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Security from Brinks (CFL)

"To invest in the growing personal protection industry, Brinks Home Security Holdings (NYSE: CFL) looks particularly attractive," says Jim Powell in Global Changes & Opportunities Report.

"Brinks Holdings is an October 2008 spin-off from Brinks Company; as its name suggests, Brinks Home Security has a tighter focus than its parent organization that offers security services to banks and other high value businesses.

"I think the emphasis on protecting families from burglary and home invasions is a plus in today's economy.

Continue reading Security from Brinks (CFL)

Analyst calls: ETR, THO, AMN, DF, FOSL, NSRGY . . .

Analyst upgrades:
  • Baird expects Thor Industries (NYSE: THO) to benefit from industry consolidation and the eventual recovery. Shares were upgraded to Neutral from Underperform.
  • Jefferies upgraded SPSS Inc. (NASDAQ: SPSS) to Buy from Hold on valuation and believes the company's cost cuts will be positive for EPS. The company's target was lowered to $28 from $29.
  • Banc of America upgraded shares of Entergy (NYSE: ETR) to Buy from Neutral on valuation and believes the company is unlikely to spin-off Enexus by year-end. They believe a spin-off in 2009 or no spin at all suggests a higher share price from current levels. The company's target was raised to $104 from $101.50.
  • AMN Healthcare (NYSE: AMN) was upgraded to hold from Sell at Citigroup.
  • Argus upgraded Choice Hotels (NYSE: CHH) to Hold from Sell.
  • Transdigm Group (NYSE: TDG) was lifted to Buy from Neutral at UBS.

Analyst downgrades:

Continue reading Analyst calls: ETR, THO, AMN, DF, FOSL, NSRGY . . .

Will GE's iconic lightbulb soon be a thing of the not-so-green past?

Whenever I think of General Electric Co. (NYSE: GE), I see a curvy, 20th-century light bulb in my mind's eye. A calm, loving woman's voice sings melodically, "we bring good things to life!" Imagine, then, a world in which the iconic GE light bulb -- the pear-shaped incandescent one -- is no longer a big seller. What would we put over little cartoon heads as shorthand for a brilliant realization? What would become the universal symbol for "idea?" And, more importantly, what would GE do?

On Friday, GE announced it was closing seven plants and warehouses that currently make and store incandescent bulbs, "reducing [GE's] footprint." Other bulbs, like the CFL (compact fluorescent lamp), are gaining ground on the 128-year-old icon of electric light as consumers seek to reduce energy costs and carbon emissions. That GE is using the environmentally-friendly "footprint" terminology to describe what is a decision brought on by shrinking demand is both shrewd and damning. The layoff of 4,400 employees (GE has already laid off 3,000, and plans to reduce its force by 1,400 more) is slyly positioned as being a plus for the planet.

As CFLs and other efficient devices save energy, they also require changing far less frequently; meaning sales must be reduced for GE and the other market participants (Philips Electronics and Siemens are the number two and three in the light bulb market). This can't be good news for the industrial giant, although GE has spent considerable time and money investing in more environmentally-friendly lines of business from emissions control and testing for other industrial clients to (you guessed it) fluorescent bulbs.

Continue reading Will GE's iconic lightbulb soon be a thing of the not-so-green past?

Symbol Lookup
IndexesChangePrice
DJIA-137.3210,327.08
NASDAQ-28.742,147.31
S&P 500-16.321,094.31

Last updated: November 27, 2009: 12:14 PM

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