Archive for May 28th, 2008

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The Associated Press reports that Spam sales are on the rise. Cans of Spam — a pig byproduct — are flying off the shelf as consumers are turning more to lunch meats and other lower-cost foods to extend their already stretched food budgets.

As I posted, consumers are going on a recession diet. I hadn’t thought of Spam as a way to play this trend. But its sales are up 10.6% and its manufacturer, Hormel Foods (NYSE: HRL) has seen its profits rise 14%. But the price of Spam is up more than Hormel’s stock, with the average 12 oz. can costing about $2.62. That’s an increase of 17 cents, or almost 7% from the same time last year.

Despite rising prices, Spam seems like a good substitute to consumers. AP quotes Kimberly Quan, a stay-at-home mother of three, who has been feeding her family more Spam in the last six months as she tries to make her food budget go further. “It’s canned meat and it’s in the cupboard and if everything else is gone from the fridge, it’s there.”

Spam was good enough for Allied troops in WW II. Yet Hormel stock is up a mere 4% in the last year. With earnings expected to rise 8.6% on a P/E of 16, the stock isn’t cheap.

So you need to decide: Is Spam good enough for your family and its stock portfolio?

Peter Cohan is President of Peter S. Cohan & Associates. He also instructs management at Babson College and edits The Cohan Letter. He has no financial interest in the securities mentioned.

 

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While the stock has taken a beating over the last six months, Israeli WiMAX player Alvarion (NASDAQ: ALVR) continues to sign deal after deal. On Tuesady, the company announced a deal with AccessKenya Group for, “Alvarion to supply WiMAX equipment for what will be the country’s largest WiMAX network. AccessKenya will invest $3.5 million to build the network, which will initially include 35 base stations in Nairobi and the port of Mombasa.”

Today the company announced another deal. This one is with Balticum TV. Alvarion is “supplying its BreezeMAX network to Balticum TV for deployment in the three Baltic states Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia.

Alvarion is very strong in the developing world. It has been growing revenues by over 30% a year, and sports more than 225 WiMAX commercial deployments.

If WiMAX never takes hold in North America, that might present some downward pressure on the stock. On the other hand, it is very strong in the developing world. For long-term investors looking for a beaten up company in the WiMAX space, you might want to spend some time researching Alvarion.

Aaron Katsman is the lead Portfolio Manager and Managing Director of America Israel Investment Associates, LLC. and Senior Editor of IsraelNewsletter.com. DISCLOSURE: Writer’s fund has a position in ALVR and is long the stock. He has no position in any other stock mentioned, as of 5/27/08

 

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We’ve all been hearing it — Microsoft Corp.’s (NASDAQ: MSFT) failure to win over consumers and business users with the Windows Vista operating system is causing sales of the older Windows XP operating system to stay afloat. Microsoft doesn’t want this, of course. It’s true that the software maker has shipped more than 140 million duplicates of Windows Vista, but since Vista is the default operating system on millions of Personal computers, it’s pretty simple to do that.

Some corporate customers, though, have bypassed Windows Vista totally and will wait until the next round. This is Microsoft’s Achilles’ heel — some companies won’t fix something that isn’t broke. General Motors Corp. (NYSE: GM) even states that “We’re considering bypassing Vista and going straight to Windows 7,” in reference to Microsoft’s next operating system due sometime in the future. Yes, many huge companies are indeed taking Windows Vista in — but it’s mostly due to not having much choice with changing out entire computing infrastructures for a global corporation. It takes a visionary IT leader to do that, and those are hard to come by in many cases.

And therein lies a huge problem for Redmond. If customers aren’t excited about its new operating system, why would they think Windows 7 will be any better? It’s hard to fathom Microsoft pouring $5 billion into Vista and being shunned left and right. The software maker’s operating system and Office productivity business subsidizes all its other products where it may make tiny or no money. But what if Windows is destined to become a slow-growth industry? If that’s the case, where is Microsoft’s growth engine going to come from in 2010? 2012? It’s making gobs of money now. Will it last? When its main product underwhelms much of the market, the question has to be asked.

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FiReaNGeL writes “Scientists were able to extract authentic DNA from ancient Viking skeletons, avoiding many of the problems of contamination faced by past researchers. Analysis of DNA from the remains of ancient humans provides valuable insights into such important questions as the origin of genetic diseases, migration patterns of our forefathers and tribal and family patterns. Using freshly sampled material from ten Viking skeletons from around AD 1,000, from a non-Christian burial site on the Danish island of Funen, Dissing and colleagues showed that it is indeed possible to retrieve authentic DNA from ancient humans.”

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spandex_panda writes “There are a few photos of the Mars Lander on the ground — you can see its parachute and its heat shield a few kilometers away, too. There’s a very cool looking picture of it floating down, actually captured while it’s in the air with its parachute out!” We also have a YouTube video all about the robot arm that will dig down and probably find a groundhog who we all hope will see his shadow.

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otter42 writes “The International Space Station’s toilet has gone kaput. It seems that the system for separating solid and liquid waste has developed a fault. ‘Solids’ go where they’re supposed to, but ‘liquids’ don’t. The astronauts have bypassed the ‘”the troublesome hardware” for urine collection with a “special receptacle.”‘ Something tells me they’re glad the failure wasn’t the other way around.” Update: 05/28 21:54 GMT by T : According to a post on Engadget, the toilet’s now been repaired.

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The banks are starting to call in their markers. Home equity lines of credit, also known as HELOCs, were all the rage over the past few years and became very common among homeowners wanting to free up some equity. Perhaps it was for a room addition or college tuition. Maybe it was a 30 foot sail boat or just consolidating credit card bills at the lower interest rates. For me, it was used to create an opportunity fund for real estate investments.

Whatever your deal was, the HELOC landscape is changing rapidly. According to one of my lenders, Wells Fargo Bank (NYSE: WFC), the retail banking industry is looking for safety and liquidity — and to improve theirs, they might be reducing yours. I’ve heard the same thing from mortgage brokers and private equity sources.

Lenders have been getting nervous as they watch home values move lower. They were writing equity lines at 80% loan-to-value. To maintain a margin of safety, they are reducing their exposure by calling due any unused portion of the available line. This means that if you had only used $100,000 of your $150,000 equity line you may receive notice in the mail that they are reducing the line to $100,000 and your available cash is zero.

In some cases where the loan-to-value has plummeted, you might even be asked to pay back some of the outstanding balance to align with the banks current loan standards. All this can happen even if your loan has always been current and your credit rating is strong.

There’s another reason the banks are calling in the loans and reducing leverage. According to one of my lenders, the banks have to reserve capital to meet their equity line obligations. By reducing the HELOC amounts, they can free up capital for other purposes. In today’s very tight credit markets, where bank margins (or spreads) are increasing, they’ve a lot of incentive to do this.

Like most things, people can readily adapt to the new lending environment if they have reasonable notice. What seems to be getting some borrowers steamed is that the HELOC notices are being sent out with tiny warning — so I’m warning you now.

Sheldon Liber is the CEO of a small private investment company and the principal for design and research at an architecture & planning firm. He writes the columns Chasing Value and Serious Money.

 

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The banks are starting to call in their markers. Home equity lines of credit, also known as HELOCs, were all the rage over the past few years and became very common among homeowners wanting to free up some equity. Perhaps it was for a room addition or college tuition. Maybe it was a 30 foot sail boat or just consolidating credit card bills at the lower interest rates. For me, it was used to create an opportunity fund for real estate investments.

Whatever your deal was, the HELOC landscape is changing rapidly. According to one of my lenders, Wells Fargo Bank (NYSE: WFC), the retail banking industry is looking for safety and liquidity — and to improve theirs, they may be reducing yours. I have heard the same thing from mortgage brokers and private equity sources.

Lenders have been getting nervous as they watch home values move lower. They were writing equity lines at 80% loan-to-value. To maintain a margin of safety, they’re reducing their exposure by calling due any unused portion of the available line. This means that if you had only used $100,000 of your $150,000 equity line you may receive notice in the mail that they’re reducing the line to $100,000 and your available cash is zero.

In some cases where the loan-to-value has plummeted, you might even be asked to pay back some of the outstanding balance to align with the banks current loan standards. All this can happen even if your loan has always been current and your credit rating is strong.

There is another reason the banks are calling in the loans and reducing leverage. According to one of my lenders, the banks have to reserve capital to meet their equity line obligations. By reducing the HELOC amounts, they can free up capital for other purposes. In today’s very tight credit markets, where bank margins (or spreads) are increasing, they’ve a lot of incentive to do this.

Like most things, people can readily adapt to the new lending environment if they’ve reasonable notice. What seems to be getting some borrowers steamed is that the HELOC notices are being sent out with little warning — so I’m warning you now.

Sheldon Liber is the CEO of a small private investment company and the principal for design and research at an architecture & planning firm. He writes the columns Chasing Value and Serious Money.

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“The markets seemed on the verge of a major sea change,” states economist David Smith. In his Cyclical Investing Quarterly, he offers a fascinating review of his concerns for the dangers that lie ahead.

“Recent economic data provides considerable foundation for Main Street fears and little support for Wall Street hopes.

“Two of the economy’s mainstays, housing and autos, continue to tank and consumers are being squeezed between falling real incomes and rising cost of living - notably in energy and food, the two components eliminated from the ‘core’ inflation indices by those who claim inflation is ‘under control.’

“The consequences of these economic stresses can be seen in falling consumer confidence, weak consumer spending, rising bankruptcies among retailers and defaults among un-creditworthy borrowers.

“The knock-on effects include a global crisis in the financial sector, a pullback in U.S. business spending,
mounting layoffs and an uptrend in unemployment, all of which, in my view, pretty much puts the nail in the coffin of the Goldilocks scenario.

“This view is seconded by chief executive officers in the financial-services industry, who placed the likelihood of a recession at 88%, with one in three putting the odds at 100%.

“Meanwhile, US and European central banks are flooding capital markets with liquidity in an effort to prevent credit markets from seizing up. As I’ve often said, ‘There is no free lunch.

“This flood of new money will eventually come back to haunt us as inflation, about which the ECB and Bank of England show due concern, and, if the current plateau in U.S. money supply is any indication, so too does the Fed.

“For investors, the threat of inflation means bond yields will probably climb (and bond prices fall), overriding the contrary pressures associated with economic weakness. My advice, keep your maturities short.

“Wall Streets hopes of an economic rebound in the second half are predicated on a revival in consumer spending, which in turn would encourage business to invest in new plant and equipment.

“The key drivers reinvigorating consumer spending, the theory goes, are $600 per person rebates from the Treasury and lowered short-term interest rates. It seems unlikely that a $600 per person windfall will make much of an impact.

“When the effects of this ’shot-in-the-arm’ wear off, American consumers will still be facing the grim realities of falling home prices; high food, gas, medical and college expenses, stagnant incomes and record levels of personal debt.

“Lower interest rates are unlikely to persuade households up to their eyeballs in debt to borrow and spend liberally, nor will they inspire shell-shocked banks to liberalize their credit standards.

“The only solution for the predicament in which most American consumers find themselves, is the reduction of record household debt. That’s the ultimate answer to the economic malaise affecting the nation.

“Any policy that fails to contribute to the reduction of household debt is doomed to failure in the long run. Debt reduction can be accomplished only in four ways: earn more, spend less, sell assets or default.

Earning more is improbable, given the competitive pressures on wages from globalization and the disinclination of U.S. corporations to share the bounty of increased productivity with anyone other than top executives and shareholders.

Spending less may be forced upon American consumers, squeezed between stagnant incomes and rising cost of living. However, spending less, so as to pay down debt, will mean a recession, contrary to Wall Street hopes.

Selling assets primarily means selling homes, Americans’ main asset. Many Americans are doing just that, at drastically reduced prices, and in so doing are further depressing the market and dampening the economic outlook. Whether they are then using the proceeds to pay down debt or sustain consumption is open to question. If they sell stocks and bonds, that too will have a detrimental economic effect.

Default is becoming an increasingly necessary solution to excessive household debt burdens. As one might anticipate, default has first become widespread among the least creditworthy borrowers - so-called ’subprime’ borrowers - but the practice seems to be extending up the ladder of creditworthiness. Credit card abusers are next.

As cascading defaults have spread, banks have become more reticent to lend, short-circuiting the borrow-and-spend dynamic that has sustained the economy for many years. To the extent that defaults are resorted to as a means of reducing debt, the economy will suffer.

“Bottom line: The band-aid solutions proposed by Washington, failing to address the underlying malaise associated with excessive personal debt, are unlikely to fulfill Wall Street’s hopes of a return to sustainable, moderate economic expansion. Accordingly, an economic contraction in the near-term seems baked into the cake.

“Whether the contraction will be inflationary or disinflationary, will depend on whether the Fed continues to flood the credit markets with new money, in which case serious stagflation will result, or whether it stands fast against inflation, in which case the economy will contract and inflation will abate.

“My ideal estimate of the situation is this: In attempting to revive the economy with a flood of new money in recent months, the Fed has infected the economy with inflation. Given the lag between monetary action and economic reaction, we’ll probably witness more stagflation.

“The recent monetary plateau might indicate the Fed’s belated attempt to quash inflation. Again, given the lag between monetary action and economic reaction, if the Fed sticks to this course of action, the economy will be starved for fuel. So the outlook is for more stagflation followed by a serious economic contraction.”

Each day, Steven Halpern’s TheStockAdvisors.com offers the latest market commentary and favorite investment ideas from the nation’s leading financial newsletter advisors.

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An anonymous reader commends a recently published study involving a new way to analyze genetic variation in human populations (full article published in PLOS Genetics): “[S]cientists from Ireland, the UK and the US analysed 2,540 genetic markers in the DNA of almost 1,000 people from around the world whose genetic material had been collected by the Human Genome Diversity Project. The results include a number of surprises… the Yakut people of northern Siberia were found to have received a significant genetic contribution from the population of the Orkney Islands, which lie off the coast of Scotland… there must have been a period of gene flow from northern Europe to east Asia. The study also shed light on the peopling of the Americas, as the results advocate that the native populations of north and south America have different origins.”

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