Tag Archives: UBS

Ares Capital to Float New Stock Issue

By Eric Volkman, The Motley Fool

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Ares Capital is making a new attempt to expand its capital base. The company will float a 16.65 million share common stock issue in an underwritten public offering. The firm also plans to offer its underwriters an option to purchase up to an additional 2.4975 million common shares collectively.

Ares Capital said it intends to use the proceeds of the issue to pay down debt and for “general corporate purposes, which may include investing in portfolio companies in accordance with its investment objective.”

The joint book-running managers of the issue are Bank of America‘s Merrill Lynch, JPMorgan Chase unit J.P. Morgan, UBS, and Morgan Stanley. Ares Capital did not specify the time frame for the offering.

The article Ares Capital to Float New Stock Issue originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Eric Volkman owns shares of Ares Capital. The Motley Fool owns shares of Bank of America. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Copyright © 1995 – 2013 The Motley Fool, LLC. All rights reserved. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Groupon's Momentum Fades. What's Left for Investors Now?

By Alex Planes, The Motley Fool

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Groupon can’t seem to catch a break. It was finally starting to climb out of its deep post-IPO hole (shares are up 20% year to date) when analysts at UBS began tracking the company, initiating coverage with a “sell” rating and a $4.40 price target this morning. That price target would bring Groupon back in line with its year-end 2012 price range — though it would still be a good bit higher than the stock‘s $2.60 per-share bottom of last November.

UBS analyst Eric Sheridan‘s view is that Groupon “has a largely unproven business model, a wide-ranging global business mix in transformation, and is undergoing a management change.” Nothing here is new or surprising to anyone who has followed Groupon on even a casual basis over the past year or so. So why should the market react as it has, pushing shares down 6% today? Maybe investors were simply looking for an excuse to take some dead-cat-bounce profit and run.

Is there really no hope left for Groupon? Let’s dig into these assertions.

Unproven business model
Is Groupon unproven? Well, at one point it was lauded as the fastest-growing company in history. Its 2012 revenue was more than $2.3 billion, which is a pretty decent haul for a company that hasn’t even been around for five full years. For comparison, Google , founded in late 1998, didn’t surpass $2 billion in annual revenue until 2004. On the other hand, Google was profitable and free-cash-flow positive before then. Groupon…not so much:

GRPN Revenue TTM data by YCharts.

Most worrisome for investors is a 2012 trend of lower free cash flow, which was Groupon’s only real bastion of financial good news. Industrywide, the picture also looks bleak: Primary competitor LivingSocial has been in payroll-slashing mode since last year, and LivingSocial part-owner Amazon.com took a write-off for its stake in the floundering second-place daily dealster.

Further, the repeated attacks on Groupon’s unconventional accounting continue. Last Friday, longtime Groupon critic and Villanova Business School professor Anthony Catanach renewed his assault, claiming that, among other things:

  • There’s no permanent CEO (more on this below).
  • Groupon is abandoning its original business in favor of e-commerce.
  • Management can’t properly value its acquisitions.
  • Groupon’s financial accounting continues to be problematic.

The last bullet point is most clearly demonstrated in Groupon’s goodwill, which is highlighted particularly because of LivingSocial’s recent writedowns of the same metric. Revenue may be increasing, but investors have been waiting for profit since Groupon’s IPO, and continued accounting concerns make that possibility more remote. Until that day arrives, “unproven” will stick.

Verdict: True (so far).

Wide-ranging and changing business mix
Catanach made the same point as UBS in his complaint, with plenty of evidence direct from the half-off horse‘s mouth. Take a look at the difference between Groupon’s business description and its 2011 10-K (with key points highlighted). First, its business description:

Groupon is a local commerce marketplace that connects merchants …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Midday Report: UBS Releases List of 14 Favorite Stocks

By DailyFinance Staff

Obama NDAA SC State Senator Blocking Nevada Anti NDAA Bill

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Produced by Drew Trachtenberg

Stocks have soared to record levels this year, but one brokerage firm says there are still plenty of profits left to mine.

After the market‘s stellar first-quarter gains, UBS (UBS) is out with a new list of favorite stocks. According to 24/7 Wall Street, UBS names 14 stocks for which it sets target prices at least 25 percent above current levels.

