VIX Looks to Rise

Fear, and maybe even some loathing of politicians, is increasingly evident in the financial market. The investor’s fear gauge, the Chicago Board Options Exchange’s Market Volatility Index (VIX), is trading in ways that suggests investors think stock prices will decline, and VIX will increase.

In an emblematic trade, an investor bought about 15,000 December 30 calls, a position that will increase in value should VIX remain elevated.

Last week, VIX had its second largest percentage drop for the year on Thursday, only to have its largest percentage increase (24%) on Friday. VIX ended the week above 30 for the first time since July 7.

These erratic VIX swings portend volatile stock trading. The erratic movements even have some investors questioning if the buy-the-dip trend is now broken. VIX was recently down just below 29. “It
contnues to feel like selling rallies is now in vogue while risk reduction remains the popular theme,” Jefferries’ derivatives straetgists advised clients Tuesday.

Hedging to preserve year-to-date gains, rather than looking for ways to make money, is emerging as the main theme in the options market. Take heed, stock investors.

– Steven Sears, Barrons.com options guru

Post-Earnings CEO Interview With Bradley Jacobs Of XPO Logistics

In an article published Wednesday morning, I looked at the positives and negatives from XPO Logistics' (XPO) most recent quarter. I noted that the company's CEO Bradley Jacobs and his team were making all the right moves for long-term growth, but may not be providing the immediate gratification that investors in a volatile market seek. Overall, I was encouraged by the company's strategy, for long-term growth, but felt as though the company must become more aggressive in acquisitions to maintain the confidence of investors.

Following the XPO article that was published post-earnings, I was fortunate enough to speak with Jacobs and Scott Malat, the senior VP of strategic planning. I was given this opportunity to clarify and address some of the operational issues from the company's most recent earnings report, from an investor's perspective. We discussed a wide range of topics, which include: guidance, acquisitions, and cold starts. Below is a summary of the conversation that took place.

XPO Logistics Q4 highlights:

  • revenue up 6.4% year-over-year $44.1 million
  • gross margin $7.2 million up 11.6% over 2010
  • net loss $1.5 million compared to a gain of $820,000 in the year prior.
  • EPS (0.27) compared to 0.10 year-over-year


The single largest issue for investors is not the company's revenue but rather the lack of acquisitions and the high costs associated with building this billion dollar company. I asked Jacobs about expectations and when investors can expect to achieve profitability. He responded by saying:

"We are only giving guidance on revenue. We are trying to see how the cold starts and acquisitions unfold. The acquisitions will result in sizable revenue but with cold starts it's a much slower process."

The first area of focus for XPO Logistics has been to find and hire an experienced executive team that could aid in long-term growth. But now that the executive team has been put into place, I asked Jacobs, what can investors expect next?

Jacobs responded by saying, "we have three next steps." He added,

"We want to keep rolling out cold starts because they are great investments off capital with long-term growth potential. Another area is to optimize the businesses we already own. And as acquisitions come along we must buy companies that are scalable and that have the potential to grow."

He went on to say, "the IT platform is critical and gives us the ability to supply and integrate companies as well."

The company's strategic plan revolves around growth through acquisitions and cold starts. So far, there has been one truck brokerage cold start in Phoenix, Ariz. and a second location scheduled to open in April. In addition, the company also added three freight forwarding locations in Newark, Charlotte, and Atlanta. The company operates in three segments and posted a year-over-year gain in all but one of its segments: the freight forwarding business. I asked Jacobs about the outlook for freight forwarding and why he is choosing to focus on freight forwarding when it's the company's only declining business.

Sometimes when you are in a battle it's best not to retreat. Our freight forwarding unit is a $70 million business in a $150 billion industry.

But we plan for the majority of our acquisitions to be in truck brokerage.

We could eventually become the second- or third-largest player with acquisitions and cold starts in truck brokerage. We are building the company for the long-term and believe this industry has the best potential.

After hearing his response I wanted him to elaborate on how the company plans to become so large. Therefore, I asked him about specific numbers, and how many truck brokerage cold starts the company plans for each given year. Jacobs responded by saying,

In absolutes we want 20 cold starts in truck brokerage over the next five years. Our goal is to have 5 new brokerage locations by the end of 2012 but the number depends on the number of quality people that we can find.

After discussing cold starts we turned our attention back to acquisitions, which is the primary area of interest for investors. In regards to the company's lack of acquisition activity, Jacobs said, "It's not a board game where you just move pieces and make it work. After you buy them you have to integrate and optimize them. We now have the accounting and finance team in place and present to move forward with this plan. But you must have the pieces in place for acquisitions to be successful"

The difference between cold starts and acquisitions is a discussion among investors. We want to know what level of revenue can be expected from the large number of cold starts that are expected. Therefore I asked him to take me inside the process of a cold start and its growth; more specifically to explain the level of growth that is expected from a particular location.

The success of a cold start depends on the location, some will do better than others. But on average we hope for $5 to $10 million in the first 12 months. But when you scale over a period of five years we expect $50 to $100 million. And to give you an idea of profits, on EBITDA, we want 5-7% over a five year period. Our Bounce brokerage was a cold start and went from $0 to $30 million in three-and-a-half years.

To conclude I wanted to talk about the much anticipated IT platform. The company has put a significant amount of emphasis on this platform and its importance for future growth. As a result, I wanted to know why it's so important and asked Jacobs if the IT platform will initiate aggressive growth and if it's needed to achieve this level of growth. He responded,

Not having this IT platform has held us back. We are going to customize the platform for expedite but in freight forwarding the system has been okay.

Jacobs then went on to talk about the Bounce system:

The Bounce people have not been using the right system. In Bounce, the new IT is an advantage because the current one is too slow, so the added speed will give significant improvements and allow for organization and the integration of new cold starts and acquisitions.

Jacobs finished by saying the company's five year goal of several billion dollars in revenue is realistic. He said that the company's ahead of schedule with IT, has built its executive team, and is improving the results of the operations. He made it very clear that the company has laid out investments to scale the business to a larger level and that the company is in active discussions with potential acquisitions.

As of now, investors can deal with quarters of loss, if it increases the possibility of the company reaching its billion dollar goal. The largest single interest for investors is acquisitions and cold starts; therefore investors should feel confident in Jacobs' final remark:

We have a prioritized list, and there are 50-60 companies that are potentially actionable with billions in revenue, we are focusing on the best of these.

As an investor this gives me reason to be optimistic.

This interview has been edited for length, grammar, clarity, readability and syntax.

Disclosure: I am long XPO.

The Best Canadian Dividend Stocks

As a dividend growth investor, I typically hold mostly U.S.-based dividend stocks. There are several reasons behind that, which I outlined in this article on the best international dividend stocks. Another reason why I hold U.S.-based multinationals has been outlined in this article.

Canadian dividend stocks seem to be having characteristics that make them similar to their U.S. counterparts. First, most Canadian stocks pay a regular distribution every quarter. Second, most Canadian blue chips pay a stable or rising dividend. This is unlike most European companies for example, which typically target a payout ratio based off earnings. Last, U.S. investors get 15% of their Canadian dividend income withheld at the source. At tax time, however, US investors get an offsetting credit against this tax withholding in taxable accounts. So the net effect is zero for most high-income investors.

In order to find the best Canadian dividend stocks, I obtained a list of Canadian Dividend Achievers. These are Canadian companies, that have increased dividends for the past five or more consecutive years.

I then screened the list based off my entry criteria:

1. Dividend Yield of at least 2.50%
2. P/E Ratio below 20
3. Dividend Payout Ratio less than 60%

Only one of these stocks is traded on the NYSE, and the rest are traded on the OTC market. The symbols used above also include the ones for the Toronto Stock Exchange.

On a side note, I was surprised that none of the Canadian banks appeared on this screen. Despite the fact that the Canadian banks such as Bank of Montreal (NYSE:BMO), Toronto-Dominion Bank (NYSE:TD), Royal Bank of Canada (NYSE:RY), Bank of Nova Scotia (NYSE:BNS) and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (NYSE:CM) were not affected by the financial crisis of 2007 – 2009, they did freeze dividends for almost 2 years. Chances are however, that within a few short years, these companies will be able to build another streak of consecutive dividend increases.

Full disclosure: Long TD. For more information visit DividendGrowthInvestor.com

Not Much Pay For Investors In VeriFone Stock Thursday

VeriFone Systems, Inc. (PAY), based in San Jose, California, designs, markets and services a transaction automation system that facilitates electronic payments between consumers, merchants and financial institutions. VeriFone reported earnings yesterday (Wednesday) after the close. Shortly after the earnings report, Doug Bergeron, the company’s CEO; Doug Reed, the Treasurer and V.P. of Investor Relations; and the company’s CFO Bob Dykes held a conference call (see complete transcript here).

VeriFone beat the earnings per share estimate and met revenue guidance, not something done a lot lately. The problem is VeriFone did commit one of the greatest Wall St. sins: The forward guidance provided by the company is not as splendid as Wall St. was looking for, sending shares down sharply. The really interesting thing is that the shares didn’t fall in price right away. In after-hours trading Wednesday, VeriFone bounced around the day’s closing price both higher and lower -- not a strong sign of weakness overall. In fact, VeriFone opened up today above $41 per share before selling off for the rest of the day. Clearly some investors liked what VeriFone reported and even after the initial digestion of information, put in buy orders for the opening today.

So what happened between the earnings report, the conference call, the opening trade today, and the rest of the day today to send the stock down so sharply? Let’s go over the earnings report, and conference call, to see if we can find what changed the opinion so sharply today.

For fourth quarter fiscal 2011, VeriFone reported revenue of $410.7 million (up almost 50% year-over-year) and up almost 30% from the previous quarter. Even so, North American sales were actually down year-over-year about 5%. Given the large increase in sales, I believe the slight fall in North America is totally discounted in light of the economy. Of course if North America isn’t producing, International is with an increase of 95% year-over-year. Brazil reported the strongest of Latin America, and Latin America set a new sales record.

Gross margins were mixed, with the most recent reporting quarter dropping slightly to 40% from last quarter’s 43%. At the same time, fiscal year 2011 beat 2010 with 42% compared to 39%. Basically, all the numbers are respectable and as I dug deeper I didn’t see any flashing lights of warning.

Guidance is the tough spot and while VeriFone is trading at a lofty trailing PE multiple of 25, the forward PE multiple is about 13. If I use the now trading price of about $37.30 and use the lower end of the fiscal year 2012 guidance of $2.53 net income per diluted share I still come up with a forward guidance of only 14.7.

For a company with consistent top and bottom line growth, a multiple of less than 15 is appears to be really cheap. Not only is 14.7 cheap for a company like VeriFone near term, but longer term it even becomes more of a value buy, considering the next quarter and next year will incur investment costs with the “Point” acquisition which is expected to close very soon.

By the end of today’s trading VeriFone traded down over 9% to settle at $36.80 near the low of the day. Unfortunately from my experience, when a stock gets crushed this much after earnings, it can take a day or two before the bleeding stops. As a result, I expect VeriFone to more likely than not trade lower again Friday. If VeriFone trades lower and falls into the sub $35 range I will look to open up a position. I will be watching the January $35 strike put options to short for about $2 each. If exercised, I will have a cost basis of about $33 per share. This gives me a forward PE multiple of about 10. I consider buying VeriFone or most any other growth stock for a multiple of 10 a very good value buy. If I am able to sell the put options and they do not get exercised due to the price staying above $35 during option expiration day, I will have a very respectable return of over 5.5%. Another way to gain exposure to VeriFone is a buy-write. Buy the stock and write a call January $35 call which should pay off slightly better due to the increase in premium and possibly from added liquidity of trading a call option (although puts tend to trade equal or higher volumes than call options when a stock is falling quickly).

I use a proprietary blend of technical analysis, financial crowd behavior, and fundamentals in my short-term trades, and while not totally the same in longer swing trades to investments, the concepts used are similar. You may want to use this article as a starting point of your own research with your financial planner. I use Seeking Alpha, Edgar Online, and Yahoo Finance for most of my data. I use the confirmed symbols from earnings.com that I believe to be of the most interest.

Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, but may initiate a long position in PAY over the next 72 hours.

5 Commodity Stocks Moving On News

It was a very rough day for our portfolio yesterday, but the one bright spot was that we have been right and continue to be right in regards to natural gas and coal. Having waited to move into those two was the correct call and has saved us some further pain. Oil remains strong, while some oil E&P plays have begun to reflect market fears rather than the reality of the situation. So this morning we look to initiate a trade in that area with a tight stop. We feel that this is now a stock picker's market, and that we must now pick our spots rather than entire industries at a time.

Oil & Natural Gas

Chesapeake (CHK) had a very rough day yesterday, and although it started off poorly it seemed to get worse as the conference call proceeded during trading. Shares closed at $16.74 falling by $2.86 (14.59%) to close at the lows for the day. Volume was over 146 million shares and it is fair to say the computers got a hold of this one playing the penny game. The call was not all that bad, but some questions were raised. Going forward it is apparent that the company is going to really focus on the Eagleford, Utica and Mississippi shale plays. That should be good as those three shales have great economics, but being unhedged on the natural gas side is really going to hurt moving forward. It will be interesting to see how the company plays that moving forward, but the story behind the hedges coming off was interesting.

SandRidge Energy (SD) took a beating yesterday, and it was a guilty by association type of day. Shares fell $0.77/share (9.60%) to close at $7.25 which was, on the bright side, off of the day's lows. The shares fell as low as $7/share and then had a very strong bounce at the close. Volume was up many times over, and finished at 47 million. Ward being involved with the hedge fund may be one thing, however we think that the shares have been hit without much merit and would initiate a position here, if only for trading purposes. It is not a great market to do so in, but the value appears to be there.

Regarding Cheniere Energy (LNG) this morning, earnings apparently were not yesterday. Two of the sites we use, as well as others, had the date listed as we reported but the company stated that they will have earnings out by week's end. This is the way it is when company's do not have real earnings to report, but just wanted to alert anyone who may have been wondering what was going on in regards to this topic.

Coal

Arch Coal (ACI) reported yesterday and got whacked. They still had positive earnings, but analysts came out afterwards and guided down for the year and adjusted to a loss. The shares hit a new 52-week low on 26 million shares traded. Both Moody's and Fitch downgraded debt ratings due to the future outlook provided by the company. One big issue is that the company reported that there is severe weakness in the US thermal coal markets. You can read the entire earnings call transcript here.

Uranium

Cameco (CCJ) was up about 3% yesterday with 4.5 million shares traded which these days is a lot for the uranium miner. Far fewer shares than used to be traded, but interest will pick up here as 2012 winds down and investors become aware of the outlook for uranium and uranium producers. Prices will rise and the supply/demand gap will be reversed. There will be more demand than supply in the next few years and that is a fact - so long as the Russians follow through with the game plan. The transcript can be found here for the earnings they reported on May 1st.

Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, but may initiate a long position in SD over the next 72 hours.

AIG, Berkshire Pros Join Forces: Deals to Watch

Dan H. Jester, a U.S. Treasury official that worked on the American International Group(AIG) bailout and Joseph Brandon a former chief executive of General Re are said by the New York Times and Insurance Insider to be making a bid for insurance company Transatlantic Holdings(TRH).

Earlier in September, Transatlantic rejected a merger with Allied World Assurance and sale talks with Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B) ended leaving Validus Holdings(VR) as the only current bidder for the New York- based insurer with a market cap of roughly $3 billion. Validus made a hostile $2.96 billion bid for Transatlantic in July. On Monday, Transatlantic said it had started discussions with a third party about a sale.

See if (AIG) is in our portfolio

Jester, a key official who worked under Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. in the A.I.G bailout and the wider efforts that Treasury made during the heat of the financial crisis, was also a banker at Goldman Sachs(GS) prior to his public sector work. Brandon was CEO of General Re, a company owned by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway from 2000 until 2008, and was seen to be a candidate to take over for Buffett if he were to retire. Brandon resigned from General Re after the Securities and Exchanges Commission pursued charges against General Re and American International Group executives over transactions to hide losses. Brandon was never personally charged by the SEC.It is still to be seen what Jester and Brandon's bid for Transatlantic will be. Transatlantic shares are up 1.16% to $49 a share in pre-market trading.Axa Group, the French insurer said that it was looking into strategic options for its private equity business, a sign of a potential sale. A sale of the unit would be a change in strategy for the insurance giant with over 200,000 employees globally and annual revenue of more than $100 billion. Previously the insurer had been building up its private equity capabilities. It bought a private equity portfolio from Citigroup(C) this summer for $1.7 billion and a $1.9 billion portfolio from Bank of America(BAC) in 2010. Axa's private equity division is based in Paris and has roughly $27 billion in investor assets under its management. It invests money for pension funds, sovereign wealth funds and Axa assets by taking stakes in European buyout funds, mid-cap companies and infrastructure projects, according to Bloomberg.

On Wednesday, Bloomberg reported that KKR(KKR), the private equity firm founded by Henry Kravis, is one of the potential bidders for Axa's 15-year old private equity division valued at close to $680 million.

In a statement, the company said "The AXA Group has always been opportunistic in its approach to strategic transactions and will decide whether or not to pursue a transaction only after completion of the strategic review." It indicates the company management and board may have just begun looking at potential bids for the private equity arm.

KKR and other private equity companies like The Carlyle group have, in recent years, added private equity assets to manage as a business line in addition to their traditional expertise of buying controlling stakes in public and private companies.Readers Also Like: 10 Stocks That May Outperform Through 201110 Best-Performing S&P 500 Stocks of 2011

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Google Invests $200M in Asia Data Centers

Google(GOOG) plans to build three of its own data centers in Asia with an investment of more than $200 million.

The data centers will be in Singapore, Taiwan and Hong Kong. Google has acquired land in each country. These would be Google's first fully-owned data centers in the Asia-Pacific region, according to The Wall Street Journal. The company currently owns and operates six data centers across the U.S., one in Finland and one in Belgium.

See if (GOOG) is in our portfolio

The move by the search giant comes as Internet traffic grows in the Asia-Pacific region. -- Written by Joseph Woelfel>To submit a news tip, send an email to: tips@thestreet.com.

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With Icahn Lurking, Mentor Graphics Adopts Holder Rights Plan

Mentor Graphics (MENT) this morning announced that its board has adopted a shareholder rights plan, in a move obviously in response to the increasingly large stake in the company held by investor Carl Icahn. This week, he lifted his holdings in the electronic design automation software company to 9.5%.

Mentor is issuing one “incentive stock purchase right” for each common share held as of July 6. The company said the rights are intended to “protect the company and to allow all of the company’s shareholders to realize the long-term value of their investment in the company,” but that it is “not intended to prevent a sale of control of the company that is determined by the board of directors to be fair, advisable and in the best interests of all the Mentor Graphics shareholders.”

The rights will be exercisable if any investor without board approval acquires 15% or more of the company’s common stock, or announced a tender offer for 15% or more of the stock. The rights entitle holders of the stock to buy more stock at a 50% discount – but rights held by the person triggering the rights would not be exercisable.

MENT is up 3 cents, at $9.28.

Get the message, Carl?

Are We Going to See Another Stock Market Correction?

With the persistence of European debt woes and recent increases in market volatility, could we be ready for another correction? One thing to consider is the S&P 500's performance relative to other similar indexes. Michael Jarman of H20 Markets told CNBC that the UK's FTSE 100 index generally shadows the S&P 500, but has only returned 3.5% during the first quarter, while the S&P 500 returned around 12%.

Marc Faber, editor and publisher of the Gloom, Boom and Doom Report, believes we will face another correction, or perhaps a bear market. In contrast, another strategist claimed that the bull market should continue, while George Gober of Matterly Asset Management said that the S&P 500's outperformance is likely due to Apple's (Nasdaq: AAPL  ) phenomenal increases. He also added that U.S. economic data has been better than anywhere else in the world.

However, the Labor Department announced that only 120,000 jobs were created in March, which marks the smallest increase since October, and came in lower than the expected 200,000 jobs. Unemployment fell to a three-year low in March to 8.2%.

Business section: Investing ideas
For a look at stocks that may hold strong in another correction, we're listing companies that have gained over 20% in the past quarter with encouraging trends from DuPont analysis. Do you think these stocks will continue moving higher?

List sorted by market cap. (Click here to access free, interactive tools to analyze these ideas.)

1. Apple: Designs, manufactures, and markets personal computers, mobile communication and media devices, and portable digital music players, and sells related software, services, peripherals, networking solutions, and third-party digital content and applications worldwide. It has a market cap of $583.85 billion. The stock has gained 47.95% over the past quarter. MRQ net profit margin at 28.2% vs. 22.45% y/y. MRQ sales/assets at 0.334 vs. 0.308 y/y. MRQ assets/equity at 1.54 vs. 1.587 y/y.

2. Las Vegas Sands (NYSE: LVS  ) : Develops and operates various integrated resort properties primarily in the United States, Macau, and Singapore. It has a market cap of $44.40 billion. The stock has gained 38.74% over the past quarter. MRQ net profit margin at 17.11% vs. 16.15% y/y. MRQ sales/assets at 0.114 vs. 0.096 y/y. MRQ assets/equity at 2.833 vs. 2.937 y/y.

3. CA Technologies (NYSE: CA  ) : Designs, develops, markets, delivers, licenses, and supports information technology management software products that operate on a range of hardware platforms and operating systems. It has a market cap of $12.45 billion. The stock has gained 27.47% over the past quarter. MRQ net profit margin at 20.82% vs. 17.48% y/y. MRQ sales/assets at 0.107 vs. 0.096 y/y. MRQ assets/equity at 2.058 vs. 2.176 y/y.

4. Terra Nitrogen Company (NYSE: TNH  ) : Produces and distributes nitrogen fertilizer products to agricultural and industrial customers. It has a market cap of $5.04 billion. The stock has gained 52.17% over the past quarter. MRQ net profit margin at 64.58% vs. 46.05% y/y. MRQ sales/assets at 0.668 vs. 0.482 y/y. MRQ assets/equity at 1.117 vs. 1.413 y/y.

5. Thomas & Betts: Designs, manufactures, and markets electrical components for industrial, construction, and utility markets in the United States, Canada, and Europe. It has a market cap of $3.75 billion. The stock has gained 24.09% over the past quarter. MRQ net profit margin at 9.42% vs. 7.51% y/y. MRQ sales/assets at 0.214 vs. 0.202 y/y. MRQ assets/equity at 1.762 vs. 1.795 y/y.

6. Solutia (NYSE: SOA  ) : Engages in the manufacture and marketing of performance materials and specialty chemicals used in a range of consumer and industrial applications. It has a market cap of $3.41 billion. The stock has gained 58.25% over the past quarter. MRQ net profit margin at 10.27% vs. 9.61% y/y. MRQ sales/assets at 0.149 vs. 0.138 y/y. MRQ assets/equity at 3.837 vs. 4.832 y/y.

7. Ascena Retail Group: Operates as a specialty retailer of apparel for women and tween girls in the United States and Puerto Rico. It has a market cap of $3.27 billion. The stock has gained 26.26% over the past quarter. MRQ net profit margin at 7.39% vs. 5.65% y/y. MRQ sales/assets at 0.449 vs. 0.437 y/y. MRQ assets/equity at 1.528 vs. 1.573 y/y.

8. ZOLL Medical: Develops, manufactures, and markets resuscitation devices and related software solutions worldwide. It has a market cap� of $2.07 billion. The stock has gained 37.99% over the past quarter. MRQ net profit margin at 4.96% vs. 3.45% y/y. MRQ sales/assets at 0.281 vs. 0.257 y/y. MRQ assets/equity at 1.288 vs. 1.374 y/y.

9. Darling International: Provides rendering, recycling, and recovery solutions to the food industry worldwide. It has a market cap of $1.94 billion. The stock has gained 20.57% over the past quarter. MRQ net profit margin at 6.85% vs. 4.41% y/y. MRQ sales/assets at 0.304 vs. 0.164 y/y. MRQ assets/equity at 1.54 vs. 2.977 y/y.

10. SS&C Technologies Holdings: Provides software products and software-enabled services to the financial service providers worldwide. It has a market cap of $1.74B. The stock has gained 24.19% over the past quarter. MRQ net profit margin at 13.86% vs. 10.66% y/y. MRQ sales/assets at 0.079 vs. 0.067 y/y. MRQ assets/equity at 1.232 vs. 1.488 y/y.

Interactive Chart: Press Play to compare changes in analyst ratings over the last two years for the stocks mentioned above. Analyst ratings sourced from Zacks Investment Research.



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Coffee ETN (JO) At New 52-Week Lows, Food And Beverage (PBJ) Near Highs

The iPath DJ-UBS Coffee Subindex TR ETN (JO) is a single-commodity tracker that currently consists of one futures contract on the commodity of coffee. JO is down 50% since September.

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Granted, I wouldn’t expect to pay 50% less for my cup of caffeine simply because the beans are cheap. Yet I might expect some of our most beloved establishments to pass on a tiny bit of savings, if only due to price wars with competitors.

As far as I can tell, however, none of the food giants have reduced retail coffee prices. Might the higher margins help the upcoming earnings prospects for the likes of McDonald's (MCD), Starbucks (SBUX) and Yum Brands (YUM)?

There are two ETFs with large exposure to restaurants, including PowerShares Dynamic Food & Beverage (PBJ) and PowerShares Dynamic Leisure and Entertainment (PEJ). I recently wrote about the latter. (Review “3 Dynamic ETFs For A Risk-Off World.”)

Both PBJ and PEJ have fared relatively well during the May-June market swoon. The former is roughly 2% below the late April peak, while the latter is down a more noticeable 6.5%. Even PEJ’s slide is a bit better than the broader U.S. market.

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Clearly, the declining cost of coffee beans (and the stable price of coffee drinks) may not be enough to justify a “dynamic” purchase. Nevertheless, I am keeping both investments on a “watch list.”

As for what I continue to own and continue to hold for clients at my Registered Investment Adviser, Pacific Park Financial, Inc., it’s still about the yield spreads over comparable treasuries. iShares High Yield Corporate Bond (HYG), iShares Preferred (PFF), iShares Mortgage REITs (REM) and iShares High Dividend Equity (HDV) figure prominently. In fact, HDV hit a new 52-week high today.

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Disclosure: Gary Gordon, MS, CFP is the president of Pacific Park Financial, Inc., a Registered Investment Adviser with the SEC. Gary Gordon, Pacific Park Financial, Inc, and/or its clients may hold positions in the ETFs, mutual funds, and/or any investment asset mentioned above. The commentary does not constitute individualized investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities. At times, issuers of exchange-traded products compensate Pacific Park Financial, Inc. or its subsidiaries for advertising at the ETF Expert web site. ETF Expert content is created independently of any advertising relationships.

How Low Will the Dow Go?

Yesterday, the U.S. dollar rose sharply following the Fed announcement that they would buy $400 billion of long-term Treasurys and sell short-term Treasurys. But the impact of the new quantitative easing plan, which The Street calls �Operation Twist,� was a broad-based, high-volume sell-off in stocks and commodities.

As the Fed wished, long-term bond prices rose sharply, driving the yields on the 10-year bond down to 1.871%. But investor confidence was shaken badly by the divided decision of the board as three members dissented.�

Volume on the NYSE rose to 1.2 billion shares and decliners outpaced advancers by almost 5-to-1 on both the Big Board and the Nasdaq.

The impact on the two major Dow indices, the industrials and the transports, was clear. Both smashed through their 20-day moving averages after turning away from the important 50-day moving averages. Now the challenge for the bulls is to hold these key indices above the reversal point of the industrials at 10,825 and the transports� lows at 4,205-4,208. A penetration of both would no doubt lead to another powerful sell-off.

While stocks were falling, the U.S. dollar, as represented by PowerShares DB US Dollar Index Bullish Fund (NYSE:UUP) was rising to a new high — putting pressure on emerging oil, which lost $1 per barrel late in the day, and sending the November light sweet crude contract to $85.92.�

And coal, as represented by the Market Vectors Coal ETF (NYSE:KOL), broke a triple-bottom on high volume and appears headed much lower. The impact of lower coal prices will no doubt impact the railroad stocks, and thus, the transportation index, since rail contracts are based in part on the price of the commodity being carried. In response, the Dow Jones Transportation Index fell almost twice the amount of the industrials.

And emerging markets, as represented by the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index (NYSE:EEM), suffered a similar fate, also breaking through a triple-bottom as foreign currency markets were hard hit by the sudden strength of the dollar.

Conclusion: The lack of confidence in the Fed decision, which was preceded by a Congressional plea to the FOMC to not engage in further quantitative easing, puts enormous pressure on stocks. If stocks cannot hold at current levels and proceed to break the lows of the six-week bear flag, look for an explosive sell-off.

But don�t rush into the market on the opening on the short side. In such an emotionally charged situation, new lows could lead to bargain hunting and an afternoon rebound. If we get that rebound, it will be time to pounce since last summer�s low at Dow 9,700 is our downside target.

Goldcorp Remains An Essential Part Of Any Mining Portfolio

For those anticipating a mania in gold mining stocks -- and I count myself in that group -- Goldcorp (GG) is an essential part of such a portfolio, especially at its current prices. Consider the rationale:

1. With a market capitalization of greater than $36 billion at the time of this writing, as well as and EPS of 2.26 and a low beta of just 0.53, Goldcorp meets the criteria of being a stable, major producer. For those who are sensitive to the volatility of gold mining stocks but still want to participate in them cautiously -- and I would argue that a well-rounded mining portfolio will have some exposure to such rationale -- Goldcorp is a great fit. Its financials and its operations establish it as a "blue chip" gold stock, and thus a safe bet for those who do not want to dig too deep into stock picking but rather want to ride the euphoria anticipated to come to the mining sector.

