"Our goal is helping investors grow their capital and income base from which to derive cash for their current and future needs," notes dividend expert Kelley Wright.
The editor of Investment Quality Trends explains, "To that end we believe that high-quality stocks purchased at historically low-price-to-high-yield offers the best potential for downside protection and upside appreciation. Our Timely Ten list represents our current top ideas.
UnitedTechnologies posts
FeedThe Timely Ten: Blue Chip Dividends
United Technologies Reports Fourth-Quarter Earnings
This morning, United Technologies (UTX) reported fourth-quarter earnings of $1.15 per share and net income of $1.1 billion. The current results include a charge of eight cents per share from restructuring costs. The post-charge results matched the consensus estimate of $1.15. The company reported sales of $14.1 billion during the fourth quarter, which was better than the consensus estimate for $13.8 billion. Looking ahead, UTX forecast full-year 2010 earnings growth between 7% and 13%. The company forecast its full-year profit between $4.40 and $4.65 per share.
Continue reading United Technologies Reports Fourth-Quarter Earnings
Stock to avoid #8 -- United Technologies (UTX)
Don't be deceived by the short-term performance of United Technologies (NYSE: UTX). The weakness of the dollar in the second quarter helped push shares of this multinational manufacturer higher. But these gains merely allowed the company to recover big losses sustained during the first quarter of the year.
The double whammy here for investors is exposure to the aerospace industry. As described previously, the weakness in the airline industry will negatively impact revenue for those companies providing equipment to the space. In addition, reductions in defense spending will also negatively impact UTX.
We are in the early stages of seeing change in how this company operates in the current environment. There is no catalyst for this stock to go higher, and shares are vulnerable to the extent the dollar strengthens. I would sell UTX.
Next: Stock to Avoid #9
Take a pass on these ten stocks
With such uncertainty, following an absolute return strategy continues to offer investors the biggest bang for their buck. There is no sense in guessing where the market will be down the road.
Instead, buy cheap stocks and sell stocks that are expensive. Then blend the two approaches together in one portfolio and chances are you'll make money.
Even with a huge rally in stocks, the S&P 500 ended the second quarter with a year-to-date gain of 1.78%. That is a vast improvement compared to the 11% loss at the end of the first quarter, but it's a minimal return for taking risk in the stock market.
Investors need to do better -- and they can.
United Technologies lifted by strong Q2 earnings
United Technologies (NYSE: UTX) shares are trading higher today after the company reported a second-quarter profit of $1.28 billion, or $1.32 per share, beating analysts' estimates of $1.30 per share. UTX said demand was strong for its Otis elevators and fire and security equipment for the commercial construction sector. If you think that the company won't fall by too much in the coming months, then now could be a good time to look at a bullish hedged trade on UTX.After hitting a one-year high of $82.50 in October, the stock hit a one-year low of $58.87 on Tuesday. UTX opened this morning at $64.50. So far today the stock has hit a low of $62.58 and a high of $65.31. As of 12:45, UTX is trading at $63.82, up 2.71 (4.4%). The chart for UTX looks bearish and steady, while S&P gives the stock a bullish 4 Stars (out of 5) buy rating.
For a bullish hedged play on this stock, I would consider a November bull-put credit spread below the $50 range. A bull-put credit spread is an options position that combines the purchase and sale of put options to hedge risk in case the stock doesn't do what you think but still leverage nice returns. For this particular trade, we will make an 8.7% return in just 4 months as long as UTX is above $50 at November expiration. UTX would have to fall by more than 23% before we would start to lose money. Learn more about this type of trade here.
UTX hasn't been below $58 at all in the past year and has shown support around $59 recently. This trade could be risky if the US military efforts in the Middle East slow down in the next few months, but even if that happens, it is tough to imagine military spending really decreasing by a significant amount.
Brent Archer is an options analyst and writer at Investors Observer.
DISCLOSURE: Mr. Archer owns and/or controls diversified portfolios of long and short stock and option positions that may include holdings in companies he writes about. At publication time, Brent neither owns nor controls positions in UTX.
General Electric spreading its wings in Czech Republic
While some companies may be consolidating, others are reconfiguring and expanding. General Electric Company (NYSE: GE) has acquired a small airplane engine company in the Czech Republic. Selling it's appliance business and adding more to it's portfolio of aircraft and engine capability should be a good move. The Wall Street Journal (subscription required) reported today that GE hopes to improve its competitive position against Pratt & Whitney.
A response from a Pratt & Whitney spokesman played down the increased competition and said that although the company takes this GE move seriously it has a 45-year history producing small engines and holds a solid position in the market place. This type of comment is to be expected and has some validity, but that does not make it good news for P&W.
P&W is a division of another major giant industrial conglomerate United Technologies (NYSE: UTX). Both GE and UTX stocks were up in early morning trading today.
