Jake Berzon

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    • GE: Nuclear Growth Galore
      Today I took a 43.9% loss (including dividends and excluding commissions) on General Electric (GE) stock by selling it for $18.08 / share. While I still love the company and all they do, I now see GE Capital as a much bigger liability than I could imagine when I bought GE stock back in February. In addition, I now expect GE's NBC Universal subsidiary to loose a significant amount of ad revenue in Q1 2009. Infrastructure spending and investments in alternative energy, touted by President elect Obama as solutions to the country's current predicament, should help GE grow their revenues, but none of this is likely to help GE's books until Q3 of 2009. Furthermore, I don't expect the overall market (as measured by the S&P 500) to find its bear market bottom until at least the summer of 2009. And GE stock's β has recently increased to equal that of the market. All of this is making me think that I should be able to pick up GE stock at an even more attractive price level next year.
      Dec 04 17:15 pm |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment |View article
    • A Few Reasons to Buy Yen
      I closed my FXY position at $106.59 today and (ignoring commissions) realized a gain of 11.7% in 7 months on this position. I see the Yen as being fairly valued vs. the $US at this point. Its prospects for appreciating further are murky, clouded by the uncertainties on the relative sizes of inflationary measures undertaken by the two countries to prop up their economies. Japan Central Bank is also likely to act to keep the Yen from appreciating further and thereby hurting exporters, who are a very large component of the Japanese GDP.
      Dec 01 12:37 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
    • General Electric: Genuine Risk of Collapse?
      You make some good points. Yet your prognosis is rather far fetched. GE may be a risky play right now, but it may be one of the more rewarding ones, as well.
      Nov 26 21:08 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
    • Time to Start Nibbling on Corning
      On Nov 03 11:15 AM daltxfan wrote:

      > I am a big fan of Corning as well and have been holding their stocks
      > for a while.
      >
      > But as we all know, in last downturn, Corning stock hits a $1. Why
      > this time you think it can't go lower than $10?
      >

      I agree that this may not be the lowest bottom of this market and that stocks could head lower from here. I also agree that GLW may go lower with the market. However, you must also consider that in 2002, when it traded at a low of $1.1, GLW was a much different business than it is today, both in volume and in product diversity. For example, 6 years ago, LCD TVs, were barely a factor for glass substrate demand. Today, they account for half of it and this isn't going to go away! Going into the last bear market, Corning was a growth story and trading at exorbitant valuations. This time around, it is a classic value play. It's in a much better position from the point of view of debt and profitability, as well and look at it's tangible book value. Can its stock drop further? Sure. Will it go to $1? There are certainly people out there looking at the charts and thinking about it. From the fundamentals view point, it is highly unlikely, though.

      On Nov 03 11:56 AM JackaLoupe wrote:

      > How out-of-it do you have to be to characterize Corning--the inventor
      > of FiberOptics that rode that wave of cross-country (and ocean) laying
      > of cable a decade ago--as so-called "low tech" company about to go
      > out of business? He must be confusing the company with the stock--while,
      > moreover, remaining clueless over the rest of Corning's business.

      Try reading my blog more carefully. I characterized Corning as "Corning is an amazingly agile 157 year old company that most of us still remember as brand name housewares low tech company that during the last recession seemed destined to go out of business. Today's Corning is that no more, but a completely transformed high tech powerhouse, a leading maker of glass substrates used by the electronics industry and fiber optic equipment used by the telecommunications industry, with an important environmental technologies business, a profitable life sciences business, as well as additional small, but promising businesses."

      It is a former low tech cookware company. It brilliantly transformed itself into a high tech company. Following that transformation it lost money for almost 4 straight years and certainly in 2002 was looking destined to go out of business, trading as low as $1.1/share. So, what's your beef?
      Nov 10 10:12 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
    • Time to Start Nibbling on Corning
      You have valid criticisms. My contention is that the margin compression currently built into the stock price is much greater than reasonable. I expect Corning to handily beat its lowest 2009 earnings expectation of $1.30 and trade at a P/E of 12 or better once markets stabilize (i.e. at least 50% upside from my purchase price).

      On Nov 03 07:07 AM skwestorange wrote:

      > This article could be strengthened with a discussion of expectations
      > for revenue, earnings and and margins in the three businesses cited.
      > The qualitative discussion does not provide any objective support
      > for the contention that GLW is undervalued and could be bought here.
      > Further the article itself lays out the case for margin compression.
      Nov 03 08:22 am |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment |View article
    • ADM: The Way to Play the Agriculture Commodities Game
      Yes, Ethanol was certainly the story on this stock two years ago. Cramer along with other TV Stock Evangelist Pundits (all big momentum players) were pumping up ADM based on this story. But ADM is so much more than ethanol. It is also biodiesel, alcohol and most importantly food.

      I wouldn't fret over fuel prices dropping recently. Ethanol is a gas additive mandated by law to reduce pollution in many states. Renewable fuels are also mandated by the U.S. Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007. Retail prices of biofuels are only very loosely tied to the price of oil based fuels. They are much more a function of government imposed demand and input costs.

      Today, corn is the input of choice for ethanol production and ADM has access to plenty of corn at the same prices as last year (they hedge). If corn goes out of favor, it would be relatively easy for them to convert production to other renewable inputs, like switch grass.

      The bottom line is, when you can pick up such a quality stock at its tangible asset value, you do it!
      Sep 19 14:28 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
    • Capitalize on Water Shortages With Grain ETFs
      John, much of the wheat grown in the US and practically all of the wheat grown in Kansas and Colorado is dry land farming - no irrigation whatsoever. Not that this takes away from the global water shortage, but just to keep the facts straight...
      Sep 19 00:44 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
    • Valero Energy: The Price of Oil
      This is all fine and good, except that the assumptions are so out of the blue that the resulting conclusion on how low oil can fall is worthless!

      Why nor take a more analytical approach by first looking at oil appreciation in terms of a basket of currencies, then build real worldwide oil supply and demand curves and use those to estimate price change contribution due to this. The result translated back into $ would give you a much better estimate of the equilibrium price of oil without with speculation factor removed. Yes, it is much more work, but the result will at least be believable...
      Jun 12 03:10 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
    • GE: Nuclear Growth Galore
      SF123,

      Thank you for your price update on the cost of Nuclear Power Plants. Unfortunately, the article does not mention how these costs break down and it is not clear whether these costs include real estate, regulatory process, time value of money and etc. It is also unclear what portion of the FPL Group's $12 billion estimate for a GE power plant would go to GE. My article assumed that GE can benefit to the tune of $5 billion a quarter in revenue over the long term from new nuclear power plant design ins. This still appears to be a valid assumption, based on this article. Here is a link: online.wsj.com/article...
      May 27 18:55 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
    • JPMorgan, Bear Stearns: More Smoke from Wall Street
      The reason that Bear Stearns didn't get rescued through an open credit window is because it was too far gone at that point and arranging a shotgun wedding with JPMorgan - Chase was the least expensive, most efficient, quick and sure way to return confidence and prevent a disaster. The Fed really impressed me with this one.
      May 24 03:07 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
    • Two Great American Companies
      This week Brady Corporation announced better than expected results and improved outlook. Its stock completed the first leg of its ascend to a previous high. I took this opportunity to lighten my exposure to the US stock markets, by getting out of BRC on Friday, May 23rd, 2008 at $36.59. My gain is 19.5% (including the April dividend payment and excluding commissions) in just 4 1/2 months.
      May 24 02:36 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
    • O Canada, O EnCana (duh!)
      One other thing that you better learn quickly is not to get too greedy and lock in your gains once the risk outweighs the potential reward.

      I realize that the "miserable" Q1 performance is expected to be short term. Whatever the excuse, whether paper loss or operational, the company still didn't post the numbers as expected. There is a large downside risk, if they miss again for whatever reason. And as gas and oil prices continue to skyrocket, consumers in North America are cutting back. I am convinced that EnCana businesses will not be able to grow as fast as expected.

      Thus, this was the right time for me to lock in the gains.

      Regarding taxes, the break is for incomes under $65,100, for joint filers. Because of our particular situation, I anticipate that almost all of our income this year will come from capital gains and my intention is to take gains only up to this limit.

      Hope this clarifies things.

      P.S. I enjoy writing about my personal stock selections. My goal is to produce readable and interesting pieces. However, I do not do complete brain dumps or full stock analysis and have no interest in inducing anyone to buy or sell stocks.
      May 20 03:29 am |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment |View article
    • Buying CurrencyShares Canadian Dollar ETF as Loonie Falls Below Dollar
      My crystal ball tells me that under the right circumstances, i.e. additional lowering of interest rates, Obama winning presidential election, and etc. S&P 500 will finish the year in the positive territory, in which case 2009 will be disastrous.

      In either case, price inflation will migrate from the wholesale level to the retail level on a much bigger scale. This will not translate into wage inflation, and the consumer will get squeezed 'till it really hurts.

      This will cause a bigger than ever anticipated default rate by consumers on credit cards, which will cause a major market decline across the board (30%+ is quite possible). I think various actions by the Congress and the Fed could delay this past year end, but I do not think that anything that they do (perhaps, short of switching from a market economy to a planned economy) can avoid it in 2009.

      But that's just my crystal ball...
      May 19 06:32 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
    • A Few Reasons to Buy Yen
      BobL,

      Not that this has any relevance to Japan and Yen, but to set the record straight, I have never poisoned any rabbits. I wrote a couple of Bugs Bunny type of short stories, were I cast myself in the role of Elmer Fudd.

      Thanks,
      Jake
      P.S. Send my best regards to Ken. He would never ask you to post this, if it was a matter of "3 people"...
      May 12 13:27 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article
    • A Few Reasons to Buy Yen
      Dear BobL,

      First of all, I would like to thank you for thoroughly studying my blog on odessapage.com/new (even if your goal was to twist my words around). Once again, I would like to remind you that I do not recommended anything to anyone. YTD, I have, in fact, saw some opportunities and purchased Brady (up 10% as of this writing), Pentair (up 19%), GE (down 3%) and added to my Cigna position (down 11% on the added portion and up overall), among others. I have also opined that JP Morgan stock price will benefit at the expense of Bear Stearns. It did significantly the day after I wrote that article, but I did not purchase it, because my Fisher Investments portfolio had too many financials in it as it was, even though JPM was not one of them. Both of my recent currency trades are also up since purchase. This year I have also sold PDS at a more than 35% profit, which I held for 5 months, KG, which went up almost 16% in 6 days that I held it. In this portfolio, so far this year, I am comfortably beating the S&P 500, as I also did last year. I have also gotten rid of 17 of the 69 stocks that Fisher Investment purchased for the account they were managing.

      As far as the run up in stocks over the past two months, even with that S&P 500 is still down 12% since its peak in September. Now, please keep in mind, that my basic strategy is to buy on dips of individual high quality stocks in the "right" industries and sell those stocks when they run up. Thus being a net seller is mostly a function of the stocks I have bought having reached my targets for them and not seeing as many opportunities for new buys.

      Now, as far as my two tongue and cheek writings about the rabbits - I don't expect everyone to understand or enjoy my humor and to read everything that I write. There are sufficient number of others who "get it" and enjoy it!

      Thanks,
      Jake
      P.S. Please allow me to simply ignore your silly comments on the article that you did not read, because it was "too long."
      May 09 13:13 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment |View article

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