Michael Shulman
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Deadbeat Stock #6: Amgen (AMGN)
A lot of investors think Amgen (AMGN) is a great next-generation biotech company. Wrong. Amgen was a decent last-generation biotech company.
It's terribly managed outfit living on EPO drugs for dialysis and oncology patients. True, it has a billion dollar (actually more) drug, Neupogen, but it could be subject to generic competition in the United States from TEVA within two years.
Continue reading Deadbeat Stock #6: Amgen (AMGN)
Deadbeat Stock #5: Merck (MRK)
This declining company lost patent protection for its statin, Zocor. It has replaced some of these sales with three new drugs, but, in reality, they cannot make up for the lost revenue from Zocor.
Merck's (MRK) revenues are stagnant and the company has a very weak pipeline. Even if health care reform adds more patients, it will also bring increased pressure to cut prices.
Continue reading Deadbeat Stock #5: Merck (MRK)
Deadbeat Stock #4: Pfizer (PFE)
Pfizer (PFE) was the darling of the 1990s. Well, so was Bill Clinton, and like Clinton, the company pops up now and again in the news, but none of it really matters.
Pfizer's premier product, Lipitor, comes off patent this year and will get hit by generic competition in 2011. This drug has $11 billion in sales, which will shrink to $4 billion or less, and with that could go $5 billion or so in profits.
Continue reading Deadbeat Stock #4: Pfizer (PFE)
Deadbeat Stock #3: Brunswick (BC)
A well-managed company that may be worth buying someday, currently Brunswick's (BC) profits rely too heavily on making and selling boats.
Who needs a boat? You may want one, but you certainly don't need one. And when you find the cash (since there's no credit available) to buy one, you can get a used one; they are falling off the dry docks.
Continue reading Deadbeat Stock #3: Brunswick (BC)
Deadbeat Stock #2: Palm (PALM)
Would anyone care if Palm (PALM) went away -- other than its employees and shareholders?
This company is seeing sales decline, and its new best hope, the Pre, is competing against the iPhone, BlackBerry and Droid.
That means a company with little cash and a market cap under a billion dollars is fighting, with an inferior and overpriced product, against the combined strength of Apple (AAPL), Research In Motion (RIMM) and Google (GOOG). End of discussion.
At the time of this writing, the author did not own shares of PALM.
Deadbeat Stock #1: Harley-Davidson (HOG)
Harley-Davidson (HOG) shot up recently on takeover rumors, but in my opinion, they're just that -- rumors.
Who needs a high-end motorcycle during the Great Recession? Or its aftermath? And who needs the stock of a company with more than $4 billion in long-term debt, huge unpaid pension obligations, lousy cash flow to service its debt, and that is still in search of a partner to take customer loans off its hands.
Continue reading Deadbeat Stock #1: Harley-Davidson (HOG)
Six Deadbeat Stocks to Clean Out of Your Portfolio
Spring is finally here, which means it's time to break out the broom and dustpan for some spring cleaning.
But your home isn't the only thing that requires constant maintenance -- your portfolio does too.
And what better time than spring to get a fresh start by cleaning out the stocks that are sitting around collecting dust rather than making you money?
Continue reading Six Deadbeat Stocks to Clean Out of Your Portfolio
Reason #5 to Short the U.S.: The Market Is Overvalued
The market is wildly overvalued given the trajectory of the economy and is being driven by traders.
The trade of the day continues to be dollar/commodities/China, but more and more, individual stocks are being rewarded or whacked based on fundamentals, a good thing for stock pickers, but a bad thing for the vast majority of money managers who know little more than the movement of the indices.
Continue reading Reason #5 to Short the U.S.: The Market Is Overvalued
Reason #4 to Short the U.S.: The Banks
Banks are the kink between the financial markets and the Main Street economy. They are also the lubricant -- when they are lending -- of a growing economy.
Using time-honored but now discarded accounting standards, U.S. banks, as a group, are insolvent. They are hoarding cash because deep in the recesses of little offices, they know they will be exposed as insolvent if they have to dump toxic assets on the market. They are also looking at reduced activity due to the economy and new taxes and regulations, and therefore lower profits. And when the Fed raises interest rates, their spreads will contract, also hitting profits.
