SINLetter - April
2007
Welcome to edition 21
of Suria Investment Newsletter (SINLetter), a free monthly
investment newsletter. The objective of this newsletter
is to provide you with unbiased initial research and
basic facts about individual stocks and other financial
instruments so that you can research them further before
deciding to add them to your portfolio or not. If you
are reading this and are not a subscriber, you can subscribe
by going to www.sinletter.com/subscribe.aspx
and you will start receiving this newsletter from next
month. I have provided relevant links throughout this
newsletter, but if you have any questions or comments,
feel free to write
to me.
March
Blog Entries:
I did not get a
chance to blog much in March as a new IT project took
up a lot of my time. I expect this time constraint to
continue in the coming months but will try to post something
at least once a week and plan to continue writing these
newsletters. As mentioned in the blog entry Selling
our NEW Position For a Gain of 850%, I did make
some changes to the SINLetter
model portfolio by selling our remaining put options
in the sub-prime mortgage lender New Century Financial
(NEWC.PK).
Other blog entries posted in March that may be of interest
to you include,
In case you do not receive blog entries by email, you
can still subscribe to receive
blog entries by email here.
Portfolio Performance:
A volatile month of March
and an equally volatile first quarter ended with all
the major indices managing to eke out tiny gains in
March. Only the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped
0.87% in the first quarter of 2007. A 11.92% gain in
last month's pick Ambassadors
Group (EPAX)
combined with almost surreal appreciation in some of
our put options offset weakness in other parts of the
portfolio and helped us outperform the major indices
in March. The monthly, quarterly and "since inception"
performance is tabulated below.
| Performance Metric |
Dow |
S&P 500 |
Nasdaq |
SINLetter |
| March 2007 |
0.70% |
1.00% |
0.23% |
1.89% |
| First Quarter 2007 |
0.87 % |
0.18% |
0.26% |
4.04% |
| Since Inception (Aug 2005) |
16.29% |
15.02% |
10.31% |
90.59% |
It looks like calls for
an early recovery in the housing market and the possibility
of an interest rate cut by the federal reserve (the
"fed") have been met with the harsh reality
that new home sales continued
to decline, home builder confidence remains
low, the consumer
confidence index dropped more than expected in March
and the fed remains biased
towards fighting inflation. Without the interest
rate cut shot-in-the-arm that some in the housing/mortgage
industry have
been looking for, the sector is not likely to recover
this year and any bounce in home builder or mortgage
lender stocks is likely to be a dead
cat bounce. The two bright spots for the economy
were the upward
revision of Q4 2006 GDP to 2.5% from the previously
reported 2.2% and a drop in new jobless claims. However
it should be noted that this rise in the GDP was primarily
driven by growth in inventories.
Based on my negative outlook
of the housing sector (I have been unwaveringly negative
since
September 2005), I am going to continue holding
our put options on the mortgage lender Countrywide Financial
(CFCSH.X),
which are now up 188.62% in less than three months.
While our put LEAPs on St Joe (JOE)
and trucking company YRC Worldwide (YRCW)
recovered in March, they are still in negative territory.
I plan to continue holding these LEAPs as a hedge
against an economic slowdown.
While our overall portfolio
has gone up, a few stocks in our portfolio were hit
hard in March. WisdomTree
Investments (WSDT.PK)
swung from a profit of 10.25% to a loss of 5.41%. Given
the lack of concrete financial information from this
company, which is listed on the pink sheets, the price
of WisdomTree is currently tied to its ability to increase
assets under management (AUM). As I mentioned in the
blog entry WisdomTree
AUM Climbs to $2.4 billion, assets have been increasing
partly because the market has been going up.
With the market almost
flat during March and Q1 2007, the stock was probably
down on the perception that growth has slowed down at
WisdomTree. While a majority of their domestic ETFs
were down for the month of February, most of their international
ETFs posted a gain. They have not yet posted the March
performance
numbers on their website, but from a quick check
on Yahoo Finance, it looks like other than a single
domestic ETF (DON),
the other domestic ETFs posted a tiny gain. Most of
their international ETFs continued to do well in March,
with WisdomTree Europe Small Cap Dividend Fund (DFE)
and WisdomTree Pacific ex-Japan Hi-Yield Equity Fund
(DNH)
posting
gains of almost 6% in a single month. Unless there
were significant fund outflows in March, I doubt growth
has slowed down at WisdomTree and plan to continue holding
the stock for now.
SanDisk (SNDK)
recovered lost ground in March after benefiting from
a series
of upgrades and signing a patent
cross-licensing agreement with Hynix Semiconductor.
The stock is now down only 8.94% in the model portfolio
when compared to being down 24.28% last month. I still
like the long-term prospects of SanDisk and am glad
I did not sell into the weakness last month.
Barclays
Bank (BCS)
had a highly volatile month, dropping fast on news that
it had exposure to the US subprime mortgage sector through
$900
million in mortgage loans it had bought from near
bankrupt New Century Financial (NEWC.PK).
This drop was the perfect opportunity to start a position
in Barclays as the dividend yield of this premier British
bank jumped up to 5.26% (better than the yield of 3
month treasury bills and most CDs) and I am still kicking
myself (I do that frequently) for not acting quickly
enough. The company launched
a bid for Netherlands based bank ABN Amro (ABN)
towards the end of March and the stock recovered rapidly.
Gold had a volatile month, dropping almost 5% in early
March before recovering to close the month at $663.30
per troy ounce, a loss of $4.70 or 0.70%.
Portfolio
Readjustment:
I am going to use the
cash generated from the sale
of our New Century Financial put options along with
some existing cash to finance the purchase of 600 shares
of EMC Corp (EMC).
How
Did the Dogs Do?
As the first quarter of
2007 comes to a close, I figured it would be a good
idea to see how the Dogs
of the Dow have performed. After excellent gains
in 2006, I was cautious
about the prospects of the dogs this year and that caution
was well founded as the dogs posted a gain of just 0.19%
in the first quarter of 2007, barely outperforming the
Dow Jones Industrial Average and actually underperforming
the Nasdaq and the Russell 2000 as you can see from
the following list of the current Dogs of the Dow. If
the universe of stocks I could pick from was restricted
to the ten dogs of the dow, I would pick General Electric
and AT&T.
2007 Dogs of the Dow
| Company Name |
Symbol |
Price Then* |
Price Now |
% Change |
| Pfizer |
PFE |
$25.90 |
$25.26 |
-2.47% |
| Verizon |
VZ |
$37.24 |
$37.92 |
1.83% |
| Altria |
MO |
$85.82 |
$87.81 |
2.32% |
| AT&T |
T |
$35.75 |
$39.43 |
10.29% |
| Citigroup |
C |
$55.70 |
$51.34 |
-7.83% |
| Merck |
MRK |
$43.60 |
$44.17 |
1.31% |
| General Motors |
GM |
$30.72 |
$30.64 |
-0.26% |
| DuPont |
DD |
$48.71 |
$49.43 |
1.48% |
| General Electric |
GE |
$37.21 |
$35.36 |
-4.97% |
| JP Morgan Chase |
JPM |
$48.30 |
$48.38 |
0.17% |
| Total Returns Excluding Dividends | 0.19% |
* Price as of market close on Dec 29th, 2006
Dogs Of The Dow
Performance Vs Major Indices
|
2007 Dogs Of The Dow
|
0.19%
|
| Dow Jones Industrial Average | -0.87% |
| S&P 500 |
0.18% | | Nasdaq | 0.26% | | Russell 2000 | 1.66% |
Performance
of the Ten Stocks For 2007:
Despite a plunge in Amgen
(AMGN)
due to unsuccessful
trials for its cancer and anemia drugs, the ten
stocks for 2007 that I picked in December 2006 have
done very well, posting an average gain of 8% in the
first quarter thanks to solid double digit gains in
Landec (LNDC),
Alvarion (ALVR),
Teva Pharmaceutical (TEVA),
Nautilus (NLS)
and Brazilian aircraft manufacturer Embraer (ERJ).
These gains do not include any regular dividends or
the $4
per share special dividend by Diamond Offshore Drilling
(DO).
Ten Stocks for 2007
| Company Name |
Symbol |
Price Then* |
Price Now |
% Change |
|
Amgen
|
AMGN
|
$68.31
|
$55.88
|
-18.2%
|
|
Diamond Offshore
|
DO
|
$79.94
|
$80.95
|
1.26%
|
|
Landec
|
LNDC
|
$10.76
|
$14.18
|
31.78%
|
|
Nautilus
|
NLS
|
$14.00
|
$15.43
|
10.21%
|
|
Airspan Networks
|
AIRN
|
$3.70
|
$3.8
|
2.7%
|
|
Barclays Bank
|
BCS
|
$58.14
|
$56.94
|
-2.06%
|
|
Teva Pharmaceutical
|
TEVA
|
$31.08
|
$37.43
|
20.43%
|
|
Embraer
|
ERJ
|
$41.43
|
$45.86
|
10.69%
|
|
Banco Santander Chile
|
SAN
|
$48.16
|
$49.87
|
3.55%
|
|
Alvarion
|
ALVR
|
$6.72
|
$8.05
|
19.79%
|
| Total Returns
Excluding Dividends |
8.02% |
* Price as of market close on Dec 29th, 2006
Performance of the Ten Stocks for 2007 Vs Major
Indices
|
Ten Stocks For 2007
|
8.02%
|
| Dow Jones Industrial Average | -0.87% | | S&P 500 | 0.18% | | Nasdaq | 0.26% | | Russell 2000 | 1.66% |
Spinoffs:
Our pick from the March
2007 edition of SINLetter, Ambassadors Group (EPAX),
performed well with a gain of 11.92% in a single month
while most major market indices were essentially flat.
However this performance pales in comparison to the
400% the stock has gained since it was spun off from
its parent company Ambassadors International (AMIE)
a little over five years ago. In fact the parent company
has also done very well, gaining 300% since the spin-off
was completed.
Another example of a company
that was spun off from its parent and has performed
very well is Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG),
which was spun off from McDonald's (MCD)
in January 2006. After raising the IPO price a couple
of times, Chipotle (their yummy burritos are not to
be missed) was finally priced at $22 per share and closed
the first day of trading at $44. The stock currently
trades at $62.10 per share. McDonald's has also performed
well, gaining almost 30% since the Chipotle IPO.
Numerous studies have
shown that companies that are spun off tend to outperform
the market over the next few years and even the parent
company that is spinning off one of its subsidiaries
or divisions tends to outperform the S&P 500. Any
theory or strategy that becomes widely known loses its
edge over time and recent studies have shown that the
extent to which spun off companies outperform the market
has narrowed. However this could also be a function
of the different time periods these studies looked at
and opportunities abound in this often overlooked area
of the market.
There are relatively few
websites/newsletters dedicated to spin-offs. One of
these websites is Spinoff
and Reorg Profiles, which publishes a monthly newsletter
edited by William
Mitchell, a former hedge fund analyst. I contacted
William to see if he would be willing to provide me
with a list of spin-offs that have been announced in
the first quarter of 2007. William was kind enough to
share his data with us and the list of recent spin-offs
is given below followed by some amusing and informative
notes. While the target audience of the Spinoff and
Reorg Profiles newsletter is institutional investors,
I believe sophisticated individual investors could also
benefit from the wealth of information in William's
newsletters.
List of Spin-offs Announced
in the First Quarter of 2007
| Spinoff |
Parent |
Type |
Domicile |
Date |
Market Cap |
| Spectra Energy (NYSE: SE) |
Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK) |
Distrib |
USA |
1/2/2007 |
> $2b |
| Indiabulls Real Estate Ltd. |
Indiabulls Financial Svcs (532544.BO) |
Distrib |
India |
1/9/2007 |
$500m - $2b |
| Wire and Wireless (WWIL) |
Zee Telefilms (505537.BO) |
Distrib |
India |
1/10/2007 |
|
| Zee News Limited (ZNL) |
Zee Telefilms (505537.BO) |
Distrib |
India |
1/10/2007 |
|
| Harris Stratex Networks (Nasdaq: HSTX) |
Harris Microwave (HRS.N) |
Merger |
USA |
1/26/2007 |
> $2b |
| TravelCenters of America (Amex: TA) |
Hospitality Trust (NYSE: HPT) |
Distrib |
USA |
1/26/2007 |
$500m - $2b |
| Southland Health Services |
Bad Toys Inc. (BTYH.OB) |
Distrib |
USA |
2/2/2007 |
< $100m |
| Network 18 Fincap (532798.BO) |
Television Eighteen (532299.BO) |
Distrib |
India |
2/2/2007 |
< $100m |
| Verichip (Nasdaq: CHIP) |
Applied Digital Solns. (Nasdaq: ADSX) |
IPO |
USA |
2/8/2007 |
< $100m |
| Time Warner Cable (TWCAV.PK, TWC.N) |
Time Warner (TWX.N) |
Distrib |
USA |
2/13/2007 |
> $2b |
| *OptiCon Systems |
Hathaway Corporation (HWYI.PK) |
Distrib |
USA |
2/19/2007 |
< $100m |
| *Plastinum Corporation |
New Generation Holdings (NGPX.OB) |
Distrib |
USA |
2/20/2007 |
< $100m |
| Emperor Capital Group |
Emperor Intl Hldgs Ltd (0163.HK) |
Distrib |
HK |
3/1/2007 |
< $100m |
| *NuPower Resources (NUP.AX) |
Arafura Resources Ltd (ARU.AX) |
Distrib |
Australia |
3/5/2007 |
< $100m |
| Domtar (NYSE: UFS) |
Weyerhaeuser (NYSE: WY) |
Distrib /Merger |
USA |
3/7/2007 |
$500m - $2b |
| Xinhua Finance Media (Nasdaq: XFML) |
Xinhua Finance (9399.T, XHFNY.OB) |
IPO |
China |
3/9/2007 |
$500m - $2b |
| China Agri Holdings (0606.HK) |
COFCO Intl. Ltd. (0506.HK) |
IPO |
HK |
3/12/2007 |
$500m - $2b |
| Kraft Foods Inc (NYSE: KFT) |
Altria (MO.N) |
Distrib |
USA |
3/16/2007 |
> $2b |
| Organon BioSciences |
Akzo Nobel (Nasdaq: AKZOY) |
IPO |
Holland |
3/27/2007 |
> $2b |
| KBR (NYSE: KBR) |
Halliburton (NYSE: HAL) |
Exchange |
USA |
3/29/2007 |
> $2b |
| Broadridge Financial Solns (NYSE: BR) |
Automatic Data Processing (NYSE: ADP) |
Distrib |
USA |
3/30/2007 |
> $2b |
| *Tekmira Pharmaceuticals |
Inex Pharmaceuticals (Toronto: IEX) |
Distrib |
Canada |
3/31/2007 |
< $100m |
| *Southern Uranium Ltd (SNU.ASX) |
Southern Gold Ltd (SAU.AX) |
IPO |
Australia |
Mar-07 |
< $100m |
| |
| Notes |
| "*" indicates promotional
stocks -- typically large losses relative to revenue, exciting speculative
story, etc. Extra credit for companies with "con" built right into the name, e.g.
"Opticon." |
| Akzo Nobel agreed to sell
Organon to Schering-Plough on 3/11, making Akzo an interesting stub:
EUR15b market cap, soon to collect EUR11b for Organon. |
For further information about spinoffs, check out this
excellent blog entry and this
second part at Old Niu's blog. I also contacted
George of Fat
Pitch Financials to share his thoughts about a recent
spinoff, Sally Beauty Holdings, that he has written
about frequently and his thoughts are given below.
Sally Beauty Holdings (SBH)
$9.19
Asif invited me this week
to discuss my investment in Sally Beauty Holdings for
SINLetter. I am George, the author of the value investing
blog, Fat
Pitch Financials, and the founder of the community
powered investment site, Value
Investing News. I am honored to be a guest author
in this edition of SINLetter.
Sally Beauty Holdings
was spun off from Alberto-Culver on November 16, 2007.
Alberto-Culver, the beauty and hair care products company
that makes VO5, TRESemme, St. Ives, and several other
brand name beauty products, gave their shareholders
one share in the newly spun off Sally Beauty, for each
share of ACV they owned. I purchased shares in Sally
Beauty Holdings right after the spin off on November
17th in my Special Situations Real Money Portfolio,
which is the model portfolio for my special situations
tracking service called Fat
Pitch Financials Contributor's Corner.
Sally Beauty Holdings
is one of the largest beauty supply distributors in
the world, selling hair and skin care goods, cosmetics,
and styling aids through direct sales and in stores
in the U.S., Canada, Germany, Japan, and Britain. I
believe Sally Beauty has a sustainable competitive advantage
in its distribution network. Academic
research on spinoffs by John J. McConnell and Alexei
V. Ovtchinnikov show that investors earn an above normal
rate of return by investing in recently spun off subsidiaries.
In addition, based on the criteria laid out by Joel
Greenblatt in his book, You Can Be a Stock Market Genius,
I believed the newly spun off Sally Beauty Holdings
was being undervalued and would likely outperform in
the future.
Here's a quick run down
of what made Sally Beauty Holdings a special situation
opportunity that appeared to be a "fat pitch"
to me:
- Institutions didn't want it. I discovered that Sally
Beauty would not be added to the S&P Composite 1500
index. This means that index funds will have to dump
the shares of Sally Beauty that they receive and thus
depress the market price of this stock.
- Insiders want it. The new management of Sally Beauty
will be highly motivated to boost the value of this
stock since they will be receiving generous stock
option grants.
- A previously hidden investment opportunity is uncovered
by this spinoff transaction. Because Alberto-Culver
produced many of the products that Sally Holdings
distributed, other beauty and hair care product manufacturers
that would potentially use Sally Beauty to distribute
their products were concerned about potential conflicts
of interest. This spinoff frees up Sally Beauty and
allows it to now more fully compete to expand their
distribution of a wider range of products from a larger
base of manufacturers. This seemed like a great move
to me. However, it seems to have not worked 100% since
Sally
Beauty lost exclusive rights to distribute products
of the L'Oreal Professional Products Division.
- Leverage! Sally Beauty will also be loaded up with
debt ($1.85 billion) and thus be highly leveraged,
which is a good thing for spinoffs according to Joel
Greenblatt. This leverage will act to turbo charge
returns to shareholders if the company is able to
generate returns greater than their costs of capital.
Based on the numbers I've seen for Sally Holdings,
I don't think this will be a problem.
- Margin of Safety. I estimate that the intrinsic
value of SBH shares is about $10. This is a fairly
conservative estimate. I purchased my shares for $7.42,
but SBH is now trading $9.19.
- Clayton, Dubilier & Rice owns almost half of the
equity in this spin-off. Having this savvy private
equity firm involved with SBH is likely a good sign.
Sally Beauty Holdings could easily be bought out at
any time.
Since I purchased Sally Beauty Holdings, management
is beginning to flex their independence. Last month,
Sally Beauty Holdings announced they acquired Salon
Services. Chapelton 21 Limited's Salon Services includes
over 80 stores with a combination of company-owned and
franchised locations in the United Kingdom, Ireland,
Germany, and Spain. The international expansion of Sally
Beauty Holdings provides an excellent growth opportunity
for this wholesaler.
Growth is already occurring. For the quarter ending
December 31, 2006, Sally Beauty's net sales have increased
7.4% since the previous year's quarter. Gross profits
are up 6.6%. Cash flows from operating activities are
up a whopping 47%. Net income however is down over $30
million from the previous year's quarter primarily due
to interest and transaction expenses. I expect that
net income will start to climb after the independent
Sally Beauty Holdings gets a few more quarters under
its belt.
My original investment criteria for Sally Beauty Holdings
appear to still be intact. If you find this spinoff
as compelling as I have, I believe building a position
of SBH when its price drifts below $9 will still provide
an entry opportunity.
The Numbers:
| P/S |
0.69 |
Cash and Investments |
$31.38 million |
| P/E |
4.32 |
Long Term Debt |
$1.78 billion |
Editor's Note: As George mentions
above, the company has a lot of debt on its balance
sheet and it may be prudent to follow the stock for
a couple of quarters before starting a position. I
am going to continue monitoring Sally Beauty for now
and will post an entry on the blog if I decide to add
it to the SINLetter model portfolio.
EMC
(EMC)
$13.85
As the amount of data
stored for both personal and business use continues
to grow almost on a daily basis, the demand for data
storage systems as well as reliable backup solutions
remains strong. Data storage systems consisting of an
array of drives are used by businesses that store large
amounts of data on their servers. Data storage is one
of the most profitable areas in the traditionally low
margin hardware sector and EMC is the leading data storage
provider with a 22% share of the enterprise market.
Beyond the data storage
business, the reason I am interested in EMC is because
of a subsidiary of EMC called VMware
that was acquired
by EMC in 2004 for $635 million. VMware sells virtualization
software that allows companies to run multiple "virtual"
machines on a single server or on distributed hardware.
Virtualization allows companies to utilize hardware
more effectively and this is something that is very
appealing to power conscious large enterprises. AMD
took market share from Intel primarily because of its
power efficient line of server chips last year (if you
live in the San Francisco bay area, you may have seen
the huge AMD billboard on highway 101 advertising this
fact). Beyond hardware efficiency, VMware also allows
companies to rapidly deploy and easily maintain these
virtual machines. VMware is expected to have sales of
over $1 billion this year and is sometimes referred
to as the fastest growing software company on the planet.
EMC has decided unlock
value in its VMware subsidiary by deciding to file an
IPO for VMware this summer, representing 10% of its
stake in VMware. EMC's IPO of VMWare could be valued
anywhere between $600 million to $1
billion, giving VMware a valuation of between $6
billion to $10 billion. This is more than 10 times what
EMC paid for VMware just three years ago and represents
close to one third of EMC's $29.2 billion market cap.
The stock has already
bounced strongly off its July 2006 low of $9.44 and
is up 46.72% since then but has hardly done anything
over the last five years despite consistently growing
both revenues and earnings. Based on this IPO, the growing
data storage business, a low forward P/E of 17.76 and
a strong balance sheet, I believe that EMC represents
a good opportunity at these levels.
I am adding 600 shares
of EMC to the SINLetter model portfolio and plan to
start a position in my personal portfolio as well.
Every month we add featured stocks into a model portfolio
started with a cash position of $100,000 on August 2,
2005. To keep calculations simple, trading costs and
regular dividends are not included. Prices reflect the
closing price as of the last trading day of the previous
month (March 31, 2007 for the April 2007 newsletter).
Model Portfolio - March 31, 2007
Stocks
| Stock |
Number of Shares |
Cost |
Current Value |
Diff ($) |
Diff (%) |
Date Added |
| EMC |
600@13.85/share |
$8,310 |
$8,310 |
$0 |
0% |
3/31/2007 |
| EPAX |
300@29.70/share |
$8,910 |
$9,972 |
$1,062 |
11.92% |
2/28/2007 |
| ICLR |
250@37.30/share |
$9,325 |
$10,650 |
$1,325 |
14.21% |
1/31/2007 |
| DO |
80@76.65/share |
$6,132 |
$6,476 |
$344 |
5.61% |
1/3/2007 |
| ALVR |
1000@6.87/share |
$6,870 |
$8,050 |
$1,180 |
17.18% |
1/3/2007 |
| WSDT.PK |
1000@7.40/share |
$7,400 |
$7,000 |
-$400 |
-5.41% |
11/30/2006 |
| BCS |
200@54.06/share |
$10,812 |
$11,388 |
$576 |
5.33% |
11/30/2006 |
| SNDK |
200@48.10/share |
$9,620 |
$8,760 |
-$860 |
-8.94% |
10/31/2006 |
| MAT |
600@19.70/share |
$11,820 |
$16,542 |
$4,722 |
39.95% |
9/30/2006 |
| TEVA |
300@35.05/share |
$10,515 |
$11,229 |
$714 |
6.79% |
9/1/2006 |
| STP |
400@25.93/share |
$10,372 |
$13,844 |
$3,472 |
33.47% |
7/31/2006 |
| INTC |
550@19.00/share |
$10,450 |
$10,522 |
$72 |
0.68% |
6/30/2006 |
| PG |
180@55.60/share |
$10,008 |
$11,369 |
$1,361 |
13.6% |
6/30/2006 |
| LOGI |
240@20.385/share |
$4,893 |
$6,679 |
$1,786 |
36.49% |
5/31/2006 |
| JNJ |
200@57.65/share |
$11,530 |
$12,052 |
$522 |
4.53% |
2/28/2006 |
| MED |
1000@6.955/share |
$6,955 |
$7,160 |
$205 |
2.95% |
11/30/2005 |
| TTM |
900@11.94/share |
$10,746 |
$14,589 |
$3,843 |
35.76% |
11/30/2005 |
| AIRN |
1700@5.62/share |
$9,554 |
$6,460 |
-$3,094 |
-32.38% |
8/1/2005 |
Options
| Option |
Number of Units |
Cost |
Current Value |
Diff ($) |
Diff (%) |
Date Added |
| CFCSH.X |
8@2.46/contract |
$1,968 |
$5,680 |
$3,712 |
188.62% |
1/3/2007 |
| LRXMJ.X |
3@7.00/contract |
$2,100 |
$1,380 |
-$720 |
-34.29% |
10/31/2006 |
| YBQMG.X |
8@2.60/contract |
$2,080 |
$1,400 |
-$680 |
-32.69% |
10/31/2006 |
| Cash |
|
|
$1,074 |
|
|
|
| Total |
|
|
$190,586 |
$90,586 |
90.59% |
|
Voluntary Disclosure: I currently
own shares of Airspan Networks (AIRN),
Medifast (MED),
Tata Motors (TTM),
Logitech (LOGI),
Intel (INTC),
Suntech Power (STP),
Teva (TEVA),
Mattel (MAT),
SanDisk (SNDK)
and Alvarion (ALVR)
as well as put options on Countrywide Financial (CFC)
and YRC Worldwide (YRCW).
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|