Archive for June 15th, 2008

Filed under: Options

Republic Services, Inc. (NYSE: RSG) is recently up 41c to $34.12:

The WSJ reported RSG and AW are in merger discussions. RSG call option volume of 648 contracts compares to put volume of 10 contracts. RSG June 35 straddle is priced at $1.95. RSG July option implied volatility of 23 is below its 26-week average of 30 according to Track Data.

Allied Waste Industries, Inc. (NYSE: AW) is recently up 93 to $14.89:

The WSJ reported RSG and AW are in merger discussions. AW call option volume of 2,419 contracts compares to put volume of 114 contracts. AW July option implied volatility of 62 is above its 26-week average of 33.

Option Update is provided by Stock Specialist Paul Foster of theflyonthewall.com

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Filed under: International markets, Google (GOOG), China, Market matters, Top Picks 2007, Huaneng Power Intl ADS (HNP), Bargain stocks, Chasing Value, Stocks to Buy, Best Stocks for 2008

One of my more avid readers and obviously another believer in Huaneng Power Intl ADS (NYSE: HNP) asked why the stock price was so erratic lately. I find that question strange given the following two year chart that indicates it is not behaving any different than it always has, it fluctuates.

Chart
I elected to show the two year chart because it is the closest to the length of time that BloggingStocks.com has been around. During that time I have written numerous stories about the company and it is one of our top five holdings. There does seem to have been a lot of volatility recently as the the short term chart indicates, where the stock moved 5% to 10% in 48 hour periods, but making anything of it is just wild speculation.

Chart

Last August I posted Volatile Markets: Huaneng Power (HNP) is my pick for the next 50 years discussing the strength of utility stocks and even showing how this value play had beaten Google, the “growth” stock. I also have made a big deal about utility stocks and dividend paying stocks in one of my early stories Dow Jones Utilities BEAT Industrials with ease!.

It is human nature to want to know why something occurs. This is exaggerated when you have invested heavily in something, be it your stocks or your kids.

The bottom line is that stocks jump around for a multitude of reasons. Sometimes an earnings report or industry news. Sometime because major investors are making a play and volume is up. It could be the government allowed for price increases or decreases or changes in subsidies. It could also be that something corrupt is happening behind the scenes — heaven forbid — and that you cannot find out about until it is too late usually.

The last issue is of course the most disconcerting and there was news reported by the China Daily on Monday that makes one wonder, Huaneng Power says chairman resigns. However, if I let my imagination run wild with each news story or press release I could not invest in stocks at all.

We originally got into HNP at $26.35 in May of 2006. We followed up into the $50’s and back down where we have been acquiring more, most recently at $28.00 per share. It is trading around $35 mid-day today which is a nice return in a short period of time and I must add that the current 5% dividend yield (20% higher for me) does allow one to be a very patient investor.

Sheldon Liber is the CEO of a small private investment company and the principal for design and research at an architecture & planning firm. He writes the columns Chasing Value and Serious Money. Disclosure: I own shares of HNP.

Filed under: Newsletters, Teva Pharm Indus ADR (TEVA), Stocks to Buy

“Analysts estimate the worldwide market for generics will increase from $75 billion to $125 billion by 2012,” says Michael Shulman.

In his ChangeWave Biotech Investor he states, “The key question for us is: Who is going to make the most money from these expirations? And the 800-pound gorilla in this market is our long-time holding, Teva Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: TEVA).

“Teva is the largest and best generics company in the world with $9.4 billion in sales in 2007 and the gap between it and its competitors is growing. Teva has 331 products on the market, 65% more than its closest competitor.

“More importantly, based on its business model of a mix of proprietary and generic drugs, the company’s operating margins are 10 points higher than competitors and that gap is widening. In fact, in the United States, the number of prescriptions filled with Teva generics is 50% more than its closest competitor.

“Be clear on this point: When it comes to generics, size does matter. The more a company sells, the more profit and cash it has available to do research and acquire more generics to add to its product list — and the beat goes on.

Continue reading Teva: The 800-pound gorilla of generics

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Lehman Brothers, the Wall Street firm that everyone has had their eye on since the implosion of Bear Stearns will report a $2.8 billion loss for the quarter and announce plans to raise $6 billion in capital through the sale of stock. Lehman bet heavily on the mortgage business with purchases of both subprime lender BNC Mortgage and alt-a lender Aurora (both of which they closed update, thanks Candy: Aurora Loan Services is still operating a Retail division.  The Correspondent and Broker divisions have been shut down.  In addition, they are still operating as a servicer as well.)  as well as a big-time MBS book.

