both sides, with a few exceptions like the First Anglo-Chinese War, ever since.

China has now developed a problem which undermines the foundation of what has been its attraction as an exporter for countless decades. Inflation in the country is increasing the costs of its goods. According to The Wall Street Journal, the heart of the problem is that "manufacturers say their profits have dwindled as they pay out more for raw materials and energy." With oil at $140 and inflation in China running at 11%, the situation is likely to get worse.

China's new inflation problem is a bigger problem for the West. Price increases on a huge number of products have been kept in check because they are made cheaply on the mainland and bought for retail sale everywhere from the US to Germany. A run-up of prices in goods out of China means a run-up in the prices for all of these items in the countries which import them.

A number of economists and retail executives have put forward the thesis that Vietnam and other poor Asia countries can replace China as a source for imports. The trouble is that Vietnam does not have 1.3 billion people and the infrastructure to be a major manufacturing.

China's inflation is spreading to the West and little can be done about it.

Douglas A. McIntyre

The Whining From Drug Companies: The FDA Is Hard On Us

The profit-mongering Big Pharma companies don't want the FDA to take so long approving their drugs. It cuts into profits and delays their chances of making money on new blockbuster treatments.

According to The Wall Street Journal, the head of Schering-Plough, almost certainly representing the sentiments of his industry expressed profound concern that "an intensifying focus on safety and a diminished tolerance for side effects at the Food and Drug Administration have dramatically lowered the odds that the drugs would make it to market -- at least not without a lot of extra time and money."

If many new pharmaceuticals did not cause people to grow extra legs or go batty, the drug companies would have an argument. But, it was only recently that Avandia, a diabetes treatment, was found to increase or cause heart failure in some patients. With a few weeks, the agency warned that the Ortho Evra Birth Control Patch could cause blood clots. These kind of alerts seems to come out of the FDA at least once a month.

Drug companies have to deal with the FDA because their products are "under-researched" before they come to market. That is understandable. Drug companies are in the business of making money. It may be the screening their own products is sometimes secondary to that.

Over at the FDA, dead patients still trump making money.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Another Doomed Venture Goes After Apple (AAPL) iTunes

Also-ran multimedia company Real Networks (RNWK) and Viacom (VIA) are going to take another run at Apple (AAPL) iTunes. They have a music download service call Rhapsody. One of the reasons it has done poorly is that songs bought through Rhapsody would not play on the iPod. Depending on who is measuring, the iTunes service has 70% to 85% of the multimedia download market now. Rhapsody subscriber have not been able to play songs on iPods but the new program will change that.

According to Reuters, "Digital music seller Rhapsody is launching a $50 million marketing assault on Apple's iTunes, offering songs online and via partners including Yahoo Inc and Verizon Wireless." Verizon has not had much success selling music on its phones and the Yahoo! music store has not been a hit. The new alliance as all the look and feel of losers trying to become winners by banding together.

ITunes is successful because it was married with a hardware device, the iPod, from the day it launched over five years ago. This "installed base" of over 150 million multimedia players gives it a position that is unlikely to be challenged.

Real Networks and Viacom should save their money.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Media Digest 6/30/2008 Reuters, WSJ, NYTimes, FT, Bloomberg

According to Reuters, Rhapsody, a music service owned by Real Networks (RNWK) and Viacom (VIA) will make a push against Apple (AAPL) iTunes by embracing the iPod as its player.

Reuters writes that the presidential election could delay any Fed action until December.

Reuters reports that China will up jet fuel 15% for its local carriers.

The Wall Street Journal reports that large tech companies like Verizon (VZ) and Google (GOOG) are buying patents in their industries to prevent them from being owned by companies which could ask for license fees.

The Wall Street Journal reports that drug companies say that the FDA's long approval process is hurting their businesses.

The Wall Street Journal writes that flooding in the Midwest could push some insurance companies to losses in Q2.

The Wall Street Journal writes that US airline may have to take foreign investments.

The Wall Street Journal writes that China's export strength could be hurt by inflation in the country.

The New York Times writes that food hoarding by some countries is pushing food prices higher.

The New York Times reports that Qualcomm (QCOM) is launching a new chip which will compete with Intel (INTC)

The FT writes that Citigroup (C) will change its bonus structure to one which encourages executives to improve earnings for the whole company and not just their divisions.

The FT writes that a new study show that when companies bought auction rate securities they believed that the banks who marketed them would support their value if the market turned down.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Asia Market 6/30/2008 (DCM)(SNP)(CN)

Markets in Asia were mostly lower.

The Nikkei fell.5% to 13,481. Dentsu was down 2.2% to 225000. Docomo (DCM) was up 2% to 156000.

The Hang Seng was up .5% to 23,157. China Netcom (CN) was up 3% to 21.60. China Petroleum (SNP) was down 1% to 7.27 CNOOC was up 3.4% to 13.54.

The Shanghai Composite was down .5% to 2,726.

Data from Reuters

Douglas A. McIntyre

June 29, 2008

Sirius (SIRI): A Mysterious Rally

Sirius (SIRI) staged an odd rally late Friday, moving up 15%. the rise began after 2 PM.

The sharp increase in the shares was may on tremendous volume, nearly 47 million shares.That is nearly twice what the company trades in a normal day.

There may be more rumors that the FCC is going to give the Sirius merger with XM Satellite (XMSR) more generous terms than Wall St. thinks. So far it has been assumed that pricing to the consumer will be capped to prevent monopoly pricing. But, both companies are in such bad financial shape that regulators may fell allowing for no increases in pricing to the consumer could doom the two companies.

No matter what the cause, Sirius is likely to drop back to where its started and drop back there early Monday.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Media Digest 6/21/2008 (BCS)(MSFT)

According to Reuters, Steve Ballmer has become the lone voice at the head of Microsoft (MSFT).

Reuters writes that fund managers hope that clients from sovereign funds will fill the gap left in money management income.

Reuters writes that the head of BNP Paribas says the worst of the credit crisis is over.

The Telegraph writest that the CEO of Barclays (BCS) say the 4.5 billion pound the company raised will get it through the current crisis.

The FT writes that global markets are going to have their worst first half in 26 years.

Bloomberg writes that the president of OPEC say oil may hit $170 this year.

Douglas A. McIntyre

June 28, 2008

Apple (AAPL): The Recession Comes Calling

Wall St. was disappointed by RIM's (RIMM) forecast for the upcoming few quarters? Could the same thing happen to Apple (AAPL)?

Several companies in the cell phone business have made comment that the second half of the year will be rough. The latest was Sony-Ericsson, which relies on high-end handsets for most of its sales. Shares in Nokia (NOK) have dropped sharply on similar concerns.

The launch of the new 3G iPhone is almost certain to be a success which will be the envy of every other handset company in the world. But, if the recession continues to deepen, what happens to the product a month or two after the first flood of buyers?

A recession will cut into the buying power of customers shopping for iPhones, iPods, and Mac, but inflation, which erodes consumer spending capacity, is even worse. All of Apple's products are discretionary purchases, which makes the company vulnerable to a sharp drop in the economy.

Apple's shares have already made a move down from nearly $190 in early June to $170. If analysts begin to show concern that Apple's sales are being cut by sharp drops in consumer purchasing, the firm's shares could move back toward $120 where they traded in late March.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Media Digest 6/28/2008 (MBI)(SI)(LEH)(MER)(BUD)

According to Reuters, the Anheuser-Busch (BUD) board is under pressure to justify what it did not take InBev's buy-out offer.

Reuters writes that overseas money is reluctant to invest in US car companies.

Reuters reports that consumer spending moved up as people got federal rebate checks.

Reuters reports that Lehman (LEH) says Merrill Lynch (MER) may write-down $5.4 million in Q2.

Reuters reports that Moody's is likely to cut Morgan Stanley's (MS) credit rating.

The Wall Street Journal reports that the Dow has hit bear market territory.

The Wall Street Journal writes that Siemens (SI) will cut over 17,000 jobs.

The Wall Street Journal reports that Anheuser-Busch will lay-off 1,000 people. raise prices, and buy-back more shares.

The Wall Street Journal writes that handset company Sony-Ericsson warned that its business was doing poorly.

The Wall Street Journal writes that MBIA (MBI) is selling munis to raise cash.

The New York Times reports that venture investors had an unusually poor quarter.

The FT writes that Merrill Lynch is considering selling its stakes in Blackrock and Bloomberg in the hope of raising $15 billion.

Douglas A. McIntyre

June 27, 2008

The 52-Week Low Club (ABK)(WM)(HUN)(IGT)(AEO)(SFD)

Smithfield Foods (SFD) S&P downgrades due to credit problems. Falls to $19.75 from 52-week high of $24.69.

American Eagle Outfitters (AEO) President of the company is leaving, and retail is poor. Falls to $13.37 from 52-week high of $28.28.

International Game Technology (IGT) Morgan Stanley downgrades after earnings. Sells down to $24.38 from 52-week high of $49.41.

Huntsman (HUN) Still falling after failed IPO. Down to $9.76 from 52-week high of $28.40.

Washington Mutual (WM) Still grave concerns about write-offs. Drops to $4.65 from 52-week high of $44.04.

Ambac (ABK) More worries about future credit agency downgrades. Dips ot $1.60 from 52-week high of $88.65.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Bear Market Forming An IPO Famine?

This week could be called "official bear market territory" with some traders, but IPO traders might call this one the "IPO Withdraw Week."  As you will see below, we had three IPO filings get formally withdrawn this week.

Initiate Systems, Inc.withdrew its planned IPO...."The initial public offering would have been a discretionary financing for the Registrant. The terms currently obtainable in the public marketplace are not sufficiently attractive to the Registrant to warrant proceeding with the initial public offering. "

Broncus Technologies, Inc. withdrew its IPO "due to current public market conditions"

Sonics also withdrew its IPO on Monday in a filing with the SEC.  Here was the original filing.

Jon C. Ogg
June 27, 2008

Some Good News for Cheniere Energy, Finally (LNG, CQP, JPM)

For the past two months, all the news from Cheniere Energy (AMEX:LNG) has been bad. First, there was the triple whammy. Then there was an awful earnings report for Cheniere and its spin-off, Cheniere Energy Partners (AMEX:CQP). Last, the company's stock hit a 52-week low on May 9th, and has dropped as low as $3.65/share since then.

Cheniere shares hit a high of $5.05 today on the company's announcement that it has reached a marketing agreement for its re-gasified LNG at the Sabine Pass terminal. Cheniere Partners reached $9.42 earlier today, before backing off to $9.12 currently. A subsidiary of J.P. Morgan (NYSE:JPM), J.P. Morgan Ventures Energy Corporation, will purchase LNG cargoes from Cheniere as soon as the LNG gets to Sabine Pass. In return, the JPM energy group acquires some storage and re-gasification capacity from Cheniere. The mother ship, JPM, guarantees all the energy group's financial obligations.

This is the first good news the Cheniere companies have had in some time. It does reduce their earnings potential, but the companies were so short of cash that their ability to pay for LNG cargoes was questionable. Now, however, the deal with Morgan frees Cheniere from life support. The agreement probably won't have any impact in the second quarter, where analysts are estimating Cheniere's loss at $1.12/share. But estimated third quarter losses of $1.29/share will almost certainly be revised downward.

Paul Ausick
June 27, 2008

Virgin Hopes Helio Can Slow Customer Defections (VM, ELNK, SKM, S)

If you have followed the launch of the "cool cellular" service called Helio over the last year or so, you might be among the few who remembered it even launched.  This was the joint venture between Earthlink Inc. (NASDAQ: ELNK) and SK Telecom (NYSE: SKM).  Richard Branson's Virgin mobile USA Inc. (NYSE: VM) has decided it might be able to to turn this into shinola, and if it doesn't work out it will have ended up being a tiny gamble.

Virgin is acquiring Helio for nearly $39 million.  But it is acquiring the company with 13 million shares of stock.  The interesting part here is that Virgin may actually get to lower its network costs in the carrier agreement with Sprint (NYSE: S).

Helio will give Virgin Mobile approximately 170,000 existing subscribers with an average revenue per of close to $80.00.  It will also give it a a handset inventory of some 85,000 units with a book value of $17 million.  With 20% of Virgin's customers migrating to post-paid products, the company hopes this will add to the retention.

Virgin Group and SK Telecom will each invest $25 million of capital into the operations in the form of mandatory convertible preferred stock with an $8.50 per share conversion price. These will have a four-year maturity and a 6% annual dividend, and SK Telecom will own a combined equivalent of approximately 17% of Virgin Mobile USA and will take two seats on Virgin Mobile USA's Board of Directors.

EarthLink shares are down over 3% today at $8.72 as this will likely result in a charge for the company.  Virgin Mobile USA shares are up less than 1% at $3.00 on the day.

Jon C. Ogg
June 27, 2008

Seven High-Yield Dividend Stocks For The Current Market (MO, AIV, T, VZ, DOW, DUK, SNH)

We have been running through many companies to determine which dividends appear safe.  Investors chase high dividend stocks with stable earnings when they are concerned about where to put their money.  We looked for stocks with dividend yields north of 4.5% (above 10-YR T-Note) as the cut-off and those who are expected to see earnings remain ample to maintain the numbers.  We had to eliminate everything tied to financial stocks in this climate as many dividends there are trimmed.  We also had to eliminate anything tied to high volatility and anything tied to auto's.  We screened many others, but here are seven stocks with dividends that we think will either stay the same or grow in the coming year.

