Sunday, July 22, 2018

Amazon.com Inc. Earnings Next Week: What to Expect

Amazon.com�(NASDAQ:AMZN) recently firmed up the date for its next earnings report -- and it's just around the corner. The e-commerce giant will deliver its second-quarter results after the close on July 26, and with shares up an incredible 82% over the past 12 months -- 22% in the past three months alone -- investors have high expectations.

The company has been firing on all cylinders recently. In its first quarter, sales and operating income increased 43% and 92% year over year, respectively -- results that blew past both analysts' consensus estimates and management's own forecast. Next week, investors will be looking for similarly impressive growth, as well as strong guidance.

An Amazon-branded trailer

Image source: Amazon.com.

Here's an overview of three important areas to focus on when Amazon's Q2 report arrives.

Sales growth

Amazon has achieved mind-boggling sales growth recently, and investors will certainly be watching to see if it's keeping up the pace. After posting year-over-year sales growth of 43% in Q1, management guided for Q2 sales to be between $51 billion and $54 billion, giving it a forecast growth range of 34% to 42% year over year.

Considering that over the past year, the company's sales results have consistently either come in at the top end of management's sales guidance range or exceeded it, it's no surprise analysts'�consensus estimate for Amazon's Q2 sales is firmly in the upper quarter of that range, at $53.4 billion. If that figure is accurate, it would equal about 41% year-over-year growth.

Sales guidance

Of course, given Amazon stock's sharp run-up recently, investors will be hoping management guides for another quarter of big growth. At this point, the company needs to grow into its pricier valuation. Thanks in part to its 82% share price rise over the past 12 months, Amazon's price-to-sales ratio is now 4.7, versus about 3.3 a year ago.

On the other hand, given Amazon's increasingly tough comparable periods and the fact that growth at this level simply isn't sustainable over the long haul, investors should expect some deceleration. I'll be looking for Amazon to guide for Q3 sales in the range of $57 billion to $59 billion, or 30% to 35% growth. While this would be a notable deceleration, it would still be rapid enough growth that investors could be optimistic about Amazon's long-term trajectory.

Boxes in Amazon's fulfillment center

Image source: Amazon.com.

Operating income

One area where Amazon has been outperforming expectations even more than it has been on revenue is operating income. In Q1, for instance, the� company posted operating income of $1.9 billion -- far exceeding the $300 million to $1 billion range management had guided for. That followed a Q4 2017 result of $2.1 billion of operating income that crushed the guidance range of $300 million to $1.65 billion.

For Q2, management has guided for operating income to be between $1.1 billion and $1.9 billion, but just because it has been topping those guidance ranges recently, investors shouldn't assume a similar beat is in the cards this time around. Amazon has made it clear that it has aggressive plans to invest in growth, and those could weigh on profitability in the near term.�Indeed, during the Q1 earnings call, CFO Brian Olsavsky specifically noted plans for bigger investments in video content, hiring of software engineers, and Prime Day preparations. In addition, though Amazon can deliver outsize operating-income growth when revenues are strong, it can be narrower than expected when sales land at the low end of the company's forecasts.

Amazon's guidance for Q2 operating income is actually the most reasonable indicator for what investors should expect -- despite how wide the range is.

Saturday, July 21, 2018

The Hackett Group (HCKT) Lifted to Hold at Zacks Investment Research

Zacks Investment Research upgraded shares of The Hackett Group (NASDAQ:HCKT) from a sell rating to a hold rating in a research note issued to investors on Tuesday.

According to Zacks, “The Hackett Group, a global strategic advisory firm and an Answerthink company, is a leader in best practice research and advisory programs, benchmarking and transformation consulting services, including shared services, offshoring and outsourcing advice. Utilizing best practices and implementation insight from more than 4,000 benchmarking studies, executives use Hackett’s empirically based approach to quickly define and prioritize initiatives, and to leverage proven strategies that enable world-class performance. “

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HCKT has been the subject of several other research reports. BidaskClub cut shares of The Hackett Group from a hold rating to a sell rating in a research report on Friday, June 8th. ValuEngine cut shares of The Hackett Group from a hold rating to a sell rating in a research report on Wednesday, May 2nd. Finally, Barrington Research set a $22.00 price objective on shares of The Hackett Group and gave the company a buy rating in a research report on Tuesday, May 15th. Three analysts have rated the stock with a hold rating and three have given a buy rating to the company’s stock. The company has an average rating of Buy and a consensus price target of $19.25.

The Hackett Group opened at $16.78 on Tuesday, MarketBeat reports. The company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.16, a quick ratio of 1.63 and a current ratio of 1.63. The stock has a market capitalization of $487.02 million, a price-to-earnings ratio of 22.08, a PEG ratio of 1.23 and a beta of 0.79. The Hackett Group has a fifty-two week low of $13.24 and a fifty-two week high of $19.24.

The Hackett Group (NASDAQ:HCKT) last posted its quarterly earnings data on Tuesday, May 8th. The business services provider reported $0.26 earnings per share for the quarter, meeting the consensus estimate of $0.26. The firm had revenue of $72.70 million during the quarter, compared to analysts’ expectations of $72.03 million. The Hackett Group had a net margin of 9.35% and a return on equity of 24.35%. The company’s quarterly revenue was up 1.8% compared to the same quarter last year. During the same quarter last year, the company posted $0.23 EPS. equities analysts predict that The Hackett Group will post 0.9 earnings per share for the current year.

The firm also recently declared a Semi-Annual dividend, which was paid on Wednesday, July 11th. Stockholders of record on Friday, June 29th were given a dividend of $0.17 per share. This is a boost from The Hackett Group’s previous Semi-Annual dividend of $0.15. The ex-dividend date was Thursday, June 28th. This represents a dividend yield of 2.14%. The Hackett Group’s payout ratio is currently 44.74%.

Several large investors have recently modified their holdings of HCKT. SG Americas Securities LLC acquired a new stake in shares of The Hackett Group during the 1st quarter worth approximately $162,000. Mackay Shields LLC acquired a new stake in shares of The Hackett Group during the 1st quarter worth approximately $164,000. MetLife Investment Advisors LLC acquired a new stake in shares of The Hackett Group during the 4th quarter worth approximately $175,000. Dynamic Technology Lab Private Ltd acquired a new stake in shares of The Hackett Group during the 1st quarter worth approximately $177,000. Finally, Susquehanna Fundamental Investments LLC acquired a new stake in shares of The Hackett Group during the 1st quarter worth approximately $210,000. Institutional investors own 76.15% of the company’s stock.

About The Hackett Group

The Hackett Group, Inc operates as a strategic advisory and technology consulting firm primarily in North America and European countries. Its executive advisory programs include best practice intelligence center, an online searchable repository of best practices, performance metrics, conference presentations, and associated research; best practice accelerators that provide Web based access to best practices, customized software configuration tools, and best practice process flows; advisor inquiry, an inquiry service used by clients for access to fact-based advice on proven approaches and methods; best practice research, a research that provides insights into the proven approaches; and peer interaction comprising member-led Webcasts, annual best practice conferences, annual member forums, membership performance surveys, and client-submitted content.

Featured Article: Are analyst ratings accurate?

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Friday, July 20, 2018

Berkshire Hathaway Hints Share Buybacks Could Happen Soon

&l;p&g;Berkshire Hathaway updated its share repurchase program Tuesday to eliminate its previous rule that it would buy back shares only at a price less than 20% above book value.

Instead, the company will repurchase shares at any time they trade below Chairman and CEO&l;span&g;&a;nbsp;&l;/span&g;Warren Buffett&a;nbsp;and Vice Chairman&l;span&g;&a;nbsp;&l;/span&g;Charlie Munger&a;rsquo;s &a;ldquo;conservatively determined&a;rdquo; estimate of intrinsic value. Berkshire Hathaway authorized its share repurchase program at 110% of book value in September 2011. It has acted on the plan once, buying 9,200 Class A shares for $131,000 each in 2012, when it increased its buyback restriction to 120% of book value.

Berkshire&a;rsquo;s book value was $211,829 at the end of the first quarter, which means the share price would have to sink as low as $254,194 to come within the 120% threshold for repurchase under the previous authorization. One Class A share of Berkshire stock traded for $303,210 per share Wednesday, down 2.45% year to date.

&a;nbsp;

Buffett has said previously that the company&a;rsquo;s intrinsic value &a;ldquo;far exceeds&a;rdquo; its book value, signaling that the share price now could be closer to the amended line to trigger a buyback.

Berkshire also placed a second condition on its repurchases, saying that it would not buy back shares if it would reduce the value of Berkshire&a;rsquo;s cash holdings and U.S. Treasury Bills below $20 billion. The company was sitting on $108 billion in cash at first quarter-end.

In the past, Buffett has applauded some types of corporate share repurchases. In his 2016 shareholder letter, he wrote:

&a;ldquo;From the standpoint of exiting shareholders, repurchases are always a plus. Though the day-to-day impact of these purchases is usually minuscule, it&a;rsquo;s always better for a seller to have an additional buyer in the market.

For continuing shareholders, however, repurchases only make sense if the shares are bought at a price below intrinsic value. When that rule is followed, the remaining shares experience an immediate gain in intrinsic value. Consider a simple analogy: If there are three equal partners in a business worth $3,000 and one is bought out by the partnership for $900, each of the remaining partners realizes an immediate gain of $50. If the exiting partner is paid $1,100, however, the continuing partners each suffer a loss of $50. The same math applies with corporations and their shareholders. Ergo, the question of whether a repurchase action is value-enhancing or value-destroying for continuing shareholders is entirely purchase-price dependent.&a;rdquo;

&a;nbsp;

A company should also avoid purchasing its shares when a business acquisition or other investment option &a;ldquo;offers far greater value&a;rdquo; than the undervalued shares, he said.

&a;ldquo;My suggestion: Before even discussing repurchases, a CEO and his or her Board should stand, join hands and in unison declare, &a;lsquo;What is smart at one price is stupid at another,&a;rsquo;&a;rdquo; Buffett wrote.

If Berkshire does decide to repurchase its shares, it will not happen until after its second-quarter earnings are released on Aug. 3.

Berkshire Hathaway shares rose 5.1% Wednesday. The company has a price-earnings ratio of 12.53 and price-book value of 1.42.

