Friday, January 31, 2014

Bulls and Bears Still Debate Tesla Motors

Thanksgiving is tomorrow, offering millions a day off from work. But Wall Street is still vigorously debating whether Tesla Motors (TSLA) is a bargain or a bad buy.

At $125.91, the shares have dropped 36% off its recent high of $194.50.

Still, Bank of America Merrill Lynch analyst John Lovallo told investors today that shares remain overvalued even after the sell-off. He argues that the company would need to produce 348,000 vehicles a year by 2020 to justify the current valuation.  

5 Best Tech Stocks To Own Right Now

Lovallo reiterated his Underperform rating and $45 price target, which suggests a 64% downside.

Deutsche Bank analyst Dan Galves, however, says the sell-off has created a favorable entry point.  He writes:

We are reiterating our Buy recommendation on Tesla as we see a series of positive catalysts over the next several months that could lead to renewed confidence in the company’s earnings trajectory. These include: 1) A favorable resolution of the NHTSA investigation; 2) Initial news on (what we believe will be very strong) China order flows; 3) Increased visibility on an accelerating order/production ramp, and; 4) Further gross margin improvement and operating expense leverage (which may be significantly better than consensus).

Galves maintained his Buy rating and a $200 price target.

Today, the bulls seem to have won out as Tesla's share price rose almost 4.5% in afternoon market action.

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Slumping gas prices may be bottoming out

After plummeting to their lowest levels in nearly three years, gasoline prices may be close to hitting a 2013 low.

Nationally, the average price for gasoline has inched up to $3.20 a gallon after bottoming at about $3.17 earlier this week. Behind the gains, a three-day spike in wholesale prices, including a 5% jump Thursday. That's already pushed pump prices in some states, such as Michigan, 11 cents higher this week. Benchmark West Texas crude traded at a five-month low early Thursday, to about $92.50 a barrel, before rebounding to close at nearly $94.

Rising wholesale and crude prices may have dashed hopes that retail gas prices could dip below $3 nationally for the first time since 2010. Eight states -- including Missouri, with a national low of $2.86 -- currently have average prices below $3. But those numbers may be fleeting. More than 20 states reported retail prices rising Thursday.

"There's still a potential for overall prices to move lower, but I don't see a whole lot of downward movement, and we may have already seen the bottom,'' says Patrick DeHaan, senior energy analyst with gasbuddy.com, a price-tracker which had forecast the national average to fall to about $3.15 a gallon by year's end.

Pump prices had fallen 10 straight weeks and by mid-October, prices averaged $3.47 a gallon. Slumping crude oil prices, a decline in seasonal demand and rising crude oil and and gasoline inventories pushed prices down nearly 9% the past month.

Gas prices typically bottom in December, and some industry watchers say they could still inch a bit lower.

Ryan Mossman, general manager of Fuelquest, which helps corporate fleets such as UPS and Federal Express manage energy use, says overall pump prices might dip to $3.10 a gallon.

"A lot of it has to do with the supply situation, and we're already oversupplied,'' Mossman says.

Rising production, slow economic growth both here and abroad, and easing tensions in the Middle East could keep prices in check in 2014, Mo! ssman says.

The Energy Information Administration reported this week that U.S.crude oil production hit a 24-year high in October and exceeded imports for the first time since February 1995. It expects 2014 gas prices to average $3.39 a gallon, vs. $3.50 this year and $3.63 in 2012.

Even if consumers have seen 2013 lows, they may still feel a bit more flush ahead of the holiday shopping season.

"You definitely see a shift in consumer sentiment when prices go down,'' says Jeff Lenard of the National Association of Convenience Stores, whose members sell about 80% of the nation's gas. "It feels good to see prices lower than what they were. You may see more buying of affordable luxuries.''

Follow Strauss on twitter @gbstrauss

Public Storage Posts Higher Net Income; Beats Earnings Estimates; Raises Dividend (PSA)

Public Storage (PSA) announced its third quarter earnings after the bell on Thursday, posting an increase in net income and revenues.

PSA Earnings in Brief

-Public Storage announced total quarterly revenues of $419 million, which were up from last year’s $397 million, but below the average analyst estimate of $464.58 million.
-The company’s net income came in at $231.4 million, or $1.34 per share, which was up from last year’s Q3 net income of $202.5 million, or $1.18 per share.
-PSA’s core FFO per share was up from last year’s $1.76 to $1.92 for the most recent quarter; this beat analysts’ estimates of $1.89.

Dividend Raise

Public Storage announced that its board has approved to raise its dividend 12% to $1.40 per common share. This is a 15 cent raise from the company’s previous quarterly payout of $1.25 and brings the annualized payout to $5.60. The new dividend is payable on December 30 to all shareholders on record as of December 13.

Share Performance

PSA stock was down 66 cents, or 0.39%, on the day, but was up steeply in after-hours trading. YTD, the company’s stock is up 14.74%.

 

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

US Steel, AK Steel Go Their Separate Ways

Analysts tend to group steel makers into two groups–AK Steel (AKS) and US Steel (X), who are more reliant on higher steel prices, and Steel Dynamics (STLD) and Nucor (NUE), who have more flexibility in their businesses.

Bloomberg

At least that’s the way it’s supposed to work. Today’s price action, however, suggests a different grouping after all four released earnings. Steel Dynamics, which met earnings forecasts, and Nucor, which beat, have gained 1% and 0.8%, respectively, suggesting that such a pairing makes sense, at least today. But AK Steel, which reported a profit, and US Steel, which lost money for the seventh time in nine quarters, have gone in very different directions. AK Steel has gained 19%, while US Steel has dropped 1.2%.

Nomura’sCurt Woodworth and team explain why investors soured on U.S. Steel:

We view X's results as positive but disappointing in terms of guidance. Flatrolled costs showed significant sequential improvement, as costs per ton decreased about $16/ton, adjusted for maintenance spending, which drove adj. EPS to $0.27 compared to our estimate of a loss per share of -$0.25. However, management failed to provide measurable cost savings targets or
other Project Carnegie-relate initiatives, which we believe investors were anticipating…

Cowen’s Anthony Rizzuto and team were pleased with the results. They write:

AK Steel reported adjusted EPS of $0.09, above its guidance of $0.02 to $0.06, our estimate of $0.03 and the consensus estimate of $0.02. The results exceeded our forecast primarily due to higher shipments, partially offset by a lower average selling price per ton of $1,031/st compared to our $1,085/st estimate. Average selling price per ton decreased 4% sequentially due to a lower proportion of value-added product shipments to the spot market.

And the performance differential isn’t just for today. AK Steel has gained 98% during the past six months, while US Steel has risen 33%. For two similar companies, that’s very different performance.

Monday, January 27, 2014

Video Exploring Compelling Investment Themes in an Atypical Market - Royce Funds Commentary

The current market rally has provided fewer buying opportunities for value investors such as ourselves. Portfolio Manager and Principal Chip Skinner discusses areas of the market that he believes are providing attractive opportunities, companies that exemplify the themes he's been developing, and three stocks that have enjoyed some success so far in 2013.

Do you think the current small-cap bull market can keep going or are you expecting a correction?While a rising market is encouraging from a performance perspective, a pullback at some point would logically make sense. There seems to be a rush to risk assets, particularly now that investors have watched certain market segments do quite well on an absolute basis over the last couple of years, so I think we're about due for a correction given that there are still a lot of unknowns with regard to the federal budget and related matters.

We've gotten sort of a head-fake from the Federal Reserve on tapering. We still have some level of global political tension. But I do feel sure that interest rates are heading higher over the longer term. So while a correction or even periodic corrections will occur, long-term, I remain very bullish on small-cap stocks.

Hot Performing Companies To Own For 2015

What sectors and industries have you been looking at most closely lately?One theme I've been exploring over the last year or so is "Machine to Machine" (M2M) technology, also known as the "Internet of Things."

Much of this technology involves placing a sensor or other piece of technology on one piece of equipment to capture information that can be relayed through a wireless or wired network to a computer that translates what's gathered into meaningful data.

This data can then be analyzed to make appliances and other things run more efficiently and effectively. Gartner, a leading information technology consultant, thinks this area can grow a! t a 23% compound annual growth rate through 2016.

This data can then be analyzed to make appliances and other things run more efficiently and effectively. Gartner, a leading information technology consultant, thinks this area can grow at a 23% compound annual growth rate through 2016.


Through M2M technologies, businesses can make a lot of manual functions more automated, and most would benefit from the ability to save time and labor not just on manual data input and measurement, which is often on a delayed batch basis, but also on inventory reporting, maintenance and parts replacement on heavy equipment, meter readings, etc.There are many factors driving this theme, but the biggest—and perhaps most evident—is the pervasiveness of communication networks. Another important driver is cost-reduction opportunities.

Through M2M technologies, businesses can make a lot of manual functions more automated, and most would benefit from the ability to save time and labor not just on manual data input and measurement, which is often on a delayed batch basis, but also on inventory reporting, maintenance and parts replacement on heavy equipment, meter readings, etc.

There's also a service element whereby companies can build stronger customer relationships. With more precise, real-time information, they can quickly detect changes in consumer trends and monitor customer behavior or usage more effectively.

Can you give us a couple of examples of companies that are taking advantage of M2M technology?Sure—we've had an investment in Pason Systems (PSI) for almost 10 years now. Based in Canada, Pason has created an entire business model around M2M by automating certain oil well drilling functions and production data so that it can tell when something's going haywire. It also has a number of additional applications that it's selling, including a sensor that attaches near the drill bit to help navigate where an operator should be drilling. The company has penetrated the U.S. in a big way,! and now ! it's looking to expand internationally.

Sierra Wireless, which is a position I first bought in January and have been building in Royce Value Plus Fund's portfolio since then, is now a pure play M2M company after having sold its laptop wireless device business to NETGEAR earlier this year.

The company has a well-respected management team, a lot of cash on its balance sheet, and sensor and communication technology. The company is now eager to make an acquisition to create a complete solution—Sierra still needs an enterprise side dashboard side for its collection analysis and interpretation of data, and that's what it's on the hunt for.

