Thursday, June 12, 2008

Retail Sales 'strong' & Jobs are weak

Retail sales for May grew 1%, or 0.8% minus gas.
http://biz.yahoo.com/rb/080612/usa_economy_retail.html

It's still positive, but when you consider that
1. We just threw $50B into consumer pockets
2. Food inflation surged in May
3. Promotions to boost sales will hurt margins

I'd say that this growth is actually a negative.
But it was above expectations of 0.5%, so everyone is happy.

Meanwhile, jobless claims rose more than expected.
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/080612/jobless_claims.html

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

TRID Bad News

There was a basic strategy with TRID: they are oversold (trading almost at cash) and are turning the corner with more design wins.


There is no TRID specific news. There was an announcement today by SIA that chip sales are weakening, especially memory chips.


What about the LCD TV Market?
* Corning is doing very well. they are the leading supplier of LCD glass. http://seekingalpha.com/article/80065-corning-lcd-tv-sales-up-confirms-guidance-for-q2

"The company confirmed that it is not seeing evidence of an economic downturn affecting LCD TV sales in the U.S. To the contrary, GLW said that LCD TV unit sales were up at least 30% year-over-year for each of the first four months of 2008. The company expects sales of LCD TVs to continue to be strong."

* Samsung is doing very well. They are the world's leading LCD TV seller and a top TRID customer. "Samsung's profits were up 37% in the first quarter of 2008 with profits of $2.2 billion on sales of $17.2 billion. Much of Samsung's growth was generated from LCD TV sales, especially those 46-inches and above. The company's LCD business generated 53% year-over-year growth itself."

* LG, the 2nd largest LCD TV seller, reported 82% growth. http://www.24-7pressrelease.com/pdf/2008/05/26/press_release_51151.pdf

* According to displaysearch Q1 2008 LCD TV units shipped grew 69% year-over-year. http://www.displaysearch.com/cps/rde/xchg/displaysearch/hs.xsl/6575.asp



One of the following may be at work:
1. Demand concern - the US market is rapidly eroding and there may be fears that CHina and other countries are not able to pick up the slack. Is this valid? Fear about the future is always valid, but they seem to be discounting expectations pretty significantly

2. More direct competition - bigger companies may enter the market.
3. ZRAN specific competition. ZRAN had an analyst meeting yesterday. Perhaps they leaked some gains in th emarket. It doesn't seem to have done much: both TRID and ZRAN downshifted.
In fact, all graphics makers were down today: Pixelworks, Silicon Image, Neomagic, etc.

3. Greater price erosion

4. Missed design wins - This is the big one. TRID is riding past design wins to drive cash growth. They need to expand the wins.

My take is general fear of a major consumer electronics slowdown.

A basic comparison of fundamentals demonstrates how negative the market has become about TRID:
Price to Cash:
TRID is 1 (at cash value)
ZRAN is 2.6
SIMG is 2.6

Price to Sales:
TRID is .9
ZRAN is 1.5
SIMG is 1.7

Operating Margins
TRID had 11%
ZRAN had -0.2%
SIMG had 7%

The fundamentals above are why I thought $10 for TRID was a slam dunk. Clearly, the market assumes TRID is worthless. Ouch. With such a strong negative sentiment, it is hard to add. I would sell, but at this point, why bother.

Stocks to buy

I have waited weeks and still no pullback onthese stocks.
These are my favorites (in descending order)
CF
MOS
ARD
PXP
DSX
CRK
LNN
NXY
BDE
WTI
WLL
XEC
MUR
RIG
ME
ACI
DNR

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

2001 All Over Again

One thing about the stock market that resembles 2001: a lot of volatility, with deep drops followed by rallies that almost but didn't quite close the gap.

