High Conviction: A Footware Company That Runs With Generation Y

Jamie Moye submits:

Logie Cassells (at right, top) and Jamie Moye (at right, below) are the principals of Beacon Asset Managers based in Chester, Nova Scotia. The company is a subsidiary of Beacon Securities Ltd., and offers independent investment services to financial institutions.

The company’s “3 Beacon” research approach focuses on three disciplines – demographics, valuation and sentiment – to discover undervalued equities, the performance of which are tracked in its model Beacon Master Portfolio. Cassells and Moye report that the model portfolio is showing a return of more than 75 percent since its December 2008 inception, representing more than 50 percentage point outperformance of the S&P Global Index ETF (IOO), which is up about 18 percent for the same time frame.


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8 Strong Trending Stocks for Your Consideration

Trade Radar Operator submits:

Here’s another post where I ran my simple value screen against the Alert HQ database. Once again I included stocks that are on the Trend Busters list as well as those that are on the Trend Leaders list.


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Will 2010 Be the Year of the Strong Grid? Part V

tom konrad Tom Konrad (AltEnergyStocks) submits:

I came across Hubbell Inc. (HUB-B) when researching General Cable (BGC) for my recent article on the company. Just one more example of when you start researching a sector, (in this case electrical transmission and distribution, or "strong grid") you never know what new companies you may find.

Hubbell is a diversified electrical supplier, serving electric utility, residential, commercial, and industrial markets worldwide. About a quarter (26%) of ITS revenue comes from the "Power Systems" segment, which is roughly what I am focusing on in this series on the "Strong Grid." I previously rejected EMCORE Group (EME) because it only has about 20% of its revenues from the strong grid, so readers might reasonably ask, "What’s so much better about Hubbell?"


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Grid-Based Energy Storage Represents a $200 Billion Opportunity

John Petersen submits:

A reader sent me a copy of an exhaustive new study titled "Energy Storage for the Electricity Grid: Benefits and Market Potential Assessment Guide" that was commissioned by the DOE’s Energy Storage Systems Program and prepared by Jim Eyer and Garth Corey. I’ve been following the work in progress on this report since last summer and have eagerly awaited an opportunity to shift away from the over hyped electric vehicle market and focus instead on a far larger market where cost, performance and substantive business merit will be the only drivers. It looks like my time has finally come. For technology aficionados that want a detailed understanding of what the various grid-based storage applications are, the entire report (232 pages including appendices) is a must read. Over the next few weeks I’ll try to extract some high-level technical and market data and translate that information into a form that will be useful to energy storage investors.

The Eyer-Corey Report identifies 17 discrete grid-based energy storage applications, discusses the performance requirements of each application and assesses the 10-year economic potential for each application. The Report also includes a great summary that condenses a couple hundred pages of detail into a single table.


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18 Dividend Payers Raising Their Yield On Cost

Dividends4Life submits:

For dividend growth investors, there are certain attributes of investments that are more relevant than others, such as yield and dividend growth. To illustrate the power of dividend growth consider that an investment’s yield-on-cost will double every 5 years if they grow their dividend by 15%/year or 7 years at 10%/year or 14 years at 5%/year.


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How Jim Balsillie’s Initial $125,000 RIM Investment Disappeared

mark mcQueenMark McQueen (Wellington Financial) submits:

It has been almost 20 years since Jim Balsillie arrived at BlackBerry by Rod McQueen: Book CoverResearch in Motion (RIMM). Mike Lazaridis knew that he needed some help on the business side, and Jim was the answer. One of the first things Jim did was invest $125,000 for a one third stake in the company. The second thing he did was hire an accountant, who quickly produced a balance sheet that showed Jimmy what had become of his $125k. This excerpt is from Rod McQueen’s new book BlackBerry: The Inside Story of Research in Motion. My Dad got exclusive access to Mike and Jim over a multi-year period, and this story is just one of the dozens that we can all expect to read when it launches next week:

Among the many crucial moments in the history of Research In Motion was the arrival of Jim Balsillie in 1992. At the time, when he was hired by Mike Lazaridis, there were only fourteen employees. As RIM’s new vice-president of finance and business development, Balsillie invested $125,000 for a one-third interest in the business.


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Heineken’s Outlook Remains Robust

Veronique Adam submits:

Stock price: €35.4 ($48.21 US)
Conclusion: Reiterate our positive stance on Heineken (HINKY.PK). Bottom line preserved thanks to pricing combined with tight cost control. Recent M&A initiatives lead to great medium term prospects in Latam, India and South Africa. Raising our valuation range to €42-€44 per share.

2009 results: 4% above forecasts. Sales up 2.7% to €14.7bn, broadly flat organic. EPS up 4%. Earnings up 18% organic. No guidance given for 2010.


