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Marathon Monday and Investing

“This sport is the sport to see what you are made of, so use those expert’s advice, but be free to be your own champion runner, picking and choosing advice you enjoy and that works best for you.” Bill Rodgers

Since today is “Marathon Monday” here in Massachusetts and also “Patriot’s Day”, I thought I would weave them together with investing. The quote above, taken from Bill Rodgers, a 4-time winner of the Boston Marathon, I think is perfectly suited for investors.

There are a million different books on how to make money and just as many on how to do it in stocks. What do you do? Who do you listen to? What style should you use? You must answer these question before you invest a dime. In this example I will use myself to try to illustrate my point.

“Never let any guru spoil your fun!” Bill Rodgers
The is no “one way” to success in investing. Warren Buffet did it with value investing, Boone Pickens did it in oil, Bill Gates in tech, Eddie Lampert, retail. The point here is that there are many ways to skin this cat and do not let any “guru” tell you there is only one way to do it and that your way is wrong. There probably is only one way for “you” to do it and that my be very different from me or the person living next door to you. The style you choose must fit your personality, otherwise you spend your whole investing life fighting yourself. What do I mean? If you are a big risk taker who needs constant action, being a value investor and rarely making a trade will probably lead to you jumping out of your skin as you see the day to day market action happening and you are not participating. You will be constantly itching to trade and fighting back the urge. Then, when you cannot contain it anymore, you will leap at a trade and probably end up making a mistake because you will be trading just to trade to satisfy the urge, not necessarily because it is a good trade.

I am two thing (among others). Stubborn and patient. Fortunately those traits are perfectly suited for my investing style of value investing. I need to be patient as it may take months or years for the full value of a pick of mine to be realized. I need to remain stubborn and have the courage of my convictions while those without patience bail from the stock as the talking heads on TV trash it day after day. If I am right, I will be richly rewarded for both traits. Remember, you are never “right or “wrong” on a pick because someone says you are. You are right or wrong because in the end, you are.

“My whole feeling in terms of racing is that you have to be very bold. You sometimes have to be aggressive and gamble.Bill Rodgers
While I am patient, I do require a little excitement in my portfolio. Now, my definition of this is probably much different that yours and that is ok because the key here is to find your level and stay within it. In order to get my “excitement fix”, I engage in the selling of puts in my portfolio. This gives me a short term trade (usually less than a month) and a little “action”. Many people are laughing at this saying to themselves “that is what he calls action?” For me, yes it is. Because I do this and do not extend myself into day trading which I just am not genetically wired to do with any consistent profit, I am very successful in this area. I usually end up netting $200-$600 a month selling these puts. Now, for me to be successful at this, I do it a certain way. Read about it here

The key here again is to find what works for you and do it, not to try to do what someone else does especially if what they do just goes against your very nature.

“One key to success is not to make your diet too complicated”. Bill Rodgers
One mistake too many investors make (myself included in the past) is to try and be a little bit of everything. There a millions of ways to invest and many people are good at them and make tons of money with them. Very few are good at many of them. There is nothing wrong with finding a single style and sticking with it so that you become very proficient at it. The is more money to be made at excelling at a single style than being ok at a few of them. The more you complicate your strategy with different styles, the easier it then becomes to blend them together and water them down. For instance, value investing and growth investing do not really mesh. In many ways, they are polar opposites. If you were to try and do both, what would most likely end up happening is you would end up with a portfolio that is a little of both (not really true value or a growth stocks) and in the end, realize the return of neither strategy. I am a value investor, everything I do stems from that. I do not understand tech (can’t analyze it with accuracy) so I avoid investing in it. That is not to say tech is bad, or that you cannot make money there, it is just not for me and to be honest, I do just fine without it. If I am really successful without names like Apple (AAPL), Google (GOOG) or Microsoft (MSFT) in my portfolio, why should I add them just because someone says “you have to have tech in your portfolio”. That is nonsense. One thing to keep in mind is there are about 15,000 stocks, bonds and funds you can buy, there is money to be made everywhere. If you do not get it, avoid it, you can make money somewhere else. Never buy a stock because someone says “you must diversify in tech” (or whatever investment they say you “need”).

“Always take the long term view and train and race smart, with a bit of caution.” Bill Rodgers
Long Term
I have said it before but I think it cannot be emphasized enough, the shorter your time frame, the more risk you assume. Taking a long term view towards your investment
s will enable you to avoid angst from the short term ups and downs that the market will inevitably throw at you. The longer your view, the less important weekly or quarterly results become to you. You will instead be focused on the big picture and the business fundamentals, which is what is the most important thing.

Train Smart
Charlie Munger, Warren Buffet’s partner, has always said that those who are the most successful investors are always reading. He says people should read whatever they can get their hands on and read in a wide variety of subjects. The wider the field of knowledge you have, the wider you then cast your investment competency net.

Caution
As you become successful as an investor and accumulate more assets, there will be a urge to become enthralled with your success and assume it will be the “way it is”. You then will be inclined to make larger bets on new positions assuming your success will naturally continue. Be careful about this as nobody is right all the time. Exercise the caution Rodgers calls for above and remember how you got to where you are and watch the urge to “over reach”. This way, if you are wrong (everybody is eventually), the pain will not be so bad. You want to avoid the sickening feeling of wiping out years of profits in one bad investment.

If you take the advice Mr. Rodgers gives above, you are at least heading it the right direction. I wonder if he knew he was an investing adviser…..


Disclosure (“none” means no position):None

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Monday’s Upgrades and Downgrades


Upgrades
Boyd Gaming (BYD)- KeyBanc Capital Mkts Underweight » Hold
Lakeland (LBAI)- FTN Midwest Neutral » Buy
Charles Schwab (SCHW)- BMO Capital Markets Market Perform » Outperform
Google (GOOG)- Collins Stewart Hold » Buy
BB&T Corp (BBT)- Fox Pitt Underperform » In Line
Google (GOOG)- Jefferies & Co Hold » Buy
Ultratech (UTEK)- Brean Murray Hold » Buy
Baxter (BAX)- William Blair Mkt Perform » Outperform
MKS Instruments (MKSI)- JP Morgan Neutral » Overweight
Alliance Data (ADS)- Piper Jaffray Neutral » Buy
Banco Latinoamer (BLX)- JP Morgan Underweight » Neutral
Cadbury Schweppes (CSG)- Lehman Brothers Equal-Weight » Overweight
Potlatch (PCH)- Credit Suisse Neutral » Outperform
SunTrust Banks (STI)- Robert W. Baird Underperform » Neutral
Ross Stores (ROST)- Lehman Brothers Equal-Weight » Overweight

Downgrades
Brookline Bancorp (BRKL)- Sterne Agee Buy » Hold
F.N.B. Corp (FNB)- Sun Trust Rbsn Humphrey Buy » Neutral
Comverge (COMV)- Cowen & Co Outperform » Neutral
POZEN (POZN)- Susquehanna Financial Positive » Neutral
AbitibiBowater (ABH)- Lehman Brothers Overweight » Equal-Weight
ISIS Pharm (ISIS)- Leerink Swann Outperform » Mkt Perform
Cymer (CYMI)- JP Morgan Overweight » Neutral
AmeriCredit (ACF)- Piper Jaffray Buy » Neutral
Capital One (COF)- Piper Jaffray Buy » Neutral
Franklin Resources (BEN)- JP Morgan Neutral » Underweight
France Telecom (FTE)- UBS Buy » Neutral
Capital One (COF)- Keefe Bruyette Mkt Perform » Underperform
Umpqua Holdings (UMPQ)- Keefe Bruyette Mkt Perform » Underperform
Entergy (ETR)- Jefferies & Co Buy » Hold
Exelon (EXC)- Jefferies & Co Buy » Hold
Compass Minerals Intl (CMP)- JP Morgan Overweight » Neutral
Textron (TXT)- Credit Suisse Outperform » Neutral
Techne (TECH)- Robert W. Baird Outperform » Neutral
Sigma-Aldrich (SIAL)- Robert W. Baird Outperform » Neutral
GlaxoSmithKline (GSK)- JP Morgan Neutral » Underweight
AstraZeneca (AZN)- JP Morgan Neutral » Underweight
Gap Inc (GPS)- Lehman Brothers Overweight » Equal-Weight
Nokia (NOK)- JP Morgan Overweight » Underweight
Blue Coat (BCSI)- Merriman Curhan Ford Buy » Neutral
Nokia (NOK)- UBS Buy » Neutral
Netflix (NFLX)- Soleil Buy » Hold

Disclosure (“none” means no position):

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Monday's Upgrades and Downgrades


Upgrades
Boyd Gaming (BYD)- KeyBanc Capital Mkts Underweight » Hold
Lakeland (LBAI)- FTN Midwest Neutral » Buy
Charles Schwab (SCHW)- BMO Capital Markets Market Perform » Outperform
Google (GOOG)- Collins Stewart Hold » Buy
BB&T Corp (BBT)- Fox Pitt Underperform » In Line
Google (GOOG)- Jefferies & Co Hold » Buy
Ultratech (UTEK)- Brean Murray Hold » Buy
Baxter (BAX)- William Blair Mkt Perform » Outperform
MKS Instruments (MKSI)- JP Morgan Neutral » Overweight
Alliance Data (ADS)- Piper Jaffray Neutral » Buy
Banco Latinoamer (BLX)- JP Morgan Underweight » Neutral
Cadbury Schweppes (CSG)- Lehman Brothers Equal-Weight » Overweight
Potlatch (PCH)- Credit Suisse Neutral » Outperform
SunTrust Banks (STI)- Robert W. Baird Underperform » Neutral
Ross Stores (ROST)- Lehman Brothers Equal-Weight » Overweight

Downgrades
Brookline Bancorp (BRKL)- Sterne Agee Buy » Hold
F.N.B. Corp (FNB)- Sun Trust Rbsn Humphrey Buy » Neutral
Comverge (COMV)- Cowen & Co Outperform » Neutral
POZEN (POZN)- Susquehanna Financial Positive » Neutral
AbitibiBowater (ABH)- Lehman Brothers Overweight » Equal-Weight
ISIS Pharm (ISIS)- Leerink Swann Outperform » Mkt Perform
Cymer (CYMI)- JP Morgan Overweight » Neutral
AmeriCredit (ACF)- Piper Jaffray Buy » Neutral
Capital One (COF)- Piper Jaffray Buy » Neutral
Franklin Resources (BEN)- JP Morgan Neutral » Underweight
France Telecom (FTE)- UBS Buy » Neutral
Capital One (COF)- Keefe Bruyette Mkt Perform » Underperform
Umpqua Holdings (UMPQ)- Keefe Bruyette Mkt Perform » Underperform
Entergy (ETR)- Jefferies & Co Buy » Hold
Exelon (EXC)- Jefferies & Co Buy » Hold
Compass Minerals Intl (CMP)- JP Morgan Overweight » Neutral
Textron (TXT)- Credit Suisse Outperform » Neutral
Techne (TECH)- Robert W. Baird Outperform » Neutral
Sigma-Aldrich (SIAL)- Robert W. Baird Outperform » Neutral
GlaxoSmithKline (GSK)- JP Morgan Neutral » Underweight
AstraZeneca (AZN)- JP Morgan Neutral » Underweight
Gap Inc (GPS)- Lehman Brothers Overweight » Equal-Weight
Nokia (NOK)- JP Morgan Overweight » Underweight
Blue Coat (BCSI)- Merriman Curhan Ford Buy » Neutral
Nokia (NOK)- UBS Buy » Neutral
Netflix (NFLX)- Soleil Buy » Hold

Disclosure (“none” means no position):

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"Fast Money" for Monday


Monday’s Picks
Pete Najarian thinks EMC Corp. (EMC) $15.52 is a buy ahead of earnings.

Guy Adami prefers Wachovia (WB) 27.24 as a short term trade.

Both Jeff Macke and Karen Finerman recommend Microsoft (MSFT) $30.0

Friday’s Results
Jeff Macke is loading up on Microsoft (MSFT) $29.22 Close $30 GAIN

Guy Adami, too. MSFT is “definitely the play,” he said. GAIN

Pete Najarian is a buyer of Yahoo (YHOO) $28.03 Close $28.43 GAIN

Seymour looses another day because of his “short Petrobos (PBR) for the next “4 or 5 sessions”.

2008 Records:
Brian Schaeffer= 0-1
Carter Worth= 1-1
Jon Najarian= 4-3
Jeff Macke= 29-21-1
Tim Seymore= 15-12
Guy Adami= 29-25
Pete Najarian= 31-22
Karen Finerman= 22-24-1
Joe Terrenova= 1-1

2007 Results (Since 6/21):
Guy Adami= 58-46 = 56%
Jeff Macke= 60-40 = 60%
Pete Najarian= 49-41 = 54%

Disclosure (“none” means no position):

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CC + BBI = Sears + Kmart? Uh, No

The latest pondering out there has the proposed Circuit City (CC) and Blockbuster (BBI) the equivalent to the merger of Sears and Kmart that created Sears Holdings (SHLD). While a nice exercise, it lacks one thing, legitimacy.

For the best analysis of the exercise, read here:

Here is were is falls apart and it does so before it actually get started really. Sears and Kmart did the same thing, retail. Specifically clothing, lawn and garden, electronics, auto and the rest of the big box general retailer gambit. The combination of the two created the nation’s third largest retailer with sales of over $50 billion a year. The combination of BBI and CC will do nothing to increase the size of either in their prospective industries.

Blockbuster rents dvd’s and Circuit City sells them it their stores. They also both…..well…..they don’t do anything else in common. Other that the fact they both have dvd’s in their stores, the two businesses have no similarities at all, other than poor management.

A Circuit City and RadioShack (RSH) merger would be a similar comparison to Sears / Kmart as those businesses are very similar. There would be, in that case, cost savings involved with the merger that could be realized and the two businesses would have selling synergies that could boost results. Also there is the little reality that RadioShack’s Julian Day could out-manage CC’s Phil Schoonver in a coma.

One also has to remember the Sears / Kmart merger has produced a 10 fold increase in shareholder value, does anyone out there actually think a Circuit City / Blockbuster one will produce even remotely similar results? Anyone? Does anyone actually think they will be even profitable considering the debt load necessary to pull off the deal?

Other than the fact that both situations involved two companies merging, there are virtually no other similarities.

Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long SHLD, none

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David Dremen on Wealth Track (video)

Value investor David Dremen says “this is one of the worst panics I have seen”. Sounds like time to buy if you adhere to Berkshire’s (BRK.A) Warren Buffett’s “buy fear” motto.

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Memo To Dow’s Liveris: Just Buy Sherwin Williams Already!

“We’re looking at gaps in technology offerings and [improving] channels to market. We’re looking at whether we can develop this organically, or through M&A, alliances, and joint ventures. I’m going to work all the levers I can to fill those gaps.” George Hamilton, president of Dow Coating Solutions, a division of Dow Chemical (DOW).

Enough is enough. Shares of Sherwin Williams (SHW) are practically being given away at he current price. For more on that, see this November, 2007 post. Dow has been yammering about expanding it coating business for two years now. Can anyone think of a better way to “improve the customer experience and gain a better understanding of the markets,” and “make it easier for a customer to give us more of their [coatings] purchasing dollars,” as Hamilton also said than purchase one of the world largest distributors of the stuff?

Dow says the recent formation of Hamilton’s business unit for its $2.5-billion coatings business will enable above market growth in the $40 billion a year coatings sector. Hamilton’s remarks about M&A are directly in line with those of Dow CEO Andrew Liveris. Let’s also not forget Dow has a $9 billion dollar check coming this year from the Saudi’s in conjunction with its 50% interest sale of its Commodity Chemical Business.

The cash with be there with plenty left over to swallow Sherwin.

Let’s also not forget that recently Farallon Capital Management recently picked up 5.2% of Sherwin’s shares. Why? Farellon says their investments are “primarily those in which a known or expected event (a merger, restructuring, recapitalization or other major change) will cause an appreciation in the value of the particular investment.”

Mr. Liveris, lets just get this done….If for no other reason you’ll make me look like a genius 🙂

Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long DOW, SHW

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Memo To Dow's Liveris: Just Buy Sherwin Williams Already!

“We’re looking at gaps in technology offerings and [improving] channels to market. We’re looking at whether we can develop this organically, or through M&A, alliances, and joint ventures. I’m going to work all the levers I can to fill those gaps.” George Hamilton, president of Dow Coating Solutions, a division of Dow Chemical (DOW).

Enough is enough. Shares of Sherwin Williams (SHW) are practically being given away at he current price. For more on that, see this November, 2007 post. Dow has been yammering about expanding it coating business for two years now. Can anyone think of a better way to “improve the customer experience and gain a better understanding of the markets,” and “make it easier for a customer to give us more of their [coatings] purchasing dollars,” as Hamilton also said than purchase one of the world largest distributors of the stuff?

Dow says the recent formation of Hamilton’s business unit for its $2.5-billion coatings business will enable above market growth in the $40 billion a year coatings sector. Hamilton’s remarks about M&A are directly in line with those of Dow CEO Andrew Liveris. Let’s also not forget Dow has a $9 billion dollar check coming this year from the Saudi’s in conjunction with its 50% interest sale of its Commodity Chemical Business.

The cash with be there with plenty left over to swallow Sherwin.

Let’s also not forget that recently Farallon Capital Management recently picked up 5.2% of Sherwin’s shares. Why? Farellon says their investments are “primarily those in which a known or expected event (a merger, restructuring, recapitalization or other major change) will cause an appreciation in the value of the particular investment.”

Mr. Liveris, lets just get this done….If for no other reason you’ll make me look like a genius 🙂

Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long DOW, SHW

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The Week's Insider Buys

Here are the stocks with the highest insider buying for the week.

KKR Financial Holdings L L C (KFN)- $9,744,693
General Electric Co (GE)- $1,515,460
Quicksilver Resources Inc (KWK)- $967,360
Northern Oil & Gas Inc New (NOG)- $721,600
Bcsb Bankcorp Inc (BCSB)- $714,000
Revlon Inc (REV)- $549,000
American Spectrum Realty Inc (AQQ)- $419,078
Discover Financial Services (DFS)- $360,301
Xtl Biopharmaceuticals Ltd (XTLB)- $357,590
Northstar Neuroscience Inc (NSTR)- $298,268
Arbinet Thexchange Inc (ARBX)- $287,195
Nanophase Technologies Corp (NANX)- $259,683
Provident Bankshares Corp (PBKS)- $232,100

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The Week’s Insider Buys

Here are the stocks with the highest insider buying for the week.

KKR Financial Holdings L L C (KFN)- $9,744,693
General Electric Co (GE)- $1,515,460
Quicksilver Resources Inc (KWK)- $967,360
Northern Oil & Gas Inc New (NOG)- $721,600
Bcsb Bankcorp Inc (BCSB)- $714,000
Revlon Inc (REV)- $549,000
American Spectrum Realty Inc (AQQ)- $419,078
Discover Financial Services (DFS)- $360,301
Xtl Biopharmaceuticals Ltd (XTLB)- $357,590
Northstar Neuroscience Inc (NSTR)- $298,268
Arbinet Thexchange Inc (ARBX)- $287,195
Nanophase Technologies Corp (NANX)- $259,683
Provident Bankshares Corp (PBKS)- $232,100

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Barron’s Picks Ups Lampert and Autozone (AZO)

Barrons has a piece on Lampert and his recent Autozone (AZO) purchases.

Below is the Barron’s article:

WITH AUTOZONE ON THE REBOUND, Edward Lampert — its biggest shareholder — spent $94 million to top off his stake in the auto-parts retailer.

On Tuesday Lampert, well-known hedge-fund manager and chairman of Sears Holdings, disclosed that he now owns 22.9 million shares, or a 36.2% stake in the Memphis, Tenn.-based company. The billionaire investor purchased 807,442 shares from April 8 through April 15 for $94 million, an average of $116.04 a share. Lampert last reported owning 22 million shares, or a 31% stake in AutoZone, at the end of the fourth quarter.

The purchases were made indirectly through Lampert’s investment vehicle ESL Investments and other subsidiaries. They were reported to the Securities and Exchange Commission in a 13D filing for active shareholders, although the documents said that the shares were obtained for investment purposes.

Neither Greenwich, Conn.-based ESL Investments nor AutoZone returned phone calls seeking comment on the purchases.

“In the end the most impressive thing about these transactions is that they’re adding onto a large position which ESL has smartly kept for years now,” says Jonathan Moreland, adviser to Ladenburg Thalmann Asset Management on insider strategies.

“This has been a huge home run for Lampert, who held onto the accumulation that he undertook when the stock was trading in the mid-$20s in 2001,” he says. “And for him to be topping up his investment — and despite the large dollar value, for him it really is just topping up — makes it more impressive.”

AutoZone shares dipped to a 52-week intraday low of $103.07 on Jan. 22. The stock has since recovered, gaining $1.13 to $122.49 on Friday.

AutoZone lost 8% in the last 12 months, while peers tracked by the Dow Jones Specialty Retail Index fell 18.5%. However, their fortunes diverged since the beginning of the year, with AutoZone rising 1.2% and the Index falling 6.3%.

“Any stock that is [exposed] to consumers paring back has traded down,” says Moreland. “Obviously Lampert has a very long-term view, and the stock is in a long term uptrend. The market is acting as if we’re closer to the end of the turmoil and stocks that were beaten down by that issue are starting to trade up. No one can say we’re absolutely out of the woods, but the smarter money is leaning long and AutoZone is a perfectly decent insider-generated candidate for investors looking to play the longer term bet that the turmoil is over.”

The Street may not be as sanguine as Lampert. Analysts polled by Thomson Financial on average rate the stock at Hold or the equivalent, with a 12-month target price of $130.20.

AutoZone currently has a Thomson Insider Rating of 7 (on a 10-point scale, with 10 being the most bullish), as compared with the Retail Goods industry average of 5.

Joshua Hong, director of research for OwnershipAnalyzer.com, wrote in an email to Barron’s Online that while Lampert’s purchase was positive, other institutional ownership data was neutral.

Disclosure (“none” means no position):None

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Barron's Picks Ups Lampert and Autozone (AZO)

Barrons has a piece on Lampert and his recent Autozone (AZO) purchases.

Below is the Barron’s article:

WITH AUTOZONE ON THE REBOUND, Edward Lampert — its biggest shareholder — spent $94 million to top off his stake in the auto-parts retailer.

On Tuesday Lampert, well-known hedge-fund manager and chairman of Sears Holdings, disclosed that he now owns 22.9 million shares, or a 36.2% stake in the Memphis, Tenn.-based company. The billionaire investor purchased 807,442 shares from April 8 through April 15 for $94 million, an average of $116.04 a share. Lampert last reported owning 22 million shares, or a 31% stake in AutoZone, at the end of the fourth quarter.

The purchases were made indirectly through Lampert’s investment vehicle ESL Investments and other subsidiaries. They were reported to the Securities and Exchange Commission in a 13D filing for active shareholders, although the documents said that the shares were obtained for investment purposes.

Neither Greenwich, Conn.-based ESL Investments nor AutoZone returned phone calls seeking comment on the purchases.

“In the end the most impressive thing about these transactions is that they’re adding onto a large position which ESL has smartly kept for years now,” says Jonathan Moreland, adviser to Ladenburg Thalmann Asset Management on insider strategies.

“This has been a huge home run for Lampert, who held onto the accumulation that he undertook when the stock was trading in the mid-$20s in 2001,” he says. “And for him to be topping up his investment — and despite the large dollar value, for him it really is just topping up — makes it more impressive.”

AutoZone shares dipped to a 52-week intraday low of $103.07 on Jan. 22. The stock has since recovered, gaining $1.13 to $122.49 on Friday.

AutoZone lost 8% in the last 12 months, while peers tracked by the Dow Jones Specialty Retail Index fell 18.5%. However, their fortunes diverged since the beginning of the year, with AutoZone rising 1.2% and the Index falling 6.3%.

“Any stock that is [exposed] to consumers paring back has traded down,” says Moreland. “Obviously Lampert has a very long-term view, and the stock is in a long term uptrend. The market is acting as if we’re closer to the end of the turmoil and stocks that were beaten down by that issue are starting to trade up. No one can say we’re absolutely out of the woods, but the smarter money is leaning long and AutoZone is a perfectly decent insider-generated candidate for investors looking to play the longer term bet that the turmoil is over.”

The Street may not be as sanguine as Lampert. Analysts polled by Thomson Financial on average rate the stock at Hold or the equivalent, with a 12-month target price of $130.20.

AutoZone currently has a Thomson Insider Rating of 7 (on a 10-point scale, with 10 being the most bullish), as compared with the Retail Goods industry average of 5.

Joshua Hong, director of research for OwnershipAnalyzer.com, wrote in an email to Barron’s Online that while Lampert’s purchase was positive, other institutional ownership data was neutral.

Disclosure (“none” means no position):None

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Weekend Reading At VIN

Here are the week’s top ten at Value Investing News

1. Best Buy Management
(via mikesnewsletterinvesting.blogspot.com)

In the sequel to the Right Price Checklist Management article I go over Best Buy’s management and reveal their returns fueled by debt and unusually large amount of related party transactions

2. Whitney Tilson: Let the herd stampede first before making your move
(via www.ft.com)

Without doubt, timely and democratic access to financial and market information contributes to smoothly functioning financial markets. But it’s worth asking whether the ubiquity of such information today is a friend or foe of sound investment decision-making. For all but the most active professional traders, the answer is often “no”.

3. Right Price Checklist: Management
(via mikesnewsletterinvesting.blogspot.com)

In the third part of the Right Price Checklist series, I throughly go over how to analyze management.

The article details how to analyze management’s honesty and competence and how well they communicate with shareholders.

4. 5 Tips For Choosing Small Cap Value Stocks
(via www.magicdiligence.com)

Small cap stocks need not be hot tip penny stocks or speculative growth stories based on an idea and a prayer. There are plenty of quality, undervalued small cap stocks out there, and this article tells you how to find them.

5. Templeton’s Mobius Says Credit Crisis Is Near End
(via www.bloomberg.com)

Templeton Asset Management Ltd.’s Mark Mobius said the global credit-market crisis that has caused $245 billion dollars of losses at banks and brokerages is “near the end.”

6. David Dreman : Looking Beyond the Bailout
(via www.forbes.com)

Frightening as the markets look today, there will come a time when the liquidity crisis ends and today’s prices for bank stocks look, in retrospect, like bargains.

7. James Altucher : Why insiders are betting on homebuilders
(via www.ft.com)

A few weeks ago I got an e-mail saying: “Stop with the personal sh*t and give us more stock tips.” So today’s article is ALL STOCKS.

8. What Warren thinks…
(via money.cnn.com)

With Wall Street in chaos, Fortune naturally went to Omaha looking for wisdom. Warren Buffett talks about the economy, the credit crisis, Bear Stearns, and more.

9. Mark Sellers : Take financial talking-heads with a grain of salt
(via www.ft.com)

Everyone acts in his or her self-interest. This is a key facet of humanity, and keeps our society moving forward. Think about that the next time you make an investment decision. As an investor, it is in your interest for your portfolio to do as well as possible with the least risk possible. Unfortunately, this is not the goal of most of the people you may rely on for news and advice.

10. 5th Annual Whitman Day: Breakfast Panel with Martin J. Whitman and Richard Haydon
(via whitman.syr.edu)

Collectively, Martin J. Whitman ’49 BS and Richard Haydon ’66 BA (A&S) have a century of Wall Street experience—and that fact is evident in the wisdom and insight revealed in this wide-ranging panel discussion.

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CEO’s Willl Never Learn (MER),(GE),(WB)

“We deliberately raised more capital than we lost last year … we believe that will allow us to not have to go back to the equity market in the foreseeable future,” Merrill Lynch (MER) CEO John Thain

This statement comes the same week both G. Kennedy Thompson at Wachovia (WB) and Jeff Immelt at GE (GE) were force fed prior statements along the same lines and shares in their companies were savaged. Thompson said Wachovia’s dividend was safe and Immelt said GE’s earnings were “in the bag”.

What does Thain gain with the proclamation? Nothing. No one believes what comes out of banker’s mouths today anyway, why say it?

It get’s even worse when just hours later he clarified the statement to mean “raise additional cash through equity”. Super, nice job John. Close the door and then go back and open it up a crack.

Now he either will be forced to take a bad deal on a debt offering or asset sale to raise cash if necessary in order to save face. If he does another equity or preferred sale, his reputation at the bank and with shareholders is crushed even before it has a chance to grow. Let’s say he is right? So what? That and $5 will get him a latte’ and Starbucks (SBUX). Had Merrill be forced to tap equity markets again, it would have been bad but now if they do, Thain will most likely be getting his resume updated.

Thain had absolutely nothing to gain by making the proclamation…….nothing. He now has created an atmosphere in which those so inclined (CNBC’s Charlie Gasparino) are going to make sport out predicting when Merrill will need more cash and how they will get it.

I always thought rule #1 was “under promise and over deliver”. Thain ought to see the example set by Berkshire’s (BRK.A) Warren Buffett

Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long WB, None

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

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Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

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Articles

CEO's Willl Never Learn (MER),(GE),(WB)

“We deliberately raised more capital than we lost last year … we believe that will allow us to not have to go back to the equity market in the foreseeable future,” Merrill Lynch (MER) CEO John Thain

This statement comes the same week both G. Kennedy Thompson at Wachovia (WB) and Jeff Immelt at GE (GE) were force fed prior statements along the same lines and shares in their companies were savaged. Thompson said Wachovia’s dividend was safe and Immelt said GE’s earnings were “in the bag”.

What does Thain gain with the proclamation? Nothing. No one believes what comes out of banker’s mouths today anyway, why say it?

It get’s even worse when just hours later he clarified the statement to mean “raise additional cash through equity”. Super, nice job John. Close the door and then go back and open it up a crack.

Now he either will be forced to take a bad deal on a debt offering or asset sale to raise cash if necessary in order to save face. If he does another equity or preferred sale, his reputation at the bank and with shareholders is crushed even before it has a chance to grow. Let’s say he is right? So what? That and $5 will get him a latte’ and Starbucks (SBUX). Had Merrill be forced to tap equity markets again, it would have been bad but now if they do, Thain will most likely be getting his resume updated.

Thain had absolutely nothing to gain by making the proclamation…….nothing. He now has created an atmosphere in which those so inclined (CNBC’s Charlie Gasparino) are going to make sport out predicting when Merrill will need more cash and how they will get it.

I always thought rule #1 was “under promise and over deliver”. Thain ought to see the example set by Berkshire’s (BRK.A) Warren Buffett

Disclosure (“none” means no position):Long WB, None

Todd Sullivan's- ValuePlays

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Visit the ValuePlays Bookstore for Great Investing Books

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 License.