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WSW: Louis Rukeyser's Wall Street Summary & Discussion $treet
This archived discussion is "read only". « Previous 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 Next » » SteveT - 7-9-04 Unfortunately my reception was not up to par last night so this report will have some gaps. I would appreciate anyone being able to add to what I was able to hear. Bob Froehlich’s comments in particular were garbled, so please feel free to expand. Consuelo Mack again served as guest host. Consuelo focused on earnings. Alcoa was the first DOW component to report this quarter. They had strong earnings and future guidance. The stock was rewarded in after hours trading by dropping more than three percent. Seems investors were worried that cost cutting was only half of expectations. Yahoo had a similar strong report and got hit eight percent. General Electric was the saving grace for the week reporting on Friday. That strong report seemed to give the broad market reason for optimism. Gretchen Lash said all recoveries start with a period on unsustainable fast growth. Now we are going into a transition of somewhat slower but sustainable healthy growth. Investors have gotten so focused on how dramatic the slowing will be. She doesn’t think it will be all that dramatic. Stocks Lash likes are Staples (SPLS), Lowe’s (LOW), and General Electric (GE). Lou Holland Thinks for now uncertainty is prevailing. The NASDAQ stocks that have earnings are trading at a P/E of 30 and growing at 10%, so they are not cheap. Holland thinks the first quarter earnings growth of 17% will be the peak and they will be slower the rest of this year. He expects stocks to finish the year up 6%-8% from where they started. Lou likes quality stocks like weight Watchers (WTW), International Speedway (ISCA), and Willis Group Holdings (WSH). Elizabeth Dater said election years are typically up and so far this one is flat. She thinks the fourth quarter will be strong as uncertainty about rates and the election are resolved. Dater said the easy earnings comparisons are behind us and at some point the market should normalize. Stocks she likes are Denbury Resources (DNR), Ask Jeeves (ASKJ), and Covance (CVD). Consuelo then introduced special guest Dr. Bob Froehlich, Chief Investment Strategist, Scudder Investments. Dr. Bob is bullish saying there is a disconnect between earnings and market performance. At the end of the day earnings always drive the markets either up or down. He believes second quarter S&P earnings will be up 30%. Froehlich thinks when second quarter earnings are reported a summer rally will ensue. He doesn’t like to over pay for any stock and thinks there are bargains in Tech and Financials. Stocks he likes are Citigroup (C), Merrill Lynch (MER), JP Morgan Chase (JPM), Intel (INTC), Cisco (CSCO), and Motorola (MOT. Gretchen asked how Bob interprets the weakness in software. Some of it is corporate officers are gun shy about giving overly optimistic guidance for fear of going to jail. Lou asked if we are in a small cap bubble. Froehlich didn’t think so, more of a rotation towards large caps, especially with new money into the market from the sidelines. Elizabeth asked for an allocation recommendation considering the trend in rising rates. I was not able to hear any more of the show. Maria Bartiromo will host next week. Special guest will be Alan Blake, Large Growth Manager, Smith Barney. The panel will be Mary Farrell, Brian Rogers, and Marty Zweig. Louis Rukeyser, Louis Rukeyser, Louis Rukeyser, Louis Rukeyser, Louis Rukeyser, Louis Rukeyser
-- posted by SteveT » Kirk - Re: 7-9-04 .In response to message posted by SteveT: Thanks Steve Stocks Gretchen Lash likes are Staples (SPLS), Lowe’s (LOW), and General Electric (GE). <img width=520 height=468 src=http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Sharp... > <img width=520 height=468 src=http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Sharp... > <img width=520 height=468 src=http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Sharp... > Lou Holland likes quality stocks like weight Watchers (WTW), International Speedway (ISCA), and Willis Group Holdings (WSH). <img width=520 height=468 src=http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Sharp... > <img width=520 height=468 src=http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Sharp... > <img width=520 height=468 src=http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Sharp... > Stocks Elizabeth Dater likes are Denbury Resources (DNR), Ask Jeeves (ASKJ), and Covance (CVD). <img width=520 height=468 src=http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Sharp... > <img width=520 height=468 src=http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Sharp... > <img width=520 height=468 src=http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Sharp... > Stocks Bob Freohlich likes are Citigroup (C), Merrill Lynch (MER), JP Morgan Chase (JPM), Intel (INTC), Cisco (CSCO), and Motorola (MOT. <img width=520 height=468 src=http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Sharp... > <img width=520 height=468 src=http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Sharp... > <img width=520 height=468 src=http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Sharp... > <img width=520 height=468 src=http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Sharp... > <img width=520 height=468 src=http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Sharp... > <img width=520 height=468 src=http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Sharp... > Louis Rukeyser Fan Club Hosted by Suite101.com As of 8/2/05, the Total Return for "Kirk's Newsletter Portfolio" since 12/31/98 is 171%. (Up 4.5% YTD vs QQQQ flat YTD) As of 6/30/2005 since 12/31/98
Even if you don’t market time or buy individual stocks, my newsletter offers quite a bit of useful information and tables (Discussion of interest rates, The Fed Model, etc.) which many say are worth the price of the subscription on its own. Show your support for my work at Suite101.com and become a subscriber today! -- posted by Kirk » SteveT - 7-16-04 Consuelo Mack once again served as guest host. Earnings were the major new across Wall Street this week. Earnings have been strong but most are expect earnings to decelerate. Citigroup reported strong earnings but set aside nearly $5 Billion for future costs associated with scandals and Pfizer warned of lower revenue. Stock prices of these companies took significant hits. On the bright side Treasury Bonds rallied. Inflation showed signs of moderating in June. In the courtroom news was not so good for Martha Stewart. Mark Belnick was found not guilty of all criminal charges against him while serving as Lawyer for Tyco. Marty Zweig says the market is pretty neutral and so are the indicators he follows. Earnings are decent but inflation offsets that. He is worried longer term about inflation. It is trending up, oil is up again, and commodities have been rising over the last year. Low interest rates and the tax cuts have taken awhile to work into the system to cause inflation but that is starting to happen now. Zweig runs hedge funds and he is currently about 60% net long and calls that neutralish. He expects the market to be neutral and is trying to grind it out by stock picking. Stocks he likes now are Phelps Dodge (PD), Etna, W.R. Berkley (BER), and Berkshire Hathaway (BRKa). Marty advises holding both stocks and bonds, not to exit the market and not to make any majors bets either. Mary Farrell said there is a tug of war going on between rising rates and inflation vs. good earnings, which should last a couple more quarters. Investor seem to be focusing on the uncertainties of rates, inflation, Iraq, oil prices, and the election. Farrell isn’t overly concerned about inflation. She thinks the FED will get it under control and have Short term rates up to around 2.5% by next year, which isn’t problematic. Mary expects the market to return around 8%- 10% over the next 12 months. Stocks she likes are United Health Group (UNH), McDonald’s (MCD), and Air Products & Chemicals (APD). Brian Rogers is tired of hearing about Martha Stewart. Earnings have been generally good and as scandal problems are resolved he believes investor confidence will slowly build. Modest expectations are going to be key to avoid disappointment. Brian advises looking for good earnings and dividends. Stocks he likes are Comcast (CMCSA), Dow Jones (DJ), and Viacom (VIA). Mack the introduced special guest will be Alan Blake, Large Growth Manager, Smith Barney. Alan is a bottoms up manager. He does have an opinion on the over all market but that does not influence how he picks stocks. He has a list of around forty stocks that fit his criteria, which include a market cap in excess of $5 Billion, fairly unique product or service, powerful balance sheets, and a good management team. Growth is somewhat defined by industry. For tech he likes to see growth of more than 20%, for consumer stocks 10-15% is acceptable. He will buy when the price is right. His $6 Billion fund owns 32 stocks and has a turn over rate of 5%-10%. He likes to buy growth stocks when they are under a cloud. If they get expensive he will trim the position but he never plays the binary game of all in or all out of a stock or the market. Now that some stocks have come down in price he uses cash flow to add to them. He will sell a stock entirely only when the reason he bought it changes. Stocks that fit the buy criteria now are Eli Lily (LLY), Coca-Cola (KO), Amgen (AMGN), and Interactive, check Lou’s web site to narrow this one down. My guess is either (IACI) or (ININ). http://www.rukeyser.com/tvshow/guestsnpa... Marty asked if there is a limit on how high the P/E is for Alan to purchase. It depends on the industry. Tech he is willing to pay nearly 2 times the growth rate, in financials he likes to buy them at a discount to the market. In long term investing 80% of getting it right is buying at proper valuation and that is where you should spend the majority of your time in research. Mary asked how Blake handled the bear market. He “let the stocks speak”. As tech got wildly expensive he kept trimming positions. He shifted that capital to cheap stocks like Media and Pharmaceutical areas. Brian asked if there were any sectors he shied away from. He tends to only be in consumer related, tech, health care, and financial services. Consuelo asked for one must own stock for all investors. Alan said he couldn’t do that. He recommends being diversified, looking for reasonable valuation, a dividend yield of more than 2%, and the ability to increase dividends. Maria Bartiromo is scheduled to host next week. Special guest will be Bob Doll, Investment Managers Chief Investment Officer, Merrill Lynch. The panel will be Harvey Eisen, Frank Gannon, and Barbara Marcin.