Some are household names like Citigroup (C) and Delta Air Lines (DAL), but there are a number of companies on the list that you may not be familiar with.

There are two energy-related stocks – Halliburton (HAL) and Cobalt International (CIE). Halliburton shares have already jumped 15 percent this year, but the UBS price target sees it gaining another 33 percent.

Robert Nickelsberg/Getty ImagesTwo employees of Halliburton Company moves between large pump trucks at a natural gas well site.

Delta is another one that has soared already this year, up 37 percent. It’s the only transport company to make the list.

There are a couple of others that have also had good runs already this year. Newcastle Investment (NCT), a real estate investment trust, is up 26 percent. And software maker Infoblox (BLOX) has gained 18 percent. It went public a year ago.

UBS also has a pair of drug and bio-pharmaceutical companies on the list. Warner Chilcott (WCRX) may be a bounce-back story. Its shares have lost 40 percent of their value since last May, and it recently warned that earnings this year are likely to fall short of Wall Street estimates. Alexion Pharmaceuticals (ALXN) is another against-the-grain pick. Last week it received a warning letter from the FDA, which said the company has failed to comply with good manufacturing practices.

Along the same line, UBS likes Monster Beverage (MNST), even though the company has been under fire recently because of possible links between its energy drinks and health problems.

Arch Coal (ACI) is the lowest priced stock on the list, trading just above $5 a share. The UBS target is $9. Like other coal companies, Arch has cut production at several mines because of weak demand for coal-based electricity. The stock has tumbled 29 percent so far this year.

Rounding out the list are Whole Foods (WFM), the retailer Ross Stores (ROST), TIBCO Software (TIBX), and Kraton Performance Polymers (KRA).

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

LIBOR Ruling Good for Investors, Bad for Customers

By Molly McCluskey, The Motley Fool

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For those Fools who hoped the LIBOR manipulation scandal might finally confront the sins of big banking, a judgment Friday brought a swift disappointment. A judge ruled that the collusion of 20 banks to rig the worldwide interest rate did not violate U.S. antitrust laws. In doing so, she effectively ended a majority of the private lawsuits brought against the 16 banks involved in the scandal.

As I wrote in January, regulation and fines would have little impact on the banks involved in the rate manipulation. Deutsche Bank was found to have made at least $654 million profit in 2008 due to a rate change. It puts the fines of the other banks in perspective: Barclays‘ $467 million fine, UBS‘s $1.5 billion and Royal Bank of Scotland‘s $612 million.

Any impetus for change would have been led by private lawsuits, and several were filed over the past year. Lawsuits in California, New York and Illinois all alleged significant financial damages as a result of the rate manipulation. Pensions for teachers and government employees, returns for individual investors, and even mortgage rates for homeowners were all affected by the rate manipulation, claimed the lawsuits. The City of Baltimore, as lead plaintiff, claimed the rate manipulation had cost the city millions of dollars, and that the collusion was a clear violation of antitrust laws.

Early in March, JPMorgan Chase , Bank of America , and several other banks involved in antitrust lawsuits claimed the rate wasn’t competitive, and therefore couldn’t violate antitrust laws. The judge agreed.

One bright spot in the scandal: U.K. politicians have called for an improvement of the culture and professional standards in the banking industry, and fines from the banks involved in LIBOR have gone to helping military veterans with combat stress and mental illness.

What does this mean for investors? As I wrote in December, the promise of change to a banking system fraught with financial disasters was encouraging, but actual change would be astounding. The dismissal of the lawsuits proves that change won’t come. While banks may stop manipulating LIBOR, the lack of significant prosecution and/or fines proves once again that such chicanery will continue in one form or another. The only question is, what form will it take next?

Bank of America is one of the 16 banks facing LIBOR charges. The Motley Fool has taken a hard look at the challenges facing the large bank and prepared a special report. Download it today; it’s free for Fools. 

The article LIBOR Ruling Good for Investors, Bad for Customers originally appeared on Fool.com.


Molly McCluskey owns shares of the Royal Bank of Scotland. Follow her on Twitter @MollyEMcCluskey. The Motley Fool owns shares of Bank of America. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Why Gold Prices Will Explode Following Disappointing First Quarter

By Royston Wild, The Motley Fool

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LONDON — Resurgent confidence in the global economy has propelled equities higher in recent months, and investors have in turn shunned the safety of traditional flight-to-safety asset gold. Indeed, the yellow metal is set to record its worst quarterly performance in more than a decade following a 3.7% drop to around $1,600 per ounce.

However, I am convinced that a backdrop of rising inflation — coupled with enduring hiccups in the macroeconomic recovery, particularly in the eurozone — should send yellow metal interest higher as the year progresses. Gold bugs can latch onto rising metal prices through SPDR Gold Trust  and Gold Bullion Securities , instruments that are designed to track movements in the gold price.

Central banks remain active gold buyers
A recent report from UBS showed official sector purchases in the first two months of the year come in at 54 tonnes, Forbes reported, representing a value around $3 billion.

Central banks, most notably in the world’s key emerging markets, have continued to bulk up their gold reserves in recent months. South Korea purchased 20 tonnes of the metal, it was announced earlier this month, while Russia and Kazakhstan also made substantial purchases in February.

Gold purchases by the world’s central banks came in at 534.6 tonnes in 2012, according to the World Gold Council, the highest level since 1964 and up 17% from the previous 12-month period.

The official sector has increasingly turned to the traditional safe-haven asset as an alternative to paper currencies, the value of which are expected to keep on eroding amid renewed stimulus measures in the West.

Monetary easing set to continue
In the U.S., Chicago Federal Reserve President Charles Evans just yesterday commented that the country’s central bank will maintain its bold asset program until a significant uptick in the jobs market materialises. This is not expected until the turn of the year at least.

Further afield, new Bank of Japan governor Haruhiko Kuroda is expected to aggressively bolster asset purchases in a bid to reach the institution’s 2% inflation target and end decades of deflation. Meanwhile, the European Central Bank is also widely tipped to cut rates, possibly as early as next week’s meeting, to boost the region’s flagging economies there.

To compound the global inflation problem, countries around the world are actively weakening their domestic currencies in order to keep their exports competitive. These “currency wars” are expected to ratchet up over the course of the year, placing further pressure on the value the world’s fiat currencies.

Interest in gold ETFs climbed during the height of the Cyprus bailout crisis, and in my opinion the likelihood of further political turmoil — combined with deteriorating economic data — should again boost gold inflows. Fallout from last month’s Italian election continues to rumble on, while German Parliamentary elections in September should herald fresh waves of uncertainty and thus interest in store-of-value gold.

Mine gold stocks for gains
Investors can also gain exposure to a rising gold price through shrewd stock picks in the mining sector. Galloping …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Pinnacle Foods Shares Rise on Market Debut

By Eric Volkman, The Motley Fool

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Pinnacle Foods has had a successful first day of trading on the stock exchange. The company’s shares were up by 11% over their issue price in after-hours trading, changing hands for $22.20 after hitting the market at $20.

Pinnacle, which produces, markets, and distributes a line of frozen food offerings, said it will net roughly $545.2 million from its listing. With those funds, it will retire chunks of its debt.

Barclays, Bank of America subsidiary Merrill Lynch, Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley, and UBS‘ investment bank unit were the joint book-running managers for the issue.

The article Pinnacle Foods Shares Rise on Market Debut originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Eric Volkman has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of Bank of America. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Copyright © 1995 – 2013 The Motley Fool, LLC. All rights reserved. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Do These Retailers Deserve to Be This Cheap?

By Steve Symington, The Motley Fool

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If you’re searching for new investment ideas, a great place to start is by looking for companies with high earnings yields and strong returns on invested capital.

Why? Because companies with strong returns on invested capital typically possess solid competitive advantages and demonstrate a knack for creating shareholder value by reinvesting capital in their businesses. When such companies also sport high earnings yields — meaning they earn a lot for the price we have to pay — they can potentially represent great opportunities for patient, long-term investors to beat the market.

With this in mind, that’s why clothing retailers Express and Buckle have finally piqued my interest.

