Friday, June 30, 2006

LiveRocket Turbo: Selling RFMD and buying JNPR Puts

Selling RFMD - they look like they are headed for a miss.
Selling 1010 shares @ $5.96 = $6,019
Buying JNPR Oct $14 puts: 109 contracts @ $0.55

Weekly Posts will be delayed

I will be travelling for the July 4th weekend.
1. My suggestion a few days ago to buy calls was the right move - if you did it, congrats
2. Fed raised rates only 0.25% and talked softly - as I hoped they would
3. This week is a good time to be long in the market - most of our stocks at this time look to be making additional gains. Who knows how the day will play out - strong likelihood of profit taking after yesterday's massive run-up.
4. Monday will be mellow.

As you consider your positions, look where volume is strong. I noticed that some stocks didn't hit average daily volume yesterday. That's not a convincing rise to me. Meaning - the stock could sag again.

HAPPY JULY 4TH

Thursday, June 29, 2006

Uh Oh, Apple

Apple announced that they too are guilty of options shenanigans. The stock fell ~3% in after hours trading. It will fall even more.

Apple is in a worse place than many of the other companies because they make a juicy target for lawsuits.

TRID - Why I remain a true believer

From a Sony presentation
-------------------------------------------------
Sony expects to increase its global LCD TV shipments to eight million units in Fiscal 2007, according to Makoto Kogure, president of Sony's TV Group and company senior vice president.

Kogure indicated that global demand for flat panel TVs is expected to jump significantly in the next few years. By 2008, flat panel TVs will account for 42% of the overall TV market, up from a 32% share in 2007. LCD TV will account for 75% of the flat panel TV market, rising from 52% in 2005, added Kogure. By fiscal 2007 (April 2007- March 2008), demand for global LCD TVs will reach 80-100 million units, up from 50 million units in fiscal 2006 (April 2006-March 2007), he noted.

Sony has grabbed the top spot in most of Asia Pacific markets such as Hong Kong, Malaysia, Australia, New Zealand, Vietnam and Indonesia, stated Kogure, adding that the company expects its shipments in fiscal 2006 will total six million units.

In response to recent inventory issues in the LCD TV market, Kogure pointed out that the company has no plans to slow down its schedule for next-generation LCD plant expansion amid strong demand for its own-brand LCD TV business. Sony's joint venture with Samsung Electronics, S-LCD, expects to enter volume production at its eighth-generation (8G) plant in August 2007, Kogure said.

I didn't buy

I saw the market weakness in the morning and next time I looked, it was back to strong.
Fortunately, I did have one order to buy more ZOLT at $27, and that was executed.

The perils of having a full time job and trying to manage investments.

What I bought yesterday

I saw the market weakness in the morning and next time I looked, it was back to strong.
Fortunately, I did have one order to buy more ZOLT at $27, and that was executed.

The perils of having a full time job and trying to manage investments.

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

Stopped out of RFMD

We hit the Stop of $5.80
Apparently their chips may NOT be used in Nokia phones.

A primary reason for buying them was expectations of a massive roll-out of new cell phones using their chips.

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Pre-Fed Jitters

The Fed meets tomorrow - these are jitters. I plan on buying today. It is a risk - the market might react badly to the Fed - but no risk, no reward.

NTRI continues to hold onto its gains.

Damn NTRI and Uh Oh MRVL

NTRI moved up again before I coul dbuy. I want to see if the market pulls it down a bit today.

Meanwhile MRVL just crashed hard. Down 12% because it is focusing on the phone business. That's a smart move in general - not sure why the market is pissed. MRVL keeps chasing markets willy nilly. Printers, iPods, storage, cell phones. Pick a plan and stick with it.

INTC did a smart move - they need to buy nVidia

Monday, June 26, 2006

VOL

A smart 4%+ move today on heavy volume. 4X the norm

Every other stock in my universe is showing low volumes. Hell, MRVL had <2M shares traded and their average daily is 6M+.

JLG had strong volume today
So did BGC & CTRN.

Stocks I feel good about: SNDK, CSH, GHL

If you are going to buy a stock, consider a short term call. A lot of stocks will move up shortly as sanity returns to the market and attention turns to the earnings. Buy on the rumor, sell on the fact.
I have calls on JLG, ESV, TRID, and TIE. I bought out ~4 months. My JLG and ESV are doing well. TRID is still in the doghouse and TIE is just being dull.
In this case, I am betting that the underselling will reverse. The JLG $22.50 jan '07 calls went for $1.70 when I bought. I was counting on a reversal of at least a few dollars, so I figured $20 in the near term and $25 potentially in a month or two (remember that it was at $32 recently). In any case, the calls are now $2.15 or almost 30% gain in less than 2 weeks. If the stock decides to return to normalcy, I could be getting a fat $5 for the call in a month, or almost 200% profit.

I think that the calls to buy are in oversold stocks like JLG, ESV, or GRP. Especially GRP - look at the billions Anadarko threw into buying drilling companies. Drilling is the place to be and they need GRP's equipment. They hit a higher low than the last bust in March when they dropped like a rock to $36. This time they bottomed at $40. If they move again to a higher high, they will beat $54. At $45 price, they have a 15 P/E. Analysts give it a target price of $63. The variance in this quarter's earning sestimate is massive: from $0.66 to $0.96 or 50%.

Let's talk upside fantasies. What if they return to $55 in the next 2 months based on incredible results. Oct $50 calls are $2.50. That's 100% return. If they return to the cycle they've been doing for several quarters, $60 or $65 is possible.

When stocks get oversold because of market conditions and not stock fundamentals, it's always worth considering calls. In this case, sentiment looks to be turning or at least prices are reversing a bit. Even a 5% reversal is an option dream.

If you feel nervous about the Fed's impact, wait a few days. This is where th emoney gets made and lost: if you buy calls now and the market likes the Fed's direction, that 3% one day jump in stock price can translate into a 20%+ increase in your option's value. (GRP would jump ~$1.50 and the call might move $0.50). On the other hand, it can lead to a big loss if the market reacts badly. That's why i go out a few months - I hedge that nearer term nervousness by extending time. I could buy the July $50s for $0.40 and, if GRP goes to $50, maybe I see a 100% gain. Or more.

But I prefer not to be that risky.

LiveRocket Turbo and NTRI

NTRI is going through some short covering. Upwards pricing pressure. Plus I think NTRI will put together a solid result.

We are going on margin and buying 30 contracts of the NTRI Aug $65. I am buying in the am and will post the prices.

Sunday, June 25, 2006

Housing Crash Update

Nevermind the egg-heads and analysts. There is only one group you should listen to: homebuilders. Making and selling homes is their bread and butter and they are obligated by law to report on their sales potential today and tomorrow.

Homebuilders are lowering forecasts, cutting earnings, reporting inventory glut, and expressing a very negative opinion of the market potential (the lowest expectation in 11 years).
In classic two-face fashion, homebuilders are talking out of both sides of their mouths. While pooh-poohing a crash, they aren't putting money down. May Housing starts are down 3.8% Y/Y and permits are down again, 2.8% fewer permits since April. That's 8.5% fewer permits than May 2005 and 4 months in a row that builders are reducing plans to build.

Housing starts are up only because, imho, builders are rushing to finish and dump the houses. They know what is around the corner and they know that they need to finish and get out ASAP.

I think housing stocks have further to fall because analysts are only factoring in a slight drop in sales. I think that the impact goes beyond housing sales. Yes, I think that sales will drop worse than expected and margins will be squeezed more. Slower building will help margins in the short-term as raw materials prices soften (law of supply and demand), but the real big picture is the debt and house of cards financing.

Their books are awful
* TOL is carrying ~$2B in debt.
* PHM has $3.4B in debt
Neither has enough cash to pay the debt. But the inventory of housing turns into a liability during a downturn.
* TOL has $5B of inventory
* PHM has $9B of inventory
To pay the debt, these companies will move to dump homes. They are sophisticated, but they will dump in ways that will definitely show up in the finances.

Housing reports distort the picture because of the massaging of data, time delay, and methodology (NY Metro and Bay Area metro prices are ranked the same as Akron, Illinois). Prices are up in areas except major metro areas, where the signs of a housing recession are emerging. On a transactional basis, actual housing units sold is crashing: Phoenix -20%, Bay Area -20%, etc. Nobody is buying homes. This was the slowest May sales volume since 2001.

Housing Spin-meisters are out in full force. They want you to imagine an adjustment, a natural cooling off. This is no crash, they say. Meanwhile, to entice buyers, new homebuilders are throwing in tons of free perks like bathroom upgrades and kitchen upgrades. Anything except a lower price.

But prices are dropping. San Diego reports that May average prices dropped $15K since April (3% drop) and condo/townhome prices tumbled $70K (15%). These are the biggest drops since 1988.

And while the time houses stay on the market has doubled to almost 40 days, even that statistic is false because of rampant de-listing and re-listing. In Jan '05, The Bay Area had 500 homes de-listed. That number last month was 3,700. What happens when you list a house and can't sell it for months?

The media is not doing its job. They are relying on paid Real Estate industry analysts to hide the truth. No real reporting is going on, just repeating what the RE experts say (paid shills). This is bad and going to get worse because hopes and expectations are being falsely set. The rats are the first ones to leave a sinking ship, and homebuilders are heading for the exits.

So the paid RE voices are starting to get households mentally prepared for losing money. In the RealtyTimes:
"When it comes to pricing your house when you're ready to sell it, keep in mind you must sell in the market you're in today. It doesn't matter what your former neighbor got six months ago, or what properties are listed for now."
In other words: suck it up and don't be too greedy. As sellers continue to wait for buyers, panic will set in and prices will drop, accelerating further price drops. That $250K paper gain will be $200K, then $175K, then $150K. Finally sellers will accept reality and sell.

Preparing for the fallout:
1. Housing prices will crash 30%. They have to. In every housing slowdown, prices revert to the mean and in this case that's 30% (although experts would say it's closer to 50%). In the Bay Area that's over $250K of lost equity. According to the experts, today's $779,700 house in San Francisco, were it not overvalued, would cost $461,582.
2. Lawsuits will fly against appraisers and lenders as major corruption and shady practices are uncovered. Could that be why the California Association of Realtors® (CAR) has announced both the creation of a "Defense Litigation and Claims Repository" and also the association's endorsement of an error's and omissions insurance carrier and broker.
3. MLS is a monopoly that is obviously manipulated by agents. The fox guarding the henhouse. Another fallout will be the "shock" and "surprise" by Congress that RE information could be mishandled, in their eagerness to pin blame on the sudden housing crash. Watch for some mandates regarding MLS.
4. Meanwhile, what happens to all that land that homebuilders are walking away from?
5. Interest rate hikes stop. The problem is deflation: how far do you let it happen. Bernanke and the Fed are petrified of deflation. Japan is in year 16 of a deflationary asset death spiral. That fear is what prompted the Fed under Greenspan to drop rates so low. However, the Fed will continue its statistic stupidity and look only at natiowide price drops, not regional. Nationwide, a 20% drop in housing prices is probably acceptable. That really means 30%+ in major metro areas.
6. Stock market crash. Put trailing stops on all stocks. Something less than 15%.
7. Go short on lenders and home builders and companies like Home Depot. Go long on apartment management and owners.
Think housing prices won't collapse in California? This is cited as having 17 of the top 20 overvalued markets in the US. In Contra Costa and Alameda in 2004, there were 1,900 housing units for sale. Today there are 12,000.
It is transitioning to a buyer's market. As soon as we see strong signs of price drops, it will be blood in the water. Particularly fragile are the areas outside of SF and Silicon Valley: Stockton, Sacramento, Lodi. Nobody really wants to live in these areas. They moved because they were squeezed out of the market. As prices appreciated, speculators came as well. Once SF prices drop (down 0.3% this month btw), those areas will become ghost towns.
If you own a home as an investment, get out. It's that simple. I rent and am quietly amassing cash positions.

AAPL Concerns

Many institutions are concerned about AAPL's fortunes and a potential revenue miss. Specifically, that iPod sales are slower than expected and the new Mac sales are strong but cannibalizing existing products.

Citigroup blames it on “iPod seasonality and iPod channel inventory drawdown ahead of new product intros in [the September quarter.]”
Merril Lynch has also trimmed the targets. In fact, the analyst slashed sales of the iPod by 1M units. That's a fall to 'merely' 22% growth. “As iPods decelerate, the Apple story becomes more dependent on upside to Mac estimates, which we see as plausible.” To balance a fall of ~$250M+ in sales, at least 100,000 units upside must be seen in the Mac. That's not quite 10% growth. Ok, I can see it. I do think Apple was faster to spot the rapid digital video interactive element of the net. They are capitalizing on it.

But as usual - I have a problem with the numbers. With iPods growing 22% and PC sales at 10%, what part of this story supports a 30 P/E? Indeed, these analysts have reduced sales expectations by $1B and earnings by 5%. Ahem. Slowing growth and falling earnings. Actual negative news, not rumored negative news, is what matters. As Apple shifts back to being a PC company, it will do well, but the PC market is slowing. Slow plus slow = soft stock price.

I own Jan Apple Puts ($50) and I am staying with them. When I bought them in February, I predicted that Apple would begin to stumble by the June quarter. I was 100% correct about the iPod slowdown, but the Intel chip move dulled the impact.

Meanwhile, I can't believe how incredibly incompetent the competition is. How hard is it to create an iTunes library? GOOG, MS, YHOO? Why is it so hard to get a better iPod? SONY? SNDK? Why aren't we seeing equally good do-it-yourself video editting programs from the Windows world?

Stock thoughts:
AAPL is neutral at best
Beware MRVL and SNDK in the face of iPod slowdown. 1M fewer iPod units will hit them hard. Go long SNDK late in the Summer because the flash iPod will get a big boost around Xmas and a Flash chip shortage will loom.
STX is also going to be hit, but I think a boost in server demand will offset it (servers for storing and handling the boost in video transmission).

By Xmas, I like SNDK, MS and STX. MS has a one-two punch with the anti-APPL moves (i.e. iTunes competition) and with the eventual release of Vista. STX benefits from Vista as well. SNDK will benefit from the iPod moves and from cell phone moves.

The next wave of mobile entertainment is here. Text blogs are being bypassed by video blogs. Th etools have yet to hit th emass market, and as they do, more storage will be needed both remote and locally (STX and SNDK). Easier transfer and mobile enjoyment will also become essential.