Tag Archives: Lazard Capital Markets

Buy Apple, Don't Buy Microsoft?

By Rick Munarriz, The Motley Fool

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Microsoft and Apple are passing ships, and not in a way that you’d probably expect.

At a time when Apple is shedding investors and Microsoft’s hoping to wow the market with the operating system, mobile platform, and tablet it introduced late last year, sentiment may be shifting back in Apple’s favor.

Lazard Capital Markets is initiating coverage of Apple with a “buy” rating this morning, establishing a price target of $540.

Lazard analysts believe that the worst is behind the consumer tech giant. Sure, Android is eating its lunch and margins will continue to get squeezed, but have investors been approaching Apple the wrong way? Lazard offers up Apple as a data storage play since it’s “instrumental in driving data creation in ways its competitors are not.”

Fresh bullish perspectives are always welcome, especially with Apple trading less than 3% away from its 52-week low.

On the other end of the opinion-o-meter, Bank of America Merrill Lynch is talking down Microsoft. After gluing itself to a “buy” rating on the stock for more than four years, Merrill Lynch lowering its rating to neutral. The original bullishness surrounded a massive stock buyback and the Windows 7 product cycle that didn’t pan out as planned. Things aren’t getting any better now that we’re several months into Windows 8.

Microsoft isn’t necessarily riding high with investors these days. Mr. Softy is trading closer to its 52-week low than its 52-week high at a time when some of the market gauges are hitting new highs. However, Microsoft’s stock hasn’t fallen as hard as Apple has since peaking last year, even though Windows 8, Windows Phone 8, and Surface rollouts have fizzled out as catalysts.

Apple at least has one notable analyst backing it now. If only it could get jaded analysts and even more skeptical investors to follow along.

Got Apple? Get smart.
There’s no doubt that Apple is at the center of technology’s largest revolution ever, and that longtime shareholders have been handsomely rewarded with over 1,000% gains. However, there is a debate raging as to whether Apple remains a buy. The Motley Fool’s senior technology analyst and managing bureau chief, Eric Bleeker, is prepared to fill you in on both reasons to buy and reasons to sell Apple, and what opportunities are left for the company (and your portfolio) going forward. To get instant access to his latest thinking on Apple, simply click here now.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Green Mountain Brews Respect

By Rick Munarriz, Munarriz, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Green Mountain Coffee Roasters is finally getting the respect it deserves.

Lazard Capital Markets boosted its price target on the company behind the popular Keurig single-serve coffee platform yesterday. It initiated coverage of Green Mountain back in September with a buy rating and a $39 price. The stock‘s been on fire in recent months, and the firm has been inching its goals higher accordingly. Yesterday’s move pushes Lazard’s price target from $58 to $67, but don’t assume that the ceiling is just a little more than 20% away. If Green Mountain‘s fundamentals keep improving, it’s a safe bet that Lazard will continue to adjust its marks.

An item on TheFlyOnTheWall.com notes that Lazard also had kind words to say about Starbucks and Chipotle Mexican Grill , lumping all three stocks as having the best upside in the restaurant sector. Lazard is sticking to its $393 price target for Chipotle, though it’s raising its goal on Starbucks from $69 to $74.

One can argue that Green Mountain isn’t really a restaurant stock. There are a growing number of restaurants turning to Keurig K-Cups to brew individual cups of coffee, but Green Mountain is more of an anti-retail play. Keurig offers home owners and company break rooms ways to save on blasts of Joe without having to hit up the local barista.

However, if we’re going to lump all three companies in one pot, it bears pointing out that Green Mountain is the cheapest of the three even though it’s growing a bit faster.

Really.

 

2013 P/E

2013 Rev. Growth

Starbucks

26.4

11.9%

Chipotle

31.2

15.5%

Green Mountain

19.4

15.9%

Source: Yahoo! Finance.

This isn’t a shot at Starbucks or Chipotle. They are both stronger brands than Green Mountain‘s Keurig, and they haven’t been hit with last year’s K-Cup patent expirations and earlier accusations of iffy accounting. However, as Green Mountain leaves the past shrinking in the rearview mirror — proving that it’s a capable growth stock with sound future prospects — the market is clearly warming up to a stock that’s still trading for half of its all-time highs from two summers ago.

There’s caffeinated respect in that K-Cup, and Wall Street‘s ready to drink it up.

This should keep you up tonight
With Green Mountain as cheap as it’s ever been, many investors are wondering whether this is the end of the former market darling or the perfect entry point for an enormous rebound. You can find our recommendation for how to play the company in our new premium research report. In it, you’ll find everything you need to know about Green Mountain, including whether it’s a buy at today’s prices. Click here for instant access.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance