Friday, August 3, 2018

Google might return to China. Here's why that's controversial

Google is reportedly planning to get back into China, a lucrative market where it has a long history of tangling with authorities.

The Intercept reported Wednesday that Google plans to launch a search app in China that would block sensitive websites and search terms to comply with Chinese government censorship.

China has hundreds of millions of internet users and a thriving online shopping market, making it impossible for US tech companies to ignore. But jumping back into China presents ethical issues for Google (GOOGL), which has long advocated a free and open internet.

Andy Tian, a tech executive who formerly led mobile strategy and partnerships for Google in China, said the Chinese tech companies that currently dominate search can't compete with Google's product.

"There's a huge void, Google can fill that void," said Tian, who is now CEO of Asia Innovations.

Asked about The Intercept report, Google said in a statement that "we don't comment on speculation about future plans."

Like many other US internet platforms, Google's most popular products �� search, YouTube, Gmail �� have been banned in China for years, blacked out by a vast government censorship apparatus known as the Great Firewall.

But that wasn't always the case.

Google China 1.0

Google launched a Chinese language version of its search engine �� google.cn �� in 2006. It complied with Beijing's censorship laws.

"While removing search results is inconsistent with Google's mission, providing no information (or a heavily degraded user experience that amounts to no information) is more inconsistent with our mission," Google said at the time.

While the search engine was censored, it also flagged to users when information was removed from results. That gave Chinese internet users an idea of what they were not allowed to see.

China blocks Google searches on the eve of the Tiananmen Square massacre in 2014. China blocks Google searches on the eve of the Tiananmen Square massacre in 2014.

"We reminded users in China every single day that they are looking at filtered results," said Tian, who worked at Google when the search engine launched.

Still, critics complained that Google was breaching its own company motto: "Don't Be Evil."

The company's devotion to web freedom, critics charged, was being subverted by a willingness to comply with Chinese censorship in return for access to a huge potential customer base.

Attack and retreat

Google was battling Baidu (BIDU) for market share. Three years after launch, Google had wrestled about a third of the search market away from its Chinese rival.

The dynamic changed in January 2010, when Google charged that Chinese hackers had targeted Google and more than 20 other Western companies and compromised the email accounts of Chinese dissidents living abroad.

Beijing denied that it had been involved in the attacks, but the incident sparked a political fight with Washington.

google.cn screen 2010 A laptop screen displaying the landing page google.cn, which linked to an uncensored Hong Kong site on July 1, 2010, in Beijing.

About three months later, Google made good on a threat to stop offering search in China.

In March 2010, it announced it had stopped running the censored Google.cn service and began routing its Chinese users to an uncensored version of Google based in Hong Kong.

Academics, university students and other researchers relied heavily on Google's search services to access information not available through Chinese search engines like Baidu.

Businesses that depended on Google applications such as Google Docs and Gmail also suffered.

gmail image new

Google wants back behind the Firewall

Google's parent company Alphabet changed its motto in 2015, replacing "Don't Be Evil" with "Do the Right Thing."

From a business perspective, getting back into China is the right thing for Google. It currently offers just a few services in the country �� Google Translate, a file organizing program and a new AI game.

Advertising is Google's main source of revenue, and 1.4 billion potential users are hard to ignore. Facebook (FB), which competes with Google for advertising revenue, is also locked out of China.

Shares in Baidu (BIDU) dropped 8% on Wednesday after The Intercept report was published.

google china booth

Critics and human rights groups are already accusing Google of bending to China's will.

"The reality is that they will be serving the Chinese government," said Lockman Tsui, former head of free expression for Google in Asia.

"The government now tracks people, apps on phones reveal who you are, where you are. They are intrusive," he added. "They collect much more data and Google can be requested to handover these data to the government."

�� Begona Blanco Munoz contributed reporting.

Thursday, August 2, 2018

LogMeIn stock plummets on weak outlook for the year

Cloud-based software company LogMeIn fell more than 24 percent during late-morning trading due to weak outlook for the third quarter.

The Boston-based company reported earnings per share of $1.32 versus Wall Street expectations of $1.25, according to FactSet.

However, it lowered its revenue expectations for the fiscal year by 2 percent. LogMeIn now expects its yearly revenue to fall between $1.185 billion and $1.195 billion, down from its April projection of $1.208 billion to $1.223 billion.

J.P. Morgan downgraded the stock to "Neutral" from "Overweight" on Thursday, pointing to troubling signs in LogMeIn's collaboration sector, which makes up a majority of the overall business. The biggest concern, the investment bank said, is increased competition in collaboration software squeezing renewal rates.

LogMeIn has acquired collaboration rivals in recent years like GoTo and Jive. "But near-term execution issues including competition and possible pricing pressure will likely keep a lid on the stock and that is why we rate shares of LOGM Neutral," J.P. Morgan analyst Sterling Auty said in a note.

Wednesday, August 1, 2018

$2.66 Billion in Sales Expected for Navistar International Corp (NAV) This Quarter

Wall Street analysts forecast that Navistar International Corp (NYSE:NAV) will post sales of $2.66 billion for the current fiscal quarter, Zacks reports. Seven analysts have provided estimates for Navistar International’s earnings. The highest sales estimate is $2.86 billion and the lowest is $2.54 billion. Navistar International reported sales of $2.21 billion in the same quarter last year, which indicates a positive year over year growth rate of 20.4%. The business is expected to announce its next quarterly earnings report on Wednesday, September 5th.

According to Zacks, analysts expect that Navistar International will report full year sales of $9.90 billion for the current financial year, with estimates ranging from $9.63 billion to $10.13 billion. For the next year, analysts forecast that the business will report sales of $10.56 billion per share, with estimates ranging from $10.43 billion to $10.86 billion. Zacks’ sales averages are an average based on a survey of sell-side research analysts that cover Navistar International.

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Navistar International (NYSE:NAV) last posted its quarterly earnings results on Tuesday, June 5th. The company reported $0.55 earnings per share (EPS) for the quarter, beating analysts’ consensus estimates of $0.34 by $0.21. The company had revenue of $2.42 billion for the quarter, compared to analyst estimates of $2.43 billion. Navistar International had a negative return on equity of 4.49% and a net margin of 1.69%. Navistar International’s revenue for the quarter was up 15.6% compared to the same quarter last year. During the same quarter last year, the company earned ($0.86) EPS.

A number of equities research analysts have issued reports on NAV shares. JPMorgan Chase & Co. reduced their price target on Navistar International from $45.00 to $38.00 and set a “neutral” rating on the stock in a research report on Tuesday, April 10th. ValuEngine lowered Navistar International from a “buy” rating to a “hold” rating in a research report on Monday, April 23rd. Piper Jaffray Companies set a $44.00 price target on Navistar International and gave the company a “buy” rating in a research report on Wednesday, April 25th. Royal Bank of Canada reaffirmed a “hold” rating and issued a $44.00 price target on shares of Navistar International in a research report on Thursday. Finally, Longbow Research raised Navistar International from a “neutral” rating to a “buy” rating and increased their price target for the company from $25.06 to $50.00 in a research report on Friday, June 1st. Nine investment analysts have rated the stock with a hold rating and eleven have given a buy rating to the company’s stock. The company presently has a consensus rating of “Buy” and an average target price of $45.56.

Several institutional investors and hedge funds have recently added to or reduced their stakes in NAV. LPL Financial LLC purchased a new position in shares of Navistar International in the 1st quarter valued at about $218,000. Campbell & CO Investment Adviser LLC purchased a new position in shares of Navistar International in the 1st quarter valued at about $233,000. Royal Bank of Canada increased its holdings in shares of Navistar International by 132.8% in the 1st quarter. Royal Bank of Canada now owns 8,135 shares of the company’s stock valued at $285,000 after acquiring an additional 32,926 shares during the last quarter. WINTON GROUP Ltd purchased a new position in shares of Navistar International in the 1st quarter valued at about $292,000. Finally, XR Securities LLC purchased a new position in shares of Navistar International in the 2nd quarter valued at about $350,000. Institutional investors and hedge funds own 81.33% of the company’s stock.

NAV stock opened at $43.52 on Friday. The company has a current ratio of 1.11, a quick ratio of 0.82 and a debt-to-equity ratio of -0.85. The stock has a market capitalization of $4.17 billion, a price-to-earnings ratio of 85.84, a P/E/G ratio of 4.06 and a beta of 2.40. Navistar International has a 1 year low of $28.83 and a 1 year high of $47.73.

Navistar International Company Profile

Navistar International Corporation manufactures and sells commercial and military trucks, diesel engines, school and commercial buses, and service parts for trucks and diesel engines worldwide. The company operates through four segments: Truck, Parts, Global Operations, and Financial Services. It manufactures and distributes Class 4 through 8 trucks and buses in the common carrier, private carrier, government, leasing, construction, energy/petroleum, military vehicle, and student and commercial transportation markets under the International and IC brands; and designs, engineers, and produces sheet metal components, including truck cabs and engines.

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Earnings History and Estimates for Navistar International (NYSE:NAV)

Friday, July 20, 2018

Top 5 Blue Chip Stocks To Own For 2019

tags:CCNE,ARC,CFG,MBUU,LKQ,

Traders, investors and Star Wars fans alike must be thrilled with Walt Disney Co (DIS, $110.57) these days. As well they should.

In successive days, Disney announced a deal to acquire a large part of 21st Century Fox (FOXA) and debuted the latest installment of the Star Wars saga in a wide release. Whether Star Wars: The Last Jedi can eclipse the $2 billion mark like 2015��s Star Wars: The Force Awakens did (and even beat Episode VII outright) remains to be seen, but its dramatic acquisition of Fox is unquestionably a blockbuster.

Disney stock is trading at a discount to the broader market and sits within reach of its all-time high of $122.08 hit more than two years ago. The blue chip looks like a buy on the heels of this news.

Here��s why.

Disney the Streaming Giant?

Disney is spending $52.4 billion to acquire Fox��s movie and televisions studios, cable and international TV businesses, local sports channels and some other assets.

Top 5 Blue Chip Stocks To Own For 2019: CNB Financial Corporation(CCNE)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    ILLEGAL ACTIVITY WARNING: “CNB Financial (CCNE) Rating Lowered to Sell at Zacks Investment Research” was posted by Ticker Report and is the sole property of of Ticker Report. If you are accessing this report on another website, it was illegally stolen and reposted in violation of US & international copyright and trademark laws. The legal version of this report can be accessed at https://www.tickerreport.com/banking-finance/3370450/cnb-financial-ccne-rating-lowered-to-sell-at-zacks-investment-research.html.

  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    BidaskClub upgraded shares of CNB Financial (NASDAQ:CCNE) from a hold rating to a buy rating in a research note released on Thursday morning.

    A number of other research analysts have also recently issued reports on CCNE. ValuEngine cut shares of CNB Financial from a strong-buy rating to a buy rating in a report on Wednesday, May 2nd. Zacks Investment Research raised shares of CNB Financial from a sell rating to a hold rating in a report on Thursday, June 14th. Boenning Scattergood reaffirmed a buy rating on shares of CNB Financial in a report on Tuesday, April 17th. Finally, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods assumed coverage on shares of CNB Financial in a report on Tuesday, April 10th. They issued a market perform rating and a $35.00 price target for the company. Two investment analysts have rated the stock with a hold rating and three have given a buy rating to the company. The stock presently has an average rating of Buy and an average price target of $31.50.

  • [By Max Byerly]

    BidaskClub upgraded shares of CNB Financial (NASDAQ:CCNE) from a hold rating to a buy rating in a research note released on Wednesday morning.

    Several other equities research analysts have also issued reports on CCNE. Boenning Scattergood reissued a buy rating and set a $29.50 price target on shares of CNB Financial in a research report on Monday, February 5th. Zacks Investment Research lowered CNB Financial from a buy rating to a sell rating in a research report on Tuesday, February 20th. ValuEngine raised CNB Financial from a buy rating to a strong-buy rating in a research report on Monday, April 2nd. Finally, Keefe, Bruyette & Woods initiated coverage on CNB Financial in a research report on Tuesday, April 10th. They set a market perform rating and a $35.00 price target on the stock. One research analyst has rated the stock with a sell rating, one has given a hold rating and three have given a buy rating to the company. The stock presently has an average rating of Hold and an average target price of $31.50.

Top 5 Blue Chip Stocks To Own For 2019: ARC Document Solutions, Inc.(ARC)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Max Byerly]

    Here’s how other cryptocurrencies have performed during the last day:

    Get ArcticCoin alerts: Pura (PURA) traded 15.3% lower against the dollar and now trades at $0.13 or 0.00001916 BTC. Polis (POLIS) traded 11.1% lower against the dollar and now trades at $3.60 or 0.00053552 BTC. DigitalPrice (DP) traded 11% lower against the dollar and now trades at $0.0700 or 0.00001041 BTC. Onix (ONX) traded 17.5% lower against the dollar and now trades at $0.0070 or 0.00000104 BTC. Adzcoin (ADZ) traded 9.9% higher against the dollar and now trades at $0.0169 or 0.00000252 BTC. Advanced Technology Coin (ARC) traded down 3.3% against the dollar and now trades at $0.0283 or 0.00000421 BTC. Startcoin (START) traded down 6.3% against the dollar and now trades at $0.0094 or 0.00000139 BTC. Prime-XI (PXI) traded down 10.9% against the dollar and now trades at $0.0052 or 0.00000077 BTC. Uro (URO) traded flat against the dollar and now trades at $0.0411 or 0.00000536 BTC. Pioneer Coin (PCOIN) traded 6.3% lower against the dollar and now trades at $0.0161 or 0.00000240 BTC.

    ArcticCoin Profile

  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    Here’s how similar cryptocurrencies have performed during the last day:

    Get Advanced Technology Coin alerts: Pura (PURA) traded 3.9% higher against the dollar and now trades at $0.10 or 0.00001530 BTC. Polis (POLIS) traded down 4.2% against the dollar and now trades at $3.01 or 0.00045423 BTC. DigitalPrice (DP) traded 2.4% lower against the dollar and now trades at $0.0684 or 0.00001034 BTC. ArcticCoin (ARC) traded 12.8% lower against the dollar and now trades at $0.0422 or 0.00000513 BTC. Adzcoin (ADZ) traded up 4.8% against the dollar and now trades at $0.0234 or 0.00000354 BTC. Onix (ONX) traded 5.7% lower against the dollar and now trades at $0.0068 or 0.00000103 BTC. Startcoin (START) traded 4.4% higher against the dollar and now trades at $0.0092 or 0.00000139 BTC. Prime-XI (PXI) traded up 11.3% against the dollar and now trades at $0.0049 or 0.00000074 BTC. Pioneer Coin (PCOIN) traded down 6% against the dollar and now trades at $0.0198 or 0.00000299 BTC. Uro (URO) traded flat against the dollar and now trades at $0.0411 or 0.00000536 BTC.

    About Advanced Technology Coin

  • [By Logan Wallace]

    ArcticCoin (CURRENCY:ARC) traded down 1.9% against the dollar during the 24 hour period ending at 20:00 PM ET on May 7th. In the last week, ArcticCoin has traded 8.2% lower against the dollar. ArcticCoin has a total market cap of $1.37 million and approximately $22,335.00 worth of ArcticCoin was traded on exchanges in the last day. One ArcticCoin coin can now be purchased for $0.0553 or 0.00000591 BTC on major exchanges including C-CEX, Livecoin, YoBit and Cryptopia.

Top 5 Blue Chip Stocks To Own For 2019: Citizens Financial Group, Inc.(CFG)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Shanthi Rexaline]

    Citizens Financial Group Inc (NYSE: CFG) shares were down Tuesday, dragged by macro concerns following the rise in Italian sovereign debt yields and a 14-basis point decline in the 10-year U.S. treasury yield.

  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    Citizens Financial Group Inc (NYSE:CFG) insider Randall J. Black sold 792 shares of Citizens Financial Group stock in a transaction on Tuesday, June 5th. The shares were sold at an average price of $41.49, for a total value of $32,860.08. Following the completion of the transaction, the insider now owns 34,258 shares in the company, valued at $1,421,364.42. The sale was disclosed in a document filed with the SEC, which is available at the SEC website.

  • [By Max Byerly]

    M&T Bank Corp lowered its stake in Citizens Financial Group (NYSE:CFG) by 38.5% during the 1st quarter, HoldingsChannel reports. The firm owned 52,349 shares of the bank’s stock after selling 32,830 shares during the quarter. M&T Bank Corp’s holdings in Citizens Financial Group were worth $2,198,000 at the end of the most recent reporting period.

  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on Citizens Financial Group (CFG)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

Top 5 Blue Chip Stocks To Own For 2019: Malibu Boats, Inc.(MBUU)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Rich Duprey]

    The latter will put Polaris in competition with leading powerboat manufacturer Malibu Boats (NASDAQ:MBUU), which last year bought Cobalt Boats, the top maker of 24- to 29-foot sterndrive boats.

  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on Malibu Boats (MBUU)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on Malibu Boats (MBUU)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

Top 5 Blue Chip Stocks To Own For 2019: LKQ Corporation(LKQ)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    Amundi Pioneer Asset Management Inc. increased its position in shares of LKQ Co. (NASDAQ:LKQ) by 11.1% in the first quarter, according to the company in its most recent filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The firm owned 590,729 shares of the auto parts company’s stock after purchasing an additional 59,069 shares during the period. Amundi Pioneer Asset Management Inc. owned approximately 0.19% of LKQ worth $22,418,000 at the end of the most recent quarter.

  • [By Dan Caplinger]

    LKQ (NASDAQ:LKQ) has found itself an extremely profitable niche in the auto parts and accessories business. By concentrating largely on the specialty and alternative market, LKQ aims to capture higher-margin business that many other parts manufacturers choose not to pursue. That's generally been a winning formula for the company over the long run.

  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    LKQ Co. (NASDAQ:LKQ) was the target of some unusual options trading activity on Wednesday. Traders purchased 2,843 put options on the stock. This represents an increase of 2,990% compared to the average daily volume of 92 put options.

Monday, July 16, 2018

Hot Blue Chip Stocks To Watch Right Now

tags:VC,BAYRY,FCNCA,BMRC,ACN, What a silly stock market. There I was on Tuesday at 2:00 p.m. waiting for the Dow Jones Industrial Average to crash 1,700 points as Trump verbally ripped Iran to shreds (and pulled out of the Iran deal). The Dow instantly tanked 80 points one sentence into Trump's latest global spectacle. But then the Blue Chip index rallied back as Trump continued to hit Iran, and actually finished the session higher. As a 15-year old would put it: #WTF.

For an already jittery market to be able to shrug off major news of this kind is nicely short-term bullish...or is it.

"Couple of thoughts. First, there's genuine confusion right now about the value of strength. We like strength in employment because there's no real wage inflation. We like strength in commodities because it means the world's not slowing down. And we like strength in consumer spending like we heard last night in Disney (DIS) and we have been hearing for weeks now in earnings season," writes TheStreet's founder Jim Cramer over on RealMoney on the weird move in the markets Tuesday. In effect, we could be in a short-term good news is good news environment for stocks. That's an environment where you load back up on cyclicals and hot tech names like Netflix (NFLX) (which could be acquired by Action Alerts PLUS holding Microsoft (MSFT) in within two years, reports TheStreet's Katherine Ross).

Hot Blue Chip Stocks To Watch Right Now: Visteon Corporation(VC)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Joseph Griffin]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on Visteon (VC)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    VirtualCoin (CURRENCY:VC) traded flat against the US dollar during the twenty-four hour period ending at 16:00 PM ET on June 19th. One VirtualCoin coin can currently be purchased for approximately $0.0119 or 0.00000144 BTC on exchanges. During the last seven days, VirtualCoin has traded 33.1% lower against the US dollar. VirtualCoin has a market cap of $120,251.00 and approximately $0.00 worth of VirtualCoin was traded on exchanges in the last 24 hours.

Hot Blue Chip Stocks To Watch Right Now: Bayer Aktiengesellschaft (BAYRY)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By ]

    And why did Bayer (OTCPK:BAYRY) buy this drug, too?

    Unfortunately, in most cases, resistance is inevitable at some point, even if you attain a strong response that lasts a while. It is a near-truism that patients will eventually acquire resistance to kinase inhibitors, except in rare exceptional circumstances and treatment settings like chronic myeloid leukemia, where a lot of patients can have a persistent remission for years and years.

  • [By Todd Campbell]

    Based on the company's results, Bayer AG (NASDAQOTH:BAYRY) licensed the rights to larotrectinib in a nine-figure deal that included $400 million up front and�up to $450 million in regulatory and first-sale milestones. The two companies will split profit in the United States. Outside the U.S.,�Loxo Oncology will get tiered double-digit royalties based on sales levels, as well as up to $475 million in sales-based milestones.

  • [By Cory Renauer]

    It looks like the benefit-to-risk ratio is off the charts for larotrectinib as well as LOXO-292, but the number of patients with TRK fusion cancers that fail multiple existing treatments is somewhere between 1,500 and 5,000 each year in the U.S. Investors also need to understand that Loxo Oncology licensed its candidates from Array Biopharma (NASDAQ:ARRY) and owes its partner substantial milestone payments and mid-single-digit royalties on any sales they might generate. Loxo has partnered with�Bayer AG (NASDAQOTH:BAYRY), and if approved, the German giant will share U.S. profits with Loxo and pay double-digit royalties on sales abroad.

  • [By ]

    Both companies reported that the phase 3 trial known as IMblaze370 had failed. This study recruited a total of 363 patients with locally advanced or metastatic colorectal cancer. One key thing to note first is that the patients that were recruited into the study, were those who had already been heavily pretreated with 2 or more prior regimens of chemotherapy. The trial was putting the combination of Tecentriq and Cotellic versus the control arm which was regorafenib (STIVARGA) from Bayer (OTCPK:BAYRY). Unfortunately, the treatment combination arm failed to improve overall survival versus the control arm. There was no actual results released yet. It was stated that full detailed results from this study will be released at an upcoming medical conference. The problem is that it doesn't matter what the results are, the bottom-line is that the primary endpoint was not met.

  • [By ]

    The last week has been depressing for Exelixis' (EXEL) shareholders, as the stock dropped by around 13% and reached its 11-week low of $18.56 on May 10, 2018. The market was disappointed to see Exelixis' Cotellic and Roche Holdings' (OTCQX:RHHBY) Tecentriq failing to meet primary endpoint of improvement in overall survival as compared to Bayer's (OTCPK:BAYRY) Stivarga in 2/3 line locally advanced or metastatic colorectal cancer indication. This trial, if successful, would have been a major advancement for the cobimetinib franchise and would have also been a major advancement in improving the sensitivity of cold tumors to immunotherapy.

Hot Blue Chip Stocks To Watch Right Now: First Citizens BancShares, Inc.(FCNCA)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    Capital City Bank Group (NASDAQ: CCBG) and First Citizens BancShares (NASDAQ:FCNCA) are both finance companies, but which is the superior business? We will contrast the two businesses based on the strength of their valuation, profitability, dividends, risk, institutional ownership, earnings and analyst recommendations.

  • [By Max Byerly]

    American Century Companies Inc. reduced its holdings in First Citizens BancShares (NASDAQ:FCNCA) by 4.0% in the 1st quarter, according to its most recent 13F filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The firm owned 31,209 shares of the bank’s stock after selling 1,294 shares during the quarter. American Century Companies Inc. owned about 0.26% of First Citizens BancShares worth $12,897,000 at the end of the most recent quarter.

Hot Blue Chip Stocks To Watch Right Now: Bank of Marin Bancorp(BMRC)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Max Byerly]

    Shares of Bank of Marin Bancorp (NASDAQ:BMRC) have received a consensus rating of “Hold” from the six research firms that are covering the company, Marketbeat Ratings reports. Five investment analysts have rated the stock with a hold recommendation and one has assigned a buy recommendation to the company. The average 12-month target price among brokers that have updated their coverage on the stock in the last year is $75.67.

  • [By Joseph Griffin]

    Media headlines about Bank of Marin Bancorp (NASDAQ:BMRC) have trended somewhat positive this week, Accern Sentiment reports. The research firm ranks the sentiment of press coverage by monitoring more than 20 million blog and news sources in real time. Accern ranks coverage of publicly-traded companies on a scale of negative one to positive one, with scores nearest to one being the most favorable. Bank of Marin Bancorp earned a news sentiment score of 0.14 on Accern’s scale. Accern also gave news coverage about the bank an impact score of 46.5239093639876 out of 100, meaning that recent press coverage is somewhat unlikely to have an effect on the stock’s share price in the near future.

Hot Blue Chip Stocks To Watch Right Now: Accenture plc.(ACN)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Max Byerly]

    Shares of Accenture Plc (NYSE:ACN) have been assigned a consensus recommendation of “Buy” from the twenty-seven ratings firms that are currently covering the firm, MarketBeat.com reports. One equities research analyst has rated the stock with a sell rating, ten have given a hold rating and fourteen have assigned a buy rating to the company. The average 12 month target price among analysts that have updated their coverage on the stock in the last year is $160.70.

  • [By ]

    Even more impressive and promising are the companies and entities backing Ripple. Investors include Seagate Technology (Nasdaq: STX) and Accenture (NYSE: ACN), as well as influential venture capital firms Andreessen Horowitz (Twitter, Skype, Airbnb) and Lightspeed Venture Partners (Snapchat).

  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    Avoncoin (CURRENCY:ACN) traded down 1.5% against the U.S. dollar during the 24-hour period ending at 23:00 PM Eastern on June 21st. Avoncoin has a market cap of $0.00 and $9.00 worth of Avoncoin was traded on exchanges in the last day. One Avoncoin coin can currently be bought for about $0.0003 or 0.00000004 BTC on exchanges. In the last seven days, Avoncoin has traded 19.4% lower against the U.S. dollar.

Friday, July 13, 2018

Citibank Just Can’t Catch a Break in Q2

When Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C) reported its most recent quarterly results before the markets opened on Friday, the bank posted $1.63 in earnings per share (EPS) and $18.5 billion in revenue. Consensus estimates had called for $1.56 in EPS on revenue of $18.51 billion. In the second quarter of last year, it posted EPS of $1.28 and $17.9 billion in revenue.

End-of-period loans were $671 billion as of quarter’s end, up 4% from the prior-year period. And Citigroup��s end-of-period deposits were $997 billion, an increase of 4%.

In terms of its segments, the bank reported as follows:

Global Consumer Banking revenues increased 2% year over year to $8.25 billion. Institutional Clients Group revenues increased 3% to $9.69 billion. Corporate and Other revenues decreased 20% to $528 million.

For the quarter, book value per share came in at $71.95 and tangible book value per share was $61.29.

Citigroup did not offer any guidance in the report, but consensus estimates from Thomson Reuters call for $1.64 in EPS and $18.42 billion in revenue for the next quarter.

Michael Corbat, Citi CEO, commented:

During the quarter, we drove strong year-over-year revenue growth in many of our businesses �� including our International Consumer franchise, Treasury and Trade Solutions, Equities, and the Private Bank. And we continue to support our clients as evidenced by solid loan growth that was balanced across businesses and geographies. Our focus on expenses has given us the ability to self-fund many of our investments and resulted in an improvement in our efficiency ratio for both the second quarter and through the first half of this year.

Shares of Citigroup traded down 2% early Friday at $67.15, with a consensus analyst price target of $83.32 and a 52-week range of $64.38 to $80.70.

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8 Top Picks From Credit Suisse With Implied Upside of 50% or More

Thursday, July 5, 2018

Q2 2018 EPS Estimates for Pioneer Natural Resources Lifted by Analyst (PXD)

Pioneer Natural Resources (NYSE:PXD) – Analysts at Seaport Global Securities upped their Q2 2018 EPS estimates for Pioneer Natural Resources in a research report issued to clients and investors on Monday, July 2nd. Seaport Global Securities analyst M. Kelly now anticipates that the oil and gas development company will post earnings per share of $1.36 for the quarter, up from their prior forecast of $1.23. Seaport Global Securities also issued estimates for Pioneer Natural Resources’ Q3 2018 earnings at $1.57 EPS, Q4 2018 earnings at $1.86 EPS, FY2018 earnings at $6.45 EPS and FY2019 earnings at $10.76 EPS.

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Pioneer Natural Resources (NYSE:PXD) last released its earnings results on Wednesday, May 2nd. The oil and gas development company reported $1.66 earnings per share (EPS) for the quarter, topping the Thomson Reuters’ consensus estimate of $1.50 by $0.16. Pioneer Natural Resources had a return on equity of 5.57% and a net margin of 15.56%. The company had revenue of $1.27 billion for the quarter, compared to analysts’ expectations of $1.26 billion. During the same quarter in the previous year, the firm posted $0.25 EPS. The firm’s quarterly revenue was up 56.5% on a year-over-year basis.

Other equities analysts have also recently issued research reports about the company. MED boosted their target price on Pioneer Natural Resources from $220.00 to $223.00 and gave the stock an “overweight” rating in a research report on Wednesday, May 23rd. Jefferies Financial Group reiterated a “buy” rating and set a $235.00 target price on shares of Pioneer Natural Resources in a research report on Monday, March 19th. UBS Group began coverage on Pioneer Natural Resources in a research report on Wednesday, March 7th. They set a “buy” rating and a $215.00 target price on the stock. BMO Capital Markets reiterated a “buy” rating and set a $260.00 target price on shares of Pioneer Natural Resources in a research report on Wednesday, April 11th. Finally, Stifel Nicolaus set a $313.00 target price on Pioneer Natural Resources and gave the stock a “buy” rating in a research report on Wednesday, March 28th. One analyst has rated the stock with a sell rating, six have issued a hold rating, twenty-five have given a buy rating and one has assigned a strong buy rating to the company’s stock. Pioneer Natural Resources has a consensus rating of “Buy” and an average target price of $220.59.

