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Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby pogoliamo » Sun 29 Jul 2007, 13:46:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', 'I') thought he wasn't supposed to take online advice. Then you proced to give him advice. :lol:


Hi threadbear! Yes, Eli, just ignore me and do whatever you think is
best for you, I just wish you success.

For myself I can say I am adding to my position of energy stocks, but
nobody realy knows what tomorrow will bring. :wink:
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby MrBill » Mon 30 Jul 2007, 04:45:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mkwin', 'W')hat oil service companies do you have in your portfolio Mr Bill?


I have already taken profits on many of my oil field service companies in June on the way up, by selling out some 50% of my longs. I over-sold Schlumberger (SLB) a little on its last spike last week. I wish I would have sold more, but I did not want to be under-weight energy either. And the S&P Energy Index (GSPE) did hit new highs in July.

However, having said that, the market closed down quite a bit last week. I see the GSPE topped out at 576 on a rally from 423 and a break-out from 480. Wide crack margins that have since retreated as well as high crude prices provided the support as well as news headlines about product shortages and the ever present threat of a hurricane. Some of those issues are now receeding in importance.

The GSPE is now testing 13-week moving average of 531 and if this gives may expect a test of 21-week support at 507. Actually, to be honest, moving averages provide more direction guidance rather than support of resistance in my opinion. But in any case I would expect the GSPE to retrace to at least 518 on this move lower where we should see some good entry points if your view is higher long-term energy prices and oil company shares . Again I cannot give investment advice.

Last week's shake-out in the enrgy sphere has shown some bargains for me as some stocks I had my eye on in the meantime are looking a little over-sold.

Devon Energy (DVN) has popped up on the radar screen. It has an RSI of 36.42 that is not over-sold, but getting there, and with an estimated P/E ratio of 11-12 not unattractive. I have not owned it, but might look to add it to my portfolio as it looks cheaper than say ConocoPhilips (COP) or ExxonMobil (XOM) that appear to have further to fall until they find support.

I own some SLB still, but Baker Hughes (BHI) is looking cheaper on the P/E ratios than SLB or Haliburton (HAL). BHI got hit on lower nat gas activity in Canada, but now looks attractive for a recover in that sector. Its share price has lagged the rally in crude as well as its peers in the past 12-mos. and year to date (YTD).

Sunoco (SUN) looks good with an RSI of 21.59 and an estimated P/E ratio of 7-8. It lost 13-14% last week. I like it better than Valero (VAL) that only lost 7-8% last week and still has a estimated P/E of 15.39, but I do hold a much smaller VAL position in addition to my SUN. I would look to re-add to the SUN position that I sold in June this week.

Fontier Oil, Holly Oil, Western Refining, Alon USA Energy and Tesoro all got knocked down 11-20% last week and have some attractive P/E ratios between 7.5-13, if you like that sector in the long-run. I have to admit I am not familiar with each one's relative strengths or weaknesses.

Refining margins are weaker than their peaks of $24-26 per barrel earlier this spring. They are now $10-11 per barrel and dip to $8-9 per barrel in the next months forward before recovering to $15-16 per barrel later in the next 12-mos. $8-9 per barrel is where we started the year in January.

However, heating oil and natural gas seemed to have bottomed on July 25th at $2.0100 per gallon and $5.7540 mmBTU respectively. If so, with the weak refining margins and being knocked down last week on wider equity weakness, then these levels might represent good entry points for a rally later in the year.

There are no guarantees of course. But some coal mining companies also look quite cheap at the moment. Peabody (BTU) is over-sold at RSI 23.17 and lost 11% last week. Consol Energy (CNX) looks cheaper from estimated P/E ratios amoung its peers. Arch Coal Mines (ACI) is also over-sold. It lost 12.5% last week.

Canadian railways still look too expensive even after last week's 8-9% drop. They still have a ways to fall before they become attractive for the long-haul. I am not familiar with any US railways, so any suggestions more than welcome for the future. Thanks.

The deep sea drillers and shipping companies like Drill Quip Inc (DRQ) and Diana Shipping (DSX) still look way too expensive. I would like to own them, but not at these multiples. GSP and RIG look slightly over-valued as well, and post merger problems may undermine some of the euphoria surrounding those two offshore drilling companies.