The firm did cut $130 billion worth of risky assets in an attempt to shake the “Bear Stearns” stigma.

From Bloomberg:

Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. reported a $2.8 billion second-quarter loss, the company’s first since going public in 1994, and plans to raise $6 billion to help it survive the collapse of the mortgage market.

The fourth-largest U.S. securities firm fell as much as 11 percent in New York trading after saying in a statement it would sell common and preferred shares. The New York-based company sold about $130 billion of assets in the quarter and cut mortgage-related holdings and leveraged loans by 20 percent.

“It’s kind of sobering for people who have been listening to the company these last six to nine months that they had everything under control,” said David Hendler, an analyst at CreditSights Inc. in New York. “It shows that the market continues to be difficult. I would say Lehman’s probably not the only broker that has these kinds of pressures.”

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Industry, Columns, Stocks to Buy

Editor’s Note: This post was written by Fil Zucchi, one of Minyanville’s many sharp minds.

Drybulk shippers have been slammed over the last few days courtesy of a plunge in capesize spot rates. However, according to the sharp eyes at Dahlman Rose, the volume of new spot fixtures has been exceedingly low of late. And taking a slightly longer perspective, spot rates are up more than 100% since last year.

A few things to keep in mind:

  • Not all shippers are created equal: Dryships NASDAQ:DRYS) plays in almost strictly in the spot market and therefore it stands to reason that it should swing hard with spot rates. After closing the purchase of Quintana Marine, Excel Maritime (NYSE:EXM) now has a decent balance of long term and short term fixtures contracts. And then you have an outfit like Paragon Shipping (NASDAQ:PRGN) with most of its fleet leased out on long term - fixed price contracts.

  • Despite the vast differences in the business models of these three companies, the market has not been very discerning in how it has treated its stocks, which suggests that there may be some arbitrage opportunity, should one wish to play it that way.
  • Despite growing economic risks in China, it’s tough to envision a collapse of infrastructure build-outs, or a sudden change in food needs in the BRIC countries and around the world in general. As long as these two activities hold up, it’s tough to see a collpase in the shipping business;
  • I can’t stress enough that my long side interest in EXM and PRGN is heavily influenced by some sizable, and so far not so succesful, shorts in broad commodity ETF’s.
  • And lastly, the volatility in the shippers offers some very attractive options selling opportunities.

    (Positions in EXM, PRGN)

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UBS, which has become the poster-child for how not to manage mortgage-backed assets in the credit crunch, may have dumped a cool $24 billion worth of Alt-A loans in a firesale.  Alt-A loans, which are made to borrowers with good credit but little or no income or asset documentation have seen defaults soar as mortgage payments adjust higher and speculative bets on investment property are let go by borrowers.

Market Watch has more on the speculated sale:

UBS may have sold off a portfolio of Alt-A securities worth around 25 billion Swiss francs ($24.1 billion), according to an analyst at J.P. Morgan.

UBS was “highly likely” to have sold the securities in a fire sale, said J.P. Morgan analyst Kian Abouhossein, noting press speculation on the subject.
“We see the speculated level of 70 cents on the dollar as realistic in a fire sale,” he said in a Thursday note to clients, adding the current market price is probably 84 cents on the dollar.
His note came amid published reports that UBS sold its entire portfolio to Pimco, the bond-house giant owned by German insurer Allianz .
A separate note from Huw Van Steenis of Morgan Stanley estimated that UBS may record mark-to-market losses of nearly 5 billion francs this quarter, if the reports are true.
Neither firm has commented on the reports.
Alt-A mortgages are home loans sold to borrowers with better credit than those who take out subprime mortgages, and they often require less information.
Delinquencies and foreclosures on Alt-A mortgages haven’t climbed as high as subprime loans, but they have deteriorated faster than many expected. Read related story.
Securities backed by Alt-A loans also built in less protection for investors than similar structures holding subprime mortgages. That’s made the deterioration in Alt-A securities almost as painful as the subprime meltdown.

Source [blownmortgage]

Filed under: Google (GOOG), Time Warner Cable (TWC)

There was an interesting read over at Slashdot.org today. In a story last night from the Associated Press, it looks like Time Warner Cable Inc. (NYSE: TWC) may be testing out a web metering service for its internet access.

The company is testing a service with new Time Warner Cable Internet subscribers in Beaumont, Texas where customers will have a monthly allowance for the amount of data with a $1.00 charge per gigabyte. The company had already warned back in January that it was going to test rates and test some metered and tiered internet access services, so this isn’t likely to be a bomb dropping into the school yard.

