homedepot(hd) posts
FeedPosted Jun 8th 2007 12:30PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Home Depot (HD), Exxon Mobil (XOM), Columns, Walt Disney (DIS), Caterpillar (CAT), Alcoa Inc (AA), Amer Intl Group (AIG), ETF Investing, Bargain Stocks, Serious Money, DJIA
Whittling Away at the Dow has been my longest multi-part blog to date. This is the seventh and concluding post of the series and for those that have been following along I hope there has been something of value for you in my comments. Among my surprises have been that there was so much value still left in the Dow given it's reaching new highs almost daily; I was surprised Disney was among the stocks that made the cut, and I was surprised at how few comments I received. You might notice that all six stocks that made the cut were from the top half of the Dow 30, perhaps I became tougher as I went along, but that's how it worked out. If you want to read the previous posts the following links will get you there: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, or Part 6. So here we go, whittling the six down to three. Here are the stars:
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Home Depot (NYSE:
HD): Retail and wholesale hardware and construction materials
Continue reading Serious Money: Whittling away at the Dow - best values : Part 7
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 Jun 1st 2007 1:00PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Dell (DELL), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), Intel (INTC), General Motors (GM), Home Depot (HD), Lowe's Cos (LOW), Honeywell Intl (HON), Serious Money
Fifteen stocks have been reviewed, fifteen to go to complete the Dow Jones Industrials whittling. Of the first fifteen, five will be looked at again as possible value plays: Alcoa Aluminum (NYSE: AA), American International Group (NYSE: AIG), Caterpillar Inc. (NYSE: CAT), Disney (Walt) Company (NYSE: DIS) and Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM) . You can link to Part 1 of this series or Part 2 or Part 3 if you want to catch up. Comments are always welcome; on to the next five...
General Motors (NYSE: GM) has practically returned from the dead rising about 100% from it's lows 18 months ago, and it was the number one performing Dow stock last year. That's wonderful for shareholders and the UAW and the managers that steered the ship. Looking at it today as a stock investment I think it would take too much speculation to be an investor. I have no idea whether GM will produce some great car designs that will be appealing to future customers or whether they will effectively compete in the marketplace against worthy alternatives. I have no idea what will happen in UAW contract negotiations. When I look at the metrics it is a mess. All I can say is that for me GM stands for "Giant Mystery," and let others wiser than I support the shares.
Continue reading Serious Money: Whittling away at the Dow - GM, HPQ, HD, HON, & INTC: Part 4
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 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
Posted Feb 2nd 2007 5:52PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst Reports, Forecasts, Time Warner (TWX), Home Depot (HD), Market Matters, Getting Started, Columns, Duke Energy (DUK), Dow Chemical (DOW), ETF Investing, Valero Energy (VLO), PetroChina Co Ltd ADR (PTR), Huaneng Power Intl ADS (HNP)
So January 2007 is already history and this is my first follow-up report. I recognize that from an investment perspective it is almost meaningless to gain any insight into the quality of my stock selections after only one month.
In truth, even a year is an arbitrary length of time to know anything for sure. On one occasion I sold Boeing (NYSE: BA) after holding it about 18 months, shortly before its rise, when its new CEO exercised some ethically and morally 'poor secretarial judgment'. Then I watched the stock double in quick order.
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:
- Google provided an 8.1% return heading into reporting season. It has since slipped.
- James Cramer's average return on his 9 picks was 5.86% which was very good. There might be some Cramer bump but if there is it will fade and for now he has done great.
- The Indexes were all in positive territory.
- Liber return was slightly negative for January -0.55% held down by my inclusion of PetroChina. 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 and believe it will be up this year.
After each quarter I will be adding the dividend yields to the results. This is one of the criteria I used in my stock picks and will have an impact on the final results.
Here are the closing prices as of December 28, 2006 of the seven stocks I recommended plus the addition of Spectra Energy that was spun out of Duke:
Continue reading Chasing down 007 picks: January results - Cramer wins
Posted Jan 15th 2007 5:35PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Analyst Reports, Forecasts, Rants and Raves, Home Depot (HD), Columns, Analyst Initiations
At the end of last year I selected The Home Depot (NYSE:HD) as one of my seven picks for the coming year in the post You don't have to be 007 to find the best picks for 2007! At the time I took notice of it my thoughts were reinforced by an article in Money Magazine by Michael Zivy, who also recommended Lowes as worthy of investment consideration.
Now, just over two weeks later, I have read many more similar reports touting the stock. No less than James Cramer of TheStreet.com, Barron's, Fortune, and more recently BusinessWeek wrote it up after the abrupt resignation of CEO Bob Nardelli. I am sure I have seen it discussed in other places too, but the point has been made. A crowd within the investment world has taken an interest in Home Depot stock. No such crowds have been reported in the actual stores.
Which is more important to the success of the company: more customers or more Wall Street players? In my own analysis I was looking at financial data and not trying to place any bets on when there might be a large positive swing in customer traffic. Are the investment world gurus (I'm not there yet) betting the stock rises because they are predicting more traffic, or is the stock going to rise in the short run even in the absence of customers simply because they say so? Short term the prognosticators do have an impact. Not only does the word on the street affect stock prices, but there are those that are leading global investment houses and placing real bets the stock will rise, so it must.
In the long run it will be customers and cash flow that will impact the stock price. And management decisions and the macro economy will impact customer flow. But, when I see a crowd I usually go the other way so I take pause to revisit my thinking on the subject of Home Depot. I am not fond of crowds but when they gather it is often worth knowing why. In this case I think my reasoning still has merit, so I will write this off to everyone jumping on the bandwagon. I do not claim to be the first one on the bandwagon, and do not know now when and if I will jump off. I will not be changing my seven picks during the year, so I guess I'm going along for the ride.
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 Jan 3rd 2007 5:43PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: After the Bell, Forecasts, Rants and Raves, Time Warner (TWX), Home Depot (HD), Columns, Duke Energy (DUK), Dow Chemical (DOW), ETF Investing, Valero Energy (VLO), PetroChina Co Ltd ADR (PTR), Huaneng Power Intl ADS (HNP)
Here's a note I wrote to my editors today:
Day ONE results: DOW up .09%, NASDAQ up .33%, S&P down -.12%
LIBER (007) SEVEN UP 3.76% (even with oil down)
You should start an office pool for lunch money - going to be HUGE year!
Sheldon
So here's what you'd need if you'd want to start your own office pool:
The closing prices as of December 28, 2006 of the seven stocks I recommended:
- The Dow Chemical Company (NYSE: DOW): $40.02
- Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK): $33.02
- The Home Depot Inc. (NYSE: HD): $39.73
- Huaneng Power International ADS (NYSE: HNP): $36.00
- PetroChina ADR (NYSE: PTR): $142.12
- Time Warner Inc. (NYSE: TWX) $22.00
- Valero Energy (NYSE: VLO) $51.61
NOTE: Duke spun-off Spectra Energy (NYSE: SE) today.
The comparisons:
- Dow Jones Industrial Average: 12,501.52
- NASDAQ Composite Index: 2,425.57
- Standard & Poors 500 INdex: 1,424.73
And of course, I will report back each month with the closing stock price as of the 28th of each month. If I am wrong, it will be very public. Although I did not recommend jumping in each of these stocks at these prices immediately, I will use them for tracking purposes, come what may.
Disclosure: I own shares of DUK, HNP, PTR, TWX, and VLO (bought 12/29/06) and will likely own DOW, and HD.
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 Dec 29th 2006 3:32PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Forecasts, Rants and Raves, Time Warner (TWX), Home Depot (HD), China, Market Matters, Getting Started, Next Big Thing, Columns, Duke Energy (DUK), Dow Chemical (DOW), ETF Investing, Valero Energy (VLO), PetroChina Co Ltd ADR (PTR), Huaneng Power Intl ADS (HNP)
Yesterday I put my reputation on the line by recommending seven stocks that I think will outperform the market in 2007, You don't have to be 007 to find the best picks for 2007!. In the past few years I have made some great calls and doubled, sometimes even tripled the market averages, helped along by stocks like PetroChina, (NYSE: PTR) acquired for $44 and closing yesterday $142.12; Intuitive Surgical (NASDAQ: ISRG) acquired at $7.70 and closing yesterday at $96.73; Merck (NYSE: MRK) acquired at $32.00 rising to $43.55, and Time Warner Inc. acquired at $12.10 and settling in last night at $22.00. There were many others.
This all followed the same disastrous 2001 collapse that most investors suffered. I wish I would have listened to James Cramer when he told me in a personal email that telecom stocks were going down hard. Like any of us, he is not always right -- but he was way right about that!
It has been said, and is worth repeating,"experience is what you get when you were expecting something else." We all got way too much experience in 2001. Since that time I have recovered all of my losses and then some, but it took a lot of work, a lot of study, and certainly some luck. Let's just say I'm older and wiser.
In making yesterday's recommendations I tried to stay away from get rich quick notions and chose stocks that I believe have strong upside potential with protection against downside risk. All seven of my 2007 picks are well known companies to most stock market investors. They are all companies that I feel are buy and hold propositions.
Here are the closing prices as of December 28, 2006 of the seven stocks I recommended:
- The Dow Chemical Company (NYSE: DOW): $40.02
- Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK): $33.02
- The Home Depot Inc. (NYSE: HD): $39.73
- Huaneng Power International ADS (NYSE: HNP): $36.00
- PetroChina ADR (NYSE: PTR): $142.12
- Time Warner Inc. (NYSE: TWX) $22.00
- Valero Energy (NYSE: VLO) $51.61
I will report back each month with the closing stock price as of the 28th of each month. If I am wrong it will be very public. Although I did not recommend jumping in each of these stocks at these prices immediately, I will use them for tracking purposes, come what may.
Disclosure: I own shares of DUK, HNP, PTR, TWX and will likely own DOW, HD, and VLO prior to next months report.
Happy New Year!
Check out my other posts for BloggingStocks here.
Lets discuss your picks for 2007
Sheldon Liber is the CEO of a small private investment company and the vice president for design and research at an architecture & planning firm.
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