- get stocks with high yields
- get some commodity stocks while they are incredibly undervalued
- have a couple growth plays.
In the #2 category, I have two MFI stocks: EGY and HBMFF. EGY is cheap and has upside potential via their current exploration. HBMFF is simply cheap beyond belief, though surely no longer a true MFI stock. I have also bought TC (they announced very good earnings tonight) and FSUMF (a supplier of iron ore to China). These are both Jubak recommendations.
In #3 I have STP, a Jubak recommendation that is a true blue light special at $12 today. This is a company growing at 30 or 40% and is priced like acompany simply growing with inflation at 3 to 4% annually.
Three of my MFI stocks reported earnings this morning, a bleak day indeed.
FTO - I was actually pleased (Frontier Oil Reports Third Quarter 2008 Results). With the sharp drop-off in oil prices, the refiners are making strong margins again. But their stocks are priced as if it is short term. WNR is a great example of this. They are a former MFI stock and selling at $7 bucks. Yet they earned $1.61 per share this quarter. Clearly the markets expects that to be short term (or doesn't think WNR has the balance sheet to last).
BR - their earnings were almost upbeat (Broadridge Reports First Quarter Fiscal Year 2009 Results). They went up 8%, which was a rarity today.
KG - with generic competition, their earnings are down, but not terrible (King Pharmaceuticals swings to third-quarter profit). The stock held up well today, but I may have to cut them lose pretty soon as other oportunities look better.
After the bell PCR reported earnings. They actually had a record quarter (Perini Corporation Announces Record Results for Q3 2008), but then guided lower for 2009. As the stock is down 50% in the past 6 months and has a strong balance sheet and a substantial backlog AND still expects to earn over $3 a share in 2009, a rational person would say the decrease in guidance is already priced in... of course they'll sell-off tomorrow! A buying opportunity.
Well it is getting late and I have rambled long enough. Call me in 5 years and see if I am happy!
2 comments:
Dear Sir,
I am an independent financial advisor based in Italy. I helped translating "the little book..." in Italian and I am running a web site, www.finanze.net, that is based on those principles. Under the section "Top 100" we update a list of stocks, not only Us stocks, that are selected accordingly. We also offer a premium service for those who want to build and maintain their own portfolio. I wonder if you may be want to have a look at the site to possibly explore some sort of co-operation.
Alessandro Milesi
Acceptance is the final stage of grief Marsh...
Congrats!
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