CNB posts
FeedPosted Jan 5th 2009 2:28PM by Connie Madon (RSS feed)
Filed under: Deals, Management, Money and Finance Today, Financial Crisis
The year 2008 saw a slew of discount M & A (mergers and acquisitions) deals, most of them below book value. Among these were Wachovia and National City. Capital One Financial bought Chevy Chase Bank at .64 times book value.
If you look at the financial landscape for 2009, some names are already popping up for distressed sales, such as Citizens Republic Bancorp (NASDAQ:CRBC), Huntington Bancorp (NASDAQ:HBAN), Midwest South Financial (NASDAQ:TSFG) and Colonial Banc Group (NYSE:CNB).
It seems that we will see a continuation of the purging of bad bank assets in 2009. Banks use a practice of good/bad assets and move their worst assets to a separate company that absorbs the assets' future losses. Then the original bank emerges as a healthier, deleveraged institution.
All of this is taking place under the radar and it is difficult for investors and the public to know which banks are using this practice. When deleveraging becomes unmanageable, the federal government may need to step in and absorb a bank losses to avoid the bank's failure.
Do you believe the financials are a place to invest in 2009?
Posted Oct 24th 2008 10:20AM by Laurie Pasternack (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst reports, Analyst upgrades and downgrades, Gap Inc (GPS), Analyst initiations, Barclays plc ADS (BCS)
Analyst upgrades:
- Keefe Bruyette upgraded shares of Colonial Bancgroup (NYSE: CNB) to Outperform from Market Perform on valuation following the recent weakness and believes the company will be eligible to receive TARP funds. Morgan Stanley believes the company's valuation adequately reflects risk to the loan portfolio; the firm raised shares to Equal Weight from Underweight.
- Merrill upgraded Ericsson (NASDAQ: ERIC) and ASML Holding (NASDAQ: ASML) to Buy from Underperform and believes their valuation reflects the worst-case for bad news.
- Oppenheimer upgraded Trimble Navigation to Outperform from Perform on valuation as they believe the company's long-term growth story is intact.
- Celestica (NYSE: CLS) was upgraded to Sector Outperformer from Sector Performer at CIBC.
- KeyCorp (NYSE: KEY) was added to Goldman's Conviction Buy List.
- Wachovia raised EastGroup Properties (NYSE: EGP) to Outperform from Market Perform.
Analyst downgrades:
- UBS cut Barclays (NYSE: BCS) to Neutral from Buy as they believe capital raises could negatively impact earnings and that the dividend is likely to be cut.
- JP Morgan downgraded Discovery Holdings (NASDAQ: DISCA) to Underweight from Neutral based on valuation and the deteriorating economic outlook.
- Friedman Billings downgraded shares of Janus Capital (NYSE: JNS) to Underperform from Market Perform and lowered its target to $7 from $23 as they see further risk to the downside following the company's weaker-than-expected results.
- LKQ Corp (NASDAQ: LKQX) was cut to Sector Perform from Outperform at RBC Capital.
- Affymetrix (NASDAQ: AFFX) was lowered to Sell from Hold at Deutsche Bank.
- RightNow Tech (NASDAQ: RNOW) was downgraded at Baird to Neutral from Outperform.
Continue reading Analyst calls: CNB, ERIC, ASML, TRMB, BCS, DISCA, JNS, RGEN, GPS and NTY
Posted Jul 15th 2008 8:56AM by Jim Cramer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bad news, Industry, Ford Motor (F), General Motors (GM), Market matters, Citigroup Inc. (C), Advanced Micro Dev (AMD), Regions Financial (RF), AutoNation Inc (AN), Bank of America (BAC), BB and T (BBT), , Sears Holdings (SHLD), Federal Natl Mtge (FNM), Comerica Inc (CMA), D.R.Horton (DHI), Amer Intl Group (AIG), Lennar Corp'A' (LEN), Southwest Airlines (LUV), , , , , Cramer on BloggingStocks, MBIA Inc (MBI)
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