Lilly posts
FeedPosted Dec 1st 2009 6:00PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: General Electric (GE), PepsiCo (PEP), Intel (INTC), McDonald's (MCD), International Business Machines (IBM), 3M Corporation (MMM), American Express (AXP), Colgate-Palmolive (CL), FedEx Corp (FDX), General Mills (GIS), Procter and Gamble (PG), Lockheed Martin (LMT), Lilly (Eli) (LLY), Deere and Co (DE), Unilever ADR (UL), Serious Money, Stock Screen, China Mobile Limited (CHL)
Yesterday I started a review of 25 companies that Fortune deemed most successful according to their peers in developing quality leadership. Today I review the remaining 20, searching to find the ones that might be worth investing in.
Price-to-book (from 11/27/09) was used as the first value screen. The theory being from a value investor's perspective that buying for a price at or near the break-up value of the company provides downside protection. Of course that is easier said than done.
Continue reading Serious Money: Fortune's 25 leaders, now 20
Posted Nov 30th 2009 1:00PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Management, General Electric (GE), PepsiCo (PEP), Intel (INTC), McDonald's (MCD), International Business Machines (IBM), 3M Corporation (MMM), Johnson and Johnson (JNJ), American Express (AXP), Colgate-Palmolive (CL), FedEx Corp (FDX), General Mills (GIS), Procter and Gamble (PG), Lockheed Martin (LMT), Lilly (Eli) (LLY), Deere and Co (DE), Unilever ADR (UL), Serious Money, Stock Screen, China Mobile Limited (CHL),
The recent issue of Fortune magazine discusses how the best of the best train, guide and nurture top managers to become the leaders that will propel their corporations successfully forward. They list the top 25 companies, which I have used as the basis of a new review to see how they would fair against common metric screens.
In the past few months, many articles have posited that large-cap stocks should excel in the coming year based on their lagging the market behind smaller, more volatile stocks flying out of the March lows. I do not believe this is universally true. Plenty of large-cap stocks did well, such as Anadarko Petroleum (APC), Apple (AAPL) and Google (GOOG), while many small caps went nowhere. Even among the large caps included in Fortune's "Leadership 25," some have doubled.
Continue reading Serious Money: Fortune's 25 leaders among leaders
Posted Sep 2nd 2009 5:00PM by Steven Halpern (RSS feed)
Filed under: Coca-Cola (KO), Exxon Mobil (XOM), Colgate-Palmolive (CL), Coca-Cola Enterprises (CCE), Procter and Gamble (PG), Lilly (Eli) (LLY)
"While companies have been cutting dividends at an historic pace over the last 24 months, the fact is that there are still quality companies with long histories of paying dividends that represent good long-term investments," says Chuck Carlson, a specialist in companies offering dividend reinvestment plans.
In his top-notch The DRIP Investor he says, "The seven stocks featured here have each been paying a dividend for over 100 years, have raised their dividend annually for at least the last quarter century and offer direct-purchase plans.
Continue reading Seven dividend elites: 100 years of dividends
Posted Jan 17th 2008 7:15AM by Zack Miller (RSS feed)
Filed under: Bad News, Pfizer (PFE), Scandals, Lilly (Eli) (LLY)

There is an
unbelievable story in The New York Times today about the pharmaceutical industry. It appears that the companies marketing drugs like
Prozac and
Paxil have been lax in reporting results of studies of their anti-depressant drugs.
NYTimes.com is reporting that one-third of all studies conducted by firms such as
Eli Lilly (NYSE:
LLY),
Pfizer (NYSE:
PFE) and
Wyeth (NYSE:
WYE) go unpublished.
Citing a new report in the
New England Journal of Medicine, the article reports that "about 60 percent of people taking the drugs report significant relief from depression, compared with roughly 40 percent of those on placebo pills. But when the less positive, unpublished trials are included, the advantage shrinks: the drugs outperform placebos, but by a modest margin."
There is a great quote about the impact of this new study written by Dr. Jeffrey M. Drazen, the editor in chief of the
New England Journal of Medicine:
This is a very important study for two reasons. One is that when you prescribe drugs, you want to make sure you're working with best data possible; you wouldn't buy a stock if you only knew a third of the truth about it.
