Tag Archives: Corinthian Colleges

2 of Yesterday's Big Disappointments

By Rich Duprey, The Motley Fool

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The old investing maxim “sell in May and go away” means we’re quickly approaching the time when the incredible run of the Dow Jones Industrial Average over the past three months will be coming to a close. Yesterday’s five-point loss could be the signal that the market is topping here, and with Europe doing all it can to stop the spread of a financial contagion after its bailout of Cyprus, there seems little reason to believe this bull market will continue much longer.

Yesterday’s big loser was Hewlett-Packard, the first quarter’s big winner, though after a 68% gain over the past three months, a small 2% loss is no big deal. But the landscape for computers hasn’t changed, so now comes the point where the turnaround has to gain traction on its own. I’m not so certain it will, though a broad overview of the markets suggests there are still worse places to be standing right now.

Canary in the coal mine
Coal miner Walter Energy took it on the chin (again) yesterday, falling 8% as the ISM manufacturing index posted its biggest miss to expectations in a year, coming in at 51.3 compared with forecasts of 54.0. The bigger worry, however, is new orders falling all the way down to 51.4 from 57.8, which, coupled with a pullback in China‘s economy, diminishes the prospects for renewed industrial demand and, in turn, greater coal demand. Arch CoalPeabody Energy , and Consol Energy all tumbled 3% or more yesterday.

Analysts see a particularly tough year ahead for Walter because of the weak pricing environment. It has significant cash obligations coming due this year, with Wall Street looking askance at the $150 million or so in interest payments and total cash obligations of $365 million, both of which combine to put it between a financial rock and a hard place. 

It faces outside pressure as well from shareholders agitating for change. Hedge-fund operator SAC Capital Partners recently reported a new 5% stake in the miner, while Audley Capital has publicly expressed doubts about management’s capabilities to turn the company around and wants to oust some directors in favor of its own five-man slate.

As coal miners remain under the gun, there appear to be few catalysts in front of Walter to change its downward trajectory.

Wearing the dunce cap
For-profit educators got schooled yesterday as well, with ITT Educational Services falling almost 9%, Grand Canyon Education dropping 5%, and Corinthian Colleges and Career Education both falling about 3% on the day. The one bright spot was Apollo Group , which rose about 1.5% and is up more than 3% since reporting better-than-expected earnings last week.

Yet even in beating Wall Street forecasts, Apollo showed what the problems are facing the sector: falling revenues, higher expenses, and dwindling student enrollments. When ITT reported fourth-quarter earnings in January, it saw all of those same factors, but it didn’t have the luxury of beating expectations. First-quarter results …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Apollo Group Earnings: An Early Look

By Dan Caplinger, The Motley Fool

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Earnings season is just about over, with almost all companies already having reported their quarterly results. But there are still a few companies left to report, and Apollo Group is about to release its quarterly earnings report. The key to making smart investment decisions with stocks releasing their quarter reports is to anticipate how they’ll do before they announce results, leaving you fully prepared to respond quickly to whatever inevitable surprises arise. That way, you’ll be less likely to make an uninformed kneejerk reaction to news that turns out to be exactly the wrong move.

For-profit education has been under siege lately and, as the operator of the industry-leading University of Phoenix, Apollo Group has been at the forefront of the controversy over the business. Let’s take an early look at what’s been happening with Apollo Group over the past quarter, and what we’re likely to see in its quarterly report on Monday.

Stats on Apollo Group

 

 

Analyst EPS Estimate

$0.18

Change From Year-Ago EPS

(69%)

Revenue Estimate

$822.8 million

Change From Year-Ago Revenue

(15%)

Earnings Beats in Past 4 Quarters

4

Source: Yahoo! Finance.

Will Apollo Group stay smart this quarter?
Over the past few months, analysts have greatly reduced their views on Apollo Group‘s earnings. They’ve cut their calls for the most recent quarter by $0.12 per share, although reducing a bit more modestly their full-year fiscal 2013 earnings estimates by $0.08 per share. The stock, meanwhile, hasn’t done well, falling almost 19% since mid-December.

For years, Apollo Group and its peers benefited from the need for workers laid off during the recession to return to school to get training for other careers. But, more recently, enrollment has declined dramatically. Back in January, Apollo said that its overall enrollment was down 14%, with a 15% drop in new-student enrollment. That’s consistent with what peers have seen lately. ITT Education saw its total and new-student enrollment figures fall 17% and 14%, respectively.  DeVry , which has its largest emphasis on business, technology, and management, saw segment enrollment drop 15% in total, and almost 5% for new-student enrollment.

On top of bad business fundamentals, Apollo and its peers have faced scrutiny from regulators and other bodies on areas from loan defaults to student retention. For instance, Corinthian Colleges’ loan default rate of 28.8% greatly exceeds the 25% level at which federal regulations could result in loss of Federal Direct Student Loans and Pell Grants as funding sources. At Apollo, the U.S. government is responsible for 91% of the company’s consolidated revenue and more than 100% of its operating income, putting the for-profit educator on a path toward potentially violating the Department of Education’s 90/10 rule. Moreover, with the Higher Learning Commission having put the University of Phoenix on probation, the issues of student retention and graduation rates remain important as industry watchdogs look …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance