- BB&T (BBT) and Aflac (AFL) to buy from hold at Deutsche Bank.
- Kodiak Oil & Gas (KOG) to outperform from neutral at RW Baird.
- Zhongpin (HOGS) to neutral from reduce at Global Hunter.
- Marathon Oil (MRO), Noble Energy (NBL) and Manulife Financial (MFC) to buy from neutral at UBS.
- Carrizo Oil & Gas (CRZO) to buy from hold at Canaccord.
- Comerica (CMA) to buy from neutral at Rochdale.
Analyst Calls: AAPL, AFL, BBT, CMA, ENER, HERO, IBM, LVS, MRO, NE ...
Continue reading Analyst Calls: AAPL, AFL, BBT, CMA, ENER, HERO, IBM, LVS, MRO, NE ...
Analyst Calls: AMTD, C, COF, DLTR, FL, GS, IBM, INTC, NYT, PGR, SCHW ...
- Intel (INTC), ON Semiconductor (ONNN), Lattice Semiconductor (LSCC), Fairchild Semiconductor (FSC), STMicroelectronics (STM) and Altera (ALTR) to outperform from neutral at RW Baird.
- Capital One (COF) to overweight from equal weight at Morgan Stanley.
- Dollar Tree (DLTR) to buy from neutral at Goldman.
- Foot Locker (FL) to buy from neutral at Sterne Agee.
- Progressive (PGR) to buy from neutral at BofA/Merrill.
- Flow International (FLOW) to buy from neutral at Roth Capital.
- Signature Bank (SBNY) to buy from hold at Jefferies.
- HiSoft Technology (HSFT) to buy from neutral at UBS.
Continue reading Analyst Calls: AMTD, C, COF, DLTR, FL, GS, IBM, INTC, NYT, PGR, SCHW ...
Analyst Calls: ADM, BX, BZH, CMA, DLTR, MRK, NE, PFE, X ...
- Large Cap Pharmaceuticals sector upgraded to Overweight at Wells Fargo.
- Archer Daniels (ADM) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse.
- Cypress Semi (CY) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS.
- MFA Financial (MFA) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Jefferies.
- Blackstone (BX) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Jefferies.
- Comerica (CMA) upgraded to Hold from Sell at Citigroup.
- Dollar Tree (DLTR) upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley.
- NuVasive (NUVA) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Leerink.
- Cogdell Spencer (CSA) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Jefferies.
- Hersha Hospitality (HT) upgraded to Hold from Underperform at Jefferies.
- G&K Services (GKSR) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at RW Baird.
- Graham Packaging (GRM) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Goldman.
- Shaw (SJR) upgraded to Neutral from Underperform at BofA/Merrill.
Continue reading Analyst Calls: ADM, BX, BZH, CMA, DLTR, MRK, NE, PFE, X ...
Analyst Calls: VIA, CMA, PRU, CMG, PBR, TXN, DHR, HUM
Analyst upgrades:
- Citigroup upgraded Lubrizol (LZ) to Hold from Sell following the company's analyst day citing its continued pricing power in lubricants. Citi upped its target price for shares to $115 from $82.
- Janney Montgomery upgraded Viacom (VIA) to Buy from Neutral citing the company's ratings improvement, 2011 film slate, and video game pipeline. The firm has a $45 price target for shares.
- BMO Capital resumed coverage on Gammon Gold (GRS) with an Outperform from a Market Perform following the its equity issue. The firm has a $12.50 price target on the stock.
- Comerica (CMA) and First Horizon (FHN) were upgraded to Buy from Hold at Deutsche Bank.
- Prudential (PRU) was upgraded to Equal Weight from Underweight at Barclays.
- Itron (ITRI) was upgraded to Hold from Sell at Stifel Nicolaus.