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Once a Retail Leader, The Gap Is Now a Turnaround Story

Brendan Wagner submits:

Gap Inc. (GPS) shared jumped 5.5% Friday after reporting a fourth-quarter 2009 earnings beat and offering upside 2010 earnings guidance. The company announced plans for additional share repurchases, and a boost in the dividend gives the stock nearly a 2% dividend yield. (See earnings call transcript.)

I’ve liked this stock since last May for two main reasons: (1) CEO Glenn Murphy is a fantastic operator who is widely underappreciated by Wall Street; and (2) The company’s valuation, both on a P/E and Free Cash Flow Yield basis is too cheap.


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Weight Watchers’ Guidance Comes In Too Light

Ockham Research submits:

Shares of Weight Watchers International (WTW) are trading down more than 13% just after the open on Friday morning because the company’s outlook for the year ahead disappointed Wall Street. The weight-management program known for point counting has endured a relatively difficult year and blames much of the difficult on a weak economy. Management expects 2010 to be challenging as well and has placed EPS guidance at $2.25 to $2.50, substantially below the consensus earnings expectation of $2.78 per share. Weight Watchers spoke to the need “to invest in initiatives to modernize their offering,” which may be related to a report out of Adweek that claims WTW’s $70 million advertising budget is reviewing its options.WTW

Financial performance in the year just ended was actually fairly strong, as fiscal 2009 earnings came in at $2.68 per share and beat analysts’ expectations in each of the four quarters. Sales did slump about 9% in the year to $1.4 billion, but management was able to limit the impact on the bottom line to just 3.3% compared to fiscal 2008 through savvy cost cutting. (Click here for earnings call transcript when available.)


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Natural Gas Inventories Nearly Even with 5 Year Average – Two Stocks That Should Benefit

Stone Fox Capital submits:

After a year when Natural Gas inventories hit record levels, it might surprise people to see that the weekly report is now showing inventory levels only 0.7% above the 5 year average. In fact, the important East market is 2.4% below that average.

With weak industrial demand, it’s likely surprising to most that storage levels are now inline with normal trends. A lot of the burn down has been due to the gruesome weather, especially the record snows in the East. Regardless, though, the more normal inventory levels set us up for higher prices as demand returns.


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Safeway Impresses With Huge Cash Flow

Brendan Wagner submits:

Grocery-store operator Safeway (SWY) opened for trading yesterday (2-26-10) down 4.3%, at 22.50. The shares then proceeded to climb 10% from that level to close at 24.73, a +5.2% gain on the day.

Along with the broad market being down early, some investors may have sold the stock on the headline news that Safeway lost $4.59 per share or $1.609 billion in the fourth quarter 2009.

That massive loss was due to a non-cash, goodwill writedown of $1.818billion, to erase from the balance sheet assets that are not assets. (Goodwill is the premium paid for previous acquisitions, and is an intangible asset). The reason for the stock to so broadly outperform the market today was the big 2009 Free Cash Flow performance, as highlighted by CEO Steve Burd:

Excluding the non-cash goodwill impairment charge, our results were in line with our expectations,” said Steve Burd, Chairman, President and CEO. “Despite very challenging economic conditions, Safeway generated free cash flow of $1.5 billion in 2009. This exceeded our expectations and is the highest annual free cash flow ever achieved by Safeway.


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25 Stocks That Look Good Into the Next Decade

Value Expectations submits:

Long Term investors are determined to find the next Microsoft (MSFT) before it explodes or identify a a company that unique and positioned to make waves in the market such as Apple (AAPL) has recently done. Who is the next company to lead investors into the next decade? An article from James Glassman of MSN Money says a good place to start is by looking at past performance and thus, he provides the top 25 stocks of the past decade (total return) as a starting point for finding the next decades Super Stocks.

In his search he only included stocks that trade on US exchanges and have a market cap of over 1 billion. One visible trend from this list is smaller market cap stocks with heavy foreign exposure seemed to fair well over the past decade. No Mega-Cap companies made this list as it is extremely difficult if not impossible for a Mega-Cap company to grow 50-fold in 10 years. In other words it is impossible for a $200 billion company to grow to $10 trillion in market value in a $14 trillion economy.


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FLIR Systems: Thermal Imaging Could Heat Up Your Returns

Paul Price submits:

FLIR Systems, Inc. (FLIR) designs, manufactures, and markets thermal imaging and broadcast camera systems for a variety of applications in the commercial and government markets. FLIR makes products for condition monitoring, research and development, airborne observation and broadcast, search and rescue, and surveillance and reconnaissance.
2009 marked the tenth straight year of improving YOY results for FLIR Systems. Full year EPS were up 14% climbing from $1.28 to $1.46. Fourth quarter earnings slightly disappointed however at $0.38 versus $0.41, and the shares pulled back to finish today at $26.47 from $33.35 in late December and an all-time high of $45.50 in 2008 (see latest earnings transcript here).
Here are FLIR’s (split-adjusted) per share numbers from continuing operations as reported by Value Line:
Year
Sales
C/F
EPS
B/V
Avg. P/E
52-wk Range
2001
1.62
0.25
0.20
0.79
14.5x
0.50 – 6.20
2002
1.89
0.35
0.29
1.25
18.6x
3.40 – 7.40
2003
2.37
0.39
0.32
1.25
21.7x
5.10 – 9.30
2004
3.49
0.62
0.47
2.27
27.0x
8.70 – 16.70
2005
3.67
0.77
0.58
2.67
24.4x
10.20 – 18.20
2006
4.37
0.92
0.66
3.03
20.3x
10.70 – 17.00
2007
5.70
1.19
0.89
4.56
26.5x
14.80 – 36.40
2008
7.62
1.72
1.28
5.94
26.1x
23.70 – 45.50
2009
7.52
1.82
1.46
7.73
16.8x
18.80 – 33.35
Along with their Q4 report, management indicated expectations of $1.48 – $1.53 for 2010. Consensus views have adapted and now center on $1.51 and $1.68 for this year and next.
That puts FLIR’s multiple at about 17.5x the 2010 view and < 15.8x the 2011 estimate. Those are near the low end of the valuation range of the past nine years, making this a potential buying opportunity.
FLIR has a pristine balance sheet. They have no short-term debt and total debt equals only about 5% of capitalization. Interest coverage is over 33x.
Value Line puts their stock’s "price growth persistence" in the 90th percentile and their "earnings predictability" in the 95th (with 100th being best).
While there’s no near-term catalyst to get investors excited, the recent pull-back seems to have mitigated most of the risk in holding this stock. With that in mind, here’s a nice play from now through Oct. 16th that can work well if these shares do nothing or even if they decline down to $25 by then.
Cash Outlay
Cash Inflow
Buy 1000 FLIR @ $26.47 /share
$26,470
Sell 10 Oct. $25 calls @ $3.30 /share
$3,300
Sell 10 Oct. $25 puts @ $1.90 /share
$1,900
Net Cash Out-of-Pocket
$21,270
If FLIR remains > $25 through Oct. 16, 2010:
  • The $25 calls will be exercised.
  • You will sell your shares for $25,000.
  • The $25 puts will expire worthless.
  • You will have no further option obligations.
  • You will end up with no shares and $25,000 in cash.

This best-case scenario will generate a cash-on-cash profit of:

$25,000 – $21,270 = $3,730
$3,730/$21,270 = + 17.5%
This would have been achieved in under eight months on shares that:
  • Went up.
  • Stayed unchanged.
  • Declined by up to $1.47 /share or (-5.5%).
What’s the downside?
If FLIR finishes < $25 on Oct. 16, 2010:
  • The $25 calls will expire worthless.
  • The $25 puts will be exercised.
  • You will be forced to buy another 1000 shares.
  • You will need to lay out an additional $25,000.
  • You will end up with 2000 FLIR shares.
What’s the break-even on the whole trade?
On the first 1000 shares it’s their $26.47 purchase price less the $3.30 /share call premium = $23.17 /share.
On the ‘put’ shares it’s the $25 strike price less the $1.90 /share put premium = $23.10 /share.
Your overall break-even would be $23.14 per share. FLIR could drop by up to $3.33 /share or (-12.5%) without causing a loss on this trade.
Summary:
FLIR’s pullback has gotten me interested again and because of the reduced expectations for the next few quarters, I’m playing this now as a buy/write with in-the-money calls and out-of-the-money puts.
If FLIR shares go up, stay unchanged or drop less than 5.5% I’ll net 17.5% for the 7.25 months or 28.9% annualized.
Disclosure: Author is long FLIR shares and short FLIR options.


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High Conviction: A ‘Stunningly Cheap’ Telecom Stock

Cale Smith is the portfolio manager of the Tarpon Folio, a spoke fund. He is also the founder and managing partner of Islamorada Investment Management, an independent value investing firm based in the Florida Keys.

We recently had the opportunity to ask Smith about his single highest conviction holding.


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Rising Dividend Yields at TransCanada and Kimberly-Clark

Low Sweat Investing submits:

As 2010 toddles ahead, the Wall Street Journal continues to report a gaggle of dividend increases. Here’s a quick gander at two that grabbed me. With their more than 4% yields and lively tales of loonies and Huggies, they’re quite a pair:

1. TransCanada Corp. (TRP), a Canadian operator of natural gas pipelines, gas storage facilities and electric power generation plants, announced a 5% dividend hike that gooses the stock’s yield to about 4.8%, though the payment will bounce around with currency fluctuations between the U.S. buck and the Canadian “loonie.”


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