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Sunday, February 13, 2011
Sysco Q2 misses Street on rising costs
Sysco shares were down more than 6 percent on Monday afternoon on the New York Stock Exchange.
On a call with analysts, the company said a double digit price rise in meat, dairy and seafood -- categories that account for one-third of its sales -- created substantial margin pressures.
"It is unlikely that these pressures are going to subside near term," Morning Star analyst Erin Sherin said, "This is in stark contrast to the 3.5 percent deflation Sysco was experiencing in the year-ago quarter."
Food inflation is a mounting worry globally. A recent study on global food prices by a U.N. agency showed they hit their highest level on record in January, and are set to worsen after a massive snowstorm in the United States and floods in Australia.
Sysco CEO Bill DeLaney said, "Recovery and to some extent, (its) financial results may be somewhat choppy due to the economic challenges that consumers continue to face."
For the second quarter, the company reported a net income of $258.1 million, or 44 cents a share, while analysts were looking at earnings of 47 cents a share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Shares of the company were down almost $2 at $28.01 on Monday, placing it among the top percentage losers on the New York Stock Exchange.
Disclosure I am Long SYY shares.
Down On The Farm: ETFs For Rising Food Prices
Sugar, wheat, corn, you name it, and it has probably seen some very bullish trade this year, but every pundit and his sister is forecasting higher food prices in 2011.
Farmers need to plant more crops to meet demand and that’s good news for fertilizer companies, so what are some solid ETF ideas for investors looking to profit from rising ag commodities in 2011. Here’s a list to get you started.
1) Market Vectors Agribusiness ETF (NYSE: MOO):
The aptly named MOO is the big kahuna of equities-based ETFs focused on the business of the farm. Top holdings include Deere (NYSE: DE), Monsanto (NYSE: MON), Mosaic (NYSE: MOS) and Potash (NYSE: POT), so MOO is literally an “all things farm” play.
2) Jefferies | TR/J CRB Global Agriculture Equity Index Fund (NYSE: CRBA):
An undiscovered rival to MOO, CRBA will have you involved in many of the same names, but if it’s volume you’re after, MOO remains the better option.
3) PowerShares DB Agriculture (NYSE: DBA):
Coffee, sugar, cocoa, cattle…oh my. DBA offers exposure to those and other commodities via rolling futures contracts. While DBA is a fine fund, the use of futures contracts runs up expenses and the expense ratio here is 0.85%, a tad high.
4) PowerShares DB Agriculture Double Long ETN (NYSE: DAG):
If you’re going to be involved with an ag ETF or ETN that is based on a variety of futures contracts, why not go leveraged? DAG is perhaps the best among leveraged ag ETNs and tracks an index composed of roughly equal percentages of corn, wheat, soybean, and sugar futures contracts.
Disclosure I am exploring the MOO at this time no plan to buy in the next 30 days.
Sunday, January 30, 2011
JM Smucker Lifts Quarterly Dividend 10%
The company, which makes jams, jellies and Jif peanut butter as well as Pillsbury products, raised its quarterly dividend to 44 cents from 40 cents, payable March 1 to shareholders of record on Feb. 11.
It also boosted its buyback authorization by five million shares. The company didn't say in a statement how many shares were left on its authorization, but it did note that it had repurchased about 3.7 million shares outstanding during the current fiscal quarter. The company has roughly 120 million shares outstanding.
Many companies have boosted their dividends or announced stock buybacks as the need to hoard cash has waned amid economic improvement.
"These actions indicate the confidence we have in our business and the strong cash flows it generates," said Co-Chief Executive Tim Smucker.
In November, Smucker said its fiscal second-quarter profit climbed 6.9%, helped by higher margins, as revenue was flat.
Disclosure I am Long SJM shares.
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Deere: A Growth Stock Consistently Hiking Its Dividend
The stock currently trades just below its 52-week high of 89.97 and sports a price-to-earnings ratio of about 20 on a trailing twelve months basis. This is also a company currently paying a yearly dividend of $1.40 per share, or roughly a 1.6% yield. We expect that the company will raise the dividend twice this year based off of their operating results.
We believe that the company will be able to raise the dividend rates further this year due to strong earnings growth resulting from the bumper harvests these farmers are having in the United States. Here in South Carolina, we noticed fields of cotton not getting harvested on time and watched in amazement as the farmers allowed the crop to deteriorate. As it turns out, these were the farmers who pay others to harvest their crops, and thus do not own their own equipment; sometimes there are co-ops that perform this function as well. We did notice something very exciting driving through cotton country recently; many of these farmers had erected huge metal sheds which made us scratch our heads at the time. Why erect these huge sheds so far from your house to simply park a few old pick-ups beneath? It turns out that all these farmers had purchased brand new John Deere tractors, combines and many accessories. Some of them have easily spent one million plus on all of this.