NYSE PXD opened at $186.19 on Wednesday. The company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.20, a quick ratio of 1.16 and a current ratio of 1.26. Pioneer Natural Resources has a 12-month low of $125.46 and a 12-month high of $213.40. The company has a market cap of $31.56 billion, a price-to-earnings ratio of 86.20, a price-to-earnings-growth ratio of 1.97 and a beta of 0.92.

In related news, Director J Kenneth Thompson sold 1,000 shares of the company’s stock in a transaction that occurred on Monday, May 21st. The stock was sold at an average price of $212.17, for a total value of $212,170.00. Following the sale, the director now owns 12,236 shares of the company’s stock, valued at approximately $2,596,112.12. The transaction was disclosed in a filing with the SEC, which is available through this link. Also, Director Larry R. Grillot sold 200 shares of the company’s stock in a transaction that occurred on Tuesday, May 29th. The shares were sold at an average price of $191.13, for a total value of $38,226.00. Following the completion of the sale, the director now directly owns 8,061 shares in the company, valued at approximately $1,540,698.93. The disclosure for this sale can be found here. In the last ninety days, insiders sold 73,265 shares of company stock worth $14,990,928. 0.92% of the stock is owned by corporate insiders.

A number of hedge funds have recently bought and sold shares of the stock. Mn Services Vermogensbeheer B.V. lifted its stake in Pioneer Natural Resources by 1.1% in the 1st quarter. Mn Services Vermogensbeheer B.V. now owns 26,728 shares of the oil and gas development company’s stock valued at $4,591,000 after buying an additional 300 shares in the last quarter. Private Advisor Group LLC lifted its stake in shares of Pioneer Natural Resources by 14.3% during the 1st quarter. Private Advisor Group LLC now owns 2,519 shares of the oil and gas development company’s stock worth $433,000 after purchasing an additional 316 shares during the period. Thornburg Investment Management Inc. lifted its stake in shares of Pioneer Natural Resources by 0.5% during the 1st quarter. Thornburg Investment Management Inc. now owns 67,189 shares of the oil and gas development company’s stock worth $11,542,000 after purchasing an additional 330 shares during the period. Neuburgh Advisers LLC lifted its stake in shares of Pioneer Natural Resources by 7.8% during the 1st quarter. Neuburgh Advisers LLC now owns 4,640 shares of the oil and gas development company’s stock worth $797,000 after purchasing an additional 336 shares during the period. Finally, Covington Capital Management lifted its stake in shares of Pioneer Natural Resources by 6.9% during the 1st quarter. Covington Capital Management now owns 5,501 shares of the oil and gas development company’s stock worth $945,000 after purchasing an additional 356 shares during the period. 87.53% of the stock is currently owned by hedge funds and other institutional investors.

About Pioneer Natural Resources

Pioneer Natural Resources Company operates as an independent oil and gas exploration and production company in the United States. The company explores for, develops, and produces oil, natural gas liquids (NGLs), and gas. It has operations primarily in the Permian Basin in West Texas, the Eagle Ford Shale play in South Texas, the Raton field in southeast Colorado, and the West Panhandle field in the Texas Panhandle.

Earnings History and Estimates for Pioneer Natural Resources (NYSE:PXD)

Monday, June 25, 2018

Angola Is in Talks With Majors to Boost Oil Output by 2020

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Angola is targeting an increase of about 250,000 barrels a day in oil output by 2020 and is already in discussions with oil majors Exxon Mobil Corp. and Equinor ASA to achieve this, said Sonangol’s Chairman of the Board Carlos Saturnino.

New energy legislation and more favorable investment terms have already spurred interest from international operators, including Chevron Corp. and Total SA, he said in an interview in Vienna.

Angola is working to roll back a sizable drop in its oil production this year due to technical problems at the country’s mature fields and an inability to lure international operators. The country is currently producing 1.55 million barrels a day, Saturnino said, down from an average of 1.65 million barrels a day over the past year.

The decline in the West African nation’s industry was a key part of the debate last week between the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies. Angola is one of those countries that’s cut deeper than required under a 2016 accord, but also has limited ability to participate in the immediate output increase the group agreed on Friday.

Saturnino said Angola’s average crude production will rise next year to no less than 1.673 million barrels a day -- around 123,000 barrels a day above current levels.

Exxon Mobil is now in discussions to enter into a memorandum of understanding for a new investment in the existing Block 15, Saturnino said. Exxon has requested to study new acreage, and has put forward a new proposal to sign an MoU for new blocks, he said.

Meanwhile, Eldar Saetre, president of the newly-named Equinor, will travel to Angola’s capital, Luanda, on July 26 to sign a memorandum to operate a block, Saturnino said -- without saying which field.

He added that Angola plans to have direct negotiations with international operators and may consider holding a new oil and gas bidding round before 2019. Sonangol is currently in the midst of a restructuring and presented a plan to Angola’s government two weeks ago to privatize some of its subsidiaries, he said.

Angola’s output fell in April to 1.5 million barrels a day, the lowest since January 2014, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The nation’s crude loadings for August will fall to the lowest in a decade, at 1.33 million barrels a day, according to data released by Sonangol.

The IEA expects Angola’s production capacity to edge up to 1.65 million barrels a day by the end of 2018 when Total’s $16 billion Kaombo project starts up. Output at the ultra-deep-water field is expected to peak at 230,000 barrels a day, the agency said.

Sunday, June 24, 2018

Your Energy Investing Questions, Answered

Listeners, you wrote in, and we're answering.

In this week's episode of Industry Focus: Energy, host Sarah Priestley and analyst Taylor Muckerman go through a grab bag of questions from listeners. They explain the issues surrounding Permian Basin production, why investors might want to check out midstream company Enterprise Products Partners�(NYSE:EPD), a few important things to know about oil services companies Halliburton�(NYSE:HAL) and Schlumberger�(NYSE:SLB), and what might become of the beleaguered offshore industry.

They also take a look at the upcoming OPEC meeting: what outcomes different countries will probably want, what could come of the meeting, and when we'll know more.

A full transcript follows the video.

This video was recorded on June 21, 2018.

Sarah Priestley:�Welcome to Industry Focus, the show that dives into a different sector of the stock market every day. Today, we're talking Energy and Industrials. It's�Thursday, the 21st of June, and�we're going to be answering some listener questions. I'm your host, Sarah Priestley, and joining me in the studio is Motley Fool Canada Premium analyst, Taylor Muckerman. Taylor, welcome to the show.

Taylor Muckerman:�Glad to be here.

Priestley:�[laughs]�You seem�really pumped to be here.

Muckerman:�I am! If�only they could see it.

Priestley:�I know, if only they could see how enthusiastic we are this morning. We have had a flurry of emails with some�fantastic oil and gas-related questions for us to tackle. As you are the resident expert, I thought that you could help us out.

Muckerman:�I love questions much more than corrections.

Priestley:�[laughs]�Yeah,�you and me both. The first question that we had was around problems of getting oil out of the Permian Basin. For�anybody listening, the Permian Basin is a�sedimentary basin in Western Texas. Try saying that after a few drinks. It covers about 250 miles wide and 300 miles long. It's pretty unique geology structure and it makes it really easy to extract oil and natural gas from, so�it can operate at lower prices than�other fields. We've seen it operate even in pretty low prices, like even $26 a barrel, I think they were still pumping.�

After a hundred years of production, it's expected to reach�record volumes this year. But, there is a bit of a problem in that frackers are becoming a victim of their own success. What do you think?

Muckerman:�This area�continues to be a wash in oil. You're talking about the Midland Texas area, which is the unofficial capital of the Permian Basin. The unemployment rate there is 2.1%. Everybody has a job, almost, in Midland Texas, and high-paying jobs along with that, because they just can't find enough truckers, enough roughnecks, which are actually working on the fracking equipment. You're seeing six-figure salaries for these truckers and other ancillary services. Home sales are thriving, home prices are thriving, all�because this is the hottest basin and has been the hottest basin in U.S. oil and gas for some time now.�

You looked at almost 2,000�horizontal well permits approved in the first quarter of this year, up 22% from the previous quarter. Even with this backlog of oil that�can't find its way to the Gulf Coast, drillers are�still trying to drill and paying quite highly for�the workers that are able to come down and do the drilling.�Even�private companies are making their presence felt.�I think I read that over 50% of permits in 2016�went to the top ten shale producers in the region. That's down to about a third now. Private drillers going from 20% of the permits up to 25% of the permits, so�everyone is getting in on the action.�

A little bit of that has to do with public companies�going out and saying, "We're going to pull back on spending�because of the downturn." But clearly,�activity is still thriving and the pipelines just can't keep up. You see a huge gap in price�between Midland Texas oil and Western Texas intermediate, and even more of a gap between international brent crude because this takeaway capacity just hasn't been there. They're building more, but it's not coming online�within the next six months. You're looking at a year, two years. Then, the export facilities in Texas and Louisiana, not really expanding as they need to until 2020 at the earliest.

Priestley:�Yeah,�as you said, some producers having no outlet, especially for the natural gas that they're bringing out, so in a lot of cases, they're flaring it.

Muckerman:�Oh, yeah, natural gas price, especially, yeah.

Priestley:�And that's capping their output, too, because of the regulation around how much they can do that. But,�interestingly, Anadarko CEO R. Walker said on a recent conference call that the pipeline�shortages are creating the haves and have-nots based on who already has established contracts. He was talking about that from their perspective. He said, "We're working hard to be among the haves by proactively aligning our production growth with midstream and downstream solutions."

But it's this crazy situation where they can get it out of the ground now in a�very cost-effective way, but they can't move it to the refiners and to the liquid natural gas export centers, where it's natural gas, in a cost-effective way. They're talking about bringing rail online.

Muckerman:�Yeah, rail and trucks, and they're saying most incremental production. So, any additional production will need to travel via truck or rail,�costing upwards of $15 a barrel in additional transportation costs.

Priestley:�You mentioned that a few pipelines are coming online. Two�that are notable,�Phillips 66 and Enbridge�together are building the Grey Oak Pipeline. That should move about three million barrels per day to Houston. As you said,�that doesn't come online until the second half of next year. Then, the�Cactus II pipeline is being built by�Plains All American Pipeline, and�that's going to go to Corpus Christi. That's�not coming online until the third quarter of next year. We know, with what we're seeing with some of the timelines for the pipelines�that are meant to be coming online now, that might get pushed out by a quarter or two, most likely.

Muckerman:�Yeah. Then, once it gets to places like Corpus Christi, they're having bottlenecks because the ports aren't big enough for some of the ships that�Chinese and European customers like to import oil on, which they call the very large crude carriers, VLCCs, talking about two million barrel supertankers. The expansions in Corpus Christi and Brownsville, Texas aren't expected until 2020.

Priestley:�What's�the big liquid natural gas export hub that's in Georgia? Is that coming online soon?

Muckerman:�I'm�drawing a blank on the name, but you have the huge one in Sabine Pass in Louisiana, and then another one from Cheniere Energy coming online in Louisiana. I'm drawing a blank on the Georgia one.

Priestley: I think we've talked about it on the show before.

Muckerman: Dominion has Dominion Cove export facility here on the East Coast, should be coming online at some point soon for liquefied natural gas. That'll help get some�Marcellus natural gas off the coast. But, yeah, the Permian driving down natural gas prices and oil prices in Texas,�because they're just producing too dang much.

Priestley:�It'll be�interesting to watch, over the next two years,�how we level out that production increase�and transport capacity around there, and what that does to the market as a whole.�

We've talked�before about midstream companies, and a lot of the questions that we've had are around midstream companies, one in particular around Enterprise Products Partners, ticker EPD. They're an American natural gas and crude oil pipeline company. Enterprises as a $60 billion market cap company, so it's a big company. It has exposure�not just to pipelines but to ports,�storage, processing and even shipping via tanker ships. It's actually�one of the largest master limited partnerships in the U.S. An MLP basically combines the tax benefits of a partnership with the�liquidity of a publicly traded company. If�we went into this, it would be a whole show, but if you want more�information on it, we do have a really good article that I can send you, so�feel free to email us at industryfocus@fool.com. Back to EPD, it provides mainstream�services to the oil and gas industry. They�mostly focus on processing, transporting, and storing natural gas liquids. Interesting company.�

And as I said, we've talked about pipelines before, we've�talked a lot about natural gas and how that market is really changing. Interesting. The�headline news for the next couple of years is that it won't be hiking distributions to�quite the same degree that we've seen in the past. That's the big�attractive thing with these MLPs, is really their yield. It has an attractive yield. It's�6% at the minute. But we're talking low single-digit increases for the next two years as they try and�improve their cash position and actually use that cash inflow to fund growth, rather than funding externally,�which I think is smart.

Muckerman:�Yeah, self-funded growth. You can't argue with that, especially if you can keep a yield of around 4-6%. That's a�pretty nice payout in today's market, with some organic growth, if they can pay it themselves. Nice exposure to the Permian. Plenty of opportunity for excess takeaway capacity, if they can provide it.

Priestley:�Yeah. They have two�major expansion projects that they're in the midst of right now. One is a $4.9 billion�recently completed growth project. Another one, which is $5.3 million, I think, expansion is under construction. I feel like we repeat ourselves all the time, but all of these expenditures will generate reliable cash flow income because they have such long-term contracts. I think�pretty much all of EDP's capacity is locked up in fairly long-term contracts.

Some investors have shied away from the company, given its open admission that it's going to pull back a little bit on distributions, but�actually, it makes a lot of sense. I think they're aiming for 50% internally funded expansion projects. Compared to competitors, it just means that they won't dilute.

Muckerman:�Yeah, you won't be issuing shares or paying a lot of interest.

Priestley:�Yes. And to me, it really indicates -- you've been studying this whole industry for so long now, you will have seen this -- that they've learned a lot from 2014 and 2015.

Muckerman:�Yeah. How long they remember it is yet to be seen, but it's certainly nice to see that, five years in, it's�still top-of-mind. To some people.

Priestley:�[laughs]�Yes, to some people in the industry. So, yes, we were asked a question about EPD. Definitely think it's worth a look at the minute. However, if�distribution growth is something that's more important to people listening, then you might be better off looking for a midstream partnership like MMP,�Magellan Midstream Partners. They're targeting 8% distribution growth in 2018. They have a lower yield, it's about 5%,�but it's an appropriate conservative investment for people. But, yeah, I'm�actually very much in the camp that this is a pretty good move for EPD.

Muckerman:�Yeah,�seems like it. Just remember, it's an MLP, so additional tax forms and considerations will apply in most cases. Just a little asterisk there. But, certainly a company that's worth considering if you like the space.

Priestley:�Yeah.�In�a great email, we were asked about oil services companies, particularly Halliburton and Schlumberger. They're the biggest rivals,�I would say, but correct me if I'm wrong.

Muckerman:�Yeah, they're two of the top three.

Priestley:�We'll�talk about Halliburton first, ticker HAL. One of the first oilfield services companies in the world, and has a reputation for being the best wellbore engineering�company. I think it still maintains that title. The company's founder, Erle Halliburton, pioneered the process of wellbore�cementing in the early 1920s, would you believe.

Muckerman:�I will.

Priestley:�[laughs]�Though they�operate across the world, I think they operate in about 60 or 70 countries,�65% of their revenue comes�North America. So they're heavily invested in�North America. They made a big�strategic bet on shale. I remember you telling me about this 20 years ago. They've�invested a ton in the market, which has been a double-edged sword for them, because they've been there for the boom but they've also felt the pain on the other side.�They had a respectable profit for the first quarter of this year, 34% increase despite issues in Venezuela that are affecting their bottom line.�

Mixed feelings,�it seems like, from analysts toward�Halliburton at the minute. They've made a lot of investments to try and be competitive with�Schlumberger. They've got a lot of organic growth, and they have really strong exposure to shale. I guess, for me,�it's really how you interpret that exposure to shale.

Muckerman:�This company is, I think, No. 3 in terms of the size. It was Mo. 2�until GE took over Baker Hughes and their energy businesses combined. Schlumberger is No. 1 and�Halliburton No. 3. They're mirror images. Schlumberger has the international exposure, Halliburton has the domestic exposure here in North America.�

It seems like�things are really clicking here.�They�say that their fracking horsepower, which is what they consider the available fracking equipment that they have in�North America, is fully supplied. They're�running at full capacity for the frack fields here in North America. They see some improvement internationally. I talked about, in the previous segment, 2,000 permits for wells in the Permian Basin in the first quarter alone. Plenty�potential action out there, and still a lot of wells to be fracked that have already been drilled. That's where Halliburton really holds their�specialty. A lot of backlog out there available for this company that has rebounded decently over the last couple of years.

Priestley:�I think the biggest difference I've noticed in people's perception between Schlumberger and Halliburton is the integrated services. People see that Halliburton hasn't really focused on these integrated services, which�people are seeing as being very efficient and a cost benefit to the oil producers. I've started on the Schlumberger section. [laughs] They're often seen as best-in-class, and their bread and butter has really been understanding oil and natural gas�reservoirs and the most efficient way to drill those. But it's also pioneered directional drilling, which was pretty important.

Muckerman:�Yeah, still is. That really was one of the key technologies to light this fuse of the frack boom. That and fracking combined is why we've seen the U.S. flood the world with oil.�

Priestley:�This�company, compared to Halliburton, is really focusing on reducing cost per barrel. I mean, Halliburton is, too, but the way that they're tackling this,�I think it's called SPM.

Muckerman:�Yeah, that's where they actually take a stake�in the production side of things. Halliburton does not do that, I don't believe. But, yeah, definitely, reservoir description and management are a key portion of that business.

Priestley:�They're at a very high P/E at the minute, there's a lot of confidence in the company. They beat�estimates three out of the last four earnings. I think the bullish�sentiment really is around that SPM and around the�integrated services and how much they can offer oil service producers through that. They also spend more on research and development than any other of these companies. They're already feeling the benefits of that.

Muckerman:�Yeah, and through acquisitions. A lot of that R&D is�focused on offshore, as well. OneSubsea was the partnership that they have after they acquired a couple of companies that focused on offshore. So, some nice upside there if offshore oil�ever comes back to life.

Priestley:�I was going to ask you; do you think that we will start to see offshore come back online? If so, what price do you think we need to be at?

Muckerman:�Yeah,�at some point, unless other countries catch the fracking craze,�which it seems like they might. Fracking can be taken internationally. A lot of frackable oil available out there. It just depends on the takeaway capacity, the infrastructure, the buy-in�from governments. If China or Argentina ever get their act together�when it comes to fracking, or�other countries as well, but�those two, certainly, in particular, you could see offshore oil continue to get pushed out on the timeline.

Priestley:�Then,�as you mentioned, obviously, we have Baker Hughes, a GE company, as a sort of looming competitor for both of these, only strengthened for the moment by its GE involvement. We'll see how that all plays out.�

The next thing to talk about is,�tomorrow is the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, OPEC's bi-annual meeting in Vienna, Austria. The next day, they will hold a meeting with non-OPEC petroleum exporting countries, namely Russia. That's OPEC-plus, I think.

Muckerman:�Yeah, OPEC-plus.

Priestley:�Very different global environment to the one that they have previously met under. The oil glut is�somewhat reduced. Prices have risen, and�even some countries like Venezuela are struggling to meet their allocations. New�sanctions on Iran mean that their�output is essentially going to be capped by their lack of a customer. Some members�really want to keep production low and prices high.�Iran has come out and said that's exactly what they're seeking. Others are�looking for an increase. They way that I see it, there are three options. They can keep it as is. Venezuela, Iran and Iraq, I think, all favor that. Keep�production as is but relax compliance. Or, increase.�I think it's rumored that the Saudis favor an increase right now.

Muckerman:�Yeah,�they announced this morning, Thursday morning, that they want to increase,�collectively, a million barrels per day. Ahead of the meeting.

Priestley:�Oh,�wow, breaking news. [laughs]�

Muckerman:�Yeah, already laying down the gauntlet ahead of the meetings,�publicly saying that they want to increase OPEC production --�or supply, because they could already be producing it and then just storing it -- by�a million barrels per day.

Priestley:�Which is definitely an increase, but I feel like the market can handle looking at some of the projections, a million barrels per day.

Muckerman:�Yeah,�they say without it, you could see a supply crunch in the back half of the year, early 2019. There are�some different incentives here. Whether or not they actually do see a supply crunch, who knows. But if that's the case, sure, let's have it. We�can't get our oil to market because we don't have the pipelines. They can.

Priestley:�Yeah,�absolutely. We should have some more news on that next week. It's�fascinating to watch that all play out. A�lot of people are attributing the recent price rises to OPEC, and undoubtedly that contributed, but�there are a lot of other factors that go into this whole mish-mash, too. But, yeah, pipeline stocks.

Muckerman:�Russia beat Saudi Arabia five to nil in the World Cup, so maybe that'll have some leverage, in terms of who gets to release what oil.

Priestley:�[laughs]�Yeah, I'd love to see the soccer jokes going on at OPEC. That's it from us today. If you would like to get in touch, please feel free to do so. As you can see, we definitely appreciate listener questions. We like to answer them. Please feel free to email us at industryfocus@fool.com, or tweet us on Twitter @MFIndustryFocus.

As always, people on the program may own companies discussed on the show, and The Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against stocks mentioned, so don't buy or sell anything based solely on what you hear. Thank you, as always, to Austin Morgan for mixing the show. For Taylor, I'm Sarah Priestley, thanks for listening and Fool on!

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Lump Sum or Annuity? How to Make the Right Pension Choice for You

Having enough income in retirement is a primary concern for everyone approaching the end of their careers. Social Security offers monthly income to most Americans after they retire, and for many, the only other potential source of support during retirement comes from the savings that they've managed to squirrel away over the course of their careers. However, some workers still have access to pension benefits through their work, and the additional financial support that a pension can provide in retirement can make the difference between being comfortable in your retired years or struggling to make ends meet.

One of the most important choices that workers who have pensions through their jobs have to make is what to do with their pension benefits after they retire. Many pensions offer workers the choice either to take a lump-sum payout of their accumulated benefits at retirement, or to accept regular monthly payments that typically last at least for the remainder of their lives. In some cases, annuity options that pensions offer can also include benefits for a surviving spouse after the worker passes away. Making the best choice for your own personal situation requires taking a close look at the exact provisions of your own pension plan, but the factors you'll generally have to take into consideration are similar no matter what specific pension plan provisions apply to your case.

Employee Pension Plan booklet next to a calculator.

Image source: Getty Images.

How lump-sum pension distributions became an option in the first place

Historically, pension payments almost universally took the form of monthly payments. This arrangement matched up well with the expectations of both employers and employees. Retired workers were able to use expectations about pension income to budget what their financial resources would be in retirement, taking monthly income and allocating it against their expected monthly expenses after they stopped receiving an ordinary paycheck. Meanwhile, for employers that had assumed the responsibility of providing for the financial well-being of their workers after the end of their careers, the opportunity to space out payments over the course of their retirees' lifetimes was more financially manageable than having to come up with vast sums of money immediately upon a worker's decision to retire.

However, in managing pension plans, companies took on a substantial amount of risk. Company pension plans had to make sure to invest in such a way that the money they set aside to cover future pension obligations would grow enough to cover those future payments. That left them vulnerable to financial market risk, because if the investments they had chosen to provide the growth necessary to fund future pension payments proved insufficient, employers would have to come up with additional cash as needed to pay benefits. In addition, if the assumptions employers had made about life expectancies of their retirees proved to be incorrect, then the pension plans would suffer the consequences of adverse mortality risk and have to make payments over a longer period of time than they had initially accounted for. That put further pressure on pension plan finances.

As a consequence of these risks, companies started to seek ways to control or eliminate the potential adverse impacts on their pension plans. The shift away from traditional pension plans toward employer-sponsored 401(k) defined contribution plans stemmed in large part from this desire, as 401(k) plans essentially shifted the burden of investment responsibility from the employer to its workers. Employers could simply choose whether to make contributions toward their workers' retirement savings through profit sharing or matching contributions, and then leave it to each worker to decide how best to invest their retirement accounts.

However, that only solved the potential problem of pension-related risk for future workers. In order to reduce the risk associated with current workers from whom companies didn't have the right to take away pension benefits entirely, companies started to offer lump-sum buyouts of pension obligations, either to newly retiring workers immediately upon retirement, or to existing pension recipients based on their then-current age and monthly payments.

This required the company to come up with a large amount of upfront cash, because the lump-sum payout would include the present value of expected monthly pension payments extending years or even decades into the future. However, once the employer and employee had agreed to terms, and the employer had made the lump-sum payout, there was no longer any risk for the employer to bear. That was beneficial for most employers, especially because their shareholders would typically accept one-time hits to earnings associated with mass buyouts of pension rights as extraordinary items with a generally positive impact on the long-term prospects of the business.

What annuity options do pensions typically offer?

If the idea of a regular annuity payment appeals to you, then the next step is to assess the specific annuity options your pension plan will offer you. It's important to understand that the annuity options a pension plan offers are typically much different from what you would be able to get if you went to a private insurance company and asked about annuity products. In particular, if you're expecting to get access to things like fixed deferred annuities, fixed indexed annuities, variable annuities, or other more exotic types of annuities and insurance products, you probably won't have much luck. As you'll see later, you'll have the option to consider such products on your own if you decide to take a lump-sum payment from your pension and then invest the pension proceeds, but don't count on your employer to offer every annuity product imaginable within the pension plan itself.

Most annuity options closely resemble the options you'd get from a single-premium immediate annuity. The simplest is the single-life option, where you agree to receive monthly payments for as long as you live. Once you pass away, payments stop, whether that happens the month after you retire, 50 years later, or anywhere in between.

Workers who are married often prefer to make provisions to ensure that their spouses will receive financial support even after the worker's death. Joint-and-survivor annuity options can meet the needs of these workers, as they give you the ability to receive payments that will last as long as either you or the person you name as your beneficiary remain living. You'll receive the payments as long as you live, and if your beneficiary outlives you, then the pension plan will make future payments to the beneficiary through the beneficiary's lifetime. In some cases, you can specify whether the payment your surviving beneficiary receives will be equal to the full amount of what you received while you were living, or will be reduced to reflect lower expenses for the survivor compared to what a couple would need. For example, a pension might pay you $1,000 until your death, and then pay $500 to your designated beneficiary, while another option might let the beneficiary get the same amount you did.

Finally, some pensions give you the right to ensure that the annuity will pay out over a certain period regardless of how long you live. For instance, if you elect a single-life annuity with a 10-year period-certain option, then if you passed away four years after you started collecting payments, your beneficiary would be able to get the remaining six years' worth of monthly benefits. In this example, if you lived longer than 10 years after retiring, the beneficiary wouldn't receive anything upon your death.

The challenge with all of these options is that your choice affects how much you'll get monthly. A single-life annuity with no period-certain option will generally give you the largest monthly payment. If you add a beneficiary under a joint-and-survivor option, the monthly payments you'll get will be less, because the expected joint life expectancy will be longer than your life expectancy alone. Similarly, adding a period-certain option will also reduce your monthly payment, because it eliminates the risk that you'll die soon after retiring and end up costing the pension plan a relatively small total amount of lifetime benefits.

The payment amounts workers receive from a pension can also vary greatly, both from plan to plan at different employers, and within a given plan depending on the worker's age and years of experience at retirement. Your plan's particular benefit formula will give you the details on what to expect, including the base amount and the impact of choosing other annuity options on the amount you receive.

Pros and cons of choosing annuity options

Picking an annuity option has a number of advantages. You can rely on the pension to provide regular income on a predictable schedule for the rest of your life, no matter what happens to your financial situation, and no matter what happens with the financial markets. You're not responsible for making any investment decisions, as the pension plan retains the responsibility for coming up with enough money to pay out whichever annuity option you selected.

However, there are risks involved with a pension annuity. You only have the right to monthly payments, so you can't get advances on future amounts from the pension plan. That can be problematic if you have an unexpected major expense, as you'll be faced with the unattractive option of having to borrow to pay the amount upfront, and then repay the loan as you receive future annuity payments.

There are also tax impacts of choosing an annuity pension payout. Typically, all of your monthly pension payment will be taxable. As we'll see later, that's better than paying tax on a lump sum all at once, but it's not necessarily as good as what can happen if you take a lump sum and use smart tax planning to manage it. Nevertheless, with broadly spread-out payments over your lifetime, taxes on an annuity payout that's fairly close to what you received in pay during your career will typically create a similar tax situation to what you saw when you were working.

How lump-sum pension distributions work

Lump-sum pension distributions are completely different from annuities. With this method, your employer simply makes a one-time payment to you. In exchange, you agree that you won't receive anything else from your employer and give a release from any further liability related to pension obligations.

The calculation of the actual lump-sum amount is somewhat complicated, but it generally depends on two things: the size of monthly payment you would have been entitled to receive had you chosen the pension annuity option, and the current prevailing interest rates at the time you elect to take the lump sum. In general, the lower the interest rate, the greater the lump-sum payout will be.

Arguably the most critical thing about taking a lump-sum distribution is how you arrange to receive the amount of the lump sum. The smarter move in nearly every case is to arrange to have the pension distribution rolled over into an IRA. That way, you can preserve the tax-deferred nature of your pension, only paying taxes on amounts as you withdraw them from your IRA.

However, you also have the choice to have your employer pay the amount directly to a regular taxable account. In that case, you'll typically owe tax on the entire lump-sum amount in the year you receive it. Often, the lump sum will be large enough that it can have a dramatic impact on the amount of tax you owe, pushing you into a higher tax bracket and creating an excessively large tax bill.

In general, there's little reason not to roll over a lump-sum distribution into an IRA. Doing so gives you maximum flexibility, as by the time you retire, you're generally eligible to take as large of a withdrawal from your IRA as you want without penalty. Meanwhile, if you choose not to take all of your money out, it can keep growing on a tax-deferred basis.

Pros and cons of choosing a lump-sum pension payout

The biggest advantage of taking a lump-sum pension payout is that you have complete control over the entire amount you receive. You can invest it in whatever way you like, choosing assets that have the potential to grow rather than simply paying a fixed monthly payment for the rest of your life. That's particularly important if you fear the possibility of high inflation, which can dramatically reduce the purchasing power of your annuity-based monthly pension payment. Although Social Security benefits are adjusted for inflation, most pension payments aren't.

In addition, having access to a lump sum lets you handle major financial emergencies more effectively. It might not be ideal, but you at least have the option of tapping into a substantial portion of your investment capital all at once, avoiding having to take on debt to pay a large expense.

However, there are definite negatives to a lump sum as well. Many people aren't comfortable taking on the responsibility of investing a large amount of money, and if you make mistakes, there's no guarantee the lump sum will be enough to last you the rest of your lifetime. Also, if you're not careful about managing taxes appropriately, then you can overestimate the after-tax value of what you'll have left of the lump sum to spend. That can be a rude awakening later in retirement, when it's too late to adjust accordingly. Most importantly, you have to have the discipline not to spend your money too quickly. Otherwise, you can find yourself running out of your lump sum too soon.

An option to get the best of both worlds

Finally, some people like the idea of splitting the difference, getting access to a partial lump sum while also guaranteeing some monthly income. There are a few pension plans that will give you the ability to get reduced monthly pension payments in exchange for a partial lump sum that's only a fraction of what the full lump-sum distribution would be. That can be the best of both worlds, granting you the flexibility of a lump sum while still preserving extra monthly income in a pension payment.

Even if your plan doesn't give you this option, you can always create an equivalent monthly payment by taking part of your lump sum and investing it in an immediate annuity. This insurance product uses a calculation that's basically the reverse of what a pension plan uses in calculating a lump sum, taking the amount you invest and coming up with an equivalent monthly payment. Just be advised that what an insurance company will pay you in an immediate annuity won't be as much as what a monthly payment from your pension plan would be, because insurers can take risks like your health status into account, things pension plans don't account for.

An example

To see how this might work, let's look at an example. Say that you're single and 65 and retiring from your job after spending 30 years with your current employer. You most recently made $60,000 a year and are entitled to a pension equal to 50% of your last year's pay. That works out to $2,500 a month from your pension, and you also expect to get $1,500 from Social Security every month. Your employer has also offered to pay you a lump sum of $300,000 if you want to give up your monthly pension payments.

If you take the $2,500 per month, then when you do the math, you can calculate that you'd need to live 10 years in order to get to a total of $300,000. That's less than half the IRS projection of 21 years of life expectancy for the typical 65-year-old. If you have health conditions that suggest you could fall well short of that life expectancy, then taking the lump sum would make more sense. For instance, if you pass away after just five years, then you'd only have received a total of $150,000, and your heirs would miss out on fully half of the lump sum amount you could have received.

Conversely, if you take the lump sum, you can invest it in a way that will generate income and investment gains. If you assume a total return of 7.5% per year, a $300,000 portfolio would generate $22,500 in annual returns, working out to $1,875 per month. That's close to but not quite as much as the $2,500 pension payment, and it's of course subject to the risk of much worse investment returns during your retirement years.

In this example, there are good reasons why different people might come to different conclusions about the best thing to do. However, if your company offered a much larger lump sum -- say, $600,000 -- then it would almost certainly make sense to take it. If the amount were much lower -- perhaps $150,000 -- then you'd almost never want to take the lump sum over the monthly pension payments.

The right pick for you

There's no one-size-fits-all answer for whether a lump sum or a monthly payment will work better for you. But in general, the more you have in other retirement savings, such as IRAs, the less need you have for the flexibility a lump sum can provide, and the more useful an added monthly pension can be. If you have no other savings beyond Social Security and your pension, on the other hand, having a lump sum offers a lot more flexibility in the event of unexpected big expenses.

A lot depends on your temperament. Some retirees love the idea of managing their own investments and ensuring that they leave a legacy for their loved ones, and if you're one of them, a lump sum can give you a much better opportunity to build up savings that will give your family a leg up financially. Other retirees find investing a burden, preferring to leave it to their former employer. Monthly pension income is a lot easier to budget for, even if it doesn't give you the same options in every circumstance.

You owe it to yourself and your family to make sure your pension works as hard as it can for you. You must consider carefully which pension options to choose, because once you've made your choice, it's generally impossible to change your mind. By knowing your own preferences about whether you want to be responsible for investing your retirement savings or would rather leave it in the hands of the pension plan, you'll be best able to make a choice you can live with for the rest of your life.

Friday, June 1, 2018

Top 5 Casino Stocks To Own Right Now

tags:NGVC,PUK,MPWR,EL,PKX,

Wynn Resorts (WYNN) soared nearly to the top of the S&P 500 today after Morgan Stanley argued that the casino stock had the potential to double.

Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Wynn Resorts�gained 4.8% to $104.30 today, while the S&P 500 finished little changed at�2,373.47. At 2:45, Wynn was easily the top performing stock in the S&P 500, only to be surpassed by Citrix’s (CTXS) late day surge.

Morgan Stanley’s Thomas Allen and team explain how Wynn could double:

Our AlphaWise work on Google search data and separate analyses of market trends suggest the Street is too low on WYNN’s Macau market share gains. Our base case implies 20% upside; bull case, the stock could double.

Consensus forecasts WYNN to essentially not grow Macau market share over 4Q16, despite the Aug ’16 opening of Wynn Palace (which increased WYNN’s room capacity by 170%) and the general view that the benefit from the property has been disappointing so far. We see upside to WYNN’s market share supported by (1) analysis of Google search trends, (2) current market dynamics and WYNN actions, and (3) the performance of WYNN��s first Macau property

Top 5 Casino Stocks To Own Right Now: Natural Grocers by Vitamin Cottage, Inc.(NGVC)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Lisa Levin] Gainers Biostar Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: BSPM) shares rose 35.8 percent to $3.00. Commercial Vehicle Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: CVGI) shares surged 32 percent to $8.94 after reporting upbeat Q1 earnings. Carbon Black, Inc. (NASDAQ: CBLK) gained 29.6 percent to $24.62. Carbon Black priced its IPO at $19 per share. California Resources Corporation (NYSE: CRC) shares rose 26.8 percent to $32.70 following upbeat Q1 earnings. Pandora Media, Inc. (NYSE: P) gained 25 percent to $7.185 after reporting strong quarterly results. Medifast, Inc. (NYSE: MED) shares climbed 23.7 percent to $122.87 after the company reported strong Q1 results and raised its FY18 guidance. Natural Grocers by Vitamin Cottage, Inc. (NYSE: NGVC) rose 23.2 percent to $8.4999 after reporting Q2 results. Portola Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: PTLA) gained 22.2 percent to $41.27 after the FDA approved the company's Andexxa, the only antidote indicated for patients treated with rivaroxaban and apixaban. Shake Shack Inc (NYSE: SHAK) rose 22.2 percent to $57.955 after the company reported upbeat results for its first quarter and raised its FY18 guidance. Atomera Incorporated (NASDAQ: ATOM) jumped 19.7 percent to $6.12 after reporting Q1 results. Super Micro Computer, Inc. (NASDAQ: SMCI) rose 16.4 percent to $21.00 after reporting strong preliminary results for the third quarter. Titan International, Inc. (NYSE: TWI) shares rose 16.4 percent to $12.21 following Q1 earnings. Integer Holdings Corporation (NYSE: ITGR) shares gained 14.9 percent to $63.75 following Q1 results. Control4 Corporation (NASDAQ: CTRL) shares climbed 14.5 percent to $23.98 folloiwng strong Q1 results. B&G Foods, Inc. (NYSE: BGS) climbed 12.6 percent to $25.40 after reporting Q1 earnings. HMS Holdings Corp (NASDAQ: HMSY) shares gained 10 percent to $19.59 after reporting upbeat quarterly earnings. Viavi Solutions Inc. (NASDAQ: VIAV) rose 7 percent to $10.09 following Q3 r
  • [By Shane Hupp]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on Vitamin Cottage Natural Grocers (NGVC)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

  • [By Lisa Levin] Gainers Biostar Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: BSPM) shares jumped 29.86 percent to close at $2.87 on Friday. Commercial Vehicle Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: CVGI) shares gained 28.87 percent to close at $8.75 after reporting upbeat Q1 earnings. Mexco Energy Corporation (NYSE: MXC) gained 27.02 percent to close at $5.4744. Carbon Black, Inc. (NASDAQ: CBLK) climbed 26 percent to close at $23.94. Carbon Black priced its IPO at $19 per share. Portola Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: PTLA) rose 25.64 percent to close at $42.44 after the FDA approved the company's Andexxa, the only antidote indicated for patients treated with rivaroxaban and apixaban. Natural Grocers by Vitamin Cottage, Inc. (NYSE: NGVC) rose 23.19 percent to close at $8.50 after reporting Q2 results. California Resources Corporation (NYSE: CRC) shares gained 22.45 percent to close at $31.58 following upbeat Q1 earnings. Atomera Incorporated (NASDAQ: ATOM) gained 22.31 percent to close at $6.25 after reporting Q1 results. Medifast, Inc. (NYSE: MED) shares jumped 22.27 percent to close at $121.46 after the company reported strong Q1 results and raised its FY18 guidance. Jerash Holdings (US), Inc. (NASDAQ: JRSH) gained 20.86 percent to close at $8.46. Pandora Media, Inc. (NYSE: P) rose 19.83 percent to close at $6.89 after reporting strong quarterly results. Shake Shack Inc (NYSE: SHAK) rose 18.01 percent to close at $55.95 on Friday after the company reported upbeat results for its first quarter and raised its FY18 guidance. Super Micro Computer, Inc. (NASDAQ: SMCI) rose 17.73 percent to close at $21.25 after reporting strong preliminary results for the third quarter. Schmitt Industries, Inc. (NASDAQ: SMIT) rose 17.41 percent to close at $2.36. Titan International, Inc. (NYSE: TWI) shares gained 16.78 percent to close at $12.25 following Q1 earnings. Integer Holdings Corporation (NYSE: ITGR) shares rose 14.23 percent to close at $63.40 following Q1 result
  • [By Logan Wallace]

    Ahold Delhaize (OTCMKTS: ADRNY) and Vitamin Cottage Natural Grocers (NYSE:NGVC) are both consumer staples companies, but which is the better stock? We will contrast the two businesses based on the strength of their earnings, valuation, risk, institutional ownership, profitability, analyst recommendations and dividends.