Altria Group, Inc. (NYSE: MO) is one of the old defensive stocks in a defensive sector: good old investor-friendly and cancer-causing tobacco.  The company recently split off Philip Morris International unit and is in the midst of a buyback and restructuring.  This company didn't drop the dividend when the stock was butchered in the 1990's, so now that its business is stable it's a safe bet that it will try to keep its dividend no matter what.  With a $1.16 dividend (annualized) you have a 5.4% yield as of today and the $1.67 EPS estimate for 2008 and $1.84 EPS estimate for 2009 may actually leave more room for that dividend to increase rather than just stay the same.

Apartment Investment & Management Co. (NYSE: AIV) is one of th larger apartment-REIT's out there, and it is diversified on property scales and by geography.  REIT's also have to pay out 90% of their taxable income to shareholders in the form of dividends.  While apartments have not at all been immune from late-pays, the credit crunch, and the soft economy, the one area that sane people can't eliminate is their roof.  Unless they want to be homeless, destitute, or back with mom and dad, the public has to live somewhere.  Unfortunately that has not translated into share appreciation as this has lost more than 1/3 of its value.  Its $2.40 dividend does seem sustainable with expected FFO (equivalent to EPS) of $3.25 in 2008 and $3.41 in 2009.  Because the price has come off this much, its current dividend yield is almost 6.8%.

AT& T (NYSE: T) and Verizon Communications (NYSE: VZ) are both believed to have safe and stable dividends.  Out of the two, Verizon is in the midst of a larger acquisition.  It is not expected to tie up all the cash that would have been applicable for the dividend, but this does make AT&T as the leader now that its recombination of BellSouth, SBC Communications and the old AT&T are all Ma-Bell once again.  AT&T has a $198 Billion market cap, its dividend is currently $1.60/annualized (4.60%), and forward income estimates of $3.01 EPS for 2008 and $3.38 for 2009 make the dividend more than sustainable for AT&T.

Dow Chemical Co. (NYSE: DOW) is perhaps one of the least exciting of industries, but because it has a monster track record and it has to keep running whether the economy is good or bad (with profits) this one made the list.  The company's $1.68 dividend (annualized) generates an approximate yield of 4.6%.  The reason this has made the cut in the 4.5% yield threshold is because the stock is so far off of its recent highs.  At $35.10 (Thursday close), its shares are down from almost $48.00.  With over $3.00 in projected EPS in both 2008 and 2009, its $1.68 annualized dividend doesn't look in jeopardy.  When you consider its recent flurry of price hike announcements and a perception that the pricing power will be able to stick, that seems even more likely today.

Duke Energy Corp. (NYSE: DUK) is one of the top ten electric utilities in the U.S. with a market cap north of $20 Billion.  Its main operations are in the Carolinas with smaller presence in Ohio, Indiana, and Kentucky; and it has some Latin American exposure as well.  The utility isn't immune from current issue, and while its debt-to-equity is lower than many it has lower valuation multiples than many peers (part because of restructuring).  But one things that utilities have historically sought is to be steady dividend payers, and they hate lowering dividends.  Earnings estimates of $1.28 EPS in 2008 and $1.35 EPS in 2009 should allow this giant electric utility to keep on paying out a $0.92 annualized dividend even if it does have to eat some higher costs that can't be entirely passed down to consumers.

Senior Housing Properties Trust (NYSE: SNH) has been one of the more reliable senior care facility operators and REIT compared to many peers of late.  This sector even fits within our "secular trend" sector as the elderly care facility sector has far more future demand than current and planned supply when you look at the managed elderly care facilities.  Its FFO (EPS equivalent) estimates of $1.71 for 2008 and $1.79 for 2009 should allow the company to maintain its $1.40 (annualized) dividend.  Because the company has made an acquisition and financed it with a dilutive secondary offering, we are not expecting the real earnings jump to come that would increase dividend-eligible income (90% for REIT's) until 2010 or 2011.  But the income is there to maintain its dividend and the company would likely rather sell stock or take on light debt rather than to cut its dividend to holders. This one isn't without any risk, but as it is in the middle of a longer-term range and as the company has been a stable operator of nursing homes where others haven't done as well we feel the company can maintain its high dividend.   