The same commodity bull market that is fueling the likes of Potash Corporation (POT) of Saskatchewan, Mosaic (MOS) and Agrium (AGU) shares higher is also behind Deere & Company’s rise. As the world awakens to the fact that we need to increase food production in order to feed the growing population, productivity will become key. Many of the world’s breadbaskets already use the most advanced techniques, technologies and equipment, but much of the developing world continues to farm the same way generations before them did.
As China, India, Brazil, South Korea and the other emerging/developing economies of the world establish these large co-ops (at home and abroad) to grow crops for their citizens, Deere & Company should gain huge orders internationally.
Currently, analysts expect Deere to report earnings of $5.45/share for the current year. Estimates for 2012 call for earnings per share of $6.40. If the company can at least match these expectations, investors will have a blue chip stock providing significant upside in the share price because of near 20% profit growth.
Deere & Company possesses a great brand with competent management and a business model that should enable it to assist further generations of farmers in providing for the world. It is truly rare to find a company that can grow both the top and bottom line considerably year-over-year (enough to be considered a growth stock), consistently hike its dividend and provide international exposure to some of the hottest economies while being an American company and thus protecting investors from many of the inherent risks of investing with the unscrupulous managements of foreign entities that exist out there. The safety of an American based and traded company cannot be underestimated in these times; this lets many of our conservative investors sleep at night.
It is our opinion that Deere & Company is both a solid play for conservative investors and a derivative play on food inflation, both in the short-term and long-term. The company’s shares could potentially reach the $120/share range by year-end if the company can continue to perform well on an operating basis while also expanding the P/E. Should the commodity boom continue on the world’s farms, Deere’s shares could take off, potentially allowing shareholders to harvest tremendous gains.
Disclosure: I am long DE shares
Friday, November 12, 2010
The Benefits of Owning Commodity ETFs
These days, commodities have a home in any well-diversified portfolio, Mitch Tuchman for U.S. News & World Report says. They offer several benefits:
* Commodities can be an important hedge against inflation. Because commodities prices usually rise when inflation is accelerating, they offer protection from the effects. Few assets benefit from rising inflation – particularly unexpected inflation.
* Commodities have offered superior returns in the past, but they carry a higher risk than most other equity investments. However, by adding commodities to a portfolio of assets that are less volatile, you can actually decrease the overall portfolio risk, because commodities have a low correlation to other asset classes.
* Commodities that are permanently limited in supply can reduce volatility in aggressive portfolios. Gold and energy are two examples.
* The long-term outlook for commodities is generally viewed as strong. The world’s population is growing and emerging markets are seeing the rise of their middle classes, who want more food, consume more energy and nicer clothes. The combination of finite supply and rising demand has the potential to keep commodities on a growth path for some time.
If you want to play commodities with ETFs, there are two primary ways:
* Buy an ETF that holds the stock of producers and tracks an index. Examples of these types of ETFs could be Market Vectors Global Agribusiness (NYSEArca: MOO) or SPDR S&P Oil & Gas Equipment & Services (NYSEArca: XES). The benefit of these funds is that you get exposure to the producers of commodities without the day-to-day price swings that might affect other funds. However, they don’t track the spot price, which can be a drawback if that’s something you’re seeking.
* You can look at funds that give closer exposure to the commodity itself, either physically or via futures. Physically-backed funds for now are restricted to precious metals, such as ETFS Physical Platinum (NYSEArca: PPLT) or iShares Silver Trust (NYSEArca: SLV). Futures-based ETFs include things like PowerShares DB Gold (NYSEArca: DGL) and United States Oil (NYSEArca: USO).
And, of course, there is always leverage, in the form of ETFs like ProShares UltraShort Gold (NYSEArca: GLL) and Direxion Daily Energy Bull 3x Shares (NYSEArca: ERX).
If you feel like you’ve missed the commodities run-up, it’s not too late. Most commodity ETFs are well above their long-term trend lines, and you can’t fight the trend. If you do decide to add commodities to your portfolio, just don’t get caught without an exit strategy.
Disclosure I am long SLV shares.
Saturday, September 26, 2009
McDonald's (MCD) Approves Increase in Quarterly Dividend
McDonald’s (MCD) is the leading global foodservice retailer with more than 32,000 local restaurants in more than 100 countries. Thursday, the company raised its quarterly dividend 10% to $0.55/share. The dividend is payable on December 15, 2009 to shareholders of record at the close of business on December 1, 2009.
MCD’s Chief Executive Officer Jim Skinner said, “So far in 2009 we’ve returned nearly $4.0 billion to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases, bringing total cash returned since the beginning of 2007 to about $15.5 billion. With today’s dividend increase, we expect to end the year near the high end of our three-year, $15 billion to $17 billion total cash return target.”
Disclosure I will be selling my holding in KFT and using the cash to purchase MCD shares market open Monday.
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Kraft, IBM, Costco, AIG in focus TUESDAY MORNING'S TOP STORIES
Global markets
European shares rose for a fourth straight session, with miners getting a lift from stronger gold prices. Australian shares were among the winners in Asia, buoyed by a jump in business confidence to its highest level since October 2003.
Morgan Stanley changed its tech-sector view, upgrading systems and PC hardware to attractive from in-line, while downgrading software to in-line from attractive. Among several rating changes, the broker cut Dell (DELL 15.72, +0.03, +0.19%) , IBM(IBM 118.17, +0.71, +0.60%) and Texas Instruments(TXN 24.86, 0.00, 0.00%) to equal-weight from overweight.
Credit Suisse downgraded American International Group (AIG 38.36, -1.69, -4.22%) to underperform from neutral and slashed its price target to $15 from $30, saying there could be little value left for common equity holders after AIG has sold off its core businesses.
Costco Wholesale Corp. (COST 56.95, +1.48, +2.67%) was upgraded to overweight from equal weight by Morgan Stanley, which said food deflation and other headwinds that had been pressuring the company are dissipating.
Kraft Foods Inc.(KFT 26.41, -1.69, -6.01%) said on Monday that it's pursuing a takeover of Cadbury (CBY 52.59, +15.13, +40.39%) after the U.K. chocolate maker rejected a $16.7 billion bid. Kraft said a combination of the two companies would create a "global powerhouse" in snacks and confectionery with annual sales of more than $50 billion. Analysts, however, said the U.S. giant may need to significantly raise its offer. A counter-bid from Nestle and Hershey (HSY 39.45, +0.82, +2.12%) is also considered a possibility.
Gold futures surged above $1,000 an ounce on Tuesday, propelled by weakness in the U.S. dollar. The December contract hit an intraday high of $1,009.40. Analysts said it's unclear how sustainable the rise above $1,000 will be, as the last two times it occurred it was followed by a sharp correction back below $900.
Chartered Semiconductor Manufacturing (CHRT 17.25, -1.53, -8.15%) said over the weekend that it has struck a deal to sell itself to Abu Dhabi's Advanced Technology Investment Co. for approximately $1.8 billion in cash.
Atheros Communications Inc. (ATHR 28.82, +0.84, +3.00%) said it will acquire Intellon Corp. (ITLN 7.15, +2.15, +43.00%) in a stock-and-cash deal valued at about $244 million, or $181 million net of Intellon's cash and short-term investments.
Disclosure I am long KFT shares.
Monday, August 3, 2009
Innophos Holdings beats by $0.03, misses on revs (IPHS)
Innophos Holdings, Inc., together with its subsidiaries, produces specialty phosphates primarily in the North America. Its products include specialty salts, which are used in food, beverage, and pharmaceutical applications; specialty acids that are used in industrial applications, such as asphalt modification and petrochemical catalysis; technical grade sodium tripolyphosphate (STPP), which is used in detergent applications, including automatic dishwashing, commercial/industrial detergents, and home laundry detergents; and other products, such as phosphate fertilizers that are used as co-products of manufacturing purified phosphoric acid. Innophos Holdings also offers purified phosphoric acid (PPA) that is used as an input to specialty salts, specialty acids, and STPP, as well as in water and metal treatment applications. The company's customers include consumer goods manufacturers, distributors, and specialty chemical manufacturers in food, bakery, beverage, pharmaceutical, and cleaning product markets. Innophos Holdings was incorporated in 2004 and is headquartered in Cranbury, New Jersey.
Disclosure I am long IPHS shares.
Friday, July 31, 2009
Kellogg profit rises 13 percent in 2Q, Pays 339th Straight Dividend
Recently, the company declared a dividend of $0.375/share, payable on September 15, 2009, to shareholders of record at the close of business on September 1, 2009. This is the 339th consecutive quarter since 1925 that Kellogg Company has paid a dividend. The current yield based on the new dividend is 3.15%.
The world's largest cereal maker said its profit rose 13 percent to $353 million, or 92 cents per share for the quarter, from $312 million, or 82 cents per share last year.
Kellogg, which makes Frosted Flakes, Cheez-Its, Eggo waffles and other popular foods, said commodity prices for key ingredients stabilized, which helped its margins, though the stronger dollar hurt the company's sales.
Revenue fell 3 percent to $3.23 billion from $3.34 billion last year.
The results beat analyst expectations of 83 cents per share in profit, as measured by the Thomson Reuters poll, but fell short of analysts' average revenue forecast of $3.27 billion. Analysts estimates typically exclude one-time items.
Kellogg saw strong sales of cereal products, particularly in North America where the category grew 4 percent. North American frozen and specialty channels rose 5 percent and North American snacks rose 3 percent.
Internationally, sales fell 13 percent but rose 2 percent excluding the stronger dollar.
The Battle Creek, Mich.-based company said it is on track to save $1 billion annually by the end of 2011. It now expects to take a charge of 26 cents per share for the cost-cutting plan in 2009, up from the 14 cents it originally expected.
Some of the savings will be reinvested in advertising, which the food maker said it plans to step up in the near term. Kellogg also announced Thursday that it will modify some of its popular products with the addition of fiber to lines like Fruit Loops.
Kellogg's widely recognized brands have proved resilient during the economic downturn and CEO David Mackay said that the company expects that strength to carry through the year.
Kellogg now expects its earnings per share to grow 8 percent to 10 percent in 2009, sharpening its earlier forecast of high single-digit growth.
That implies earnings of $3.23 to $3.29 per share -- or $2.97 to $3.03 excluding the 26 cents per share related to its cost cutting plan. Analysts predict annual earnings of $3.11 per share.
It affirmed guidance of 3 percent to 4 percent growth in revenue, excluding the effect of the stronger dollar.
Standard & Poor's reiterated its "hold" rating on Kellogg and raised its 2009 earnings estimate to $3.08 from $3.05 and its 2010 estimate to $3.36 from $3.35.
S&P Packaged Foods Analyst Tom Graves said he expects the cereal category to benefit from more people eating at home during the recession and he expects cost pressures to ease in the second half of the year. But he expects the dollar's strength to keep cutting into Kellogg's profit.
Shares of Kellogg fell 38 cents to close at $47.66.
Disclosure I am long K shares.Friday, July 24, 2009
Why Everyone Should Be Investing In Commodities
If you are not investing in commodities, you may be missing a giant opportunity. Environmental and economic forces could have a very strong impact on the value of commodities in the future, especially as the world's resources become increasingly scarce. The following article from Money Morning explains why it would be a mistake to not have some of your investments in commodities.
“Every investor needs to have a financial exposure to commodities,” Krauth says. “For one thing, although commodities have been in a bull market since 2000, bull markets in commodities tend to last a long time. This one, in fact, is likely to last as long as 17-20 years. That means we’re only nine years in – with a decade or more left. Then there’s the tremendous growth we’re seeing abroad. There’s still a major opportunity for investors to profit from these trends.”
Krauth – a contributing editor to Money Morning – sat down recently with Money Morning Executive Editor William Patalon III to talk in detail about commodities investing. Here are the highlights of that interview:
Money Morning (Q): For years, such “alternative investments” as gold and natural resources were viewed as the exclusive domain of the wealthy. But you believe that almost every investor needs to have investments in such natural-resource investments as gold, silver and energy. What do investments in these “hard assets” give you that a similar-sized investment in stocks may not?
Peter Krauth: Protection from inflation is a huge benefit. Inflation is a subtle-yet-menacing tax that government imposes on us by debasing the value of our cash and fixed-income investments. They do this by printing money – lots of it. Just look at what [U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S.] Bernanke is saying about the central bank’s so-called “exit strategy” right now.
(Q): Can you name some of the specific investments in this category, and list some of their specific benefits?
Krauth: Specific investments would include gold, silver, oil, and copper, to name a few. All of these are valuable – and possess an actual value – which means that they will not go to zero. They’re also assets that are never someone else’s liability. Since they are priced in U.S. dollars, as the dollar loses value through inflation, you need more dollars to buy the same quantity (not to mention increasing demand). That sounds like good protection to me.
(Q): What are some of the strong global trends – worldwide infrastructure development being one, we know – that figure to drive up demand for these natural resources?
Krauth: Voracious demand from large emerging economies that are growing and modernizing. Just the two countries of China and India are home to about one of every three humans on earth. Their disposable incomes are improving, so they want to eat more meat, have the latest electronic gadgets and condos, and drive new cars.
(Q): What geographic parts of the world are the strongest providers of these resources?
Krauth: Some of the biggest providers of natural resources are Canada, Australia, Latin America, Africa and Russia.
(Q): What countries or regions are the biggest users of these resources?
Krauth: Traditionally, the biggest users were in North America and Western Europe, but China, India, and much of the rest of Asia are catching up on a total usage basis. Plus, there’s a lot more demand to come, since most of these countries are still way below the West on a per-capita consumption basis.
(Q): We’ve heard that China is working very hard and using the global financial crisis to lock up captive supplies of many key resources. Does this figure to drive up the prices of some of these already-scarce resources?
Krauth: No question in my mind. And China is using every means at its disposal. What would you do with a $2 trillion foreign reserve? Remember, at least $763 billion of this is directly placed in U.S. debt. It makes perfect sense to be trading an asset I’ve got too much of, and whose value is depleting [U.S. dollars], for assets I need more of [commodities], especially when they’re on sale. China’s imports of refined copper in April of this year at $2 a pound were 148% above April 2008 levels, when copper was trading at $4 per pound.
(Q): Is this rising demand by global players a trend the typical individual investor can profit from? Can they profit directly, by investing in the assets themselves? Or can they profit indirectly, by investing in the markets where the demand is strongest, figuring that these markets will have stronger growth than, say, the United States?
Krauth: I believe that investors can profit both ways – directly and indirectly. The more direct approach is to buy the stocks of companies that produce these commodities – as the price goes up, so do the companies’ profits. Investors can also consider investing in the end-users of these products, but then they must make a geographical bet. Meanwhile, commodities get sold to the highest bidder, no matter where those bidders happen to be.
(Q): What’s the basic premise behind your new Global Resource Alert trading service? What’s the strategy that you employ?
Krauth: What we’re doing is seeking out the best opportunities for subscribers across all commodity sectors. That includes precious metals, base metals, energy, alternative energy, and even agriculture. I look for prospects in a sector that has fallen out of favor, yet has great fundamentals. I also ride sectors that my research demonstrates are in a sustainable, upward trend.
(Q): What types of investments do you highlight? Stocks? Exchange-traded funds (ETFs)? Any others?
Krauth: We trade mostly small- and mid-cap stocks, as well as ETFs and ETNs [exchange-traded notes]. There’s enough opportunity there to benefit from all the underlying trends.
(Q): What are the hottest sectors you see at play right now?
Krauth: Right now, I see precious metals and agriculture as the most attractive. Both will be benefiting from growing demand and inflation concerns. Remember, financial markets look forward.
(Q): You’ve talked about the “commodities supercycle,” as well as the “Secular Cycle.” What, exactly, are these and how can investors benefit?
Krauth: My recent Money Morning article on the Secular Cycle should be read by all serious long-term investors. Essentially, if you look at market behavior over, say, 100 years, there are distinct, alternating cycles that typically last 17-20 years. When general stocks are in a bear market, commodities are in a bull market, and vice versa. But you can’t see this without stepping way back and visualizing the long-term view. Right now, we’re clearly in a long-term cycle, where commodities should continue to do well.
(Q): What are the factors at play?
Krauth: You see, major under-investment between 1980 and 1999 in commodities has set us up for a long-term bull market in hard assets. China and the Asian Tigers have awakened, and now they’re very hungry. I want to own the commodity producers that will feed them.
(Q): What effect will this growing global demand for commodities have on the U.S. economy? The U.S. dollar?
Krauth: The U.S. economy is in for a tough slog. Plus, American consumers will have to compete with others to buy commodities on world markets at ever-increasing prices. Between August 2008 and May of this year, the U.S. Federal Reserve doubled the money supply. That’s about a 110% growth rate in nine months – an astounding run-up. Over the past 95 years – the Fed was established in 1913 – the annual average has been only about 6% annually. We’ve lost 95% of the dollar’s purchasing power since then. This reckless behavior will lead to major inflation once again. This isn’t new. Just look at what happened during the early 1920s in Germany’s Weimar Republic [See accompanying chart].
(Q): Looking down the road, what are one or two of the most interesting new trends that you see emerging in the future?
Krauth: Gold has steadily gained popularity with individual and institutional investors. That’s a trend that can’t be ignored – but is also relatively simple to invest in. Today, the SPDR Gold Trust (NYSE: GLD) – an exchange-traded fund that invests in gold bullion – is the second-largest ETF in the world. With 1,120 metric tons of gold, GLD ranks as the sixth-largest holder of bullion on the planet. There are similar ETFs for silver, and for other commodities, such as oil and agricultural products.
(Q): What will be the catalysts behind those new trends?
Krauth: Putting gold into the hands of the masses is quickly making it the new “equalizer.” I expect to see more and more ETFs, perhaps some new ones for base metals will emerge. But, for serious profits, investors need to look at the producers of these assets, since they benefit from leveraged profits as prices rise.
This article has been republished from Money Morning. You can also view this article at Money Morning, an investment news and analysis site.
Disclosure I am long many commodities etfs.
Sunday, July 12, 2009
Cal-Maine (CALM) egg facility damaged by fire
The company said a fire on Thursday destroyed four of the nine layer houses at the site as well as killing some hens at a fifth house. Cal-Maine said no people were hurt and only minimal physical damage was done to the rest of the complex as a result of the blaze.
An investigation is under way to determine the origin of the fire.
The complex accounts for approximately 3 to 4 percent of its production.
Fred Adams, chairman and chief executive, said he expects "minimal financial impact on our operations" as a result of the fire and the company does not exect "any long-term disruption to our customers."
Cal-Maine Foods said it is the largest producer and distributor of fresh shell eggs in the United States and sells most of its eggs in about 29 states in the southwestern, southeastern, mid-western and mid-Atlantic regions.
The company said it is fully insured to cover the costs of the fire.
Shares of Cal-Maine fell 10 cents to $24.86 in close Friday trading.
Disclosure I am long CALM shares in my consumer good folio, currently up 1.39% on this holding. Next dividend payment expected around the end of this month. Received $0.34 cents a share back on the 27th of April.
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Innophos Holdings, Inc. (IPHS)Declares Quarterly Dividend
Innophos Holdings, Inc., together with its subsidiaries, produces specialty phosphates primarily in the North America. Its products include specialty salts, which are used in food, beverage, and pharmaceutical applications; specialty acids that are used in industrial applications, such as asphalt modification and petrochemical catalysis; technical grade sodium tripolyphosphate (STPP), which is used in detergent applications, including automatic dishwashing, commercial/industrial detergents, and home laundry detergents; and other products, such as phosphate fertilizers that are used as co-products of manufacturing purified phosphoric acid.
Innophos Holdings also offers purified phosphoric acid (PPA) that is used as an input to specialty salts, specialty acids, and STPP, as well as in water and metal treatment applications. The company's customers include consumer goods manufacturers, distributors, and specialty chemical manufacturers in food, bakery, beverage, pharmaceutical, and cleaning product markets. Innophos Holdings was incorporated in 2004 and is headquartered in Cranbury, New Jersey.
Disclosure I am long IPHS shares in my Basic Materials Folio.
Monday, June 29, 2009
General Mills (GIS) Pumps Up Quartley Dividend by 9% to 0.47 cents per share
The Minneapolis-based food company said Monday that its board is raising the dividend by 4 cents to 47 cents per share. The new dividend is payable Aug. 3 to shareholders of record as of July 10.
The new annual dividend rate will increase to $1.88 from $1.72.
General Mills Chairman and CEO Ken Powell said the dividend increase is a reflection of the company's robust financial condition and future growth prospects.
Shares of the company fell 13 cents to $55.71 in aftermarket trading, having closed the regular session at $55.84.
Disclosure I am long GIS shares in my Consumer Goods Folio.
Monday, June 22, 2009
Flower Foods (FLO) Bust out the Oven this stock is ready to Cook

As one of the nations leading producers of bakery goods, Flowers Foods (FLO -Investor Details) operates popular brands such as Nature's Own, Cobblestone Mill, Blue Bird and Bunny. In addition, Flowers is a leading consolidator in a defensive industry, and as such it offers investors a combination of revenue safety and growing profitability -- attractive qualities in tough economic times.
Founded in 1919 by the Flowers brothers in Thomasville, Georgia, the company went public in 1968 and was listed on the NYSE in 1982. The current entity came into being in 2001 when Flowers Industries sold its Keebler investment to Kellogg (K) and spun the remaining divisions into a new company.
The company has strong cash flow, a nice dividend and an active stock buyback program -- Flowers repurchased 1.5 million shares of its own stock in the third quarter for $38 million dollars. Investors should also note some recent insider buying at the $23.00-$24.50 range.
In May,Flowers Foods boosts regular quarterly dividend by 17 percent to 17.5 cents. The company is also rich in real estate holdings. Including its home offices, it owns all but one of the 39 production facilities it operates throughout the US.
The stock’s recent correction allows new buyers the opportunity to take a position without chasing the shares. In addition, the company’s gross profit margin should begin to improve as lower input costs and efficiencies of scale start to take hold. The fact that consumers are eating more often at home bodes well for the company’s bread sales. Analysts are forecasting 12% earnings growth in 2010, which probably is too conservative, as a 15-16% rate of improvement is more like it. Its risk reward ratio is a favorable 2:1-translation: a buyer is essentially risking $1 to make $2 (the stock’s upside potential is about $6 while its downside risk nears $3 at this juncture) and that type of opportunity does not show up too often.
Disclosure I am long FLO in my consumer goods folio.
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
Sysco(SYY) Declares 158th Consecutive Quarterly Dividend
The ex-dividend date is June 30. The date you must own the share to collect this dividend.
With record sales of $37.5 billion, a 7.1% increase and record net earnings on $1.1 billion, a 13.1% increase (FY08), Sysco continues to be the global leader in the foodservice industry.
