Halliburton (HAL) posts
FeedPosted Jan 1st 2008 1:13PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), Cisco Systems (CSCO), Time Warner (TWX), Home Depot (HD), China, Indices, Halliburton (HAL), Altria Group (MO), NYSE Euronext (NYX), Goldman Sachs Group (GS), Duke Energy (DUK), Dow Chemical (DOW), ETF Investing, Valero Energy (VLO), PetroChina Co Ltd ADR (PTR), Huaneng Power Intl ADS (HNP), Level 3 Communications (LVLT), Chasing Value™, Oil, S and P 500, DJIA, Stocks to Buy, Rite Aid Corp (RAD),
This is the final review of the seven stocks I picked twelve months ago, and the time has passed quickly. This covers the period from December 28 2006 through December 27 2007. It has been a stock pickers year for sure given that the S&P 500 index moved up only modestly. Having come to this conclusion, I must admit my seven picks were all over the place. Three beat the indices, two performed sorely and two were basically break even except for the healthy dividends.
If the stock you happened to pick was Google, Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG), which I included as sort of a "stalking horse" because of its popularity, it beat all else as a portfolio of one. As a matter of fact GOOG beat my picks by a whopping 930% meaning it bested my returns with very little effort with a gain 9.3 times the average of my seven stock picks.
The average of my seven picks fell dramatically in the last two months and I have gone from wonderboy with about a 22% YTD return, to waterboy with about 5.5% return -- UGH! I rode the Chinese market up and down, among the macro events.
Luckily for me I did not stop picking stocks last December. My actual average of all recommendations in 2007 is notably higher, see: Chasing Value: My best and worst picks of 2007.
Highlighting the fact that this year was suited to the stock pickers, James Cramer's average based on his nine picks beat all the indices by a healthy margin. Cramer, as you might imagine, had the most volatile picks. The two best Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) and Savient Pharmaceuticals Inc. (NASDAQ: SVNT) did spectacularly well. Apple was appreciating most of the year while Savient saved Cramers tush by doubling in the last month due to approval of one of their drug therapies.
Continue reading Chasing Value: 7 for 2007 review: Props to Cramer for his 2007 picks
Posted Dec 12th 2007 4:30PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Other Issues, Rants and Raves, Competitive Strategy, Middle East, Halliburton (HAL), Johnson and Johnson (JNJ), Politics, Oil
My fellow Americans...hmm, that's overused....and I am not running for anything. HEY PEOPLE... too rude... To my fellow investors, read carefully: WE ARE NEVER LEAVING IRAQ! There, I said it, it's done.
Don't you wish some of our elected officials could tell it to us straight? We are not going to pull out of Iraq this year, next year, in 10 years or perhaps 100 years. Not unless we are chased out (although some locals are trying). It is true that we may reduce our forces over the next four or five years to a third of what we have there now, but we are not leaving. Since we are not leaving, I would like to see the business plan. Everyone has wanted to see the administration's strategic plan for some time, but a business plan will do.
The United States military never left Korea, Japan, Germany, Italy, and has advisors on every continent, just about every place we have ever gone. The only time we've left is when we were kicked out. The Iraqis will not be kicking us out. They need us to prevent an escalation of the civil war. They need our help rebuilding their infrastructure, (which we bombed), and we want to do that!
Continue reading Iraq, Inc.: How much will it cost us if we never leave?
Posted Dec 10th 2007 4:55PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), Cisco Systems (CSCO), Time Warner (TWX), Home Depot (HD), China, Indices, Halliburton (HAL), Altria Group (MO), NYSE Euronext (NYX), Goldman Sachs Group (GS), Duke Energy (DUK), Dow Chemical (DOW), ETF Investing, Valero Energy (VLO), PetroChina Co Ltd ADR (PTR), Huaneng Power Intl ADS (HNP), Level 3 Communications (LVLT), Chasing Value™, Oil, S and P 500, DJIA, Rite Aid Corp (RAD),
For the most part, this year has portrayed itself as a stock picker's market. If the stock you happened to pick was Google (NASDAQ: GOOG), which I included for fun because of its popularity, it beat all else as a portfolio of one.
