Thursday, December 21, 2006
dead wrong!
* AAPL fell off a cliff. Broke through $85 on the downside, holding now around $83. I backed up the truck and bought more on anticipation of a great quarter and a blowout set of announcements. It should be all good news from here - a calm restatement around the options stuff, talk of Christmas iPod sales, MacWorld buzz and finally earnings announcement on Jan 17. We should run from here. I am calling a bottom.
* ORCL. Disappointing quarter, and I went long. I still like the risk/reward on the trade but it didn't work out.
* RIMM. Didn't get the risk/reward I was looking for (call options were very pricey), so I sat this one out. And of course it moves higher!
I am taking donations.
Sunday, December 17, 2006
ORCL and RIMM earnings this week
* ORCL. Oracle was hit this week with reports from Lehman that database revenues would disappoint investors this quarter. The data apparently come from customer surveys. Personally I don't have much confidence in this, as databases remain very important to the web industry as a whole. The report however did provide a nice haircut and profit taking move to the downside over the past week. This leaves ORCL in a great risk reward position. Expectations may be dampened enough that a weak report will not trigger much of a downside move in price. I like the risk/reward going long ahead of earnings tomorrow.
* RIMM. Research in Motion is likely poised to report blowout numbers after releasing the popular BlackBerry Pearl this quarter. Analysts are probably being conservative in their estimates of Pearl sales. The downside here is that RIMM has moved up so much that all the good news may be in the stock; any weakness would be severely punished. Palm Inc. reports on Tuesday, so investors may be looking at Treo sales as indicative of what RIMM may be capable of delivering. I think this is apples and oranges - if there is any downside move in RIMM because of what Palm does, I would consider it a buying opportunity.
Summary: long ORCL, cautious on RIMM unless Palm gives us a way to get into it cheaply.
Thursday, December 14, 2006
New ways to play a Santa Claus rally
* JNJ. I have been looking at rotating into healthcare at the end of this big tech push towards Christmas. JNJ looks like it is breaking out here and I see nothing but upside. I may pull the trigger on a small part of my position tomorrow.
* AAPL. I am still hugely bullish on AAPL, even with the strange (options-related?) trading activity today. Everybody was up, but Apple was down. Maybe profit taking on the big move yesterday. But since AAPL is way above the $85 strike, I think bulls will try to push this stock above $90 in tomorrow's session. If it doesn't happen I've got plenty of buying power to step in on the dips (unlike last time).
* LOW. Lowe's is a great way to play housing weakness. Low interest rates mean cheap equity loans for remodeling. Low housing prices mean people will be sticking around and getting a new kitchen rather than selling their houses for new construction.
That's it for now. I still like Mastercard on any weakness, and I think GS is going to do really well as the bulls start to pile in over the next few sessions after options expiration tomorrow.
taking some profits
I've also closed out a bit of Research in Motion (RIMM). Not the entire position. I felt I was too exposed to tech here and the Q4 tech rally seems to be losing steam.
In other bad news, my Boston Scientific (BSX) play didn't materialize at all and I'm completely underwater in those options.
And GS didn't move at all on blowout numbers. It is basically pinned at $200 for options expiration week. I think it should rally to year end and be comfortably in the $220s shortly. As I wrote in my analysis earlier I think this could be a $240 stock.
The highlight of my portfolio at the moment is a hugely successful position in Apple Computer (AAPL) ahead of Macworld. I'm staying long this one until Jan 5 when the stock should be trading in the triple digits!
Monday, December 11, 2006
Picks for the end of the year
As I write this, here are my holdings:
Apple Computer (AAPL), Google (GOOG), Goldman Sachs (GS), Halliburton (HAL), Lowe's (LOW), Mastercard (MA), NY Stock Exchange (NYX), Research in Motion (RIMM) and US Gypsum (USG).
I had some positions in Exxon Mobil (XOM) earlier this week, which I closed out. I moved out of XOM and made a speculative short-dated options play on GS. I think these guys will have a blowout number. If they can manage $6 a share per quarter, that implies a valuation of $240-275 per share at a peer-justified multiple of 11 or 12. I think tomorrow before the close they will announce such a number. It's been a great quarter for trading and also not bad for M+A activity either. Best of all, I think 2007 is going to be great for traditional underwriting activity too. So I like GS here. I didn't play this with Dec calls (I could have) but instead January calls. Last time it took a little while for the bulls to pile in. It could be a similar situation this time, especially if a Santa Claus rally materializes.