Sysco expected to earn 1.80 a share next year EPS, putting a fair P/E of 13.00, makes it a great buy at 23.40, however Sysco has $1.52 a share in cash as well. I placed my target at $28.00, as I do believe that they should be able to easily obtain the 1.80EPS they are aiming for. We are for sure not going to stop eating today, tommorow and anytime in the future.
Disclosure I am long shares of SYY in my Services Folio.
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Tyson Foods, Inc. Announces Quarterly Dividend
Tyson Foods, Inc. (NYSE:TSN), founded in 1935 with headquarters in Springdale, Arkansas, is the world's largest processor and marketer of chicken, beef and pork, the second-largest food production company in the Fortune 500 and a member of the S&P 500. The Company produces a wide variety of protein-based and prepared food products and is the recognized market leader in the retail and foodservice markets it serves. Tyson provides products and service to customers throughout the United States and more than 90 countries.
The company has approximately 107,000 Team Members employed at more than 300 facilities and offices in the United States and around the world. Through its Core Values, Code of Conduct and Team Member Bill of Rights, Tyson strives to operate with integrity and trust and is committed to creating value for its shareholders, customers and Team Members. The Company also strives to be faith-friendly, provide a safe work environment and serve as stewards of the animals, land and environment entrusted to it.
Disclosure None
Monday, May 4, 2009
Jim Rogers Claims GOLD could plunge to $700 or less on IMF sale
Rogers, who left the United States to settle down in Singapore last year, and who is regarded as a commodities guru globally said he will hold on to his gold and is waiting to buy more gold because he expects gold prices to considerably come down when IMF sells its gold holdings.
”The fact is that IMF is trying to get permission from everybody to sell gold. I don’t know it will succeed or not. But if and when IMF sells its gold, gold prices may go to a bottom. Who knows? It may go down to US$700. IMF has got a lot of gold to sell. If it does, I hope I’m brave enough and smart enough to buy more,” Rogers told Bloomberg Radio in an interview.
Rogers launched the Rogers International Commodity Index in 1998. The index is a composite, US dollar-based, total return index, designed to meet the need for consistent investing in a broad based international vehicle. The Index represents the value of a basket of commodities consumed in the global economy, ranging from agricultural to energy to metal products.
Rogers who is hot on China has been investing heavily into Chinese investment and agricultural funds in the last year. According to Rogers, three billion people living in Asia, most of them in India and China, will account for a major portion of the total demand for commodities in the coming years.
Rogers, author of such famous books like Hot Commodities and A Bull in China, recently launched an agricultural commodities index focused on food consumption in China. In an interview to Commodity Online Rogers said recently: “China is a fascinating place to invest in. China is on the rise, like America 100 years ago, and the problems the Asian giant is encountering right now in certain, mainly export-driven, sectors of its economy will not alter the country’s long-term trajectory. “
Rogers who is known for a investor across various commodities has never been fascinated by gold. Recently he had stated that gold trading at COMEX was a paper game.
Rogers said that is worried that gold prices are under pressure because of the IMF decision to sell gold reserves.
He said owns own some gold. But at the same Rogers is not planning to buy any more yellow metal because IMF, which is one of the largest owners of gold in the world, is desperate to sell its gold.
Rogers’ comments come in the wake of the G20 leaders’ decision that IMF should sell gold from its reserve to help stimulate the world economy.
"Additional resources from agreed sales of IMF gold will be used, together with the surplus income, to provide US$6 billion additional concessional and flexible finance for the poorest countries over the next two to three years," G20 leaders had said.
The IMF’s board approved a proposal in April 2008 to sell 403.3 metric tons of bullion as part of a plan to close the Washington-based lender’s annual deficit. The sale of 403.3 tonnes of gold was originally proposed in 2007 after a committee chaired by Andrew Crockett recommended the IMF adopt a new funding model.
The IMF is the third-largest holder of gold reserves after the US and Germany, with 3,217 tons in deposits, according to the World Gold Council (WGC).
Countries like India and China want IMF to sue the money to invest to raise IMF liquidity or spend it to improve incomes of the poorest countries.
A large part of the IMF gold may find its way into central banks and private players. Since most of it will be out of reach for retail markets, gold prices may not get hammered.
Globally gold prices now are in the $870-$950 per ounce range. India and Turkey, traditionally big buyers of gold, have not bought much lately because of low domestic demand.
According to IMF, a recent surge in IMF lending to countries facing balance of payments crises related to the global economic slowdown and financial turmoil has led analysts to question whether the Washington-based institution will proceed with the plan.
The sale is expected to hit the gold price, which is at the peak now. Following the recession, gold prices have soared to new heights as safe haven buyings increased.
Disclosure I am long GLD shares.
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Current Watchlist April 30th 2009
RTP, Rio Tinto plc.
Rio Tinto plc engages in mining and processing mineral resources. The company produces aluminum products, including bauxite, alumina, and aluminum; copper and diamonds, such as copper in concentrate, refined copper, gold, silver, molybdenum, magnetite, vermiculite, and diamonds; energy and mineral products that consist of coking and thermal coal, uranium, titanium dioxide, feedstock, borates, and talc; and iron ore products, including iron ore, pig iron, salt, and gypsum.
It also engages in the production and sale of cathode blocks, anodes, aluminum fluoride, and calcined coke; and provision of engineering services and sale of smelting equipment, as well as the sale of electricity. Rio Tinto plc has operations in North America; Europe; Japan, China, and other Asian countries; Australia; New Zealand; and internationally. The company was founded in 1873 and is headquartered in London, the United Kingdom. Rio Tinto plc is a subsidiary of Rio Tinto Group.
BG, Bunge Ltd. Bunge Limited engages in the agriculture and food business worldwide. It operates in three divisions: Agribusiness, Fertilizer, and Food Products. The Agribusiness division purchases, stores, transports, processes, and sells agricultural commodities, including grains and oilseeds, such as soybeans, rapeseed or canola, sunflower seeds, wheat, and corn; and commodity products. It sells its products to animal feed manufacturers, wheat and corn millers, and oilseed processors; livestock, poultry, and aquaculture producers; and edible oil processing companies. The Fertilizer division produces and supplies fertilizers to farmers. It engages in nutrients and retail operations, including mining and processing phosphate ore; and the production of intermediate phosphate-based products for sale to fertilizer blenders. This division's products include phosphate rock, sulfuric acid, phosphoric acid, single super phosphate, and dicalcium phosphate, and phosphate-based animal feed ingredients. It also produces, distributes, and sells blended NPK formulas and other fertilizer products directly to retailers, processing and trading companies, and farmers.
The Food Products division offers edible oil products and milling products for food processors, foodservice companies, and retail outlets. Its edible oil products include packaged and bulk oils, shortenings, margarines, mayonnaise, and other products derived from the vegetable oil refining process; and milling products comprise various wheat flours and bakery mixes, and corn-based products derived from the corn dry milling process consisting primarily of dry milled corn meal, flours, grits, soy-fortified corn meal, corn-soy blend, corn oil, and corn feed products. Bunge Limited was founded in 1818 and is headquartered in White Plains, New York.
Disclosure I don't own these stocks yet but watching them closely
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
McDonald's profit rises nearly 4 percent, Despite Stronger dollar
McDonald's Corp. said Wednesday that its first-quarter profit climbed nearly 4 percent as more customers worldwide came to the Golden Arches for a cheap meal. MCD said that it earned $979.5 million, or 87 cents a share, up from $946.1 million, or 81 cents a share, in the year-earlier period. The latest figures include a 4-cents-a-share gain on the sale of the company's minority interest in Redbox Automated Retail and an 8-cents-a-share negative impact from currency conversion.
Disclosure I am long MCD.
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Healthcare Services Group (HCSG) Pumps Dividend 24 Quarters in a Row
With a market capitalization of under $1Billion and virtually no press and only 2 analysts covering the stock, the yield stands at 4.3%. What's going to continue to power this stock though, is sustained dividend increases in the face of a very harsh environment. They're on a streak here and the management intends on keeping these dividend increases going. While the proverbial "recession-proof"/"defensive" healthcare sector proved to be anything but in the recent downturn, this particular niche actually appears to hold true to the stereotype. In fact, Healthcare Services Group is doing so well, not only is it increasing its dividend every quarter, but it also just announced an acquisition: Contract Environmental Services, one of their competitors. With the well-known graying of America and cost pressures on healthcare providers, the business outlook is quite strong for HCSG.
The company, which sells housekeeping and food services to hospitals and nursing homes, said its profit grew to $7.7 million, or 18 cents per share, from $6.9 million, or 16 cents per share a year earlier. Revenue rose 9 percent to $160.4 million from $147.3 million.
Analysts had expected a profit of 17 cents per share and $158.4 million in revenue, according to Thomson Reuters.
Healthcare Services said its profit from operations grew slightly, to $11.6 million from $10.8 million, while its investment and interest income nearly tripled to $937,000 from $324,000.
The company raised its dividend to 18 cents. Its dividend during the first quarter was 17 cents, and the company paid a dividend of 14 cents a year ago.
The dividend will be payable May 15 to shareholders of record as of April 24.
In aftermarket trading, Healthcare Services stock grew 39 cents, or 2.5 percent, to 16.30, after closing the regular session at $15.91, down 2 cents.
I own shares of HCSG.