&a;nbsp;

This article originally appeared &l;a href=&q;https://www.gurufocus.com/news/709600/berkshire-hathaway-hints-share-buybacks-could-happen-soon&q; target=&q;_blank&q;&g;HERE&l;/a&g;. Follow the author on Twitter &l;a href=&q;https://twitter.com/hollyla_fon&q; target=&q;_blank&q;&g;here&l;/a&g;.&l;/p&g;

Thursday, July 19, 2018

China's yuan plunges again. Is a currency war coming?

China's currency is plunging again. But how low will it go?

The yuan weakened almost 1% against the US dollar on Thursday to hit its lowest level in a year. It has now fallen by nearly 8% over the past three months amid a global trade spat and concerns over an economic slowdown in China.

Analysts said the yuan's latest dip came after China's central bank indicated that it was willing to accept a weaker currency.

A sliding currency could help China's huge export industry cope with new US tariffs, as it makes Chinese products cheaper for buyers who pay in dollars. That could in turn boost an economy that posted its slowest growth rate in nearly two years �� 6.7% �� in the second quarter.

Unlike the dollar or euro, the yuan does not float freely against other currencies. Instead, China's central bank helps guide the currency by setting a daily trading range. On Thursday, it surprised investors by guiding the yuan lower.

Ken Cheung, a currency analyst at investment bank Mizuho, said the move implied that the central bank would tolerate a weaker currency in order to support the economy.

yuan v  dollar The Chinese yuan fell to its weakest level against the US dollar in a year on Thursday.

There could be costs, however. A weaker yuan risks increasing trade tensions with the Trump administration, which has repeatedly accused China of keeping its currency artificially low to support its huge export industry.

Analysts say it's unlikely that China would use the weaker yuan as a weapon in the trade war. They point to the chaos caused in Chinese and global markets by sharp falls in the currency in 2015 and early 2016.

But trade tensions are escalating anyway. The United States and China have slapped tariffs on billions of dollars of each other's goods, and President Donald Trump is threatening to strike again at even more Chinese exports.

There are other factors weighing on the yuan. Given the strength of the US economy, the Federal Reserve is expected to keep raising interest rates. That makes it more attractive for investors to hold US dollars, prompting them to sell other currencies.

"Gravity is doing its job again as monetary policy diverges further between the United States and China," said Margaret Yang, an analyst at investment firm CMC Markets.

The question is how much further the yuan may fall.

Qi Gao, a currency analyst at Scotia Bank, expects the currency to weaken another 2% against the dollar. That would be when it would feel compelled to halt the yuan's descent, he added.

It's a careful balancing act for policymakers.

If the yuan falls too quickly, it could prompt money to flood out of China as investors lose confidence and seek to exchange it for assets in dollars and other currencies.

"Chinese authorities will likely prevent the currency from moving too sharply in any direction," said Hannah Anderson, global market strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management.

Thursday, July 12, 2018

Top Dividend Stocks To Watch Right Now

tags:IRET,FFNW,MMM,APH,RL,

ForeScout Technologies (NASDAQ: FSCT) and Immersion (NASDAQ:IMMR) are both small-cap industrial products companies, but which is the superior investment? We will contrast the two companies based on the strength of their risk, earnings, analyst recommendations, dividends, valuation, profitability and institutional ownership.

Analyst Recommendations

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This is a breakdown of current recommendations for ForeScout Technologies and Immersion, as reported by MarketBeat.

Sell Ratings Hold Ratings Buy Ratings Strong Buy Ratings Rating Score ForeScout Technologies 0 2 6 0 2.75 Immersion 0 0 4 0 3.00

ForeScout Technologies presently has a consensus price target of $34.00, indicating a potential upside of 12.25%. Immersion has a consensus price target of $13.56, indicating a potential downside of 0.86%. Given ForeScout Technologies’ higher probable upside, analysts plainly believe ForeScout Technologies is more favorable than Immersion.

Top Dividend Stocks To Watch Right Now: Investors Real Estate Trust(IRET)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Shane Hupp]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on INVESTORS REAL ESTATE TRUST REIT Common Stock (IRET)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

  • [By Motley Fool Staff]

    Investors Real Estate Trust (NYSE:IRET) Q4 2018 Earnings Conference CallJun. 28, 2018 10:00 a.m. ET

    Contents: Prepared Remarks Questions and Answers Call Participants Prepared Remarks:

    Operator

Top Dividend Stocks To Watch Right Now: First Financial Northwest Inc.(FFNW)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on First Financial Northwest (FFNW)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

  • [By Logan Wallace]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on First Financial Northwest (FFNW)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

Top Dividend Stocks To Watch Right Now: 3M Company(MMM)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Paul Ausick]

    3M Company (NYSE: MMM) traded down 2.50% at $199.06. The stock’s 52-week range is $191.44 to $259.77. Volume was about 20% below the daily average of around 2.9 million. A third industrial company that had no specific news but got whacked anyway.

  • [By ]

    Cramer was bearish on 3M (MMM) , Fitbit (FIT) and Granite Construction (GVA) .

    Search Jim Cramer's "Mad Money" trading recommendations using our exclusive "Mad Money" Stock Screener.

  • [By ]

    In fact, top dividend-paying companies like Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG), Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ), and 3M (NYSE:MMM) have consistently converted 15% or more of their revenues into free cash flows (FCF). Combined, the three companies generated nearly $173 billion in revenues in 2017. That's a lot of money, and a good chunk of it is going into shareholders' pockets. That's why these money-minting dividend stocks deserve your attention.

  • [By Brian Feroldi, Matthew Frankel, and Dan Caplinger]

    Retirees should favor companies that operate in stable industries and offer their shareholders a predictable stream of income. So which stocks in particular do we think can fulfill their needs? We asked a team of Motley Fool investors to weigh in, and they picked�Senior Housing Properties Trust (NASDAQ:SNH),�Prologis�(NYSE:PLD), and 3M (NYSE:MMM).�

  • [By ]

    The Caterpillar news was followed by 3M (MMM) , which lowered full-year guidance, sending its shares down 6.8%. Lockheed Martin (LMT) then delivered blowout earnings, but mentioned that its cash flow might be challenged. Shares fell 6.1%.

Top Dividend Stocks To Watch Right Now: Amphenol Corporation(APH)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Lee Jackson]

    This top stock has remained a favorite long-term pick at Deutsche Bank for some time.�Amphenol Corp. (NYSE: APH) is one of the world��s largest designers, manufacturers and marketers of electrical, electronic and fiber optic connectors, interconnect systems, antennas, sensors and sensor-based products and coaxial and high-speed specialty cable.

  • [By Logan Wallace]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on Amphenol (APH)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    Greenleaf Trust reduced its holdings in Amphenol (NYSE:APH) by 4.0% during the 1st quarter, according to its most recent disclosure with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The firm owned 17,234 shares of the electronics maker’s stock after selling 714 shares during the period. Greenleaf Trust’s holdings in Amphenol were worth $1,484,000 as of its most recent SEC filing.

Top Dividend Stocks To Watch Right Now: Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation(RL)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Shane Hupp]

    Shares of Ralph Lauren Corp (NYSE:RL) hit a new 52-week high and low during trading on Monday . The company traded as low as $137.59 and last traded at $137.30, with a volume of 1474925 shares changing hands. The stock had previously closed at $134.80.

  • [By Leo Sun]

    Several apparel retailers recently disproved the bears, who believed that sluggish mall traffic, e-tailers, and fast fashion players would bury older clothing stores. That list of winners includes Abercrombie & Fitch (NYSE:ANF), Guess (NYSE:GES), and Ralph Lauren (NYSE:RL), which rallied 81%, 116%, and 106%, respectively, over the past 12 months.

  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    Tredje AP fonden lowered its stake in Ralph Lauren Co. (NYSE:RL) by 6.2% in the 1st quarter, according to its most recent filing with the SEC. The fund owned 16,720 shares of the textile maker’s stock after selling 1,110 shares during the period. Tredje AP fonden’s holdings in Ralph Lauren were worth $1,878,000 as of its most recent SEC filing.

  • [By Daniel Miller]

    Shares of Ralph Lauren Corp. (NYSE:RL), a global leader in design, marketing, and distribution of premium lifestyle apparel and other product categories, are popping 15% as of 11:20 a.m. EDT, after the company topped estimates on both the top and bottom lines during the fourth-quarter fiscal 2018.

  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    State of Tennessee Treasury Department raised its holdings in shares of Ralph Lauren Corp (NYSE:RL) by 75.0% in the 1st quarter, according to the company in its most recent 13F filing with the SEC. The institutional investor owned 105,127 shares of the textile maker’s stock after acquiring an additional 45,048 shares during the quarter. State of Tennessee Treasury Department owned approximately 0.13% of Ralph Lauren worth $11,753,000 as of its most recent filing with the SEC.

Wednesday, July 11, 2018

3 Big Credit Card Trends and How to Make the Most of Them

It's a good time to be a credit card user. In this episode of Motley Fool Answers, hosts Alison Southwick and Robert Brokamp bring in Austin Smith to explain three big trends in credit cards today, and what you can do to get the most out of them.

Find out how to get the sweetest sign-up bonus possible, why the side perks aren't all they used to be, what big benefits to watch out for, and more. Also,�Bro profiles a quiet philanthropist next door who changed the lives of thousands with the money she earned washing clothes, and Alison debunks the myth of the ultra-successful, ultra-young, ultra-casual tech entrepreneur.

A full transcript follows the video.

This video was recorded on July 10, 2018.�

Alison Southwick: This is Motley Fool Answers! I'm Alison Southwick,�and I'm joined as always by Robert Brokamp, personal finance expert here at The Motley Fool.

Robert Brokamp: Hi, Alison!

Southwick: In this week's episode, we're joined by The Motley Fool's own�Austin Smith. He's going to talk about three�credit card trends and what you can do to take�advantage of them. I'm also going to explore�the myth of the hoodie-wearing tech entrepreneur, and Bro is going to introduce us to an inspiring philanthropist next-door. All that and more on this week's episode of Motley Fool Answers.

Brokamp:�What's up, Alison?

Southwick:�Well, Bro,�I've discovered something amazing, it's that I have psychic abilities.

Brokamp:�Really? What�am I thinking right now?

Southwick:�Are you ready? I can read minds. To prove it, I want you to picture�in your mind a successful tech entrepreneur. Do you see that person in your mind?

Brokamp:�Yeah.

Southwick:�Is it a man?

Brokamp:�Yeah.

Southwick:�Is he in his twenties?

Brokamp:�He's younger.

Southwick:�Is he wearing a hoodie?

