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Posts with tag ADGO

Quiksilver sells Cleveland Golf -- Should Adams Golf be next?

After more than a month of rumors surrounding the possible sale of Quicksilver's (NYSE: ZQK) Cleveland Golf subsidiary, the deal is done. Quiksilver announced the sale last night, and will collect $132.5 million from SRI Sports, based in Japan.

It's interesting because it's roughly double what industry experts were initially estimating the company would sell for. Back in September, GolfWeek wrote that "Industry sources say Quiksilver Inc., which acquired Cleveland in 2005 as part of a deal to buy ski-maker Rossignol, is in the final stages of unloading the golf equipment maker for roughly $60 million to $70 million. Some analysts say the price is a bargain, noting Cleveland likely is worth at least $100 million, but they add an expedient sale even at a discount is in Quiksilver's best interests."

Recently, I've written about a stock I own called Adams Golf (OTC BB: ADGO), which I believe is very undervalued, in large part because of some corporate governance issues and managerial apathy toward the stock price (which is a good thing in moderation, but Adams may be at the opposite extreme). Using the sale of Cleveland Golf as a guide, I am convinced that Adams shareholders would be rewarded very handsomely if the company's board explored sale options. Take a look at some of the key stats


Continue reading Quiksilver sells Cleveland Golf -- Should Adams Golf be next?

The BloggingActivist update: Adams Golf's excessive compensation -- for a retired guy!

A few months ago, I wrote a piece about a company that I own shares of called Adams Golf (OTC BB: ADGO). While I was, and still am, very optimistic about the company's potential for providing outstanding returns to shareholders, corporate governance is a significant problem at the company. I strongly believe that there are changes that need to be made to provide shareholders with the best return possible, and I outlined some of the steps I believe should be taken in that post.

One issue that makes abundantly clear the corporate governance problems at Adams Golf is the compensation of its founder and chairman, Barney Adams.

According to the most recent proxy statement, Adams was paid $421,698 in 2006, a pay package that is hardly immaterial in light of Adams' market cap of around $50 million. The footnote explains it this way:



Continue reading The BloggingActivist update: Adams Golf's excessive compensation -- for a retired guy!

Callaway reports well but guidance fails to appease Wall Street

Although Callaway Golf (NYSE: ELY) reported solid earnings and upped guidance after the bell, the stock has moved down in after hours trading. The reason for this sell-off, according to press reports, is the fact that the company's new guidance is still below the analysts' consensus for yearly EPS and revenues.

On the quarter, Callaway was roughly in-line with estimates -- they missed EPS estimates by a penny but matched revenue expectations. For the year, Callaway expects to earn 78-84 cents per share, an increase from previous guidance, but still below the consensus estimate of 89 cents per share. The fact that the company didn't up guidance all the way to analyst expectations is nothing surprising in my experience, very few companies actually match expectations in guidance.

As I mentioned in an earlier post, I think the play in golf stocks is Adams Golf (OTC: ADGO). The stock is trading for roughly half Callaway on almost every metric and I'm very bullish on the future of the company's hybrid irons.

Disclosure: Kevin Kelly is long Adams Golf.

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Last updated: August 20, 2008: 12:29 PM

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