Slower services of 768 kbps with a 5-gigabyte monthly allowance are going to run $29.95, while their fastest and larger service with fast downloads at up to 15 megabits per second and a 40-gigabyte cap will run $54.90 per month.

Apparently 5% of its internet users are taking up half of the capacity on local cable lines.

For basic web users this is a non-starter. But for those who download videos and send out or access large files regularly, this could become a head scratcher as very few consumers have any real clue what their internet usage means in terms of bandwidth. It seems that Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) YouTube and all that free porn are going to end up costing you after all.

That’s one way around net neutrality…

I was having a conversation with someone last week regarding his home equity line being shut down. He was rather distraught and frustrated by the sudden move of the lender to close off his line due to market conditions here in California. “How can they do that? They have no right to […]
Related Posts:
Superstars of Housing Love: The Sheriff Deputy Evicting People who Default.
Real Buyers of Genius: Another $20,000 a year person takes on a $600,000 mortgage.
$640 Billion in Sub-prime Loans Originated. $386 Billion in Alt-A Loans Originated. $1.026 Trillion in Loans at Risk? Priceless.
Housing Bloggers Unite: The Housing Blogger Network (HBN) has Started.
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I was having a conversation with someone last week regarding his home equity line being shut down. He was rather distraught and frustrated by the sudden move of the lender to close off his line due to market conditions here in California. “How can they do that? They have no right to take away my hard earned money!” Aside from restraining myself from smacking him upside his head I did ask him how he earned that money that was now gone. “My home equity was my money. The bank has no right in closing access to my money.” Welcome to the new mentality of wealth in our nation.

This simple conversation is the tip of the iceberg of the challenge that is now confronting our nation. In the past few decades, Americans have arrived to the current distorted point in reality where alternate universes collide and somehow debt is now the equivalent to wealth. I should actually clarify that last statement in light of the above conversation about home equity lines being shut down:

“Wealth in the last decade isn’t how much you save or your net worth. Wealth is determined by your ability to have access to large amounts of easy debt via credit lines and maximum leverage.”

That is a very important point and once you grasp this knowledge, you can understand why we are in the predicament we are in. Today, retail sales numbers perked up and the market initially came out of the gate with guns-a-blazing. That is until folks stopped for two seconds and did the current economic math:

A: If all recent data is showing us that consumers are tapped out.

B: Home prices are still declining and foreclosures are rising.

C: Consumer inflation is hitting on every front.

D: Then how can Americans still be spending?

Let me show you how:

“American credit card debt is growing at the fastest rate in years, a fact that may signal coming trouble for the banks that issue them.

The Federal Reserve reported this week that the amount outstanding of revolving consumer credit hit $937.5 billion in November, on a seasonally adjusted basis, up 7.4 percent from a year earlier.

The annual growth rate has now been above 7 percent for three months running, the first such stretch since 2001, when a recession was driving up borrowing by hard-pressed consumers.

The surge in credit card borrowing comes as credit card default rates are gradually rising, albeit from low levels, and may reflect the fact that it has gotten harder for consumers to borrow against the value of their homes, both because home values have fallen in many markets and because mortgage lending standards have tightened.”

Now the above article was posted in January but now we are close to $1 trillion in revolving consumer debt out there. And the more ominous problem is that defaults are rising in this area. So what has occurred in the above equation is due to the lack of wage growth, people were using leverage via mortgages and consumer debt to bridge the Joneses gap. Take a look at the massive explosion in mortgage and consumer debt over the past 20 years:

consumer debt

Source: Fed Flow of Funds Report, June 2008

It is rather shocking that American households have approximately $13.84 trillion in debt obligations. In 1993, this number was at $4.2 trillion so we’ve nearly triple our national household debt in the matter of 15 years. That $13.84 trillion is a very large number and to put that into context, the estimate GDP for the entire United States for 2007 was $13.84 trillion:

GDP

Source: Wikipedia

We spend every last penny!  Is it any wonder why Americans have a negative personal savings rate? You really have to wonder how people can spend more than they earn but that is essentially the way we as a nation have been living for the past decade. This housing bubble fueled by the debt bubble was only a logical extension of the cultural financial neurosis. The great majority of the public started associating the ability to access credit with true financial prosperity. Well as we all now know, anyone with a pulse and one tooth was able to get a large mortgage in California by simply making things up. Need we remind you about the farmer making $14,000 a year with access to a $720,000 loan? Or what about the hundreds of credit card offers Americans receive each year in the mail? When debt is no longer seen as a necessary evil and a sign of wealth, new definitions take hold of mass psychology.

Take a look at this ad during the heyday of the housing bubble:

ad2.jpg

“Chances are, you’ll sell your home before we sell your mortgage.” Is this some sort of race? The underlying implication of course is you’ll make so much equity in a few short years that you’ll be selling your current McMansion for a double whopper McMansion so why worry yourself with whether they sell your mortgage off to some foreign investor. These ads only spoke to the distorted psychology of consumers who thought access to a $500,000 mortgage meant that they had access to a $500,000 net worth.

In a way, it allowed consumers to put on the bourgeois costume for a few years and feel like a million bucks even though they were drowning internally by suffocating debt. Think this isn’t the case? Take a look at the below chart:

saving.gif

savings2.png

That is why at the height of pseudo prosperity and the pinnacle of the housing bubble, Americans had for the first time crossed the negative savings barrier. This is the perfect example of watering down the definition of wealth in our country; collectively as a society people started having an aversion to saving money and a liking to debt. This of course is a major problem and no country can survive in the long run with crushing amounts of debt. I don’t care what kind of math political parties want to sell you but there is no way a country can be prosperous in the long run by running larger and larger deficits.

This implosion of the credit (debt) markets is simply a decade long debt ponzi scheme that can go on no longer. Consumer psychology still can’t understand why fuel is rising or why everything from education to groceries are costing much more. The perfect scheme was to con people into believing that going into debt, meaning you were spending tomorrow’s dollars today, was somehow a prudent way toward wealth. And the entire idea of savings lost its allure. In fact, society punished savers implicitly. For much of the past, if you bought a home folks knew that you had the diligence and restraint to hunker down for 2 or 3 years and put off conspicuous consumption for a larger goal such as a home. That entire romanticism of saving went out the window when anyone and everyone was getting BMWs and McMansions with zero down.

In fact, if you were renting and saving and trying to be frugal, you were seen as an outcast and a bum because you just missed out in a home that just went up $50,000 in one years simply because everyone was smoking the housing peyote. I wonder how many people had a kitchen conversation like this circa 2003:

Spouse A: “We should buy a home. The Perma Bulls down the street bought a home last year and they now have $50,000 in equity.”
Spouse B: “But it doesn’t make sense. How can a home be worth $50,000 more if they didn’t do anything?”
Spouse A: “Well here we are saving and all we’ve been able to save in our 2% savings account is $15,000. What if homes go up $50,000 again next year?”
Spouse B: “That can’t be because that makes no economic sense. Prices go up and correspond to some fundamental reason.”
Spouse A: “I heard that they got a home equity line and took a trip to Europe. Isn’t that great and fantastic? We actually make a bit more than they do but why do we live and feel poorer?”

Spouse B: “I don’t know. It just doesn’t make sense. I feel uncomfortable going into that large of debt. Why is that?”
Spouse A: “Because you’re stupid?”

Spouse B: “No. You are stupid you moron and don’t understand the difference between net worth and being in debt.”
Spouse A: “Isn’t wealth about what you can buy? We don’t take fancy trips or even have our own home! You are the true idiot you financial midget with no home.”
Spouse B: “I hate you.”
Spouse A: “I’m leaving you.”
Spouse B: “Go ahead and take the dog while you’re at it. I always hated how he looked at me anyways.”

lawnsign.jpg

What a lovely and heart warming story don’t you think? As you can see from the above sign, many people did have a conversation like this except in our story above, the couple split ways because of diverging financial goals and with that lawn sign, we can see that some folks unfortunately realized that selling a home in a busted bubble is no easy task.

This is the real deal here folks. We are shifting back whether we want to or not. The real psychological shift that is unfolding is the ability to break down wants and needs. A big gas guzzling car is a want and many folks are painfully realizing this. A large crushing mortgage for a McMansion is a want. Food and education are needs. Time to get these equations recalibrated before the market recalibrates them for you.

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Related Posts:
Superstars of Housing Love: The Sheriff Deputy Evicting People who Default.
Real Buyers of Genius: Another $20,000 a year person takes on a $600,000 mortgage.
$640 Billion in Sub-prime Loans Originated. $386 Billion in Alt-A Loans Originated. $1.026 Trillion in Loans at Risk? Priceless.
Housing Bloggers Unite: The Housing Blogger Network (HBN) has Started.
About

Via [DrHousingBubble]

Filed under: General Electric (GE), Options

General Electric (NYSE:GE) is recently down 26c to $28.80. GE is expected to report Q2 EPS in mid-July. GE call option volume of 69,403 contracts compares to put volume of 84,929 contracts. GE June option implied volatility is at 33, July is at 38; above its 26-week average of 28 according to Track Data, suggesting larger price movement.

Option Update is provided by Stock Specialist Paul Foster of theflyonthewall.com

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