Archive for August 15th, 2008

Anti-Globalism sends this except from the Guardian: “In a report commissioned by the Defense Intelligence Agency, leading scientists were asked to analyze how a greater understanding of the brain over the next 20 years is likely to drive the development of new medicines and technologies. They found several areas in which progress could have a profound impact, including behaviour-altering drugs, scanners that can interpret a person’s say of mind and devices capable of boosting senses such as hearing and vision. …The report highlights one electronic technique, called transcranial direct current stimulation, which involves using electrical pulses to interfere with the firing of neurons in the brain and has been shown to delay a person’s capability to tell a lie.”

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Hugh Pickens writes “When American Swimmer Margaret Hoelzer goes for the gold tonight in the 200-meter backstroke, part of her success will be due to a new system developed by Tim Wei, a mechanical and aerospace engineer at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, that uses fluid dynamics to study human movement allowing scientists and coaches to study how fast and hard a swimmer pushes the water as he moves through it. ‘Wei uses a tracking technique called digital particle image velocimetry, commonly used to measure the flow of small particles around an airplane or small fish or crustaceans in water.’ Wei filtered compressed air in a scuba tank through a porous hose to create bubbles about a tenth of a millimeter in diameter. When an athlete swims through a sheet of bubbles that rises from the pool floor, a camera captures their flow around the swimmer’s body and the images show the direction and speed of the bubbles, which Wei then translates into the swimmer’s thrust using software that he wrote.”

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mattnyc99 writes “A few weeks ago we got first word of NASA’s plan to crash a spacecraft into the moon next February. The new issue of Popular Mechanics has an in-depth look at the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite and its low-cost, lightning-fast mission prep — even if delays have pushed it to late February or early March. Quoting: ‘Andrews had no budget for an expensive lander to seek water, and conditions in the eternally dark polar craters would kill rovers, with temperatures close to minus 300 F. Instead, Blue Ice and its partners at Northrop Grumman came up with a concept to bring the lunar floor out in the open…. Since engineering precision hardware would break the budget, the LCROSS team had to make existing components work together.’”

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Amid an unprecedented decline in the housing market and a significant slowdown in consumer spending, Home Depot (NYSE: HD) is in the unenviable position of being a housing-dependent retailer. Not surprisingly, analysts are skeptical ahead of the company’s second-quarter earnings report, which is slated to hit the Street next Tuesday, August 19, ahead of the opening bell.

According to Thomson Financial, analysts are expecting HD to report a profit of 61 cents per share for the recently concluded quarter. During the past year, the company’s performance in the earnings spotlight has been blended. First Call reports that Home Depot has exceeded earnings estimates in two of the past four quarters, and fallen short of the Street’s mark in the other two reporting periods. Its second-quarter report a year ago was one of the upside surprises; HD beat expectations by five cents per share last August.

However, it doesn’t look like brokerage firms are banking on another Street-beating quarter. There have been 3 downward revisions to HD’s estimated annual earnings, compared to just 1 upward revision (per First Call). Meanwhile, the average 12-month price target on the shares is $29.53. This target is a premium of 8.6% to the stock’s closing price Thursday, but it represents a discount of more than 23% to HD’s current annual high. In other words, analysts’ expectations for the stock are rather low.

Considering this wary attitude, it should come as no surprise that the majority of Home Depot’s analyst rankings are skeptical “holds.” In total, Zacks reports 5 “strong purchases,” 8 “holds,” 1 “sell,” and 2 “strong sells.” While this configuration is hardly a ringing endorsement, it does leave HD with ample chance to benefit from potential upgrades.

And HD could attract some bullish attention, since the stock is showing signs of technical strength recently. The Dow component has shed 17% during the past 52 weeks, but it’s fast approaching breakeven on a year-to-date basis. From its mid-July nadir of $20.76, the equity has galloped 31% higher, and pulled its 10-day and 20-day moving averages into a bullish cross. In fact, the shares of Home Depot are poised to complete this week atop their longer-term 20-week moving average for the first time since mid-May.

Despite this upswing on the charts, option traders are mildly pessimistic ahead of the earnings report. During the past 10 days, HD has racked up a put/call ratio of 1.03 on the International Securities Exchange (ISE). This indicates that traders are displaying a slight preference for puts on the retailer, and it’s also worth noting that option volume on the ISE has been more bearishly skewed just 28% of the time during the past year.

Short sellers are also skeptical, with short interest on the stock rising by 8.4% during the most current reporting period. At HD’s average daily volume, it would take about 4 days for all these bearish bets to be repurchased.

Overall, the pessimistic sentiment toward HD is encouraging to see ahead of earnings. In the event of a weaker-than-expected report or soft forward-looking guidance, the shares are unlikely to be smacked by a large-scale unwinding of optimistic bets. (Of course, the shares could still sell off if earnings disappoint; however, technical support could put the brakes on a major decline.) Plus, if the retailer can manage a positive surprise, there’s ample opportunity for a short-squeeze rally, or a bullish boost from brokerage firms. In any event, this stock is definitely one to watch next Tuesday.

Elizabeth Harrow is an analyst and financial writer in the research department at Schaeffer’s Investment Research. She is featured in the weekly video series Option Basics on SchaeffersResearch.com.

 

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Donald Trump, the Clown Prince of Capitalism and Chairman of Trump Entertainment Resorts (NASDAQ: TRMP), is back in the news. The Associated Press reports that he’ll be bailing out Ed McMahon, the former Johnny Carson sidekick who defaulted on $4.8 million in loans on his Beverly Hills home.

Trump told The Los Angeles Times that he didn’t know McMahon personally and is motivated by “compassion. . . When I was at the Wharton School of Business I’d watch him each night. How could this happen?”

Holy cow! When I read this story, I thought “Finally! I’ll have a chance to do a nice piece on Donald Trump.” Wrong. I am actually going to make history here and bash someone for helping an old man keep his house. First, why Ed McMahon? There are hundreds of thousands of people facing problems with their homes and, rather than quietly helping average Joe’s with mortgage payments, Trump goes and spends millions of dollars to help one old rich guy keep his palace — and then calls The Los Angeles Times to brag about it. Oh, and he’d to remind everyone that he went to Wharton.

This act of charity, like everything Donald does, seems to be motivated by narcissism, grandiosity, and a thirst for publicity.

I’m caving into his desire to have his name all over the place, but I’m also calling BS on this billionaire bailout.

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Since returning in January 2007 to the company he founded in 1984, Michael Dell has set many things straight with Dell, Inc. (NASDAQ: DELL). It’s widely known that some of the ideal stewards of public companies are the founders, and this is certainly the case with Dell himself. Entering retail in a big way, busting out plenty of new designs, and concentrating on laptop sales have given Dell an edge to use against Personal computer market leader Hewlett-Packard Corporation (NYSE: HPQ), which wrestled the world’s largest Computer maker crown from Dell in 2006.

Dell is now saying that his company will see more sales growth in 2008 than the overall Computer market as a whole. No, this isn’t just due to being more in retail with colorful laptops in the U.S. market. Most of the demand that will grant Dell to outpace the industry growth rate will come from strong demand in emerging markets like India and China.

Dell recently said ”The emerging markets are a huge part of our growth … ‘Dell will continue to grow faster than the rest of the industry, certainly for the remainder of this year.” Those are pretty strong words, but it’s not surprising. In many instances, companies are pinning their hopes on international sales growth to balance out tepid waters in the U.S. market. Even up until recent times, the red-hot U.S. market was comfortable.

But that’s not so much now as gas prices and a bombing mortgage market has turned off the consumer flame. The auto industry is the most lucidly aware of having a balanced product mix globally, and PC makers are there as well. Dell beat HP’s shipment growth 21% to 17% in the quarter ended in June, so it’s hitting on more cylinders every quarter.

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An anonymous reader writes “The board game The War On Terror is a satirical game in which George Bush’s ‘Axis of Evil’ is reduced to a spinner in the middle of the board, which determines which player is designated a terrorist say. That person then has to wear a balaclava (included in the box set) with the word ‘Evil’ stitched onto it. Kent police stated they had confiscated the game because the balaclava ‘could be used to conceal someone’s identity or could be used in the course of a criminal act.’ Balaclavas are freely sold all over the place in the area.” Schneier has blogged this stupidity, of course.

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Housing Rebound in Cleveland Means Bad News for US (Update2) - Bloomberg

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Cutie Pi writes “In a current Rasmussen poll looking at the public’s attitudes toward a possible revival of the fairness doctrine by the Democrats, a surprisingly huge percentage of those polled seek fairness doctrine mandates (originally intended for public airwaves) to cover the Internet as well. It is encouraging that a minority of people feel that way, but Democrats state ‘hands-off the World wide web … by a far smaller margin than Republicans and unaffiliated voters. Democrats oppose government-mandated balance on the World wide web by a 48% to 37% margin. Sixty-one percent (61%) of Republicans reject government involvement in World wide web content along with 67% of unaffiliated voters.’”

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