Boiler Room: The Official Stock Market Discussion

Domingo Halliburton

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ECONOMIC REPORTS

Domestic economic reports scheduled for today include:
Markit manufacturing PMI for January at 9:45--consensus 54.0
Leading indicators for December at 10:00--consensus up 0.4%
Existing home sales for December at 10:00--consensus up 3.0% to 5.08M rate

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

AmSurg (AMSG) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at Piper Jaffray
Anglo American (AAUKY) upgraded to Neutral from Sell at Goldman
Cypress Semiconductor (CY) upgraded to Neutral from Underweight at JPMorgan
DreamWorks Animation (DWA) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at Piper Jaffray
E-Trade (ETFC) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse
Kate Spade (KATE) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Mizuho
LinkedIn (LNKD) upgraded to Strong Buy from Market Perform at Raymond James
lululemon (LULU) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at JPMorgan
Michael Kors (KORS) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Mizuho
Natural Grocers (NGVC) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at Piper Jaffray
Nucor (NUE) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Goldman
ResMed (RMD) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Needham
Ternium (TX) upgraded to Neutral from Sell at Goldman

Downgrades

Access National (ANCX) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Keefe Bruyette
Alamos Gold (AGI) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at BofA/Merrill
Altera (ALTR) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at BMO Capital
Avon Products (AVP) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Wells Fargo
Cardinal Financial (CFNL) downgraded to Market Perform at Keefe Bruyette
Century Aluminum (CENX) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at JPMorgan
Chevron (CVX) downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at Credit Suisse
City National (CYN) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Raymond James
Coca-Cola Femsa (KOF) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at JPMorgan
DreamWorks Animation (DWA) downgraded to Sell from Neutral at Janney Capital
DreamWorks Animation (DWA) downgraded to Underperform from Market Perform at Cowen
Exxon Mobil (XOM) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse
Hercules Offshore (HERO) downgraded to Underperform at Raymond James
Hershey (HSY) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank
PNM Resources (PNM) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Jefferies
Precision Castparts (PCP) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Sterne Agee
Precision Castparts (PCP) downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at Credit Suisse
Rentokil (RTOKY) downgraded to Sell from Neutral at UBS
Sallie Mae (SLM) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman
Travelers (TRV) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at Atlantic Equities
U.S. Steel (X) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman
Vale (VALE) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman

Initiations

Arena Pharmaceuticals (ARNA) initiated with a Sector Perform at RBC Capital
Avolon (AVOL) initiated with an Overweight at JPMorgan
Hortonworks (HDP) initiated with a Market Perform at Cowen
Informatica (INFA) initiated with a Market Perform at Cowen
Kona Grill (KONA) initiated with an Outperform at Oppenheimer
Medivation (MDVN) initiated with a Sector Perform at RBC Capital
Natural Grocers (NGVC) initiated with an Underperform at Wedbush
Orexigen (OREX) initiated with an Outperform at RBC Capital
PTC Therapeutics (PTCT) initiated with an Outperform at RBC Capital
Puma Biotechnology (PBYI) initiated with an Outperform at RBC Capital
Qlik Technologies (QLIK) initiated with an Outperform at Cowen
Rice Energy (RICE) initiated with an Outperform at Imperial Capital
Salesforce.com (CRM) initiated with an Outperform at Cowen
Sarepta (SRPT) initiated with a Sector Perform at RBC Capital
ServiceNow (NOW) initiated with an Outperform at BMO Capital
Sprouts Farmers Markets (SFM) initiated with a Neutral at Wedbush
Stemline (STML) initiated with an Outperform at Cowen
Tableau (DATA) initiated with a Market Perform at Cowen
Teradata (TDC) initiated with a Market Perform at Cowen
The Fresh Market (TFM) initiated with a Neutral at Wedbush
United Natural Foods (UNFI) initiated with an Outperform at Wedbush
United Technologies (UTX) initiated with a Buy at Citigroup
VIVUS (VVUS) initiated with an Outperform at RBC Capital
Whole Foods (WFM) initiated with an Outperform at Wedbush
Workday (WDAY) initiated with an Outperform at Cowen
Zafgen (ZFGN) initiated with an Outperform at RBC Capital

COMPANY NEWS
DreamWorks Animation (DWA) said it will focus its feature production from three films per year down to two. The overall reduction of DreamWorks' feature production output will result in a loss of approximately 500 jobs across all locations and all divisions of the studio. DreamWorks also announced the departure of COO Mark Zoradi
Starbucks (SBUX) named Kevin Johnson as president and COO and said A1 performance was 'exceptional'
Merrimack (MACK) announced resignation of Chief Scientific Officer Ulrik Nielsen, effective January 30
Telefonica (TEF) entered into talks to sell O2 UK to Hutchison Whampoa (HUWHY) for GBP10.25B
Sony (SNE) to delay earnings report due to last year's cyberattack
J. Crew CEO Mickey Drexler to retire from Apple (AAPL) board
Intuitive Surgical (ISRG) sees 2015 procedural growth 7%-10%

EARNINGS
Companies that beat consensus earnings expectations last night and today include:
General Electric (GE), Prosperity Bancshares (PB), Raymond James (RJF), State Street (STT), Western Alliance (WAL), Celanese (CE), BancFirst (BANF), SVB Financial (SIVB), First Internet Bancorp (INBK), Altera (ALTR), Skyworks (SWKS), Infinera (INFN), KLA-Tencor (KLAC), Bryn Mawr Bank (BMTC), Independent Bank (INDB), ResMed (RMD), Polycom (PLCM), Intuitive Surgical (ISRG)

Companies that missed consensus earnings expectations include:
BNY Mellon (BK), Heritage Commerce (HTBK), LeapFrog (LF), Hancock Holding (HBHC), OceanFirst Financial (OCFC), Old Line Bancshares (OLBK), First Financial (FFIN), Digi International (DGII), Capital One (COF), American National Bankshares (AMNB), Uroplasty (UPI)

Companies that matched consensus earnings expectations include:
Starbucks (SBUX), 8x8, Inc. (EGHT), Hexcel (HXL), Microsemi (MSCC), Federated Investors (FII)

Starbucks (SBUX) sees FY15 EPS outlook $3.09-$3.13, consensus $3.13, sees 1H15 EPS at lower end of range. Starbucks sees Q2 EPS 64c-65c, consensus 68c
Skyworks (SWKS) sees Q2 EPS $1.12, consensus $1.04, sees Q2 revenue $750M, consensus $708.72M
Microsemi (MSCC) sees Q2 EPS 64c-68c, consensus 67c
LeapFrog (LF) withdraws guidance for FY15, CFO sees Q4 sales declining

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES
NIH, GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), Merck (MRK) launch joint Ebola vaccine test in Liberia, WSJ reports
Google's (GOOG) entrance into telecommunications may not be beneficial, Re/code says
Amazon (AMZN) acquires Annapurna Labs, Re/code reports
Microsoft's (MSFT) Windows 10 unlikely to bring dramatic changes to mobile market, DigiTimes says
Hutchison (HUWHY) could bring in PE firms as minority partners in O2 (TEF) deal, Reuters reports
Airlines unlikely to cut fares despite 'enormous' savings, Reuters reports (JBLU, DAL, UAL, AAL, LUV)

SYNDICATE
Box, Inc. (BOX) 12.5M share IPO priced at $14.00
Dave & Busters (PLAY) files to sell 6M shares for holders
Euronav NV (EURN) IPO raised to 16.26M shares, priced at $12.25
Horsehead Holding (ZINC) 5M share Secondary priced at $12.75
Michaels (MIK) Secondary increased to 18.8M shares, priced at $23.52
Otonomy (OTIC) Secondary increased to 2.55M shares, priced at $29.25
Radius Health (RDUS) 4M share Secondary priced at $36.75
Verastem (VSTM) Secondary increased to 7.25M shares, priced at $6.50
Vitae Pharmaceuticals (VTAE) 3M share Secondary priced at $11.90
 

Domingo Halliburton

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Hedge funds like LNG:

B8ComJrCIAAM2lS.jpg
 

Perfectson

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fukkin NFLX is killing me, played a calendar and didn't get out before earnings - now have a put spread and need this to come back to $400, this move is fukking incredible


by the way, here's a gift for mutual fund investors. I'm going to give you a portion of my retirement allocation. Now I'm not super investor but you can't shake your head at strong strategies and/or funds.


1. Bonds:

a good LT bond, ST bond, and income bond fund should be in your portfolio based on risk tolerance. You can probably do without a LT bond, since many feel the risk involved with long dated duration doesn't give you an applicable return vs ST bonds. With that said:

WHOSX
FMEQX
PIMOC (income)


2. International:

YOu can go with Vanguard, Janus, USAA world. Or look at specific markets. Many are jumping in to Russia but I'm looking at the best performer from last year an dlooking for repeat performance this year which is India, also looking at Japan.

HJPNX
MINDX (best performing mutual fund)

3. Here's my current key and i'm putting alot of faith here. Infastructure - this requires additionl reading so look into these

GASFX
TOLSX

4. Commodities - horrible in the last 5 years, but due for a rebound. Small part of allocation and again hopefully all the gains from the others will offset/hedge any losses suffered here but i think anyone that doesen't mind risk and believe in value investing has to be looking at commodities


SKSRX

5. Industries:

FSRFX

6. real estate



7. Health care
 

无名的

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I forget who talks about this stock but I saw on twitter that there is some big insider buying on CERE. I don't know if big is the right word but there's insider buying.

Their CFO bought 1,000 shares... at $0.20 a piece

Literally spent 200 fukking dollars.

:mjlol:

This company needs bought and management needs taken behind the barn to be shot. Put everyone out of their misery.
 

Domingo Halliburton

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Their CFO bought 1,000 shares... at $0.20 a piece

Literally spent 200 fukking dollars.

:mjlol:

This company needs bought and management needs taken behind the barn to be shot. Put everyone out of their misery.

I just saw on twitter someone mention insider buying for this company. I assumed if they mentioned it, it had to be something substantial. What a joke. :heh:
 

Domingo Halliburton

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A
hedge fund manager told clients he is "truly sorry" for losing virtually all their money.

Owen Li, the founder of Canarsie Capital in New York, said Tuesday he had lost all but $200,000 of the firm's capital—down from the roughly $100 million it ran as of late March.

Li is a former trader at Raj Rajaratnam's Galleon Group,

bolded should have been your first red flag. he's really sorry though.
 

无名的

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I just saw on twitter someone mention insider buying for this company. I assumed if they mentioned it, it had to be something substantial. What a joke. :heh:

I saw someone post on Stock Twits all excited like "The insider buying has started!"

:stopitslime:

1,000 shares is just a slap in the face at $0.20.

You make hundreds of thousands of dollars a year as an executive at a company that is generating almost no revenue and the most confidence you can show, when it's at all time lows, is $200 worth?

:mindblown:

I'm not too far from them in Thousand Oaks. Might be time to make a drive up there.

:demonic:
 
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Mark Spitznagel On The Value Of Tail-Hedged Equities

Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/23/2015 14:16 -0500




inShare6

Submitted by Mark Spitznagel, Brandon Yarckin, and Chitpuneet Mann via Pensions & Investments,

The introduction of asymmetric beta to the CAPM framework can allow an investor to construct a portfolio with expectations well above the security market line.

Incorporating asymmetric beta provides evidence of a mispricing in certain payoff profiles, namely tail hedged equities, that can be analyzed by using variants of the CAPM type of framework. CAPM based asset allocations are misspecified and ill-equipped to handle asymmetric returns.

The capital asset pricing model is a fundamental building block with which investors make allocation decisions over time. Investment decisions are made based on risk-return constructs, and in this framework, CAPM, for the most part, has stood the test of time. Due to its simplicity, it is widely used when an equity investor wants to roughly estimate the expected returns of one's portfolio.

We want to appraise the value of tail hedging within a CAPM framework, and thereby show the efficacy of tail hedging and the misspecificity of the model itself.

By using Harry Markowitz's efficient frontier, one can roughly compare different asset classes based on their consensus expected returns and observed risk (mostly computed using standard deviation of asset returns). However, this measure of risk is fairly naive since it has been well documented that most, if not all, asset classes have non-normal fat-tailed and often asymmetric return distributions. Asymmetric properties are not well accounted for in a mean-variance framework as it underestimates tail risk in negatively skewed portfolios. Stress tests should thus be used, as they are critical risk estimation tools that transparently demonstrate vulnerabilities to large deviations that can impact long-term expected returns. (We recognize successful empirical research stating that multifactor models can explain and predict investment returns, but they have similar limitations.)

Due to the principal-agent problem in the asset management industry, most money managers rationally have a propensity to use a negatively skewed payoff distribution. This kind of behavior, in aggregate, is also evidenced in the historical data, which shows significant losses for professional investors during the largest market downturns. Most investors and asset allocators, in addition to these negatively skewed positions, further view the returns of hedging strategies in a vacuum, rather than as a holistic part of their broader portfolio. Thus, they are likely to consider portfolio hedging programs to be a drag on their performance numbers and further undervalue them. We believe these factors, among others, contribute to a market segmentation that creates an undervaluation in tail-risk hedges.

Assuming there are such opportunities in hedging tail risk, let's evaluate how one can depict an asset class' risk-return profile and see if using a fair proxy tail-risk hedging program could help investors better maneuver these not-so-uncommon market crashes. We use Mr. Markowitz's efficient frontier type of framework to plot a “risk measure” on the x-axis (which is the average semi-variance for three-year rolling monthly returns) and the corresponding asset's annualized returns on the y-axis.





From Figure 1, we can ascertain that from a risk-reward standpoint, an investment in the S&P 500 index plus short-term Treasuries could be considered a benchmark for validating a tail hedge argument. Thus, we choose a vanilla 60/40 portfolio — 60% invested in the S&P 500 and 40% in short-term Treasuries, rebalanced monthly. On the other hand, our tail-hedged portfolio consists of S&P 500 and out-of-the-money put options (specifically one delta which has a strike roughly 30% to 35% below spot) on the S&P 500. At the beginning of every calendar month, using actual option prices, the number of third-month options (with a maturity from 11 to 12 weeks, and also carrying over the payoff from unexpired options) is determined such that the tail-hedged portfolio breaks even for a down 20% move in the S&P 500 over a month. From practice, for scaling the payoff, we can safely assume the S&P 500 options' implied volatility, or IVol, surface would look similar to the one observed after the lows of the October 2002 crash.





Marked-to-market fluctuations in the options position of the tail-hedged portfolio (i.e. giving back small unrealized gains) can cause its risks to be overstated by semi-variance. We can, however, overcome this limitation by using model-free stress tests.

Below we have defined a conservative stress test with monthly price and IVol shifts such that the IVol is unchanged for down 5% and 10% moves (which is still included in this test as a shoulder risk, although we consider to be a remote possibility), and for down 20%, we report the average results (in Figure 2) when we assume that the IVol surface would look similar to the one observed after five different crashes (August 1998, October 2002, October 2008, May 2010 and August 2011) in the past two decades. The benchmark portfolio would have the same risk throughout the time horizon as the price shift is defined in terms of moves in the S&P 500; however, the tail-hedged portfolio will reflect varying risk profiles depending on how often the hedge is rebalanced.

As we have defined and constructed the hedge portion of the tail-hedged portfolio in a very simplistic manner with minimal ongoing trading/rebalancing, we could evaluate the mean portfolio returns of daily stress tests to get a fair idea of what the risk characteristics look like throughout the investment horizon. Figure 2 demonstrates that the tail-hedged portfolio is increasingly less risky than the 60/40 benchmark for left fat tail moves over most of the investment horizon.

Being conservative, let's assume that the tail-hedged portfolio has similar risk properties as the benchmark portfolio. Using Figure 3, we can see that not only does the tail-hedged portfolio perform better than our benchmark (since the inclusion of options in the portfolio clips the fat left tail and allows us to take more equity risk and invest in the S&P 500), it also has a roughly 7% annualized outperformance over the S&P 500 itself.





Moreover, if we overlay our hedged portfolio performance on the previously demonstrated risk-reward plot, we would get the shaded annualized return distribution region (for robustness, we tweaked the parameters of tail-hedged portfolio construction methodology and plotted the returns of the different variations), and the risk is approximated as being similar to the benchmark. Further, it is likely a similar profile is replicable on other asset classes by incorporating tail hedges where available, but we focus on the S&P because it has the longest history of options data.

Asymmetric profiles, as evidenced by the tail-hedged portfolio, significantly raise both the returns and the risk-adjusted returns of equity portfolios, which should be deterministic in allowing one to capture much greater equity risk premium over time. Asset allocation decisions should be refined when analyzing asymmetric returns to include additional stress tests that identify potential portfolio tail risks and appraise their mitigation.

Here we have shown that CAPM type of frameworks are misspecified and leave out a whole class of securities that have highly non-linear payoffs, and because of this exclusion, they are ignored by capital allocators, and thus provide returns well above the security market line.
 
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