UPDATE: GE closed at $26.91 up $0.40 (1.51%). UTX closed at $61.05 up $1.35 ( 2.26%).
Sheldon Liber is the CEO of a small private investment company and the principal for design and research at an architecture & planning firm. He writes the columns Chasing Value and Serious Money. Disclosure: I own shares of GE.
Dividend boosters: Emerson Electric (EMR) and United Technologies (UTX)
"Dividend growth has become increasingly scarce on Wall Street," says says Chuck Carlson, an expert on dividend reinvestment plans. In his The DRIP Investor he looks at two stocks boosting their payouts.
"For the first time in five years, the number of companies in 2007 boosting their dividends declined nearly
6% from the previous year, according to Standard & Poor's. And the slowdown in dividend growth continued in the first quarter of 2008.
"The first quarter marked the seventh consecutive three-month period of year-over-year declines in the number of companies raising dividends. Through the first three months of this year, 19% fewer companies raised dividends than in the year-earlier quarter.
"Even more alarming, 83 companies decreased their dividends during the fi rst quarter, according to S&P. That's up from just 19 in the same period in 2007 and is the highest number of dividend decreases since 1991.
"Nevertheless, there are still plenty of companies willing to boost their dividends, and you can now buy such companies at bargain prices.
Continue reading Dividend boosters: Emerson Electric (EMR) and United Technologies (UTX)
Honeywell isn't afraid of the recession -- buy the stock?
According to this article at CNBC, industrial manufacturer Honeywell (NYSE: HON) doesn't see the current recession (or slowdown, if you believe recession is too harsh a term) hurting its plans all that much. Shareholders of the company should certainly rejoice at management's assertion that the company will still be able to deliver somewhere between $3.70 and $3.80 in earnings per share for 2008.
Reaffirmation is always a good thing in a market as tempestuous as this one has been. The question is, when you see a news item such as this, what actionable inference can you take from it? In other words, should you be looking at Honeywell? Investors should indeed perform some due diligence on the company, because based on the current price of the stock, Honeywell isn't overly pricey. Plus, the stock is really close to a 52-week high. I'm not the biggest fan of buying at 52-week highs, but for those who believe in trading via chart science, a stock near the top end of a range is oftentimes attractive since, in theory, a majority of the weak holders will be out of it by that point.
But being patient for a pullback is usually a virtue with any strong stock. And here's something else to consider. Competitor United Technologies (NYSE: UTX), which has a similar dividend yield to Honeywell, is further away from its 52-week high, but well off its 52-week low. Does that make UTX more attractive? Possibly. And Goodrich Corp. (NYSE: GR), while not having as high a dividend yield, is also not at a 52-week high. So while the reaffirmation bodes well for Honeywell, definitely kick the company's financial tires a bit before making any decision, and look around to similar companies that you might think are better values.
Disclosure: I don't own shares in any company mentioned here; positions can change at any time.
Cramer on BloggingStocks: Earthquake recovery can change China
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says that rebuilding from natural disasters can alter the growth picture for a country. Is it Katrina all over again? Or is it bigger? Much bigger? That's what I am thinking about this Chinese earthquake.
Katrina distorted the U.S.'s growth pattern for more than a full year. The raw materials, the effort, the work, the reconstruction affected businesses from small-scale retail to refining and infrastructure.
We don't really know how China works, although a lot of people tell us they do. To me, the Chinese are always a day away from revolution or civil war and the trick of the government is to stay one step ahead of the posse. (Chinese hands will dispute that, but you have to appreciate that it takes a special skill to be wrong for more than a century and still maintain credibility.)
That means massive reconstruction: bricks, lumber, cement, steel and all the trimmings. Massive imports, not controlled by the Chinese and their little negotiation games like they play with iron and steel and coal. Just full-bore buying and something that could take growth for China back to the levels that everyone thought it couldn't absorb without more inflation.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Earthquake recovery can change China
Cramer on BloggingStocks: The charts are amazingly bad
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says investors should be negative, but they have to keep an eye out for rallies.Have you looked at the charts lately? I still carry them around and, frankly, have been reluctant to sit down and look at one after another the way Helene Meisler has for years and years.
But I have forced myself to do so since this year began just to remind myself that this bear market is a vicious one and you better have a darned good reason to buy a stock because you are most likely going to lose money otherwise.
The charts are amazingly bad. The vast majority of stocks are simply awful. You eliminate the oils, the golds, the ags, you have nothing, I mean, really, nothing. You can see that an Avon (NYSE: AVP) (Cramer's Take) could rally or maybe a Coke (NYSE: KO) (Cramer's Take), and you can make a case for the utilities to bottom on interest rate compares but that's really about it. The banks? They all look like they have no bottom.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: The charts are amazingly bad
United Technologies offers $2.63 billion for Diebold
Maker of Otis elevators and Chubb security systems, United Technologies Corp. (NYSE: UTX), announced Sunday that it had made an unsolicited $2.63 billion offer for Diebold Inc. (NYSE: DBD). Diebold is one of the largest makers of automated teller machines and voting machines, and United Tech's move comes as a part of its plan to extend its security business and presence in China.United Technologies announced it first approached Diebold about a possible deal two years ago but nothing had materialized thus far. United Tech announced that its current bid amounts to $40 a share, a 66% premium to Diebold's closing price of $24.12 on Friday. The company also said a it may increase its offer if it is sees more detailed information.
George David, United Technologies' chairman and chief executive, stated that the "transaction creates significant and immediate value for Diebold shareholders with no operational risk, while creating long term value for UTC shareholders."
Continue reading United Technologies offers $2.63 billion for Diebold
Defense stocks should be on your radar screen
President Bush recently submitted a $3.1 trillion dollar budget to congress with the biggest proposed increases in defense spending, and homeland security. The Pentagon would get a $35 billion increase to $515 billion for core programs, about 7% with war costs additional (but how much is additional?) This further supports my investment posture for this year and next that the defense sector is the place to be as I posted earlier today and many times over the past few months -- the BIG BUYS.Some of our big defense contractors, all of which should benefit to some degree include: Boeing (NYSE: BA), General Dynamics (NYSE: GD), Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT), Northrop Grumman (NYSE: NOC), Raytheon Company (NYSE: RTN), and United Technologies (NYSE: UTX). I am not suggesting that you jump into these stocks immediately, but you should add them to your watch list. Perhaps, for some investors dollar cost averaging into them over six months would make sense. Each has a varying degree of exposure to defense spending. For example, United Technologies is the parent of Sikorsky helicopters which makes the Black Hawk. Lockheed Martin and Boeing make fighter jets. Raytheon makes defense electronics and missile while General Dynamics and Northrop Grumman supply warships to the US Navy. Northrop also makes aerial vehicles that are being used in the Iraq War.
Continue reading Defense stocks should be on your radar screen
Cramer on BloggingStocks: Today's game plan: What you can safely buy
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says companies with great earnings might be worth a look.
Stocks are cheap on an earnings basis -- unless they have earnings risk. If they have no earnings risk, they are not cheap.
Therein lies the conundrum on a day like today. Let's say you went CAMPing today: You bought Coke (NYSE: KO) (Cramer's Take), Altria (NYSE: MO) (Cramer's Take), Merck (NYSE: MER) (Cramer's Take) and Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG) (Cramer's Take). Do you know that even after the precipitous falls last week and the declines we expect today, that none of them is historically cheap? Do you know that most of them are up significantly since last summer?
That's a real issue. You aren't buying them at rock bottom prices because they are up so much already.
Now, let's take the examples of the cyclical stocks in the Dow. They are cheap: United Tech (NYSE: UTX) (Cramer's Take), Honeywell (NYSE: HON) (Cramer's Take), Alcoa (NYSE: AA) (Cramer's Take). But their earnings estimates are considered vulnerable to the worldwide slowdown and a U.S. recession.
You can chicken out, buy some Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) (Cramer's Take), which has good earnings, or IBM (NYSE: IBM) (Cramer's Take), which just had great earnings, and in many ways those will be cheaper.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Today's game plan: What you can safely buy
Options update 1-18-08: UTX, MA volatility up into earnings season
United Technologies (NYSE: UTX) will report Q4 EPS on January 23. UTX February option implied volatility of 32 is above its 26-week average of 26 according to Track Data, suggesting larger risk.
MasterCard (NYSE: MA) closed at $176.88. MA will report Q4 EPS on January 31. MA February option implied volatility of 67 is above its 26-week average of 41 according to Track Data, indicating larger price fluctuations.
Options Update is provided by Stock Specialist Paul Foster of theflyonthewall.com
United Technologies (UTX) gets into solar energy
Solar energy presents two challenges. The first is to gather energy from sunlight. The other is to store it for future use. United Technologies (NYSE: UTX) believes that it has found a solution for the second problem.
According to The Wall Street Journal, UTX unit "Hamilton Sundstrand is scheduled to announce that it has teamed with US Renewables Group to commercialize a new type of solar-power plant that will use molten salt to store the sun's heat."
Solar power stocks were among the biggest winners on Wall Street in 2007. As an example, shares in SunTech Power (NYSE: STP) moved from a 52-week low of $31.41 to close the year at $82.32. As long as the price of crude stays high, solar power shares are likely to do the same.
The United Technologies announcement is a sign that sun-driven alternative energy is entering the big time. The company had almost $14 billion in revenue last quarter, but some of its businesses like cooling and elevators are likely to face slower growth.
What better idea for UTX than to use some of its huge resources to get into one of the fastest growing industries in the world.
Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.
Tax Reform in This Election Year: It's Not Likely
Which Credit Card Rewards Does the IRS Care About?