Top 5 Casino Stocks To Own Right Now: Prudential Public Limited Company(PUK)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    Here are some of the news headlines that may have effected Accern’s rankings:

    Get Prudential alerts: Zacks Investment Research Lowers Prudential (PUK) to Hold (americanbankingnews.com) Financial wellness program popularity rises among employers, up 63 percentage points in two years (markets.financialcontent.com) FY2018 EPS Estimates for Prudential (PUK) Reduced by Jefferies Group (americanbankingnews.com) Jefferies Group Weighs in on Prudential’s FY2020 Earnings (PUK) (americanbankingnews.com) ValuEngine Downgrades Prudential (PUK) to Hold (americanbankingnews.com)

    Shares of PUK stock traded down $0.02 during trading on Tuesday, hitting $51.56. 141,455 shares of the stock traded hands, compared to its average volume of 198,097. The firm has a market cap of $66.49 billion, a PE ratio of 13.79, a PEG ratio of 1.34 and a beta of 1.55. The company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.39, a quick ratio of 0.03 and a current ratio of 0.03. Prudential has a 52-week low of $44.49 and a 52-week high of $55.36.

  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    Prudential (NYSE: PUK) and Reinsurance Group of America (NYSE:RGA) are both finance companies, but which is the superior stock? We will contrast the two companies based on the strength of their analyst recommendations, earnings, valuation, dividends, risk, profitability and institutional ownership.

  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    ValuEngine lowered shares of Prudential (NYSE:PUK) from a buy rating to a hold rating in a research note issued to investors on Wednesday morning.

    Several other analysts have also recently issued reports on the stock. Zacks Investment Research upgraded shares of Prudential from a hold rating to a buy rating and set a $57.00 target price on the stock in a research note on Tuesday, March 27th. Berenberg Bank cut shares of Prudential from a hold rating to a sell rating in a research note on Thursday, March 29th. Finally, Citigroup cut shares of Prudential from a buy rating to a neutral rating in a research note on Wednesday, April 25th. One equities research analyst has rated the stock with a sell rating, three have issued a hold rating and two have given a buy rating to the company. The stock currently has an average rating of Hold and an average price target of $57.00.

Top 5 Casino Stocks To Own Right Now: Monolithic Power Systems, Inc.(MPWR)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Shane Hupp]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on Monolithic Power Systems (MPWR)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

Top 5 Casino Stocks To Own Right Now: Estee Lauder Companies, Inc. (EL)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Logan Wallace]

    Est茅e Lauder Companies (NYSE:EL) – Investment analysts at Piper Jaffray lifted their FY2018 earnings estimates for shares of Est茅e Lauder Companies in a research report issued on Wednesday, May 2nd. Piper Jaffray analyst E. Murphy now forecasts that the company will post earnings per share of $4.43 for the year, up from their previous forecast of $4.38. Piper Jaffray has a “Buy” rating and a $152.00 price target on the stock. Piper Jaffray also issued estimates for Est茅e Lauder Companies’ Q4 2018 earnings at $0.52 EPS, Q3 2019 earnings at $1.35 EPS, Q4 2019 earnings at $0.53 EPS, Q1 2020 earnings at $1.46 EPS, Q2 2020 earnings at $1.96 EPS, Q3 2020 earnings at $1.52 EPS and FY2020 earnings at $5.58 EPS.

  • [By ]

    "I was mulling over just this concept," Cramer continues, "until we got quarterly earnings last week from Est茅e Lauder Cos. (EL)  . The company's results seemed like a throwback to the good old days, where you got genuine growth through innovation, share take and emerging markets."

  • [By Motley Fool Staff]

    The Industry Focus�team concludes its discussion of�Ulta Beauty (NASDAQ:ULTA)�with a look at the company's tight margin structure -- from the cost of running physical stores -- and how that stacks up against profitability at fellow skincare and cosmetics leader Est茅e Lauder�(NYSE:EL).

Top 5 Casino Stocks To Own Right Now: POSCO(PKX)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Max Byerly]

    Media coverage about POSCO (NYSE:PKX) has trended somewhat positive on Saturday, according to Accern Sentiment Analysis. The research firm scores the sentiment of news coverage by analyzing more than twenty million blog and news sources. Accern ranks coverage of public companies on a scale of negative one to positive one, with scores closest to one being the most favorable. POSCO earned a news sentiment score of 0.22 on Accern’s scale. Accern also gave news headlines about the basic materials company an impact score of 46.5366586800129 out of 100, meaning that recent news coverage is somewhat unlikely to have an impact on the company’s share price in the near future.

Tuesday, May 29, 2018

Is Holly Energy Partners, L.P. (HEP) a Buy?

Investors looking for big dividends in the energy sector will no doubt be thrilled by Holly Energy Partners' (NYSE:HEP) above-8% yield. The master limited partnership's (MLP) yield trounces many of its peers' as well as that of its parent company HollyFrontier (NYSE:HFC).

But a top yield isn't all that investors need to look at. And there are signs that Holly may underperform the stock market in coming years. Let's take a closer look to see whether or not Holly is actually a buy.

Big changes

Before you even consider buying an MLP, you should know that in exchange for preferential tax treatment, the U.S. government requires MLPs to pay out almost all of their income in the form of distributions to their unitholders. This usually means they offer big yields...and some extra hoops for investors to jump through at tax time.

A series of pipelines

Holly Energy Partners is a midstream pipeline operator and refiner. Image source: Getty Images.

Hoops or no hoops, Holly has certainly had an impressive track record of rewarding its unitholders with regular quarterly distribution increases. In fact, the partnership has upped its distribution every quarter since going public in 2004. That investor-friendly track record has continued, even as Holly has made some big changes to its operating structure to better align the goals of general partner HollyFrontier with the goals of its other investors, through the elimination of incentive distribution rights.

In order to make this change, though, Holly had to issue a batch of new units, which caused the company's distribution coverage -- the amount of cash it spins off to pay the distribution -- to drop to dangerously low levels. Coverage was just 1.0 times in 2017 and is expected to be just 1.0 times again in 2018 -- in other words, just enough to cover the distribution, and no more. That should be of concern to investors unless there's a solid plan to improve the partnership's cash flow in the near future.

Out of options

Sadly, it looks as though there isn't an easy fix. That's because HollyFrontier has already dropped down -- that is, sold to Holly Energy Partners -- all of its assets that make sense for Holly to take on. With no further dropdowns from its general partner, Holly will have to find other ways to grow its business.

One way would be to acquire another company. But unfortunately, there are slim pickings for viable acquisition targets right now. On the company's first-quarter 2018 earnings call, CEO George Damiris sounded pretty pessimistic about the partnership's prospects for acquisitions in the near future: "[T]here really aren't a whole lot of smaller opportunities in Permian and ... most of the smaller systems are full already. And most of the activity is oriented around new construction, or the new volumes that are coming out in the area."

In other words, why acquire a company that's fueling its growth with new construction when you can just build the new construction yourself? And, in fact, that's just what Holly plans to do: organically grow the business through new projects.

Slow and steady may not win the race

Organic growth may be the only viable option left for Holly, but it isn't necessarily an attractive one. Given its slim coverage ratio, the company would almost certainly have to take on additional debt to finance a major growth project. But that's something management may be loath to do, having just paid down its debt to below 4 times trailing EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization), which is the partnership's target level.

Without going into debt -- or issuing new units, which would further stretch the company's distributions -- Holly is left to focus on smaller growth projects. This year, for example, the company will make some small improvements to a pair of recently acquired pipelines to improve their capacity, and add a new truck loading rack to the Delaware Basin to accommodate increased diesel demand in the region.

If that doesn't sound like much, it's because it's really not. The truck loading rack is estimated to cost between $10 million and $20 million, while the pipeline improvements, according to CFO Rich Voliva, are in the "single-digit-million range." For a $3 billion company, that's not going to move the needle much. And indeed, the projection is for quarterly distribution growth to come in at just $0.005 -- half a cent�-- each quarter, or 4% for the year, a far cry from the robust 6% to 8% growth we've seen over the last five years. That may not be something investors want to sign on for.

Investor takeaway

An 8.8% yield -- which is what Holly is currently offering -- is nothing to sneeze at, and the partnership may be worth buying on that basis alone. Certainly, management has an excellent track record of regularly upping its distribution, and even though the coverage is a bit thin at present, Holly sports a solid balance sheet and has enough liquidity to cover its bases for a few quarters if it needs to.

However, the lack of apparent options for robust growth -- no dropdowns, no obvious acquisition targets -- may hamstring the company's growth moving forward, so it's tough to call Holly a definite buy. There are other players in the oil and gas space that you might want to check out first. Still, an energy investor with a diversified portfolio probably won't be unhappy making Holly Energy Partners a part of it.