Jon C. Ogg
June 27, 2008

Goldman Sachs Pans Ethanol (AVR, PEIX, VSE)

In coverage this morning, Goldman Sachs has come out and reiterated the firm's Cautious analyst coverage view for the corn-based ethanol producers.  Specifically, the firm has reiterated its "SELL" ratings on:

  • Aventine Renewable Energy (NYSE: AVR),
  • Pacific Ethanol NASDAQ: PEIX),
  • and VeraSun Energy (NYSE: VSE).

The firm notes that corn markets are already short of supply already tight and that spot prices are now much higher because of the Midwest flooding.  It also noted that the next big ramp-up in ethanol capacity will keep pressure on ethanol equities.

As part of this call, Goldman Sachs made wider loss projections for PEIX in 2008 and 2009 and now sees losses rather than gains in VSE as well.  The interesting part of the call besides the reiterated Sell rating is that Goldman Sachs actually now sees a gain in AVR and less of an earnings drop-off in 2009 as a result of likely decelerated plant expansion plans.

Jon C. Ogg
June 27, 2008

Early-Bird Technology Upgrades & Downgrades (ARMH, FFIV, MFE, MOT, NOK, NOVL, QCOM, TIBX)

These are the earl-bird upgrades and downgrades we are seeing in Telecom, Tech, and I.T. on this Friday morning with about two and a half hours to open:

  • ARM Holdings (NASDAQ: ARMH) raised to Outperform at Credit Suisse.
  • F5 Networks (NASDAQ: FFIV) started as Buy at Deutsche Bank.
  • McAfee (NYSE: MFE) Started as Outperform at R.W.Baird.
  • Motorola (NYSE: MOT) Started as Underperform at Credit Suisse.
  • Nokia (NYSE: NOK) Downgraded to Neutral at Credit Suisse.
  • Novell (NASDAQ: NOVL) Raised to Buy from Hold at Jefferies.
  • Qualcomm (NASDAQ: QCOM) Started as Outperform at Credit Suisse.
  • Tibco Software (NASDAQ: TIBX) Raised to Hold from Underperform at Jefferies.

Full Med-Bio Analyst Upgrade/Downgrade summary from BioHealthInvestor.com: BMY, EHTH, IMCL, BABY, NUVA, ONXX, OSIP, ZMH

Jon C. Ogg
June 27, 2008

Microsoft (MSFT): Ballmer's Big Plan

The Wall Street Journal has unearthed a memo from Steve Ballmer, CEO of Microsoft (MSFT). In it, he lays out some of his plans for the company.

The program falls into four buckets. The first is that he will more carefully monitor the launch of Windows 7, which will eventually replace the doomed Vista OS. Next, he will set up a structure which allows the operating groups within the company to work more closely together. Third, he wants to build out a consumer electronics group. As the paper writes, "He now is pushing to more aggressively attack the consumer market and compete with Apple's hit iPhone." Finally, he wants to ramp up his internet group and search business.

The memo may be instructive, but is covers ground which has been part of the Microsoft push for over a year.

Ballmer does have a shot at the consumer electronics business, but it is a long one. The Xbox has been a huge success. The Zune multimedia player has been a tremendous failure. Competing with the iPhone is a dream, but not one that will come true.

Search is also a long shot. If Ballmer can pull that off without the Yahoo! deal, it will be a miracle.

The hopes for Windows 7 are the most important hopes, and they are real and realistic. Microsoft has certainly learned from Vista. The product before it, XP, is a fine map for what Windows 7 could be. The OS is where Microsoft makes its money. It should stick to the knitting.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Apple's (AAPL) China Adventure, The Death Of iPhone Margins

After over a year of playing cat and mouse, it looks like Apple (AAPL) may be close to a deal with China Mobile (CHL) to sell the iPhone on the mainland. Since the country has more cellular subscribers that any nation in the world and the base is growing rapidly, it may be the most critical deal Apple can strike to drive rapid adoption of its newest product.

The problem that China Mobile has had with Mr. Jobs is that he wanted a piece of the subscription revenue from each customer who bought the phone. He seems to have dropped that requirement. According to Reuters, "Apple is no longer insisting on a revenue-sharing policy, so the biggest hurdle for China Mobile to bring in the iPhone has been cleared, but there are practical issues still to be resolved," said China Mobile spokeswoman Rainie Lei.

In the process of getting into China and some other markets, Apple is taking a very significant risk. A piece of the subscription revenue for each iPhone buyer could be worth several hundred dollars every year year for every unit. Giving it up hurts the profit for each handset sold. Apple is also dropping the price of the 3G iPhone to drive adoption.

Apple may eventually end up selling 20 million iPhones worldwide every year. It will be faced with the unpleasant reality the now bedevils firms like Motorola (MOT) and Nokia (NOK). Sales volume is not any good as a substitute for a high yield on each product. Low margins have never been part of the Apple formula for success.

That is probably about to change, and Apple is going to be much worse off for it.

Douglas A. McIntyre

A Plan To Save The Stock Market (GE)(MSFT)

If the stock market crashes, it could bite a number of parts of the economy, and bite them hard. There are several things that Congress could do to help the situation, although the government body is almost always slow to act.

The laundry list is short, but a 2,000 point drop in the Dow could wipe out the savings of many of America's older citizens and some of the so-called baby boombers. With home prices falling, a big sell-off could take the net worth of many citizens to zero.

1. Eliminate the tax on dividends. This would drive buyers into many large cap companies which have strong yields. Companies like GE (NYSE:GE) are almost certainly a source of safe yields for shareholders even if the stock is at a multi-year low.

2. Open the strategic oil reserve. The government could "talk" the price of oil down by putting its own supply of oil into the market. Is there a risk? Yes. In the event of a huge interruption of supply coming into the country, the US could be caught short. But, high oil prices may be the greatest enemy of the stock market.

3. Allow investments in the market to be tax deductible for one year. A dollar into the market is a dollar taken off of income. The benefit of owning common shares goes up, even if the market continues to drop.

4. Give public companies a tax credit for the buy-backs of their own shares. Shrinking the base of stock outstanding increase EPS. This does not always increase share price, but it may in cases where companies have huge cash reserves. Microsoft (MSFT) may be one of the best examples.

5. Move private equity back into the market. The best way to do this may be for the Fed to supply banks with capital to lend to buyers by creating a facility that allows deals to be done with below market  interest rates.

6. Take away all caps on the tax benefits of money put into IRAs. It encourages the purchase of stock for future retirement needs.

Of course, by the time Congress looks at any of these options, it will be the end of the decade.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Media Digest 6/27/2008 Reuters, WSJ, NYTimes, FT, Bloomberg

According to Reuters, M&A activity is down sharply.

Reuters writes that Anheuser-Busch (BUD) turned down an offer from InBeve.

Reuters reports that Yahoo! (YHOO) has realigned its senion management

Reuters reports that China Mobile (CHL) said it was making progress with Apple (AAPL) on iPhone distribution.

The Wall Street Journal reports that Mozilo of Countrywide (CFC) helped many people get loans.

The Wall Street Journal writes that the Fed will make it easier for private equity firms to invest in banks.

The Wall Street Journal writes that IACI (IACI) will take a $300 million goodwill hit.

The Wall Street Journal write that the new Centro did not keep Palm (PALM) from a big loss.

The New York Times writes that a suit claims that UBS (UBS) misled investors.

The New York Times writes that Sony (SNE) has put together a plan to improve returns in its electronics businesses.

The Wall Street Journal writes that Ford (F) is offering buy-outs at some of its plants.

The Wall Street Journal reports that a memo from Microsoft's (MSFT) Ballmer offers clues about what he will do with the company.

The New York Times writes that Chrysler brought back Lee Iacocca to give employess a pep talk.

The FT writes that Verizon (VZ) is pressing Vodafone (VOD) to exit its piece of Verizon Wireless.

Bloomberg writes that AIG (AIG) is facing another $5 billion in write-downs.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Asia Market 6/27/2008

Markets in Asia were down sharply.

The Nikkei fell 2% to 13,544.

The Hang Seng fell 1.8% to 22,055.

The Shanghai Composite fell 5.3% to 2,746.

Data from MarketWatch

Douglas A. McIntyre

Continue reading "Asia Market 6/27/2008" »

June 26, 2008

XM Taps Credit Facility, Extends Chairman Contract (XMSR, SIRI)

XM Satellite Radio Inc. (NASDAQ: XMSR) and its XM Satellite Radio Holdings Inc. announced in a filing today that (on June 26, 2008) it has entered into a Credit Agreement relating to a $100 million term loan with UBS AG.

XM said it has used a portion of the loan proceeds to repay the previously disclosed draw under its $150 million GM credit facility. Following the repayment, XM noted in the filing that it has full access to the GM credit facility.

