Archive for October, 2010

Roubini: Next Week GOP Win Will Create A Political Impasse

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Copyright 2010 The Financial Times Limited

An Article that was written by the Financial Times that I would like to share with you that concides with my opinion on the near future of the US Economy.

What has been the fiscal performance of President Barack Obama? He inherited the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, as well as a budget deficit that – after much needed bail-outs and a series of reckless tax cuts – was already close to $1,000bn. His stimulus package, together with a backstop of the financial system, low rates and quantitative easing from the Federal Reserve, prevented another depression. Mr Obama also deserves credit that the US, alone among advanced economies, currently supports a “growth now”, rather than an “austerity now” path.

But this is but one half of the picture; we must also judge his first two years on his ability to anticipate what the economy will need tomorrow. Here the picture is much less positive. Given the likely path of fiscal policy after next Tuesday’s election – with the expiration of existing stimulus and transfer payments, and even with most of the 2001-03 tax cuts being kept – the US economy will soon experience serious fiscal drag just when it needs a further boost. Problematically, the administration’s failures leave it relying on the Fed, which is bent on further QE, likely to be announced next Wednesday. But studies show this will have little effect on US growth in 2011, so fiscal policy should be doing some of the lifting to prevent a double dip recession.

In an ideal world Mr Obama would also have been able to move towards reforming and reducing entitlement spending, with commitments to measures that could be phased in over the next few years, therefore avoiding short-term fiscal pain. He would also have committed to increase, gradually over the next few years, less distortionary taxes such as a VAT and a carbon tax. This would have reduced the fiscal deficit, and created a climate in which no investor would worry about additional stimulus.

Sadly, this has not happened. In fact the opposite will now take place. The term stimulus is already a dirty word, even within the Obama administration. After the Republicans make significant electoral gains further stimulus is even less likely. Medium-term consolidation, meanwhile, will be all but impossible as the 2012 presidential election begins to loom large.

In truth the only window of opportunity is 2011. Here the president deserves credit for setting up a bipartisan debt commission, which is most likely to propose a sensible combination of entitlement spending cuts and increases in taxes. But sadly the chance that these recommendations will be implemented in 2011 is close to zero. Republicans will veto any tax increase, while Democrats will resist unpopular entitlement reform.

The upshot is that the current gridlock in Congress will soon get much worse. Of course, Mr Obama cannot entirely be blamed for his limited progress, when the Republicans take that Leninist approach of “the worse the better”, and offer no co-operation on any issue. That they now see Mr Obama as a one-term president will soon mean the worst open warfare inside the Beltway in 30 years.

The coming stalemate will only be made worse by the lack of a reason to act on the deficit. The bond vigilantes are asleep, while borrowing rates remain unusually low. Near zero rates will continue as long as growth and inflation are low (and getting lower) and repeated bouts of global risk aversion – as with this spring’s Greek crisis – will push more investors to safe dollars and US debt. China’s massive interventions to stop renminbi appreciation will mean purchasing yet more treasuries too. In short, kicking the can down the road will be the political path of least resistance.

The risk, however, is that something on the fiscal side will snap, and the bond vigilantes will wake up. The trigger could be a debt rollover crisis in a major US state government, or perhaps even the realization that congressional gridlock means bipartisan solutions to our medium-term fiscal crisis is mission impossible.(My belief coincides with Roubini as the US economy will experience a Double Dip) is political Only then will our politicians suddenly remember that, on top of our federal debt, the US suffers from unfunded social security and Medicare liabilities, state and local government debt, and public pension bills that add up to many multiples of US GDP.

A bond market shock is thus the only thing likely to break the impasse. Mr Obama may take some comfort from the fact that the worst of the coming fiscal train wreck will be prevented by the Fed’s easing. But the risk is he will then preside not over a bout of inflation but a Japanese style stagnation, where growth is barely positive, and deflationary pressures and high unemployment linger.