The average of my seven picks fell as dramatically in November as it rose in October, reflecting the ebb and flow of the Chinese market. James Cramer's average based on his nine picks sank as well, but not as much. While Cramer managed to stay ahead of all the indices, and I beat the benchmark Standard & Poor's 500 and marginally beat the Dow Jones Industrial Average, I lost out to the NASDAQ and the average of the three.
Last month, after reporting spectacular gains, I remained realistic when posting "Of course, this could easily change given recent market volatility. A sharp downturn in the market could reverse our fortunes. A lot can happen in the remaining two months -- I take nothing for granted."
Yes, Google has done well, but Cramer's best, Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) has done much better. It seems to be priced for perfection, as they say, but it also seems to be achieving it so far on the wings of the iPhone, iPod, and growing Mac sales. Warren Buffett voiced his opinion that the Chinese market has gotten bloated, and PetroChina ADR (NYSE: PTR), while still up significantly, dropped back off its all-time highs after becoming the second-largest capitalized company in the world.
Continue reading Chasing Value: After 11 months, AAPL +125%, GOOG +50%, PTR +35%
Posted Oct 1st 2007 1:01PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), Cisco Systems (CSCO), Time Warner (TWX), Home Depot (HD), China, Indices, Halliburton (HAL), Altria Group (MO), NYSE Euronext (NYX), Goldman Sachs Group (GS), Duke Energy (DUK), Dow Chemical (DOW), ETF Investing, Valero Energy (VLO), PetroChina Co Ltd ADR (PTR), Huaneng Power Intl ADS (HNP), Level 3 Communications (LVLT), Kraft Foods'A' (KFT), Bargain Stocks, Chasing Value™, S and P 500, DJIA, Stocks to Buy, Rite Aid Corp (RAD),
This Chasing Value post marks my 400th story for BloggingStocks over the last 18 months. I originally agreed to do about five per month, so I have exceeded what I thought was practical, given my other responsibilities. Through this time I have learned a lot about writing, blogging, editing, the internet, AOL, and have continued to improve my investing acumen, which is a never-ending process. Many of our readers have contributed with some thought-provoking commentary and made this time a more interesting journey. I created the Chasing Value section after discussions with Senior Editor Amey Stone, and it seems to have gathered a modest following. This is the latest installment tracking my 2007 picks.
Through September, the market has benefited from a 0.5% interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve Board, recovering much of August's losses. This has also stimulated oil and gold prices to new highs and caused the dollar to shrink in value overseas. To some degree I think this resulted in foreign stocks rising significantly, most notably Huaneng Power International ADS which derives 100% of its revenue outside the United States. Last December, I made a strong case for HNP; prior to its recent rise I did so again for our Volatile Market picks: Huaneng Power (HNP) is my pick for the next 50 years.
This year continues to be a stock picker's market, as the volatile James Cramer of TheStreet.com and I have both topped the indices. Cramer made the best and worst picks for the year among those I've been tracking monthly. Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) is the best performer among all the stocks and indices in this review, and has stabilized what might have otherwise been a mediocre showing. It has been a good year for energy and tech stocks. The past few months have been dismal for the financial sector, and anything lingering near its giant shadow.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average is once again approaching its high of 14,000 and looks like there might be room to exceed it. The housing market and subprime loans continue to worry investors, but unlike last month when an interest rate cut was not a certainty, the market seems to be betting now that another cut is not far off.
Continue reading Chasing down 007 picks: AAPL +89%, HNP +46%, PTR & VLO +30%, GOOG +22%
Posted Sep 19th 2007 6:30PM by Kevin Kersten (RSS feed)
Filed under: Google (GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Apple Inc (AAPL), China, Halliburton (HAL), Aetna Inc (AET), CIGNA Corp (CI), Lockheed Martin (LMT), Politics, Presidential Elections
What if politics was like the stock market and you could buy politicians you like and sell the ones you didn't without envelopes of sequentially numbered small money orders in the same Chinese handwriting or cold cash hidden in the freezer?
For those rich enough -- they can buy a politician or two. The rest of us probably could rent a couple minutes of time with a big campaign contribution, and get lots of promises from a politician. Knowing the integrity of politicians and the value of political promises I am not sure how good of an investment politicians turn out to be.
Maybe you are one of the people smart enough to pick up a couple of bucks around the office at election time with bets on who is going to win. I have to admit I lost the last political bet I made. Good thing it was only a buck. What if there was a stock market where you could buy and sell shares in the candidates? The candidates would move up and down every day and those of us who are financial analysts could quantify the likelihood of people winning based on how bets are placed.
Now I am not into horse racing, poker or sports betting; but I do have to check up on the political bets every once in a while. With real money on the line there is a big incentive to be right. If you do not like the odds you can jump into the market and take the other side of the action. So what do the bookies think is going to happen in the coming election? Well it appears that Clinton is the favorite for the Democratic nominee with 67.8% and the Republican Rudy Giuliani leads the GOP with 35%.
Continue reading Is President Hillary 43% likely? You can bet on it!
Posted Aug 8th 2007 5:30PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Earnings Reports, Analyst Reports, Forecasts, Rants and Raves, Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), Cisco Systems (CSCO), Time Warner (TWX), Home Depot (HD), China, Indices, Halliburton (HAL), Altria Group (MO), Goldman Sachs Group (GS), Duke Energy (DUK), Dow Chemical (DOW), ETF Investing, Valero Energy (VLO), PetroChina Co Ltd ADR (PTR), Huaneng Power Intl ADS (HNP), iPhone, Level 3 Communications (LVLT), Kraft Foods'A' (KFT), Chasing Value™, S and P 500, DJIA, Rite Aid Corp (RAD),
July started off so promising and ended in the dumps. After the DJIA triumphantly closed above 14,000 it beat a hasty retreat scared off by a tumbling housing market, continued worries about sub-prime loans, record highs in oil prices, continued turmoil in Iraq and perhaps a dose of summer vacationitus. In addition, market darlings Apple and Google exited the month with a few unanswered questions. Nothing could be more telling than people speculating about a Dow 15,000...16,000...17,000 the moment it passed the 14,000 mark. And silly guy that I am...thoughts of repeating my 29% 2006 return entered my mind when I reached a 24% IRR earlier. That no longer looks like a possibility although I'm still doing fine - so far.
The month of July started off about stock picking and finished about stock picking as James Cramer of TheStreet.com would support. However, among the good picks were plenty of bad ones and anything remotely associated with housing, and sub-prime loans paid a heavy price by month end. Google maintained its leadership but did take a dive after reporting earnings. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) set so many new highs that it is not news anymore, but then there was news, most of it bad enough to put doubt in investors minds, and the market traded down. Earnings reports still trickle in but nothing major unexpected affected the market. Mergers and acquisitions are showing some signs of slowing, but deals are getting done. This is my seventh follow-up report. For reference, check out my original Dec. 28, 2006 post on this topic.
Although the DJIA has been the market leader among the indices and may indicate that investors are giving large cap stocks their due, it has retreated lately. It also may indicate that the global economy is doing better as a whole than the national economy, creating opportunity for the multi-national corporations.
Continue reading Chasing Value 2007 picks : Google (GOOG) runs up, Cramer runs down, indices worse
Posted Jul 2nd 2007 7:40PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Forecasts, Blogs, Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), Cisco Systems (CSCO), Time Warner (TWX), Home Depot (HD), China, Indices, AT and T (T), Halliburton (HAL), Altria Group (MO), NYSE Euronext (NYX), Goldman Sachs Group (GS), Duke Energy (DUK), Dow Chemical (DOW), ETF Investing, Valero Energy (VLO), PetroChina Co Ltd ADR (PTR), Huaneng Power Intl ADS (HNP), iPhone, Level 3 Communications (LVLT), Kraft Foods'A' (KFT), Chasing Value™, S and P 500, DJIA
Through the month of June it seems that it remains a stock pickers' market as Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG), James Cramer of TheStreet.com and I all topped the indices. Google continued its strong move upward battling me for the lead, while Cramer lost much of his gains of last month competing to stay ahead of the indices. Cramer is sticking with his NYSE Euronext (NYSE: NYX) pick, and it continues to drag him down. Earnings reports still trickle in but nothing major has affected the market. Mergers and acquisitions are a bigger story and something seems to be happening every day. This is my sixth follow-up report. It is not a long time, but short of a major change in the global economic picture it looks like 2007 will be a good year. For reference, check out my original Dec. 28, 2006 post on this topic.
