Archive: Stock Market

CNBC Bonus Bucks Trivia: Donald Trump told CNBC he sold his Palm Beach house for $100 million. What literary reference did he make?

Donald Trump told CNBC he sold his Palm Beach house for $100 million. What literary reference did he make?

“I’m a little bit of a tale of two cities. I just sold a house in Palm Beach for a number of approximately $100 million,” Trump said. “I bought it a little while ago and sold it for a lot of money.”

Topics: Stock Market | No Comments

CKH: Seacor Holdings Looks Like an Enticing Wallflower

My latest column is up at RealMoney. It is part of an ongoing series on “wallflowers” - stocks that have little or no analyst coverage from Wall Street. In this case, it is Seacor Holdings (CKH).

Over the last 12 months, Seacor has generated about $325 million in free cash flow, which equates to a very juicy free cash flow yield of nearly 17%. This wasn’t just a fluke number, either. Over the last three years, free cash flow has averaged $295 million per year.

At 1.2 times book value, Seacor is trading well below the industry average (according to Zacks Research Wizard) of 2.7 times. On the basis of its return on equity, I estimate a sustainable growth rate in the high single digits. Adding in a potential valuation expansion to the industry average, total return could range from 20% to 30% per year, with the main variable being the estimated time for Seacor’s price/book to converge to the industry average.

Disclosure: At time of publication, William Trent has no financial position in the companies mentioned in this article. 

Zacks Investment Research has provided Stock Market Beat with a complimentary trial subscription to Research Wizard.

Topics: Seacor Holdings (CKH), Speedway Motorsports (TRK), 3M (MMM), Stock Market | No Comments

CNBC Bonus Bucks Trivia: In the story “Homebrew Heads To Your Gas Tank,” what’s the “true cost” of the EFuel100 MicroFueler?

In the story “Homebrew Heads To Your Gas Tank,” what’s the “true cost” of the EFuel100 MicroFueler?

The true cost is actually around $5,000.

Topics: Stock Market | No Comments

CNBC Bonus Bucks Trivia: In the slideshow, 10 Biggest Entrepreneurial Mistakes, what is the No. 5 (Five) error?

In the slideshow, 10 Biggest Entrepreneurial Mistakes, what is the No. 5 (Five) error?

Dazed & Confused - No Rallying Point

Topics: Stock Market | No Comments

CNBC Bonus Bucks Trivia: How much did super sports agent David Falk sell his agency, FAME, for in 1998?

How much did super sports agent David Falk sell his agency, FAME, for in 1998?

Darren: You sold your agency, FAME, for $100 million in 1998 to SFX, but continued representing players.

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CNBC Bonus Bucks Trivia: How did Larry Kudlow’s blog “Bush Whiffs on the Dollar” end?

How did Larry Kudlow’s blog “Bush Whiffs on the Dollar” end?

“Truly, we need a return to King Dollar and an end to the U.S. peso. Senator John McCain, are you listening?”

Topics: Stock Market | No Comments

CNBC Bonus Bucks Trivia: According to Rebecca Darst, what “slammed” the Pawn-and-Payday firms?

According to Rebecca Darst, what “slammed” the Pawn-and-Payday firms?

Fears are on the rise that state legislatures, alarmed by the short-term interest rates typically charged by these companies, may move to curtail the industry, Rebecca Darst of Interactive Brokers said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.” Just this week Ohio made such a move.

“All the payday-loan companies, the companies that operate these sort of franchises in states around the country, they just got slammed yesterday, and I think the reason is that we’re suddenly alarmed by the sort of wham-bam legislation,” she said.

Topics: Stock Market | No Comments

CNBC Bonus Bucks Weekly Quiz: On the MACD indicator, a reading above _____ is considered to represent positive momentum.

On the MACD indicator, a reading above _____ is considered to represent positive momentum.

According to the video, it is 0.

Topics: Technical Analysis | No Comments

Reconsidering the P/E Contraction Theme

I have not written in some time about a theme that I think is an important one. Skeptics could probably argue that the reason I haven’t written about it was that the recent facts have contradicted my belief, though the fact is just that I haven’t gotten around to it. So, to put the cards back on the table, it is time to talk about valuation cycles.

Many people can tell you that the average market P/E over the long term is something like 15 times. Of course, “average” doesn’t imply that the P/E is always 15. About half the time it is higher, and about half the time it is lower. The trick is figuring out in advance which half is which.

In behavioral finance, some would argue that the market follows long-term trends in valuation. Rising valuations spark investor interest, and additional investors adding money to the market causes further increases in valuation.  Once all investors are in the market, though, valuations peak. As they begin to decline, investors gradually lose interest and start pulling money out of the market, further causing valuations to decline.

The theory would explain why, despite profits following a fairly regular 7% annual growth rate, the market tends to have large advances followed by long periods of sideways movement.

Source: Barron’s, via The Big Picture.

Extending that to the current period, a 15-20 year period of sideways prices and/or declining valuations would have started sometime between 1998 and 2000.

Econoday recently updated the S&P 500 quarterly data for both profits and stock prices, saying:

Stock prices have lagged profits throughout the expansion, showing declines early on for five straight quarters in 2002 and 2003 even while profits were moving ahead and then exceeding profits for another five straight quarters in 2006 and 2007 even while profits began to contract. As of this writing, the S&P for April is down 6 percent year-on-year, indicated by the last red bar on the right of the graph. Profits have not been supporting share prices for more than a year, an unsustainable disconnect between profits and shares that hints at big losses in the stock market should the big expectations for future profits fizzle out. Even if companies do meet the expectations, stock prices are not necessarily going to follow higher right away.

profits-and-prices.gif

Five straight quarters of increasing valuations (if prices are rising faster than earnings, valuations must be getting higher) is enough to pose a serious challenge to the notion of a long-term cyclical trend, but it also isn’t quite enough to make me abandon the belief. That said, if valuations don’t resume a downward trend sometime this year, continuing to believe in a downward cycle would start to look more like stubbornness than reason.

Topics: P/E Waves, Stock Market | No Comments

Apologies and a Big Announcement

I originally posted this on April 30, but had to rebuild the site after encountering some problems. Reprinted here.

Readers who have been trying to access the site over the last couple of days, I apologize. There’s no telling what you might have been able to access, if you were able to access anything at all. Blame it on a flubbed software “upgrade.”

It’s a shame, too, because it had to happen just when there was an exciting announcement to make that is probably driving more visitors to the site.

You may recall that when I reviewed the Newsflashr service I said the feeds available are currently limited to a selection (admittedly a large one) of the top sources. While these are indeed the sources I most frequently consider, there are other sources I would like to be able to add as part of a personalized newsflashr.

I also said that based on what I have seen, I would bet adding those features is simply a matter of time.

Little did I know. As Gal explained in a news release:

We’re introducing two new sections for “Stock Market Beat” & “Techmeme Leaderboard” for new selections of the top business and technology news sources. Thanks to Bill Trent at Stock Market Beat for submitting his list of favorite financial news sources. Bill recently wrote a thorough review of newsflashr where he mentioned that he would like to see an option to get a personalized page and, by coincidence, we had just completed our work on this feature. So here’s our new way of viewing Bill’s OPML reading list:

Feeds view: http://www.newsflashr.com/feeds/stockmarketbeat.html
Topics view: http://www.newsflashr.com/topics/stockmarketbeat.html

Now you can sift through my news sources to see where I’m coming up with some of my crazy ideas.

In the meantime, I’ll be trying to restore my site to its previous condition.

Topics: Stock Market | No Comments
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