Continue reading Analyst Calls: VIA, CMA, PRU, CMG, PBR, TXN, DHR, HUM
Closing Bell: From a Big Win to a Partial Win (CSCO, BAC, BA, CMA, EDAP, C, FSLR)
Today was the one-year anniversary of the stock market's peak selling day. The DJIA is up about 61% from the March 9, 2009 close. Despite many stocks being higher and transports being higher, today was one of those days where the gains were almost taken away entirely toward the end of the day, and whether market would end the day up or down was not really guessable until right before the 4PM close. Here were the unofficial closing bell levels:
Dow 10,564.53 +12.01 (0.11%)
S&P 500 1,140.43 +1.93 (0.17%)
Nasdaq 2,340.68 +8.47 (0.36%)
Top Analyst Calls
Top Day Trader Stocks
Continue reading Closing Bell: From a Big Win to a Partial Win (CSCO, BAC, BA, CMA, EDAP, C, FSLR)
Comerica Selling Stock to Repay TARP Debt
Regional banking issue Comerica (CMA) is in focus today, after announcing last night that it will sell $800 million in common stock in order to repay its debt to the U.S. government. Under the terms of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). Comerica owes Uncle Sam about $2.25 billion. At this point, the Dallas-based bank is among the few remaining financial institutions yet to repay its TARP debt.
This morning, Comerica priced its common stock offering at $35 per share, representing a discount to Monday's close at $36.29. The shares have quickly backpedaled as a result, slipping below recent support at their 10-day and 20-day moving averages.
Comerica Soars to 52-Week High on Q4 Earnings
Comerica Incorporated (CMA) shares are rising today after the company reported earnings this morning, posting a fourth-quarter loss of $29 million, or 41 cents per share, beating analysts' forecasts of a 49-cent loss. If you think that the stock won't fall by too much in the coming months, then now could be a good time to look at a bullish hedged trade on CMA.CMA opened this morning at $34.35. So far today the stock has hit a low of $34.35 and a high of $36.87. As of 12:00, CMA is trading at $36.54 up 2.97 (8.9%). The chart for CMA looks bullish and S&P gives CMA a positive 4 STARS (out of 5) buy ranking.
Continue reading Comerica Soars to 52-Week High on Q4 Earnings
The Week in Preview: Q4 Earnings Expectations for the Financial Sector
Last week, JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) led off the coming parade of earnings from the big banks when it reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter and full-year earnings, though its revenue fell short of estimates.
Plenty more earnings from the financial sector are due out this week. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters anticipate fourth-quarter earnings growth from American Express Co. (AXP), Bank of New York Mellon Corp. (BK), Hudson City Bancorp Inc. (HCBK), SLM Corp. (SLM) and US Bancorp (USB).
Continue reading The Week in Preview: Q4 Earnings Expectations for the Financial Sector
Analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations: RHHBY, MOT, RBS, DKS, MCO ...
Analyst upgrades:- ING upgraded Roche (OTC: RHHBY) to Buy from Hold as it believes Roche will not pay more than $100/share for Genentech (NYSE: DNA) and that the Avastin adjuvant data due April 2009 provides significant upside potential.
- Oppenheimer upgraded Motorola (NYSE: MOT) to Outperform from Perform on valuation as it believes sentiment is at an all-time low and the stock has limited downside. The firm set a $5 target on shares.
- Morgan Stanley upgraded Comerica (NYSE: CMA) to Equal Weight from Underweight citing valuation that adequately reflects credit deterioration in its commercial-heavy loan portfolio and aggressive government action.
- Cheesecake Factory (NASDAQ: CAKE) and Nucor (NYSE: NUE) were upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Goldman.
- Pinnacle Entertainment (NYSE: PNK) was raised to Overweight from Equal Weight at Barclays.
Continue reading Analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations: RHHBY, MOT, RBS, DKS, MCO ...
Cramer on BloggingStocks: Buy Procter, General Mills all the way down
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says the safety theme will come back if only because these companies' earnings will be good in six months. Editor's note: Jim Cramer will present his 2009 stock outlook for the first time at TheStreet.com Investment Conference on Saturday, Oct. 25. Click for details.
Now they come after the Procter & Gambles (NYSE: PG) (Cramer's Take) and the General Mills (NYSE: GIS) (Cramer's Take) and the like, betting that the action will be better in the cyclicals with all of this money being printed worldwide.
Commodities are also coming back because of reflation. And we have to feel that many of the infra and ag names are finally sold out by the hedge fund redemptions.
Here I am speaking of a Freeport McMoRan (NYSE: FCX) (Cramer's Take), with its good yield and a belief that the hedge funds are at last done.
I don't buy it. I like a balanced portfolio, but I want to buy the GIS/PG all the way down because we are going into a recession, not going out of one. These companies pay dividends, raise dividends and have great commodity tailwinds.
Colgate's (NYSE: CL) (Cramer's Take) down a lot too, and I am liking that one.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Buy Procter, General Mills all the way down
Cramer on BloggingStocks: Look to Cabot, Nucor if/when oil bubble pops
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says the value creation at both companies is astonishing and not going away, despite the market trend. Every now and then days like yesterday happen. Days where it is so crazy, where the selling never ends and the buying never ends. Where the sellers just keep reloading and the buyer just keep buying.
Some of it seems like short-covering panic and some of it seems like sellers who can't take the pain anymore. As I watched Cabot Oil & Gas (NYSE: COG) (Cramer's Take) -- a very good company, a company that priced a gigantic piece of merchandise 30% higher a fortnight ago -- go down more than 10% today, I am astonished at the market's inefficiency.
When I see Nucor (NYSE: NUE) (Cramer's Take) decline 10% on a good quarter and conservative guidance, I marvel at how ridiculous things are. Sure, you can say if you look at a three-year chart, "This is the end of the bubble." But how about value? How about the fact that COG is making much more money than it ever has and is unlikely, given the big shift toward natural gas, ever to make as little money as it did a few years ago?
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Look to Cabot, Nucor if/when oil bubble pops
Regions Financial boosted by finance sector earnings
Regions Financial (NYSE: RF) shares are trading higher today with other financial stocks after a slew of positive financial earnings. JP Morgan Chase (NYSE: JPM) reported a second-quarter profit of $2 billion, or 54 cents per share, beating analysts' predictions of 44 cents per share, while PNC Financial (NYSE: PNC) and Comerica (NYSE: CMA) also reported earnings and are trading higher. If you think that the company won't fall by too much in the coming months, then now could be a good time to look at a bullish hedged trade on RF.After hitting a one-year high of $33.65 last July, the stock hit a one-year low of $6.41 on Tuesday. RF opened this morning at $8.88. So far today the stock has hit a low of $8.09 and a high of $9.91. As of 12:45, RF is trading at $9.07, up 1.06 (12.8%). The chart for RF looks bearish and steady, while S&P gives the stock a neutral 3 STARS (out of 5) hold rating.
For a bullish hedged play on this stock, I would consider an August bull-put credit spread below the $5 range. A bull-put credit spread is an options position that combines the purchase and sale of put options to hedge risk in case the stock doesn't do what you think but still leverage nice returns. For this particular trade, we will make a 13.6% return in just one month as long as RF is above $5 at August expiration. RF would have to fall by more than 44% before we would start to lose money. Learn more about this type of trade here.
RF hasn't been below $6.40 at all in the past year and has shown support around $7 recently. This trade could be risky if the company's earnings (due out on 7/22) disappoint, but most of the banks that have reported so far have responded well to their earnings reports.
Brent Archer is an options analyst and writer at Investors Observer.
DISCLOSURE: Mr. Archer owns and/or controls diversified portfolios of long and short stock and option positions that may include holdings in companies he writes about. At publication time, Brent neither owns nor controls positions in RF nor CMA. He does own and control bullish hedged trades on PNC and JPM.
Cramer on BloggingStocks: The breadth of the danger is staggering
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says our problems are so widespread, he sees lots more IndyMacs before we're out.You don't need me to tell you it's awful out there. You don't need me to tell you that there's no quick fix for any of these things. But what might help you understand why it feels so bad this time is that I have never, in my career, seen so many companies go off track at the same time. This is one unbelievable moment, and it is made more horrible by the day as companies' stocks just get pummeled, causing people to then question the very viability of the companies involved.
First, obviously, are Fannie Mae (NYSE: FNM) (Cramer's Take) and Freddie Mac (NYSE: FRE) (Cramer's Take). We don't know what will happen, but we do know that their futures are much darker than their pasts. Their best hope: a Democrat becomes president and shows the usual love to both. But as investments, they are pretty much perma-losers going forward. The losses are that heavy. Yes, it is true that two years from now they will be better, but will the government let them limp through to that? View them as calls on a Democratic win.