The Obama administration did the right thing early, and avoided another depression. He is still doing the right thing now in pointing out the risks of early austerity. And he is limited by an unco-operative Republican party trapped in a belief in voodoo economics, the economic equivalent of creationism. Even so, he and his party have been unwilling to tackle long-term entitlement spending. Two years in, and this means the US remains on an unsustainable fiscal course.

The result will soon be the worst of all worlds: neither short-term stimulus nor medium-term fiscal sustainability. Fiscally the only light at the end of the tunnel may be that which causes the upcoming crisis. With two years of gridlock in prospect, it will fall to the next president in 2013 – whoever he or she may be – to start fixing America’s fiscal mess. Whether that is Mr Obama or not, that he may leave this challenge may become the worst of his legacy.

Earnings to Track Today (NSR, NUVA, PWER)

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Neustar, Inc (NYSE:NSR) added 3.34% to $25.71. The company reported that its third-quarter net income increased to $29.95 million or $0.39 per share from $24.52 million or $0.32 per share last year. Total revenue increased to $130.51 million from $117.20 million last year.

Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected the company to report profit of $0.38 per share on revenue of $131.00 million for the quarter. Analysts’ estimates typically exclude special items.

The stock went up more than 10% year-to-date. The 52-week range of the stock is $20.20-$26.73.

NuVasive, Inc. (NASDAQ:NUVA) plunged 28.19% to $26.29 following late Thursday the Medical device maker trimmed its Full year forecast, that missed analyst estimates as well.

The company said that during the third quarter its profit jumped to f $8.5 million, or 21 cents a share, compared with $5.06 million, or 13 cents a share a year ago. On an adjusted basis, it earned 46 cents a share. Revenue grew 27% to $120.3 million.

Analysts were targeting the company to earn 42 cents a share on revenue of $122.1 million.

The company said it is feeling a slowdown in the spine market and therefore slashed its full-year earnings outlook to $1.42-$1.45 from $1.50-$1.60. It also reduced its revenue forecast to $470-$475 million from $485-$495 million.

Power-One, Inc. (NASDAQ:PWER) advanced 0.08% to $11.14. Net income in July-September was $63 million, or 40 cents per share, compared to a loss of $3 million, or 3 cents per share, last year.

Analysts were expecting the company to earn 23 cents a share, on revenue of $264.7 million.

The company expects revenue in the fourth quarter to be $340-$360 million. Analysts expect revenue of $297.9 million, according to Thomson Reuters.

Stocks Rising In Late Morning Session (HLS, MXIM, MSFT)

Friday, October 29th, 2010

HEALTHSOUTH Corp. (NYSE:HLS) added 0.62% to $17.79. The company reported that its third-quarter net income attributable to shareholders increased to $25.3 million or $0.27 per share from $10.3 million or $0.12 per share last year. Net operating revenues increased to $490.7 million from $470.4 million last year.

The company lowered its fiscal 2010 adjusted earnings per share guidance to a range of $1.57 to $1.62. Analysts currently expect the company to report fiscal 2010 earnings of $1.73 per share.

The stock went down more than 8% year-to-date.

Maxim Integrated Products Inc. (NASDAQ:MXIM) soared 10.85% to $21.79. For the first quarter, the company’s earnings almost tripled to $117.6 million, or 39 cents a share, from $42 million, or 13 cents a share, a year ago. Excluding items, Maxim earned 43 cents a share. Revenue rose 39 percent to $626.1 million.

Analysts were expecting the company to earn 37 cents a share, before items, on revenue of $614 million, according to Thomson Reuters.

Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) added 1.03% to $26.55. The company said its quarterly net income rose to $5.4 billion, or 62 cents a share, from $3.6 billion, or 40 cents a share, in the same period last year. The Redmond, Wash.-based company said revenue for the period ended in September rose 25% to $16.2 billion.

Analysts polled by FactSet Research had expected Microsoft to report first-quarter earnings of 55 cents a share and $15.8 billion in revenue.

