Thursday, December 31, 2009
Chicago PMI Revised Downward
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Chicago PMI Increases Sharply in December
Chicago PMI jumped sharply in December to it's highest level in almost 3 years. The index, typically released before the more important ISM manufacturing index, jumped significantly from 56.1 in November to 60.0. The consensus expected the index to fall by 1 point to 55.1. All categories jumped significantly - notable among them being employment, which jumped from 41.9 (contraction) to 51.2 (expansion). If this report can be replicated at the national level on Monday, when the ISM manufacturing index is due, this can cause some real movement in the market.
Monday, December 28, 2009
CTCT: Buy on current weakness
Constant Contact (CTCT), a leading on-demand email marketing company has declined almost 32% from its July 30th high of $22.70. The stock is currently trading at 2.8x EV/Rev, a big discount to its peer SaaS companies avg of 5.2x (Please see the comps analysis below).
Nothing major has happened since July 30th for CTCT – The Company has beaten estimates, has issued a decent guidance for the current quarter and has been growing much faster than other SaaS companies. The only significant event that has happened is the CFO transition that CTCT announced on Dec 1st. Looking at the above chart and comparables below, it seems like the stock is mainly being driven down by technicals and is perhaps a solid buy on this weakness.
An impressive growth rate, a retention rate of more than 97% on a customer base of more than 300,000 and a cheap valuation suggests a strong buy.
Disclosure: No positions
The article was first published here: http://seekingalpha.com/instablog/527966-sgrover/41262-ctct-buy-on-current-weakness
Nothing major has happened since July 30th for CTCT – The Company has beaten estimates, has issued a decent guidance for the current quarter and has been growing much faster than other SaaS companies. The only significant event that has happened is the CFO transition that CTCT announced on Dec 1st. Looking at the above chart and comparables below, it seems like the stock is mainly being driven down by technicals and is perhaps a solid buy on this weakness.
An impressive growth rate, a retention rate of more than 97% on a customer base of more than 300,000 and a cheap valuation suggests a strong buy.
Disclosure: No positions
The article was first published here: http://seekingalpha.com/instablog/527966-sgrover/41262-ctct-buy-on-current-weakness
Saturday, December 19, 2009
Lessons from a local entrepreneur
When I bought flowers from the local Pike place flower shop yesterday, I had my usual question to the owner, the one I would ask at any place I am shopping , “So, how’s your business doing – Are you seeing some improvement in business?” - Little did I know that this otherwise uneventful chat would end up into an interesting 20-minute conversation, offering me insights that no sell side or market research report typically produces.
James Harvey, a local entrepreneur has been running his flower shop for over 17 years now at unarguably the Seattle’s busiest tourist intersection. If you have ever visited Seattle, then chances are that you have been to Seattle’ Pike Place market. This little colorful shop at the corner of 1st and Pike is hard to miss, no matter you are into flowers or not. In my discussions with James about economy yesterday, he gave me 2 ground zero indicators that he tracks personally to gauge any uptick in demand.
i) Trash turnover at the busiest intersection: Next to his shop are two ubiquitous metallic trash cans. He told me that for the last 17 years, he has been calling the local authorities every single day to pick up trash twice a day as it would start overflowing before the middle of the day.
However, he has not made this call since the last 1.5 years, suggesting a steep decline in trash produced per day. A more than 50% decline in trash produced at the busiest tourist location directly relates to a decline in tourists and a decline in goods consumed by tourists. Note that the shop is directly opposite to Starbucks and there have been no external events such as the closure of Starbucks that can explain this steep decline in trash produced. While Q3 GDP has turned positive and Q4 GDP is likely to be positive signaling an end to this great recession, this indicator is still flat at it’s never before low levels, suggesting an uneven road to recovery.
ii) Consumer cash buying pattern: James offers a whole lot of payment options to consumers - from credit cards to debit cards to plain vanilla cash. Over the last 1.5 years, his cash paying consumers have undergone a distinctive pattern change. A year and a half ago, he would make routinely visit to his bank to stack up on one dollar bills as a consumer buying a $2 flower or $7 flower would give him a $10 bill and he would have to offer change in one dollar bills. With the economy taking its toll on consumers, people are coming in with exact change in hand, offering the exact cash while purchasing those $2 or $7 flowers. He no longer goes to bank to stack up on $1 bills. Any change in this pattern would likely suggest an improving consumer confidence and a solid path to recovery, but until now James hasn’t seen this change and is still pessimistic about the economy.
James is a savvy businessman who has kept up with changes in economy and is sure going to survive no matter how the economy rolls in the next year. He has cut down on expense by not hiring temps, has geared up to offer better customer service, has changed his product mix to reflect lesser impulse purchases, all this while keeping an open eye towards changes in economy. Only if bankers and investors had closely watched this trend, we surely would have not seen our house values and 401Ks plunge by more than half.
There’s so much you can learn about the economy from people like James on the ground – I treat these conversations far more important than designated leading indicators such as University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index.
Monday, November 30, 2009
Stronger than expected Chicago PMI
Chicago PMI for November came in better than expected at 56.1 versus a consensus of 53.3. Almost all readings were in the positive territory - Employment, though still contracting (Note that any reading below 50 signifies contraction) improved from 38.3 to 41.9.
Sunday, November 29, 2009
A busy week ahead
A busy week ahead for the stock markets as it gets ready to absorb various economic reports:
- Chicago PMI due Monday, 11/30 - Might give us a peek into what to expect from ISM Manufacturing report on 12/1
- ISM Manufacturing Index due Tuesday, 12/1- A better than October PMI reading of 55.7 would definitely signal a consistent growth, although the market expects a reading of 54.8, slightly below October reading.
- Auto Sales and ADP employment report - significant but may hardly move the markets
- Initial unemployment claims as always due Thursday 8:30am - Claims have been on a decline since past few weeks and another decline might signal consistent decline in layoffs.
- The most important and market-shaker BLS unemployment rate due Friday 8:30am - Anything north of 10.3% is sure to send jitters down the market. Investors would also be closely watching average workweek number as that is by far the most leading indicator in this otherwise lagging jobs report. Any improvement to 33.0 hrs non-farm private average workweek would be taken very positively by the market.
- Chicago PMI due Monday, 11/30 - Might give us a peek into what to expect from ISM Manufacturing report on 12/1
- ISM Manufacturing Index due Tuesday, 12/1- A better than October PMI reading of 55.7 would definitely signal a consistent growth, although the market expects a reading of 54.8, slightly below October reading.
- Auto Sales and ADP employment report - significant but may hardly move the markets
- Initial unemployment claims as always due Thursday 8:30am - Claims have been on a decline since past few weeks and another decline might signal consistent decline in layoffs.
- The most important and market-shaker BLS unemployment rate due Friday 8:30am - Anything north of 10.3% is sure to send jitters down the market. Investors would also be closely watching average workweek number as that is by far the most leading indicator in this otherwise lagging jobs report. Any improvement to 33.0 hrs non-farm private average workweek would be taken very positively by the market.
Yahoo NEW stock screener - great tool but hard to find
Yahoo as a company continues to amaze me! They have a great stock screener embedded inside Yahoo Finance but it's not searchable from the search engines (not even Yahoo search) unless you type the right keywords. A search for "Yahoo stock screener" on yahoo and google points to the primitive old screener page and there is no way to reach to the new comprehensive java based screener from the old page. Only if you type "yahoo stock screener java", you reach the new stock screener page.
This java based screener is great for individual investors such as me who cannot afford the expensive paid CapitalIQ subscriptions. It offers a boatload of screening criteria and can definitely be a handy tool in coming up with a shortlist of stocks to dig deeper into. However, few suggestions for the next version (if anyone at Yahoo is still supporting this tool):
- Consider making this tool a desktop downloadable software rather than as a web1.0 style java-enabled pop-up. Or at lease consider a savvy Web2.0 flash based version.