The numbers
Before we dig further, though, let’s take a quick look at both companies’ key metrics next to two of their publicly traded peers:

  Express Buckle Gap Abercombie & Fitch  
Market Capitalization  $1.5 billion  $2.2 billion  $16.5 billion  $3.6 billion
Debt-to-Equity Ratio  0.66  0.00  0.43  0.03
Current Ratio  1.65  2.15  1.76  1.84
P/E Ratio (TTM)  11.0  13.6  15.0  14.5
Estimated Forward P/E Ratio  10.2  12.7  12.0  11.2
Dividend Yield  N.A.  1.7%  1.7%  1.7%
Payout Ratio (TTM)  N.A.  24%  16%  22%
Return on Capital  26.74%  42.95%  22.7%  6.3%

Source: YCharts and Fool.com. TTM = trailing 12 months

Of course, at first glance and based on the numbers above, there are no glaring problems with Gap or Abercrombie; to the contrary, while Abercrombie’s return on capital may leave a bit to be desired, both stocks appear to be reasonably priced with sustainable dividends supported by relatively healthy underlying businesses.

Right off the bat, however, both Express and Buckle look pretty darn cheap based on their trailing price-to-earnings ratios of 11 and 13.6, giving them decent earnings yields of 9.1% and 7.4%, respectively. Coupled with their even more impressive returns on capital of 26.74% and 42.95%, these two stocks start to look downright mouthwatering.

Express, for one, has manageable debt levels based on its relatively healthy debt-to-equity ratio of 0.66 and current ratio of 1.65. Buckle, however, takes the cake here given its sterling balance sheet, which boasted zero debt and total cash and investments of nearly $180 million at the end of its most recent quarter — and that’s even after Buckle forked out $254.6 million in dividends in 2012, including a massive $4.50-per-share special dividend last December.

So why, then, are these stocks so cheap? After all, there has to be some reason investors aren’t piling in, right?

An Express ticket to profits
On one hand, while Express met expectations for both revenue and earnings per share with its most recent earnings report two weeks ago, the stock is still reeling after falling margins caused by lower-than-expected foot traffic in February resulted in the company offering cautious guidance for 2013. Of course, in exchange for its prudence, Mr. Market pushed shares of Express down by a whopping 10% that day.

Even so, I agree with the analysts at UBS, who quickly chimed in with a buy rating at the time and placed a $21 price target on Express, noting that its long-term story remains favorable as the company is “taking the right steps to fix the business by simplifying pricing, increasing key items, recognizing fashion trends, and increasing customer …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Central Banks Bought More Than $3 Trillion In Gold In 2013: UBS

By Agustino Fontevecchia, Forbes Staff

Gold has been on a definite downtrend since last October, with bullion falling a dramatic 5.1% in February alone.  As prices have dropped and investors lost faith, central banks have been on the opposite side of the trade, gobbling up bullion at a rate of 27-metric tons a month, according to UBS’ gold expert Edel TullyRussia and South Korea are among the biggest buyers, while several smaller, first-time acquirers have emerged, suggesting global central banks aren’t snubbing the yellow metal in the same way the general market seems to have done, which, in the face of it, is definitely bullish for gold. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Swiss papers say US eyes tax info in Liechtenstein

Swiss media report that U.S. prosecutors are poised to step up their probes of wealthy U.S. tax evaders using the tiny principality of Liechtenstein.

Zurich daily newspapers Neue Zuercher Zeitung and Tages-Anzeiger say the U.S. Justice Department has requested statistical data on U.S. clients of Swiss banks with interests in companies or foundations in Liechtenstein.

The reports Wednesday each describe the prosecutors’ request for information by the end of this week as a potential new front in the long-running U.S. probe into more than a dozen Swiss banks, including UBS and Credit Suisse and private banks such as Wegelin & Co., which is closing after admitting to helping American tax cheats.

The papers describe the letter as an informal request that could lead to a formal tax probe.

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Dow Surges Thanks to These Stocks

By Matt Thalman, The Motley Fool

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With housing prices rising and durable-goods sales increasing, investors pushed the markets higher today. The Dow Jones Industrial Average managed to gain 111 points, or 0.77%, while the S&P 500 surged higher by 0.78%, and the Nasdaq rose 0.53%.

The catalyst for these moves were probably the 5.7% increase in durable goods in February and the Case-Schiller Index showing that home prices in the nation’s top 20 cities rose 8.1% in January.

In also helped the index that a number of its components rose more than 1% today.

