Mission Statement

Information disseminated through the traditional financial news outlets is often subject to a hidden agenda. At best the information is misguided and at worst deliberately misleading. With a combined 60+ years of experience in the financial markets, we intend to help the reader separate fact from fiction and expose the news that actually moves markets.

If you don’t read the newspaper you are uninformed, if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed.
–Mark Twain

RCM Manages the Fortune's Favor Family of Funds:

  • Fortune's Favor I (Long/Short US equity)
  • Fortune's Favor Offshore (offshore clients)
  • Fortune's Favor Precious Metals

Friday, July 31, 2009

Credit Thaw, LIBOR Trend, Commercial Paper,M Hanson Real Estate, CA Home Sales Report, Earning of Interest ABX, NETL

We have been following the LIBOR story since the beginning of the credit crisis. Conventional wisdom suggests that if the LIBOR rate is going up then there are problems with the credit markets and if rates are going down then credit is flowing freely. This story highlights a possible wrinkle in this theory. Rates are clearly going down but the positive effects associated with the ease may not be felt in the economy which may cause some consternation for policy makers.

Credit thaw is spurring appetite for bank IOUs -

WSJ reports investors have developed a voracious demand for short-term debt issued by U.S. and European banks, and an important global lending benchmark has fallen to an all-time low -- welcome signs that bank credit markets have improved.

But beneath the demand for short-term bank debt, known as commercial paper, and a drop in the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, significant kinks remain lodged in the bank markets: Banks are using the fresh cash to repay existing debt, or simply hoarding it. That cash buildup is potentially stymieing efforts by regulators to circulate funds to borrowers and the most needy banks.

In contrast to the panicked days early this year, bank commercial paper "flies off the screen," said one New York trader. The market for this short-term bank debt runs from 7 a.m. to about 2 p.m. in New York. But investor demand has been so strong that some banks are turning away buyers by late morning... There is the possibility that three-month dollar Libor could fall yet further. The most healthy U.S. and European banks are selling three-month commercial paper at a range of 0.3 percentage point, or nearly 0.2 percentage point below the three-month Libor, according to one New York desk that trades commercial paper. That suggests Libor might fall further if it tracked the cost of selling the short-term IOUs.

In Thursday's post I made reference to the dire condition of the real estate market. The following piece by Hanson Advisors lays credence to that claim. Please read the red highlights closely as they will protect you from the positive spin chicanery evangelized by government.

M Hanson Advisers – Real Estate & Finance:

Late last week, DataQuick released their monthly CA home sales report. June saw more sales and higher prices than May. More sales are better for the market than less, no doubt. But opening a bottle of Dom and slapping a high-five to your real estate investment partner -- or proclaiming a bottom to the CA market on national tv -- would be misguided and ultimately detrimental to your career.

This is especially true given that loan defaults and foreclosures are surging faster than sales, foreclosure-related resales are at a point of maximum demand, and all-important organic sales are off 65% from levels seen just a few years ago. In addition, the primary reason for the recent house price appreciation is due to mid-to-high end price slashing and short sales, which has led to an up-tick in sales, and a subsequent rise in the median due to the mix-shift. (Very important to understand and yet rarely discussed by traditional media sources.)

While lower prices are needed to ultimately put an end to the housing crisis, price dumping leads to increased negative equity across the homeowner population significantly increasing the likelihood of loan default. As you witnessed at the low-to-mid end of the market beginning in 2007, a lot of pain is experienced while a market finds its bottom.

This up-tick in mid-to-high end sales is the leading indicator I have been waiting for that signals the rest of the housing market is finally beginning its mark-to-market. This time around, however, the mid-to-high end earners and consumers are the ones most affected.

The bottom line is that foreclosure-related resales have peaked and organic sales are off 65% from their peak levels. In the foreclosure resale half of the market, supply is once again outpacing demand. The mid-to-high end is being swiftly re-priced lower. This cannot be viewed as a ‘market getting better’.


Earnings of Interest

(Please click on the link above to review previous EPS posts)


Periodically I will post the EPS news of companies we find interesting. This is not a recommendation to purchase or sell the shares. I will not engage in the hackneyed approach of other bloggers and give advice about when to buy or sell. The purpose of these posts is to give you, the reader, an idea of what companies our research department deems worthy of review.

Of course, if you are an investor in any of the Fortune's Favor Family of Funds or a client of RCM our door is always open. Feel free to call or email questions at any time.

Barrick Gold beats by $0.11, beats on revs (32.86 ) : Reports Q2 (Jun) earnings of $0.49 per share, excluding non-recurring items, $0.11 better than the First Call consensus of $0.38; revenues rose 3.2% year/year to $2.03 bln vs the $1.9 bln consensus. Barrick remains on track with its full year 2009 production guidance of 7.2-7.6 million ounces of gold at net cash costs of $360-$385 per ounce or total cash costs of $450-$475 per ounce. "Our portfolio of operations performed strongly in Q2, exceeding plan, and positioning us well to meet our production and cost targets for the year. The go-ahead decision on Pascua-Lama during the quarter marks an important milestone for Barrick and our strategy of developing long life, low cost mines. Pascua-Lama is expected to be one of the industry's lowest cost gold operations and joins the world-class Cortez Hills and Pueblo Viejo projects in construction. Execution on this new generation of projects, combined with a favorable gold price outlook and our focus on cost management provides the foundation from which Barrick will continue to deliver shareholder value."

NetLogic beats by $0.10, beats on revs (39.43 ) : Reports Q2 (Jun) earnings of $0.35 per share, $0.10 better than the First Call consensus of $0.25; revenues fell 11.0% year/year to $32.5 mln vs the $32.1 mln consensus.

NetLogic guides Q3 above consensus on earnings call (39.43 +0.15) -Update : On call mgmt guides Q3 sales to grow 8% to $46 mln vs $33.69 mln First Call consensus, EPS to $0.32 vs $0.27 First Call consensus. Guidance for Q3 will include the effects of both the acquisitions of network search engine business as well as the pending merger with RMI corporation

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Obama on the Recession, Fed's Beige Book, Treasury Auction Results

President Obama says US may be seeing beginning of end of recession -DJ
Sure, and the emperor was wearing clothes...


ECONX Summary of Fed's Beige Book Reports suggest that economic activity continued to be weak going into the summer, but most Districts indicated that the pace of decline has moderated since the last report or that activity has begun to stabilize, albeit at a low level....


Amidst all the positive recession-ending talk looms the dark clouds of a weakening Treasury bond market. As the Beige Book illustrates, the pace of economic decline has slowed but not stopped; in order for any recovery to actually gain traction interest rates must remain low.


The Obama administration's economic policies may be the undoing of his proclamation that the recession end is near. Allow me to explain. Apparently the Administration is employing a very scientific two-pronged approach for economic salvation: 1) If you close your eyes and say 'the recession is ending' enough times it will come true. We will call this the Oz method. 2) With your eyes closed, spend like a drunken sailor.


The problem with this brilliant technique is first, closing your eyes and wishing only works for little girls with pigtails and second, excessive spending leads to a rise in interest rates. The conundrum: spend to get out of the recession but spending leads to Treasury bond weakness/rate increases. The real estate situation in this country remains dire and an increase in mortgage rates will re-accelerate the economic decline.


Our job as investors remains precarious as this equity rally continues to pick up steam. We must monitor the conundrum by paying close attention to Treasury bond auctions. Weakness in these auctions creating interest rate creep will be telling signs of trouble to come.

To that end, I will be periodically posting data from various auctions of government debt. Keep a close eye and look for troubling trends.


Tuesday...
Briefing: 10-Yr:+09/32..3.684%.. USD/JPY:94.5545.. EUR/USD:1.4170
Mixed on Air, Supply: The early bond rally skidded to a halt and prices backed off to new lows on the heels of a good, but not good enough, record $42B 2-yr auction, with added drag coming in front of record 5-and-7yr auctions hitting tomorrow and Thursday....

And then Wednesday...

Briefing: ECONX 5-year Note Auction Results: High Yield 2.689% (2.635% expected); Bid/Cover 1.92x (2009 Avg 2.22x); Indirect Bidders 36.7% (2009 Avg 41.9%)

Previous offering saw $37B, 2.7% yield, with a bid-to-cover of 2.58x and an indirect bidder participation rate of 62.8%.

Slammed: Treasuries were flipped on the poor showing on the record size 5-yr auction, which, even as the bar was set a bit lower after yesterday's only OK offering. The market saw a high yield of 2.689% against the when issued 2.635% while the cover's sub-2.00 demand measure, at 1.92, was ugly and the indirect bidder take was about half of the last outing and also under the year's average. The poor showing really puts a glaring spotlight on tomorrow's already suspect and oddball record 7-yr, with the thinking that if "popular" issues such as 2s and 5s are not up to snuff, the 7s will probably be truly ugly. The 5-yr went to a 2.706% yield from 2.601%, while the 10-yr swung to 3.731% from 3.63% in a flash. The 7-yr just gave up and was clobbered to add nearly 12 basis points to its yield.

Monday, July 27, 2009

FASB Rule Changes, All Hail the Blue Dogs, SOHU/CYOU/GLW Earnings


RCM Comment: We must keep an eye on this major development. If FASB stands firm and makes the changes desired then possibly 3rd and certainly 4th quarter earnings announcements for financial companies should be entertaining. These changes would make it exceedingly more difficult for the financial group to hide and misrepresent the true conditions of the business.

Accountants Gain Courage to Stand Up to Bankers: Jonathan Weil July 23 (Bloomberg) -- Turns out America’s accounting poobahs have some fight in them after all. Call them crazy, or maybe just brave. The Financial Accounting Standards Board is girding for another brawl with the banking industry over mark-to-market accounting. And this time, it’s the FASB that has come out swinging.

It was only last April that the FASB caved to congressional pressure by passing emergency rule changes so that banks and insurance companies could keep long-term losses from crummy debt securities off their income statements.

Now the FASB says it may expand the use of fair-market values on corporate income statements and balance sheets in ways it never has before. Even loans would have to be carried on the balance sheet at fair value, under a preliminary decision reached July 15. The board might decide whether to issue a formal proposal on the matter as soon as next month....READ MORE


RCM Comment: Let's take a moment and give the Blue Dogs some credit. At least some group in Washington appears to be awake.

"Blue Dog" Democrats hold health-care overhaul at bay - WSJ
WSJ reports so-called Blue Dog Democrats continued to resist key aspects of their party's health-care overhaul Sunday, despite pressure from party leaders who fear they will endanger President Barack Obama's most ambitious legislative effort. A leader of the fiscally conservative group of representatives said he expects any vote on the House's health proposal would have to wait, likely until after Labor Day. "I think the American people want to take a closer look at this legislation. They want to feel more comfortable with it," Rep. Jim Cooper, a Blue Dog from Tennessee, said on CBS's "Face the Nation." House Speaker Nancy Pelosi disputed any suggestion that the Blue Dogs' protests threatened the bill's passage. "Absolutely, positively not," she said Sunday on CNN's "State of the Union." "When I take this bill to the floor, it will win...We will move forward. This will happen."



Earnings of Interest

Periodically I will post the EPS news of companies we find interesting. This is not a recommendation to purchase or sell the shares. I will not engage in the hackneyed approach of other bloggers and give advice about when to buy or sell. The purpose of these posts is to give you, the reader, an idea of what companies our research department deems worthy of review.

Of course, if you are an investor in any of the Fortune's Favor Family of Funds or a client of RCM our door is always open. Feel free to call or email questions at any time.