Brokamp:�Something like that. He's very informally dressed, I'll tell you that.

Southwick:�Yes.�I can't actually read minds, it's just a pretty common bias that tech entrepreneurs are young dudes in sneakers -- emphasis on young, emphasis on dudes. Sneakers, eh. As Mark Zuckerberg told an audience at Stanford back in 2007,�young people are just smarter;�although, now that he's a father,�I doubt that he feels the same way. New Republic noted in an article about ageism in Silicon Valley that�the website of ServiceNow, a large, Santa Clara-based IT services company,�featured the following advisory in large letters atop its career page: "We want people who have their best work ahead of them, not behind them."�

Well, meet�Dan Scheinman. He spent many years at Cisco, and eventually decided to start out on his own as an angel investor. While launching his VC fund, he knew he needed to identify a niche for�investing. He needed to find an area that was perceived as less desirable and less competitive�because he was a little guy in a big pond of big sharks. He said�during a presentation with a couple of bratty Zuckerberg wannabes, it hit him:�older entrepreneurs were, "the�mother of all undervalued opportunities."�

Indeed, of all the ways that VCs�could be misled, the allure of youth ranked highest,�they wrote in this article. As the�founder of the start-up accelerator YCombinator, Paul Graham told the New York Times in 2013, "The cutoff in investors'�heads is 32. After 32, they start to be a little skeptical."

Why do we feel this way? Well, we�assume young people are more likely to have transformative ideas and embrace�technology. They're also less likely to have distractions like family. And, of course, we have the iconic�success stories of Zuckerberg�starting Facebook, Brin and Page starting Google, that kind of thing. Ouch!

Is it true that all of the successful tech entrepreneurs are�cocky little jerks in hoodies? Well, let's�check out the Kellogg School of Business at Northwestern and their recent research that came out this last week. They decided to look into it.�Kellogg professor Benjamin Jones teamed up with Javier Miranda at the Census Bureau, as well as Pierre Azoulay and J. Daniel Kim of MIT.�

The�researchers found that, contrary to popular thinking, the best entrepreneurs in tech�tend to be middle-aged. Among the very fastest-growing new tech companies, the average founder was 45 years old at the time of founding. Furthermore, a�50-year-old entrepreneur is nearly twice as likely to have a majorly successful company as a 30-year-old. Let's dig into the data some more, shall we?

Brokamp:�Let's do that.

Southwick:�Is�this making you feel good about your age?

Brokamp:�[laughs]�Yes. I'm�closing in on my peak!

Rick Engdahl: I'm ready to go start a company.

Southwick:�Do it! Among the founders that they�looked at in their Census Bureau data set, the average age of a company founder at the time of founding was 41.9 years. That's all the founders. They limited their data set to include only tech companies, and further winnowed that down to the fastest-growing 0.1%. In other words, this is the one company out of every thousand that saw its sales or number of employees increase the most in its first 5 years. Among this�subset, the average founder age was 45.�

The�researchers decided to look at it another way. They looked at firms that had successfully gone public or were acquired by another company. The average founder age there was�46.7. Finally, they�created a batting average. The odds that the founders of different ages would make it into the top 0.1% percentile? The data revealed that a founder who is 50 years old is 1.8X more likely to start a top company than a 30-year-old founder; and�that a 20-year-old founder has the worst chance of all.

While�researchers didn't dig into the why,�they did offer that founders with three or more years of experience in the same industry as their start-up are�twice as likely to have a 1/1000 fastest-growing company.�

Let's revisit Dan�Scheinman and his old farts venture fund. How's it doing? Well, when his�skeptical wife asked to see where the money was going, he showed her the results, and her response was, "Keep going." He's�now one of the leading angel investors in Silicon Valley.

Brokamp:�Wow! You wonder if, A, it's a�question of survivorship bias. We hear about the Zuckerbergs and all those folks, but�we don't hear about all of the other 20-somethings who tried to start a company and it didn't work. Also, who the media chooses to profile and make a celebrity CEO, it just might be a flashy story to find some kid who's doing something.

Southwick:�A wonderkid, yeah,�as opposed to some old dude who's like, "I ground it out at Procter & Gamble�for 30 years!"

Brokamp:�Let me make it clear here that mid-40s to 50 is not old.

Southwick:�Oh, no! It's not! It is not, by the way! As I am approaching my 40th birthday, no, no, it's not.

Brokamp:�And tomorrow is my 49th.

Southwick:�Is it?! Tomorrow's your birthday?!

Brokamp:�It is, yeah.

Southwick:�I didn't know that! Happy birthday!

Brokamp:�Thank you very much. Yeah, my birthday is July 11th. In celebration, 7-Eleven always gives out Slurpees. Go get your free Slurpee.

Southwick:�It's also my dad's birthday. Did you know that?

Brokamp:�I didn't know that.

Southwick:�7-11!

Engdahl:�I thought the Slurpees were for him.

Southwick: For my dad? Oh, yeah, they're for my dad, not for you.

Brokamp:�It's for both of us.

Southwick:�Today, we're�going to tackle three�credit card trends to watch out for and what you can do about them. Helping us is�Austin Smith. He works on The Ascent. It's a new�website that The Motley Fool has launched. Hey, Austin! Thanks for joining us!

Austin Smith: Hello! Thanks for having me!

Southwick: Before you get going into our topic at hand, can you tell us a little bit about The Ascent?

Smith:�I would love to. I'm glad you asked. Everybody knows The Motley Fool's helped you invest better for years, but there's a lot of other personal finance decisions beyond investing that we feel like we can bring light to. We've launched The Ascent, which is a personal finance-focused site, helping you pick the best credit card, the�best mortgage, the best savings account, the best insurance, you name it. We're�going to review hundreds of products�across all if these categories, bring a little bit of Foolishness to the table and provide our recommendations for which one is the best for your specific situation.

Southwick: All of this content is available for free?

Smith: Always. You can access it whenever you want at theascent.com.

Southwick: Alright, let's get into it. We're going to tackle a few trends in�credit cards, and then you're going to tell our listeners what they can do to�take advantage of that trend, or come out on�the other side even wealthier and healthier and with shining credit ... I don't know. We'll see. I'm�making a lot of promises for you. We'll see how you do.

Smith: It's�a lot to live up to, but we like high expectations. Our tag line is "helping you live more richly," so�I think we'll be able to fit that mold.

Southwick: Alright, here we go! What's the first trend?

Smith: We're seeing�quite a bit of an enrollment�arms race by the credit card issuers right now.�JPMorgan�kicked this off a few years ago with their Sapphire cards. They just started lavishing new card owners with massive benefits. It's�resulted in this massive ramp among almost all of the issuers,�where they're giving you more points, free hotel stays, free�sign-up bonuses.�

It used to be that, when you signed up for a new card, maybe you were getting $200-250 worth of�benefits. JPMorgan dialed that all the way up to 11. You can get up to $625 worth of sign-up bonuses, all the way up to $725 or $750,�depending on your category. They kicked off this arms race. All the other issuers are following suit.�American Express�is upping their sign-up bonuses, Discover is becoming extremely competitive with some 50,000 bonus point sign-up reward. Just lavishing new card owners when they register.

Southwick: If one of the trends is that people like us are getting tons of points and�awesome benefits for�signing up for new cards,�I want to assume that the best way to take advantage of this trend is�to sign up for new cards. Did I get it right?

Smith: That's a really good guess, but there's an even better version of it. While you might be looking at ten cards, and they might be showering you with 40,000 sign-up bonus points, the value of those points will value out�differently based on the issuer and the card platform. What we've found in our analysis is that not all miles and bonus points are considered equal.�

This is an instance where niche cards or�particular cards will actually transfer better. What I mean is,�if you look at Chase Sapphire Preferred -- which set the high-water mark in this category with their 50,000 sign-up bonus points -- if you can sign up for an airline, maybe a Frontier or a Southwest, you might only get 40,000 bonus points. That's still pretty rich, but because they�transfer onto their own platform instead of just a platform where�you can book with any airline, they're worth more per mile or per point. Those 50,000 on Chase�might not be worth as much as a 40,000 on a�Southwest card.

Our suggestion to play this trend is, if�people are ramping up these sign-up bonuses, to actually go with a niche player like a Southwest card, a Frontier card, a Marriott Hotel card, because they transfer more richly within their own network, they're worth more. The�standard transfer rate to consider is about $0.005-0.01 per point on a Chase platform. If you look at a Southwest or a Frontier, the transfer rate is about $0.01-0.03 of value per point. They end up being worth quite a bit more.

Southwick: You mentioned niche cards�that are all travel-related. What if I'm not much of a traveler? What good are sign-up bonus points for me?

Smith: Typically, the�math will still work out -- if you're looking at a sign-up bonus with a niche�product where all of those bonus points stay�within their own network, you're going to get a better rate transfer than�trying to transfer those points to�something that lets you book to any airline or any hotel. You just get a lower point value per point.

Brokamp:�Sometimes, you read articles about how to negotiate with companies. For example, if you have an annual fee with a card or something like that. I've occasionally read articles where they say you can call up and say, "I'm not interested in paying this fee�anymore, I'm going to leave," and�it can get waived. I don't know how accurate that is. But, do you know if these side benefits are anything you could negotiate for? Could you say, "I'm interested in this other card, but I'll stay with you if you give me some more points," or anything like that?

Smith: We haven't seen a lot of people get flexibility on the points. Granted,�we haven't tried it or researched it ourselves. But,�we have seen�people get flexibilities on their annual fees on the cards, to your first point. I would just go for it on that measure, because that's something they can themselves more�easily control. It's just waiving a fee.

Brokamp: Got it.

Southwick:�Alright, what's the second trend that our listeners should be on the lookout for?

Smith: The�second trend, which relates to the first, which is one of the ways credit card companies are now able to afford these�lavish sign-up bonuses, is by eroding side perks. It�used to be that credit cards maybe came with a dozen�different perks, and most people didn't realize they had access to all those�benefits, they didn't use any of them. Things like auto rental coverage,�price protection, free credit scores.�

Basically,�what we've seen is, they've traded this more benefits mantra that persisted in the credit card space for a very long time in favor of the best. They're�going to bundle all of their chips in a huge sign-up bonus or a huge cash back�allowance on the card. They're doing away with a lot of these side perks, maximizing their sign-up bonuses.

Southwick: Alright,�and how should I take advantage of that?

Smith: Most�people didn't even know that they had access to most of these benefits. What we've found is, there are still side door ways to reap these same rewards, but�maybe not through the credit card issuers themselves. The way to play this trend, since what we've found is that what most people care about, in order, are, cash back cards, no annual fee, and a low interest rate, you�pick the benefit that's most important to you. Find the card that�maximizes that benefit the most. If you're�looking at a cash back card, maybe�look at something like a Discover it or a�Bank of America�cash back card,�both of which have really great rates right now. Maximize on the single benefit that's most important to you.�

Then, add in the tertiary benefits with other�third-party services that you no longer get�through your credit card yourself. For example,�you can still get price protection through a program like Earny, which automatically scrapes your�credit card statement and looks for price differences between what you paid and refunds you�half of the balance automatically. Though you�no longer get that through your credit, you can still get it through the third-party bolt-ons, if you so choose.

Southwick: Wait,�what is that? Earny?�I've never heard of this.

Smith: You've never heard of this?

Southwick: No, tell me about Earny!

Smith: Price protection used to be something that persisted in a lot of credit cards. They�no longer have it, so that vacancy has been filled by a company called Earny. You connect it�to your credit card statement and they scan everything that you purchased on your statement and balance it up against the lowest available price. If there's a difference, if you overpaid, they file a claim on your behalf, and they�refund you half of the balance.�

We find that, by combining these�other features with a card,�you can maximize the benefit that's most important to you -- maybe cash back, maybe low interest rates. Pick your�ideal best card for your pillar,�most important benefit. Then,�you can still get these other benefits like�auto rental coverage or�price protection through other third-party products.

Southwick: Earny. I have to look that up.

Smith: We have a Fool in Colorado who gets $20-25 back every month from their statement.

Brokamp:�Nice!

Smith: It's fabulous.

Southwick:�And what is the third trend that we're�going to talk about today?

Smith: The�third trend we're going to talk about is kind of derivative of the second, which is the changing ancillary features of credit cards in favor of�putting all of your benefits in one basket. That is the�travel benefits-ish trend.�

It used to be that credit cards,�particularly travel cards, would have all sorts of perks like lounge access at airports, access to pre-check or global entry, which�gets you through security faster. What we're finding is that the popularity of a lot of these cards -- particular Chase Sapphire, to name the biggest offender in this space -- has�given those benefits to so many people over the last few years that it's eroded the value of it.

Southwick: Oh,�yeah, there was the New York Times article. Did you see this?

Smith:�I think it was Wall Street Journal.

Southwick: Oh, was it Wall Street Journal? Basically, all these people who used to have the executive lounges at the airports all to themselves were like, "What are all these hoi polloi doing here?"

Smith: "What's the�bourgeoisie doing in here?"

Southwick: Basically,�they were complaining about little toddlers running around throwing trail mix everywhere, naked.

Brokamp:�The�credit card commoners!

Southwick:�[laughs]�It was!

Engdahl: I did that. I brought my kids to the lounge. I was like, "Look at this cool thing! Free food! Help yourselves, kids!"

Smith: OK,�we're going to modify this third trend to be the Rick Issue Trend.�

Engdahl: They were�spinning around in those cool chairs.

Southwick:�Meanwhile, international first-class traveler in the next chair is just fuming at you. But you didn't care. Nope. [laughs]�

Smith: Him and his five guests.

Southwick: [laughs]�Everybody! Kids, strangers, "Come on in!"

Engdahl:�I didn't notice/ I was stretched out on one of those couches, taking a snooze.

Brokamp:�[laughs]�"Someone watch my children,�I need a nap."

Smith: Our�tip for how to play this trend is actually just�to avoid Rick and his friends altogether by no longer�going to the airport lounges.

Southwick:�News you can use, here on Motley Fool Answers -- avoid Rick.

Smith: But seriously, as so many people have signed up for these benefits, it's eroded�the value of what used to be a really premium perk. We advocate that people, again, anchor on the one pillar benefit for you. If it's cash back, find the best cash back card. Don't�anchor too much on these ancillary benefits,�because they're not as valuable as they used to be.�

For�example, TSA pre-check used to get you through in about five minutes. Now, with�so many people having access to the program, it's�closer to 15 or 20. Given that the average TSA line is about 30 minutes, you're�really not gaining as much as you used to. Airport lounges have reacted to this inflow of Rick and all his friends, so now you're�not getting full meals anymore.

Southwick: [laughs]�They�just have a picture up in front that says, "No Rick." "Would you like the Rick or No-Rick section?" "I'll take the No-Rick section."

Brokamp:�I'll take the Rick section, because I like Rick and his children.

Smith: They pulled back a lot on the volume of benefits. Your�meals aren't as large, you aren't getting as many drinks,�they might cap the dollar amount that you're getting in that lounge -- which really restricts the value of those benefits to begin with. So, don't chase the ancillary benefits, we say.�

Again, the best way to play this is not to anchor�too much on the value of a TSA pre-check and lounge access, which sound like they might be great on paper. Pick�the biggest benefit to you, find the card that satisfies that. If you still want lounge access,�there are other ways to get it that don't involve you taking a card that's�otherwise imperfect for your situation.

Brokamp: Let's say�someone hears all this, loves all these perks, and they say to you, "Austin,�I'm going to go open up a bunch of credit cards to get all this stuff." What do you say to them?

Smith: There's a�responsible and an irresponsible way to open a lot of credit cards. The�responsible way is to maybe be aware of what your long-term plan is. If you�plan on taking out a large loan in the next year, it's�not a good time to take out a bunch of credit cards, because you'll ding your score with each extra application. If you're�planning on getting a mortgage, not the best time to take out a bunch of cards.�

If you're not planning on taking out a mortgage or a car loan in�the next, let's say, year, don't�take out more cards than you have a capacity to reasonably spend on and pay off. If your�monthly spending about $2,000 a month and there are two different cards, and you think you can realize the benefits on both of them with $1,000 a month in spending, that's great. But don't take out so many cards that you have to�stretch your spending to hit those bonuses. That's like spending for a sale,�spending more to save more, the�math doesn't end up adding up. Don't stretch your spending level.

Brokamp:�That highlights, by the way, another trend that I know of. As the economy has gotten better, people are more gainfully employed, you'd think that their credit card debt would not grow. Actually, credit card debt is growing as people feel wealthier. Let me just highlight, that trend is not a good trend. Folks,�just because you're getting these cards doesn't mean you should load up on them.

Smith: Of course. There's�another interesting side to that, which is, we see�a lot of people misusing their cards. Millennials in particular are not putting enough credit cards. They�tend to be very debit card-heavy users. In some instances, we have users maybe abusing their credit card and loading up on debt and not paying it off. We always advocate to pay it off as quickly as you can, ideally every month so you�avoid those interest fees. On the other side,�we're seeing some people not using a credit card appropriately at all,�because maybe they're so scared of debt�and that situation. There's�a lot of education needed across the spectrum.

Southwick:�We've�covered travel hacking before. We've�talked about a number of these credit cards. We finally got Chase. If we could hang out in the airport lounge, we would be there right next to you with our Chase card. But, we actually were able to get�free plane tickets to Orlando because of our points, and it felt so good! It felt�really great! I was so happy. Anyway. That's�my success story, that I've actually been taking our advice on travel hacking, a little bit. We opened up the one card and got the free�plane tickets. I was more excited about it than Ron was. Ron was like, "Whatever."

Smith: If you're�traveling, it's hard to beat the Chase Sapphire card. Although, if you're thinking about the�travel hacking game -- I don't know if you've covered this before -- we�always advocate for signing up for the Chase cards first because Chase has a 5-24 rule. If you�sign up for more than five cards within 24 months across any issuer, you're automatically rejected. So, it's best to get your Chase cards in there first. And the Chase points�tend to be one of the more transferable credit card points of�all the issuers out there. You have a currency which you can combine with other platforms. If�you want to play the travel hacking game, you're on the right first step.

Southwick: Taking baby steps. It is scary. The idea of opening up a bunch of credit cards goes�against everything that I grew up believing. So, it's a little scary, but it's going fine. And�people like Rick made me a believer. Thumbs up.

Engdahl: I�had a really nice hotel suite in Iceland, and I would not have paid cash�for that, because that place is expensive. But�it was free on points!

Southwick: There�you go! All these moments! Alright, how about a disclaimer? Again, where can our listeners go if they want to learn more about the research you've done into credit cards?

Smith: www.theascent.com.�I would just remind people that while we are�very credit card-heavy to launch -- because there are so many credit card users, it's an integral part of many people's lives, there's a lot of misuse, we're�covering that heavily for the first few months, but we are going to be expanding into mortgages, insurance, savings accounts,�basically any financial product you can imagine. We're going to be out there reviewing it, testing it ourselves, and�giving you our honest, transparent assessment.�

Southwick: Alright, there you go! So, everybody, you can head over to theascent.com, and we'll�see you at the airport lounge.

Brokamp:�Alison, it's�no secret to longtime listeners that I'm a fan of The Millionaire Next Door, a book that was first published in 1996 by Thomas Stanley and William Danko. Basically, they looked at real-life millionaires to see how they lived. They found out that real-life millionaires don't live in big houses and have�fancy cars. Actually, most of those people are not millionaires�because they have such big debts. The�real-life millionaires live in middle-class or lower neighborhoods, they drive�ordinary cars, they don't live a flashy lifestyle.�

While they�focused on millionaires for the study, really, what they emphasized is the ability to cumulate�above-average wealth given your circumstances. In fact, they even had a formula for it. But the thing is, you wouldn't know that these people have amassed a�decent amount of wealth relative to their income because they live relatively simple lives, and they usually pass their wealth onto their kids or to charities.�It's the cases of these charities where we sometimes learn about some people who surprisingly had accumulated a decent amount of money.�

In the coming weeks, we're going to profile a few of these so-called�philanthropists next door, starting with someone whose bequest was actually much less than a million dollars, at least initially. In this first installment, we'd like to introduce you to a woman named�Oseola McCarty.

She was an African American woman born in 1908 in�Hattiesburg, Mississippi. She lived with her mother, her grandmother, and an aunt. The women made a living by washing clothes,�cooking, and cleaning houses. The�washing was all done by hand. In the morning, they went out, built the fire, put the pot of water on, washed it by hand, and then they'd hang the laundry out on a line.

Southwick:�Oh,�wow, and using lye and all kinds of horrible chemicals.

Brokamp:�Yeah. Doing all the ironing with an iron that you put on a stove, all that stuff.