Monday, November 06, 2006
a nice looking pie
Friday, November 03, 2006
impact on interest rates
so much for "top of the cycle"
To that end I am using these dips as buying opportunities. I mentioned a week or so ago that I'd like to be more long but could not justify it. Here, I can justify. Some new positions to mention:
* RIO. This is a recommendation from Jim Cramer's show. He identified this industrial metals play (copper, nickel, etc.) and I think it's a great pick. It trades with a Brazil discount that will likely disappear as the political instability plays out over the next few weeks. And, it's a great way to play scarcity in these metals.
* Goldman Sachs (GS). Finally, an entry point for this best of breed investment bank on its way to $200.
* NVIDIA. I do think NVDA's shares are pricey here. But there is a buying opportunity here because the shares have been hit by options cost restatements. This has no impact on the long term business prospects or earnings going forward. These guys are well positioned to take advantage of the video gaming story that is developing thanks to Electronic Arts' blowout quarter. (EA might be a good long -- I am doing some research on it today.)
Thursday, October 26, 2006
no more GOOG talk
MSTR going to $150
All of this points to a $310M top line number for FY2006 and about $357M for FY2007. Based on my numbers this yield a $4.58 and $7.50, respectively. Growing at 15% I think MSTR deserves a 30 multiple or so. This would yield a price target of $137-$225.
Seems like a long to me, even given that the stock is trading after hours at $121. Plenty of upside left.
would like to be more long here
The second problem is the larger one. I'm already making strong gains in retail, home building and technology sectors. I don't want to increase positions here. I would like to add a defense and oil services play (Halliburton) or a Pharma play, but these stocks will be first on the chopping block with a Democratic house.
So the best I could come up with today was back into Wells Fargo. I like WFC here because the bond market thinks the Fed will start cutting in Q2 2007 rather than Q3 like before. Low short term rates are good for the banks and WFC is the best of breed here.
I may try to pick up a little more tech tomorrow. I'm looking at MicroStrategy and NVIDIA.
Wednesday, October 25, 2006
Trimming GOOG here
Keep in mind, I'm not a huge fan of the current administration. But I am worried that the Democrats will mistakenly think they have a mandate from the people. And they will interpret that mandate as a license to push protectionist, isolationist failed policies back into the political discourse. This is worrying for American economic competitiveness.
The Democrats might also interpret a House win as license to begin investigating all aspects of the Iraq war. I think there is a lot to investigate here! But its also not productive. We're there and we have to build a democracy in Iraq. No other choice at the moment. As the Economist puts it, I am worried about a long period of "navel gazing".
So I'm reducing my exposure to GOOG here. I'm selling into strength today. (What a trade!)
As I mentioned before I'm starting work at GOOG in a few weeks. Thus I will need to stay away from trading GOOG in the near future. Might as well get used to it.
earnings mistake on ALK
Thankfully it was not too costly. Nonetheless, I won't be repeating it again.
Monday, October 23, 2006
unbelievable upside move in GOOG
My Dec 470 calls were originally purchased at $10. They are now trading at about $26. Not bad! There is still plenty more upside here.
Unfortunately I will be joining the Google team shortly and as such I won't be allowed to make derivative transactions. I will need to exit this position over the next few days for that reason.
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
on the money after all
That said I believe that YHOO is forming a nice bottom here. We've got the New York Times effect plus the rally attempt on horrific news plus new expectations that YHOO might actually ship Panama soon. I will be looking at Yahoo over the next few weeks to see if any buying opportunities emerge.
I don't play takeovers but it seems to me that Yahoo would be a phenomenal addition to the Microsoft stable.
Note: Apple Computer reported blow out earnings after the bell and is trading up about 5% after market.
high risk, low reward
Continuing to play the numbers game, I opened a GOOG 470 Dec call today. Based on Google's revenue growth I think they will report around $2.70 a share. The consensus estimate is $2.42 which seems like sandbagging to me. If you annualize the $2.70 this implies that GOOG is trading at about 38x earnings at the moment. Cheaper than Yahoo! If this multiple goes to 50 as is warranted by this growth monster, GOOG becomes a $500-550 stock.
