Rosetta Stone - This stock was an absolute mistake. I think I mentioned this weekend that they were new to my mechanical list and that I had bought them I was looking forward to their earnings yesterday as my experience has been that new IPOs usually have strong earnings out of the box... I mean you don't want to disappoint the street one month after an IPO. When I read the press release (Rosetta Stone Inc. Reports First Quarter 2009 Results), I started scratching my head as it didn't add up.
- it was a better quarter than a year ago (up 41% in sales)
- they are an MFI stock with a 32% earnings yield (per my calc)
- The listed market cap (yesterday) was about $57m.
- They made $3.2m, which against a 57m market cap feels like a 32% EY
- BUT, they only made 19 cents per share, which against a $29 stock price would be a P/E over 30! That doesn't sound like a 32% EY.
HCKT - this is another stock I bought last week. They also had "disppointing" earnings (The Hackett Group Announces First Quarter Results), but I could live with them. They still have a ton of cash and while they will slow down with the economy, I think it is priced in.
MTXX - this is a funny little company that makes OTC flu/cold stocks. They are increasing revenues and earnings in the teeth of the recession (Matrixx Initiatives, Inc. Reports Fiscal 2009 Revenue Increased 11% to a Record $111.6 Million and Earnings Per Share Increased 40% to $1.46). They have an impregnable balance sheet. They did say they plan to look at acquisitions in 2009.... hopefully nothing to make them sick. They were up about 10% today.
QXM - this was my big bet, the little Chinese phone maker. They were down YoY, but still a solid quarter with a solid outlook (Qiao Xing Mobile Reports Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2008 Financial Results). The amazing thing is how cheap they remain (they did go up 5 to 6& today). They have like $432m in cash and a $164m market cap. How can that be for a company that is making money? I don't know the answer, but I won't be selling anytime soon.
Speaking of selling, I did sell a couple of stocks prematurely the past two weeks. While I generally try to use the Magic Formula, I have been so scarred and trigger-shy from the past two years that I have been selling some into this rally. I am now at my biggest cash position ever. I sold AHCI which was a great stock for me, I got about a 60% return from early January. I also sold SOLR for over a 30% gain. That may end up being a fortuitous sale as I see they're down about 15% this evening as they announced earnings. I also sold half my TC, which means I have what I started with as it has doubled. I think that is all my sales, I feel better now that I have confessed (MFI does have religious connotations as you have to "believe" and have "faith").
Even with the sales and having a good chunk in cash, I am now 10% above the benchmark Russell 3000 portfolio and getting within spitting distance (well, perhaps a bit more than that) of breakeven.
Finally, I made a mistake adding MSTR to my mechanical portfolio this weekend. It was already in it as of August
Later this week I will profile my all-Chinese portfolio I started in mid September last year. It is up about 15% while the Russell 3000 is down over 25% in the same stretch.
2 comments:
Marsh - fully diluted share count assumes that all granted options are purchased into shares, or that the board has authorized a secondary offering or something of that nature. I haven't looked at RST yet, but I'm guessing since they are a recent IPO they have a ton of options grants outstanding which are plenty dilutive and probably the reason the company is on the MFI screen in the first place. It's another MFI bugaboo, a "phantom" MFI stock.
Thanks Steve, I was pretty sure that was what it meant but had never seen the dilution be so great... unless the stock symbol is "AIG"
I am glad I pulled the trigger quickly as they dropped another 16% today.
MG
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