Are there any other themes that you've been developing?I think the enterprise software area is pretty interesting right now, particularly cloud-oriented companies and software businesses that either help track assets or reduce corporate expenses. Tangoe is a leader in the telecom expense management space—both wired and wireless. The company helps enterprises track and manage mobile devices of all types.

With the introduction of laptops and smart phones, corporate intranet security and access have become more complicated, particularly with all the different mobile phone vendors and telecom plans a company's employees typically have.

Historically, most companies have not tried to manage this process. Tangoe (TNGO) helps companies consolidate and renegotiate contracts by using the buying power that's already there to help companies better manage this end of their business.

A second company that makes enterprise software is SciQuest (SQI), which provides procurements and spending management software on a subscription basis. Unlike one of its chief competitors, which targets everyday supply purchases made by big companies, SciQuest provides automated purchasing to a different segment by focusing on universities, hospitals, local and state governments, etc.

While some might say these areas are the weakest segments a company can target! , SciQues! t would contend that these are highly cost-conscious entities, which to me is a pretty compelling argument.

More recently, I've been looking at alternative energy. As the U.S. moves toward energy independence, I believe there are a lot of opportunities in solar, geothermal, and natural gas.

There are two companies that I'm gradually easing into at the moment; one is in the process of becoming a pure play lithium producer and one takes an interesting approach to power generation.

Can you discuss three stocks that have been successful this year? What did you initially like about them and what helped them turn around?Methode Electronics (MEI) is an automotive component supplier, with automotive customers accounting for about 60% of its revenues. The company classifies the other 40% of its revenues as non-auto, which includes home appliance touch screens and sensors.

To say it had a rough go in the last 10 years is an understatement, especially during the downturn for the automotive industry. However, the company was able to develop a center console product that includes a touchscreen which acts as an interface for navigation systems, entertainment, etc.

Methode first got this console into Ford vehicles, and about two quarters ago it started a very large rollout with GM for their trucks and SUVs. The ramp-up has gone better than expected, and the stock has been beating expectations. It was sort of forgotten by other investors for a while, but it's got an interesting product that looks like it's got some legs.

Immersion Corporation, which manufactures and licenses technology that enhances digital devices with touch interaction, has a lot of intellectual property around haptics, which is technically defined as tactile feedback or the vibration or other physical response a user gets when pressing buttons on an electronic device.

The technology is being adopted in cell phones and gaming consoles, but the company also plans to enter the automotive console area. I also th! ink we're! likely to see its technology in iPads and other tablets.

The company has owned this technology for a while. When I first began to buy this stock in April 2012, the company was spending a lot of money on litigation to defend its intellectual property.

In the last nine months, the company was able to convince Motorola Mobility, which Google now owns, to pay back royalties and to sign a new royalty agreement. Around the middle of the spring the company also signed Samsung. It looks like the dominoes are starting to fall now, which is why the stock has gone up so much since March. And at some point the legal expenses will come down. Immersion has a very high margin revenue stream, and the company has more end markets that it wants to target.

The last company I want to mention is HealthWays (HWAY), which was once a small-cap growth stock favorite. Due to increasing changes in the U.S. healthcare industry, as well as confusion around the implementation of ObamaCare, the company recently expanded its business to not just physical wellness but to social and emotional wellness, health, and nutrition.

Like its original business, which was more along the lines of disease management, HealthWays helps insurance providers, as well as governments and consumers, redesign their product offerings to provide the same or better outcomes at lower costs. Its stock became attractively cheap to us when the company announced that it had lost its largest contract, Cigna, and its operating profit predictably fell. It's since endured a decline in revenues and an even bigger decline in profits.

But more recently it's won arguably the same or more business than what it had lost with Cigna. Unfortunately for HealthWays, there are some up-front costs when bringing on large customers, and that's blunted profits. However, as the company moved past that anniversary, its revenues are starting to grow again, and I expect this will continue to improve further down the road.

How do you feel about the reco! very of R! oyce Value Plus Fund? Are you happy with its recent performance and is it acting the way you intend?It took some time for our efforts to bear fruit in regards to the performance challenges we encountered with Royce Value Plus Fund in the second half of 2010 and in the early part of 2011.

That being said, it's becoming clearer that those efforts have resulted in improvement through solid absolute returns, better stock selection, and an emphasis on a "growth at a reasonable price" (GARP) investment approach.

By targeting robust, multi-year growth themes and focusing on what we see as quality companies benefiting from those themes, we think the Fund has done well in the current slow-growth economy.

While we have more groundwork to do with respect to performance relative to our benchmark, I firmly believe we are on the right path.

Royce Value Plus Fund (RYVPX)
Average Annual Total Returns as of Quarter-End 6/30/13 (%)

[ Enlarge Image ]

Important Performance and Expense Information

All performance information reflects past performance, is presented on a total return basis, reflects the reinvestment of distributions, and does not reflect the deduction of taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or the redemption of fund shares. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Investment return and principal value of an investment will fluctuate, so that shares may be worth more or less than their original cost when redeemed. Shares redeemed within 180 days of purchase may be subject to a 1% redemption fee, payable to the Fund, which is not reflected in the performance shown above; if it were, performance would be lower. Current month-end performance may be higher or lower than performance quoted and may be obtained at www.roycefunds.com. Operating expenses reflect total annual operating expenses for the Service Class as of the Fund's most current prospectus and include mana! gement fe! es, 12b-1 distribution and service fees, other expenses, and acquired fund fees and expenses. Acquired fund fees and expenses reflect the estimated amount of the fees and expenses incurred indirectly by the Fund through its investment in mutual funds, hedge funds, private equity funds, and other investment companies.

Important Disclosure Information

Chip Skinner is a portfolio manager and principal of Royce & Associates, LLC, investment advisor to The Royce Funds. He serves as portfolio manager for Royce Value Plus Fund (RVP) and serves as an assistant portfolio manager for Royce Low-Priced Stock Fund (RLP). The thoughts expressed in this piece are solely those of the person speaking and may differ from those of other Royce investment professionals, or the firm as a whole. There can be no assurance with regard to future market movements.

This material is not authorized for distribution unless preceded or accompanied by a currentprospectus. Please read the prospectus carefully before investing or sending money. Royce Value Plus Fund invests primarily in micro-cap, small-cap, and mid-cap stocks, which may involve considerably more risk than investing in larger-cap stocks. (Please see "Primary Risks for Fund Investors" in the prospectus.) The Fund's broadly diversified portfolio does not ensure a profit or guarantee against loss. The Fund may invest up to 25% of its net assets in foreign securities, which may involve political, economic, currency, and other risks not encountered in U.S. investments. (Please see "Investing in Foreign Securities" in the prospectus.)

Percentage of Fund Holdings as of 6/30/13 (%)

[ Enlarge Image ]

Sunday, January 26, 2014

US Airways' Biggest Union Wants Contracts Before It Backs Merger

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (TheStreet) -- Hundreds of US Airways (LCC) employees are in Washington, lobbying members of Congress to support a planned merger with American (AAMRQ), despite opposition from the Justice Department.

Supporters do not, however, include leaders and members of the International Association of Machinists, the largest union at US Airways, representing about 3,500 mechanics and 5,800 fleet service workers.

"I think it raises a red flag with members of Congress when the largest labor group is not involved with the lobbying," said Bill Wise, president of IAM Local 1725 in Charlotte.

The Justice Department's 57-page complaint opposing the merger focuses on protecting consumers by preserving the low fares offered on some one-stop routes by US Airways. But it doesn't mention that US Airways earns lower revenue per available seat mile on comparable routes than bigger competitors do, and that it compensates for lower revenue by paying its employees less than their peers at bigger rivals. Many employees were to receive contract improvements triggered by the merger: US Airways has estimated the gain in employee compensation at about $400 million annually. The biggest beneficiaries would be US Airways pilots. Pilots from both US Airways and from the former America West -- the two airlines merged in 2005 -- have below-industry standard contracts. East pilots have had bankruptcy contracts since 2003. For them, a merger means a new contract that over six years would provide $1.6 billion worth of benefits, including pay raises of 13% to 35% over existing rates and lump sum payments around $10,000 each. But US Airways mechanics and fleet service workers are looking to make contract gains through negotiations, which have been stalled since their two contracts became amendable 21 months ago on Jan. 2, 2012. IAM members, primarily fleet service workers, picketed Friday at Charlotte Douglas International Airport. Talks have been delayed by the airline's merger efforts and by a failed effort by the International Brotherhood of Teamsters to organize the mechanics. That effort began late in 2012 and ended in August, when the Teamsters lost a representation election .

Last week, the National Mediation Board met with the two sides and set the first week of October as the time when talks would begin on a new contract for mechanics and the first week in November for talks to begin on a new contract for fleet service workers.

"When we get to the table, we'll see whether things will move forward," said IAM spokesman Joe Tiberi.

"It's long past time for US Airways to focus on their own employees," Tiberi said. "US Airways has ignored their employees and prefers to worry about a merger and getting deals with the unions at American."

Mark Baskett, vice president of IAM District Lodge 141, said US Airways fleet service workers have better health care and better job protection than American fleet service workers, who are members of the Transport Workers Union. "But they have better pay, an extra week's vacation, and better sick pay," he said. Top scale is $20.57 an hour at US Airways and $22.56 at American. "We lost so much in the two bankruptcies," Baskett said. "What we're trying to do is get it back, since the company is making record profits." Follow @tedreednc -- Written by Ted Reed in Charlotte, N.C. >To contact the writer of this article, click here: Ted Reed

Saturday, January 25, 2014

FPA Capital Fund Fourth Quarter Commentary

Introduction Who said thirteen was an unlucky number? It must have been an equity short seller because the thirteenth year of the new millennium was an incredible year for shareholders of U.S. publicly-traded companies. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 26.5%, the S&P 500 appreciated more than 32%, and the Russell 2500 outdid them both by gaining over 36%. The Russell 2500's performance was its third best showing since we started managing the FPA Capital Fund (Trades, Portfolio) in 1984 (only eclipsed by the performance in 1991 and 2003). To put that 36% into perspective, if one were to invest $46,200 and achieve a 36% annual compounded return, one would become a newly minted member of America's millionaire club in just ten years. Or, one could merely start with $100,000 and thirty years later be a billionaire, if one were to realize a 36% annual compounded return. 

Market Commentary 

We begin this section with further analysis on the Russell 2500 index. In our opinion, this index most closely (while not exactly) represents companies which could be investment opportunities for our strategy. The ability for the Russell 2500 to repeat recent returns, in our opinion, is highly unlikely. Here is why: 

At the end of 2013, the Russell 2500's Price-to-Earnings ratio (P/E)1 was 27.8x, and this is with near record highs in corporate profit margins. If you recall, the S&P 500 traded at approximately 30x earnings in the year 2000 and then collapsed nearly 50% between the years 2000 and 2002. 

To see how challenging it would be for the Russell 2500 to produce a 36% compounded annual return over the next ten years, let alone the next thirty years, let's assume earnings will grow 10% each year for the next decade, despite the fact that earnings for the market have grown less than 7% annually since the year 2000 and roughly 7% annually over the past eighty years. Thus, the Russell 2500's P/E ratio in ten years would be over 230x if that index were to achieve an annual compo! unded return of 36% for the next decade and earnings were to grow 10% annually. We do not believe there are enough "supporters" who could keep that enormous bubble afloat, but the Pols in Washington are a determined group that continually prove folly has no boundaries. 

Some people might ask, why are we so fixated on the P/E ratio? The answer is simple. If one were to invert the P/E ratio (E/P), one would get the cash-on-cash return of that investment if one were to acquire the entire company. For our illustrations, we are ignoring the accounting timing differences for working capital and assuming depreciation equals capital expenditures. Therefore, net income, or earnings per share, equals free cash flow in our example. Thus, with the Russell 2500 trading at 27.8x, investors are currently realizing just a 3.6% return on their invested capital. A P/E of 230x equates to a cash-on-cash return of 0.4%, or four-tenths of one percent. At that valuation, one might want to consider playing the Powerball lottery and buying Mega Million tickets for a better return, instead of endeavoring to become the next Warren Buffet. 

When we explain this simple math to people they intuitively understand it is better to buy equities with a lower P/E because the cash-on-cash return is higher. The problem everyone has, including us, is that nobody knows with 100% confidence what earnings will look like next year, in three years, or in five years or longer. The stock market cares about future earnings, not last years or prior year earnings. 

While we do not pretend to have a crystal ball that gives us perfect insight into future earnings, we can make some educated assumptions about how to think about future earnings. In recent letters, we mentioned that we were expecting very modest economic and earnings growth. This outlook was predicated on a myriad of factors, but sluggish wage growth and high debt levels were material factors. Our modest outlook for earnings growth proved correct in 2013, with earnings ! growing r! oughly 4..5% for the Russell 2500, despite the index appreciating more than 36% last year. In other words, nearly 90% of 

The point in analyzing these scenarios is to objectively evaluate the viable outcomes, based on a set of relevant input factors. Our team does this with stocks all of the time to gauge the base case, downside case, and upside case for individual securities th at go into the portfolios we manage. This rigorous and quantitative analysis helps us frame the risks and return opportunities for an investment. We applied this analysis to the Russell 2500 merely to illustrate the plausible market scenarios so our invest ors and shareholders have a better understanding of the market risks. It is important to note that we are bottoms up investors and put very little weight on the macro factors, especially when we can invest in market - leading companies at very cheap absolute valuations.

Portfolio Commentary

Speaking of bottoms up analysis, the companies in the portfolio performed very well in 2013. More than 50% of the companies in the portfolio appreciated 42% or more during the year, and 40% of the stocks rose double digits in the fourth quarter. There was one disappointment in the portfolio that we will discuss later, but even that company performed well operationally.

There were no thematic winners or losers last year. Our best performing stock was a technology company, but our worst performer was a tech nology stock as well. Our second best performer was an energy company, but our second worst performer was also an energy company. Our retailers performed well, as did our education and industrial companies. 

Importantly, we like the industry in which Centene (CNC) competes. Some of our investors might recall that one of our prior investments, Amerigroup, was acquired in 2012 by Wellpoint at a val uation that allowed us to achieve a return on investment of greater than 100% over the roughly one - year time period that we owned the shares. Medicaid managed car! e companie! s not only save states money but also offer better service; therefore, more states a re letting managed care companies run their Medicaid programs. To that end, states are expanding both the geographies carved out to managed care companies and the types of programs. The next phase of growth will come from the dual - eligible population. D uals (or dual - eligible population) are 8.3mm 3 people in the U.S. that are eligible to receive both Medicare and Medicaid benefits (mainly low - income seniors). According to the Kaiser Foundation, Duals accounted for almost 40% of Medicaid spending although they made up only 15% of the Medicaid population. We believe there are ample growth opportunities for CNC and other companies to meet the challenges of managing these disparate Medicaid members for the foreseeable future.

As we alluded to above, CNC inc urred some unusual expenses in 2012 due to a bad contract in the state of Kentucky. Thus, in 2012, CNC barely earned any money for the year, but we believed that was a temporary situation. Sure enough, CNC exited the Kentucky market and should earn close t o $3.00 per share in 2013 once it reports its fourth quarter's earnings in early February. Our base case estimate has CNC earning $4.30 over the next couple years, and significantly more over the longer term, so it appears that management and the company a re well on their way to achieving that metric.

Unfortunately, we only have a small position in CNC as the stock took off as we were trying to accumulate our position. Nonetheless, should CNC have a hiccup and the stock decline to a more attractive valuat ion, we have the financial wherewithal to substantially add to our position.

As for Apollo Education Group (APOL), the situation is different than Centene's in that the For - Profit Education industry is currently experiencing a declining enrollment environment, v ersus the large growth in new members for Medicaid services. However, despite all of the negative news on the education industry i! n general! , and Apollo specifically, we are highly encouraged with APOL's current profit level and its ability to generate abun dant free cash flow.

Long - term investors will recall that we highlighted the education services sector as the worst performing industry group in the US in 2012. Nevertheless, we ended up investing in two companies in that industry: Apollo and DeVry. Both of these companies p ass our criteria of investing in market leading companies with a history of profitability and pristine balance sheets that are run by capable management teams. The main question to answer is a simple one: will we need education in the future? If yes, who will deliver this education and how will it be delivered.

Top Warren Buffett Companies To Watch In Right Now

APOL operates the online school called the University of Phoenix (UoP) as well as several international schools. UoP generates more than 90% of Apollo's revenue but 100% of its operating earning s. That is, the international schools are losing money, which we estimate was roughly $60 million in 2013. With a new management team now running the international schools, we could envision this division potentially earning $50 million in operating profit s over the next few years. This would be a swing of approximately $1.00 per share in operating profits should the turnaround occur. To put that into perspective, APOL earned nearly $3 a share in fiscal 2013, before considering restructuring charges.

The c ore operation for Apollo is UoP, which is the largest independent online university in the US. UoP was the first For - Profit company to offer online degrees over thirty years ago. The University of Phoenix is a well - known brand, but one that is in the proce ss of being upgraded. The company has embarked on a new determination to be more selective in choosing students who enroll at UoP. The main goal is to find students who will persist t! hrough ev! ery semester until they graduate rather than to fill the classro om every semester just to find a replacement when that student drops out.

Most investors, analysts, media, and government officials say this should always be the goal, and they are right. However, UoP's typical students are not the eighteen year olds grad uating from high school figuring out whether they should attend a private or public university. UoP's typical student is single, twenty - eight years old, a minority single - mother, first in her family to attend college, and someone who is 3 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) via WellCare Health Plans, Inc. 2012 Annual Report on Form 10 - K trying to improve h er career skills and compete in today's fierce labor market. Among the biggest obstacles for this cohort is keeping their child, or children, healthy and in school so they can finish school themselves.

The company has re - invested a tremendous amount of ca pital into superior software programs not only to educate students, but also to provide a more timely feedback loop to professors who are teaching classes. The company is also spending more money per student on student advisors, to intervene earlier and pr ovide help when a student is in danger of withdrawing from the program.

APOL is also aggressively courting businesses not just to place their graduates in a well - paying job, but to partner with them and tailor a certificate program, for example, that prov ides students with skills specific to an individual company or industry. Many CEOs will tell you that there is not a jobs problem in America but a skills problem. That is, many traditional, not - for - profit universities in America are not educating students and imbuing them with skills for the 21 st century global labor marketplace. APOL is now working with hundreds of companies to deliver graduates, whether they are fully credentialed students or students with a narrower certificate degree, to businesses that are looking to hire qualifie! d people.!

These initiatives will take time to fully implement and for shareholders to see tangible benefits. In the meantime, APOL management is cutting expenses to reflect the lower enrollment numbers, like marketing and recr uiting, to maintain healthy profits and free cash flow at the company. On the most recent quarterly conference call, APOL's CEO announced that the company upped its total fixed costs cuts to a minimum of $675 million, $350 million of which has already been cut from the budget.

While we are pleased we were able to accumulate a full position below the $19 level, pleased that APOL appreciated nearly 50% in 2013, and pleased the stock is up another 25% during the first three weeks of 2014, we believe there is still a lot of upside potential in the stock should the company ever be able to monetize its software investment.

Currently, the Department of Education does not allow universities to share Title IV funding revenue dollars. Title IV funding is essentiall y the government guaranteed loans students use to finance their education. If this restriction is removed, APOL would be in a very strong position to forge relationships with the thousands of universities and colleges in the U.S. and effectively become the on - line outsource partner for these schools. The long - term trend in education is toward more distance or on - line learning, and APOL has the some of the best technology to deliver the highest quality service to millions of potential students. Today, this s oftware technology is an inexpensive call option for shareholders, but one that could be worth a lot of money down the road should this archaic restriction be eliminated.

The most disappointing investment in the portfolio for 2013 was InterDigital (IDCC). This stock declined approximately 28% during the year, despite posting roughly 25% operating margins. Our thesis on IDCC is that the company should benefit from its wireless technology patents as more smartphones and mobile tablets are connected to the in! ternet. ! IDCC creates wireless technology, applies for patents for the technology it creates, and then licenses its technology to manufacturers who produce the aforementioned products. In the past, Nokia, Samsung, Apple, LG, and many other manufacturers hav e licensed the company's technology to use in their products and paid IDCC royalties.

Typically, in the past, IDCC would receive royalty payments fixed for a certain period of time, for example four years, and then its customers would renew its license fo r another period of time and likely with some additional patents thrown into the agreement. However, as IDCC switched to receiving a royalty on a per unit sold basis and the number of smart phone units sold worldwide has exploded to the upside over the pas t couple of years, some of the company's traditional customers have chosen not to sign new license agreements and pay IDCC. The failure to pay, but still use IDCC's essential patents in the manufacturer's products has prompted IDCC to sue some of its large st customers.

Suing your customers is not an ideal business strategy, but one, unfortunately, that is all too commonly deployed in the technology industry. These lawsuits are not only expensive, but also can drag on for years as the suits wind their way t hrough both the International Trade Commission and the Federal Circuit. At the end of the day, IDCC has prevailed in prior lawsuits and won large judgments or settled with the likes of Nokia and Samsung. Most investors do not have the patience to withstand all of the ups and downs of the legal process. When there are temporary setbacks to IDCC's legal process, investors sell their stock, and this is what we believe largely transpired in 2013.

However, we do not view the prospects of a legal victory as the only means to the success of IDCC. In fact, the company can monetize its patent portfolio by selling non - core patents to other companies. For example, in 2012, Intel paid IDCC $375 million for a couple of hundred patents, out of a p! ortfolio ! of over 20,000 patents. IDCC can also enter into joint venture agreements, such as the agreement signed with Sony in 2013, to generate value for shareholders. Instead of suing its potential licensees, IDCC can enter into binding arbitration with manufacturers. 

Moreover, IDCC has not ruled out eventually developing products employing its patents, and then selling these products to its customers rather than licensing them the technology. Thus, there are multiple ways for IDCC to get paid for the value it creates, and it does not have to be a binary situation as some ill - informed investors might believe.

The one risk that we need to watch closely in the coming months and quarters is the political risk. There is some discussion is Washington about the merits of pate nts in our fast - changing, technologically - advanced society. Some people will argue that patents do not have as much value today as in the past. Their reasoning is that product life cycles are much faster today and new things are always being created to rep lace the older generation of products. However, perhaps the life cycle of products is shortening because there is payoff to those who create the technology in the first place. If inventors and scientists are not paid for the stuff they create, what is the incentive to create the new technology? Our view is that inventors, musicians, writers, and scientists should have their new ideas and products protected from being copied for a reasonable period of time, and get paid a royalty should someone or a company want to use their creation. However, we need to be cognizant that our opinion could be refuted in a political environment that has a different agenda. While the risk of a massive overhaul of our patent laws is small, we cannot fully discount it occurring.

Thus, we will be diligent in adding to our IDCC position and ask for an extra discount before buying more shares. The company's balance sheet remains exceptionally strong with about half of the company's market val! ue consis! ting of its net cash position. The management team has also been very good stewards of shareholders capital, and the market for smart phones, tablets and other mobile devices connecting to the internet remains very robust. 

In light of the above, we remain ever vigilant of valuations ac ross those companies that meet our business criteria and will continue to aggressively deploy capital when valuations meet our targeted entry levels. While there is currently a dearth of opportunities, we have exhibited an ability to find a few gems and lo ok forward to uncovering more over the months to come.

We thank you for your continued trust and confidence in our strategy.

 

Portfolio Holding Submission Disclosure Except for certain publicly available information incorporated herein, the information contained in these materials is our confidential and proprietary information and is being submitted to you for your confidential use with the express understanding that, without our prior written permission, you will not release these materials or discuss the information contained herein or make reproductions of or use these materials for any purpose other than evaluating a potential advisory relationship with First Pacific Advisors (Trades, Portfolio). You should consider the Fund's investment objectives, risks, and charges and expenses carefully before you invest. The Prospectus details the Fund's objective and policies, and other matters of interest to the prospective investor. Please read this Prospectus carefully before investing. The Prospectus may be obtained by visiting the website at www.fpafunds.com , by email at crm@fpafunds.com , toll-free by calling 1-800-982-4372 or by contacting the Fund in writing. Investments in mutual funds carry risks and investors may lose principal value. Stock markets are volatile and can decline significantly in response to adverse issuer, political, regulatory, market, or economic developments. The Fund may purchase foreign securities, including American! Deposito! ry Receipts (ADRs) and other depository receipts, which are subject to interest rate, currency exchange rate, economic and political risks; this may be enhanced when investing in emerging markets. Small and mid cap stocks involve greater risks and they can fluctuate in price more than larger company stocks. Groups of stocks, such as value and growth, go in and out of favor which may cause certain funds to underperform other equity funds. Portfolio composition will change due to ongoing management of the fund. References to individual securities are for informational purposes only and should not be construed as recommendations by the Funds, Advisor or Distributor. The FPA Funds are distributed by UMB Distribution Services, LLC, 803 W. Michigan Street, Milwaukee, WI, 53233

 


Also check out: FPA Capital Undervalued Stocks FPA Capital Top Growth Companies FPA Capital High Yield stocks, and Stocks that FPA Capital keeps buying

Currently 5.00/512345

Rating: 5.0/5 (2 votes)

Email FeedsSubscribe via Email RSS FeedsSubscribe RSS Comments Please leave your comment:
More GuruFocus Links
Latest Guru Picks Value Strategies
Warren Buffett Portfolio Ben Graham Net-Net
Real Time Picks Buffett-Munger Screener
Aggregated Portfolio Undervalued Predictable
ETFs, Options Low P/S Companies
Insider Trends 10-Year Financials
52-Week Lows Interactive Charts
Model Portfolios DCF Calculator
RSS Feed Monthly Newsletters
The All-In-One Screener Portfolio Tracking Tool
MORE GURUFOCUS LINKS
Latest Guru Picks Value Strategies
Warren Buffett Portfolio Ben Graham Net-Net
Real Time Picks Buffett-Munger Screener
Aggregated Portfolio Undervalued Predictable
ETFs, Options Low P/S Companies
Insider Trends 10-Year Financials
52-Week Lows Interactive Charts
Model Portfolios DCF Calculator
RSS Feed Monthly Newsletters
The All-In-One Screener Portfolio Tracking Tool
CNC STOCK PRICE CHART 61.56 (1y: +40%) $(function() { var seriesOptions = [], yAxisOptions = [], name = 'CNC', display = ''; Highcharts.setOptions({ global: { useUTC: true } }); var d = new Date(); $current_day = d.getDay(); if ($current_day == 5 || $current_day == 0 || $current_day == 6){ day = 4; } else{ day = 7; } seriesOptions[0] = { id : name, animation:false, color: '#4572A7', lineWidth: 1, name : name.toUpperCase() + ' stock price', threshold : null, data : [[1359352800000,44.07],[1359439200000,44.45],[1359525600000,43.72],[1359612000000,43.16],[1359698400000,43.8],[1359957600000,42.54],[1360044000000,44.99],[1360130400000,45.14],[1360216800000,44.78],[1360303200000,46.04],[1360562400000,44.5],[1360648800000,44.78],[1360735200000,45.16],[1360821600000,45.51],[1360908000000,45.96],[1361253600000,45.98],[1361340000000,45.5],[1361426400000,45.77],[1361512800000,45.42],[1361772000000,44.35],[1361858400000,44.13],[1361944800000,44.97],[1362031200000,45.02],[1362117600000,45.7],[1362376800000,44.69],[1362463200000,45.43],[1362549600000,46.05],[1362636000000,47],[1362722400000,47.92],[1362978000000,47.38],[1363064400000,46.5],[1363150800000,47.02],[1363237200000,45.47],[1363323600000,45.79],[1363582800000,45.43],[1363669200000,45.1],[1363755600000,45.47],[1363842000000,44.99],[1363928400000,44.75],[1364187600000,44.59],[1364274000000,44.52],[1364360400000,44.17],[1364446800000,44.04],[1364792400000,44.58],[1364878800000,44.57],[1364965200000,43.76],[1365051600000,43.61],[1365138000000,42.25],[1365397200000,42.38],[1365483600000,45.21],[1365570000000,45.8],[1365656400000,47.35],[1365742800000,47.7],[1366002000000,45.93],[1366088400000,46.35],[1366174800000,45.11],[1366261200000,44.29],[1366347600000,45.49],[1366606800000,45.35],[1366693200000,47.07],[1366779600000,47.34],[1366866000000,47.64],[1366952400000,47.18],[1367211600000,46.6],[1367298000000,46.2],[1367384400000,46.4],[1367470800000,47.09],[1367557200000,47.53],[1367816400000,47.82],[1367902800000,48.12],[1367989200000,48.75],[1368075600000,49.22],[1368162000000,50.62],[1368421200000,50.91],[1368507600000,51.49],[1368594000000,51.69],[1368680400000,52.15],[1368766800000,51.86],[1369026000000,50.49],[1369112400000,50.77],[1369198800000,50.89],[1369285200000,51.34],[1369371600000,50.06],[1369717200000,51.23],[1369803600000,50.93],[1369890000000,51.25],[1369976400000,49.5],[1370235600000,48.87],[1370322000000,49.08],[1370408400000,47.93],[1370494800000,48.31],[1370581200000,49.71],[1370840400000,50.19],[13! 70926800000,49.55],[1371013200000,49.34],[1371099600000,50.17],[1371186000000,50.44],[1371445200000,50.81],[1371531600000,51.98],[1371618000000,51.66],[1371704400000,50.38],[1371790800000,50.08],[1372050000000,49.84],[1372136400000,49.31],[1372222800000,49.37],[1372309200000,51.96],[1372395600000,52.46],[1372654800000,52.54],[1372741200000,53.14],[1372827600000,52.82],[1373000400000,53.76],[1373259600000,54.49],[1373346000000,54.71],[1373432400000,54.56],[1373518800000,54.56],[1373605200000,54.42],[1373864400000,54.98],[1373950800000,55.4],[1374037200000,55.12],[1374123600000,55.23],[1374210000000,55.48],[1374469200000,55.92],[1374555600000,58.21],[1374642000000,58.77],[1374728400000,57.26],[1374814800000,56.08],[137507400

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Monday Closing Bell: Markets Plunge on KerryĆ¢€™s Remarks

Bull and Bear figuresSource: thinkstockAugust 26, 2013: U.S. markets opened slightly higher this morning, held in check by limited data releases in Europe and Asia, and a decidedly downbeat report on U.S. durable goods orders. The markets traded along slightly higher most of the day until late afternoon when Secretary of State John Kerry stated that Syria had indeed used chemical weapons against its own citizens, causing fears that a U.S. military response would further destabilize the region and affect global equities' prices.