On June 26, 2008, the lenders who are party to XM’s $250 million revolving secured facility entered into a fourth amendment to the original facility to approve the credit agreement (which replaces XM’s right under the Original Facility to elect to increase the size of the Original Facility by $100 million).

Goldman Sachs said that both Sirius Satellite Radio Inc. (NASDAQ: SIRI) and XM would need cash, but this is just the credit facility side of it.

The Credit Agreement has a scheduled maturity date of May 5, 2009 and will survive if the pending merger with Sirius Satellite Radio is consummated.  The agreement is also secured by substantially all of XM’s assets other than specified property.  Additionally, this contains a financial covenant that requires XM to maintain a level of cash (and equivalents) from time to time of either $50 million or $75 million.

In a separate note, the company noted in this filing that Chairman Gary parsons extended his employment term from June 30, 2008 to November 18, 2009.

Jon C. Ogg
June 26, 2008

Five Big Winners For A Crummy Day (BBBY, NVO, SWHC, S, AUY)

Chances are that if you weren't short selling all day, this was another ugly summer day that made you want to panic. Covering the market wasn't any more fun either.  But imagine that there were some key stock winners on a day where oil breaks above $140.00 per barrel and when the DJIA, NASDAQ, and S&P 500 were all down roughly 3%.  You might think you'd have to be Dr. Pangloss for any positive takes, but here are a few key stock winners:

Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. (NASDAQ: BBBY) closed up 4.27% at $29.79 after beating earnings the night before.  We saw nearly triple the volume with more than 14.3 million shares traded.  Earnings were down from the prior year but still better than analysts were expecting.  You just know their customer base isn't going to stay at home forever, recession or not....

Novo Nordisk A/S (NYSE: NVO) was another standout winner, and it is amazing that the volume on this diabetes winner has remained so low.  The Danish drug company is often one of the few winners on crummy days as their diabetes treatments are above and beyond all.  Shares closed up 2.8% at $67.85.  While 480,000 shares isn't as actively traded as many key US drug stocks, it is nearly double a normal day for NVO shares. Recession or no recession, that insulin for diabetics has to keep coming and it has to keep getting better and better.

Smith & Wesson Holding Corp. (NASDAQ: SWHC) rose by 6.6% to $5.45 today on more than double volume of 1.66 million shares.  And it wasn't because we all have to buy guns to fight off the economically challenged. The Supreme Court overturned a handgun ban in Washington D.C. by a 5-4 decision, ruling that the district's handgun laws violated the Second Amendment by denying individuals the right to own guns.

Sprint Nextel Corp. (NYSE: S) bucked the day's trends after it said that the recently launched touch screen Samsung Instinct smart phone broke company sales records in its first week in stores.  If there was a phone company that needed a rally, it's Sprint.  Shares closed up almost 3.4% at $8.84 on almost twice the normal trading volume with more than 64 million shares trading hands.

Yamana Gold Inc. (NYSE: AUY) was the volume leader in major gold stocks today.  With a weakening dollar and oil cruising past $140/barrel, you know the gold bugs were winning today.  We saw more than a 3% gain to back above $900/ounce for gold today.  Yamana shares were up 6.8% at $15.61 on over 21.4 million shares, almost twice its average daily volume.

Interestingly enough, none of the major integrated U.S. oil companies rose today.  Even that huge list of DEFENSIVE STOCKS FOR A CRUMMY MARKET failed to perform again today. 

Jon C. Ogg
June 26, 2008

Palm (PALM) Bites The Dust As Yield-Per-Phone Collapses

Things were supposed to be bad at Palm (PALM), but, based on earnings, they were even worse.

The firm, which has products which compete with the Apple (AAPL) iPhone and RIM (RIMM) Blackberry, among others, posted a loss of $41 million on revenue of $296 million. For the quarter ending May 31 a year ago, the numbers were much better. Revenue was $410 million and the company had a $17 million net profit.

According to the company "Smartphone sell-through for the quarter reached a record high, totaling 968,000 units, up 29 percent year over year." That means the price that Palm got for each phone was awful.

Cash and short-term investments were $258 million at the end of the quarter compared to $546 million at the end of the period a year ago.

The market did not much like the news. Shares were down almost 8% after hours to $6.01.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Micron Dribbles Earnings (MU)

Micron Technology, Inc., (NYSE:MU) posted earnings at -$0.30 EPS on net sales of $1.5 Billion.   First Call had estimates at -$0.28 EPS on $1.47 Billion in revenues.

The company generated $217 million in cash flow from operating activities during the third quarter of fiscal 2008 and ended the quarter with $1.6 billion in cash and investments.

The company didn't offer any fixed outlook in its press release, so all ears that care after a day like today will be on that conference call.  As Wall Street had a dismal day, shares are indicated modestly lower after a 7.1% drop to $6.99 in regular trading.

Jon C. Ogg
June 26, 2008

Icahn Files Proxy Against Yahoo! (YHOO)

Carl Icahn has made his proxy filing today with his formal nominees for the Yahoo! Inc. (NASDAQ: YHOO) board of directors.  His stake is also listed as holding 4.98% in the company.

His new slate of board members is Lucian A.  Bebchuk, Frank J. Biondi,  Jr., John H. Chapple,  Mark Cuban,  Adam Dell,  Carl C. Icahn, Keith A.  Meister,  Edward H. Meyer and Brian S. Posner.

The good news is that Mr. Icahn is a billionaire and he's got a solid track record.  The bad news is that for now he's just wasted his time by messing around with Jerry Yang & Kids.... and wasted a few million dollars of spending money.

Covering the Yahoo! saga is becoming about as exciting as watching the stock ticker right now.

Jon C. Ogg
June 26, 2008

The 52-Week Low Club (SIRI, XMSR, C, BAC, AIG, LEA, RAD, GM, OSK, UAUA)

Oshkosh (OSK) Comes out with extremely week outlook. Sells down to $22.20 from 52-week high of $65.83.

GM (GM) Big sell rating and possible credit rating downgrade. Economy catches up to Detroit. Makes multiyear low at $11.10 down from 52-week high of $43.20.

Rite Aid (RAD) Larger than expected loss. Sells off to to $1.39 from 52-week high of $6.51.

Lear Corporation (LEA) Auto supplier in a bad auto market. Screams down to $14.25 from 52-week high of $41.33.

Bank of America (BAC) Series of negative comments from brokerages about money center banks. Wall Street also does not like Countrywide (CFC) deal. Sells down to $25.01 from 52-week high of $52.96.

Citigroup (C) Wall St. estimates another $9 billion in write-offs in Q2. Drops to $17.53 from 52-week high of $52.97.

XM Satellite Radio (XMSR) Concerns about viability, merger or not. Drops to $7.33 from 52-week high of $16.44

Sirius (SIRI) Ditto. Dips to $1.80 from 52-week high of $3.94

AIG (AIG) Investors looking for more huge write-offs. Tumbles to $28.26 from 52-week high of $70.97

United (UAUA) Oil prices top $140 a barrel. Sell down to $5.25 from 52-week high of $51.60

Douglas A. McIntyre

Oil At $140, One Share Of Exxon (XOM) Buys A Tank Of Gas

Every time the market thinks oil won't go higher, it does. Today it hit $140. To be fair, OPEC president Chakib Khelil said oil could reach $150 to $170 this summer. At the current rate of increase, crude may make those numbers before the 4th of July.

Premium gas is already above $5 in some regions in the US. Regular is over $4.25 many places. Refineries and retailers can only swallow so much in terms of losses. The consumer will have sit at the same table with them soon.

A 1% increase in crude does not represent a 1% increase in gas. Too bad the math is not that simple. Drivers could look ahead a month or two and see what it will cost to fill up at the pump.

Gas will hit $5 throughout much of the US, probably in July. Too much of the auto travel by Americans is mandatory. And, even if it hurts, some people will insist on vacationing by car this summer.

At $87, it now takes one share of Exxon (XOM) to pay for a fill-up.

No On Cares About Yahoo! (YHOO)

Almost every financial news outlet and website ran the news that Yahoo! (YHOO) was realigning its management. The portal company said "The moves support its strategy to be the starting point for the most users, the must-buy for the most advertisers and the platform of choice for developers." It is hard to say what that means, but it would be equally hard to say that it is anything other than vague.

The market is wise. Its reaction to the announcement was nothing. Yahoo!'s shares moved up a few pennies, but volume is running very light--about half its normal daily trading.

Yahoo! said a few people would get new jobs. A few positions are being created, but the company has not appointed people for these. Perhaps the decisions were hasty and they could not locate the appropriate bodies.

Shareholders don't care about the news. It does not show any indication that the board or management have a plan to improve the company's revenue or to cut costs to increase margins.

A month or two from now, it will be hard to find Yahoo! in the financial news. It will have simply have become less than ordinary again.

Douglas A. McIntyre