There seems to be growing support for large cap stocks which analysts have been talking about but now might be starting to show up for real. The Dow Jones Industrial Average has been the market leader among the indices and may indicate that investors are finaly giving large cap stocks their due. It also may indicate that the global economy is doing better as a whole than the national economy. There also may be some flight to safety. That said, June seemed more cautious then May except in foreign markets as indicated by the strong rise in my Chinese picks. Investors moved the S&P 500 index to new highs.
Continue reading Chasing down 007 picks: Google leads, Cramer sags, value up!
Posted Jun 4th 2007 4:00PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst Reports, Good news, Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), Cisco Systems (CSCO), Time Warner (TWX), Home Depot (HD), China, Halliburton (HAL), Altria Group (MO), NYSE Euronext (NYX), Goldman Sachs Group (GS), Duke Energy (DUK), Dow Chemical (DOW), ETF Investing, Valero Energy (VLO), PetroChina Co Ltd ADR (PTR), Huaneng Power Intl ADS (HNP), iPhone, Level 3 Communications (LVLT), Kraft Foods'A' (KFT), Chasing Value™, S and P 500, DJIA
The month of May was all about stock picking as James Cramer of TheStreet.com has come roaring back after a poor showing in April. Google also made a strong move upward. After languishing for three months it has come close to its all time high. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) set so many new highs that it is not news anymore. Earnings reports still trickle in but nothing major has affected the market. Mergers and acquisitions are a bigger story and something seems to be happening every day. This is my fifth follow-up report. It is not a long time, but short of a major change in the global economic picture it looks like 2007 will be a good year. For reference, check out my original Dec. 28, 2006 post on this topic.
The DJIA has been the market leader among the indices and may indicate that investors are finaly giving large cap stocks their due. It also may indicate that the global economy is doing better as a whole than the national economy. There also may be some flight to safety. That said, May was not a time of caution. Investors moved everything upward with even the S&P 500 index reaching a new high. Cramer took back the lead and for the first time the indices lagged.
Continue reading Chasing down 007 picks: Google & Cramer roaring back and the Dow oh my!
Posted May 4th 2007 4:42PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), Cisco Systems (CSCO), Time Warner (TWX), Halliburton (HAL), Altria Group (MO), Goldman Sachs Group (GS), Duke Energy (DUK), Dow Chemical (DOW), ETF Investing, Valero Energy (VLO), PetroChina Co Ltd ADR (PTR), Huaneng Power Intl ADS (HNP), Level 3 Communications (LVLT), Kraft Foods'A' (KFT), Chasing Value™
This is an update through April 30, 2007 after many companies have reported their first quarter earnings and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJAI) passed the 13,000 watermark and set new record highs. We are still in the midst of earnings season. This is my fourth follow-up report. Not enough time to prove much but plenty of time to make or lose some money. If you want to refer to the original article from December 28, 2006 see: You don't have to be 007 to find the best picks for 2007!
This month an interesting trend took hold. Even with the indices reaching new highs and many stocks doing so as well, it seems there must be some caution in the wind. This is the first month that my value approach lead the pack and Cramer's approach, whatever it is, took a back seat. Not only is Cramer lagging each of the indices, but four of his six speculative and growth picks were down while all three of his value picks were up. Google seems to be dead in the water for now, having reported tremendous growth and beating analyst's guestimates again by a wide margin, it still has not gained any traction even in an up market.
Continue reading Chasing down 007 picks: Index beats Cramer - value trumps growth
Posted Apr 2nd 2007 2:00PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: After the Bell, Forecasts, Blogs, Competitive Strategy, Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), Cisco Systems (CSCO), Time Warner (TWX), Home Depot (HD), Halliburton (HAL), Altria Group (MO), NYSE Euronext (NYX), Goldman Sachs Group (GS), Duke Energy (DUK), Dow Chemical (DOW), ETF Investing, Valero Energy (VLO), PetroChina Co Ltd ADR (PTR), Huaneng Power Intl ADS (HNP), Level 3 Communications (LVLT)
This is an update through March 30, 2007 bringing the first quarter to a close. Earnings season is now upon us. It is my third follow-up report. Three months is a short time in the market for long term investors, and an eternity for a day trader. If you want to refer to the original article from December 28, 2006 see: You don't have to be 007 to find the best picks for 2007!.
