Friday, November 21, 2014

3 Value Stocks Near 52-Week Lows Worth Buying

Much like companies that are rising past their fair values, we can often find companies trading at what may be bargain prices. While many investors would rather have nothing to do with stocks wallowing at 52-week lows, I think it makes a lot of sense to see whether the market has overreacted to a company's bad news.

Here's a look at three fallen angels trading near their 52-week lows that could be worth buying.

Chips and dips
It's been far from a November to remember for chipmaker Qualcomm (NASDAQ: QCOM  ) , which saw its stock nosedive by nearly 9% after reporting weaker-than-expected fourth-quarter earnings results two weeks ago.

Source: Flickr user Doug Kline.

For the quarter, Qualcomm saw its revenue rise 3% year over year but dip 2% from the sequential third quarter. The story was similar for its net income, which jumped 25% year over year but fell 15% from the sequential quarter. The problem for Qualcomm is that it's facing a growing number of legal battles in China, the U.S., and Europe that have halted some lucrative licensing payments to the company and threaten to slow its steady growth rate.

Specifically, China's National Development and Reform Commission is examining whether or not Qualcomm's licensing business, along with its chipmaking business (Qualcomm is currently the leading baseband provider in the world), would create a monopoly within the country. If the NDRC's decision goes against Qualcomm, it could significantly inhibit Qualcomm's growth potential in what is becoming the world's most important wireless market.

Additionally, U.S. regulators are looking into the "fair and reasonable commitments" of Qualcomm's licensing division, while the EU is investigating various types of financial incentives related to its baseband business. All told, Qualcomm's sales and profits are forecast to come up short until these probes are put in the rearview mirror.

Despite this, I view Qualcomm as an intriguing value stock after its latest tumble and would highly encourage value investors to give the company a closer look.

To begin with, Qualcomm's bread-and-butter chipmaking business continues to grow despite its licensing issues. The latest quarter saw its chip business expand 9% to $4.85 billion, and I anticipate this is a trend that's unlikely to slow down anytime soon. As the world's leading provider of wireless chipset technology, Qualcomm is certain to benefit from rising global handset sales.

Source: Flickr user Maurizio Pesce.

Secondly, the rise of the Internet of Things -- in English, the interconnectivity of various devices in our lives, such as home electronics and our automobiles -- will mesh perfectly with Qualcomm's dominance in wireless technologies. Most companies haven't even begun to scratch the surface of the Internet of Things, so this could be a multidecade growth opportunity for Qualcomm.

Finally, don't forget that Qualcomm is fortifying its investors against downside with a fast-growing dividend. Over the past decade Qualcomm's dividend has grown sixfold to $0.42 per quarter and is just shy of having doubled over the past three years. Compounded with the stock's recent swoon, that quarterly payout is netting shareholders a delectable 2.4% yield. Imagine how quickly your money could grow if that dividend were reinvested back into Qualcomm stock!

A newly refined value stock
In general, it's been a rough couple of months for any company associated with the energy industry. With oil prices sinking to four-year lows, fears are spreading that we could see integrated oil and gas operators cutting back on production. Any cutback could eventually trickle its way down to midstream and downstream operators, and in a worst-case scenario, it may be a predictor that something is amiss with the U.S. or global economy.

One company that has really taken it on the chin since the beginning of September is oil refiner and marketer Phillips 66 (NYSE: PSX  ) . Shares have lost 20% since hitting a 52-week high, and they've continued to head lower despite a stronger-than-expected third-quarter earnings report. Investors are worried that weaker oil prices will result in lower production, which can have an adverse effect on Phillips 66's top and bottom lines.


Source: Phillips 66.