The stock opened at $27.14 and was trading within the range of $26.48-$27.20.

Top Traded US Stocks (GPRO, GNW, GXP)

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Gen-Probe Incorporated (NASDAQ:GPRO) slid 0.84% to $48.65. For the third quarter, Gen-Probe earned $27.4 million, or 56 cents a share, compared with $22.2 million, or 44 cents a share, last year. Excluding items, it earned 57 cents a share.

Analysts on average expect the company to earn $2.16 per share, before special items, on revenue of $555.9 million, according to Thomson Reuters. Revenue rose 8 percent to $132.6 million.

Analysts on average were expecting 50 cents a share, excluding items, on revenue of $135.3.

Genworth Financial, Inc. (NYSE:GNW) plunged 11.37% and closed at $11.15. The company reported a net profit of $122 million, or 25 cents per share, compared with a year-earlier profit of $45 million or 10 cents per share.

Operating income, excluding investment gains and losses, was $29 million or 6 cents per share, down from $81 million a year earlier. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters on average expected operating income of 25 cents per share.

The stock opened at $10.96 and was trading within the range of $9.18-$19.36.

Great Plains Energy Incorporated (NYSE:GXP) slid 0.89% to $18.85. The company reported a higher profit for the third quarter. For the quarter, earnings available for common shareholders rose to $131.6 million or $0.96 per share from $78.7 million or $0.58 per share last year.

On average, six analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected the company to earn $0.78 per share in the quarter. Analysts’ estimate typically excludes special items.

Looking ahead, the company raised its 2010 earnings guidance to a range of $1.52 to $1.62 per share from the previous level of $1.30 to $1.50 per share. Analysts currently expects the company to earn $1.46 per share for the full year.

Notable Stock Movers (EXR, FII, FSLR)

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Extra Space Storage, Inc. (NYSE:EXR) surged 2.47% to $16.21. The company reported Thursday a higher funds from operations, as well as net income for the fourth quarter, helped by increased same-store revenues.

Net income attributable to common stockholders increased to $7.67 million or $0.09 per share from $5.97 million or $0.07 per share last year.

Total revenues for the quarter edged up to $71.98 million from $71.11 million in the previous-year quarter, helped by a 3.9% increase in revenue at the company’s 246 same-store properties.

On average, 11 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected the company to earn $0.23 per share on revenues $65.38 million for the quarter. Analysts’ estimates typically exclude special items.

Federated Investors, Inc. (NYSE:FII) added 2.12% to $25. The company said third-quarter profit fell 24 percent as investors withdrew funds and it granted more fee waivers.

Net income slid to $43.1 million, or 42 cents per share, from $57 million, or 56 cents per share, a year earlier, the company said on Thursday.

Federated waived a net $11 million of fees in the third quarter, down from a net $13 million in the second quarter but up from $8.6 million a year earlier.

Over the past 52-week, the stock traded within the range of $20.01-$28.31. At current market price, the market capitalization of the company stands at $2.58 billion.

First Solar, Inc. (NASDAQ:FSLR) fell 7.85% to $139.29. The company late Thursday reported third-quarter net income rose 16% to $177 million, or $2.04 a share, compared with net income of $153 million, or $1.79 a share, in the year-ago period.

Analysts had forecast First Solar to earn $1.94 a share on sales of $779 million, according to FactSet Research.

For 2010, First Solar raised its earnings target. It expects to earn as much as $7.65 a share. The old forecast was $7.40 a share.

The stock opened at $139.15 and was trading within the range of $138.13-$142.45. 

Stocks In News (DECK, DRC, EMN)

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Deckers Outdoor Corporation (NASDAQ:DECK) went up 6.63% to $57.57. The company topped third-quarter estimates on Thursday as demand for its popular sheepskin boots remained strong, prompting the company to raise its full-year outlook.

The company said it earned $42.1 million, or $1.07 a share, compared with analyst estimates of 93 cents a share.

Analysts were expecting revenue of $265.00 million, according to Thomson Reuters.