Southwick: Oh,�hard work.�

Brokamp:�Right.�Oseola started helping with the washing at a very early age, and she loved it. She was�particularly careful about washing and ironing her own clothes for school. One day, her teacher asked her, "Who irons your clothes?" And Oseola said, "I do." So, the teacher hired her, and the word spread.�

The�children in a household where her grandmother worked�had thrown out a doll buggy. Her grandmother�brought it home and gave it to Oseola, and that became her piggy bank. That's where she'd deposit all her money. When�she was 12, her aunt became sick and could�no longer walk or work, so Oseola�had to leave school in the sixth grade to help take care of her and�help with the washing. She never returned to school.

One of her jobs was to walk around town and pay the family's monthly bills -- pay the grocer, pay the milkman, people like that. One day, she passed the bank and thought�she should put some of the money there. She once said, "I�went to the bank and deposited it. I didn't know how to do it. I went there myself,�didn't tell Momma and them I was going."�

For her entire working like, she washed clothes by hand. In the 1960s, she tried a washing machine and a dryer, but felt that the washer�didn't rinse enough and that the dryer turned whites yellow, so she turned back to her scrubbing rag and just setting a fire�every morning and doing the washing herself.�

She lived in a small, simple house, never owned a car, pushing a shopping cart a mile each way to the local grocery store. She�never married or had her own children, but she did regularly go to church and made sure that she put money in the collection plate each week. And, she kept putting money in the bank.

By the�time she retired in her 80s, in 1995, her account was worth $280,000. Adjusted for inflation, that's almost $500,000. That alone is pretty remarkable. But then, with�the help of her banker and a lawyer�for whom she worked, she decided to donate $150,000 of it to the�University of Southern Mississippi to create scholarships for lower-income African-American students, even though she never attended college. She never even visited the college,�even though it's just a few blocks from her house.�

Word�got out about her donation, and 600 other people contributed to the fund, adding another�$330,000. Then, she became a celebrity. She was on the David Letterman show, she was on Oprah. She was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Southern Mississippi and Harvard. It was�the first time she'd ever been on a plane. She�carried the Olympic torch through�part of Mississippi as it made its way to Atlanta in 1996.

Southwick:�She's 80-some years old when this is all happening?

Brokamp:�Yes. She also won the United Nations Avicenna Medal for�educational commitment, and�Bill Clinton awarded her a Presidential Citizens Medal. She rang in 1997 by being the person who flips the switch for the ball to drop on Times Square. She said at the time�it was the latest she'd ever stayed up in her whole life. It inspired Ted Turner, the creator of CNN, to donate $1 billion to charity. He said, "If�that little woman can give away everything she has, then I can give a billion."

Most of her life, it was in a savings account or CDs. Eventually, the people at the bank convinced her to invest in some conservative�mutual funds, so it grew a little bit more. They�also convinced her, by the way, to buy an�air conditioner for her house and cable TV.�Fellow Fool Selena Maranjian has written about her. She wrote�about her several years ago. One of Oseola's bankers wrote to Selena and said, "If�we had been able to introduce her to equities earlier,�she would have left millions instead of thousands."

Oseola died in�1999 at the age of 91. Today, at the�University of Southern Mississippi, there's a residence hall named after her. According to articles from 2014, the�Oseola McCarty Endowed Scholarship fund is worth more than $700,000. I�emailed the university to ask what it's worth now, and they said�they don't provide that value anymore, but�they did say that through this year,�approximately $480,000 has been distributed to 84 students.

Yeah.�I'll close with four quotes from�Osceola herself. A journalist from People Magazine asked�why she didn't spend the money that she'd saved on herself. She answered that, "Thanks to�the pleasure that comes from making the gift, I am spending it on myself."�

She said, "I hear�some people today have financial advisors to tell them how to save their money and what to spend it on, or�people who want more of this or more of that to make them happy. They just can't get enough. Well, the Lord portioned out the good things in life�to me just fine. Who needs any more?"

She also said, "I'm proud that I worked hard and that my money will help young people who worked hard who deserve it. I'm proud that I'm leaving�something positive in this world. My�only regret is that I didn't have more to give."�

And finally, "I can't do everything, but�I can do something to help somebody. And what I can do, I will do."

Southwick:�Wow,�that's the show! Thanks again to Austin for dropping by and dropping some credit card knowledge on our heads. The show is edited philanthropically by Rick Engdahl. It is a charity, actually. [laughs]�Our email is answers@fool.com. Don't forget to send us a postcard from your exotic travels and journeys. Our�address is 2000 Duke Street,�Alexandria, Virginia,�22314. Our email is answers@fool.com. For Robert Brokamp, I'm Alison Southwick. Stay Foolish, everybody!

Monday, July 9, 2018

Top 5 Small Cap Stocks To Invest In Right Now

tags:PQ,CNR,ACHN,FCEL,

I typically write on small cap and other stocks which are much less followed than Tesla (TSLA) because doing so helps fill an obvious coverage void. TSLA, on the other hand, is extremely well-covered, and so there��s less of an opportunity to make new points and/or present a fresh angle. Indeed, I regularly read all of the short-side experts (Montana Skeptic, EnerTuition, Anton Wahlman, etc.) as well as many of the best longs to get a better understanding of the opposite side of my trade (Trent Eady, ValueAnalyst, Randy Carlson, etc.) Yet while the coverage from both sides is extensive and extremely thought provoking, the sheer volume and pursuit of minor details can often obscure the essential investment (short) case. For example, while it��s very interesting to ferret out the costs of each supercharger location, in the end, the results won��t materially affect the probabilities of TSLA��s ultimate success or failure.

In order to stay focused on the bigger picture, I like to review my longer term positions every six months or so, with the goal of distilling my investment case, including identifying any potential developments which might cause me to change my mind. In this article, I present the results of my review in the form of a top 5 list of reasons (in order of importance) for why I have a long-term TSLA short position, in the hopes that it might also be helpful to other readers who may have become overwhelmed with the volume of TSLA coverage.

Top 5 Small Cap Stocks To Invest In Right Now: Petroquest Energy Inc(PQ)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    News headlines about Petroquest Energy (NYSE:PQ) have been trending somewhat positive recently, Accern Sentiment Analysis reports. Accern identifies negative and positive news coverage by reviewing more than 20 million blog and news sources. Accern ranks coverage of publicly-traded companies on a scale of -1 to 1, with scores nearest to one being the most favorable. Petroquest Energy earned a coverage optimism score of 0.05 on Accern’s scale. Accern also gave news stories about the energy company an impact score of 47.638327846877 out of 100, meaning that recent news coverage is somewhat unlikely to have an impact on the company’s share price in the near future.

Top 5 Small Cap Stocks To Invest In Right Now: China Metro-Rural Holdings Limited(CNR)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Shane Hupp]

    Wall Street analysts expect that Canadian National Railway (NYSE:CNI) (TSE:CNR) will announce $1.02 earnings per share (EPS) for the current quarter, according to Zacks Investment Research. Seven analysts have provided estimates for Canadian National Railway’s earnings, with the highest EPS estimate coming in at $1.06 and the lowest estimate coming in at $0.97. Canadian National Railway reported earnings per share of $1.00 in the same quarter last year, which would suggest a positive year over year growth rate of 2%. The company is expected to announce its next quarterly earnings results on Tuesday, July 24th.

  • [By Joseph Griffin]

    Shares of Canadian National Railway (TSE:CNR) (NYSE:CNI) have been given an average recommendation of “Buy” by the eleven research firms that are covering the firm, MarketBeat reports. One investment analyst has rated the stock with a hold recommendation and six have issued a buy recommendation on the company. The average 12-month price target among brokerages that have updated their coverage on the stock in the last year is C$109.36.

  • [By Max Byerly]

    Canadian National Railway (NYSE:CNI) (TSE:CNR) – Cormark raised their Q3 2018 earnings per share (EPS) estimates for Canadian National Railway in a research report issued to clients and investors on Tuesday, April 10th. Cormark analyst D. Tyerman now expects that the transportation company will post earnings per share of $1.15 for the quarter, up from their previous estimate of $1.14.

  • [By Shane Hupp]

    Her Majesty the Queen in Right of the Province of Alberta as represented by Alberta Investment Management Corp cut its position in Canadian National Railway (NYSE:CNI) (TSE:CNR) by 21.1% during the first quarter, according to the company in its most recent disclosure with the Securities & Exchange Commission. The institutional investor owned 1,956,400 shares of the transportation company’s stock after selling 522,300 shares during the period. Canadian National Railway accounts for about 1.7% of Her Majesty the Queen in Right of the Province of Alberta as represented by Alberta Investment Management Corp’s investment portfolio, making the stock its 7th biggest position. Her Majesty the Queen in Right of the Province of Alberta as represented by Alberta Investment Management Corp owned 0.27% of Canadian National Railway worth $184,215,000 at the end of the most recent reporting period.

  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    Brokerages expect Canadian National Railway (NYSE:CNI) (TSE:CNR) to announce earnings of $1.03 per share for the current fiscal quarter, Zacks Investment Research reports. Eight analysts have issued estimates for Canadian National Railway’s earnings, with the highest EPS estimate coming in at $1.10 and the lowest estimate coming in at $0.97. Canadian National Railway reported earnings of $1.00 per share in the same quarter last year, which would indicate a positive year over year growth rate of 3%. The business is scheduled to issue its next quarterly earnings report on Tuesday, July 24th.

