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Taser: A 'stunning' trade

"Taser International (NASDAQ: TASR), a maker of stun-guns used for police work, corrections, and personal defense" is a new trade from technician Melvin Pasternak in The Swing Trader.

On a split-adjusted basis, the stock peaked in the mid-$30s in 2004. The advisor notes, "Dogged by bad publicity about its guns, it declined to just above $5 per share in October 2005." The shares then rallied to the $11 range in the spring of 2006, he points out, and have been trading in a broad range between $6 and $10 since that time.

However, in late May, he notes, TASR "blew through important resistance just above $10 on volume about double normal weekly levels." In addition, he says, "This past week, the stock added to its gains and probed key resistance just above $11 before retreating." Volume, he adds, was again very strong.

For the more technically-inclined, the advisor explains that the stock has broken a relative strength downtrend line, and that line is "convincingly above its own moving average for the first time in many months." In addition, he notes that the stock's MACD is on a buy signal. With the shares breaking out of a multi-month base, he believes they are posted to move higher.

To determine the possible upside, the tecnician looks at the stock's base, which he notes it $3 in height. He says, "According to the measuring principle, the stock should now reach about $13 per share."

For more stock picks from the leading financial newsletter advisors, visit Steven Halpern's free daily website, TheStockAdvisors.com.

Taser's new consumer stun gun spooks police

TASER International Inc. (NASDAQ: TASR) is no stranger to controversies. These days, police say it is concerned with Taser's latest consumer weapon, a $299 metallic pink, palm-sized C2 stun gun (no worries, it does come in three other cool colors including Black Pearl as well).

To recap, last time I wrote about Taser was in late February, when Taser reported fourth-quarter earnings that showed strong sales that boosted profits. Shares went up 5.5% consequently. Then Taser announced preliminary first quarter results that fell below analysts' expectations due to delayed orders. While investors punished the stock, taking it down 5%, some analysts remained positive on the company's base sales.

As for the C2, police say the consumer weapon is bound to fall into criminal hands and worry that officers will be injured by users who lack proper training. The Fraternal Order of Police, the largest law-enforcement labor union, has barred Taser from exhibiting the new C2 weapon or any other at its convention in August.

Seven states have already outlawed consumer use of stunning devices and three other states, including Texas are considering bills for bans or regulation of ownership.

Taser isn't worried. First, its main market is law-enforcement agencies rather than consumers. Second, there's always concern around a new product, the company says.

After a nice 5% run the past ten days, shares closed down 2.56% at $8.37 on Thursday. The stock remains of speculative nature. While many wrongful deaths lawsuits have been dismissed, lowering its risk, Taser does have rocky fundamentals. I still definitely like the long-term prospects, but it's only for those who can stomach it.

As a last comment, and in light of the Virginia Tech shooting, something eludes me here (probably because I'm Canadian). How is it that stunning devices seem to be more regulated than guns in the U.S.? Gun control - no, but stunning devices ban - yes?

Taser stuns the market

Taser International Inc. (NASDAQ:TASR) shares are up over 5.5% today on heavy volume after the company reported strong sales in the fourth-quarter that boosted profits for the stun gun maker.

Despite many controversies regarding its products, Taser has managed to grow profits for four straight quarters. For the fourth-quarter, net income grew to $2.3 million, or 4 cents per share, from $179,126, or breakeven per share, in the year-ago period. Revenue rose 53% to $19.3 million from $12.6 million. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial expected 4 cents earnings per share on revenue of $19.2 million.

While the market is happy with the results, Taser is far away from the highs it reached in 2004 when safety concerns over the use of the TASERs and a SEC investigation hit the company The government ordered a two-year study by the Department of Justice (yet to be completed) and Amnesty International called the stun guns inhumane. The SEC also investigated the company's accounting practices back then. The investigation ended in 2005.

The company mentions in the report that courts dismissed seven more suits related to wrongful deaths from TASER use, but just last month yet another Taser controversy about police use of the guns made the headlines. Despite all that, it seems customers keep coming back for more, and for now, that's what matters to investors.

If the company continues its growth without new controversies to shake it or competition to speak of (competition remained weak so far), the stock should continue to do well as law-enforcement agencies domestically and around the world continue to adopt this nonlethal (or as some would prefer, 'less-lethal') gun. And lest we forget the opportunities in the personal market as well.

Symbol Lookup
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DJIA+20.0310,246.97
NASDAQ-2.982,151.08
S&P 500-0.071,093.01

Last updated: November 10, 2009: 10:38 PM

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