-- posted by SteveT » SteveT - Sorry I experienced reception problems with last nights show. I was only able to understand a very small portion of the program. Rather than risk providing an inaccurate or incomplete summary I have decided to take the week off. Hopefully the poor reception problem can be resolved quickly. Stock recommendations can be found at http://www.rukeyser.com/tvshow/guestsnpa... Next weeks host will be Consuelo Mack. Special guest will be Daniel Boone III, Portfolio Manager, Calvert Social Investment Equity Fund. The panel will be Rich Bernstein, Ed Brown, and Liz Ann Sonders. -- posted by SteveT » SteveT - 7-30-04 Consuelo Mack once again served as guest host. She was happy to report the market was up this week, perhaps triggered by the Tuesday report from the Conference Board on consumer confidence. This report hit a 2 year high and has now posted 4 consecutive monthly gains. On the down side oil prices closed the week at $43.80, a 21 year high. Rich Bernstein thinks the slowing of expected future earnings can explain the market activity. Also weighing things down are the FED increasing rates and the price of oil. Rich advises going with quality and dividends. Stocks he likes are Alltel (AT) and Ameren Corp (AEE). Liz Ann Sonders says Mutual Fund flows have been strong in June and July. Corporations are buying back stock. Which leaves hedge funds as the sellers. She believes that started to turn around this week and could be the catalyst for a nice rally over the next couple months. Liz Ann agrees about going with quality and recommends being properly diversified. Stocks Sonders likes are ChevronTexaco (CVX), Nordstrom (JWN), Safeco (SAFC), and Potlatch (PCH). Ed Brown said the third quarter got off to a tough start. He wonders if a weaker than expected economy with alleviate the FED from increasing rates at the next meeting. He expects the market to be rocky with slower earnings and terrorism fears. Ed too signs on to the quality theme. Saying he looks for both deliverability and predictability of earnings and he never pays too much for a stock. Brown believes a shift will occur from value to growth stocks. Stocks that fit his criteria are Health Management (HMA), Staples (SPLS), Harley Davidson (HDI), and Applied Materials (AMAT). Consuelo then introduced Daniel Boone III, Portfolio Manager, Calvert Social Investment Equity Fund. Boone’s fund invests only in companies that respect the environment and communities in which they work. Further his criteria include strong balance sheets, growth approaching 15%, and reasonable valuation. Focusing on socially responsible companies helped him avoid holding stocks of bankrupt companies or those involved in the ethical and accounting scandals. He is positive on the economy and stock market. Daniel believes we are in a consolidation phase and after that is complete the market can go up 10% or 15% over the next year. He uses a top down approach and is currently over weighted Health Care and Information Technology. He is underweight interest rate sensitive areas such as Finance, Telecom, and Utilities. Boone believes short term rates will peak out around 3.5% to 4%. Stocks he likes now are Medtronic (MDT), Costco (COST), and Dell (DELL). Rich asked about the impact of raising rates on housing and the consumer. Daniel believes it will be a headwind. One of his biggest concerns is can inflation stay around 2%? If it does the FED funds should top out about 2% above that, at 4% or so. If we go above that threshold those with excess debt and adjustable mortgages will have even less money to spend. Liz Ann asked when the Health Care sector should see earnings growth improve. Boone says that earnings are starting to pick up across the spectrum of Pharmaceuticals, Devices, and Providers. Valuations are the lowest they have been since 1993 so as a contrarian now is a good time to buy. Ed asked where we are today in the capital spending cycle. The economy is growing in the 3% to 4% range after coming in higher in the initial stages of the recovery. Using history as a guide Boone expects capital spending to be strong for at least the next 18 months. Next week Consuelo Mack will host the annual travel special. Guests will be Jason Ader, CEO & Founder, Hayground Cove Asset Management covering the gaming and hotel sector. Other guests will be Julius Maldutis, Airline Analyst, Aviation Dynamics, and Chris Ceraso, Auto Analyst, Credit Suisse First Boston.