Summary of Results:
Not much change since last month. Since the quarter has concluded I added one quarter of the the dividends to the results. This is one of the criteria I used in my stock picks and will have an impact on the final results. Only 3 of Cramer's picks pay dividends averaging about .66%; the Indexes pay a higher average of 1.8%; my picks average still higher at about 3%; and Google does not pay a dividend. The flatter the market is this year the more the dividends will be a factor.
I still remain very comfortable with my stock picks and believe this year will prove to be a "Tortoise and Hare" story. It is my belief that 'Value' will beat 'Growth' and 'Indexing' over the long run. Google is a wild card! Two of my picks continue to be mentioned as buyout candidates; Dow Chemical Co. (NYSE: DOW) and Home Depot (NYSE:HD). Home Depot is receiving the most negative discussion in business circles these days but I see it as becoming a greater value at the lower price.
The following are the closing prices as of December 28, 2006 and three month returns for the seven stocks I recommended plus the addition of Spectra Energy that was spun out of Duke Energy (NYSE:DUK).
Continue reading Chasing down 007 picks: Q1 is done - Valero is tops
Posted Mar 18th 2007 5:10PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Other Issues, Bad News, Blogs, Rants and Raves, Middle East, Scandals, Columns, Halliburton (HAL), Business of Sports, Sunday Funnies
A week of less funny and more irony, shame, and disappointment for some, and plenty of outrage as usual. I do not think anything was more outrageous than the announcement that Halliburton will take the money and run! by moving it's headquarters from Texas to Dubai. Halliburton Co. (NYSE:HAL) framed the move as "it's just good business" and it had a few supporters -- I was not among them. To summarize: "The company can rationalize it to the world press, Wall Street, and the three blind mice for all I care, but it still stinks to the high heavens!"
Sick Of It, wrote: "First we loose Michael Jackson to Dubai & now Halliburton......." I think HAL's reasoning is not so far off from MJ's. After taking our money, and behaving scandalously, they do not feel loved and respected anymore.
American Idol or Sad Idol?
Sanjaya is now among the top eleven competitors on Amercan Idol or Survivor: It's for real and may start to get some sympathy votes now because he looks so sad and remorseful on stage, his joyful smile turning to nervous laugh. He does have many legitimate supporters, but the Vote the Worst crowd bothers me as much as Halliburton. They have rationalized their existence as poorly as HAL its departure. They have contributed to a mean-spirited, tortuous-to-watch situation, which in the end will have a long-term detrimental affect on Sanjaya that may be inescapable for his whole life. I don't think this is how he would like to be remembered. At the same time they choose to mock American Idol, they probably have helped stir things up on a relatively boring season ... but this stinks to the high heavens also!
Continue reading Sunday Funnies: Halliburton, Oil, Duke, DUK & Voting
Posted Mar 12th 2007 7:25PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: After the Bell, International Markets, Forecasts, Rants and Raves, Middle East, Halliburton (HAL)
Earlier in the day I wrote: Halliburton will take the money and run! and JZM questioned, should you do the same with the stock? Halliburton Co. (NYSE:HAL) closed up today 17 cents to $32.19. It has been dead money for three months, a little up, a little down. Today on the day it announced it was packing up and heading for Dubai it is up. If that has any relevance to the stock market then investors view it as a positive "move." It is one of James Cramer's stock picks for 2007 if that has any meaning to you.
If I was basing my judgment on today's fundamentals, I would view the stock favorably. It has a P/E ratio of 14.43 -- that is lower than the DJIA or Standard & Poor average P/E. It pays a dividend, although lower than average, with a yield of 0.93. I like the low P/S of 1.56 very much, even more than the modest P/E. Its current ROE, ROA, and ROIC are all strong and higher than the P/E. It is at the lower end of its 52-week average, between $26.53 and $41.98. It makes a decent and consistent profit. The big question mark to me is HAL's transitional execution plan a year out, what is it's current back-log of work and is it realistically sustainable?