However, what Phillips 66's third-quarter earnings results showed is that there's more to this company than meets the eye. The company's refining business in particular could be poised to see incredible strength in the coming quarters thanks to rapidly falling oil prices that have caused crack spreads to move noticeably higher. What this means for Phillips 66, which gets close to 30% of its revenue from its refining operations, is significantly better margins and profitability even if its revenue misses the mark. By a similar token, Phillips 66's marketing and specialties business, as well as its petrochemicals division, should continue to benefit from weaker oil prices as input costs fall.

Like Qualcomm, Phillips 66 is also a cash flow cow that's poised to deliver a top-quality dividend to shareholders. Since being spun-off in 2012 its dividend payout has increased four separate times and by 150% overall to $0.50 per quarter. Currently paying a projected yield of 2.8%, Phillips 66 is divvying out a nice premium to the S&P 500's yield of around 2%.

Lastly, considering the probability that Phillips 66 continues to trounce Wall Street's estimates as oil prices remain depressed, the company's valuation -- less than 10 times forward earnings and a PEG ratio of just 0.8 -- adds more fuel to the value stock fire. For reference, most refiners have P/Es in the mid-teens.

If you're looking for a way to play this recent dip in oil, Phillips 66 could be your stock.

Let there be light!
Lastly, I'm going to prove that you can't let your emotions get in the way of finding high-quality value stocks and suggest you dig deeper into a company that I've been waving the caution flag on for years: First Solar (NASDAQ: FSLR  ) .

Source: First Solar.

The maker of solar systems has been hammered over the past two months, losing about a third of its value as reduced production guidance from some of its peers, as well as expected delays in overseas and domestic solar projects, has weighed on the company. Furthermore, while weaker oil prices are a boon for refiners like Phillips 66, they're bad news for First Solar, which is relying on high fossil fuel prices to encourage businesses to make the switch to solar. If fossil fuels keep losing value, First Solar's pricing may have to drop to entice customers to make the switch.

Despite this recent weakness, I see plenty of light at the end of the tunnel for this solar value stock.

Topping the list is First Solar's third-quarter earnings results, released two weeks ago. First Solar kept its production guidance, operating cash flow, and EPS guidance unchanged, while actually upping its gross margin forecast and its operating income guidance. The only negative was that First Solar reduced the top and bottom of its sales forecast by $100 million each to $3.6 billion-$3.9 billion, which it mostly blamed on temporary project delays. In other words, while its peers are cutting guidance, First Solar is powering through with stronger margins and holding to its profitability forecast.

Source: Flickr user Steve Jurvetson.

Another key point is that First Solar's balance sheet and valuation are gems compared to those of its overseas peers. First Solar is sporting about $900 million in net cash (nearly 19% of its current market value), trading right around its book value, and being priced at less than 11 times forward earnings. Even considering a lack of near-term order visibility throughout much of the sector (even though that has not been a problem for First Solar), a forward P/E of less than 11 is pretty inexpensive!

Finally, long-term trends favor the growing use of alternative energies and a push away from fossil fuels. As fossil fuels become more finite, their price is likely to head higher, placing even more importance on renewable energies like solar. Simply put, few companies have anywhere near the production and efficiency capabilities of First Solar.

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Friday, November 14, 2014

The Dow Does it Again: A New Record Close as Stocks Inch Higher

The Dow Industrials can thank Wal-Mart Stores (WMT) for helping it reach its 25th record close this year. The index rose more than 40 points or 0.2% to end the day at 17,652.79.

The S&P 500, meanwhile, climbed one point, or 0.05% to end at 2,039.33 and the Nasdaq climbed 5 points, or 0.11% to close at 4,680.14.

Energy stocks suffered a sharp decline, despite a last minute surge by Halliburton (HAL) and Baker Hughes (BHI) amid merger chatter. Oil prices continue to fall, dropping below $75 a barrel today, pressuring the sector.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note inched down to 2.342% from 2.359% on Wednesday. Yields fall as prices rise. Gold futures added 0.14% to $1,160.70 an ounce.

In corporate news, lower gasoline prices helped Wal-Mart report its first sales increase since 2012. But the retailer gave a less optimistic outlook for the year. Still, Wal-Mart shares rose 4.7% to close at $82.94.