2. The company's cost per ounce for Q3 2011 was reported to be $258 -- outstanding in comparison to many of its peers, who report numbers nearly twice that amount; in fact, a study conducted by Forbes showed that average cost per ounce for gold miners 2009 was $450, and rising. Such favorable production costs suggest Goldcorp will be able to maintain profitability -- even if gold prices were to continue falling. The company is currently issuing a dividend of $0.05 per share, which amounts currently to a yield of 1.20%. In light of its production costs, I suspect these numbers are easy to maintain and have much room to grow if the gold price appreciates significantly, which I suspect it will. For those looking for stocks with the potential to yield a nice dividend over the course of a bull market with years left to go, Goldcorp's current position looks quite favorable.

3. In terms of its current price, Goldcorp seems to be especially worth buying. Its current P/E ratio, still a metric I am always quick to look at, is just under 20; for a major producer in a growing sector, I find this to be acceptable. Of course, a fall of about 9% to its 200 week moving average just above $40 would be even better, and I would feel especially comfortable adding to my position at those prices.

Disclosure: I am long GG.

New Zealand Dollar: Come Back to Earth

In March, I wondered aloud about whether the New Zealand dollar might be the most overvalued currency in the world. Since then, it has continued its unlikely ascent, rising 10% on a correlation-weighted basis and 3% against the U.S. dollar, hitting a 26-year high in the process. While there are signs that the New Zealand economy might be able to withstand an expensive currency, at some point, the chickens must come back to roost.

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Surely the expensive kiwi must be wreaking havoc on the New Zealand dollar? "How is New Zealand supposed to rebalance its economy away from consumption, importing, borrowing and asset selling toward investment, production, exporting and asset buying when our currency is headed for record highs?" Wonders one commentator. In fact, exporters are coping just fine, and New Zealand just recorded its highest quarterly trade surplus on record. Never mind that this is due almost entirely to soaring prices for commodities and unflagging demand. In spite of two earthquakes and other related downside factors, the New Zealand economy is nonetheless forecast to grow by 2.3% in 2011.

On the other hand, New Zealand's current account deficit continues to rise, as foreign investors pour into New Zealand to make acquisitions, portfolio investment and loans to the government. New Zealand's largest dairy conglomerate could soon be sold to Chinese investors, while China's sovereign wealth fund (which manages a portion of the country's sprawling forex reserves) has announced plans to purchase a big chunk of New Zealand government debt. This is just as well, since a record 2011 budget deficit will require a significant issuance of new debt.

Meanwhile, New Zealand price inflation is currently 4.5%, which means that the country's real interest rate is -2%, certainly among the lowest in the world. Moreover, even as two-year inflation expectations tick up, rate hike expectations remain unchanged. The consensus is that the Reserve Bank of New Zealand will avoid hiking its benchmark until the first quarter of 2012. Regardless of what happens in the interim, it seems unlikely that Bank president Alan Bollard will give in, for fear of stoking further speculative interest in a currency that is already "undesirably high."

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Let's review: Record low interest rates and record low real interest rates. Record budget deficit. Large current account deficit. Declining expectations for GDP growth. Record high New Zealand dollar. Does anyone see a contradiction here? It's no wonder that the IMF recently speculated that the kiwi might be overvalued by as much as 20%, echoing the sentiments of yours truly.

At the same time, commentators concede that "The New Zealand dollar or any currency can deviate for a long period of time from academic measures of valuation." And that is why making fundamental bets on currencies is so difficult. Even if all signs point to down (as is basically the case here), a currency can continue rising for many more months, before suffering a massive correction. For what it's worth, this is the fate that the New Zealand dollar is resigned to. Whether it will happen tomorrow or next year, alas, will depend more on global macroeconomic factors (such as the ebb and flow of risk aversion) than on what happens in New Zealand.

Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.

Renters Beware: You Need to Buy Insurance Too

Sometimes, mistaking a myth for a fact can be extremely costly.

Take, for example, the myth that the only people who need to insure themselves against fires, floods or other disasters are homeowners.

Everyone realizes that a property owner needs an insurance policy, but many renters overlook the fact that they, too, need coverage.

"Some think that because the landlord has an umbrella policy, they don't need additional coverage," explains Susan Voss, president of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, the organization of insurance regulators. "Then there are college students who believe their parents' homeowners insurance covers their apartment."

"People somehow don't think about renters insurance because their home is not a house that they own," she says. They forget that while they may not own the building, they own the contents, and replacing them could be a major expense. Misconceptions about renters insurance can prove expensive when the unexpected happens. "A lot of the people in the recent tornadoes didn't have renters insurance," says Voss.

The number of renters is growing nationwide -- it's up more than 10% between 2004 and 2009, according to Traveler's Insurance -- and in today's economy, many of them might not be on the lookout for one more bill to add to their budgets. But this is one they can't afford to ignore, so forget the myths and go for the facts.

Not Buying Insurance for All the Wrong Reasons

In a recent survey by MetLife (MET) of people who didn't have renters insurance, 33% of respondents said they thought renters insurance was too expensive. Not sure where they were looking, or if they were just guessing. But, at $125 to $200 a year for a policy covering up to $25,000 of contents and $300,000 in liability protection, there's no need to crack your piggy bank, says to Jeffrey Zander, an independent insurance agent with Zander Insurance Group, You could spend that much on a couple of nights out on the town.

Nearly one-fourth of folks surveyed said they thought they were covered by the landlord's policy. Wrong again. The building is protected, but not your stuff. Furthermore, don't assume that if your roommate has a policy, that you're covered too.

Some 20% thought their personal property wasn't valuable enough to warrant insurance. Do the math. If you had to replace your entire wardrobe, furniture and more -- not to mention the cost temporarily moving somewhere else -- could you afford to? The costs add up. In fact, insurers say that the average person has $20,000 in possessions.

What's Covered, What's Not

What's important, is to know is what's covered by your policy and what isn't. Generally, a basic policy will cover clothing, furniture, computers, electronics and such. You can also get liability protection to protect you if someone is injured in your home. For items like antiques, expensive jewelry, firearms or special equipment, a separate rider might be necessary. Furthermore, some insurers such as Traveler's offer renters policies that cover you for a range of other issues: losses from credit card and check forgery; additional living expenses if you need to stay in a hotel after an incident, and the meals you have to eat out since you can't cook, among others.

While the circumstances under which you're covered varies, some examples include fire, lightning, windstorm or hail, freezing of plumbing system, ice, snow or sleet damage, and theft.

Be clear about what's not covered. For example, jewelry damaged in a fire would likely be covered, but if you simply lost your jewelry, it wouldn't, says Lisa Karpienski, renters insurance product manager for USAA.

Again, policies vary, but generally, causes of loss that are not covered are intentional loss, pollution, lead exposure, flood,
earthquake, and neglect, explains Mario Morales, manager of corporate underwriting for MetLife Auto & Home.

"USAA is unique in that our standard renters policy provides coverage for floods and earthquakes," points out Karpienski.

By the Numbers

As with any product or service, shop around for the best deals. Keep in mind that the higher the deductible you suck up, the lower your premium will be. You'll benefit too, if you bundle your policy with the same insurer that covers your car, for example. Having safety devices like a smoke detector can lower premiums.

You want to be sure your policy offers replacement value, meaning you'll get enough money to buy new stuff at today's prices, not yesteryear's.

Know what the property limits are of your policy, and whether items in your garage or a separate storage unit in your complex would be covered, adds Voss.

Lastly, don't leave your coverage level to guesswork. Valuables should be appraised so you have a basis for assessing their replacement costs. Also, keep receipts for big-ticket items.

Still wondering about renters insurance? There's really nothing to debate. You may not have purchased a home, but for a mere pittance, you can purchase peace of mind.

Why "the Crowd" is Wrong about American Airlines

"How do you make $1 million in the airline industry? Start with $2 million and know when to quit." As the economy drifts toward a possible recession, investors are increasingly scrutinizing balance sheets of major air carriers for signs of real trouble. Companies that carry too much debt can end up in bankruptcy court if sales fall and losses grow. Venerable names such as Braniff, Eastern, Pan Am, National, Midway and Aloha Airlines no longer exist after bumping up against a weak economy. That was precisely the logic behind my bearish call on AMR (NYSE: AMR), parent company of American Airlines, back in July. The mere perception of a bankruptcy scare is enough to spook investors. Shares have lost half their value since my bearish view two months ago, highlighted by a 33% drop on Monday, Oct. 3, alone. Investors are surely recalling the events of 2003, when AMR saw its stock slide to just $1.25 on the heels of a bankruptcy scare. AMR managed to avoid bankruptcy back then, and its shares moved back to $40 by 2007.   The good news: the chances of a bankruptcy are still remote, and this obvious short candidate may just be morphing into a long candidate with significant upside. Let me explain... How steep a drop? The question for AMR and its fellow airlines is a clear one: How would these firms fare if demand slumped and price wars kicked in? For carriers with relatively strong balance sheets, such as Southwest (NYSE: LUV) and JetBlue (Nasdaq: JBLU), rising losses can be tolerated for an extended period. For carriers that carry ample debt but also operate in a very low-cost manner -- such as Delta Airlines (NYSE: DAL) -- exposure to falling demand is also limited. AMR is stuck with the double whammy of high operating costs and a lot of debt. Yet a series of factors should swing in AMR's favor, helping it to avoid bankruptcy. For starters, AMR had been especially hard hit by rising fuel prices because it carries the thirstiest fleet in the business. Management has long talked of modernizing its fleet toward more fuel efficient planes, just as United Continental (NYSE: UAL) has, but limited financial firepower has crimped AMR's fleet upgrade plans. (The average age of an AMR plane is 14.8 years, compared to the industry average of 11.7 years. The older a plane, the less fuel-efficient it is likely to be.) Luckily for AMR, a global economic slowdown also means a drop in the price of jet fuel. AMR's balance sheet is also not quite as bad as the plunging stock price may indicate. The company has roughly $4 billion in unrestricted cash and about $3 billion in bonds coming due in the next two years. This implies the carrier can't burn more than $500 million in the next two years before bankruptcy concerns really start to bite. At first blush, AMR's financial picture seems awfully tenuous. Merrill Lynch forecasts the carrier will lose around $200 million in free cash flow for the rest of this year and another $350 million in 2012. By that logic, AMR's cash balance would move below $500 million by the end of next year, once upcoming tranches of debt are repaid. Increasingly, this looks like a worst case scenario. Instead, AMR is likely to extract better-than-expected concessions from its pilots and other labor associations, simply because few stakeholders have an interest in pushing the company into bankruptcy. Lower labor costs -- the carriers' second-largest expense after fuel -- will surely help. Moreover, Merrill Lynch's analysis doesn't incorporate falling fuel prices, and the recent drop in jet fuel is likely to save AMR nearly $100 million in 2012. (Fuel expenses account for 33% of estimated industry 2011 costs, up from 15% in 2000.) Lastly, current forecasts don't account for AMR's ability to simply shrink away from unprofitable routes, taking its most inefficient planes out of service. All about capacity It's that last factor that industry bears may be overlooking. A key theme of the recent airline industry rebound has been a tight grip on capacity. For example, the major carriers have been planning route cuts throughout this year, and total domestic industry capacity in 2012 should be close to 5% less than 2011. This means carriers will be less prone to vicious price wars to fill empty planes, as has been the case in the past. Revenue and yields (the percentage of seats filled) will surely drop if we go into recession, but not likely to the extent many fear.   Airline stocks are taking it on the chin these days, perhaps to an even greater extent than the broader market. If the economy stays flat or slips into only a mild or short-lived recession, then the current sell-off surely creates a compelling entry point for investors. The stock you find appealing should be based on your risk appetite. JetBlue, for example is low-risk because it has a strong balance sheet and its market value of $1.1 billion is well below its tangible book value of $1.7 billion. Delta carries more risk, thanks to nearly $15 billion in debt, but is also quite lean and better-equipped than most for lean times. As I noted a few months ago, this stock could rise sharply in a better economic picture. What about AMR? Well, as noted, the odds of an actual bankruptcy filing are still quite remote. And in the event industry pricing and crude oil prices stabilize, investors will start to take note that the carrier now trades for less than two times projected 2012 EBITDA. Indeed, AMR's stock likely has the greatest upside of any airline carrier, perhaps 300% or 400%, if the economy ends up back on a growth path in 2012 or 2013. The downside of course, is the stock could go to zero, so AMR is only suitable for investors with a high degree of risk tolerance. Risks to consider: What could go wrong? Plenty. Americans are still traveling -- for work and for pleasure -- but a deep or prolonged economic slowdown would boost the popularity of "staycations" and video-conferencing. Industry balance sheets are unlikely to be rocked in the near-term, but they can't really withstand losses that extend beyond four to six quarters. You need to calculate burn rates for these carriers and steer clear of any carrier that has less than 12 months of cash left based on current quarterly loss rates.

13 Companies Increasing Dividends

It was a massive week for corporate earnings, as dozens of high-profile companies told Wall Street how they performed in the third quarter. Big-cap market bellwethers such as Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and General Electric (NYSE:GE) disappointed, while Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) and McDonald�s (NYSE:MCD) bested expectations.

The market waxed and waned between bull and bear this week, as traders digested the competing earnings news. And in what has become a familiar exhortation during the past several months, word that European leaders are closer to agreeing on a deal to backstop Europe�s debt issues helped spur some buying. Against the backdrop of big earnings news and European debt discussions was a flood of companies increasing dividends. Here are 13 firms pumping out higher payouts to shareholders:

Barnes Group

Logistics services provider and aerospace components makers Barnes Group (NYSE:B) planned a flight for its quarterly dividend, increasing its payout by 25% to 10 cents per share. The new dividend is payable Dec. 9 to shareholders of record as of Nov. 30. The new dividend yield, based on the Oct. 20 closing price (the day Barnes announced the dividend) of $21.35, is 1.87%.

Brown & Brown

Insurance industry intermediary Brown & Brown (NYSE:BRO) moved to care for its shareholders by increasing its quarterly dividend 6.25% to 8.5 cents per share. The new boosted payout will be made on Nov. 16 to shareholders of record as of Nov. 2. The new dividend yield, based on the Oct. 19 closing price of $20, is 1.7%. Barnes made the announcement along with its earnings report, which showed a 5% increase in third-quarter revenue along with earnings per share that met expectations.

Cintas

Corporate uniform maker Cintas (NASDAQ:CTAS) stitched together a 10.2% increase in its annual dividend to 54 cents per share. The new payout will be made on Dec. 14 to shareholders of record as of Nov. 11. The new dividend yield, based on the Oct. 18 closing price of $29.25, is 1.85%. The company also said its board approved a new share repurchase program, authorizing it to buy back up to $500 million of Cintas common stock at market prices.

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Crestwood Midstream Partners L.P.

Natural gas pipeline operator Crestwood Midstream Partners L.P. (NYSE:CMLP) has raised its quarterly distribution to unitholders by 14.3% to 48 cents per share. The new distribution will be payable on Nov. 10 to unitholders of record as of Nov. 1. The new dividend yield, based on the Oct. 18 closing price of $26.97, is 7.12%. Separately, Crestwood announced a deal to acquire Tristate Sabine, LLC for $65 million in cash up front, and a deferred payment of approximately $8 million one year after the deal�s close.

Eaton Vance

Investment management firm Eaton Vance (NYSE:EV) invested in its shareholders this week, upping its quarterly payout by 5.6% to 19 cents per share. The new dividend is payable Nov. 15 to shareholders of record on Oct. 31. The new dividend yield, based on the Oct. 20 closing price of $24.27, is 2.97%. The increase marks the 31st consecutive fiscal year that the company has raised its dividend, which has grown at annual rate of 19% during that period.

Jabil Circuit

Electronic parts maker Jabil Circuit (NYSE:JBL) turned up the juice on its quarterly dividend, increasing the voltage on its payout by 14% to 8 cents per share. The new dividend is payable on Dec. 1 to shareholders of record as of Nov. 15. The new dividend yield, based on the Oct. 20 closing stock price of $19.30, is 1.66%. Separately, the company said its board has authorized the repurchase of up to $100 million worth of JBL common stock during the next 12 months.

Kinder Morgan Energy Partners L.P.

Natural gas pipeline behemoth Kinder Morgan Energy Partners L.P. (NYSE:KMP) increased its quarterly cash distribution by 5% to $1.16 per common unit. The enhanced payout will be made on Nov. 14 to unitholders of record as of Oct. 31. The new dividend yield, based on the Oct. 19 closing price of $76.18, is 6.09%. KMP has increased its distribution seven consecutive quarters and 42 times overall since current management took over in February of 1997. The company also announced that third-quarter profit fell because of costs related to an acquisition in July.

Magellan Midstream Partners L.P.

Energy asset MLP Magellan Midstream Partners L.P. (NYSE:MMP) upped its quarterly cash distribution by 7% to 80 cents per unit. The new distribution will be paid Nov. 14 to unitholders of record at the close of business on Nov. 1. The new dividend yield, based on the Oct. 18 closing price of $62.45, is 5.12%. The increased distribution to unitholders is the 38th distribution increase since the company became public in 2001. Magellan plans to announce its third-quarter earnings before the market opens on Wednesday, Nov. 2.

Markwest Energy Partners, L.P.

Natural gas transportation firm MarkWest Energy Partners L.P. (NYSE:MWE) sent a higher payout to unitholders, upping its distribution 14% to 73 cents per unit. The new distribution is payable Nov. 14, to unitholders of record as of Nov. 7. The new dividend yield, based on the Oct. 18 closing price of $47.09, is 6.2%.

Matthews International Corp.

Casket and funeral products provider Matthews International Corp. (NASDAQ:MATW) etched a higher dividend into its quarterly headstone, upping its payout 12.5% to 9 cents per share. The new dividend is payable Nov. 14 to shareholders of record as of Oct. 31. The new dividend yield, based on the Oct. 20 closing price of $33.65, is 1.07%.

Stepan Co.

Specialty chemical maker Stepan Co. (NYSE:SCL) mixed up a shiny new dividend for the next quarter, upping its payout 7.7% to 28 cents per share. The new dividend yield, based on the Oct. 19 closing price of $76.03, is 1.47%. It was the company�s 44th consecutive annual dividend increase. Stepan also reported Q3 net income that fell slightly, as higher sales were offset by increased spending from international expansion.

Watsco, Inc.

Air conditioning, heating and refrigeration equipment maker Watsco, Inc. (NYSE:WSO) turned up the thermostat on its quarterly dividend, upping its payout 9% to 62 cents per share. The new dividend will be reflected in the company�s next regular dividend payment in January 2012. The new dividend yield, based on the Oct. 20 closing stock price of $56.46, is 4.39%. The upbeat dividend news came along with a downbeat earnings report that saw Watsco�s EPS fall short of analysts� expectations.

Visa

Credit card issuer and electronic payment provider Visa (NYSE:V) charged up its quarterly payout to shareholders, raising its quarterly dividend a hefty 47% to 22 cents per share. The new dividend is payable Dec. 6 to shareholders of record as of Nov. 18. The new dividend yield, based on the Oct. 19 closing price of $90.08, is 0.98%.

As of this writing, Jim Woods did not own a position in any of the aforementioned stocks. Check out other companies increasing dividends in past weeks here.

Patriot Coal Slumps 13% On Lower Production, Plant Idlings

Patriot Coal (PCX) is falling nearly 13%, to less than $8 on news it is curtailing production in the face of weak demand and high operating costs.

Today the company saidit would idle five southern West Virginia mines to align it with current market trends, as recent weeks have seen a drop off in demand for metallurgical coal.

“As world economies return to normal growth rates, we expect a resumption of the longer-term growth trend for metallurgical coal demand that should allow us to bring much of this production back on line,” said Chief Executive Richard Whiting.

The shares are sliding back toward their October lows under $7, and are well off their February 2011 52-week high of $29.20.

Apple Inc. (AAPL) Stock Rumors – Cloud-based iTunes?

Here is your daily Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) stock news and rumors for August 3, 2010. Apple takes third place in global market share amongst portable computer manufacturers while the company’s rumored cloud-based iTunes service sees new delays. Also, Apple’s E-book pricing through the iBookstore comes under review after accusations of anticompetitive pricing.

AAPL Gains Third Largest Market Share Amongst Portable Computer Manufacturers Thanks to iPad: Deutsche Bank analyst Chris Whitmore published a new research report in Forbes magazine that shows that Apple Inc. is now the third leading manufacturer of portable computers in the world. Apple used to trail behind Toshiba, Dell, and Asus but the success of their tablet computer, the iPad, has helped Apple gain significant ground over its competitors. The Cupertino, California company now only trails Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ) and Chinese tech company Lenovo on the international stage. Given the consensus amongst other analysts as to the iPad’s continued sales success over the next fiscal year, AAPL should be able to maintain a healthy grip on its new-found market share amongst portable computer and notepad manufacturers.

Rumored iTunes Cloud Service Delayed Again: It’s been widely suspected that Apple would launch a brand new, cloud-based version of its iTunes music service after the company acquired Lala late last year. Lala did not have even a fraction of the audience that Apple’s current downloadable-data-based iTunes service, but its growing popularity made the streaming, cloud-based service a threat to Apple’s near-monopoly on the digital music marketplace. It was believed earlier this year that Apple would relaunch the service under the iTunes branding alongside the release of the iPad or iPhone 4, but the service has yet to materialize. Now, in a report at CNet, the word is that Apple’s new cloud-based iTunes won’t launch until next year. Citing myriad issues with licensing, CNet claims that a preview version of the service, lacking many full features, could launch by the end of 2010. There is also word of internal strife in Apple’s music division. Sources in the music industry claimed that one of Lala’s founders who made the jump to Apple following the acquisition has since left the company.

Apple’s E-book Contracts Evaluated After Accusations of Being Anti-Competitive: A report in the Wall Street Journal Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal has conducted a review of Apple and Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN) current contracts with book publishers dictating E-book pricing. The reason the contracts have come under scrutiny is that the current agreements may be anticompetitive, making E-book pricing uniform over multiple platforms and keeping the market from developing healthy price fluctuation, thus spurring greater consumer sales. Part of the problem is the “agency” pricing model used by Apple Inc’s iBookstore and others. The company serving the eBooks under this model takes a cut of each sale. (Apple themselves take a whopping 30% of every E-book sale.) The Connecticut review is the second such inquiry in recent months, following another in Texas.

As of this writing, Anthony Agnello did not own shares in any of the stocks named here.

5 Small Cap Stocks to Buy Now – Small, innovative companies are watching their earnings explode — and they are the next ten-baggers. Investing pro Louis Navellier reveals his secrets to identifying these small cap innovators, plus five of his favorite small cap stocks — download your FREE profit guide here.

Toyota’s Recall Troubles Not All Good News for Its Competitors

Ford (F), GM and other automakers may be rejoicing in the Toyota’s(TM) recall troubles, figuring it will help boost their own sales, but it may not be all good news for them.

Uncertainty tends to result in buying decisions being deferred and it will take some time for the impact of the recalls to filter through the new and used car markets.

Potential buyers may be more leery of new “high-tech” (and often higher margin) vehicles that rely heavily on software and electronics. Thus they may hold onto older, more “mechanical” models for longer than they otherwise would.

Last OctoberJeff Schuster, S&P’s Executive Director of Global Forecasting, and David Cutting, Senior Manager of North American Forecasting, at J.D. Power and Associates (owned by S&P) wrote: “There is no mystery about what consumers want: higher-quality vehicles with advanced technology features that get better mileage (which will happen in the U.S., like it or not, because of new government-mandated mileage standards) and are competitively priced.”

It will be interesting to see what impact Toyota’s problems may have on buyers’ faith in technology.

S&P’s economists are forecasting sales of 11.2 million light vehicles this year, or 7.7% more than in 2009, but this would still be 15.2% below the weak levels of 2008. The 2010 forecast is also below the “scrappage rate” (generally estimated at roughly 12 million units a year), which is the number of vehicles that come out of service because of age or accidents. This suggests buyers may continue to hold onto their cars for longer as they become more reliable.

Toyota’s problems may also have a depressing impact on prices, due to the loss of the “Toyota premium” in both the new and resale markets. If Toyota has to offer significant discounts and financing or other incentives in order to to revive sales, this could ripple throughout the market, to the detriment of most, if not all of the industry.

See Alacra Pulse for latest analyst comment onToyota.

The Safe Haven of Emerging Markets

Who would have ever thought that emerging markets would be beneficiaries of the flight to safety trade? But in a world where every developed nation is seemingly in a race to see who can rack up larger deficits, relatively frugal emerging markets have outperformed in the period since global equities made their most recent peak in mid-February.

The chart below shows the relative strength of the MSCI Emerging Markets Index compared to the MSCI Developed Market Index. When the line is rising, emerging markets are outperforming developed markets, and vice versa when the line is falling. As shown in the chart, emerging markets peaked on a relative basis back in early October, which was a month after the start of the huge run higher we saw in U.S. stocks from early September through February.

After months of underperformance, however, emerging market equities once again started to outperform just as global equities were peaking last month. For investors who have grown accustomed to market corrections beginning in emerging markets and spreading to the rest of the world, these developments are certainly out of the ordinary.

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To further illustrate the shift in leadership, the chart below was included in last weekend's Week in Review newsletter for Bespoke Premium clients. In it we highlight the performance of G-7 countries and the four BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) since February 18. Of the 11 countries shown, the four best performing have been the BRICs. In other words, not one of the seven so-called economic superpowers is performing better than any of the BRICs.

NEM Added as Top 5 Metals Channel Dividend Stock With 2.03% Yield

Newmont Mining Corp. (NYSE: NEM) has been named as a Top 5 dividend paying metals and mining stock, according to Dividend Channel, which published its weekly �DividendRank� report. The report noted that among metals and mining companies, NEM shares displayed both attractive valuation metrics and strong profitability metrics. The report also cited the strong quarterly dividend history at Newmont Mining Corp. , and favorable long-term multi-year growth rates in key fundamental data points.

Click here to find out The Top 5 DividendRank�ed Metals Stocks »

The report stated, �Dividend investors approaching investing from a value standpoint are generally most interested in researching the strongest most profitable companies, that also happen to be trading at an attractive valuation. That�s what we aim to find using our proprietary DividendRank formula, which ranks the coverage universe based upon our various criteria for both profitability and valuation, to generate a list of the top most �interesting� stocks, meant for investors as a source of ideas that merit further research.�

Special Offer: Find out what Dave Moenning is holding in the ETF Channel Flexible Growth Investment Portfolio with a special 20% off coupon from Forbes and 30 Days Free.

The annualized dividend paid by Newmont Mining Corp. is $1.40/share, currently paid in quarterly installments, and its most recent dividend has an upcoming ex-date of 12/06/2011. Below is a long-term dividend history chart for NEM, which Dividend Channel stressed as being of key importance. Indeed, studying a company�s past dividend history can be of good help in judging whether the most recent dividend is likely to continue.

1 Reason to Expect Big Things From Rockwell Automation

Here at The Motley Fool, I've long cautioned investors to keep a close eye on inventory levels. It's a part of my standard diligence when searching for the market's best stocks. I think a quarterly checkup can help you spot potential problems. For many companies, products that sit on the shelves too long can become big trouble. Stale inventory may be sold for lower prices, hurting profitability. In extreme cases, it may be written off completely and sent to the shredder.

Basic guidelines
In this series, I examine inventory using a simple rule of thumb: Inventory increases ought to roughly parallel revenue increases. If inventory bloats more quickly than sales grow, this might be a sign that expected sales haven't materialized. Is the current inventory situation at Rockwell Automation (NYSE: ROK  ) out of line? To figure that out, start by comparing the company's inventory growth to sales growth. How is Rockwell Automation doing by this quick checkup? At first glance, OK, it seems. Trailing-12-month revenue increased 18.5%, and inventory increased 10.6%. Comparing the latest quarter to the prior-year quarter, the story looks decent. Revenue grew 7.9%, and inventory expanded 10.6%. Over the sequential quarterly period, the trend looks worrisome. Revenue dropped 10.9%, and inventory grew 5.5%.

Advanced inventory
I don't stop my checkup there, because the type of inventory can matter even more than the overall quantity. There's even one type of inventory bulge we sometimes like to see. You can check for it by examining the quarterly filings to evaluate the different kinds of inventory: raw materials, work-in-progress inventory, and finished goods. (Some companies report the first two types as a single category.)

A company ramping up for increased demand may increase raw materials and work-in-progress inventory at a faster rate when it expects robust future growth. As such, we might consider oversized growth in those categories to offer a clue to a brighter future, and a clue that most other investors will miss. We call it "positive inventory divergence."

On the other hand, if we see a big increase in finished goods, that often means product isn't moving as well as expected, and it's time to hunker down with the filings and conference calls to find out why.

What's going on with the inventory at Rockwell Automation? I chart the details below for both quarterly and 12-month periods.

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Data is current as of latest fully reported quarter. Dollar amounts in millions. FY = fiscal year. TTM = trailing 12 months.

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Data is current as of latest fully reported quarter. Dollar amounts in millions. FQ = fiscal quarter.

Let's dig into the inventory specifics. On a trailing-12-month basis, work-in-progress inventory was the fastest-growing segment, up 13.3%. On a sequential-quarter basis, work-in-progress inventory was also the fastest-growing segment, up 12.2%. Rockwell Automation may display positive inventory divergence, suggesting that management sees increased demand on the horizon.

Foolish bottom line
When you're doing your research, remember that aggregate numbers such as inventory balances often mask situations that are more complex than they appear. Even the detailed numbers don't give us the final word. When in doubt, listen to the conference call, or contact investor relations. What at first looks like a problem may actually signal a stock that will provide the market's best returns. And what might look hunky-dory at first glance could actually be warning you to cut your losses before the rest of the Street wises up.

I run these quick inventory checks every quarter. To stay on top of inventory and other tell-tale metrics at your favorite companies, add them to your free watchlist, and we'll deliver our latest coverage right to your inbox.

  • Add Rockwell Automation �to My Watchlist.

Display Booth Rental Options For Businesses

There are many different kinds of display booth rental opportunities available. These booths can provide people with a variety of essential needs. There are various sizes and shapes that can create a custom way to advertise or promote a product. Some stands are set up to display food and sell products, others are aimed at outdoor use. Large display units can hold TV, shelving and large signs.

A modern display unit may feature an aluminum backdrop. The entire system is able to hold a few flat screen TV screens and shelves. There is space for signs and graphics to be displayed. When a business owner contacts a display company, they can have this particular unit custom designed to include the perfect size and features.

A standard booth can come in many shapes and sizes. It may feature a bar height table that can come in a rectangular shape, square or curved. Some people will prop up these booths and stand behind them promoting their service. A few items can be placed on the table top.

When people need a food and beverage station to advertise food products, they may go with a specialized cart. These carts may contain a built in cooler or fridge. Electrical outlet for any small hand held devices. Shelves for the storage of food products and materials. These stands are fully loaded to support any food advertisement.

An independent kiosk is available for people to use on their own. These portable systems can be custom designed and then set up in a location that is preferred. These interactive display units can hold TV monitors, small writing areas and storage space to hold pamphlets and information about the business. Overhead signs can be custom designed and tailored to meet the needs of the client.

When someone is ready to order a unit, they can do so online. A person can make all of their requests over the internet and pay for what they need. Online applications will be detailed to help customers choose what they need. Orders can be made on the website, with a card payment option.

Websites will be easy to use and will contain all of the information that is needed. If a customer needs to speak with someone directly, they can call one of the posted phone numbers. Money transactions can be billed or paid over the internet online.

Rental times can include full and half day bookings. For longer periods of time, there are monthly and weekly rental rates. Services that provide booths will be flexible to meet the needs of many business venues.

Display booth rental companies can be found by doing a internet search. A list of sites may be found when a search is performed. People can use these sites to look up information about the different kinds that are available. There will also be info about the time line around making orders. Applications can be made over the phone, in person or through email.

Experts in manufacturing portable banner Stand Display and custom displays for all your marketing and trade show needs.

How Home Depot Delivers Where Competitors Fail

Specialty retail companies were hit pretty hard after the financial crisis mostly due to the pullback of consumer spending as well as the economic slowdown. But not all specialty retailers are created equal.
For example, Best Buy is typically viewed as a consumer electronic giant linked to the tech sector, but the stocks of two ho-hum do-it-yourself stores --Home Depot (HD) and Lowe's (LOW)--have outperformed Best Buy (BBY), and the appliance giant Sears (SHLD), as well as the S&P500 in the past year. (See Chart Below).

So who has the potential to be the fairest of all?

I recently had the misfortune of having to source three major appliances. The places I went include Home Depot, Best Buy , Sears and Lowe's . So I will base the discussion on these four companies, partly from the perspective of this personal experience

Not All Retailers Are Created Equal

The goal of my appliance procurement project was quite straight-forward; source all three appliances reasonably priced at one place, to be delivered and installed on the same day. However, due to the overly popular yet poorly implemented outsourcing model, and the mis-guided belief that customers are willing to sacrifice service for price, my seemingly logical procurement expectation turned out to be as lofty as the Northern Star for some retailers.

Best Buy - A Total Nightmare

At first, I found the desired models and specs at Best Buy Online, which is easy enough. However, the rest of the experience with Best Buy is nothing short of a nightmare.

The people at Best Buy Ordering Dept. I spoke to on the phone were all very poorly trained and inexperienced, with the computer system as well as procedure. Incidents such as accidental disconnect and order cancellation by mistake makes the ordering process very time consuming and frustrating. Nevertheless, I figured it was worth it, since all three appliances would be delivered, installed on the same day, or so I was repeatedly reassured.

Then the delivery was delayed four times and extended from two weeks to four months. The worst and most infuriating part came when, upon delivery, I was informed installation had to be separately scheduled, which could take another three days. That was the final straw and I refused the delivery on the spot in its entirety, while coming to the conclusion to never buy Best Buy... ever.

Online Only Stores

While shopping through basic no frill online only stores could potentially realize very significant savings over buying through retailers, the logistics is very challenging and stressful, particularly when you have to take off work to receive three appliances arriving on different dates, while scheduling installation separately.

Sears - Not Much Better

After a four month of ordeal with Best Buy and online only appliance sties, I then visited Sears, which is best known for its appliance center. The staff there was nice, but the prices looked high in general, and the delivery lead time was 4-8 weeks on the models I was interested in. Installation most likely would not be the same day as delivery since it is subcontracted out to a different company.

Lowe's - Close But No Cigar

The next stop was Lowe's, based on a friend's suggestion. While Lowe's pricing point seems reasonable, the one employee I spoke to at appliance department seemed to know very little beyond reading off of the display card. And similar to Sears, delivery lead time was also long, and no same-day installation either.

Home Depot Delivers as Promised

Out of desperation, I went to Home Depot. After all, Home Depot is best known as a home repair project store, instead of its appliance sales like Best Buy or Sears. However, to my surprise, the Appliance Specialist there was very knowledgeable and helpful in answering all questions. Best yet, all three models I was interested in were all reasonably prices and could be delivered in two days.

Although Home Depot also has the same outsourced model of the installation as its competitors, the delivery and installation could be scheduled on the same day right from the in-store system. And, just as promised, the delivery and installation of all three appliances did indeed complete on the same day (which was Saturday, March 17), and the whole process took three hours.

Home Depot Outshines

Investor's optimism towards recent housing improvement has helped to lift housing related stocks including Home Depot and Lowe's. Between the two, Home Depot has focused relentlessly on improving the customer experience since 2011, thus gaining market share from Lowe's.

JP Morgan recently noted that Home Depot's focus shifting to better understanding and servicing the customer through CRM (Customer Relationship Management) investments/initiatives, and supply chain improvement program should continue to lift its margin into 2012. The company's operating income is expected to improve 11% with an estimated P/E of 16.3 in 2012, which is lower than the current average P/E of S&P500 at 23.41.

Above all, my recent experience demonstrates how the Home Depot model could still beat the low-price online competitors, and that its focus on customer service and supply chain efficiency has trickled down to its retail store level where the other three companies failed.

Right now, various forecasts seem to point to a continuous gradual improvement in the U.S. and world economy. In this environment, Home Depot could be expected to deliver more than its competitors.

About Best Buy

As for Best Buy, I'd say it has the worst customer service with some of the most poorly trained personnel I've ever dealt with. There was a Forbes article entitled Why Best Buy is Going out of Business...Gradually, but based on my experience, "gradually" is probably an understatement.

Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.

More Growth Shares at a Reasonable Price: Part 1

This is the first of a two-part transcript in which Fool.co.uk's David Kuo chats with fund manager Jane Coffey about GARP investing. Jane, who is head of equities at the Royal London UK Equity Fund, revisits five stock picks for Money Talk listeners from last year that have delivered an average return of more than 20%. Read on for this year's selection of shares from Jane that could also offer "growth at a reasonable price!"

(You can read�the second part of this transcript here. You can listen to or download�the full podcast here.)

David Kuo: This is Money Talk, the weekly investing podcast from The Motley Fool. I am David Kuo, and today I am delighted to welcome someone back into the studio who shares my passion for top-down investing. My guest is head of equities, and she manages the Royal London UK Equity Fund, and is no stranger to us here at The Motley Fool, and I'll explain why she is no stranger to us here at The Motley Fool in a minute. She is, of course, Jane Coffey, and she is with me now. Welcome back to Money Talk, Jane.

Jane Coffey: Good afternoon.

David: It is a beautiful day today -- I don't know when this podcast goes out, whether it'll still be a beautiful day, but it is certainly very sunny today.

Jane: And the equity markets are up, so it's unusual all round!

David: That's right -- sunny on the London Stock Exchange, and also sunny outside here in London. Now, tell me a little bit about the Royal London UK Equity Fund, Jane.

Jane: This is a fund that's designed to be a core U.K. equity fund for investors. It's a 370 million pound equity open-ended investment company, and I run it with an investment philosophy based on growth at a reasonable price.

David: So you are still keen on GARP investing, then?

Jane: Very much so. It's an investment style that I've been using for 20 years, so I'm unlikely to change it now. At the moment, growth has very much been a style that has been in vogue, and I think over the next few years it is going stay that way, apart from maybe the odd one or two months where you get a sort of big rally in value stocks. The reason that I believe that is that, in this environment that we're in, a very low nominal GDP growth in a sort of slow economy, it's very difficult for companies to grow their top line across the board. So those companies that do have some kind of structural growth, and a good market position, are going to be valued more highly by the market.

David: So how does that differ from income investing? Because I mean, that is the other passion at the moment among investors. They're all going for high-yielding shares. So how does GARP differ from income investing?

Jane: Well, I'm certainly not against income investing. However, what I feel is that it's actually the growth in that income that drives the valuation ...

David: The share price over the long term, yeah.

Jane: ... over the long term, so yes, you can have a company that is yielding 6%, 7%, but it is only yielding 6% or 7% each year. That's likely to be your total return for the year, because why would the share rerate over time if its profits are not going up, or its dividend stream is not going up. However, if you're looking at growth, you're wanting to see longer-term growth in the actual earnings stream, and in therefore their ability to pay dividends, and that is likely to get you some kind of capital gain, as well as your dividend.

David: OK, now when you were here the last time, it was about a year ago, you brought to us five shares that you were particularly interested in. Do you want to know how those shares have done over the last year?

Jane: Of course I do.

David: OK, now, they have generated on average a return of over 20% over that year. That is quite an achievement, isn't it?

Jane: Well, as I say, I think good-quality growth companies have actually been the place to be in this very tricky environment, and these companies that I chose all have managed to deliver on their earnings growth, and so thankfully we've also seen that reflected in their share price.

David: OK, so can we have a look at some of these companies in particular, and can you explain to us why they have done well? The first one is�Compass Group� (LSE: CPG.L  ) -- why has Compass Group done well? I know at the time I made fun of Compass Group, because I said it was just a giant sandwich maker, but you said otherwise?

Jane: Yeah, well in fact Compass is a contract caterer.

David: Sandwich maker?

Jane: A sandwich maker. They do a lot of catering in corporations, government offices, and they are pretty international. In fact, they have 68% of their revenue in North America and the fast-growing emerging markets, and that's one of the reasons why I still like this company at the moment, because those are areas of the world that are growing top line more, so growing GDP, and in fact Compass expands as GDP expands really, because they can go out, and as companies employ more and more people, their turnover goes up in their canteen. That's the simple answer behind that. But one of the other key things about Compass is that they're very cash-generative, and so they started with a very good balance sheet. They're also generating 750 million pounds of free cash flow every year, and they're using that to make acquisitions that complement their existing presence in the markets that they're not in at the moment to get themselves better scale advantages. Plus, they're buying back stock, so reducing the number of equities that you actually have to share that profit with, and they're also paying a 3.5% dividend yield, so all in all, it's a pretty good story.

David: So doesn't the fact that it goes up by making acquisitions -- does that not worry you a little? As a fund manager, don't you get a little bit worried when management says, "I'm going to be going out and spending this free cash flow on new purchases"?

Jane: It depends very much on two things. One is how much they pay, and secondly, whether they're doing it just for size, rather than for actually getting advantages of scale and strategic advantage. So the good thing about Compass is that they've just been doing bolt-on acquisitions, which they've been getting at relatively good value. Usually they're paying the same or less multiples than they trade on themselves, plus they then can take out quite a lot of the central costs for that and bulk it up with their overall business, and usually they can also increase the margin, because they have a best-in-class margin. So whereas you might see them paying 13 times for a company, actually by the time they've stripped out that cost, to them it's only really seven times.

David: OK, so that is Compass out the way. What about�Spirent� (LSE: SPT.L  ) ? That was another company that you brought to us, and Spirent shares have gone up 27% since you were here the last time.

Jane: Indeed, Spirent has really benefited from the secular growth in smartphone as one of its core areas. Now, it does not make smartphones. What it does is it actually tests smartphones and their interconnection onto the networks. So all the smartphone manufacturers have to buy Spirent kit to check both backwards compatibility and across different networks and across different ranges. So this whole big growth in smartphones has led to an awful lot more testing, because you have to be able to interconnect on much more than just simple voice. What we've seen as well is that 4G, which is the next generation of mobile telephony, the ramp-up in that has been even faster than the ramp-up in 3G was. So this area of the business is growing about 30% per moment. They also are a beneficiary of the cloud and the big data centers, because interconnection and testing on that side is key, and again, that's growing quite quickly -- that's growing about 20%. They have two other smaller divisions which are not growing quite so much at the moment, and they're currently looking to potentially divest them, or just cut costs within them, and sort of downgrade them somewhat, but overall I still think this is a company that's giving you mid-teens earnings growth. Another company with a very strong balance sheet and a growing cash pile -- I mean they've got 21% of their market cap in cash, so it is possible they might make an acquisition, but at the moment the management have been pretty keen that they will return cash to shareholders as and when they have it, so again another company doing buybacks.

David: So you still like Spirent at the moment?

Jane: So I still like Spirent, even at this price.

David: OK, so you like Spirent, and you also like Compass Group?

Jane: Uhum.

David: OK, so�IMI� (LSE: IMI.L  ) , and this was another company that I made fun of. I said they just made optics that you find behind the bars when you go and get a shot of whisky. This company has gone up 23% since you came in, so another great tip from you. Why has IMI done so well?

Jane: Well, IMI has managed to again deliver on its earnings, so it's seen an uplift in earnings of more than 15% over the past year. In fact, its optics division is a division that's pretty much non-core now; although it's still there, it's very much not part of their core business. The other areas in their business are exposed really to industrial growth, and despite the recession, actually industrials across the globe have been doing reasonably well. So Spirent has ...

David: IMI, you mean?

Jane: IMI, sorry, has got a very good position within that, and they have continued to deliver. Again, the stock's still on 11 times earnings, so despite its 23% return in the share price, it hasn't rerated, because it has seen that good earnings growth, and this is the benefit of investing in growth stocks.

David: So just wait for the rerating to come, yeah? Is that right?

Jane: Yeah, now we'd like to see the rerating! There are grounds for it to be rerated, because in fact its core business has an 18% margin, and usually that would lead to a 1.8 times book value -- it's currently trading on 1.3 times.

David: OK, now then --�Holidaybreak� (LSE: HBR.L  ) -- this was another company. This company, according to my calculations, has gone up 60% since you came in the last time. What happened there, what happened at Holidaybreak?

Jane: Well, Holidaybreak was a good little company that was transforming itself from being the old Eurocamp into an education holidays company. It bought PGL, which did the adventure holidays and the activity holidays in the U.K. for children, and therefore it was getting a much better stream of earnings, a much more visible stream of earnings, because these things are booked year after year by the same schools. It was therefore seen as attractive by a competitor, and Cox & Kings came in and bought it at a 30% premium on the day, but obviously at a bigger premium over the time that we were talking, because it had already gone up into the deal.

David: Now, there is always one boy in the choir who sings out of tune, Jane, right? We've looked at one, two, three, four companies that have done exceedingly well, and this boy that is not singing in tune with the rest of the choir is�IG Group� (LSE: IGG.L  ) . What has gone wrong at IG Group? It's only down about 8%, I have to say.

Jane: Yeah, IG Group has, in fact, been quite disappointing in its performance, but I still actually like IG Group, and it still has a place in my portfolio. What happened over last year is that, over the summer, earnings were being downgraded. Actually, bizarrely, it was when the market was going up that initially the earnings started being downgraded, because volatility in the market decreased, and as volatility decreased, the amount that each client would bet with IG Group became less. There was less excitement for the private investor to speculate on changes in share prices as volatility went down. So although their actual long-term growth is backed by the number of new clients, which continue to go up, as each new client was trading a bit less, it led to flat earnings instead of the expected growth that we were hoping for. However, this is a great stock.

David: There's always a "however", isn't there?

Jane: Yeah -- however, this is a good stock, if you think that there is going to be increased volatility in the market. So when markets actually fell dramatically at the end of last year, the stock started to outperform a bit into that environment, and I think now you've got a company that's trading, again still on 11 times, so still a reasonable price, and it's still got 8%, 9% expected growth over the next few years as it expands internationally.

David: And it also pays a dividend, doesn't it?

Jane: And it pays a 5% yield.

David: Yeah, so that's not too bad. I mean, getting 5% just to wait for the company to turn around isn't such a bad deal, is it?

Jane: No, absolutely not, and it's not that it's a company that's losing money or having any problems with its cash flow at all. This is a company that's still growing, it just has stuttered in its growth last year, but I believe we're back on track now.

That was the first of a two-part transcript in which Fool.co.uk's David Kuo chatted with fund manager Jane Coffey about GARP investing. In�the second part of the transcript, Jane, who is Head of Equities at the Royal London UK Equity Fund, gives her latest selection of shares that could offer "growth at a reasonable price!"�Just click here to continue reading.

David Kuo challenged his Motley Fool analysts to pinpoint the attractive sectors of 2012 -- and they delivered! Discover the industries they selected in this new Motley Fool guide -- "Top Sectors for 2012" -- while it's still free!

Further investment opportunities with David Kuo:

  • The One UK Share Warren Buffett Loves
  • 10 Steps To Making A Million In The Market
  • 8 Shares Held By Britain's Super Investor

Best Stocks To Invest In 2012-2-5-1

Starbucks Corporation (Nasdaq:SBUX) announced that Clara Shih, Chief Executive Officer of Hearsay Social, provider of one of the leading enterprise social media platforms, was elected to the Starbucks Board of Directors. Shih will serve on the Board’s Nominating and Corporate Governance committee.

Starbucks Corporation purchases and roasts whole bean coffees. It operates 6,705 company-operated stores and 4,082 licensed stores in the United States.

Crown Equity Holdings, Inc. (CRWE)

Crown Equity Holdings Inc. (CRWE.OB) announced that it has launched CRWE Tube, www.crwetube.com, a video sharing site that allows billions of people around the world to upload watch and share original videos.

“The CRWE Tube team has built an exciting media platform, which allows people and businesses large and small to quickly and efficiently reach a vast new audience,” said Kenneth Bosket, President of Crown Equity Holdings Inc. “With online videos continuing to experience explosive, viral growth and the web rapidly moving from text to video, businesses will need to adapt to the shift in video distribution technology or quickly become irrelevant to their consumers who anticipate seeing video everywhere online.”

Crown Equity Holdings Inc., together with its digital network of Websites, offers media advertising, branding and marketing services as a worldwide online multi-media publisher. The company focuses on the distribution of information for the purpose of bringing together a targeted audience and the advertisers that want to reach them. Its advertising services cover and connect a range of marketing specialties, as well as providing search engine optimization for clients interested in online media awareness.
Many small businesses have in the past avoided using video commercials as part of their small business marketing strategy due to the high cost and limited return on investment. With online video, the equation has changed.

Now you can, for less than many small business spend on their monthly pay-per-click campaigns, create and use video ads to promote your business. To give you some ideas and inspiration we’ve put together a collection of the best video commercials and ads.

For more information please visit official website of CRWE: www.crownequityholdings.com

Liberty Global Inc. (NASDAQ:LBTYA) announced the authorization of a new $1.0 billion stock repurchase program. Under the program, Liberty Global may acquire from time to time its Series A common stock, Series C common stock, or any combination of Series A and Series C common stock. The stock repurchase program may be effected through open market transactions and/or privately negotiated transactions, which may include derivative transactions. The timing of the repurchase of shares pursuant to the program will depend on a variety of factors, including market conditions. The program may be suspended or discontinued at any time.

Liberty Global, Inc. provides video, broadband Internet, and telephony services primarily in Europe, Chile, and Australia.

Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings Inc. (Nasdaq:AAWW), a leading global provider of outsourced aircraft and aviation operating services, confirmed that its Atlas Air, Inc. unit has accepted delivery of the company’s second and third Boeing 747-8 Freighters. The aircraft are part of Atlas Air’s order of nine 747-8Fs with Boeing.

Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings, Inc., through its subsidiaries, provides air cargo and outsourced aircraft operating solu.