Dresser-Rand Group Inc. (NYSE:DRC) plunged 11.27% to $32.75. The company reported third-quarter net income of $37.5 million or $0.46 per share, compared to $74.6 million or $0.91 per share in the prior year quarter.

On average, 13 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected the company to report earnings of $0.47 per share for the period. Analysts’ estimate typically excludes special items.

Total revenues for the quarter were $483.1 million, down 21% from $612.1 million in the previous year period. Eight Wall Street analysts expected revenues of $509.39 million.

Eastman Chemical Company (NYSE:EMN) slid 0.24% to $78.86. The company late Thursday posted third-quarter net income of $170 million, or $2.33 a share, up from $101 million, or $1.38 a share, in the year-earlier period.

Analysts surveyed by FactSet Research had expected Eastman Chemical to earn $2.24 a share. For the fourth quarter, the company said it will earn between $1.40 and $1.50 a share.

Over the past 52-week, the stock traded within the range of $51.10-$83.42.

Earnings to Watch (GERN, CSTR, CW)

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Geron Corporation (NASDAQ:GERN) slid 0.18% to $5.68. The company reported financial results for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2010.

For the third quarter of 2010, the company reported net loss applicable to common stockholders of $18.3 million, or $(0.19) per share, compared to $15.2 million, or $(0.17) per share, for the comparable 2009 period.

Revenues for the third quarter of 2010 were $546,000, compared to $494,000 for the comparable 2009 period. Revenues for the first nine months of 2010 were $2.5 million, compared to $1.1 million for the comparable 2009 period.

The 52-week range of the stock is $8.48-$16.43.

Coinstar, Inc. (NASDAQ:CSTR) soared 21.49% to $56.20. The company raised its full-year outlook on Thursday after posting a big jump in sales at its DVD rental unit Redbox.

Net income was $19.5 million, or 60 cents a share, compared with $41.4 million, or $1.34 a share a year ago. The company said the quarter was impacted by one-time items.

Analysts had on average forecast profit of 50 cents on revenue of $381.2 million, according to Thomson Reuters.

Curtiss-Wright Corp. (NYSE:CW) went down 3.72% to $31.29. For the third quarter, Curtiss-Wright reported net income of $27.8 million, or 60 cents a share, compared with $20.1 million, or 44 cents a share, a year earlier. Revenue rose 7 percent to $465.8 million.

Analysts on average were expecting earnings of 58 cents a share, on revenue of $449.3 million, according to Thomson Reuters.

The 52-week range of the stock is $26.11-$37.54.

NASDAQ Stocks Alert! (BMRN, BMC, CEPH)

Friday, October 29th, 2010

BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc. (NASDAQ:BMRN) added 1.34% to $24.95. The company posted third-quarter GAAP net income was $217.3 million or $1.68 per share, up from $6.6 million or $0.07 per share for the third quarter of 2009.

Non-GAAP net income was $6.0 million or $0.06 per share, compared to non-GAAP net income of $15.5 million or $0.14 per diluted share for the third quarter of 2009.

Total revenues rose to $97.75 million, from $80.81 million in the prior year quarter.

Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected the company to report a loss of $0.01 per share on revenues of $98.19 million. Analysts’ estimates typically exclude special items.

BMC Software, Inc. (NASDAQ:BMC) went up 5.71% and was trading at $46.48. The company reported a fiscal second-quarter profit of $132 million, or 73 cents a share, on $502 million in revenue, compared with earnings of $94 million, or 50 cents a share, on sales of $462 million in the year-ago period.

Excluding one-time items, the business-software company would have earned 82 cents a share to top the estimates of analysts surveyed by FactSet Research, who forecast a profit of 70 cents a share on $484 million in revenue.

The company also said it now expects to earn between $2.92 and $3.02 a share for its 2011 fiscal year.