J.C. Penney (JCP) fell 8.5% after it reported a narrower third-quarter loss.

Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) rose 0.55% after it agreed to acquire the Duracell battery business from Procter & Gamble (PG). P&G fell almost 1%.

And finally, reports of deal talks between Hasbro (HAS) and DreamWorks Animation (DWA) sent the movie studio soaring more than 14% to close at $25.52. Hasbro fell 4.3%.

Thursday, November 6, 2014

A Day In The Life Of A High-Frequency Trader

Ezra Rapoport doesn’t sleep much during the week.

He's a high-frequency trader in futures markets, which are only closed for 45 minutes every day. His systems are running 23 hours a day, and Rapoport, himself, is up and running for most of that time as well.

Rapoport is the head of automated strategy and development for Flammarion Capital Partners and recently joined Benzinga’s #PreMarket Prep to talk about the average day in the life of a high-frequency traders.

Related Link: Jeff deGraaf On What Happens When Quantitative Easing Ends

The Life Of An Early Riser

“I drag myself out of bed as early as I can possibly manage after staying up as late as I can manage,” Rapoport said. “So basically, I stay up until about midnight, and I wake up at about four to get myself to the office.”

By the time he’s reached the office, Rapoport has already been checking his trades for hours. He fires up his Bloomberg, checks his news sources and numbers, and gets prepared for the day.

Completely Automated Trading Volume

As a high-frequency trader, essentially all of his trading volume is completely automated. He monitors the trading activity all day, but none of the orders are placed by hand.

In addition to constantly observing trading, Rapoport also works on development and maintenance. During the 45 minutes that futures markets are closed, he and his team go into their server and make any necessary updates or configurations to files.

“So we have a 45-minute maintenance period every night before the market reopens, but other than that, we are absolutely up 23 hours a day for five sessions,” he said.

For those who don't know what ebola looks like... pic.twitter.com/8sXAsIIIWG

— Ezra Rapoport (@HFBondsTrader) October 24, 2014

Sky High Number Of Trades

In addition trading for long hours, Rapoport’s systems trade very large volumes. On a normal day, they’re doing trades in the thousands to tens of thousands.

"When we get to quarterly expirations or other events where there’s volume driven up in the futures -- which is where we like to be -- on those high volume days, things can get into the hundreds of thousands of transactions."

He also talked about his average holding times and how he was trained by floor traders.

Check out his full interview here:

Don’t forget to tune in to Benzinga’s #PreMarket Prep Monday-Friday 8-9:45 a.m. ET all of the premarket info, news and data needed to start the trading day.

Posted-In: Benzinga #PreMarket Prep Ezra Raporport HFT high frequency tradingFutures Markets Interview Best of Benzinga

© 2014 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

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Monday, November 3, 2014

PLUG – Plug Power Stock a Sell Even on Good Earnings

Twitter Logo LinkedIn Logo Google Plus Logo RSS Logo Dan Burrows Popular Posts: The Top 10 S&P 500 Dividend Stocks for May5 Stocks to Buy in MayTwitter Stock Gets Third Upgrade in Three Days … And Still Isn’t a Good Buy Recent Posts: PLUG – Plug Power Stock a Sell Even on Good Earnings Weak Retail Sales Hurt Everything from Home Depot to Nike The Top 10 S&P 500 Dividend Stocks for May View All Posts

Anyone who follows Plug Power (PLUG) won’t be surprised that PLUG stock managed to fall nearly 10% right after Wednesday’s opening bell. Wild swings are what Plug Power is known for, and there are sure to be many more — probably to the downside — ahead.

plugpower185 PLUG   Plug Power Stock a Sell Even on Good EarningsThere are always a few stocks that a portion of the market falls head-over-heels in love with, despite investors’ better judgment. Take look at what PLUG stock has done over the last 12 months, and it’s abundantly clear some players are blinded by their ardor.