Top 5 Small Cap Stocks To Invest In Right Now: Achillion Pharmaceuticals Inc.(ACHN)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Lisa Levin] Gainers Avenue Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ: ATXI) rose 29.4 percent to $5.50 in pre-market trading after the company disclosed that its first pivotal Phase 3 trial of IV tramadol achieved the primary and key secondary endpoints. MB Financial, Inc. (NASDAQ: MBFI) rose 16.8 percent to $51.00 in pre-market trading. Fifth Third Bancorp (NASDAQ: FITB) agreed to acquire MB Financial for $54.70 per share in cash and stock. LiveXLive Media, Inc. (NASDAQ: LIVX) rose 9.3 percent to $5.40 in pre-market trading after falling 28.92 percent on Friday. Celyad SA (NASDAQ: CYAD) shares rose 9 percent to $29.30 in pre-market trading after climbing 3.26 percent on Friday. Ethan Allen Interiors Inc. (NYSE: ETH) rose 6.7 percent to $26.40 in pre-market trading after gaining 1.64 percent on Friday. Achillion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: ACHN) rose 5.4 percent to $3.90 in pre-market trading after gaining 3.06 percent on Friday. Acacia Communications, Inc. (NASDAQ: ACIA) rose 5.2 percent to $34.70 in pre-market trading after gaining 1.38 percent on Friday. Westinghouse Air Brake Technologies Corporation (NYSE: WAB) rose 5.1 percent to $100 in pre-market trading. General Electric Company (NYSE: GE) agreed to merge its transportation unit with Wabtec. Sunrun Inc. (NASDAQ: RUN) shares rose 4.7 percent to $11.50 in pre-market trading. Nasdaq, Inc. (NASDAQ: NDAQ) shares rose 4.3 percent to $93.98 in the pre-market trading session. LaSalle Hotel Properties (NYSE: LHO) shares rose 4.2 percent to $33.25 in pre-market trading. Blackstone Group LP (NYSE: BX) will buy LaSalle Hotel Properties in a $4.8 billion deal, Bloomberg reported. Monro, Inc. (NASDAQ: MNRO) shares rose 4 percent to $58.35 in pre-market trading as the company posted upbeat quarterly earnings and disclosed that it has acquired Free Service Tire. HUYA Inc. (NYSE: HUYA) rose 3.7 percent to $19.75 in pre-market trading after falling 4.80 percent on Friday.

    Find out what's going

  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    Achillion Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:ACHN) has been given an average recommendation of “Hold” by the nine brokerages that are currently covering the firm, MarketBeat reports. Two analysts have rated the stock with a sell rating, four have issued a hold rating and three have issued a buy rating on the company. The average 12 month price target among analysts that have covered the stock in the last year is $5.20.

  • [By Joseph Griffin]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on Achillion Pharmaceuticals (ACHN)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    Achillion Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:ACHN) – Research analysts at B. Riley reduced their FY2018 EPS estimates for shares of Achillion Pharmaceuticals in a research note issued to investors on Wednesday, May 2nd. B. Riley analyst M. Kumar now anticipates that the biopharmaceutical company will earn ($0.58) per share for the year, down from their previous estimate of ($0.55). B. Riley has a “Neutral” rating and a $3.50 price objective on the stock. B. Riley also issued estimates for Achillion Pharmaceuticals’ FY2019 earnings at ($0.64) EPS, FY2020 earnings at ($0.71) EPS, FY2021 earnings at ($0.70) EPS and FY2022 earnings at ($0.84) EPS.

  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on Achillion Pharmaceuticals (ACHN)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

  • [By Shane Hupp]

    News articles about Achillion Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:ACHN) have trended somewhat positive this week, Accern Sentiment reports. The research firm ranks the sentiment of press coverage by analyzing more than twenty million blog and news sources in real-time. Accern ranks coverage of companies on a scale of negative one to positive one, with scores closest to one being the most favorable. Achillion Pharmaceuticals earned a media sentiment score of 0.16 on Accern’s scale. Accern also gave news articles about the biopharmaceutical company an impact score of 46.941587509483 out of 100, indicating that recent press coverage is somewhat unlikely to have an effect on the stock’s share price in the near term.

Top 5 Small Cap Stocks To Invest In Right Now: FuelCell Energy Inc.(FCEL)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Joseph Griffin]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on FuelCell Energy (FCEL)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

  • [By Shane Hupp]

    FuelCell Energy Inc (NASDAQ:FCEL) shares traded up 5.8% on Friday . The stock traded as high as $1.49 and last traded at $1.45. 12,581,855 shares traded hands during trading, an increase of 983% from the average session volume of 1,161,380 shares. The stock had previously closed at $1.37.

  • [By Peter Graham]

    Small cap fuel cell stock�FuelCell Energy Inc (NASDAQ: FCEL) reported Q4 and fiscal year ended October 31, 2017 earnings�with�Q4 total revenues�being $47.9 million versus $24.5 million:����

  • [By Paul Ausick]

    FuelCell Energy Inc. (NASDAQ: FCEL) posted a decrease of 25.7% in short interest during the period. Some 5.86 million shares were short as of April 30. The stock closed at $1.93 on Wednesday, up about 1.6% for the day, in a 52-week range of $0.80 to $2.49. Shares traded down about 7.8% in the short interest period, and days to cover rose from six to eight.

  • [By Shane Hupp]

    FuelCell Energy (NASDAQ: FCEL) is one of 25 public companies in the “Miscellaneous electrical machinery, equipment, & supplies” industry, but how does it contrast to its peers? We will compare FuelCell Energy to related companies based on the strength of its risk, dividends, earnings, valuation, profitability, analyst recommendations and institutional ownership.

  • [By Shane Hupp]

    Electro Scientific Industries (NASDAQ: ESIO) and FuelCell Energy (NASDAQ:FCEL) are both small-cap computer and technology companies, but which is the better stock? We will compare the two businesses based on the strength of their analyst recommendations, valuation, institutional ownership, risk, profitability, dividends and earnings.

Wednesday, July 4, 2018

Brokerages Anticipate Navigant Consulting, Inc. (NCI) Will Announce Quarterly Sales of $236.01 Milli

Analysts expect that Navigant Consulting, Inc. (NYSE:NCI) will report sales of $236.01 million for the current quarter, according to Zacks Investment Research. Three analysts have provided estimates for Navigant Consulting’s earnings. The highest sales estimate is $239.00 million and the lowest is $233.70 million. Navigant Consulting posted sales of $235.24 million during the same quarter last year, which indicates a positive year over year growth rate of 0.3%. The company is scheduled to announce its next earnings results on Monday, July 30th.

On average, analysts expect that Navigant Consulting will report full year sales of $958.15 million for the current year, with estimates ranging from $952.17 million to $966.20 million. For the next year, analysts expect that the firm will post sales of $991.49 million per share, with estimates ranging from $976.84 million to $1.01 billion. Zacks’ sales calculations are an average based on a survey of research analysts that that provide coverage for Navigant Consulting.

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Navigant Consulting (NYSE:NCI) last issued its quarterly earnings data on Wednesday, May 2nd. The business services provider reported $0.30 earnings per share (EPS) for the quarter, meeting the Zacks’ consensus estimate of $0.30. The firm had revenue of $243.90 million during the quarter, compared to analysts’ expectations of $233.79 million. Navigant Consulting had a net margin of 7.29% and a return on equity of 7.95%. The business’s revenue for the quarter was up 3.3% on a year-over-year basis. During the same quarter in the previous year, the company earned $0.27 earnings per share.

A number of brokerages recently issued reports on NCI. Zacks Investment Research cut shares of Navigant Consulting from a “hold” rating to a “sell” rating in a report on Monday, May 7th. ValuEngine cut shares of Navigant Consulting from a “buy” rating to a “hold” rating in a report on Friday. Finally, Barrington Research restated a “buy” rating on shares of Navigant Consulting in a report on Tuesday, June 26th. Two investment analysts have rated the stock with a sell rating, one has given a hold rating and one has assigned a buy rating to the company’s stock. The company currently has a consensus rating of “Hold” and an average price target of $26.00.

A number of hedge funds and other institutional investors have recently modified their holdings of the stock. BlackRock Inc. grew its holdings in Navigant Consulting by 1.9% during the fourth quarter. BlackRock Inc. now owns 5,963,727 shares of the business services provider’s stock valued at $115,755,000 after purchasing an additional 111,461 shares during the period. Engine Capital Management LLC lifted its stake in Navigant Consulting by 17.4% in the first quarter. Engine Capital Management LLC now owns 2,036,348 shares of the business services provider’s stock valued at $39,179,000 after buying an additional 301,406 shares in the last quarter. Sunriver Management LLC lifted its stake in Navigant Consulting by 5.9% in the fourth quarter. Sunriver Management LLC now owns 1,271,034 shares of the business services provider’s stock valued at $24,671,000 after buying an additional 71,042 shares in the last quarter. Macquarie Group Ltd. lifted its stake in Navigant Consulting by 11.7% in the fourth quarter. Macquarie Group Ltd. now owns 1,262,309 shares of the business services provider’s stock valued at $24,501,000 after buying an additional 132,026 shares in the last quarter. Finally, Northern Trust Corp lifted its stake in Navigant Consulting by 2.0% in the first quarter. Northern Trust Corp now owns 1,004,466 shares of the business services provider’s stock valued at $19,327,000 after buying an additional 20,158 shares in the last quarter. Hedge funds and other institutional investors own 92.64% of the company’s stock.

NYSE NCI traded up $0.39 during trading on Wednesday, reaching $22.53. 263,400 shares of the stock traded hands, compared to its average volume of 270,991. The stock has a market cap of $1.00 billion, a P/E ratio of 20.39, a P/E/G ratio of 1.26 and a beta of 0.91. The company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.27, a quick ratio of 2.60 and a current ratio of 2.60. Navigant Consulting has a fifty-two week low of $14.62 and a fifty-two week high of $25.25.

Navigant Consulting Company Profile

Navigant Consulting, Inc provides professional services to corporate executives and senior management, corporate counsel, law firms, corporate boards, special committees, and governmental agencies worldwide. It operates through four segments: Healthcare; Energy; Financial Services Advisory and Compliance; and Disputes, Forensics and Legal Technology.

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Earnings History and Estimates for Navigant Consulting (NYSE:NCI)

Sunday, June 24, 2018

Analysts Expect ProAssurance Co. (PRA) to Post $0.41 Earnings Per Share

Brokerages expect ProAssurance Co. (NYSE:PRA) to report earnings of $0.41 per share for the current fiscal quarter, according to Zacks. Three analysts have provided estimates for ProAssurance’s earnings. The lowest EPS estimate is $0.38 and the highest is $0.45. ProAssurance posted earnings of $0.40 per share in the same quarter last year, which would indicate a positive year over year growth rate of 2.5%. The firm is expected to issue its next quarterly earnings results on Monday, August 6th.

On average, analysts expect that ProAssurance will report full year earnings of $1.77 per share for the current fiscal year, with EPS estimates ranging from $1.65 to $1.95. For the next year, analysts expect that the company will report earnings of $1.72 per share, with EPS estimates ranging from $1.60 to $1.90. Zacks Investment Research’s EPS calculations are an average based on a survey of sell-side analysts that cover ProAssurance.

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ProAssurance (NYSE:PRA) last released its quarterly earnings results on Thursday, May 3rd. The insurance provider reported $0.40 EPS for the quarter, missing the Zacks’ consensus estimate of $0.44 by ($0.04). The business had revenue of $201.03 million for the quarter, compared to the consensus estimate of $219.42 million. ProAssurance had a return on equity of 5.64% and a net margin of 9.20%. The firm’s revenue was down 9.9% on a year-over-year basis. During the same quarter last year, the company earned $0.62 earnings per share.

A number of equities research analysts recently commented on PRA shares. Raymond James upgraded ProAssurance from an “underperform” rating to a “market perform” rating in a research report on Wednesday, February 28th. TheStreet lowered ProAssurance from a “b” rating to a “c+” rating in a research report on Friday, March 9th. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods set a $52.00 price target on ProAssurance and gave the stock a “hold” rating in a research report on Tuesday, April 10th. SunTrust Banks lowered ProAssurance from a “buy” rating to a “hold” rating in a research report on Wednesday, April 4th. Finally, Zacks Investment Research lowered ProAssurance from a “hold” rating to a “strong sell” rating in a research report on Monday, February 26th. Three equities research analysts have rated the stock with a sell rating and six have assigned a hold rating to the company’s stock. The company has a consensus rating of “Hold” and an average price target of $54.75.

ProAssurance traded up $0.90, reaching $36.70, during trading hours on Friday, according to MarketBeat Ratings. 5,223,704 shares of the company’s stock were exchanged, compared to its average volume of 413,031. The firm has a market cap of $1.92 billion, a PE ratio of 18.17 and a beta of 0.50. ProAssurance has a one year low of $35.60 and a one year high of $63.45. The company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.24, a current ratio of 0.39 and a quick ratio of 0.39.

The business also recently declared a quarterly dividend, which will be paid on Tuesday, July 10th. Stockholders of record on Friday, June 22nd will be paid a $0.31 dividend. This represents a $1.24 dividend on an annualized basis and a dividend yield of 3.38%. The ex-dividend date of this dividend is Thursday, June 21st. ProAssurance’s dividend payout ratio (DPR) is currently 61.39%.

In related news, Director Magnus James Gorrie purchased 2,000 shares of the business’s stock in a transaction dated Wednesday, June 13th. The shares were bought at an average price of $39.20 per share, with a total value of $78,400.00. Following the purchase, the director now directly owns 14,231 shares in the company, valued at approximately $557,855.20. The acquisition was disclosed in a filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission, which is accessible through this link. Corporate insiders own 1.80% of the company’s stock.

Several hedge funds have recently bought and sold shares of PRA. Carillon Tower Advisers Inc. acquired a new position in shares of ProAssurance in the 4th quarter valued at $37,292,000. Dimensional Fund Advisors LP raised its stake in ProAssurance by 16.4% during the 1st quarter. Dimensional Fund Advisors LP now owns 1,820,449 shares of the insurance provider’s stock worth $88,383,000 after buying an additional 256,834 shares during the period. Victory Capital Management Inc. raised its stake in ProAssurance by 11.5% during the 1st quarter. Victory Capital Management Inc. now owns 1,743,480 shares of the insurance provider’s stock worth $84,646,000 after buying an additional 180,270 shares during the period. BlackRock Inc. raised its stake in ProAssurance by 3.1% during the 4th quarter. BlackRock Inc. now owns 5,573,593 shares of the insurance provider’s stock worth $318,531,000 after buying an additional 169,585 shares during the period. Finally, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. raised its stake in ProAssurance by 7.0% during the 4th quarter. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. now owns 1,211,339 shares of the insurance provider’s stock worth $69,229,000 after buying an additional 79,302 shares during the period. 81.50% of the stock is currently owned by institutional investors.

ProAssurance Company Profile

ProAssurance Corporation, through its subsidiaries, provides property and casualty insurance, and reinsurance products in the United States. The company operates through Specialty Property and Casualty, Workers' Compensation, and Lloyd's Syndicate segments. It offers professional liability insurance for healthcare professionals and facilities; professional liability insurance for attorneys; liability insurance for medical technology and life sciences risks; and workers' compensation insurance for employers, groups, and associations.

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Earnings History and Estimates for ProAssurance (NYSE:PRA)

Wednesday, June 20, 2018

Mid-Day Market Update: Dow Down 350 Points; Tellurian Shares Plunge

Midway through trading Tuesday, the Dow traded down 1.41 percent to 24,635.21 while the NASDAQ declined 0.86 percent to 7,680.47. The S&P also fell, dropping 0.74 percent to 2,753.32.

Leading and Lagging Sectors

On Tuesday, the telecommunication services shares surged 1.57 percent. Meanwhile, top gainers in the sector included Sify Technologies Limited (NASDAQ: SIFY) up 3 percent, and Cincinnati Bell Inc. (NYSE: CBB) up 3 percent.

In trading on Tuesday, materials shares fell 2.23 percent.

Top Headline

Roche announced plans to acquire outstanding shares of Foundation Medicine, Inc. (NASDAQ: FMI) for $2.4 billion.

The offer price of $137 per share represents a 29 percent premium over FMI's closing price on Monday.

 

Equities Trading UP

Gevo, Inc. (NASDAQ: GEVO) shares shot up 75 percent to $22.2489. Gevo shares surged around 262 percent on Monday after the EPA announced it has approved up to a 16 percent blend of isobutanol for use in automobiles.

Shares of Foundation Medicine, Inc. (NASDAQ: FMI) got a boost, shooting up 28 percent to $136.60 after Roche announced plans to acquire outstanding shares of FMI for $137 per share in cash.

Neptune Technologies & Bioressources Inc. (NASDAQ: NEPT) shares were also up, gaining 38 percent to $3.38 after the company reported a multi-year deal with Canopy Growth for supplementing of Canopy's extraction, refinement, and extract product formulation capacity.

Equities Trading DOWN

PagSeguro Digital Ltd. (NYSE: PAGS) shares dropped 13 percent to $28.00 after reporting a follow-on offering. Credit Suisse downgraded PagSeguro Digital from Neutral to Underperform.

Shares of Tellurian Inc. (NASDAQ: TELL) were down 10 percent to $9.745. Tellurian priced its 12 million share offering of common stock for gross proceeds of $118.8 million.

PTC Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ: PTCT) was down, falling around 21 percent to $37.85 after rising 27.51 percent on Monday.

Commodities

In commodity news, oil traded down 1.79 percent to $64.67 while gold traded down 0.20 percent to $1,277.50.

Silver traded down 0.64 percent Tuesday to $16.335, while copper fell 1.74 to $3.0745.

Eurozone

European shares were lower today. The eurozone’s STOXX 600 dropped 0.70 percent, the Spanish Ibex Index fell 0.14 percent, while Italy’s FTSE MIB Index dipped 0.07 percent. Meanwhile the German DAX dropped 1.22 percent, and the French CAC 40 fell 1.10 percent while U.K. shares fell 0.36 percent.

Tuesday, May 29, 2018

Top Undervalued Stocks To Buy For 2018

tags:NSM,DJCO,TZOO,CCM, What happened

Shares of Box Inc. (NYSE:BOX) popped 11.6% on Monday after the cloud content management specialist received a vote of confidence from a hedge fund manager.

Speaking the Sohn Investment Conference today, Social Capital CEO Chamath Palihapitiya argued that Box is a "really interesting disruptive company," calling the stock "incredibly cheap and undervalued."

IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

So what

Palihapitiya explained that Box "sits on top of an enormous amount of R&D," particularly in the artificial intelligence (AI) space.

For perspective, last October, Box unveiled an AI toolkit dubbed Box Skills, enabling customers to use AI and machine-learning tools from companies like Google, Microsoft, and IBM�to better manage and extract data from multimedia files -- for example, the ability to automatically tag photos, or to transcribe audio and identify topics and people from video files.

Top Undervalued Stocks To Buy For 2018: Nationstar Mortgage Holdings Inc.(NSM)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Max Byerly]

    LSV Asset Management raised its stake in shares of Nationstar Mortgage (NYSE:NSM) by 28.7% during the first quarter, according to its most recent filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The fund owned 282,100 shares of the financial services provider’s stock after acquiring an additional 62,900 shares during the quarter. LSV Asset Management owned approximately 0.29% of Nationstar Mortgage worth $5,066,000 at the end of the most recent quarter.

Top Undervalued Stocks To Buy For 2018: Daily Journal Corp. (S.C.)(DJCO)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    BidaskClub downgraded shares of Daily Journal (NASDAQ:DJCO) from a buy rating to a hold rating in a research report released on Tuesday.

    Separately, TheStreet raised shares of Daily Journal from a c- rating to a b rating in a report on Monday, February 12th.

Top Undervalued Stocks To Buy For 2018: Travelzoo Inc.(TZOO)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Lisa Levin] Gainers Daré Bioscience, Inc. (NASDAQ: DARE) shares jumped 56.69 percent to close at $1.27 on Wednesday on news that the company entered into worldwide license agreement for Juniper Pharmaceuticals' intravaginal ring technology platform. Vicor Corporation (NASDAQ: VICR) rose 26.84 percent to close at $37.10. Vicor posted Q1 earnings of $0.10 per share on sales of $65.2 million. AGM Group Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: AGMH) climbed 25.56 percent to close at $10.61. Travelzoo (NASDAQ: TZOO) gained 24.7 percent to close at $9.75 following strong Q1 results. Intrepid Potash, Inc. (NYSE: IPI) shares climbed 19.24 percent to close at $4.71. China Customer Relations Centers, Inc. (NASDAQ: CCRC) rose 18.73 percent to close at $18.64. Genprex, Inc. (NASDAQ: GNPX) climbed 18.28 percent to close at $5.89. Genprex expanded its operations to Cambridge, Mass. Scorpio Tankers Inc. (NYSE: STNG) rose 13.92 percent to close at $2.70 following Q1 results. Rocky Brands, Inc. (NASDAQ: RCKY) shares surged 13.57 percent to close at $23.85 after reporting Q1 results. Resonant Inc. (NASDAQ: RESN) shares rose 12.5 percent to close at $4.14 on Wednesday. USANA Health Sciences, Inc. (NYSE: USNA) jumped 11.24 percent to close at $106.85 following Q1 results. SUPERVALU Inc. (NYSE: SVU) rose 11.16 percent to close at $16.24 after the company reported Q4 results and agreed to sell and leaseback eight distribution centers for an aggregate purchase price of $483 million. K12 Inc. (NYSE: LRN) shares gained 10.74 percent to close at $15.36 following Q3 results. Tupperware Brands Corporation (NYSE: TUP) rose 9.15 percent to close at $46.28 as the company posted in-line quarterly earnings. Six Flags Entertainment Corporation (NYSE: SIX) shares climbed 8.49 percent to close at $64.18 as the company posted a narrower-than-expected loss for its first quarter. Carlisle Companies Incorporated (NYSE: CSL) gained 8.2 percent to close at $107.94 af
  • [By Max Byerly]

    Travelzoo (NASDAQ: TZOO) and CACI (NYSE:CACI) are both retail/wholesale companies, but which is the better business? We will compare the two businesses based on the strength of their analyst recommendations, risk, earnings, dividends, institutional ownership, profitability and valuation.

  • [By Lisa Levin]

    Shares of Travelzoo (NASDAQ: TZOO) got a boost, shooting up 25 percent to $9.70 following strong Q1 results.

    Six Flags Entertainment Corporation (NYSE: SIX) shares were also up, gaining 9 percent to $64.54 as the company posted a narrower-than-expected loss for its first quarter.

  • [By Lisa Levin]

    Shares of Travelzoo (NASDAQ: TZOO) got a boost, shooting up 30 percent to $10.16 following strong Q1 results.

    Six Flags Entertainment Corporation (NYSE: SIX) shares were also up, gaining 8 percent to $64.01 as the company posted a narrower-than-expected loss for its first quarter.

  • [By Lisa Levin] Gainers Daré Bioscience, Inc. (NASDAQ: DARE) shares climbed 54.2 percent to $1.25 on news that the company entered into worldwide license agreement for Juniper Pharmaceuticals' intravaginal ring technology platform. Travelzoo (NASDAQ: TZOO) climbed 21.3 percent to $9.40 following strong Q1 results. Intrepid Potash, Inc. (NYSE: IPI) gained 16.5 percent to $4.60. K12 Inc. (NYSE: LRN) shares rose 11.2 percent to $15.4206 following Q3 results. Chicago Bridge & Iron Company N.V. (NYSE: CBI) shares rose 11 percent to $15.3289. McDermott issued a release reiterating rejection of Subsea 7's offer. Six Flags Entertainment Corporation (NYSE: SIX) shares gained 9.2 percent to $64.61 as the company posted a narrower-than-expected loss for its first quarter. Tupperware Brands Corporation (NYSE: TUP) surged 8.5 percent to $46.00 as the company posted in-line quarterly earnings. Carlisle Companies Incorporated (NYSE: CSL) climbed 7.5 percent to $107.22 after reporting Q1 results. Allena Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: ALNA) rose 6.1 percent to $14.78. B. Riley initiated coverage on Allena Pharmaceuticals with a Buy rating. Texas Instruments Incorporated (NASDAQ: TXN) rose 4.6 percent to $102.90 after the company reported stronger-than-expected earnings for its first quarter on Tuesday. Credit Suisse Group AG (NYSE: CS) rose 4.5 percent to $17.03 following strong Q1 results. STMicroelectronics N.V. (NYSE: STM) rose 4.2 percent to $22.20 after reporting Q1 results.

    Check out these big penny stock gainers and losers

Top Undervalued Stocks To Buy For 2018: Concord Medical Services Holdings Limited(CCM)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Lisa Levin] Gainers Comstock Resources, Inc. (NYSE: CRK) shares shot up 52 percent to $7.235 after the company disclosed a deal with Arkoma Drilling L.P. and Williston Drilling, L.P. to buy oil & gas properties in North Dakota. Comstock announced withdrawal of tender offers for outstanding secured notes. MarineMax, Inc. (NYSE: HZO) shares gained 24.2 percent to $21.80 as the company posted upbeat Q2 results and raised its FY18 outlook. Mattersight Corporation (NASDAQ: MATR) shares rose 22 percent to $2.625 after the company agreed to be purchased by NICE Ltd. Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc. (NYSE: CMG) jumped 21.3 percent to $411.871 as the company reported stronger-than-expected results for its first quarter on Wednesday. Axsome Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ: AXSM) rose 17 percent to $3.10 after the company disclosed a positive outcome of the interim analysis of STRIDE-1 Phase 3 trial of AXS-05 in treatment resistant depression. Ultra Clean Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ: UCTT) rose 15.9 percent to $18.34 following upbeat Q1 earnings. PCM, Inc. (NASDAQ: PCMI) gained 15.6 percent to $12.20 following Q1 results. O'Reilly Automotive, Inc. (NASDAQ: ORLY) surged 14.4 percent to $260.3901 following upbeat Q1 profit. Concord Medical Services Holdings Limited (NYSE: CCM) gained 13.8 percent to $3.70. Penn National Gaming, Inc. (NASDAQ: PENN) rose 13.5 percent to $29.815 after reporting strong Q1 results. BioTelemetry, Inc. (NASDAQ: BEAT) rose 13.5 percent to $38.30 as the company reported stronger-than-expected earnings for its first quarter. Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMD) shares rose 13.1 percent to $10.985 as the company reported upbeat results for its first quarter. SJW Group (NYSE: SJW) shares gained 11.8 percent to $63.59 following Q1 results. California Water Service Group made an offer for SJW. Churchill Downs Incorporated (NASDAQ: CHDN) climbed 9.8 percent to $278.40 following Q1 results. CYS Investments, Inc. (NYSE: CYS)
  • [By Lisa Levin] Gainers Genprex, Inc. (NASDAQ: GNPX) shares gained 86.76 percent to close at $11.00 on Thursday. Comstock Resources, Inc. (NYSE: CRK) shares climbed 47.06 percent to close at $7.00 after the company disclosed a deal with Arkoma Drilling L.P. and Williston Drilling, L.P. to buy oil & gas properties in North Dakota. Comstock announced withdrawal of tender offers for outstanding secured notes. Ceridian HCM Holding Inc. (NASDAQ: CDAY) gained 41.86 percent to close at $31.21. MarineMax, Inc. (NYSE: HZO) shares rose 26.5 percent to close at $22.20 as the company posted upbeat Q2 results and raised its FY18 outlook. Concord Medical Services Holdings Limited (NYSE: CCM) jumped 24.92 percent to close at $4.06. Mattersight Corporation (NASDAQ: MATR) shares climbed 23.26 percent to close at $2.65 after the company agreed to be purchased by NICE Ltd. Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc. (NYSE: CMG) rose 24.44 percent to close at $422.50 as the company reported stronger-than-expected results for its first quarter on Wednesday. Ultra Clean Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ: UCTT) gained 17.75 percent to close at $18.64 following upbeat Q1 earnings. PCM, Inc. (NASDAQ: PCMI) rose 16.59 percent to close at $12.30 following Q1 results. Zymeworks Inc. (NASDAQ: ZYME) rose 16.06 percent to close at $15.25. Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ: ALXN) shares climbed 14.5 percent to close at $121.42 as the company posted reported Q1 beat And raised FY18 outlook. Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMD) shares gained 13.7 percent to close at $11.04 as the company reported upbeat results for its first quarter. Axsome Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ: AXSM) rose 13.21 percent to close at $3.00 after the company disclosed a positive outcome of the interim analysis of STRIDE-1 Phase 3 trial of AXS-05 in treatment resistant depression. O'Reilly Automotive, Inc. (NASDAQ: ORLY) jumped 13.06 percent to close at $257.40 following upbeat Q1 profit. BioTelemetry,

Monday, May 28, 2018

Crusader Energy Group (JONE) Reaches New 52-Week High and Low at $0.44

Crusader Energy Group, LLC (NYSE:JONE)’s share price hit a new 52-week high and low during mid-day trading on Friday . The company traded as low as $0.44 and last traded at $0.50, with a volume of 22608 shares changing hands. The stock had previously closed at $0.52.

A number of equities analysts have issued reports on the company. Zacks Investment Research lowered Crusader Energy Group from a “hold” rating to a “sell” rating in a research note on Tuesday, January 30th. ValuEngine lowered Crusader Energy Group from a “sell” rating to a “strong sell” rating in a research note on Saturday, February 3rd. Finally, Stephens reaffirmed a “hold” rating and set a $1.00 price target on shares of Crusader Energy Group in a research note on Thursday, March 15th. Three investment analysts have rated the stock with a sell rating and four have assigned a hold rating to the company. The company has a consensus rating of “Hold” and an average target price of $1.21.

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The company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 1.79, a quick ratio of 1.69 and a current ratio of 1.69.

Crusader Energy Group (NYSE:JONE) last released its quarterly earnings data on Wednesday, May 2nd. The oil and gas producer reported ($0.32) earnings per share for the quarter, missing the consensus estimate of ($0.24) by ($0.08). The company had revenue of $57.49 million for the quarter, compared to the consensus estimate of $54.23 million. Crusader Energy Group had a negative return on equity of 9.77% and a negative net margin of 64.68%. equities research analysts forecast that Crusader Energy Group, LLC will post -1.12 EPS for the current year.

Several institutional investors and hedge funds have recently added to or reduced their stakes in JONE. Marathon Asset Management LP bought a new stake in shares of Crusader Energy Group during the 1st quarter worth $1,430,000. Brookfield Asset Management Inc. boosted its stake in shares of Crusader Energy Group by 57.6% during the 4th quarter. Brookfield Asset Management Inc. now owns 2,400,000 shares of the oil and gas producer’s stock worth $2,640,000 after acquiring an additional 877,268 shares in the last quarter. Cambrian Capital Limited Partnership bought a new stake in shares of Crusader Energy Group during the 4th quarter worth $714,000. California Public Employees Retirement System boosted its stake in shares of Crusader Energy Group by 46.1% during the 4th quarter. California Public Employees Retirement System now owns 790,881 shares of the oil and gas producer’s stock worth $870,000 after acquiring an additional 249,561 shares in the last quarter. Finally, Bank of Montreal Can boosted its stake in shares of Crusader Energy Group by 8,977.4% during the 4th quarter. Bank of Montreal Can now owns 232,562 shares of the oil and gas producer’s stock worth $256,000 after acquiring an additional 230,000 shares in the last quarter. 59.77% of the stock is owned by institutional investors and hedge funds.

Crusader Energy Group Company Profile

Jones Energy, Inc, an independent oil and gas company, engages in the acquisition, exploration, development, and production of oil and natural gas properties in the mid-continent United States. It owns leasehold interests in oil and natural gas producing properties, as well as in undeveloped acreage located in the Anadarko Basin in Oklahoma and Texas.