DSX peers include TeeKay, Tidewater and Overseas Ship Holdings that all dropped 8-9% last week. I will keep an eye on this sector for the future.

If you like gold around $660 an ounce here we are. Barrick Gold looks good as its performance YTD and YOY has been quite anemic. But as a flat price play on the price of XAU or XAG it is an alternative to the futures or an ETF. Most gold companies gave back 5-11% of their share price last week, and if EUR/USD finds support at $1.3600 then gold near $660 an ounce will look cheap.

Barrick peers include Newmont, Royal Gold, US Gold Corp, Gold Reserve, etc., but as I am not a gold bug I am not familiar with their unique market positions.

However, technically XAU can still dip to $645 and EUR to $1.3485 even as EUR/JPY continues to move lower on the unwinding of yen carry trades and the threat of higher BOJ rates in August. EUR/JPY topped out at 169 and now looks likely to test 160. The defeat of PM Abe Shinzo in the Upper House elections as well as weaker US markets and the credit squeeze may provide the BOJ with wiggle room despite a heathy economy to delay hiking rates. This might slow the unwinding of yen carry trades.

One stock that I would like to own, but up to now was too expensive was Caterpillar (CAT) on the whole mining story and demand for heavy equipment in places like The Athabasca Oil Sands in N. Alberta. CAT derives its worth from strong global GDP throughout the world, and is not really affected by credit concerns and falling equity prices in the USA (although it is not discoounted entirely). CAT dropped last week along with other stocks and now has an RSI of 34.20, which is close to over-sold. It has a reasonable estimated P/E ratio of 13.91. At $75 a share it might be a good long-term buy.

SUN, BHI, ABX, ACI, DVN, CNX and CAT may therefore all be on the shopping list this week. My plan would be to scale-down buy as I am still very afraid of a wider market meltdown, and that would either put downward pressure on these stocks as well or give me better entry levels later. I would sooner own a little at these levels rather than shoot my wad now and be long and wrong if the wider market melts down. Keeping in mind that many of these markets were highly correlated on the way up as well.

I am not a stock analyst. All caveats apply. Thanks.

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Last edited by MrBill on Mon 30 Jul 2007, 06:34:38, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby pogoliamo » Mon 30 Jul 2007, 06:16:40

Dear MrBill - valuable analysis!!! Thanks a lot!!!

If you permit the joke my only concern is that you are on the same
opinion as me on all of the subjects. There's a good possibility we are
both completely wrong then :lol:
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby MrBill » Mon 30 Jul 2007, 06:31:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pogoliamo', 'D')ear MrBill - valuable analysis!!! Thanks a lot!!!

If you permit the joke my only concern is that you are on the same
opinion as me on all of the subjects. There's a good possibility we are
both completely wrong then :lol:


As they say, "strong minds think a like, but weak minds seldom differ?" ; - )
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby DantesPeak » Mon 30 Jul 2007, 10:29:31

As a holder of a graduate degree in Investments, but currently not be compensated in any manner for investment advice, there is some very good advice above - not only from Mr. Bill, but from others.

Sunoco has dropped quite a lot since its recent high, but I think that has more to do with market psychology than expected earnings from that company. Some issues like Exxon probably went up too fast, but ther are others that are probably oversold.

Again, what the Fed says and does are two different things. They will bailout the housing bubble from its collapse, and following that, inflation and oil prices, etc., will move up.
It's already over, now it's just a matter of adjusting.
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby Eli » Mon 30 Jul 2007, 11:07:19

I agree about taking responsibility for ones actions but honestly I think on this site if you listen to the right people you can get great investment advice for our current situation.

Where the hell else am I supposed to get investment advice, call my broker at AG Edwards? A guy who probably knows fuck all about KSA Oil production and has no idea what Cantarell is.

If I called that guy I would be guaranteed to get bad investment advice. Only by pure dumb luck can someone be ignorant of the PO and make sound investments.

I have made close to 20% on my investments in oil so far, I think it might be time to sell some of it and reinvest in things that guard against a correction like it has already been advised.
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby threadbear » Mon 30 Jul 2007, 13:20:35

Good for you, Eli! I'll be interested in how you reinvest, if you're into sharing. :)
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby Eli » Mon 30 Jul 2007, 15:19:41

What about shorting some stocks?