Continue reading Reason #4 to Short the U.S.: The Banks
Reason #3 to Short the U.S.: The 'New Frugal'
With reduced national income due to unemployment, reduced spending power due to tightened credit, reduced wealth due to falling home and stock market values and reduced confidence due to all of the above, we are seeing consumers take on new attitudes toward spending.
This "New Frugal" will not be a fad that passes quickly. U.S. consumers will continue to keep their purse strings tightened.
Continue reading Reason #3 to Short the U.S.: The 'New Frugal'
Reason #2 to Short the U.S.: The Housing Market Isn't Recovering
The optimism on Wall Street about housing is surreal given all the public data on housing values, mortgage defaults, foreclosures and new home starts.
Housing prices are going to fall nationally for another couple of years as foreclosures hit 6-7 million in the next 30 months, and the 600,00 to 800,000 homes foreclosed but not yet listed are added to housing inventory. The headwinds created by this will last until foreclosures peak and those homes hit the market in late 2011 to mid-2012. Foreclosures will not hit historical norms until a year or two from that peak.
Continue reading Reason #2 to Short the U.S.: The Housing Market Isn't Recovering
Reason #1 to Short the U.S.: Public Debt
Large and rapidly growing deficits and public debt at the federal and state level will eventually lead to a rise in interest rates and to the crowding out of other spending as governments service debt. This will likely start near the end of this year or early in 2011.
And please don't blame the Democrats, the party of fiscal rectitude. The Republicans doubled the debt while they controlled the White House and Congress, financing a war off balance sheet, led by a cheerleader in chief who told people to go shopping rather than tighten their belts after 9/11. And historically, red-staters spend more on their key constituents than the Dems, so if they grab power, nothing will change.
Continue reading Reason #1 to Short the U.S.: Public Debt
Five Reasons to Short the U.S.
I love my country: the chaos, the hurly-burly of democracy, the hard work of quiet people and the great, big heart as shown by our private donations to Haiti at a time of near 20% unemployment and underemployment. We forgive wayward politicians and athletes, let our children make more decisions than virtually any people on Earth and we stand for something -- a true city on a hill. But right now, that city is in political chaos ... and pretty broke.
Although, I don't like to say it, it is time to short the United States.
Continue reading Five Reasons to Short the U.S.
Lie #11: The Palm Pre Is the Ultimate iPhone Killer
This little gem was perpetuated by tech guru and investor Roger McNamee. Of course, he is a member of the Palm (PALM) board of directors, and his firm is an investor in the company.
Did I mention that PALM shot up after his comment, before the mediocre and overpriced Pre hit the market? The company then issued shares a few days later? You and I would go to jail for doing this.
Continue reading Lie #11: The Palm Pre Is the Ultimate iPhone Killer
Lie #10: China Experienced Double-Digit Growth in 2009
If you think China saw double-digit growth this year, you may also believe swine flu is spread via flying pigs.
The London-based Lombard Group, using energy data from the International Energy Agency -- which we can assume is a bit more accurate than the nonsense printed by the Chinese government -- shows GDP growth may have been just 2% in the first quarter rather than the reported 6.1%. And even that growth is being held up by government stimulus and state banks lending money to anyone and everyone to build capacity no one needs or to invest in Chinese equities no one can fairly value since Chinese accounting is as good as Chinese government data.
Continue reading Lie #10: China Experienced Double-Digit Growth in 2009
Tax Reform in This Election Year: It's Not Likely
Which Credit Card Rewards Does the IRS Care About?
The Money Man Behind Rick Santorum: Who Is Foster S. Friess?
Savings Experiment: Snow Removal
Tax Reform in This Election Year: It's Not Likely
Which Credit Card Rewards Does the IRS Care About?
Why Your 2012 Tax Bill May Jump By $8,000
Bonds Are a 'Safe' Investment: A Big Lie Gets Even Bigger
Walmart's New Health Food Push: Is It Too Hard to Swallow?
Tax Time for Single Parents Can Be Doubly Aggravating
Savings Experiment: Tissues vs. Toilet Paper
5 Signs You're Getting Robbed at the Hospital