Cephalon, Inc. (NASDAQ:CEPH) slid 0.30% to $66.32. For the third quarter, Cephalon posted a net profit of $131.6 million, or $1.66 per share, compared with a profit of $95.1 million, or $1.31 per share, a year ago.

Excluding items, the Frazer, Pennsylvania-based company earned $2.14 per share. Analysts on average expected $1.79, according to Thomson Reuters.

The company forecast 2011 sales of $2.96 billion to $3.04 billion. It expects 2010 sales to come in at $2.69 billion to $2.73 billion, up from its prior view of $2.63 billion to $2.71 billion.

Over the past 52-week, the stock traded within the range of $53.44-$72.87. At current market price, the market capitalization of the company stands at $4.99 billion.

NASDAQ Stock Movers After Earnings (APKT, ACOM, ARBA)

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Acme Packet, Inc. (NASDAQ:APKT) fell 1.94% to $38.92. For the July-September quarter, the company earned $10.5 million, or 15 cents a share, compared with $3.6 million, or 6 cents a share, last year.

Quarterly revenue rose 56 percent to $56.6 million helped by higher prices the company realized on its product sales, the company said on a conference call with analysts.

Analysts on average were expecting the company to earn 19 cents a share on $55.1 million in revenue, according to Thomson Reuters.

The stock went up more than 256% year-to-date.

Ancestry.com Inc (NASDAQ:ACOM) went up 5.17% to $27.05. The company posted results that topped market estimates for the fourth straight quarter, helped by strong subscriber additions, and forecast robust fourth-quarter sales.

Net income for July-September was $11.8 million, or 24 cents a share, compared with $4 million, or 10 cents a share, last year.

Analysts were looking for earnings of 19 cents a share, on sales of $76.5 million.

The stock opened at $26.86 and has a 52-week range of $12.80-$28.36. The stock made its fresh 52-week high of $28.36.

Ariba, Inc. (NASDAQ:ARBA) slid 0.52% to $19. The company announced results for the fourth quarter and fiscal year ended September 30, 2010. Net income for the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2010 was $4.1 million, or $0.05 per share, as compared to net income for the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2009 of $5.6 million, or $0.06 per share.

Total revenues for the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2010 were $95.1 million, as compared to $84.3 million for the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2009. Subscription and maintenance revenues for the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2010 were $62.9 million, as compared to $57.9 million for the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2009.

The stock opened at $18.48 and was trading within the range of $18.48-$19.25.

Stocks Falling in Opening Session (NWL, NI, QSII)

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Newell Rubbermaid Inc. (NYSE:NWL) dropped 2.08% to $17.43. The company reported a higher-than-expected third-quarter profit, helped by improved margins and lower interest costs.

The company posted third-quarter net income of $28.3 million, or 9 cents a share, compared with a net income of $85.5 million, or 28 cents a share, a year earlier.

For the full year, the company reiterated its previous earnings forecast of between $1.40 and $1.50 a share, but said it would was likely to hit the high end of that range.

The stock went up more than 15% year-to-date.

NiSource Inc. (NYSE:NI) went down 1.09% to $17.26. The company said that it swung to a third-quarter profit of $33.4 million, or 12 cents a share, from a loss of $13.2 million, or 5 cents a share, in the year-ago period.

Revenue rose to $1 billion from $902 million. Wall Street analysts expected NiSource to earn 6 cents a share on revenue of $1 billion, according to a survey by FactSet Research.

The company said it increased its full-year adjusted profit outlook to $1.20 to $1.25 a share, compared to the analyst target of $1.22 a share.

Quality Systems, Inc. (NASDAQ:QSII) plunged 11.31% to $59.42. For the second quarter, net income rose to $13.43 million or $0.46 per share from $11.82 million or $0.41 per share in the previous year. On average, 21 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected the company to report earnings of $0.49 per share in the second quarter.

The company said that total revenues for the quarter increased 14% to $81.46 million from $71.69 million.  Twenty analysts were expecting revenue of $85.71 million in the second quarter.

The stock went down more than 5% year-to-date.