Posted Oct 26th 2007 10:30AM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst Reports, Analyst Upgrades and Downgrades, Comcast Cl'A' (CMCSA), Lilly (Eli) (LLY), Level 3 Communications (LVLT)
MOST NOTEWORTHY: Trident Microsystems, Comcast, Level 3 Communications, Ambac Financial and MBIA Inc were today's noteworthy downgrades:
- Jefferies downgraded shares of Trident Microsystems Inc (NASDAQ: TRID) to Hold from Buy and lowered their target to $9 from $20 following the company's mixed quarter as they expect TRID to lose share in the TV market and face increasing price pressure. Shares were also downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank. Oppenheimer lowered Trident to Neutral from Buy, citing disappointing December guidance, delay in TV ramp, and expectations that 2008 will be a peak year for TV chip ramp revenues.
- CIBC downgraded shares of Comcast Corporation (NASDAQ: CMCSA) to Sector Performer from Outperformer following the weak Q3 results to reflect increasing competition in telco video, slower broadband growth and the weakening economy.
- JP Morgan downgraded Level 3 Communications Inc (NASDAQ: LVLT) to Neutral from Outperform following disappointing Q3 results and guidance.
- Friedman Billings downgraded shares of Ambac Financial Group Inc (NYSE: ABK) and MBIA Inc (NYSE: MBI) to Market Perform from Outperform citing lack of near-term catalysts and uncertainty surrounding the credit markets.
OTHER DOWNGRADES:
Posted Dec 26th 2006 5:15PM by Eric Buscemi (RSS feed)
Filed under: Apple Inc (AAPL), Altria Group (MO), , Lilly (Eli) (LLY)

U.S. stocks were slightly higher on light trading volume. The Dow was up 0.45%, the NASDAQ 100 up 0.35%, the S&P 500 up 0.35%, while 10-year bond rates decreased to 4.6030%. The CBOE VIX was up .02 to 11.38.
- Telik Inc's (NASDAQ: TELK) January option implied volatility collapsed after disappointing data. Telik was recently down $11.47 to $4.79. TELK Phase 3 trails related to its cancer drug Telcyta (treatment for non-small cell lung cancer & ovarian cancer) "did not achieve statistically significant improvement in overall survival." JANY & STFL downgraded Telik to sell. Telik's January option implied volatility was at 85, according to Track Data, below a level of 215 from last week, suggesting decreasing risk.
- Eli Lilly's (NYSE: LLY) January 55 calls were active on 6,163 contracts as Lilly rallies. Eli Lilly recently rallied .43 to $51.77, after a Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington, D.C. ruled its 2011 Zyprexa patent was valid. Lilly faced pressure last week on documents leaked to the NY Times indicating Zryprexa (schizophrenia treatment) had understated weight gain and diabetes risk. Lilly's Zyprexa accounts for approximately 25% of Lilly's sales & 50% of its EPS. Lilly's January option implied volatility of 19 was near its 26-week average of 19, according to Track Data, suggesting non-directional risks.
- U.S. Bancorp's (NYSE: USB) calls active on company going ex-dividend on 12/27/06. USB goes ex-dividend on 12/27/06, paying a dividend of .40 cents. USB total intra-day call option volume was heavy on over 962,946 contracts, according to Track Data. Heavy call volume was attributable to traders hoping to take advantage of option exercises, call pricing discrepancies and low option transaction commission fees.
Liquid stocks with option implied volatility above 90, according to Track Data: AtheroGenics (NASDAQ:
AGIX), Momenta Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:
MNTA), Dendreon Corp (NASDAQ:
DNDN), Escala Group (NASDAQ:
ESCL), and Northfield Laboratories (NASDAQ:
NFLD).
Option volume leaders today were Telik Inc, Altria Group (NYSE:
MO), Clear Channel Communications (NYSE:
CCU), and Apple Computer (NASDAQ:
AAPL).
Options analysis provided by Paul Foster, options strategist for Theflyonthewall.com.