True, Plug Power is one of the few ways for investors to bet on the exciting and revolutionary technology of electricity-generating fuel cells. But since when does it make sense for shares in a company that helps power fork lifts to rise more than 1,400% in a year?

plug power stock PLUG   Plug Power Stock a Sell Even on Good EarningsJust as worrisome is the epic volatility seen in Plug Power stock. Indeed, PLUG stock has traded in a range of 22 cents to $11.72 in the last year alone. Sure, Plug Power stock still is up more than 140% for the year-to-date, but it’s also off 64% since its March 10 high. Have a look at the chart:

How does anyone figure an entry and exit point in a stock like that — especially one as neurotic as Plug Power stock?

Plug Power Stock Short Circuits on Earnings

The latest sell0ff in PLUG was set in motion by disappointing quarterly earnings. Plug Power reported a wider net loss year-over-year, to $75.9 million, or 57 cents a share, from $8.6 million, or 18 cents, in 2013. Yes, much of that stemmed from a charge of $68.4 million for stock warrants, but even on an adjusted basis, PLUG missed analysts’ estimate. Plug Power had an adjusted loss of 6 cents when Wall Street was looking for a loss of 5 cents.

Then again, missing by a penny a share is hardly a tragedy. Furthermore, although revenue declined to $5.6 million from $6.4 million, the top line comfortably exceeded Street estimates. That might be a disappointing quarter for PLUG, but it wasn’t so bad that the stock needed to be shellacked.

However, PLUG took a bad beating because that’s what happens to momentum stocks with insanely high valuations when anything negative comes to light.

Even after Wednesday’s selloff, Plug Power stock was luxuriously expensive, with a nosebleed forward price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) of 77. For comparison, the S&P 500 trades at 16 times forward earnings. Heck, even Netflix (NFLX) — a poster child for pricey momentum stocks — has a P/E of just 50.

That’s not to say that PLUG doesn’t have a solid business or a great future. It very well may. Walmart (WMT), the world’s largest retailer, uses fuel-cell-powered forklifts aided by Plug Power’s systems.

At an investor conference this week, PLUG said it will deliver more than 3,000 units this year and will end 2014 with a profit, excluding interest, taxes and depreciation. That’s nothing but good news for PLUG.

It does not, however, make Plug Power stock a buy.

Like fellow fuel-cell stocks Ballard Power Systems (BLDP) and FuelCell Energy (FCEL), PLUG stock trades wildly from headline to headline. The volatility alone makes Plug Power too risky because it’s far too easy to buy high.

If anything, Plug Power stock is a sell if you’re sitting on gains. Momentum stocks don’t stand a chance in this market, especially if they carry a 1,400% gain over the last year.

PLUG stock offers too many reasons to get out, and there looks to be plenty more selling ahead.

That’s why it’s time to pull the plug.

As of this writing, Dan Burrows did not hold a position in any of the aforementioned securities.

Here's Why LinkedIn Might Be a Better Investment Than Twitter

LinkedIn (NYSE: LNKD  ) and Twitter (NYSE: TWTR  ) shares have sold off by huge margins this year: LinkedIn shares are down 42% year to date, while Twitter's shares are down 37% this year

They are the fastest growing social media companies today. But, LinkedIn's top-line growth is showing signs of slowing down. It fell to 46% in the first quarter of fiscal 2014, from an average yearly growth of 57% in fiscal 2013. Assuming that the company grows at the top end of its guidance, then it will finish fiscal 2014 with a revenue of $2.08 billion, or a 36% growth.

What's going on at LinkedIn?
LinkedIn managed to make a profit in seven out of the eight last quarters between 2012-2013, before reporting a net loss of $13.4 million in the first quarter of the current fiscal year. LinkedIn is facing the bugaboo of many companies experiencing high-revenue growth: spiraling sales and marketing costs.