If I was going to speculate (and be very cynical) I would say the government of Dubai has promised HAL even more favorable treatment than it has received from the current Bush administration, or the company would not make the move. This is not an in-depth look but is a good starting point. If forced to state a case here and now without further research, I can see there being more reason to believe the price will be higher rather than lower in the foreseeable future. In after-market trading as I write, it is up another 36 cents to $32.55.
Check out my other posts for BloggingStocks here.
Sheldon Liber is the CEO of a small private investment company and the vice president for design and research at an architecture & planning firm.
Posted Mar 12th 2007 1:52PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Major Movement, International Markets, Bad News, Rants and Raves, Competitive Strategy, Toyota Motor Corp. (TM), Middle East, Scandals, Columns, Diageo plc (DEO), Halliburton (HAL), Sony Corp ADR (SNE), BHP Billiton Ltd ADR (BHP)
Not happy! Not Happy! Not Happy!
No. I'm not happy to hear that Halliburton will move its headquarters to Dubai. The move that looks like it is: a) Financially motivated -- no problem with that. b) Strategically motivated -- no problem with that. c) Politically motivated -- BIG problem with that as it is completely UN-American!
Halliburton Co. (NYSE:HAL) is moving its headquarters from Texas to Dubai for many reasons. The company can rationalize it to the world press, Wall Street and the three blind mice for all I care, but it still stinks to the high heavens! If every United States based company that made greater sales or profits overseas left, we would lose many companies.
But other companies don't leave -- why? Maybe because this is their home. Maybe because they feel some loyalty to their family, friends and neighbors. Maybe because this is a good place to do business. I just can't help but think companies that move to the Bahamas -- or now Dubai -- are looking for a safe haven more than a new headquarters.
Continue reading Halliburton will take the money and run!
Posted Mar 4th 2007 2:48PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Forecasts, Google (GOOG), Apple Inc (AAPL), Cisco Systems (CSCO), Time Warner (TWX), Home Depot (HD), China, Halliburton (HAL), Altria Group (MO), NYSE Euronext (NYX), Duke Energy (DUK), Dow Chemical (DOW), ETF Investing, Valero Energy (VLO), PetroChina Co Ltd ADR (PTR), Huaneng Power Intl ADS (HNP), Level 3 Communications (LVLT), Bargain Stocks
This is an update through February 28, 2007 which has come and gone all too quickly. It is my second follow-up report. Two months is a short time in the market for a buy and hold guy like me, and ages for a day trader. If you want to refer to the original article from December 28, 2006 see: You don't have to be 007 to find the best picks for 2007!.
Summary of Results:.
- James Cramer's average return on his 9 picks was 5.86% last month but now after two months is: +2%. Interestingly it is his speculative stocks that are up the most. Best pick so far Level 3 communications.
- The Indexes all reversed from positive territory to slightly negative, the DJIA leading the way south: -1.2%.
- Liber return is negative at -1.9% held down by my inclusion of PetroChina which is down 22%. I cautioned about buying this stock at close to an all time high. However, for the purposes of this story I used that number as my starting point. Best pick so far Valero Energy.
- Google provided an +8.1% return in January and has since slipped for a YTD loss: -2.9% Among all considerations Google had the poorest showing in the last month going from first to last.
After each quarter I will be adding the dividends to the results. This is one of the criteria I used in my stock picks and will have an impact on the final results. Only 3 of Cramers picks pay dividends averaging about .66%; the Indexes pay a higher average of 1.8%; my picks average still higher at about 3%; and Google does not pay a dividend.
I still remain very comfortable with my stock picks and believe this year will prove to be a "Tortoise and Hare" story. It is my belief that 'Value' will beat 'Growth' and 'Indexing' over the long run. Google is a wild card! Two of my picks continue to be mentioned as buyout candidates; Dow Chemical Company and The Home Depot.
The following are the closing prices as of December 28, 2006 and two month returns for the seven stocks I recommended plus the addition of Spectra Energy that was spun out of Duke:
Continue reading Chasing down 007 picks: Jan/Feb results - Cramer on top