Monday, October 16, 2006
yahoo and intel earnings plays
* Intel (INTC). Intel has been beaten down from highs of $27 per share primarily because of increased competitive pressures from AMD. But the new Intel Core Duo is rapidly gaining traction among the computer elite. I think that Apple is going to report a monster number for Q3... and that means good things will be happening for Intel on Tuesday. And it's not just a one off good quarter - Intel should raise guidance for the next year and that means that the price should be going way up. Right now Intel has a multiple of around 20 or so. The combination of the Windows Vista release, new gaming consoles and exploding Macintosh sales should be able to boost earnings and even justify a 30 multiple as well.
* Yahoo (YHOO). Yesterday after talking to my buddy who works at Yahoo, I was convinced that this stock had bottomed. An extremely negative article was publishing in the New York Times about Yahoo, which is a Cramer bottom signal. But then I started to do some analysis on the numbers and frankly, I think this stock has a tremendous amount of downside left.
Yahoo's revenue guidance is in the $1.15B range. This revenue number is considerably below the past two quarters in which they delivered $1.5B at the top line. The last time they reported numbers near this it would have been a loss if not for one time interest and investment income (sales of GOOG stock). This time around, Yahoo can't pull one of these accounting tricks to produce big numbers. On 1.1B of revenue I see approximately a $660M gross profit. Assuming that their R+D and admin costs are fixed, this actually is about a break even result. If Yahoo can produce some cost savings they will be able to eke out a small profit, maybe $100M or so. In my book that is $0.05 or $0.06 EPS. The street estimates are still $0.11 per share -- I don't understand how this is possible. Maybe I'm missing something. But I'm putting my money where my mouth is on this one and going short.
The bottom line is that I bought some October 25 puts on Yahoo because I think they will really disappoint tomorrow.
Friday, October 13, 2006
adding to my positions here
Why Microsoft? Well I'm definitely no fanboy -- in fact, I don't use any of their products. But that's because I'm in the position not to. Most people aren't. New versions of Windows (Vista) and Office are coming out next quarter. XBox 360 sales are strong since the PS3 looks so weak. I also like some of the things they are developing under the banner of "Unified Communications." They are tackling the VoIP space with some very innovative products.
Bottom line is that Microsoft has a virtually unassailable competitive position in the operating system and office productivity markets. With new product cycles starting, this should mean increased earnings. And right now, the multiples are just so low. With consumer staples selling off and these funds looking for a home, I think MSFT is the place to go.
Wednesday, October 11, 2006
well that sucked
Fundamentally, I'm not liking the tone of the markets here. I think its time to get solidly into safe haven plays like financials and stocks levered to cheap oil. I'm going to continue to move into homebuilders.
Note that I closed out my GOOG position today, since I am worried about what the market's reaction to earnings next week will be. I also think there will be some underlying jitters about the YouTube deal. For now, I'm staying on the sidelines hoping GOOG will rechallenge its $380-390 support levels before hitting new highs before the end of the year. If there is any sign of flagging growth in the online advertising market for Q3, I think the stock will take a massive beating.
Tuesday, October 10, 2006
genentech wobbles
It may be that the market has started pricing in these big upside surprises. If that's the case, Q3 is going to get ugly for the longs.
earnings plays!
* DNA. Consensus estimates for Genentech are only $0.53 per share! They came in at 52 cents per share last quarter. This estimate is quite conservative. I think strong sales of Aventis (for off-label uses) should provide considerable revenue growth and an upside surprise here. I am playing this with October calls struck at 85 (at-the-money). I may exercise and turn this into a position if things go nicely this afternoon as I do not have a biotech/pharma play at the moment.
* INFY. Infosys is the leader in Indian IT outsourcing. Infosys was able to push through a significant price increase this quarter. I don't think analyst estimates are factoring this in. The consensus estimate is only $0.32 per share. Since they reported $0.31 per share last quarter, these estimates are also extremely conservative. I don't think they are factoring in the secular trend towards helpdesk/IT outsourcing or the price increases. Both of these things should solidly impact the bottom line and provide us a nice upside surprise. Unlike Genentech, I am strongly exposed to tech here and this will not become a long term position for me.
caution in front of the Google/YouTube buy
So far trimming the position looks like the right thing to have done. Google shares are down about 1% today.
I will however be stepping back in on any weakness. The YouTube purchase is great for Google long term, especially because it prevents a key competitor (read: Yahoo) from getting the dominant player in the online video space.
Thursday, October 05, 2006
nice moves in Starbucks and Marvell
Secondly, a strong day for Marvell on a mostly down session gives me an opportunity to sell into strength and reduce my position. I think Marvell was a bad trade to start and as such, I am going to be eliminating it.
Here's my portfolio these days. Google calls are looking nice here!
AAPL Apple Computer, Inc. 74.96 -0.42 (-0.56%)
AIG American International Group, Inc. 67.32 +0.17 (0.25%)
F Ford Motor Company 8.34 -0.22 (-2.57%)
GOOG Google Inc. 414.15 -1.55 (-0.37%)
KMB Kimberly-Clark Corporation 66.25 +0.04 (0.06%)
SBUX Starbucks Corporation 38.51 +2.55 (7.09%)
TOL Toll Brothers, Inc. 28.66 -0.11 (-0.38%)
WFC Wells Fargo & Company 36.53 -0.10 (-0.27%)
Tuesday, October 03, 2006
cheap oil and nervousness about the democrats
When that happens, we'll see a poisonous business climate because the Democrats will mistakenly believe that their populist rhetoric is actually what people want. And we'll get a very unfortunate backlash against pharma and oil companies, which is unwarranted.
In preparation for this I am going into a secular play, Kimberly-Clark, which also happens to be levered to cheap oil. If investors are worried about soft vs. hard landing, the Democrats won't be doing anything to allay those fears. If anything they will be stoking them towards the hard landing camp. This is good for seculars. A hard landing is also good for cheap commodities. In conclusion, I think KMB works on both of these levels.
marvell implodes
This is a stock that I probably should not have been in to begin with and I am paying the price. First of all, I don't have a complete understanding of their business and this is always a recipe for disaster. Second, it is a play on PC sales after Vista. Personally I don't think that a strong wave of PC buying will follow Vista's release. Vista is underwhelming. Most people will be far better served by getting a Mac or waiting a couple of quarters for the 1.0 bugs to get sorted out. It's not something that I feel will significantly drive PC sales.
Ultimately I got into MRVL because Cramer recommended it. That's just a bad reason. Cramer's brings a lot of ideas and discipline to the table. His constraints and timeframe are far different than mine. If I'm going get into a semiconductor play I need to get into a company that I really believe in. At sixteen and a half this looks like a buying opportunity for the longs. I don't have enough confidence in the MRVL story and the management team to pull the trigger here.
Thursday, September 28, 2006
Asleep at the Wheel
Wednesday, September 27, 2006
More Rebalancing on Weakness
* TOL. I continue to like the homebuilders here. Despite lackluster numbers and a downward revision in home sales numbers for last month, they are rallying. It feels like these stocks have nowhere to go but up.
* WFC. It increasingly looks like a soft landing is in the cards. Inflationary pressures are being ameliorated thanks to cheap commodity and energy prices. It stands to reason that financials like Wells Fargo will be the beneficiaries of cheap short-term and long-term rates (core business model and mortgage originations, respectively).
* AAPL. I continue to like Apple Computer, even at these levels. Apple is going to be very strong going into back to school and Christmas seasons. I'm taking advantage of a small pullback to add to my holdings.
On a side note, I unwound most of my GOOG Jan calls at 420... one misstep by these guys and it would have torpedoed my gains for the year. I'm still very bullish but don't want to be the next Amaranth!
Tuesday, September 26, 2006
Rebalancing into financials
Today I'm moving into financials, Wells Fargo (WFC) to be specific. I like WFC here because of lower short-term interest rates and the potential for income from mortgage refinancings and applications as we clear housing inventories. Short-term rates help the bank's natural business model. Mortgage originations will help drive revenue. With the 10 year at 4.5%, people who are in ARMs may choose to go to fixed rates.
Monday, September 25, 2006
Long NVDA Oct 30 calls
I think there is some near-term upside there as our multiple is only at 33 (I think it will top out at 40). The stock will also run to end of quarter thanks to mark-up week. But I'll be getting out on Wednesday or Thursday. I think the market is too optimistic. These guys are not really as levered to the PS3 launch as people think, and there are still massive supply problems there. They may be a PC play but overall I'm not bullish on PC sales since the PC experience is getting worse and worse by the day.
Wish me luck... the calls are trading at $1.75 as I write this.
Friday, September 22, 2006
scope creep
* SBUX. To quote Steve Ballmer, "I love this company!" Starbucks has gotten beaten up recently because their lines at the stores are too long! Talk about the definition of a good problem to have. They are aggressively expanding in markets like China where the upside is huge and saturation is a very long way away. I still think they have room to grow here. I still can't find a seat in my local Starbucks most times. Take the long-term secular growth potential plus the near-term upside from consumer's extra discretionary income from lower gas prices ("consumer isn't dead") and I think you have a winner. Entered at $33.
* TOL. Cramer thinks the homebuilders have bottomed and so do I. Interest rates are coming down and these stocks rallied today on slighly improved revenue numbers from KBHome. They are about 50% off of their peak and most of them trade close to book value. The head of Toll Brothers says he can liquidate all of his land holdings today for a healthy profit. Toll Brothers is best of breed and has a phenomenal brand. The home showcases that they put together are simply unparalleled - check out Desert Canyon in North Phoenix and you will want to sign on the dotted line right there.
Here's the rest of my portfolio:
AAPL Apple Computer, Inc. 73.00 -1.65 (-2.21%)
BMY Bristol Myers Squibb Co. 25.06 +0.35 (1.42%)
F Ford Motor Company 8.00 +0.24 (3.09%)
GOOG Google Inc. 403.78 -3.07 (-0.75%)
MRVL Marvell Technology Group Ltd. 18.87 -0.44 (-2.28%)
SBUX Starbucks Corporation 34.01 +0.00 (0.00%)
TOL Toll Brothers, Inc. 27.81 +0.65 (2.39%)
Note that I am long GOOG 420 Jan calls.
Friday, September 01, 2006
Back and better than ever
Well today I hit the practice range for the first time since my trip back east a couple of weeks ago. My new favorite play to hit balls is up at Angeles National golf club in Sunland, California. Its tucked away up in the foothills about 30 mins away. The reason to go is that you can actually hit off of the grass there. Thanks to Jeff at Firefly for the recommendation.
In any case I was hitting strong and accurate with everything. My nine iron was a nice consistent 120 long and dead straight. Some problems with the driver and I still can't hit a consistently decent shot with the hybrid Titleist. My seven was easily going 150 which I'm happy with (given I'm hitting ancient pings, too).
Also starting to experiment with fades and draws with my sand wedge. Fades working nicely but the draws are a little harder!
Tuesday, May 23, 2006
great session.
I was hitting the ball well too. The low irons were working beautifully. Distance was consistently long. The signs were worried I might hit them. I felt like I was making good ball contact too. Wedge was going about 100 yards. The seven was travelling 135. My loft issues were mostly under control. I didn't hit a single skull.
My 5 wood was going a comfortable 190. A few loft problems here, but the accuracy was impressive. Maybe it's because of the lack of wind?
The driver was kind of wild. I hit a few off of the heel of the club which I think was just the usual hip-leading problems. When I made contact, it was solid and travelled straight and long.
Just need to keep drilling the fact that the hip leads the shot, working on stance and grip, and remembering to supinate before contact.
Friday, April 21, 2006
Seven iron
Spent most of my session today with the short irons, working on accuracy. The right thumb and left wrist supination are coming along well. It was a rough start since I've got a lot on my mind. I wasn't committing with the hips on the downswing. I was also doing a really bad job keeping the club on plane during the backswing. After I got more relaxed I was hitting some tremendous seven iron shots, about 135 or so, not skyhigh at all and consistently straight. Just keep the preshot routine consistent and mind the plane.
Sunday, April 16, 2006
Driver loft
Good day at the range again. Had nice control with the driver and five wood, and good distance, about 235 and 200 respectively. Still my shots are going way too high in some cases. This is probably just a case of the left wrist being prone. If I can get the shots down I can probably get 20-30 more yards out of both of them.
Saturday, April 15, 2006
Right thumb
Good day at the range today despite a somewhat rough start. I slotted back into the usual pattern of letting my hands lead the downswing. I also picked up a strange right hand grip on the club in which my right thumb would wrap completely around like holding a knife.
I managed to discover and fix both of these problems halfway through the session. A proper right hand grip and a full commitment to the downstroke with the hips was producing nice mostly straight shots.
I'm still having trouble with the angle of the club face on impact. My fade has nearly disappeared but still comes out ever so rarely. However I'm still hitting shots far too high. This is costing me significant distance and makes me vulnerable to wind and other obstacles. Next time I'll work on supinating the left wrist to get proper loft.
Distances: 80 wedge, 100 nine, 120 seven and 156 five. Lots of room to improve there!