A few Dow winners
Shares of Johnson & Johnson rose by 1.47% today, after UBS upgraded the company. Analysts at the Swiss bank increased their target price to $87 per share. UBS clearly believes in the future of this company, and I think most investors would agree that Johnson & Johnson will be around for a long time to come. But as my Fool colleague Rich Smith noted earlier today, the company already trades at 21 times earnings at a time when management expects to grow those earnings by only the mid-single digits over the next few years.  

American Express surged higher by 1.62% today, on the heels of the announcement that the company’s Bluebird prepaid cards will now be FDIC-insured. This gives the card a legitimate status for individuals who were previously thinking about using the card but were concerned with the safety of their money. Cardholders can now also have funds directly deposited onto the Bluebird, write checks with it, and use it at ATMs. These new features and the insurance should both help the card gain more users and dramatically increase American Express‘ transaction fee count.  

Lastly, shares of Boeing rose 2.09% following the company’s first 787 Dreamliner test flight with its new lithium battery system. While the news is seen as a positive event, shareholders and management surely would have rather never been in this situation in the first place. The FAA grounded the plane back on Jan. 16. One fire and another emergency landing have kept the plane on the ground while engineers rework the battery system and safety components. Yesterday’s flight is a sign that progress is being made and that the FAA will soon allow the plane to begin flying again.

Boeing operates as a major player in a multitrillion-dollar market in which the opportunities and responsibilities are absolutely massive. However, emerging competitors and the company’s execution problems have investors wondering whether Boeing will live up to its shareholder responsibilities. In our premium research report on the company, two of The Motley Fool’s best minds on industrials have collaborated to provide investors with the key, must-know issues surrounding Boeing. They’ll be updating the report as key news hits, so don’t miss out — simply click here now to claim your copy today.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

BlackBerry Disappoints With Its U.S. Z10 Launch, But The Stock Looks Cheap

By Agustino Fontevecchia

BlackBerry is at a make-it-or-break-it moment and on Thursday will announce its first quarterly earnings numbers since releasing its newest line of smartphones. All eyes will be focusing on the performance of the new Z10s, which seem to have had healthy sales trends abroad and an ?underwhelming? AT&T debut in the U.S. in its first couple of days on the market, according to UBS. It is too early to draw a discernible trend, though, but the company will have to give further insight into a multi-screen device strategy, a content ecosystem, and its cloud strategy in order to remain relevant in the longer-term. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Technology

BofA/Merrill Lynch Slashes RadioShack and, Oddly, Raises Target Price

By 24/7 Wall St.

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RadioShack Corp. (NYSE: RSH) just cannot manage to find any love. The troubled electronics retailer was downgraded to Neutral at BofA/Merrill Lynch, which is really just part of the ongoing wave of negative sentiment around the stock.

Last week we saw that Goldman Sachs cut the rating to Sell from an already cautious Neutral. In late February, UBS maintained a Sell rating. We also were confused by its choice for a turnaround CEO due to industry background changes.

Merrill Lynch believes that many of the positive catalysts that it had predicated in its prior Buy rating are largely priced into the stock. The company is exiting its loss-making partnership with Target Corp. (NYSE: TGT). What is interesting is that this downgrade includes a price target increase to $4.00 from $3.50, based on a 0.1-times sales multiple, although upside looks limited until a clear strategic plan is presented. The team here thinks that the the new CEO direction will be very important, but also said that any turnaround plan is likely not coming until the second half of this year.

This sounds yet again like one more example of how and why RadioShack will have to face its future alone.

Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Analyst Calls Tagged: RSH, TGT

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Microsoft Surface sales underwelm, at an estimated 1.5 million units

Microsoft’s Surface RT and Surface Pro haven’t made much of a dent in the tablet market, according to unofficial sales estimates.

So far, Microsoft has sold roughly 1.5 million Surface devices, Bloomberg reports, citing three unnamed sources “with knowledge of the company’s sales.” The split in sales is reportedly more than 1 million units for the Surface RT and about 400,000 units for the Surface Pro.

If accurate, those sales figures fall short of some analysts’ estimates, and possibly Microsoft’s own estimates. Microsoft had reportedly ordered 3 million Surface RT tablets, Bloomberg’s sources said, and UBS analyst Brent Thrill had projected Microsoft would sell 2 million of them in the December quarter alone. Other analysts forecast lower sales, with Detwiler Fenton expecting RT sales to top out at 600,000 in the fourth quarter.