Like home Depot which just put on a gain today they should be hurting pretty bad by the fall of 2008 one would have to think.

Also I bet Boeing, will not be in that great of a position either, right now everyone seems to love them.

What would people suggest?

Also my oil stock is adding on some more today, but I don't want to get caught being a pig.

I making a long term energy play, but I think it is not going to be straight up, I think we will see a serious dips.

I do think I need to diversify what I am holding.

Also I think longterm it may not matter that much what I invest in I think there is a very good chance that the whole game could be rewritten.
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby MrBill » Tue 31 Jul 2007, 04:53:41

Shorting stocks is like writing a blank cheque. You never know how much it will cost you? I would prefer a well diversified portfolio over short stock sales with my own savings.

Alternatively you can buy put options. They are expensive because you are paying away time value, but in comparison with the risky nature of short stock sales, at least you know your maximum loss.

On the other hand if you want to lock-in some profit from the long-side, while giving up some additional upside you can write covered calls on stocks you already own. They are not perfect protection against a falling stock market, but ATM calls in conjuntion with OTM puts do provide some insurance against falling prices.

But that's just me. Better to talk to your wife, God, your accountant or your dog before deciding what to do.

Here are some things that might go wrong with today's stock market.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')So here's the new contest: Pick the No. 1tipping point that'll push us over the edge, into a recession and bear market. Yes, it'll probably be some combo of multiple triggers, a perfect storm ... but tell us, which one single "Archduke moment" or "Seinfeld event" do you think will be the final ultimate detonator triggering a chain reaction of unintended consequences:

1. War/military defense budget busting

The tab on the Iraq and Afghanistan wars is now over $600 billion, with long-term estimates exceeding $2 trillion. Now many neocons openly predict the president will invade Iran before the next elections. WWIII will be the new "unintended consequence."

2. Real estate bubble raging

Inventories rising. Prices declining. Subprime failures rippling through hedge funds, banks. Home builders' guidance bleak. Declines expected into 2008 and beyond. The Economist says global housing is "the biggest bubble in history," fueling stock market speculation.

3. Foreign trade imbalance, trillions new debt

We spend like teen drug addicts with stolen credit cards. To pay, we're forced to borrow an unsustainable $1 trillion annually. Foreigners now own over $2.5 trillion of America.

4. China's economy overheating

She's smoking! But the Beijing bubble could pop long before the Summer Olympics.

5. Private-equity credit imploding

Moody's downgrades their debt. Credit crunch. U.S. economy hit. Blackstone "flips" Equity Office Properties in five short months. Congress may kill tax breaks.

6. 'Homeland Insecurity' failures

Borders leaking like sieves. Ports and chemical plants unprotected. Meanwhile, FEMA governed by politics, "gut instincts" and "good-job-brownies," not intelligence.

7. Hedge funds hurting retirement plans

Assets doubled since 2000 to over $1.3 trillion as pension funds, discouraged by low stock market returns, take bigger risks, further endangering your retirement.

8. Oil rocketing toward $100 a barrel

Crude's again pushing new records. Detroit is no longer the "Big 3," yet continues fighting increases in mileage standards, while marketing to the big gas-guzzling egos.

9. Weak U.S. dollar keeps sinking

Foreign nations are diversifying reserves away from an ever-weakening dollar, further damaging America's global credit rating.

10. Federal budget deficits

GAO head warns America's headed for "bankruptcy." Federal debt now $8.7 trillion. We'll add another $200 billion this year. By 2010, interest on debt will equal the defense budget.

11. Social Security entitlements

Economists call it the "coming generational storm," estimating massive 44% cuts in benefits or 44% increases in taxes. Time bomb ticks as politicians babble on, in denial.

12. Medicare's massive deficits

Big pharma's greed controls. Prescription drug benefits added unfunded $8 trillion. Estimates of $36.6 trillion deficit by 2027. Going broke faster than Social Security.

13. Health-care-insurance deficit

Yes, "Sicko;" with 47 million uninsured, costs skyrocketing, inflation rampant.

14. Climate change fuels global wars

Not Gore: The Pentagon's own research says "climate change" is the "mother of all national security issues," creating geopolitical conditions triggering wars worldwide.