Top Communications Equipment Stocks To Buy Right Now

European and Asian markets closed mixed today, while Latin American markets closed lower.

On Tuesday's calendar, San Francisco Fed President John Williams is giving a speech and we are scheduled for the following data releases and events:

9:00 a.m. – S&P Case-Shiller house price index 10:00 a.m. – Conference Board consumer confidence index 10:00 a.m. – Richmond Fed manufacturing index 11:30 a.m. – 4-week Treasury bill auction 1:00 p.m. – 2-year note auction

We also broke out the top Wall Street calls with analyst upgrades and downgrades.

Here are the closing bell levels for Monday:

S&P500 1,656.79 (-6.70 -0.40%) DJIA 14,946.85 (-63.66; -0.42%) NASDAQ 3,657.57 (-0.22; -0.01%) 10YR TNOTE 2.789% (-0.22%) Gold $1,370.80 (+6.50; +0.47%) Euro/Dollar: 1.3371 (-0.0015; -0.12%)

Big earnings movers: Chinese internet firm Qihoo 360 Technology Co. Ltd. (NYSE: QIHU) is up 8% at $78.99 on strong earnings and a buoyant outlook. A small biotech firm, Spherix Inc. (NASDAQ: SPEX) jumped 26.7% to more than $14 on earnings. On Tuesday we are scheduled to get earnings from LDK Solar Co. Ltd. (NYSE: LDK) and Tiffany & Co. (NYSE: TIF) before markets open. After Tuesday's close we'll hear from Workday Inc. (NYSE: WDAY) and TiVo Inc. (NASDAQ: TIVO), among others.

Stocks on the move: Onyx Pharmaceuticals Inc. (NASDAQ: ONXX) is up 5.6% at $123.52 after accepting a $10.4 billion buyout offer from Amgen Inc. (NASDAQ: AMGN). Chinese wealth management firm Noah Holdings Ltd. (NYSE: NOAH) is down 16.6% at $13.76 following an analyst downgrade on worries about the company's recurring revenues.

In all, 91 stocks put up new 52-week highs today, while just 14 stocks posted new lows.

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Target cuts 475 as retail 'transformation' hits

Target Corp. is laying off 475 workers after a massive information-security breach stole the retail giant's Christmas.

Minneapolis-based Target has also eliminated another 700 vacant positions over the last six months, company spokeswoman Molly Snyder said. The cuts are across the company's operations, except that no workers in Canada are being cut, she said.

The company has struggled recently. First, like other middle-priced retailers, it has lagged the performance of very high-end and very inexpensive retailers. Then last month, disclosure of a data breach that let hackers steal 40 million customers' credit card information from Target's systems. Earlier this month, it said other information about 70 million customers, including e-mail addresses, had also been stolen during the breach.

"Retailing is in a transformative time,'' Target spokeswoman Molly Snyder said. "We're making decisions that will help us thrive and grow in the future.''

THIS WEEK: Questions over border arrests, Target hacking

DATA BREACH: Doubts over ID of Target malware author

Target's problems in Canada, and the data breach, are just further complications for a company that has been caught between fellow discounters Wal-Mart and Costco, and especially hard-hit by competition from Amazon.com, William Blair analyst Mark Miller said in a Jan. 10 report.

"They used to be the best at selling value, on a broad assortment, to a higher-end consumer," Miller said. "Now there is someone else who does a better job at the exact same thing."

The 1,900 store chain employs 361,000 people, Snyder said. The affected workers will get at least 45 days severance, though longer-tenured workers may get more, she said.The company is continuing to recruit in some areas, especially to support its online and mobile commerce initiatives, she said,

The company said Jan. 10 that holiday sales had been running ahead of forecasts until the first data breach was disclosed Dec. 19, and turned "materially weake! r" after the disclosure.

The company said comparable store sales would decline about 2.5% for the fourth quarter, compared with the same period in 2012. The company expects fourth-quarter earnings of $1.2 to $1.30 per share, compared with $1.50 to $1.60 before the breach was disclosed.

In the first nine months of the year, Target's net income fell 46%, with much of the blame falling on higher-than-expected losses on the company's Canadian expansion, according to Target's federal securities filings.

Snyder declined to say what parts of Target bore the brunt of the cuts. Local outlets in the Twin Cities reported large cuts in marketing, finance and technology services functions.

Monday, January 20, 2014

3 Stocks Set to Make Big News This Week

Synovus Financial, Regions Financial, and Discover Financial Services are all set to report earnings this week. Synovous and Regions, both banks focused on the Southeastern part of the U.S., have been trying to clean up their balance sheets and get back to the basics of banking. On the other hand, Discover has been firing on all cylinders and has been active entering new markets.

In this segment of The Motley Fool's everything-financial, Where the Money Is, banking analysts David Hanson and Matt Koppenheffer discuss these three companies and tell investors what they will be watching this week.

Are Regions and Synovous set to be blindsided?
Do you hate your bank? If you're like most Americans, chances are good that you answered yes to that question. While that's not great news for consumers, it certainly creates opportunity for savvy investors. That's because there's a brand new company that's revolutionizing banking, and is poised to kill the hated traditional bricks-and-mortar banking model. And amazingly, despite its rapid growth, this company is still flying under the radar of Wall Street. For the name and details on this company, click here to access our new special free report.

5 Best Warren Buffett Stocks To Buy For 2014

Sunday, January 19, 2014

The Shocking Truth About Donald Trump's Rise To Success

You've probably heard his popular catchphrase, "You're fired!"

The Donald has long been a bombastic figure on the American financial scene. He is a well-known real estate magnate, and he is almost as famous for his companies' bankruptcies as he is for his companies' lavish real estate projects.  
 
Through it all, however, Donald Trump has shown that he knows what he's doing. He's been a wily businessman, and his real estate development projects have been, overall, fairly successful.

But how did he get his start? And what does he think would make a great investment right now?

The Trump Secret
We hear a lot about Donald Trump's real estate empire. Yes, he's built it up to something truly lucrative. (Forbes puts his worth at $3.2 billion.) However, he didn't get his start from nothing.

So what's his secret?

Like so many successful and wealthy investors and businessmen, Trump had rich parents to help him get in the game.

His father was a wealthy real estate developer named Fred Trump. Fred's father had a firm -- Elizabeth Trump & Son -- that a young Donald worked at while he attended the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. (He had gone to Fordham University for two years before that, after graduating from New York Military Academy.)

In 1968, Trump joined his father's firm officially, and he was put in control of the organization in 1971. At that point, he renamed the company The Trump Organization.

     
   
  Like so many successful and wealthy investors and businessmen, Trump had rich parents to help him get in the game.  
 

He's been involved in numerous business ventures, some of which have gone bankrupt. However, Trump is too savvy to let company and project bankruptcies touch his personal fortune; in fact, he knows how to get back in there and work on the next big thing.

Donald Trump's Investment Advice
Since his family has long been involved in real estate, it's no surprise that Trump makes a lot of real estate investments. He has claimed that his father told him to know everything you can about what you're doing before you invest. This advice seems to be something he takes to heart when he invests in real estate. Since it's the family business, Trump knows a lot about it.

Indeed, his best investment is likely a real estate investment that he made in 1995: The purchase of 40 Wall Street, the old Bank of Manhattan Trust building. It is now known as Trump Tower.

Even though Trump tried to sell it in 2003, and it didn't work out, the building is still considered immensely valuable. Trump has claimed, on several occasions and in different venues, that he bought the building for $1 million. The building is probably worth several hundred million dollars right now.

But what would Trump tell others to invest in? According to Business Insider, Donald Trump believes that the best choice for investing is still equities and corporate bonds. But he also thinks that if you know how to do it, it makes sense to purchase foreclosed homes from banks. He suggests demanding good interest rates and long-term financing, presumably so you can make the most of leverage.

Trump recently said that he thinks that there are potential investment opportunities in Detroit, for those who can see the potential and buy the real estate. He pointed out, in Crain's Detroit Business, that rock bottom is a good place to invest. After all, where else can you go but up?

And he did use that philosophy when buying 40 Wall Street after it had been neglected as a result of a sale on behalf of late Filipino dictator Ferdinand Marcos falling through. (That tends to happen when your assets are frozen.) The building had been neglected, and Trump turned it into a prime piece of real estate.

Action to Take --> Donald Trump had rich parents who were willing to help him get ahead in the real estate development business. Not all of us are that fortunate, though.

The good news is that we don't need our own rich parents to get ahead. If you know where to look, you can find good companies with rich parent companies to invest in. Get in on these investments while you can, and you could take advantage of them and become rich yourself.

This article originally appeared on InvestingAnswers.com:
The Shocking Truth About Donald Trump's Rise To Success

P.S. -- Trump's hardly the only one with rich parents. In fact, some businesses have "Rich Parents," too -- in the form of a wealthy and powerful company backing them. These stocks are one of my favorite ways to profit in the market right now. One is a low-risk play that has already returned 333% since going public in 2008, while another yields nearly 10%. To find out how to get the names of 20 of my favorite "Rich Parent" MLPs, go here.

Saturday, January 18, 2014

LinkedIn Payoff: Morgan Stanley FA Lands $70 Million Account

Sending a LinkedIn invitation and getting a $70 million account was all in a day’s work for one Morgan Stanley financial advisor—not all in the same day, mind you, but in the sense of day-in day-out use of social media that the firm actively encourages.

“It was an advisor in our New York City area who serves the small business owner segment,” says Lauren Boyman, head of digital strategy for Morgan Stanley Wealth Management.

Boyman told ThinkAdvisor in an interview on Monday that this advisor “is very systematic about how he uses LinkedIn,” participating in group discussions targeted to CFOs or CEOs of small businesses.

Through disciplined activity in this market—Boyman says there are nearly 2 million small business owners using LinkedIn—the advisor “gets himself known as a knowledge leader within the small business space…After he has a roster of people he knows and has established a name for himself, he invites them for more personal interaction.”

Lauren BoymanWhile the large account, from a technology consulting and services company, may be an outlier in terms of size, Boyman (left) says Morgan Stanley advisors enrolled in the firm’s social media program are seeing positive results.

“For those advisors who are using social and doing so on a daily basis—meaning it’s actually part of their practice, something they have absorbed—40% have gotten a new client,” she says, adding that a failure to be consistent will yield no better results than trying to diet by going to the gym once a month.

“It has to be part of their business development and marketing efforts on a regular basis,” she says.

(Wirehouse advisors aren’t the only advisors who are increasingly using social media for business building. See these recent ThinkAdvisor articles:

Where to Find Wealthy Clients on Social Media
RIAs’ Top Compliance Goal: Social Media Policies
4 Tools for Fund Managers, and All Advisors, to Use Social Media Effectively) 

Boyman says some 4,000 Morgan Stanley advisors—about 25% of the advisor force—are enrolled in the firm’s social media program, which fully rolled out a little over a year ago, after a yearlong pilot program.  

Top Growth Companies To Buy Right Now

She says about 75% of these advisors have only a LinkedIn account and about 25% both a LinkedIn and Twitter account. The firm is currently working on a pilot program for Facebook, which Boyman calls “tricky,” citing worries over a crossover between personal and professional usage.

Morgan Stanley provides its advisors with compliance-friendly, pre-approved content, so that advisors needn’t spend lots of time finding relevant material, and it archives all communications and tracks audience engagement—for example seeing what information audiences are sharing and surveying advisors to see what kind of business they’re bringing in.

In a new initiative, the firm just added a whole slew of new content that goes beyond the market and investment strategy focused material they were using exclusively until a week or two ago.

The new content, provided by American Express Publishing, includes material on golf, travel and leisure, food and wine. While it’s too early to make meaningful comparisons as to which content area is most effective, Boyman says that so far at least the lifestyle-oriented content—on subjects such as the five new wine regions with lots of potential or state-of-the-art golf equipment—is being shared as much as their most popular finance-oriented articles.

While there are a wide variety of business development activities an advisor could take, Boyman says the firm especially esteems social media because of the ease of tracking and wide potential reach.

“Other kinds of marketing activities are harder to measure and intangible,” Boyman says. “Something like a seminar or event is more tangible to measure but harder to put together and organize. Coaching little league or [participation in] charitable activities—that’s harder to measure.”

In contrast, social media, she says, is not only easier to measure, but is an especially efficient and productive use of an advisor’s time, she says.

“With other ways you reach one or two people or pay a lot of money and not get anywhere. Social allows you to reach thousands of people with one click.”

Still, many advisors have been slow to adopt, something the Morgan Stanley exec says is inherent in a large group. The firm’s website program, for example, has been around for 15 years now, but is still short of 100% participation, despite the ubiquity of websites in the U.S.

“To get 16,000 to 18,000 advisors to do anything is not easy. There are a few approvals they have to get. They have to get training and have profiles approved,” she says.

But Boyman is confident that advisors will embrace social media.

“We’re growing steadily and have been for a while. At some point it’ll reach a steady state plateau—by focusing on engagement and giving them different kinds of content.”

Coming up next? The firm is working out how to allow assistants to help out with the advisor’s social presence.

Presently, “others can do advance searches or look for groups that are relevant,” Boyman says. “But we’re working on a technological solution to allow someone in more of a support role to help out [actively by overcoming] IT and security concerns” involving passwords and the like. Boyman expects a solution later this year.

-----

Check out these related ThinkAdvisor articles:

Friday, January 17, 2014

Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger Q&A Part 3

These notes were taken live as GuruFocus covered the annual shareholder meeting of Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A)(BRK.B) in Omaha on Saturday. The notes are continued from Part 2 here.

Question: Will the health care act affect Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A)(BRK.B)?

Warren: We're not sure. We don't know of any units that don't have health care. Health care was a huge cost for us. Do few things on a centralized basis but we have not assessed figures of the quarter. We saw a few units' costs rising 10% to 12%. We're not trying to centralized headquarters.

Question: What are your capital spending plans? And do you owe your success to timing?

Warren: I was born in the U.S. so I had a huge advantage, and I was born male so I had a big advantage. I'm not sure in the business world if I was born in 1930 the time could have been better. I was conceived in November 1929 when my parents had nobody to call on and no TV, so here I am, luck the crash of 29 came along. It caused a lot of people to be turned off on stocks like the last crash. Business was a terrible environment. Every baby born in the U.S., on a probably basis, will do better in all kinds of ways than I do. In the investment field, it is not as good as it was in 1950. But a person with a passion for investing coming of age likely will do better and live better.

Charlie: Competition was weak in the early days. Competition is not as weak now. There is surely an advantage from exiting between not mean more to do ahead.

Question: If you can imaging yourself at 30, how have you changed, and what advice would you give yourself, and how would you give the advice in a way that you would actually take it?

Charlie: It's so old fashioned and boringly trite. Keep plugging along. All old virtues still work. And work where you're turned on.

Warren: We met in the grocery business. I'm not in the grocery business now.

Charlie: You were not promoted either. Even though you had the family name.

Question: How concerned are you about

Warren: I hate dumb competition. And a lot of hedge funds have entered into the hedge fund business aggressively in the last few years. It gives them an opportunity to operate in Bermuda and avoid taxes. It's respectable and sold to investors. Anything Wall Street can sell it will sell. It's very sellable now. Money is flowing in and bringing down prices. In the end we know what we're willing to do and do what we think will get us underwriting profit. If a hedge fund guy is willing to sell gas and buy first, he has a problem. In the 1980s we had expense ratios up and volume down. Standby costs were real, but not backbreaking. We look forward to better days and they came. Never anticipated it would happen. We've been luck to get people – Jain and Nicely. We hit the jackpot of people and like not having pressure to do…

Question: I noticed your boardroom reflects the fact that women are not hired for top jobs in corporate America.

Warren: I wrote an article for Fortune and you can see my views on that. There's no question that throughout my lifetime women have not had the same shot as we have. My sisters were as smart, grades were good, and more personable than me. My parents loved them. All my teachers were female and because they only had a few occupations available to them. Improvements have been made, but there is a long way to go. When people are placed in that position they start believing it themselves, so they don't envision more. Katherine Graham was an intelligent woman and told woman couldn't run a business as well as a man. She knew it wasn't true, but couldn't get rid of it and secretly told herself that. The stock went up 40% under her and she wrote a Pulitzer Prize-winning biography. I hope it keeps moving and moving faster. I hope females hearing this will not see themselves in funhouse mirrors.

Question: Is Berkshire too big to fail? How about DF and how does it impact insurance and Wells Fargo (WF! ) and Gol! dman Sachs (GS).

Warren: It won't affect it to my knowledge. Capital ratios for long banks at high levels and affects return on equity. Cap ratios increase and return on equity will increase. Banking in the U.S. is stronger than in the past 20 years. Compared to the EU or 20 years ago, it's dramatically stronger. Don't worry about banking being the cause of the next bubble. Usually we don't get to a bubble the same way we got to the last one. I feel good about our investments at MNT and WFC. We won't earn as much return on equity because the rules change.

Charlie: I'm less optimistic in the long term. I see something more extreme. I don't see why massive derivatives books should be mixed with deposits of people. The more banks act like investment banks, the less I like it.

Warren: Five years ago I wrote about investors getting sold predictions. I offered to beat bet a group of hedge funds that they could not beat a no-load index fund over five years. Each put $350,000 into a zero-coupon treasury at $1 million. Interests rates have gone down, so from an investment of $950,000 sold zero-coupon and bought Berkshire Hathaway, now worth 1.2 million. Hedge funds have returned 0.13% and the S&P returned 8.96%, at the half-way part. If it does well we'll have more than $1 million to give to charity. You can see it on Longbets.com, where there is a bet a large hadron collider will destroy the earth in 10 years. And one that says one human in 2000 will be alive in 2150 – Charlie?


Related links:BRKABRKBHere

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Ball's 'Green' Spacecraft Fuel - Analyst Blog

Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp., a unit of Ball Corporation (BLL), together with Aerojet Rocketdyne has brought forward an environmental-friendly spacecraft fuel for NASA's Green Propellant Infusion Mission (GPIM).

Ball has successfully demonstrated the end-to-end checkout of the 22 Newton thruster required for GPIM. The role of 22 Newton thrusters is significant to GPIM as it will fire along with four smaller 1N thrusters to initiate orbit inclination changes and altitude changes. It is also vital for GPIM's eventual de-orbit upon mission completion.

An industry and government team is working under Ball's guidance to bring up a high-performance, non-toxic fuel alternative to the conventional hydrazine. The mission propellant, a Hydroxyl Ammonium Nitrate (HAN) fuel/oxidizer blend, or AF-M315E, provides around 50% improved performance than hydrazine.

GPIM is a Technology Demonstration Mission under the leadership of NASA's Space Technology Mission Directorate. The green propulsion system will fly aboard a Ball Configurable Platform (BCP) 100 spacecraft bus. This is the first time that U.S will use a spacecraft to test green propellant technology.

Ball Corporation., which belongs to the containers and packaging industry along with Crown Holdings Inc. (CCK), Greif, Inc. (GEF) and Mobile Mini, Inc. (MINI), also supplies aerospace and other technologies and services to government and commercial customers through its Aerospace and Technologies segment.

The segment contributed 12% of Ball Corporation's revenues in the first quarter of 2013. It develops and manufactures spacecraft, advanced instruments and sensors, components, data exploitation systems and RF solutions for strategic, tactical and scientific applications. In the first quarter, Aerospace and Technologies segment sales increased 15% to $231 million. The segment had a backlog of more than $1 billion at the end of the quarter.

This is a milestone in Space Technologies as green fuel will redu! ce environmental impact and operational hazards, improve launch processing capabilities, increase payload capacity, enhance spacecraft maneuverability and also enable longer duration missions. This will lead to the adaptation of green spacecraft propulsion technology into a wide range of government and commercial missions. Given its improved performance, green propellant will be the preferred choice for future space missions and provide a competitive edge to Ball's Aerospace and Technologies.

Ball Corporation currently holds a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold).


Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Retirement: 7 scams retirees too often fall for

We've all worked mighty hard to get ready for retirement. So, the last thing in the world we want is to lose even a portion of what we've saved.

But that's what's happening as a legion of scam artists targeting seniors and retirees gets bolder and more treacherous. Their activity revs up during the holidays. And the data breaches at Target and other retailers mean everyone, especially seniors and retirees, needs to be more vigilant about protecting their personal information.

A MetLife survey estimated that seniors older than 60 have lost nearly $3 billion a year to financial abuse. And surprisingly, much of this abuse is not from strangers.

"They are often friends and families and neighbors," says senior fraud expert and independent consultant Marion Somers. "There are a lot of bad guys out there," she says.

RETIREMENT PLANNING: Get all the latest news and information

There are lots of scams. According to the experts, here are the most popular among the crooks. And be especially careful giving out your personal information — that is what many of them are after, says Somers, who operates the website www.livingsafer.tv. And people need to be as protective of their Medicaid information as they are of their Social Security number.

"When I deal with clients, I put a note on every phone in the house, 'Do not give out personal information,'" she says, "and never give money via wire unless you confirm it verbally with the person you are sending it."

1. Advanced fee (and lottery) scam. "They want you to pay for something you didn't order," says Summers. Most popular among these is the lottery scam or the inheritance scam, she says.

"They call and tell them they won this large prize and tell this person they need to send money for fees, to pay taxes or some type of insurance to receive the money," says Angela Byers, financial crimes section chief for the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Washington. "After they've paid some, they keep getting them to pay more. Th! ey haven't won the lottery. They've never played. I'm not sure why they completely fall for that."

"Never pay for anything you haven't ordered, that includes those books that keep coming," says Somers. "When you pay for that book by check, they know where you are checking. They are getting information. Never give out any personal information."

2. Grandparent scam. This one starts with a call from someone claiming to be a grandchild.

"They will call as the grandchild in some crisis situation where thy need money urgently, and beg them to send the money and not call the parent," says Byers. "They are crying. It is someone posing as the grandchildren. They are saying they are in a foreign country," she says. "You wire them money, and then try to get them to wire more."

"People are so willing to help their grandchildren, they will do whatever," says Doug Shadel, AARP Washington state director and expert on senior fraud. "They don't ask questions. These impostor scams are happening all over the country."

3. Cash fraud. This includes people fraudulently asking for money for charities or people playing to seniors' loneliness with romance on sweetheart scams.

Summers says the charity scams are especially prevalent during the holidays. "You end up being on every charity list," she says. "They sell your name, your phone number and your e-mail address. They make money selling your information. When you send in your money, especially if you send it in a check, they are getting a huge amount of information."

The sweetheart scam happens when someone befriends an elder person, she says. "It could be a neighbor, it could be an aide, or a relative of an aide. They gain information on your accounts. That also goes for family members or neighbors who have drinking problems or drug problems."

Check your credit card and bank cards statements carefully every month to make sure there are no discrepancies, she says.

4. Computer scams. "Another one that especially scares ! older fol! ks, is the computer virus scam," says Shadel. People will say, "I'm calling from Microsoft, and I see you have a virus. We can get rid of it." They get you to log into a website that lets them control your computer. They can make it look like a virus. They can also steal your ID.

"We've been trying to get the inside scoop of people who did the scams," says Shadel. "We interviewed an ID thief. The most valuable thing is your personal computer, even if it's 10 years old. It has all your information on it.

"A lot of people on home computers don't have them password protected," he says. ID thieves would hire people to break into homes and steal computers. If they steal your computer and it's not password protected, Shadel says, they can go to all your websites because you have logged in automatically. "Do not think that if you go the mall and you lock your laptop in your trunk, it is safe," he says. "People are waiting. Your laptop is the No. 1 thing they are looking for."

5. Time-share scam. " As you get older and are not able to utilize time shares, you want to sell them," says Byers. "A guy stole the time-share list of his former employer. He called the customers offering to sell them and trying to get them to pay fees, which he said they would get back."

She said people paid several thousand to $10,000 to the group. The FBI charged 41 people in Miami last year in the case that netted the thieves $5 million.

6. Homeowner scam. "They call you up and say we drove by and saw your roof needs repair or tree limb needs to be repaired," says Somers. "They are soliciting home repairs you don't need."

An old person's home is sometimes in disrepair. "They come to the door, and are very respectable looking. You should never let them in the house. You should say, 'Give me your card and I'll have my lawyer get in touch with you, or my son," Summers says. "Make believe you have a support system. For one of my people, we got a barking dog record for her. When someone came to the doo! r she put! the record on."

7. Medical scam. You get a call saying a company is running a special on some kind of medical equipment, maybe a heart monitor, or wheelchair or even a bench that goes into the bath tub, says Somers. They need a deposit and your personal information or Medicaid number to send the equipment. Not only does the medical equipment never come, but they are getting your personal information. "If you are suspicious, just hang up," she says.

For information on financial scams aimed at seniors, or to report a scam, there are several options.

• AARP recently started Fraud Watch Network (www.aarp.org/fraudwatchnetwork), which alerts people to new scams. Shadel says in the two months it's been operational, 17,000 people have already signed up to get the alerts.

• The Senate Aging Committee has launched a new anti-fraud hotline to make it easier for seniors to report financial fraud at 855-303-9470.

•Report suspicious activity or get more information at the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (www. IC3.gov).

Monday, January 13, 2014

USD/JPY Falls To 3 Week Low After Soft Jobs Data Calls Tapering Into Question

10 Best Biotech Stocks To Watch For 2014

The U.S. dollar fell to its lowest levels since December 18 against the Japanese yen after the U.S. employment report raised investor concerns over the health of the U.S. economy.

On Friday, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported a gain of 74K nonfarm jobs, the smallest increase in three years. The figure missed analyst expectations of 196K by a wide margin.

News that the December U.S. unemployment rate fell to 6.7 percent from 7.0 percent in the prior month was dampened by the decline in labor force participation. The civilian labor force participation rate declined by 0.2 percent to 62.8 percent in December, equaling November's figure which was the lowest since 1978.

See also: Weekly Preview - All Eyes on Bank Earnings

The Fed announced in December that starting in January, it will taper its monthly bond buying to $75-billion from the $85-billion pace started in September 2012, citing 'meaningful' progress in the jobs market. However, the weaker aspects of Friday's employment report have prompted speculation over how the data may affect the Federal Reserve's plans to taper stimulus in the coming months.

Speaking at the news conference following December's announcement, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke emphasized that Fed policy would remain data dependent, "On the first issue of $10 billion, again we say we are going to take further modest steps subsequently so that would be the general range but again I want to emphasize that we are going to be data dependent. We could stop purchases if the economy disappoints, we could pick them up somewhat if the economy is stronger."

USD/JPY surged higher during 2013 amid the diverging policies of the Federal Reserve and Bank of Japan. While the Fed moved towards reducing stimulus in 2013, making the first taper in December, the Bank of Japan ramped up their large scale bond-buying program geared to boost the Japanese economy and prevent deflation.

USD/JPY Daily Chart

Looking at the USD/JPY daily chart we can see that starting in early December, while price was rising, momentum as measured by the oscillator RSI was declining. Price/oscillator divergence is viewed as an indicator of a potential change in price trend.

rsz_download_5.png

Posted-In: Bank of Japan Ben BernankeNews Forex Economics Federal Reserve Markets Best of Benzinga

(c) 2014 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.

  Most Popular Earnings Expectations For The Week Of January 13: Big Banks, GE, Intel And More UPDATE: Stifel Downgrades Cree on Recent Performance UPDATE: JMP Securities Reiterates Coverage on ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, Sees Market Share Regain UPDATE: Bank of America Upgrades MGM Resorts International, Has Bullish 2014 Outlook Coming Soon: 3D Printing for Everyone Alcatel-Lucent CEO Says China to Become World's Largest 4G Market Related Articles (FXY + dxy) USD/JPY Falls To 3 Week Low After Soft Jobs Data Calls Tapering Into Question Dollar Sharply Lower After Non-Farm Payroll Miss ETF Outlook for Thursday, December 19 (FXY, GLD, XLF, FDN) Japan the Next Big Trade for U.S. Investors? ETF Outlook for Friday, November 29, 2013 Around the Web, We're Loving... Lightspeed Trading Presents: Thunder and Tubleweeds: Trading Techniques for the New Market Enviroment Pope Francis Rips 'Trickle-Down' Economics Come See How the Pro's Trade in this Exclusive Webinar Wynn, MGM, Other Casino Giants Vying For U.S. Turf What Should You Know About AMZN? View the discussion thread. Partner Network

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Hot Small Cap Companies To Invest In Right Now

Stem cells may not be in the news much�as the sector has moved beyond the use of embryotic�ones, but small cap stem cell stocks Cellular Dynamics International Inc (NASDAQ: ICEL), International Stem Cell Corp (OTCMKTS: ISCO) and BioRestorative Therapies (OTCBB: BRTX) have been fairly active over the past several trading days as ICEL went public, ISCO raised additional funding and BRTX grabbed more attention:

Cellular Dynamics International Debuts on the NASDAQ. Small cap Cellular Dynamics International,�which develops and manufactures fully functioning human cells in industrial quantities, had its IPO on Thursday where it raised $46.2 million from selling 3.8 million common at $12 a share. However, shares closed down 20.83% at $9.50 for a market cap of about $150 million. Nevertheless, that market cap is still bigger than the 14 other companies comprising the Stem Cell Stock Index compiled by William Busa, the president of Busa Consulting LLC. Busa commented to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that while ��ools companies��like Cellular Dynamics International don�� have "multibillion-dollar prospects" like therapeutics companies, very few biotech tools companies are able to pull off an IPO���something the company needs to be given some credit for. Moreover, its worth mentioning that the goal of Cellular Dynamics International is�to become the industry standard for manufactured human cells and it bills itself as the pioneer of manufacturing stem cells in industrial quantities.

Hot Small Cap Companies To Invest In Right Now: Panera Bread Company(PNRA)

Panera Bread Company, together with its subsidiaries, owns, operates, and franchises retail bakery-cafes in the United States and Canada. Its bakery-cafes offer fresh baked goods, sandwiches, soups, salads, custom roasted coffees, and other complementary products, as well as provide catering services. The company also manufactures and supplies dough and other products to company-owned and franchise-operated bakery-cafes. As of March 29, 2011, it owned and franchised 1,467 bakery-cafes under the Panera Bread, Saint Louis Bread Co., and Paradise Bakery & Cafe names. The company was founded in 1981 and is based in St. Louis, Missouri.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Andrew Marder]

    I've come to loathe precedents. Nothing is more annoying than someone telling you that their favorite new book is the next Harry Potter�or that the movie they just saw is going to be the next Godfather. So it shouldn't be a surprise that I'm not overly keen on the selling of Noodles & Company (NASDAQ: NDLS  ) as the next Panera (NASDAQ: PNRA  ) or Chipotle (NYSE: CMG  ) or Buffalo Wild Wings (NASDAQ: BWLD  ) . Instead, maybe we can judge the business on its merits, instead of on the success of restaurants that came before it.

  • [By Chris Hill]

    Pepsi's (NYSE: PEP  ) �second-quarter profits rise 35%. Shares of Ford (NYSE: F  ) hit a two-year high. Caterpillar (NYSE: CAT  ) lowers guidance in the wake of a bad quarter. And Panera's (NASDAQ: PNRA  ) �second-quarter profits come in lower than expected. In this installment of Investor Beat, Motley Fool analysts Matt Koppenheffer and Jason Moser discuss four stocks making moves on Tuesday.

  • [By Dan Caplinger]

    Panera Bread (NASDAQ: PNRA  ) will release its quarterly report tomorrow, and investors are hoping that the company will be able to produce the same growth that its rapidly rising stock price has promised. As with most high-growth stocks, Panera earnings will need to accelerate to make shareholders truly happy.

Hot Small Cap Companies To Invest In Right Now: FuelCell Energy Inc.(FCEL)

FuelCell Energy, Inc., together with its subsidiaries, engages in the development, manufacturing, and sale of high temperature fuel cells for clean electric power generation primarily in South Korea, the United States, Germany, Canada, and Japan. The company offers proprietary carbonate Direct FuelCell Power Plants that electrochemically produce electricity from hydrocarbon fuels, such as natural gas and biogas. Its fuel cells operate on a range of hydrocarbon fuels, including natural gas, renewable biogas, propane, methanol, coal gas, and coal mine methane. The company also develops carbonate fuel cells, planar solid oxide fuel cell technology, and other fuel cell technologies. It provides its products to universities; manufacturers; mission critical institutions, such as correction facilities and government installations; hotels; and natural gas letdown stations, as well as to customers who use renewable biogas for fuel, including municipal water treatment facilities, br eweries, and food processors. The company was founded in 1969 and is headquartered in Danbury, Connecticut.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Bryan Murphy]

    Had shares of its peers and competitors performed as well, it may not even be worth bringing up. But, Plug Power Inc. (NASDAQ:PLUG) shares have done significantly better than FuelCell Energy Inc. (NASDAQ:FCEL) and Ballard Power Systems Inc. (NASDAQ:BLDP) since the end of March. And, PLUG has performed considerably better than FCEL and BLDP have since mid-August. This is more than "just a little volatility." This is a leader breaking away from the pack after a very long lull. Thing is, there's plenty more room for Plug Power to keep running.

  • [By Lauren Pollock]

    FuelCell Energy Inc.'s(FCEL) fiscal fourth-quarter loss narrowed as the power-equipment maker reported broad sales growth across all segments and wider gross margins. But the loss was still steeper than expected, sending shares down 11% to $1.65 premarket.

Top 10 Casino Stocks To Invest In 2014: ATA Inc.(ATAI)

ATA Inc., through its subsidiaries, provides computer-based testing services in the People?s Republic of China. It offers services for the creation and delivery of computer-based tests utilizing its test delivery platform, proprietary testing technologies, and testing services; and provides logistical support services relating to test administration. The company?s computer-based testing services are used for professional licensure and certification tests in various industries, including information technology (IT) services, banking, securities, teaching, and insurance. Its e-testing platform integrates various aspects of the test delivery process for computer-based tests ranging from test form compilation to test scoring, and results analysis. ATA also provides career-oriented educational services, such as single course programs, degree major course programs, and pre-occupational training programs focusing on preparing students to pass IT and other vocational certification tests; test preparation and training programs and services to test candidates preparing to take professional certification tests in securities, futures, banking, insurance and teaching industries; online test preparation and training platform for the securities and banking industries; and test preparation software for the teaching industry. In addition, the company offers HR select employee assessment solution, an online system that utilizes its proprietary software and an inventory of test titles to help employers improve the efficiency and accuracy of their employee recruitment process. As of March 31, 2010, it had contractual relationships with 1,988 ATA authorized test centers. The company serves Chinese governmental agencies, professional associations, IT vendors, and Chinese educational institutions, as well as individual test preparation services. ATA Inc. was founded in 1999 and is based in Beijing, the People?s Republic of China.

Hot Small Cap Companies To Invest In Right Now: InterDigital Inc.(IDCC)

Interdigital, Inc. engages in the design and development of digital wireless technology solutions. The company offers technology solutions for use in digital cellular and wireless products and networks, including 2G, 3G, 4G, and IEEE 802-related products and networks. It holds patents related to the fundamental technologies that enable wireless communications. The company licenses its patents to equipment producers that manufacture, use, and sell digital cellular and IEEE 802-related products; and licenses or sells mobile broadband modem solutions, including modem IP, know-how, and reference platforms to mobile device manufacturers, semiconductor companies, and other equipment producers that manufacture, use, and sell digital cellular products. InterDigital?s solutions are incorporated in various products comprising mobile devices, such as cellular phones, tablets, notebook computers, and wireless personal digital assistants; wireless infrastructure equipment, such as base stations; and components, dongles, and modules for wireless devices. The company was founded in 1972 and is headquartered in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Jason Shubnell]

    InterDigital (NASDAQ: IDCC) shot up 5.78 percent to $30.38 as the company and Huawei reached a settlement pact.

    Shares of Tesla Motors (NASDAQ: TSLA) got a boost, shooting up 6.48 percent to $152.85 after the NHTSA reaffirmed the Model S 5-star safety rating in 2014.

  • [By Evan Niu, CFA]

    What: Shares of InterDigital (NASDAQ: IDCC  ) have gotten crushed today by as much as 20% after the company lost a patent suit against several smartphone makers.

Hot Small Cap Companies To Invest In Right Now: EZchip Semiconductor Limited(EZCH)

EZchip, a fabless semiconductor company, engages in the development and marketing of Ethernet network processors for networking equipment. Its products include network processor chips, evaluation boards and network-processor based systems, and development software toolkits. The company offers network processors for use in forming the silicon core of networking equipment, such as switches and routers; and for voice, video and data integration in various applications. Its network processors are single-chip solutions, which enable its customers to design multi-port line cards, such as processing and classification engines, traffic managers, media access controllers, as well as a range of specialized hardware blocks that accelerate various functions. The company offers Evaluation systems which enable customers to test NPU-based systems; and toolkits that assist customers in creating, verifying, and implementing solutions based on its network processors. It provides a library f eaturing data plane code for a range of applications, which include Metro Ethernet protocols, Multi-Protocol Label Switching, IPv4 and IPv6 routing, Access Control Lists, GPON/EPON OLT functionality, Network Address Translation, and Server Load Balancing. The company sells its products directly, and through contract manufacturers and distributors to network equipment vendors. It markets its products in Israel, China, Hong Kong, the Far East, Canada, the United States, and Europe. The company was formerly known as LanOptics Ltd. and changed its name to EZchip Semiconductor Ltd. in July 2008. EZchip Semiconductor Ltd. was founded in 1989 and is based in Yokneam, Israel.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Lisa Levin]

    EZchip Semiconductor (NASDAQ: EZCH) shares climbed 5.80% to $23.53. The volume of EZchip Semiconductor shares traded was 635% higher than normal. EZchip Semiconductor's PEG ratio is 1.57.

  • [By Paul McWilliams]

    Paul McWilliams: Oh, absolutely. Another company that most investors probably have never heard of is a tiny little Israeli semiconductor company named EZChip (EZCH).

  • [By Jake L'Ecuyer]

    EZchip Semiconductor (NASDAQ: EZCH) was also up, gaining 7.16 percent to $24.11 after a Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO) announced a new product that would not threaten the company as previously thought. Equities Trading DOWN
    Shares of Cypress Semiconductor (NASDAQ: CY) were down 16.05 percent to $9.91 after the company lowered its Q3 forecast.

  • [By Evan Niu, CFA]

    What: Shares of EZchip (NASDAQ: EZCH  ) have jumped today by as much as 13% after the company reported first-quarter earnings.

    So what: Revenue in the first quarter totaled $15.3 million, topping the Street's forecast of $15.1 million. Non-GAAP net income per share came in at $0.23, which was right on target with expectations.