Microsoft shrugs

Microsoft has downplayed the need for strong Surface sales, and the company’s own expectations don’t seem as high as those of industry analysts. Last July, before the launch of Windows 8, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said the company “may sell a few million” Surface tablets in the product’s first 12 months. Unless sales pick up from now until July, it’s unlikely that Microsoft will hit that mark, but it could come close.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

5 Big Analyst Upgrades &amp; Downgrades for Wednesday (BA, WAG, WMT, YUM, ZTS)

By 24/7 Wall St.

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24/7 Wall St. has seen many analyst upgrades and downgrades this Wednesday, but there are several calls which really stand out in key companies.

Boeing Co. (NYSE: BA) was reiterated with a “Buy” rating and with a $100 price target at BofA Merrill Lynch based partly upon Dreamliner tests resuming. It was also upgraded to Hold from Underweight at BB&T and Stifel Nicolaus maintained a “Buy” rating and raised its target to $100 from $85 this morning.

Walgreen Co. (NYSE: WAG) was raised to Buy from Neutral at UBS.

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (NYSE: WMT) was reiterated as “Buy” but what stood out here was the firm’s $85 price target at BofA Merrill Lynch.

Yum! Brands INc. (NYSE: YUM) was also maintained as Outperform and its target price was raised by $3 to $70 at Credit SUisse based upon the bleeding in China finally letting up.

Zoetis Inc. (NYSE: ZTS) was started in coverage by the major brokerage firms now that the quiet period has ended: started as Neutral at BofA/Merrill Lynch; started as Neutral at Goldman Sachs; started as Buy at Jefferies; started as Overweight at JPMorgan; started as Buy at Deutsche Bank.

by Jon C. Ogg at 247wallst.com

Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Medgenics Appoints Former Chairman and CEO of UBS Financial Services Joseph J. Grano, Jr. to Board o

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Medgenics Appoints Former Chairman and CEO of UBS Financial Services Joseph J. Grano, Jr. to Board of Directors

MISGAV, Israel & SAN FRANCISCO–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Medgenics, Inc. (NYSE MKT: MDGN and AIM: MEDU, MEDG) (the “Company” or “Medgenics”), the developer of a novel platform technology for the sustained production and delivery of therapeutic proteins in patients using their own tissue, announces the appointment of Joseph J. Grano, Jr. to the Company’s Board of Directors effective March 15, 2013. Mr. Grano’s appointment fills the vacancy resulting from Gary Brukardt‘s death in 2012.

Mr. Grano is Chairman and CEO of Centurion Holdings LLC, a provider of advisory services to public and private clients on all facets of business strategy and capital markets access. Previously he was Chairman and CEO of UBS Financial Services Inc. (formerly UBS/PaineWebber), subsequent to the merger between UBS and PaineWebber in 2000. Prior to joining PaineWebber he held various senior management positions at Merrill Lynch including Director of National Sales.

“We are honored to welcome Joe Grano to our Board of Directors. His considerable experience and business acumen will be invaluable assets to Medgenics as we develop our proprietary Biopump technology for the sustained production and delivery of therapeutic proteins from the patients’ own dermis. His wealth of knowledge will be a welcome addition to our Board of leading business and biotechnology executives,” stated Andrew L. Pearlman, Chief Executive Officer of Medgenics.

“I am delighted to be joining the Medgenics Board of Directors at this exciting stage of its clinical development. The Biopump technology represents a potential breakthrough in the way we treat a number of chronic diseases and conditions. I am encouraged by the multitude of opportunities this versatile platform technology can address and look forward to helping Medgenics reach the next level,” commented Mr. Grano.

Mr. Grano is the former Chairman of the Board of Governors of NASD and was a member of the NASD‘s Executive Committee. He was appointed by President George W. Bush in 2002 to serve as the Chairman of the Homeland Security Advisory Council, a position he held until August 2005.

Mr. Grano was a captain in the U.S. Special Forces (Green Berets), and is a member of the City University of New York’s Business Leadership Council and a former member of the National Board of D.A.R.E. He holds honorary Doctor of Law degrees from Pepperdine University and Babson College, as well as an honorary Doctor of Human Letters degree from Queens College. He served on the Board of Directors of the YMCA of Greater …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Why Every American Should Care about Bank Record Subpoenas

By Robert W. Wood, Contributor

Few can claim ignorance of the IRS push for full transparency of foreign bank accounts and income. Since the shot heard round the world that brought UBS to its knees, billions in taxes and penalties have been paid. Tens of thousands of U.S. taxpayers sheepishly stepped forward to declare overseas bank accounts. UBS avoided ruin and indictment, the smaller Wegelin private bank did not, and many other banks are not out of the woods. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Does Apple Need More Investor Transparency?

By Evan Niu, CFA, The Motley Fool

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In recent months, both UBS and Barclays have suggested that Apple start hosting Analyst Days again, since it’s been a decade since it stopped the practice. They point to IBM as a company that successfully transitioned into maturity as an example Apple should follow.

Doing so would increase investor transparency since the company would engage more with sell-side analysts on various corporate policies. Tim Cook has made many changes in favor of transparency since becoming CEO.

In the video below, Fool.com’s Alison Southwick and contributor Evan Niu discuss what implications this could have for investors.

There’s 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

Are Apple, Google, and Microsoft Switching Hats?

By Douglas Ehrman, The Motley Fool

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If you spend much time in the financial blogosphere, you come across a common theme when things start to get shaken up: Is company X the new company Y? Right now, with Apple languishing just above its 52-week low, Google sitting at its 52-week high, and Microsoft presumably happy to be a part of the conversation again, there is a nice series of these comparisons to be made.

Is Apple the new Microsoft? Is Google the new Apple? And almost by default: Is Microsoft the new Google? As odd and improbable as this may all seem, particularly if we look back at where each of these companies was sitting last fall, these are legitimate questions that should be asked.

Is Apple the new Microsoft?
History is littered with tales of great empires falling due to stagnation, complacency, and bad timing. Since the stock‘s high above $700 per share last September, Apple shares have tumbled 40%. One of the areas in which the company has been criticized is in the lack of new innovation being seen out of Cupertino. The company has drawn attention over its rumored entry into wearable tech with the iWatch, but there is no indication of when this product might be released.

In a recent research note, UBS analyst Steve Milunovich identified the problem, but warns that investors will likely need to be patient. He also commented on the company’s margins:

And a 30 percent operating margin long-term historically has proven very difficult to protect. We are no longer looking for the gross margin to move back over 40 percent this year. So while we don’t see it coming down a lot, I think longer-term it is a risk.

The new Apple products slated for July are only incremental improvements over existing models. Each of these were the types of problems that caused Microsoft to stagnate for nearly a decade. The company remained profitable, just not the hot name. If Apple is to avoid this fate, it needs to up its game soon.

Is Google the new Apple?
As is the nature of empires, when one falls there is always another standing ready to take its place. While I have long maintained that Google was the true king of tech, based largely on its better-diversified business model, the company seems to have embraced this new role. As Apple shares have fallen, Google is up double-digits this year. The company has been able to successfully grow revenue across market segments, is going to market with Google Glass, and continues to whittle away at Apple’s lead in devices.

While it is hard to compare a device company to a search company per se, it is Google’s tenacity in expanding into new markets that’s allowing it to perform as well as it is. The company was able to grow its app revenue by six times for 2012, it controls an estimated 75% of the search market in the …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Wednesday's Top Upgrades (and Downgrades)

By Rich Smith, The Motley Fool

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This series, brought to you by Yahoo! Finance, looks at which upgrades and downgrades make sense, and which ones investors should act on. Today, our headlines include downgrades for defense contractors AeroVironment and Harris Corp . Meanwhile, though…

LCD specialist Cree lights up the scoreboards
Great news for Cree shareholders this morning: Wall Street likes your stock again. In twin announcements Tuesday, Cree confirmed that it’s going to begin selling a new LED lightbulb, exclusively through Home Depot, and for the low, low price of less than $10. Even better, Cree’s so convinced this product will be a success that it’s upped its revenue guidance for the fiscal third quarter (that’s the one we’re in now) to a new range of from $335 million to $350 million — and on stable gross margins of perhaps 39.5%.

Wall Street loves the news, with Credit Agricole upping its rating from underperform to outperform in a Paris minute yesterday, and Goldman Sachs praising the company’s new “price points as very competitive” and hiking its own price target for Cree stock to $48. This morning, a third analyst joined the Cree fan club, as UBS went a step further and projected Cree shares will hit $51 before a year is out.

Are they right? Well, let’s see here. According to StreetInsider.com, Cree thinks it can earn between $0.16 and $0.21 per share this quarter ($0.31 to $0.36 pro forma). If it’s right, that would work out to at least a double in GAAP profit over last year’s Q3 levels, and perhaps an increase of 162%. Even pro forma, the growth rate would exceed 50%. Either way, that’s a whole heck of a lot faster than the 37% earnings growth Wall Street has Cree pegged for this year, and suggests there’s reason for the analysts’ optimism.

Granted, at 108 times earnings, Cree shares don’t look like much of a bargain on the surface. But if you value the company on its remarkably strong (four times GAAP earnings) free cash flow, and credit it for its strong cash reserves ($886 million, with no debt in evidence), the stock actually looks pretty fairly priced at 20% projected growth, and an enterprise value-to-free-cash-flow ratio of just 19.4. In short, I wouldn’t short Cree on this rally. This stock‘s not nearly as expensive as it looks.

AeroVironment crashes and burns
If only I could say the same for small unmanned aerial vehicle specialist AeroVironment, which yesterday missed earnings badly, then compounded the fumble with a prediction hat fiscal 2013 earnings will come in at just $0.42 a share — down from earlier projections of $1.43. The news prompted an immediate cut in price target by FBR Capital, which slashed expectations by nearly half, and said AV investors will be lucky if their shares are worth even $19 a year from now. BB&T Capital seconded the emotion, pulling its buy rating and downgrading AV to “hold.”

But is the news …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

The Biggest Threat to Apple's Share Price

By Douglas Ehrman, The Motley Fool

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While Apple has faced its share of headwinds over the past few months, having slid 40% from its historic high above $700 per share last September, the company seems to still be facing some real challenges. There is a real concern among investors and industry-watchers that the company’s innovation rate has slowed significantly. Where Apple was once known not only as a technology leader but for its ability to remain focused on great projects, the company has become more reactionary, trying to compete with increasingly well-executed competition. Despite all of these issues, however, the single largest threat to Apple’s share price is the health of the overall market.

Historic levels for the Dow
Tuesday’s trading session has seen the Dow Jones Industrial Average break through all-time intraday highs, trading at levels not seen since 2007 and on pace to close above the record close set Oct. 9, 2007. Much of the run has been triggered by general optimism about the prospects for the economy looking ahead. The rise puts the index up over 8% so far this year and is marked by money moving into stocks. Reuters quotes Russell Investments’ Chief Strategist Stephen Wood, who admits the move is not totally supported by fundamentals: “There is a lot of momentum and rotation going into equities from cash and bonds, and right now sentiment seems to have the upper hand over fundamentals.”

While some disagree, many commentators attribute the rise to action of the Federal Reserve and Chairman Ben Bernanke. Recently, whenever the market has even paused for a breather, the Fed has aggressively pushed to keep the rally alive. Those who take a softer view see Bernanke’s actions as providing liquidity only, and not being a driving factor in the rise. In either case, the Fed has played a significant role in the process, suggesting that any major policy shift has the potential to be a blow to the overall market.

The skeptics point out that these types of peaks often precipitate significant declines; the October 2007 peak came before stock indexes were essentially cut in half. While market internals are solid, the psychological impact of these various factors should not be ignored. Even if the rally has some room to run, the dance between the Fed and the market should be watched.

The Google effect
Over the past several months, as Apple has languished, Google has surged to its highest level of all-time. Apple has stagnated to some extent, reporting its lowest growth statistics in recent memory, while Google continues to find growth and innovation. Though the connection itself may be coincidental, Apple’s troubles are certainly not hurting Google’s ability to fight higher.

Can we all have a little patience?
UBS analyst Steve Miluovich reiterated his buy rating on Apple Tuesday morning, setting a $600 price target, but warning that investors will need to be patient: “The only way out might be innovation in new categories, which will …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance