Archive for September, 2008

Woops

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

Dow 11,015.69 -372.75 (-3.27%)
Nasdaq 2,178.98 -94.92 (-4.17%)
S&P 500 1,207.09 -47.99 (-3.82%)

JPMorgan Chase & Co. -13.28%
Wells Fargo & Company -11.61%
Bank of America -8.88%

The short ban is working well. It’s almost as effective as a tea towel on a burning house.

I’m annoyed the market is sinking though. I don’t have an options account yet. It will probably be too late to take advantage of this temporary bubble by the time mine is verified and activated.

This all reminds me of a quote from an old music production lecturer. “You can’t polish a turd”. No amount of fiddling with the free market will fix the fundamental problems of the financial markets. All they have done is well, made things worse. 

Short sellers have sat back and seen that even longs have no faith in financial stocks. I’d expect financials to get hammered through October. Of course earnings is the key though. It’s all down to them. Check the consensus estimates. Wall St. is good at guiding really low so they can rob individual investors despite dire earnings.

Over reactions work in both directions

Saturday, September 20th, 2008

Fridays rally has caused the worms of ignorance crawl out the woodwork. The short ban co-inciding with a huge rally must mean that shorts caused the markets to sink? The beauty of correlation causation fallacy.

Most of the ignorance is coming from the UK where the FTSE was up nearly 10% at one point. What these people fail to realise and research is the FTSE futures and the fact that the UK markets close before the American markets. Americans can trade ADR’s for UK stocks after our markets have closed.

When the FTSE closed at 4884 on thursday the DOW was trading at ~10620. When the dow closed thursday it closed at 11027. The FTSE and Dow have quite a strong  2:1 point relationship. If the dow moves 2 the ftse moves one. This is not absolute on a minute by minute basis but it is a general rule I use.

When the DOW closed on thursday FTSE futures closed at 5080. That is almost perfect 2:1

The FTSE closed friday @ 5310 +8.84%.  The real FTSE rally from shot banning is only +4.5%. Still impressive but there are more factors to weigh in.

On thursdays news of the bank bail out American investors could cover their short positions.  On friday on the news of the short ban they could also cover. For the UK it was different. All that news came in one go. All investors wanting to cover will have had to cover in the same trading day. Heavy short covering means buying. These two factors gave sellers a unique opportunity. The big boys knew they had an amazing opportunity to squeeze a huge amount of shorts.

Just as a market collapses if they are no buyers it bubbles when there are no sellers. Check friday volume for financial stocks. Lowest of the week for most. This includes the huge option blocks that go through too. Lowest volume of the week on quad witching day? That doesn’t sound like a liquid market to me. Liquidity is the problem in the markets too. So what has banning shorts achieved? It’s killed the last source of market liquidity.

There is a hate for shorts. Thing is it is not their fault. If people were buying stocks and the stocks wouldn’t go down. No one wants to buy junk bank stocks though. Everyone is sitting and holding hoping for the best. AIG LEH BSC have all shown us you can end up with next to nothing. The rest of the financial sector is not faring much better than nothing either.

EDIT: It’s monday today and what is happening to financials? They are sinking. Oh what a surprise. But how is this possible with short selling banned? Maybe it is because shorts are only a fraction of the market?

Ambac (ABK) and MBIA (MBI)

Saturday, September 20th, 2008

ABK and MBI are two of the monoline bond insurers that got hit heavily hit in the credit crunch. They regained some ground in recent weeks which was surpising since nothing has really changed for them.

ABK was trading near $10. That may not sound a lot but when you put in 150% share dilution that is $25! It appears no one else in the market looked at this fundamental factor. They are probably all too busy drawing stupid lines and plotting worthless averages all over the graphs.

Well yesterday ABK and MBI were put on ratings reviews. Is this any surprise? Why would anyone suddenly think these companies were fixed and on the road to making profits anywhere near pre crisis levels?

As a result ABK has tumbled and MBI will probably go too. It’s a shame I couldn’t short ABK though, not because of the short ban but simply because it’s not a stock that I have been able to buy or sell since it got removed from the S&P 500. When it was up near the 10’s a week or so ago it just looked like a diamond opportunity. MBI is looking the same, but with a short selling ban on financials I will miss out again.

Maybe I should get off my ass and get an options account?

Today you can really earn your bacon

Monday, September 15th, 2008

Some really interesting news today

LEH files for chapter 11
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/lehman-file-bankruptcy-protection/story.aspx?guid={50D06AF4-0AD5-4B38-8206-D4C8D6E62EC7}

BAC buys MER.
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/merrill-lynch-bought-b-50/story.aspx?guid={CF19C66B-BEBF-4A50-AA1C-88BDE2D21FAE}
Massive news but a lot of other things have happened and will be neglected as important because they are not seen to be as significant as the bankruptcy and acquisition.

AIG Seeks $40B loan :O
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/aig-seeks-40-billion-loan/story.aspx?guid={F588B80C-2D77-43A2-A2B8-85BE4CC2C85B}

Banks setup $70B loan programme
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122144631339134981.html?mod=mktw

ECB and BOE inject more money into markets
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/european-central-banks-inject-funds/story.aspx?guid={FB0CA8CD-48E9-48CC-996B-F219C8027E69}

Fed increases lending facility
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122143939332934501.html?mod=mktw

Markets are sinking. No one will want to buy today. I’m not sure what to expect in the near tearm but I’m swinging towards an “unrealistic” rebound as loan liquidity gets sunk into the market.

Unfortunately I own some Nasdaq 100 but I’m hoping it won’t be hit too bad since there are no financials in it!

Nvidia : 10-Q Analysis Q2′FY09

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

Nvidia’s 10Q report for FY09 is now available. The report and other filings can be found under SEC filings in the investor relations section of their website. Alternatively there is a direct link to this quarters report here.

I suggest downloading it so you can use it to follow my analysis. The page numbers I will refer to will be the PDF page index not the page numbers printed at the bottom of each page.

The 10Q is an important document because it tells us how the business is really performing. Nvidia made a loss this quarter because of a one time charge. Simply looking at the figures we see they made a loss and without extra information we cannot tell what the future holds. A one time loss should be treated like a one time gain. If you got a £1000 tax rebate in April you’d be stupid to expect one each week for the rest of the year.

Lets start with a quick recap of the basic earnings on page 6.

Nvidia Q2 FY2009 Earnings

Nvidia Q2 FY2009 Earnings

Revenue was lower at $890M down $43M.
Cost of revenue was up $231M.
Gross profit was down $274M.
Research and development was up $55M.
Operating Expenses was up $66M.
Operating income was lower at -$155M down $339M.

Cost of revenue was up due to the $196M write-down consequently affecting gross profit.

If we take out this one time charge we can see the real operating figures for the company and build a better comparison.

Revenue: $890M down $43M.
Cost of revenue: $546M up $35M.
Gross Profit: $345M down $78M.
Research and development: $212M up $55M.
Operating Expenses: $305M up $66M.
Operating income: $41M down $143M.

We can now see that Nvidia is still profitable albeit it barely in comparison to previous earnings. It may not be fair to make such a direct comparison as things related to the write-down may have caused extra operating costs. Still we cannot deny that Nvidia is having a rough patch.

There are several factors that I believe are causing Nvidia to have a tough time.

  • ATI released new products which performed better than expected.
  • ATI have priced their products very aggressively to try and capture market share.
  • Most Nvidia products from this quarter were produced on a 65nm process. ATI products are on 55nm
  • meaning they use less silicon and more can be produced per wafer. This means larger margins.
  • The new Nvidia GTX 2xx series cards are very expensive to produce, hence their very expensive price on release. The ATI cards caused Nvidia to drop prices thus lowering income per chip by around $150.
  • They celebrated before they got to the finish line. They thought they were untouchable and now ATI have caught up again.

That’s quite a list of things chipping away at profits but it is also a list of things that when fixed will return this company to normal. A look at AMD’s 10Q shows that their graphics divison cannot even make an operating profit despite having had the manufacturing advantage for a long time now.

The shift to 55nm from 65nm decreases product size by approximately 33% which in turn increases the amount of products you can get from a wafer by 50%. This is a vital transision for Nvidia and they shouldn’t stop there. Manufacturing advantages can makeup for a poor product, just look at Intel’s graphics divison.

The most interesting part of the 10-Q is the breakdown of earnings into segments this is available on page 33.

Nvidia Q2 FY2009 Earnings Breakdown

Graphics is still taking huge revenue despite all the negativity. The writedowns are reflected by negative income but the actual figures are not so bad when you look closely. However there is a another notable strength. Professional solutions are really pulling some weight for Nvidia. Professional solutions are Quadro and Tesla based cards. Nvidia’s combined graphics chip related revenue is still huge.

The weak spot of the company is chipsets. Hopefully Nvidia will leave the chipset business or at least make it more profitable by scaling down the size of designs. The Intel SLI bridge may help them focus of the profit side rather than the revenue side of things.

CPB had a bad quarter (Tegra/Mobile). This however is the one to watch. This could make or break nvidias future as a real player in the markets. It is a market they’ll have to themselves which is what is important here. Nvidia are good at execution of products so there is every reason to believe their chips will be in more and more mobiles in the future.