The company spent $510 million, or 34%, of its 2013 revenue, on sales and marketing expenses. In the first quarter of fiscal 2014, growth in sales and marketing costs outpaced revenue growth: 52% vs. 46%. Product development costs, the company's second-largest expense category, grew 49% during the quarter, 3 percentage points faster than revenue growth. Oddly, LinkedIn's general and administrative expenses, its third largest category, grew 74%.

LinkedIn's user base grew 36% during the quarter compared to last year, but its page views grew just 5%, indicating a rather worrying lack of user engagement.

The bright spot in that rather flat report was that the company expects its sales and marketing expenses for the full year as a percentage of revenue to be below last year's figure of 34%.

Although the company's stock-based compensation in fiscal 2014 is expected to grow to $305 million from $193.9 million last year, it will represent ''just'' 14.7% of its revenue. In contrast, Twitter's stock-based compensation of $640 -$690 million for the current year represents about 54% of its expected 2014 revenue.

LinkedIn has more than $2 billion in cash and short-term securities, while Twitter is cash-flow negative.

Twitter's Achilles' heel
While most of LinkedIn's problems look like temporary ones that the company is likely to outgrow, Twitter's case is not as easy. The bad part is that some of Twitter's biggest problems are not necessarily of its own making, and there isn't much the company can do about them. Let's have a look at three of these reasons.

1. Poor monetization rates for international users
Twitter's business exhibits an odd dichotomy. The company has far more international users (non-U.S.) than domestic ones (U.S.): 186.8 million vs. 54.1 million. While there is nothing unusual about this, the worrying part is that international users account for just 26% of the company's revenue. Non-U.S. users have been growing 1.5 times faster than U.S. users: 33% vs. 21%.

Twitter's advertising revenue per 1,000 timeline views stands at $3.80 in the U.S. and just $0.60 for the rest of the world.

Assuming that 80% of the U.S. population will eventually become Twitter users ( a very generous assumption), and growth for both local and international segments continue at the current rates, the U.S. market will be fully covered in just eight years, after which the rest of the company's growth will have to come from international markets. It's very likely that U.S. growth will max out much sooner than the eight years we have assumed here, possibly in just five years.

With such poor monetization rates for international users, the company could be facing a revenue cliff in a very short period of time.

Twitter's reprieve, however, might come as smartphone adoption rates in the developing economies continues to increase. Currently, a huge percentage of these users are viewing Twitter through feature phones, which are not very advertiser friendly. But assuming that smartphone adoption in these countries helps to double their revenue per 1,000 timeline views to $1.20 in about five years, it will still be far short of the U.S. average.

2. Crowded online advertising industry
Twitter happens to be a tiny player in a crowded online advertising industry. The company has roughly 1% market share vs. 51% for Google (NASDAQ: GOOG  ) and 11% for Facebook (NASDAQ: FB  ) . There are a raft of other top players in this industry, too, including Yahoo, Baidu, LinkedIn, and Yelp. Facebook can sell its users' data to advertisers; LinkedIn is busy steamrolling human-resource industries with its profiles and content, while Google is busy growing its already dominant market share in online advertising. The space looks quite hostile for Twitter.

Twitter shares still look quite expensive even after the big sell-off this year.

3. Stock-based compensation
Twitter's stock-based compensation for its executives and employees is a major drag on its bottom line. The company reported a net loss of $645.3 million in fiscal 2013, after taking a $600.3 million hit from stock-based compensation. The situation is not expected to improve in fiscal 2014 when the company will dole out stock-based compensation amounting to $640 million-$690 million.

Foolish bottom line
Twitter shares seem to be priced for a lot of growth in the coming years. But with the company making so little money from its international markets, and growth in its core U.S. market likely to hit a ceiling soon, it's going to be difficult for the company to maintain good growth five years or so down the line. LinkedIn is more likely to outgrow its problems sooner than Twitter, and is therefore the better long-term investment.

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