-- posted by SteveT » SteveT - 8-20-04 Consuelo Mack once again served as guest host. Mack reported on the flap over the Google IPO and for the first time in a few weeks both the stock market and oil prices increased. She pondered if the link between higher oil and lower stock prices has finally been broken and gave both the panel and guest a heads up of the direction of the discussion.Mary Farrell reminded us every time it is different that before. She believes we may have seen the peak in oil or close to it. The market still will have uncertainties with the election, and Middle East. She sees no reason to run in and buy the market. Mary would take money off the table in energy and become more defensive. In a slowing growth environment she would look for best total return. Stocks Farrell likes are HSBC Holdings (HBC), Gillette (G), and Alltel (AT). She would be cautious on bonds and shorten durations. Frank Cappiello said oil stocks maybe telling. Prices have been gradually sliding. If oil goes down it should be good news for stocks. He did warn we still have Iraq and a slowing economy to deal with. Frank is looking to buy companies that will surprise on the up side with earnings, have more buyers than sellers, and net insider buying. Stocks fitting that theme are Home Depot (HD) and Popular Inc. (BPOP). Cappiello said buying bonds now is buying a guaranteed loss until rates start going down. He would sell energy and buy them back later after they come down. Kim Goodwin says over the past five years there is no specific correlation between oil prices and the S&P 500, except when oil prices spike, and then only in the riskiest asset classes. For now the riskiest asset classes seem to be small cap growth and semiconductors. Kim likes the Large Caps that are using cash to benefit shareholders. Some of them are Microsoft (MSFT), Tyco (TYC), and Consol Energy (CNX). Goodwin would sell any stock under $1 Billion market cap that has appreciated quite a bit and is starting to look expensive. Consuelo then introduced Charles Maxwell, Senior Energy Analyst, Weeden & Company. Charles thinks oil prices are very close to the top of this wave. He believes there will be a second and third wave. The current normal oil price should be around $34 a barrel, the rest is the terrorist premium. Maxwell said oil companies did their long range planning on $22 oil, but we are entering a new era. Oil will probably range from $30 to $60 and average in the mid 40s. This will bring on a huge amount of new projects. They have the capital to start them any time they wish. This will benefit the Big off shore drillers such as Transocean (RIG). His oil forecast is for oil to pullback for 12 to 18 months, then move above $40 in 2 or 3 years. Finishing the decade at $55-$60 a barrel. Charles did say he liked a couple Canadian Companies as long-term investments but might wait for oil to drop before buying them. They are Encana (ECA) and Suncor (SU). Mary asked what is happening with solar energy and if it has a future. It has a future but for now it is less than .1% of the energy market. So even if it quadruples it has almost no effect on solving our energy problem, yet it is coming along. It is constantly becoming more efficient but will not be much help over the next ten years. Kim asked which types of companies would benefit from the natural gas prices. U.S. supply peaked in 2000 and we still have good demand with no additional supply. This means we will have to import liquefied natural gas. Also the large cap drillers have exited the market and turned over leadership to the mid caps drillers. Frank wanted to know what a President could do to break the cycle of one energy crisis after another. Find a way to burn coal without the pollution, promote a revolution in peoples minds about nuclear energy and figure out when we are going to solve the associated waste problem, and first and foremost conservation. Fund research for cleaner diesel engines, hybrid cars, and insulated homes better. Ultimately the market will decide these issues, it always comes down to the pocket book of the consumer. Next week Ron Isana is scheduled to host. Special guest will be David Williams, Portfolio Manager, Excelsior Value & Restructuring Fund. The panel will be Laszlo Birinyi, Michael Holland, and Brian Rogers.