Look at yesterday - following a major fall on Friday, the markets did not rally Monday
1. NASDAQ continued its drop (another -0.6%)
2. Dow rose just under 0.6%, not a rally
3. S&P did not move (it rose 1 point)
4. Declines outnumbered advances
5. Down volume was 2:1 vs. up volume
6. New Lows vs. Highs were 4:1
7. Markets traded at higher than average volumes, indicating a broad based move

Meanwhile Bernanke is continuing the tough talk about inflation, but that's all it is imho.
1. Economy is still too shaky to talk rate hikes
2. Unemployment problems are getting deeper and going global. The largest temp agency, Manpower, said that hiring plans are falling to 2003 levels. For all countries in the G7 (most of the world's economy), only 30% of companies surveyed will be hiring. http://www.reuters.com/article/ousiv/idUSN0930367520080610

What is interesting is that the hiring is slowing not crashing. This is the same consistent tune across all economic indicators. I'm reminded of the story about a frog in a hot pan. Put a frog in a hot pan, and he'll jump out. But put a frog in a cold pan and gradually heat it, and the frog stays put.
----------------------
Where are the bright spots? Mining and coal.
According to the recent trade figures for April and the hiring data, only mining is strong. Thank you China and petro-dollar countries.

Monday, June 09, 2008

TRID at $4.28

TRID trading almost for cash!
Wow. I am speechless.

Some stock comments

I see some major hyperbolic actions in the gas arena - everyone is pouring into energy stocks.

My strategy of holding back and waiting for a broad market pullback has not worked.
GSG - a fine place to start investing
ETFC - I keep holding off writing calls for a better price

PUTS UPDATE
I'll do a more comprehensive review, but for now the puts are not doing well, with MGM the only exception (up ~100%). We have plenty of time - 7 months - and a bad Q2 quarter could propel us closer, but too many stocks are exhibiting strength in the face of poor fundamentals. AN for example: car sales are slumping to a major low, but the stock stays up.

MGM Sept $50 puts - very tasty: we're $5 in the money. Going to wait on this one.
AGN July $55 puts - AGN keeps rising. I think we can get out ahead on this one, but just barely
AN jan $10 puts - If they approach $12 we'll be fine. Right now they are at $14
NKE Jan $50 puts - this one is looking dicey. Everything is riding on a major drop in the US market, which looks very likely given the major pullback in clothing spending. But overseas still looks good. I am counting on a weak Q4.
VMC Jan $50 puts - These guys are finally falling back hard, but not hard enough. They must be getting creamed by oil prices and by construction pullbacks. But the stock hsa resistance at $70. If they screw up this quarter, then we should see $63 and that will put us in the money
ZLC Jan $15 puts - This looks like a lost cause. No way is business doing well, but the stock has legs. Everything depends on a strong Q4 and I don't know if we should wait until then. They need a 25% pullback.
HOG Jan $30 puts - Another one with surprise strength. They should be squealing like a pig as they get stuck with slower sales, minimal international opportunity/exposure, and lots of returned stock

Sunday, June 08, 2008

Help me create a calendar

Each week I'd like to spotlight a specific stock.
Specical requests gladly accepted and encouraged

Back on Track: Market Heading Down


Earlier in the week I presented this chart and wondered whether we were on the shallow or the steep down slope. The difference being how rapidly the market will unravel IF it is going to unravel. By Friday, it became clear that we are on the steep downward slope.

To revisit my Last Gasp Theory (first mentioned April 5th http://liverocket.blogspot.com/2008_03_30_archive.html)
1. The market bounces around in 10% cycles prior to one final surge – The Last Gasp
2. The Last Gasp is a large run-up of ~15%+
3. The surge continues as the recession officially starts, peaking within a few weeks of the recession’s beginning
4. The subsequent crash happens quickly and is much deeper than the run-up

The last few weeks look really, really like the the Last Gasp is playing out. In theory, we are out of whack with #3 because the Q1 GDP was revised up to 0.9%. My take: whether or not the Recession has begun may be less important than what people think. An dmost people think that we are in a recession.


(BTW hug apologies. I work for Cisco Systems and there is an investment community there. On Thursday, as the market was racing up, I shared my thoughts that it was a head-fake: a false rally. I was rightly criticized for not sharing those thoughts here. Going forward, I will post my thoughts here first, and then copy and paste there. You deserve to get the latest ideas first.)

Other than a neat chart, why do I think worse has yet to come? Start with the Dow’s P/E of 82. (http://online.wsj.com/mdc/public/page/2_3021-peyield.html?mod=topnav_2_3002)
That’s a clear sign that the market has over valued equities.

To understand what is about to happen, you have to consider the origins of the disconnect between economic fundamentals and the stock market’s prices.
For a few months, the Fed has been peddling the following story that
- outside of housing and banking, the economy isn’t that bad and it will be better by the 2nd half of 2008
- Exports will boost our economy

Clearly, both are wrong. As I showed before, latest export figures show a fall in exports. It’s hard to predict the trend. Pushing up exports will be the harvest season that just began. But pushing it right back down is the newly invigorated dollar (5% higher than in March) and the slowing European economies.
Bottom line – with the $2B pullback, the economy needs at least a $5B+ surge to bolster the broader economy. That's a lot of corn and wheat.

Meanwhile, the economy is doing worse not better. Unemployment and inflation are both up. Last week’s preliminary retail report for May showed consumer weakness. Spending went to food and gas, and not to discretionary items like clothes and durables. At this point, the question is not about Bull market or Bear market. We are in a Little Bear market. The question is: will the Little Bear become a Big Bear?

I think the market is about to react furiously, like the betrayed spouse who is waking up to the facts that they have been lied to and ignored the truth displayed before their eyes.

Beyond financial market behaviors and psychology, we have the very real problems of the investment banks and hedge funds. These are the players at the table who make the markets move. As pointed out previously, lately they have been rushing into cash (http://liverocket.blogspot.com/search?q=morgan). JP Morgan showed that the rush is happening at exactly the same rate as happened in previous recessions. Money sitting on the sidelines is money not pushing up stock prices.

March: Hedge Funds suddenly re-gain access to easy money. The Fed didn’t just lower lending rates to 2%, they also began lending to investment banks.

April: Hedge funds drive up bubbles in food, gas and commodity metals. The target is determined by two things: the only recession-proof investments are food and energy and, secondly, many commodities have less stringent margin requirements than equities.

May: Lenders face insolvency. The dominos from housing are falling: a terrible Spring season for housing sales means lenders are starved for liquidity: builders and homeowners aren’t paying back loans. Banks have capital/cash requirements and they aren’t meeting them. Meanwhile, their customers are facing the same problem: the collateral they put up has dropped in value. Banks are making margin calls.

June: Lenders and others begin panicking. They now have 4 weeks to get cash or begin fire sales. But banks are getting smacked around. Home builders are dropping prices even faster to raise cash to pay back the banks, but the new prices pressure home prices overall, hurting the individual homeowners that are behind payments or looking to re-finance.
Meanwhile, the consumer is not spending. The stimulus package fizzles.

I’ve mentioned the 90 day cycle wherein funds make investment decisions around 6 weeks before the end of the quarter. In this case, late May. Yep, the market started sagging exactly when you would expect the funds to start heading for the exits. Smart money began leaving 3 weeks ago. Next up: retail investors like you and me. Unless, like me, you have been in cash and short positions.

To make matters worse, the funds are getting pressured by their lenders, the banks, who need that cash back. Now. That pressures funds to sell even more.

So it's a convergence of liquidity an dfinancial pressures pulling money out of the stock market and a weaker than expected corporate earnings (thanks to the now-hibernating consumer). Unfortunate timing for longs.

Can the Fed do something to stop the slide? Not really. They can’t risk another rate cut. In fact, they want to stop the rampant speculation that is driving up inflation.

And then there is market psychology. The economic data will no longer be fuzzy – one week positive and the next week negative. Too much economic data is going to be released shows a sharp downturn. It’s not that the economy is slowing – it’s also that the Fed has been singing songs of good cheer, making investors feel foolish.
What are the steps? Denial, anger, and then acceptance? Something like that. We are exiting the denial stage, next up is anger. Angry investors are dis-investors. Which will add to the market plunge.

I've published my watch list. Next step: shorten the list and buy. I’m thinking about buying in Friday on the back of a bad week of economic data. I have been looking for my target stocks to pullback with the broader market. No such luck. I like Friday because I see bad news ahead.
- April export/import data (Tuesday)
- May Retail Sales (Thursday)
- May CPI (Friday)
- June Consumer Sentiment (Friday)

It's possible that retail data will continue to be both positive and negative. Sales could be up, but largely because of inflation. Strip out food and energy, and you’ll see falling spending on consumer durables. That will no doubt be echoed in the import/export figures in things like lower imports of clothes, cars, electronics, and so forth

BTW I am seriously thinking about jumping into silver. I think gold jewelry is too expensive for most folks, so retailers will be shifting to silver.