Friday, May 12, 2006

Our next buys

I like pullbacks. The direction is clear - up. Now we have a pause.
Stocks that I have been following and which may be on our model are:
AMX
RFMD
TIE (waiting for buy in point)
CCJ
CSH
MNST
PTSI

I am trying to consider if we are ready to buy today or wait and which ones to buy.
Note that I am avoiding health and high tech for the most part

Don't be eager to rush back in

I'm still not seeing serious bargains. I see only a market that surged and is pulling back.
I want to see deeper drops before jumping back in. And we are sitting on a lot of cash: $50K+

Stopped out of TIE

Sold 400 shares @$86

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Edited to add:
In response to a few queries, I like TIE and we will get back in. I want to see if there will be additional pullback into the 70s after the split. I believe the TIE story is still positive - I was stoppde out of my personal TIE and TIE calls (I had Sept. 55s). I am looking at Dec 90 calls - just $1 more than the 95s (about 7.5%)

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Waiting for bargains

Today's pullback does not seem like much in light of the recent run-up.
Yes, NTRI is down $4, but it was up almost $6 yesterday.

I am surprised, however, by the incredible weakness in the tech sector - NASDAQ has retreated to early March levels. I remember back in the 90s that tech stocks always softened in the summertime. Maybe we are back to that behavior.

Meanwhile, I am looking for some buys and I don't see any fabulous opportunities (TRID being the exception, of course). We are sitting on $8K+ of cash until we find a better place to put it.

Also, I don't think the retreat is enough. I want to see consolidation around 11400 and then move up.

New Stops

Updated Stop prices in red.

ET: $23.6
GHL: $68
GRP: $48
JLG $24 (I am lowering because I think folks are messing around with the price prior to a great earnings release in 2 weeks)
JOYG: $63
MDR: $67
NTRI: $64
STX: $24
TIE: $86
TRID: No stop

TEVA Update

Bad news - they did not perform as expected.

I had hoped that TEVA would show some good results and we could get out around $44. As I've been saying, we bought on the basis that it would be breaking out and moving onwards, and I was wrong.

We were stopped out at $37.7. Damn.

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This was editted to reflect the Stop.

TRID Update

It is incredibly hard to watch TRID drop 20%, especially after such great earnings.
In fact, the slide began after earnings and accelerated when GNSS reported soft sales and earnings.

Most analysts are saying that GNSS softness is actually TRID's gains. That is, that GNSS targetted 2nd and 3rd tier companies selling both old-fashioned CRT TVs and flat panel LCD TVs. CRT sales are losing to LCD, so that can't be good for them. Meanwhile top-tier accounts are moving into the smaller rivals' markets. TRID is the main supplier to these top tier accounts, and it showed in their recent quarter's performance as well as in their guidance upwards for this quarter.

To quote Motley Fool's analysis of GNSS:
"Making matters worse, I think what's really happening is that the second- and third-tier vendors that make up some of Genesis' customer base are losing share to the higher-end manufactures supplied by Trident, among others. That lower revenue in turn led to the usual results -- that is, lower margins and lower earnings."

TRID will enjoy the opposite experience: higher sales will lead to better margins and higher earnings. Get back to what TRID reported:
1. Unit sales are up 2.7X - TV sales were up 140%, so TRID is selling into more TVs
2. Sales were up 177%
3. Prices dropped only 7%. Typically, silicon prices drop a lot further. This is sign of pricing power.

So why isn't this translating into a stronger stock price? Possibilities include:
Factor #1 - Investors don't distinguish between TRID and GNSS. Either from stupidity or because they don't see LCD TV strength
Factor #2 - Consumer spending slowdown fears. As rates rise, as housing strains appear, there is fear that consumer spending may slow. I don't think that will happen with these TVs, especially as prices come down
Factor #3 - TRID will lose market share because they are the king of the hill. TRID has one weakness and that is the HDTV tuner. As of March, new US TVs must include a HDTV tuner (technically, TVs 25" or greater). Ideally, the HDTV tuner and the Video Processor would be on the same chip. Ideally because it's less silicon and lower cost. TRID is a few months late with such an integrated chip. This is in no way a deal breaker, and I wonder if it will have much impact at all.
Factor #4 - June quarter is slow. Could be a drop before a slow quarter. Yet TRID announced that sales would be up.
Factor #5 - Slipping prices. In the face of aggressive price cuts from GNSS or lack of integrated chips, TRID could face lower prices. Ummm, on older and lower quality chips - perhaps. But on the TVs that will roll out in the Fall - TRID is sitting pretty. ANd that is where they are making the money.
Factor #6 - Institutional selling. I can not get visibility to this, but a small cap that moves so far so fast is clearly a victim of institutional factors (possibly hedge funds)
Factor #7 - Overpriced. It has a P/E of 111. My response - so? It grew 177%. It has a PEG <1.>100% is a big buy signal in my book.

To conclude - I don't know why TRID dropped. It makes no sense. SO I am staying with TRID - this is a strong hand and someone is trying to bluff us out. (The same thing happened at NTRI - sharp and sudden drop even though the fundamentals hadn't changed and showed signs of even improving).

Sunday, May 07, 2006

Analyst ratings - Handle with care





There are quality stock analysts out there. Smart people who do a lot of digging before they make a recommendation. Most analysts, however, are not so diligent.




I own PWR - a company that actually installs power lines and fiber optic cable. When AT&T decided to push more fiber to the curb, they use PWR. WHen katrina hit and power lines had to be re-installed, PWR was there.

Post Katrina, PWR continues to swing for the fences.
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=PWR


In the latest quarterly earnings release this week, PWR reported a profit of $0.7. Expectations were for $0.03. And that is versus a $0.04 loss same quarter last year.

What is hysterical to me is that MATRIX RESEARCH downgraded them the week before release form HOLD to SELL. When a company is growing and throwing out earnings higher than expected, why would you sell? Overpriced? Maybe....but they don't seem to give any reasons. Meanwhile, PWR ran up 15% since that SELL recomendation.....

Stop Loss Prices

The market is raging. I mentioned earlier in the week that 16% for th eyear was possible, and Friday's run up made me think that I might not have been aggressive enough.

I think the market has seriously forgotten that rate hikes will happen. I want to keep tight, tight stops. As follows
ET: $23.6
GHL: $61
GRP: $48 (GRP likes to move in cycles http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?t=6m&l=on&z=m&q=b&p=&a=&c=&s=grp)
JLG $25
JOYG: $60
MDR: $62
NTRI: $64
STX: $24
TEVA: $37.7
TIE: $72 (tighter than normal)
TRID: No stop