-- posted by SteveT » SteveT - 9-3-04 Bill Griffeth served as guest host this week as Lou continues his slow but steady return to good health. Bill talked about the rhythm of the market, or seasonality. Griffeth compared the market to a dance, sometimes fast, sometimes slow. With the dog days of summer behind us is the market due for a rally? Will the pace pick up? Will all the markets get back to doing the same dance? Time will tell. Barbara Marcin is positive on the market even though it appears the economy is moderating. She is encouraged due to the confidence shown by corporate executives and thinks the market dip is temporary, caused by rising oil and election uncertainty. Marcin likes companies that use their cash to buy back stock and increase dividends. Some of her current favorites are Halliburton (HAL), Noble Corp. (NE) and Microsoft (MSFT). Frank Gannon says corporate cash is king now. The key for the economy this year and next is what will corporate America do with their cash? If they spend it the economy will grow. Frank thinks the DOW will be a barometer for the Presidential election. If the DOW is up Bush should win, if it is down Kerry could win. Now Gannon is looking to add volatility to his portfolio wanting to make the most out of an anticipated market run going into the end of the year. Stocks he likes are Transocean (RIG), Goldman Sachs (GS), and Lexmark International (LXK). Elizabeth Dater said the consumer is always key to the economy. She does agree at some point in this cycle capital spending will pickup. For now cash is accumulating quicker than capital spending is increasing. Beth thinks we are still unwinding the last of the excesses from the late 1990s. She thinks before they buy new equipment companies want to be absolutely sure money spent is going to see a return. Dater also thinks stock buy backs will be increasing as well as merger and acquisition activity and more private equity investors. She likes Carbo Ceramics (CRR), Denbury Resources (DNR), and Mentor Corp (MNT). Bill then introduced Michael Fasciano, Portfolio Manager, Neuberger Berman Fasciano Fund. Michael is a small growth manager and believes small stocks always offer the opportunity to make money and can be exciting. He is currently optimistic but always cautious. He tempers his enthusiasm, saying he is looking for real businesses, making real money, that present real value. He doesn’t buy growth unless he sees value in the stock, and don’t buy value unless he sees growth in the business. Fasciano says small stocks are fertile ground for finding companies that are under followed by Wall Street and under owned by institutions. They also can be frequently under valued. His current thinking is go with quality and proven moneymakers with positive free cash flow. Stocks he likes now are International Speedway (ISCA), Direct General (DRCT), and Young Innovations (YDNT). Barbara asked if he is finding value in small cap energy stocks? Michael thinks they can do well as long as oil is above $30 per barrel. Possible selections could include Carbo Ceramics, Offshore Logistics, and FMC Technology. Frank asked if M&A would be a big part of the small cap story going forward? It is possible as larger companies look for niche players. This is true more so in moderate economic growth periods as larger companies look to enhance their growth rates. Fasciano thinks this will be held in check by the relative valuations of small vs. larger stocks. Beth asked for a view on technology. Michael is under weighted by about 50% of his normal tech allocation. He is not anti-tech but is looking for longer product cycles. He tries to look out five years, and right not five month is a stretch for many Tech companies. He did mention some holdings that could be worth a look. Scansource, Plantronics, and Methode Electronics. Next week Consuelo Mack will be back as guest host. Special guest will be Ned Davis, President and Founder, Ned Davis Research. The panel will be Mary Farrell, Tom Gallagher, and Liz Ann Sonders.
-- posted by SteveT » hairie31 - Ned Davis: 9-10-04 *I only caught the last few minutes of Ned Davis' interview. In it, he said he expects the markets to go up after the election regardless of who is elected. He said presently, the markets don't like the uncertainty of the election. Did anyone see the entire interview? Did he say that he expects the markets to go down prior to the election? At such a critical junture in the markets, it's interesting to know how a eminent Market Historian sees the road ahead. -- posted by hairie31 » Kirk - 9/24/04 Ed Hyman .Ed Hyman was on Rukeyser Friday. He has by far the best record of economists. He said we are in a period much like 1993/1994 (pretty much what I've been saying in my recent newsletters.) Ed said we are three years from a major attack and recovering from a recession just like 1993/1994. He seemed to be saying he expects a long, slow recovery characterized by low inflation and low interest rates. He said Real Estate will probably be "the next Nasdaq Type Bubble" but it is now only at 1993/1994 levels. (I think this is possible given it is the only really true hard asset and we will have inflation with the huge deficits). He said Bonds will surprise people and not go up in yield much as measured inflation will be quite low. He said some guest on the show will warn of deflation in the next year. He said Cash is not going to be a good relative investment but many are in cash now as they fear both bonds and equities. -- posted by Kirk « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 Next » Please follow the guidelines set forth in the Suite101 Posting Etiquette when adding to the discussion. |
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