SOHU Sohu.com beats by $0.03, beats on revs; guides Q3 revs above consensus (63.63 )
Reports Q2 (Jun) earnings of $0.79 per share..., $0.03 better than the First Call consensus of $0.76; revenues rose 24.6% year/year to $127.1 mln vs the $123 mln consensus. Gross margin was 77 in 2Q09, compared to 76% in 1Q09, and 76% in 2Q08. Non-GAAP operating profit margin was 43% for 2Q09, compared to 45% in the previous quarter and 41% in 2Q08.



Co issues guidance for Q3, sees EPS of $0.92-0.97; sees Q3 revs of $133.5-137.5 mln vs. $132.18 mln consensus. Assuming no new grants of share-based awards, Sohu estimates share-based compensation expense for 3Q09 to be $4.0-5.0 mln, which includes Changyou's share-based compensation expense for 3Q09 estimated to be $3.5-4.0 mln. Considering Sohu's share in Changyou, the estimated impact of this expense is expected to reduce Sohu's fully diluted EPS for 3Q09 under US GAAP by $0.07-0.09.

CYOU Changyou.com beats by $0.04, beats on revs; guides Q3 revs in-line (41.65 )
Reports Q2 (Jun) earnings of $0.66 per share, $0.04 better than the First Call consensus of $0.62; revenues rose 39.0% year/year to $66.6 mln vs the $65 mln consensus. Revenues from game operations for 2Q09 increased 9% quarter-over-quarter and 42% year-over-year to $64.9 mln. The increases were mainly due to user base expansion and higher APA, which reflect the growing popularity of the co's online games.



Co issues guidance for Q3, sees EPS of $0.75-0.77; sees Q3 revs of $67.0-69.0 mln vs. $68.92 mln consensus. Assuming no new grants of share-based awards, Changyou estimates share-based compensation expense for 3Q09 to be between $3.5-4.0 mln, reducing fully diluted earnings per ADS by $0.07-0.08.

GLW Corning beats by $0.07, beats on revs; sees third-quarter glass shipments flat to up slightly (17.00 )
Reports Q2 (Jun) earnings of $0.39 per share, $0.07 better than the First Call consensus of $0.32; revenues fell 17.6% year/year to $1.4 bln vs the $1.36 bln consensus. Gross margin was 41%, an increase over first-quarter gross margin of 27%. Display Technologies combined glass volume, including Corning's wholly owned business and Samsung Corning Precision Glass Co., Ltd. (SCP), increased 66% sequentially. Volume in the co's wholly owned business improved by 101% sequentially, while SCP's volume increased by 50%.



Co says, "The resurgent demand for LCD glass is propelling us to restore much of our previously idled production capacity as quickly as possible to meet our customers' needs. Approximately 40% of our second-quarter shipments came from existing inventory. We need to- and have- restarted tanks to replace this inventory drawdown to meet third-quarter demand. We believe our third-quarter glass shipments will be flat to up slightly, compared to the very strong second-quarter level. year. We estimate that current inventory supplies are 16% less than the second quarter last year, compared to retail demand that has been running approximately 15% ahead of a year ago. Retail demand is forecasted to continue growing at double-digit rates in the back half of this year. This comparison gives us some comfort about the outlook for the remainder of the year. However, the pace of economic recovery remains uncertain and we are being cautious about the amount of capacity we are restarting for the fourth quarter and for early 2010. As we receive more clarity from our customers on their fourth-quarter outlook, we will make decisions on our fourth-quarter capacity levels. We have increased our forecast for LCD glass market volume in 2009 due to the vitality of LCD TV sales in the first half of the year. We now estimate that total yearly volume will be around 2.3 bln square feet, or about 15% growth over last year. Corning originally expected annual glass volume to be 2 bln square feet and early last quarter revised it upward to a range of 2.1-2.2 bln square feet.