- There is no way to add geographic information on the screener (I want to look at the companies based out of US and not ADRs and there is no way to filter that)
- If you really want feedback from users, please fix the "Give us Feedback" link. Currently, it goes to a broken link.
This java based screener is great for individual investors such as me who cannot afford the expensive paid CapitalIQ subscriptions. It offers a boatload of screening criteria and can definitely be a handy tool in coming up with a shortlist of stocks to dig deeper into. However, few suggestions for the next version (if anyone at Yahoo is still supporting this tool):
- Consider making this tool a desktop downloadable software rather than as a web1.0 style java-enabled pop-up. Or at lease consider a savvy Web2.0 flash based version.
- There is no way to add geographic information on the screener (I want to look at the companies based out of US and not ADRs and there is no way to filter that)
- If you really want feedback from users, please fix the "Give us Feedback" link. Currently, it goes to a broken link.
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
BerrySki - offline GPS ski resort map for your blackberry
If you are an avid skier, a must have app for your blackberry that lets you visualize the ski resort map even without the network or internet connection. A powerful analytics feature is an added bonus.
Here is the link for the app: http://www.berryski.com/main/
Here is the link for the app: http://www.berryski.com/main/
Saturday, November 07, 2009
STEC: What a chart
What will happen when your YTD stock chart looks like this? STEC rose from $3.42 almost an year ago to $42.50 in Sep-09, yielding an unprecedented 1100% return in a year - only to fall to $13.13 at the market close yesterday, a staggering 70% drop from the peak in 2 months. Add to this the CEO selling 9 million shares at $31in August.
The result: bunch of lawsuits from various law firms..
The result: bunch of lawsuits from various law firms..
Saturday, July 04, 2009
Waking up from dormancy
My last post was almost an year ago. The world changed in the last one year.. Here is my recollection of what transpired over the past 12 months:
- Lehman is no more: Lehman Brothers filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on September 15th and the world would never be the same again.
- Dow would plunge a record 33.8% in 2008.
- Dow would continue trading under maximum possible 4 digit number and is expected to do so for the foreseeable future.

- Most companies declared Q1'09 as the bottom - The economy is not falling as rapidly as before. Barry's post sums this up neatly.
- We are currently experiencing a big bull rally. Nasdaq Composite is up 41.6% since lows of March 9th 2009, and Dow is up 26.5%.
- Some people already think that June 11th was the top and it is the beginning of a bear phase now. Since June 11th, Dow is down almost 6% and Nasdaq is down 3.5%. I don't hold any opinion on whether the current market is a small dip in the bigger bull rally or is it a new bear rally. I would leave that up to the macro experts to decide, although I highly doubt anyone's ability to correctly predict that.
- Finally, I graduated as the class of 2009 Wharton MBA earlier this May. While class of 2010 would be close, I think that class of 2009 should easily have the honors of graduating in the worst economic year. Whatever done, I cherished the graduation ceremony and a great speech by Prof. Muhammad Yunus.
- Lehman is no more: Lehman Brothers filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on September 15th and the world would never be the same again.
- Dow would plunge a record 33.8% in 2008.
- Dow would continue trading under maximum possible 4 digit number and is expected to do so for the foreseeable future.

- Most companies declared Q1'09 as the bottom - The economy is not falling as rapidly as before. Barry's post sums this up neatly.
- We are currently experiencing a big bull rally. Nasdaq Composite is up 41.6% since lows of March 9th 2009, and Dow is up 26.5%.
- Some people already think that June 11th was the top and it is the beginning of a bear phase now. Since June 11th, Dow is down almost 6% and Nasdaq is down 3.5%. I don't hold any opinion on whether the current market is a small dip in the bigger bull rally or is it a new bear rally. I would leave that up to the macro experts to decide, although I highly doubt anyone's ability to correctly predict that.
- Finally, I graduated as the class of 2009 Wharton MBA earlier this May. While class of 2010 would be close, I think that class of 2009 should easily have the honors of graduating in the worst economic year. Whatever done, I cherished the graduation ceremony and a great speech by Prof. Muhammad Yunus.
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