15. Personal savings shortfall

We love consuming! So America's savings rate is below zero, from 10% in early 80s.

16. Consumer debt surging

Except for the military, Americans don't know "sacrifice." We live beyond our means. Consumer debt exceeds $2 trillion. Bankruptcies and foreclosures accelerating.

17. Corporate pension defaults

Congress lets pension funds use unrealistically low estimates of future returns which create underfunding. Later, after benefits disappear, U.S. taxpayers must bail them out.

18. Local government pension deficits

Over $400 billion of entitlements will exhaust local taxpayer resources. And in a recession, collapsing revenues will make matters even worse.

19. International credibility deficit

Gitmo, Abu Ghraib, black sites, wiretapping, more: America needs an image makeover.

20. Washington politics in endless gridlock

Which is more childish: Republicans vs. Democrats? Or Lindsay, Britney and Paris? At least the Hollywood trio can't set up a global meltdown, like our do-nothing leaders.

Source: Pick that one tipping point pushing us over edge
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby pogoliamo » Tue 31 Jul 2007, 04:54:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Eli', 'W')hat about shorting some stocks?
Very bad idea...
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby Eli » Tue 31 Jul 2007, 11:05:37

OK, I am now talked out of shorting stocks or even buying puts, I will just try and diversify my account which is good idea anyway for any kind of investing.


I have too much in a vanguard oil eft, although it has done kick ass.

But what is safe and easy to invest in when I know that this whole thing is going to come apart? Also don't tell me gold, I think that the powers that be are manipulating that market and no central banks are going to let it dominate again. Every one is running fiat currencies they cannot allow gold to lead again.

I am glad I did not sell the other day, it looks like happy days are here again. :roll:


This global market it is not going to quit for any reason unless it cannot grow anymore. It is going to take a major disaster to kill it.
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby mkwin » Tue 31 Jul 2007, 17:51:43

I would have to agree that shorting doomed stocks is a bad idea just yet. In the very early days of a post-decline world a few short would be a very good idea, just not yet. I plan on spending 3-5% on shorts when i'm confident the market is soon to realise the reality of the decline. My estimation would be 2011 but we just have to roll with the punchs and see what happens.
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby mkwin » Tue 31 Jul 2007, 18:16:49

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Eli', 'O')K, I am now talked out of shorting stocks or even buying puts, I will just try and diversify my account which is good idea anyway for any kind of investing.


I have too much in a vanguard oil eft, although it has done kick ass.

But what is safe and easy to invest in when I know that this whole thing is going to come apart? Also don't tell me gold, I think that the powers that be are manipulating that market and no central banks are going to let it dominate again. Every one is running fiat currencies they cannot allow gold to lead again.

I am glad I did not sell the other day, it looks like happy days are here again. :roll:


This global market it is not going to quit for any reason unless it cannot grow anymore. It is going to take a major disaster to kill it.


Well I think the confiscation of gold is unlikely. However, if you’re worried about this, buy some silver as well. The government can hardly confiscate silver as it has too many industrial and domestic applications and it has a pretty strong correlation with the price of gold so you should get the safe haven bounce. Also inflation linked bonds.

Personally I'm not a doomer. I think we will get through this and move to a sustainable system but if the shit really does hit the fan, the money you make in the early days could be used to buy a farm and equipment.

My portfolio will be (still have a little to do),

Oil majors 10%
Oil service 15%
Index Linked Gilts 20%
Renewable energy stocks 10% (returned 24% last year)
Gold Certificates 10%
Silver Certificates 5%
Gold coins 5%
Silver coins 5%
Other 10% (Have some major mining stocks/uranium/nuclear/coal/bit of arable land)
Cash 10% (Euros)
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby mmasters » Tue 31 Jul 2007, 18:50:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mkwin', 'M')y portfolio will be (still have a little to do),

Oil majors 10%
Oil service 15%
Index Linked Gilts 20%
Renewable energy stocks 10% (returned 24% last year)
Gold Certificates 10%
Silver Certificates 5%
Gold coins 5%
Silver coins 5%
Other 10% (Have some major mining stocks/uranium/nuclear/coal/bit of arable land)
Cash 10% (Euros)

Nice portfolio! :)
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby NTBKtrader » Wed 01 Aug 2007, 23:40:57

I'm in basically 30% mining, gold cos i.e. au,bhp

20% healthcare

30% international China/Europe

20% bonds, some dom stocks ie YUM.
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby mkwin » Thu 02 Aug 2007, 05:00:35

Mr Bill..... What’s your take on Shell, BP and Total?

They have lost quite a bit of ground over the last three months and I’m thinking they are now a buy.

Shell for example; when you strip out their upstream business, you are buying (P50 estimate) 30 billion barrels of oil for $5. Considering their production costs are circa $20, my view is that’s good value? When you factor in hurricane season, Iran and the tightening supply situation, there seems to be significant upside. What do you think?
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 02 Aug 2007, 06:31:19

I am not a stock analyst, so my knowledge of each is limited. Just some thoughts though starting with the S&P Energy Index (GSPE).

GSPE
--------
534
YTD 34% YOY 24%
P/E 19
RES 541
SUPP 518
RSI 52

Comments: knocked down along with major markets, but held up by strong crude prices

RDSA
-----------
GBP 1888
YTD 5.77% YOY 3.29%
P/E 9 est. P/E 10
RES 2154
SUPP 1860
RSI 35.34

Comments: I have never liked their shareholding structure and multiple tickers. If I like CDN oil sands, for example, do I buy Shell Canada instead? A poorly managed company in the past that has under-performed its peers. A good comeback story perhaps? Regression to the industry mean. Etc. Looks more over-sold than the GSPE itself.

BP PLC
-----------
GBP 567.50
YTD 0% YOY -10%
P/E 10.6 est. P/E 11.2
RES 627
SUPP 563
RSI 34.38

Comments: Another underperforming multinational compared to its peers and the S&P Energy Index. Hit quite hard with loss of reserves in Russian through TNK-BP. Not expensive, but you have to ask why pay the same P/E ratios for a company whose share price has gone down despite an industry rally, when well-run profitable companies have done so much better? Regression to the mean?

TOTAL (FP)
--------------
56.50 euros
YTD 2% YOY 11.5%
P/E 11.5 est. P/E 10.3
RES 64
SUPP 55.60
RSI 39.05

Comments: What can I say? A slimely French company that is likely to be able to go places where American oil companies are excluded like Iran and especially Libya now that the French government is selling them formerly restricted weapons despite an earlier EU ban on such weapon technology transfers.

On the positive side it is a slimely French company that will benefit from state interference on its behalf and has no problem dealing with Sudan or Myanmar.

On the downside, minority investor rights may be trampled on by inside deals, asset stripping or transfer pricing or by holding down domestic prices to suit the government's own policies. The cost of being so close to the state.

I have often thought of buying it myself, but given low levels of French worker productivity and high labor and non-labor costs in France this is a big gamble in exchange for access to some nice fields. I would prefer Lukoil who can also explore and drill in places like Iran and Iraq as well.


LKOD LI
----------
$78
YTD -10% YOY -10%
P/E 9 est. P/E 9
RES $87
SUPP $78
RSI 39.52

Comments: Obviously, this share has been knocked down by Russian sovereign risk due to concerns about renationalization and the uncertainty surrounding Russian Presidential elections in 2008. However, most of Lukoil's expansion has been outside of Russia in downstream assets, whereas a lot of its future upstream activity will be in places like Iran and Iraq. I therefore see it as a Russian multinational oil company, unlike Gazprom who's main operations are still clearly tied to Russia. But that is just my opinion.

Note: I have traded in shares of Lukoil and will look to add to positions on any weakness. All caveats and disclosures apply.
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby mkwin » Thu 02 Aug 2007, 13:30:47

Good points. I think Russian oil stocks are just too risky though and, considering the P/E is comparable to the other European majors, I am not convinced the risk premium being paid is high enough. If it was a P/E of say 7-8, I might consider it.

What am I going to do if Putin nationalises the company? Complain to the customer services department of the KGB…err I mean the Russian administration.
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 03 Aug 2007, 04:41:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mkwin', 'G')ood points. I think Russian oil stocks are just too risky though and, considering the P/E is comparable to the other European majors, I am not convinced the risk premium being paid is high enough. If it was a P/E of say 7-8, I might consider it.

What am I going to do if Putin nationalises the company? Complain to the customer services department of the KGB…err I mean the Russian administration.


You can always take them to court in Texas.
It won't help, but it has been tried before! ; - )

One play on 'risky' countries is through the banking sector, and we all know it has been knocked down lately. Two that I like in particular for EEMEA are Austria's Raiffeisen Bank and Erste Bank that own large banking networks in CEE, including resource rich Russia.

I like Bank Austria, too, but it is majority owned by Unicredito, the largest banking network in Eastern Europe, and despite excellent profitability in CEE, its share price has been knocked down on problems in Italy and western Europe.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')We expect €191m net profits on 9 August

We expect €283m at the PBT level, up 25% y/y with the split broadly balanced in Central Europe - €101m up 41% y/y, € 90m in SEE up 24% and weaker headline results of €92m in CIS, up 12% y/y as the sale of Raiffeisen's profitable Ukrainian operation at the end of 06 will affect y/y comparison.

Watch for quality of earnings, revenue vs cost dynamic

While the bottom line figure is important, the market will want to see a good quality mix - we are expecting healthy loan growth of 7% q/q, but will want to see stable margins (vs the drop seen in 1Q, particularly in SEE). We are also seeing rising cost pressures across the region due to wage inflation and branch and business expansion, and we expect only modest revenue/ cost jaws, and do not expect any significant cost/income ratio improvements from the current 58%.

Upgrades and better markets needed for performance

The stock has treaded water this year, although it has rallied since 1Q results. Two drivers are needed for future performance - better markets and earnings upgrades. As a high growth, high beta, relatively expensive stock (PE08 16.4x) RI is ultimately a call on markets, and these are particularly tricky to call now. From a stock specific point, we will need to see earnings upgrades - we believe the macro and banking growth in the CEE space remains exceptionally robust over the next few years and Raiffeisen is well positioned to benefit from it.


Source: Merril Lynch on Raiffeisen International

I think that after the dust settles around the fallout from the sub-prime lending fiasco and LBO blow-up that some banks are going to be very cheap and/or attractive as take-over targets.

Temasek, China and some other state investment funds, like Qatar, are looking to expand their stakes in western banks, like Temasek's purchase of 10% of Standard Chartered, and China's and Qatar's interest in Barclay's Bank.

If any of these banks or brokerages stumble and fall due to credit problems they will find themselves very vulnerable. One German bank in particular looks good as a take-over candidate, but their shares are still too high on a P/E basis, so that may already be reflected in their price? Everything at the right level.
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Re: Need help with what to do? Mr.Bill and others

Unread postby MOCKBA » Fri 03 Aug 2007, 21:59:00

After looking at my shoping list and not finding any, I looked at what others are thinking, and...

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')Last week's shake-out in the enrgy sphere has shown some bargains for me as some stocks I had my eye on in the meantime are looking a little over-sold.

Devon Energy (DVN) has popped up on the radar screen. It has an RSI of 36.42 that is not over-sold, but getting there, and with an estimated P/E ratio of 11-12 not unattractive. I have not owned it, but might look to add it to my portfolio as it looks cheaper than say ConocoPhilips (COP) or ExxonMobil (XOM) that appear to have further to fall until they find support.

I own some SLB still, but Baker Hughes (BHI) is looking cheaper on the P/E ratios than SLB or Haliburton (HAL). BHI got hit on lower nat gas activity in Canada, but now looks attractive for a recover in that sector. Its share price has lagged the rally in crude as well as its peers in the past 12-mos. and year to date (YTD).

Are you seriously considering that? Now?

I never knew www.fool.com is PO aware - they are no MSNBC but not that much far. These days Fools refference T. Boone Pickens and have the following to say about the bunch above

http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2 ... -ways.aspx

Ask me - looks like the market did price in some of that "PO bullshit". How much does it cost today that tomorrow BP would post 10% declines in extraction? Would even 50% increase in WTI cover for that and even if it would how much money SLB and such would make by drilling half the holes at twice the cost? Would current 10-20% off price be warranted when PE would double?

I don't know... but I am affraid that majors and oil services would be the first victims of PO. They got a little bit of a boost from high oil prices lately, but they are volume sellers (as opposed to boutiques) and for volume sellers like Walmart margins do help a lot, but volume comes first... Going forward into PO you get lower volume with lower margins... What can I say?
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