We all know that Citigroup (NYSE: C) (Cramer's Take), Wachovia (NYSE: WB) (Cramer's Take), Washington Mutual (NYSE: WM) (Cramer's Take) and National City (NYSE: NCC) (Cramer's Take) are in trouble. Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) (Cramer's Take) says it isn't in trouble, but obviously the market doesn't believe management because the stock failed to rally when it said its dividend was safe. Any short-selling hedge fund could hire 30 actors and have them line up at a Washington Mutual or two and get a bank run going. Then we would have to hear about a "hasty" Treasury department plan to bail out WM. Hasty? How can these guys not see it coming?
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: The breadth of the danger is staggering
Financials expected to post earnings declines, losses this week
After the implosion of IndyMac Bancorp (NYSE: IMB) and news of the deterioration of Fannie Mae (NYSE: FNM) and Freddie Mac (NYSE: FRE) last week, there's bound to be a certain level of trepidation as the earnings crunch begins this coming week and many big financial companies report. Here's a look at what Wall Street was expecting (see The week in preview: Expectations as the earnings crunch begins for expectations of other reporting companies.)
Analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial are expecting the following of companies to report lower earnings when compared to the same period of the previous year.
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JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM): 44 cents EPS (-63.3%) on sales of $16.4 billion (-13.2%)
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Comerica Inc. (NYSE: CMA): 51 cents EPS (-59.2%) on sales of $680.2 million (-7.3%)
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Zions Bancorp. (NYSE: ZION): 75 cents EPS (-47.6%) on sales of $627.3. million (+2.7%)
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Huntington Bancshares Inc. (NYSE: HBAN): 23 cents EPS (-32.4%) on sales of $617.1 million (+50.7%)
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Capital One Financial Corp. (NYSE: COF): $1.31 EPS (-30.7%) on sales of $4.4 billion (+7.8%)
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Wells Fargo & Co. (NYSE: WFC): 50 cents EPS (-25.4%) on sales of $10.7 billion (+7.7%)
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M&T Bank Corp. (NYSE: MTB): $1.50 EPS (-23.1%) on sales of $756.6 million (+1.6%)
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BB&T Corp. (NYSE: BBT): 69 cents EPS (-16.9%) on sales of $1.8 billion (+5.9%)
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U.S. Bancorp (NYSE: USB): 60 cents EPS (-7.7%) on sales of $3.8 billion (+8.3%)
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PNC Financial Services Group Inc. (NYSE: PNC): $1.16 EPS (-7.2%) on sales of $1.9 billion (+8.5%)
Continue reading Financials expected to post earnings declines, losses this week
Cramer on BloggingStocks: 'Bailout' is not a dirty word
How did "bailout" become such a curse? The U.S. has a long history of bailouts, the big ones being most successful. The U.S. government saved Lockheed (NYSE: LMT) (Cramer's Take) in 1974 -- we need all the competition in military procurement we can get, considering how precious little of it there is -- so it's hard to judge that one a loser. The feds profited from the Chrysler bailout five years later .Not just profited, but had a huge success. The Mexican bailout in the 1990s saved that country's financials and gave the U.S. a tidy profit. The Resolution Trust bailout worked perfectly in restoring the banking system at a small cost, in retrospect, to the chaos we could have had.
Yet here's JPMorgan (NYSE: JPM) (Cramer's Take) taking on a lot of risk, in retrospect, given the junk nature of Bear's portfolio, and there's a tremendous amount of hand-wringing about it?
I say get used to it. General Motors (NYSE: GM) (Cramer's Take) and Ford (NYSE: F) (Cramer's Take) can't cut their way out of their jam, not with the F Series down 40% and GM still paying more for its labor force than it thought would have to. Both have strong, salvageable franchises, but they need capital, a la Chrysler in 1979. I think the feds should give it to them with contingencies that allow the U.S. to profit from any rebound.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: 'Bailout' is not a dirty word


