Bill Gates Just Bought $571 Million of This Stock

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Here at StreetAuthority.com, we like to keep tabs on where the richest people in the world are putting their money.

After all, billionaires like Warren Buffett and Bill Gates are some of the smartest investors on the planet. And they have advantages the rest of us don't: entire staffs of MBAs working for them... Wall Street CEOs who give them sweetheart deals in order to get their business... and friends at the highest levels of government and society who can steer them toward the next big thing.

These advantages have helped corporate titans like Buffett and Gates deliver some of the biggest gains in stock market history.

 

For example, anyone with the good judgment to invest $10,000 in Buffett's partnership at its inception in 1956 (and to transfer into Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK-B) at the partnership's termination) would today be sitting on an astonishing $432 million -- after all fees and expenses.

Has W.W. Grainger Made You Any Real Money?

Although business headlines still tout earnings numbers, many investors have moved past net earnings as a measure of a company's economic output. That's because earnings are very often less trustworthy than cash flow, since earnings are more open to manipulation based on dubious judgment calls.

Earnings' unreliability is one of the reasons Foolish investors often flip straight past the income statement to check the cash flow statement. In general, by taking a close look at the cash moving in and out of the business, you can better understand whether the last batch of earnings brought money into the company, or merely disguised a cash gusher with a pretty headline.

Calling all cash flows
When you are trying to buy the market's best stocks, it's worth checking up on your companies' free cash flow once a quarter or so, to see whether it bears any relationship to the net income in the headlines. That's what we do with this series. Today, we're checking in on W.W. Grainger (NYSE: GWW  ) , whose recent revenue and earnings are plotted below.

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Data is current as of last fully reported fiscal quarter. Dollar values in millions. FCF = free cash flow. FY = fiscal year. TTM = trailing 12 months.

Over the past 12 months, W.W. Grainger generated $534.0 million cash while it booked net income of $658.4 million. That means it turned 6.6% of its revenue into FCF. That sounds OK. However, FCF is less than net income. Ideally, we'd like to see the opposite.

All cash is not equal
Unfortunately, the cash flow statement isn't immune from nonsense, either. That's why it pays to take a close look at the components of cash flow from operations, to make sure that the cash flows are of high quality. What does that mean? To me, it means they need to be real and replicable in the upcoming quarters, rather than being offset by continual cash outflows that don't appear on the income statement (such as major capital expenditures).

For instance, cash flow based on cash net income and adjustments for non-cash income-statement expenses (like depreciation) is generally favorable. An increase in cash flow based on stiffing your suppliers (by increasing accounts payable for the short term) or shortchanging Uncle Sam on taxes will come back to bite investors later. The same goes for decreasing accounts receivable; this is good to see, but it's ordinary in recessionary times, and you can only increase collections so much. Finally, adding stock-based compensation expense back to cash flows is questionable when a company hands out a lot of equity to employees and uses cash in later periods to buy back those shares.

So how does the cash flow at W.W. Grainger look? Take a peek at the chart below, which flags questionable cash flow sources with a red bar.

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

When I say "questionable cash flow sources," I mean items such as changes in taxes payable, tax benefits from stock options, and asset sales, among others. That's not to say that companies booking these as sources of cash flow are weak, or are engaging in any sort of wrongdoing, or that everything that comes up questionable in my graph is automatically bad news. But whenever a company is getting more than, say, 10% of its cash from operations from these dubious sources, investors ought to make sure to refer to the filings and dig in.

With questionable cash flows amounting to only 6.3% of operating cash flow, W.W. Grainger's cash flows look clean. Within the questionable cash flow figure plotted in the TTM period above, stock-based compensation and related tax benefits provided the biggest boost, at 7.5% of cash flow from operations. Overall, the biggest drag on FCF came from capital expenditures, which consumed 26.2% of cash from operations.

A Foolish final thought
Most investors don't keep tabs on their companies' cash flow. I think that's a mistake. If you take the time to read past the headlines and crack a filing now and then, you're in a much better position to spot potential trouble early. Better yet, you'll improve your odds of finding the underappreciated home-run stocks that provide the market's best returns.

We can help you keep tabs on your companies with My Watchlist, our free, personalized stock tracking service.

  • Add W.W. Grainger to My Watchlist.

Top Stocks To Buy For 1/2/2013-5

Magma Design Automation, Inc. (NASDAQ:LAVA) witnessed volume of 2.59 million shares during last trade however it holds an average trading capacity of 678,501.00 shares. LAVA last trade opened at $6.91 reached intraday low of $6.81 and went -2.01% down to close at $6.84.

LAVA has a market capitalization $456.75 million and an enterprise value at $434.35 million. Trailing twelve months price to sales ratio of the stock was 3.39 while price to book ratio in most recent quarter was 25.43. In profitability ratios, net profit margin in past twelve months appeared at -2.34% whereas operating profit margin for the same period at 4.04%.

The company made a return on asset of 3.08% in past twelve months and return on equity of -33.56% for similar period. In the period of trailing 12 months it generated revenue amounted to $139.29 million gaining $2.27 revenue per share. Its year over year, quarterly growth of revenue was 13.20%.

According to preceding quarter balance sheet results, the company had $47.09 million cash in hand making cash per share at 0.71. The total of $26.33 million debt was there putting a total debt to equity ratio 111.02. Moreover its current ratio according to same quarter results was 1.51 and book value per share was 0.27.

Looking at the trading information, the stock price history displayed that its S&P500 52 Week Change illustrated 19.68% where the stock price exhibited up beat from its 50 day moving average with $6.36 and remained above from its 200 Day Moving Average with $5.77.

LAVA holds 66.78 million outstanding shares with 60.62 million floating shares where insider possessed 7.40% and institutions kept 59.80%.

WSJ: Not Clear ACA Understood Paulson Role After All

As Bloomberg’s Lorraine Woellert was this afternoon reporting Goldman Sachs (GS) veep Fabrice “Fab-o” Tourre had agreed to testify before the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations next Tuesday, April 27 — sharing the chamber with Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein! — Dow Jones Newswires’s Greg Zuckerman and Serena Ng were refining this morning’s story, originally reported by CNBC, that hedge fund Paulson & Co. explicitly told ACA Capital it was shorting Goldman’s infamous Abacus trade.

An anonymous person “familiar with the matter” corroborates the rumor that Paulson & Co. executive Paolo Pellegrini informed ACA back in late 2008 that the fund was short the trade.

But Zuckerman and Ng followed up with Laura Schwartz, the ACA manager of CDO investments, the individual to whom Pellegrini supposed disclosed Paulson’s position. Schwartz is no longer with ACA, and hung up on the reporters, and it sounds like Schwartz, and ACA, may have not been entirely clear on what Paulson was doing after all:

Ms. Schwartz was a main point person in the discussions between ACA and Goldman and was at an early 2007 meeting with representatives of Paulson and Goldman, according to Goldman’s responses to the SEC’s “Wells” notice of possible civil charges, regarding the issue. After that meeting, Ms. Schwartz emailed a Goldman employee to ask for feedback on the meeting and said she wasn’t clear about how Paulson wanted “to participate in the space,” the Goldman papers said. Goldman argued in documents it submitted to the SEC that Ms. Schwartz, who was deeply involved in selecting the assets for the Abacus deal, should have known from previous ACA-managed deals that hedge funds could have both long and short positions in a CDO.

5 Reasons This Stock Could Rise Another 40% or More

It's fun to be right about a stock and I picked a real winner. Since I wrote about it on Nov. 11, 2010, this stock's value has soared more than 35%, from around $39 a share to $53, compared with barely a 10% gain for the S&P 500.

But the point really isn't to toot my own horn. It's that the stock still has plenty of room to run despite the recent surge. I project an additional increase of at least 40% during the coming two to three years, making the holding a timely "buy" even if you missed out on the last five months of gains.

For details on what initially drew me to St. Jude Medical (NYSE: STJ), be sure to read my initial analysis. Everything I said about it then applies now.

 

Here's why I think St. Jude will continue to be a winner:

1. It progressively diversifies. After gaining fame 35 years ago for creating an artificial heart valve to replace diseased valves in people with bad hearts, St. Jude branched out and now offers an array of products for use in heart surgery, cardiovascular disease and neuromodulation. Neuromodulators are spinal cord-stimulating devices that treat chronic pain. They also have potential in the treatment of psychological and neurological ailments such as Parkinson's, depression and epilepsy.

2. It keeps innovating. The latest big news: the March 22 announcement of a new implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) to be introduced later this year for the treatment of arrhythmias, irregular heartbeats that impair blood circulation. The device, once implanted in the body, emits charges that help maintain a steady heartbeat.

Of course, ICDs have been around a while. But this one is such a significant technological advance -- it's smaller, safer, and quicker to recharge than previous models -- that it should rapidly become the standard of care in ICDs.

St. Jude also recently got Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for two new ablation catheters -- thin, flexible tubes used to treat arrhythmias. The catheters deliver targeted energy bursts to specific areas of the heart, essentially producing scars that interrupt the abnormal electrical signals that contribute to arrhythmias.

Like ICDs, ablation catheters are nothing new. But here again, St. Jude has improved the technology by making its catheters more maneuverable. This will allow doctors to position them and deliver energy bursts with greater precision.

3. It's expanding globally. Most recently, St. Jude opened a technology center in Beijing, where doctors can perform "virtual" product testing. The firm now has 250 employees at sales offices in three Chinese cities, maintains about two dozen manufacturing facilities worldwide and boasts a significant presence in more than 100 countries in North America, the Middle East, Latin America, Eastern and Western Europe, and Asia. Global expansion is crucial because foreign sales, especially in emerging and frontier markets, will be a progressively larger source of future sales.

4. It's growing sales and earnings. Forecasts call for earnings of $3.30 a share this year, a gain of about 10% compared with last year, followed by 11% to 12% growth from 2012 to 2016 as the global economy improves. The divisions housing the neuromodulators and ablation catheters should do especially well, advancing sales at nearly 15% annually.

However, the biggest top-line boost is expected from AGA Medical, a firm St. Jude acquired last October for $1.1 billion in cash and stock. There, sales may well grow at 20% or more annually on demand for AGA's unique cardiac surgery tools designed to correct heart defects through minimally invasive procedures. Strong demand is also expected for AGA's blood vessel plugs, which are used to block blood flow to tumors and reduce pressure on weakened blood vessels.

5. It's paying shareholders. In February, St. Jude's board approved the firm's first-ever cash dividend -- $0.21 a share each quarter, which translates to an annualized dividend yield of 1.6%. The dividend, which will begin on April 29 to shareholders of record on March 31, suggests St. Jude has achieved a scale where it can return a portion of earnings to shareholders while still investing in long-term growth. According to management, share buybacks are also a near-term possibility.

Free cash flow is $700 million, slightly more than when I first wrote about St. Jude five months ago. At 0.5, its debt-to-equity ratio still mirrors the industry mean.

How Kaman is Bringing Bucks Home More Quickly

It takes money to make money. Most investors know that, but with business media so focused on the "how much," very few investors bother to ask, "How fast?"

When judging a company's prospects, how quickly it turns cash outflows into cash inflows can be just as important as how much profit it's booking in the accounting fantasy world we call "earnings." This is one of the first metrics I check when I'm hunting for the market's best stocks. Today, we'll see how it applies to Kaman (NYSE: KAMN  ) .

Let's break this down
In this series, we measure how swiftly a company turns cash into goods or services and back into cash. We'll use a quick, relatively foolproof tool known as the cash conversion cycle, or CCC for short.

Why does the CCC matter? The less time it takes a firm to convert outgoing cash into incoming cash, the more powerful and flexible its profit engine is. The less money tied up in inventory and accounts receivable, the more available to grow the company, pay investors, or both.

To calculate the cash conversion cycle, add days inventory outstanding to days sales outstanding, then subtract days payable outstanding. Like golf, the lower your score here, the better. The CCC figure for Kaman for the trailing 12 months is 121.5.

For younger, fast-growth companies, the CCC can give you valuable insight into the sustainability of that growth. A company that's taking longer to make cash may need to tap financing to keep its momentum. For older, mature companies, the CCC can tell you how well the company is managed. Firms that begin to lose control of the CCC may be losing their clout with their suppliers (who might be demanding stricter payment terms) and customers (who might be demanding more generous terms). This can sometimes be an important signal of future distress -- one most investors are likely to miss.

In this series, I'm most interested in comparing a company's CCC to its prior performance. Here's where I believe all investors need to become trend-watchers. Sure, there may be legitimate reasons for an increase in the CCC, but all things being equal, I want to see this number stay steady or move downward over time.

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Dollar amounts in millions. FY = fiscal year. TTM = trailing 12 months.

Because of the seasonality in some businesses, the CCC for the TTM period may not be strictly comparable to the fiscal-year periods shown in the chart. Even the steadiest-looking businesses on an annual basis will experience some quarterly fluctuations in the CCC. To get an understanding of the usual ebb and flow at Kaman, consult the quarterly-period chart below.

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Dollar amounts in millions. FQ = fiscal quarter.

On a 12-month basis, the trend at Kaman looks good. At 121.5 days, it is 2.6 days better than the five-year average of 124. days. The biggest contributor to that improvement was DPO, which improved 5.4 days compared to the five-year average. That was partially offset by a 4.3-day increase in DIO.

Considering the numbers on a quarterly basis, the CCC trend at Kaman looks good. At 122.4 days, it is little changed from the average of the past eight quarters. With both 12-month and quarterly CCC running better than average, Kaman gets high marks in this cash-conversion checkup.

Though the CCC can take a little work to calculate, it's definitely worth watching every quarter. You'll be better informed about potential problems, and you'll improve your odds of finding underappreciated home run stocks.

If you're interested in companies like Kaman, you might want to check out the jaw-dropping technology that's about to put 100 million Chinese factory workers out on the street � and the 3 companies that control it. We'll tell you all about them in "The Future is Made in America." Click here for instant access to this free report.

  • Add Kaman to My Watchlist.

More Good News: Manufacturing Improves

Bloomberg NewsGetting better

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index (SPY) and Dow Jones Industrial Average (DIA) are both up about 1.8% right now.

Relief over a deal in DC plays a part, though we should all pause to consider that we may well live through all the hype, hoopla and fear again in less than two months with the debt ceiling negotiations.

While it also helps�that it’s Jan. 2�(the markets usually rise on this date),�the good mood on Wall Street has doubtless been helped by positive data coming out about the US economy.

Most notably, the Institute for Supply Management’s data shows an expansion in manufacturing and uptick in employment last month:

The ISM’s manufacturing-purchasing-managers index increased to 50.7 in December from 49.5 in November. A reading above 50 indicates expanding activity.

Economists surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires expected the December PMI to improve to 50.5.

Earlier Wednesday, data provider Markit said its own U.S. factory index increased to 54.0 in December. That was up from 52.8 in November and the highest reading since May.

And that’s not all: Bloomberg reported earlier that we saw healthy auto sales in December:

Car and light truck sales in the U.S. probably rose 9.8 percent in December, according to a Bloomberg survey of analysts. That would cap a third-straight annual gain of at least 10 percent, the first such industry streak since 1973.

�It sure feels a lot better to be selling cars today than a few years ago,� Geoffrey Pohanka, president of the Pohanka Automotive Group, said in a telephone interview. �The age of the fleet and the attractiveness of a lot of cars that are being designed now are going to help sustain sales going forward.�

As I wrote on Monday, these numbers look so good partly because the preceding years were so bad. But even so, it’s evidence of a what’s hopefully a sustained improvement economy. If politicians can stay out of the way, of course.

AXP: FBR Cuts Target To $55

American Express (AXP) impressed investors�last night when it reported�quarterly earnings that bested expectations, but it wasn’t enough to keep the love flowing this morning�after analysts at FBR cut their price target�for the stock.

Analysts at FBR reduced�their 12-month�outlook to�$55 a share, an 8% below�the previous price target of�$60 a share.

Shares of American�Express�fell 1.5% to $45.45 a share during morning market action.

As our colleague Avi Salzman reported after the market close Wednesday, the credit card company�beat earnings expectations on continued growth in cardmember spending, and shares rose� 1.4% during�after-hours trading. But�revenue fell just shy of the expected $7.58 billion.

Jim Cramer: Real-World Deals

How easy it is to focus on the tortured talks of Washington. You don't have to do a lot of work. All you need to do is turn on the television and see two leaders who obviously despise each other talk about how his opponent wants to raise taxes on the middle class. We only need to know when they are coming on, not what they are going to say -- we have that nailed down -- and then we can watch, with awe, at how hedge funds come out of the woodwork to blast down the S&P 500 futures.

I just wish they would make it even easier. I wish when Speaker Boehner would come on he would dispense with the formalities and say, "I would sell the S&P down 2% based on my talks today." Or the President should limit his comments to "You better bang out of some Apple (AAPL), and be careful of the 50-day moving average of the transports because Speaker Boehner wants to raise taxes on everyone rather than hit up the hedge fund managers for their fair share."Hedge fund managers should have to pay more given the annuity stream these two are generating.But then, every once in a while, the real world intrudes, and you realize that the indices that are bouncing around off of the sinking below in Washington are made up of stocks and that stocks actually represent the fortunes of real companies.Right now the real world is intruding in a big way with NYSE Euronext (NYX), Gardner Denver (GDI) and Alterra Capital Holdings (ALTE).The first, you know by nature, but probably not by reason. CNBC's own David Faber broke the story this morning that NYSE Euronext is in talks to be acquired by IntercontinentalExchange (ICE) for about $33 a share.We think of NYSE as the place at which equities trade. IntercontinentalExchange, however, most likely thinks NYSE Euronext is a worldwide futures exchange with an unfortunate equities business with too much overhead. I bet IntercontinentalExchange thinks it could come in, smash the paternalism of the place and just get its hands on the machines, rationalizing a growth business (i.e., the futures) while stemming losses in a no-growth business (i.e., the equities). 1 2 Next › Last »

It makes sense as a terrific consolidation play, and it is something that is happening irrespective of Washington.

The second intrusion of the real world into the surreal Washington world? Gardner Denver is in talks to be acquired by SPX Corporation (SPW).You may not know Gardner Denver, but it is integral to the oil and gas food chain because it makes air compressors. Oil and gas drilling is very much in bull market mode because of the combination of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling, and SPX is a classic industrial good manufacturer that needs to have more exposure to growth.SPX could end up stealing Gardner Denver, which has been hit hard by the slowdown in natural gas drilling, for $4 billion, barely unchanged for the year. Still, it's a huge win if you bought it when Gardner Denver announced a shortfall earlier this fall and fell to $55. An impatient activist, ValueAct, obviously not focused on the charade in Washington, is getting the job done.Finally, there is Alterra, a very big reinsurance company that just caught a bid from Markel (MKL), a well-respected insurer that's always been undervalued. Markel is picking up Alterra for $3.1 billion, a nice chunk of change, yet it seems as if the market didn't even notice.And that's really the point. Three big deals, three that happened without worries of fiscal cliffs and off-again/off-again talks. Real money changing hands. Real wins to be had.If anybody cares to have them.FREE for a limited time only: Get TheStreet Ratings #1 Stock Report NOW! « First ‹ Previous 1 2

Does Capella Education Miss the Grade?

Margins matter. The more Capella Education (Nasdaq: CPLA  ) keeps of each buck it earns in revenue, the more money it has to invest in growth, fund new strategic plans, or (gasp!) distribute to shareholders. Healthy margins often separate pretenders from the best stocks in the market. That's why we check up on margins at least once a quarter in this series. I'm looking for the absolute numbers, so I can compare them to current and potential competitors, and any trend that may tell me how strong Capella Education's competitive position could be.

Here's the current margin snapshot for Capella Education over the trailing 12 months: Gross margin is 60.0%, while operating margin is 19.4% and net margin is 12.1%.

Unfortunately, a look at the most recent numbers doesn't tell us much about where Capella Education has been, or where it's going. A company with rising gross and operating margins often fuels its growth by increasing demand for its products. If it sells more units while keeping costs in check, its profitability increases. Conversely, a company with gross margins that inch downward over time is often losing out to competition, and possibly engaging in a race to the bottom on prices. If it can't make up for this problem by cutting costs -- and most companies can't -- then both the business and its shares face a decidedly bleak outlook.

Of course, over the short term, the kind of economic shocks we recently experienced can drastically affect a company's profitability. That's why I like to look at five fiscal years' worth of margins, along with the results for the trailing 12 months, the last fiscal year, and last fiscal quarter (LFQ). You can't always reach a hard conclusion about your company's health, but you can better understand what to expect, and what to watch.

Here's the margin picture for Capella Education over the past few years.

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Dollar amounts in millions. FY = fiscal year. TTM = trailing 12 months.

Because of seasonality in some businesses, the numbers for the last period on the right -- the TTM figures -- aren't always comparable to the FY results preceding them. To compare quarterly margins to their prior-year levels, consult this chart.

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Dollar amounts in millions. FQ = fiscal quarter.

Here's how the stats break down:

  • Over the past five years, gross margin peaked at 61.5% and averaged 58.5%. Operating margin peaked at 22.3% and averaged 17.8%. Net margin peaked at 14.4% and averaged 12.0%.
  • TTM gross margin is 60.0%, 150 basis points better than the five-year average. TTM operating margin is 19.4%, 160 basis points better than the five-year average. TTM net margin is 12.1%, 10 basis points better than the five-year average.

With recent TTM operating margins exceeding historical averages, Capella Education looks like it is doing fine.

Over the decades, small-cap stocks, like Capella Education have provided market-beating returns, provided they're value priced and have solid businesses. Read about a pair of companies with a lock on their markets in "Too Small to Fail: Two Small Caps the Government Won't Let Go Broke." Click here for instant access to this free report.

  • Add Capella Education to My Watchlist.

The Most Moronic Company Policies I Encountered in 2012

It's natural to feel sorrow for an entertainment industry beset by pirates, a communications company struggling to make a buck in a rapidly changing world and the steadfast U.S. Postal Service, making do with fewer and fewer workers, offices and hours. That is, until you come up against a moronic policy that makes your sorrow seem less natural and more like natural selection.Here are three dumb blunders showing how industries make it easy for us to hate them:What I want: "Marvel's The Avengers" on DVD with bonus features and a digital copy I can watch on my laptop.The problem: Disney (DIS) says these treats aren't for low-rent scum such as myself that never moved up to Blu-ray. The company released six versions of the movie Sept. 25, but three were Blu-ray only from Best Buy (BBY), Target (TGT) and Wal-Mart (WMT), and the only complete package puts bonus features (including deleted scenes and the short movie "Item 47") on a Blu-ray disc I can't watch.The company's solution: "Blu-ray discs give us the ability to add more content with the best viewing quality. Additional bonus can also be found on the digital downloads (iTunes, for example) if he doesn't have a Blu-ray player," Disney said through a public-relations firm. So a $49.99 set would have given me a DVD of the movie and a digital copy but no bonus materials, and the bonus features don't sell on their own at iTunes -- and "Item 47" can't be found at iTunes at all. Or I can buy a two-disc set for $39.99 that has the bonus features but not a digital copy, which is $19.99 at iTunes in high-def or $14.99 in standard. So because I don't have a Blu-ray player, Disney makes me pay either $54.98 or $59.98.My solution: Wait a while and buy a new copy of the two-disc set for as low as $14.39 or a used copy for as low as $10 and use free DVD ripping software such as MakeMKV to create my own digital copy. Free and easy, in fact.The result: The entertainment industry hates pirates, so why encourage piracy? They also turn paying customers into digital freebooters with such tactics as letting digital-copy codes expire even if they've never been used.

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What I want: I just want my iPhone to get a Verizon (VZ) signal in my apartment.The problem: It doesn't. Months of lame customer service results in an apologetic executive customer service ninja sending me a free signal booster. (Usually Verizon charges $250 to make their phones work with their own service!) But the signal booster has to be attached to Verizon high-speed Internet, which I don't have. The company's solution: It will sell me high-speed Internet for about $19.99 a month, which I am willing to pay ... so long as it's bundled with a landline, which means the cost rises to a minimum $34.99, which I am not willing to pay. Because: Landline! Guess what, Verizon, the only reason I need your Internet is to have a signal booster to make my cellphone work. It would be pretty stupid to get a landline in my apartment so I can use my iPhone instead.But the company is unwilling to budge on this even when I point out that I have outdone their Internet-landline bundle by already buying an iPhone and Mi-Fi wireless hotspot from them, each with their own service plans.My solution: I pay my upstairs neighbor $15 a month to use their excellent Internet (better than the 0.5 to 1 Mbps I could have bought for that $34.99) and I use Skype to make calls when I'm in my apartment, costing me maybe a few buck a month. And when my contracts are up for my Verizon devices, I'm switching to Sprint (S). Or whatever.The result: Verizon may make some short-term money by forcing Victrolas on the iPod crowd, but in the long term it's just sending its customers away by making them feel ripped off. Heck, I wanted to give Verizon my money, yet it's answer was to try to extort even more of it. Hard to believe I'm the only person planning to walk away from a company that wants to force its customers to pay more for living in the previous century -- especially when it's their solution for fixing a problem I have with another one of their super-expensive products.

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What I want: To know why my package didn't reach its destination in Europe, where it is and when it will arrive.The problem: A long line at the post office that leads me to a postal worker who doesn't know how to help me. But the other guy can. I just have to wait another half-hour while the other guy deals with a customer with a hellacious amount of packages to send. Ultimately, that guy can't help me either. The company's solution: There's a phone number I can call to use the tracking number on my receipt. But it took me 45 minutes to find out what that was, and the second postal worker threatens me because he doesn't like my attitude -- even though that attitude built up because I waited the better part of an hour. Apparently, part of the U.S. government's postal worker training is to tell only some employees about a phone number.My solution: Why not just print on the receipt that phone number with the note that all questions about expensive, missing overseas packages should be referred to that phone number? And that, in fact, going to a post office will be a waste of time? That would help customers and postal workers who are more swamped than ever -- because the U.S. Postal Service is in massive debt and cutting workers and offices to make up for it.The result: If the U.S. Postal Service can't take such a simple step to ease long lines and overwork in its surviving staff, citizens are going to start to think the service needs even more radical change. Starting with smarter people running it.

>To order reprints of this article, click here: Reprints FREE for a limited time only: Get TheStreet Ratings #1 Stock Report NOW! « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3

Citrix Acquision of Web Conferencing Services Provider to Help Accelerate Growth in Europe

Citrix Systems (NASDAQ: CTXS), a software-as-service provider based in Florida, announced on Friday that it has agreed to acquire its privately-held European counterpart Netviewer AG. The financial terms of the transaction were undisclosed.

Netviewer, based in Germany, is a provider of online web conferencing services in Europe. The firm has about 18,000 customers, including businesses of varying sizes.

The deal will accelerate the growth of Citrix Online, Citrix System’s online services division, in Europe the company said. Citrix Online provides online web conferencing tools and remote computer access services.

"SaaS-based collaboration and IT Services have been key to our growth story. We believe there is even more opportunity ahead as the global market matures and customers look for a strong, experienced partner," said Brett Caine, Senior Vice President of Online Services Division at Citrix Systems.

After the deal closes, Netviewer will be integrated into Citrix Online. Robert Gratzl, Netviewer's Chief Financial Officer, will become the division’s Vice President and General Manager in Europe, Middle East and Africa.

The deal, subject to certain closing conditions, is expected to close in early 2011.

Citrix Systems’ shares have edged up 1.2% to trade at $69.98 as of 11:39 am EST Friday.

Top stocks 2013: Apple & Freeport


Apple, Inc. (AAPL) is a good case for the role psychology plays in investments, and this is when my B.A. and M.A. in Sociology comes in very handy.

Meanwhile, Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold (FCX) is a classic illustration of the difference between short-term thinking and long-term thinking, or making a quick buck vs. making a good investment.

In 2012, Apple broke the $700 level and analysts were saying it was the greatest thing since sliced bread.

After a 25% correction, analysts are now saying it is mature company past its prime. Honestly, has the company really changed in such a short time, or is this another speculative algorithm from the Quantitative Analysts?
By all my measures of value, Apple is a good buy. Is price/earnings ratio is 11, which is less than the total market, and about one half of Apple�s normal p/e ratio.

Yes, there is constant change in the computer industry, but Apple, with its management skills and huge trove of cash, should be able to adapt to this in its usual seamless manner.

Apple pays a dividend of about 2%, so if you are looking solely for income this is not a stock for you.

Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold recently fell sharply on the news that it was going to spend $9 billion to purchase two oil companies. These acquisitions are an attempt to expand their business.

Was this a good move? If you were looking towards the next quarter�s earnings you are probably would not be interested in investing in this stock.

Now, let�s take a long-term investment view of the company. What Freeport-McMoRan has done is diversified its business from being solely into mining, to a mining and oil exploration.

Therefore, if you want a quick profit, you should avoid this stock. But if you want a good investment for the long run, then Freeport-McMoran is for you.



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BIDU: Bulls See Continued Momentum, Smaller Beats

Shares of search engine Baidu (BIDU) are down $5.80, or 4%, at $136.03 this morning after the company last night beat Q4 estimates and forecast this quarter’s revenue above consensus as well.

No price target increases or ratings changes that I can see this morning. The bulls are largely upbeat that the company reaffirmed their faith in its growth, even if the magnitude of the company’s ability to beat and raise each quarter may be smaller than in past.

Mayuresh Masurekar, Collins Stewart: Reiterates a Buy rating and a $215 price target. The story is changing, he writes. “In 2010-2011, the story was about share gains from Google, search market acceleration on eCommerce and large advertisers, Phoenix Nest and margin expansion. In 2012, the story will be about growing large advertiser spend and contextual ramp, somewhat offset by weakness in some verticals due to a slowing economy, search share stabilization at ~80%, mix shift to lower monetization mobile searches and potential margin contraction from investments in infrastructure and headcount, as well as higher TAC. We believe the days of strong beat-and-raise quarters�??are over – recall that 2Q/3Q beat revenues by 5%-6% and guided 9%-10% higher, while 4Q beat by <1%. That said, 40%+ CAGR China search market growth continues to be a strong long-term driver and stock is trading at 0.6x PEG on 2012, vs. historical average of 0.9x.”

Qi Guo, ThinkEquity: Reiterates a Buy rating and $200 price target. “Baidu reported a strong 4Q with top-line strength mainly driven by solid customer additions, suggesting the company’s SME segment has significantly improved in 4Q11. 1Q12 guidance was ahead of the street’s expectation, implying continued business momentum into 2012, despite a more seasonal Q1 and uncertainties related to the China macro environment.”

George Askew, Stifel Nicolaus: Reiterates a Buy rating and a $190 price target. He’s estimating Q1 revenue toward the high end of Baidu’s guided range of $666.5 million to $688 million, at $682. “We believe that 2012 will be a year of increased investment at Baidu as the company develops new sales associates for underpenetrated verticals, new ad formats and tools which help search engine marketers optimize their budgets and spending.”

Cynthia Meng, Jefferies & Co.: Reiterates a Buy rating and a $200 price target. “The growth outlook is intact as traditional offline and brand advertisers increase spending on search marketing. Baidu remains focused on penetrating SMEs and will continue to invest in R&D, network infrastructure, mobile products and online video in FY12 [�] Baidu will focus on increasing traction in the F&B, cosmetics, auto and business services verticals and hire marketing specialists to help key customers develop online marketing strategies. We expect ARPU increase to be the main driver for topline growth going forward.”

Not everyone’s satisfied, however:

Richard Ji, Morgan Stanley: Reiterates an Equal Weight rating and a $156 price target. “Baidu could still deliver respectable growth, but we expect its earnings growth rate to moderate in 2012 due to the macro overhangs faced by SMEs, higher base and heavier investment [�] Baidu continued its slower pace of customer acquisition as its active paying customer volume rose only 13% YoY, as it has been focusing on a smaller number of large customers while some SME customers have cut their ad spending due to macro overhangs. 2) Baidu expects its 1Q12 sales to climb 72-77% YoY, vs. its sales growth of 83% in 2011. Its 4Q11 earnings growth of 77% YoY, albeit respectable, was the slowest over the past two years.” The company is “searching for a new catalyst,” he thinks, and it might mobile: “In our view, wireless search may emerge as the next growth engine for Baidu. Notably, mobile Internet users tripled over the past three year years to ~70% of total Chinese online population, up from ~40% in 2008.”

Google Maps navigates its way into Kia, Hyundai connected cars - 01:36 PM

(gigaom.com) -- We’re still not at the point where we can call up Google Maps on our car dashboards as we would on our smartphones, but we’re getting a lot closer to that point. Google revealed on Wednesday that Hyundai and Kia will use Google’s Send-to-Car technology to ship maps, directions and points of interest directly from smartphones into their cars’ on-board navigation systems.

Kia will tap into Google’s APIs to bring Maps and Google Places data to its UVO eServices connected car platform, which will first be available in the 2014 Kia Sorrento and 2014 Forte. Hyundai will use a similar implementation in its Blue Link connected car system, though it didn’t reveal when or in which car models.

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All three companies were short on the details of their respective partnerships — and are likely waiting for the grand stage of CES next week to reveal them — but it looks like Google is acting more as technology enabler than an app developer in both cases. Instead of allowing a version of Google Maps to be downloaded into the car, both Hyundai and Kia appear to be relying on their own navigation apps. But they’re liberally pulling Google mapping and location data from the smartphone and the cloud.

In Kia’s case it’s incorporating the mapping functions into its own UVO smartphone app, which will be available on both the iPhone and Android in the next six months. Meanwhile Kia’s Microsoft-developed in-vehicle platform will host several apps that will use Google map and point-of-interest data as well as local search technology. Google said in its enterprise blog that both Kia and Hyundai would also use its voice recognition technology to find and manage their destinations.

The vehicle navigation space is definitely getting interesting as web and mobile mapping software becomes more sophisticated and more cars get mobile internet connections — either directly from the dash or via a smartphone. Google is working with several other automakers, including Audi, Daimler and Tesla to bring its cartographic, Street View and search data to the dashboard. Chevrolet is also tapping into Google Local Search to provide business and point-of-interest info in its forthcoming BringGo navigation app.

Google isn’t the only tech company looking to break into automotive. Apple announced Eyes Free with the launch of iOS 6, which allows Siri to act as the surrogate voice assistant in the connected car. GM is supporting Eyes Free in upcoming versions of MyLink in the Chevy Sonic and Spark, and several other automakers are working with Apple as well. Eyes Free isn’t a nav platform, but it could become the interface for controlling a car’s navigation system or even a future in-vehicle version of Apple Maps once it works through the app’s laundry list of bugs.

Japan Stocks Set for More Gains

TOKYO�Encouraged by promises of strong action by Japan's new government to weaken the yen, end deflation and introduce structural overhauls, market experts are generally bullish on Japanese equities for 2013 after the market surged nearly 20% in the last six weeks of trading.

For all of 2012, the Nikkei Stock Average rose 23%, its best performance since 2005, while the broader Topix index was up 18%. Based on projections from seven brokerages, the Topix index may add another 7% in 2013.

Politics have everything to do with the optimism: Almost all of the gains came after snap elections were called in mid-November. The new government under Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, which swept to power in a mid-December parliamentary election, is pushing the normally cautious Bank of Japan to embark on aggressive monetary easing and to set a 2% inflation target, up from 1% currently. Japan has been suffering nearly two decades of deflation; most measures of inflation are now around zero.

Expectations for greater easing have helped to push the yen lower, providing relief for the country's exporters and propelling the market higher. The yen has lost more than 8% against the dollar and more than 12% against the euro since Nov. 14 as players bet that Mr. Abe's Liberal Democratic Party would come back to power. The dollar was quoted late Monday at �86.74, its highest level in nearly 2� years.

A cheaper yen relative to the Korean won is also seen as critical because Japan and South Korea compete in key industries such as autos and electronics, making a stronger yen a big obstacle for Japanese producers.

"A weaker yen would be a powerful tool for escaping from deflation as it would improve the competitiveness of Japanese exports, leading to expanded earnings and higher share prices," said Daiwa Research strategist Kazuhiro Miyake. "The resulting upturn in consumer and corporate sentiment would enable the economy to rebound."

Hiromichi Tamura, a strategist at Nomura Securities, expects gains of at least 15% for both the Nikkei and the Topix in 2013. "With earnings at Japanese companies still about 40% below pre-financial crisis levels, there is considerable scope for recovery," said Mr. Tamura.

He expects that corporate earnings per share would rise as much as 20% from a year earlier if the dollar is at around �80, and that the gain would be 30% if the dollar rises to �90.

Strategists almost uniformly agree that Japanese shares remain undervalued and underexposed to international investors. "Japan is the only major market where price-to-book ratios still stand near 2008 crisis levels, while dividend yields are more than triple 10-year government bond yields," notes Kathy Matsui, chief equity strategist for Japan at Goldman Sachs .

With Japan currently underweight in many major international equity funds, a fundamental reweighting could potentially pour tens of billions of dollars back into Japanese stocks, she said. Foreign investors account for two-thirds or more of daily trading on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

Aggressive easing of monetary policy by the Bank of Japan should theoretically also work to inflate asset prices�including for real estate and stocks�and fuel loan demand.

"The setting of an inflation target of 1% to 2% by the Bank of Japan should not be infeasible," said David Herro, the Chicago-based chief investment officer at Harris Associates. "Japan desperately needs to reverse its deflationary spiral, and this is the single best way to do it."

Mr. Abe has pushed for a 2% target, but the central bank has yet to act.

While aggressive monetary easing and setting higher inflation targets are relatively quick fixes, their effects alone probably won't be enough to lure the kind of foreign investor capital for needed for a longer-term recovery in equity prices, some traders say.

Structural economic overhauls are the best hope for a sustained bull market, as Japan's experience in 2005 and 2006 illustrated, said Peter Eadon-Clarke, an analyst at Macquarie Equities Research, referring to the efforts of Junichiro Koizumi, Japan's prime minister at the time. Mr. Koizumi is credited with pushing through changes to Japan's tax, regulatory and financial systems.

Some changes are already under way, including cuts to pension benefits and a staggered increase in the national consumption tax, Mr. Eadon-Clarke noted. "Politicians now have a strong incentive to introduce policies to stoke more GDP growth," he said.

This optimistic scenario has its detractors, however, including those who note that Mr. Abe's first stint as premier in 2006 lasted barely a year. Remaining in the job is difficult, making it hard for prime ministers to take radical action. The prime ministership has changed hands six times in the last six years.

Profit-taking could also stifle the market if jitters worsen over the U.S. budget, or if the LDP backtracks on key policy goals. "It's tempting to take some money off the table in stocks like Nomura Holdings that have run up so much," said Naoki Fujiwara, a fund manager at Shinkin Asset Management. "But we're standing pat on core exporters such as Toyota Motor Corp. and Canon Inc."

Adam Fisher, chief investment officer at Los Angeles-based hedge fund Commonwealth Opportunity Capital, remains skeptical. "Considering the kind of massive effort the BOJ needs to make, I'm pessimistic," Mr. Fisher said. "After so many years of merely hoping for change, I need to see follow-through before I become a believer."

Write to Brad Frischkorn at bradford.frischkorn@dowjones.com

FOREX-Euro up for 4th day on hopes of official action – Reuters

CNBC.comFOREX-Euro up for 4th day on hopes of official action
Reuters
Central banks' liquidity pledge reassures investors * Soft U.S. data keeps speculation of Fed easing alive * Options reflect high level of euro uncertainty * Yen …
WORLD FOREX: Eerie Calm Before Greek Elections; Sterling …NASDAQ
US Says G20 to Focus on Global Demand, China ForexCNBC.com
Forex Traders Positioned for the Worst on Greek Elections – CautionDailyFX
Yahoo! Eurosport UK
all 2,879 news articles »

{forex} – Forex News

U.S. stock indexes start 2013 with big rally

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) � U.S. stocks surged on Wednesday, with the Dow industrials notching their largest first-session-of-the-year-point rise ever, as Wall Street welcomed an 11th-hour deal to avoid steep spending cuts and tax increases and pondered deficit moves still ahead.

�The next focus will certainly be what happens in the next two months in terms of addressing spending and the effect of whatever we do on GDP growth rates,� Art Hogan, a market strategist at Lazard Capital Markets LLC, said of the impact of reduced government spending on the economy.

The measure approved by the House of Representatives just after 11 p.m. Tuesday undid tax hikes for all but one to two percent of U.S. households, with the bipartisan vote ending a lengthy standoff over how to avoid more than $600 billion in tax hikes and spending cuts viewed as likely to push the economy back into recession.

Yet the deal was not the grand bargain on cutting the nation�s red ink that lawmakers intended when they came up with tax-and-spending deadlines during the past few years.

Click to Play Obama praises fiscal-cliff deal

President Barack Obama said he would sign the bill sent to him by Congress to avert the U.S. fiscal cliff. Watch Obama's full statement, in which he praises the late-night deal. Photo: Getty Images.

The measure bypassed much of the immediate trauma poised by the fiscal cliff and marked only one piece towards cutting the federal deficit, with a February battle looming over increasing the $16.4 trillion debt ceiling.

�We can celebrate the fact that we avoided catastrophe, but we�ll certainly focus on the making of spending cuts to get the rest of the fiscal cliff averted. Does that mean we ignore economic data and the M&A going on? Probably,� Hogan added of upcoming economic reports that include the nonfarm payrolls report for December due on Friday. Read: What�s the chance the relief rally will last?

�As we head into the next couple of weeks, we�ll get to figure out if we can make spending cuts with a scalpel or a sledge hammer,� said Hogan. Separate drama over deficit spending awaits.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA �rose 308.41 points, or 2.4%, at 13,412.55, with Hewlett-Packard Co. HPQ �and Caterpillar Inc. CAT �leading gains that included all of its 30 components. Read about Wednesday�s biggest stock movers.

The S&P 500 index SPX �climbed 36.23 points, or 2.5%, to 1,462.42, with telecommunications the best performing of its 10 major industry sectors, all of which advanced.

Wednesday�s session also marked the first time the S&P 500 opened five years in a row with a gain, with Howard Silverblatt, senior index analyst at S&P Indices noting that �the market moves in the same direction as its opening day 50% of the time.�

INVESTING STRATEGIES
� Equity markets are dying
� How different is January vs. other months?
� Market will blindside investors in 2013
� Will it be a happy new year for Apple?
� Trading Strategies for January �
� See investing ideas from Trading Deck � /conga/story/misc/investing.html242961

United States Steel Corp. X �climbed 8.6% after Credit Suisse upgraded it to a buy rating.

Zipcar Inc. ZIP � jumped 48% after Avis Budget Group Inc. CAR �said it would acquire the company.

The Nasdaq Composite COMP �added 92.75 points, or 3.1%, to 3,112.26. Shares of iPhone maker Apple Inc. AAPL �rose 3.2%. Read: Apple sentiment improves with new year.

For every stock that fell more than 10 gained on the New York Stock Exchange, where 859 million shares traded.

Composite volume neared 4.2 billion.

Equities remained in party mode after the Commerce Department reported U.S. construction spending fell 0.3% in November. Separately, the Institute for Supply Management said its gauge of manufacturing activity expanded in December, to 50.7% from 49.5% the month before.

As equities rallied U.S. Treasury prices fell, with the yield on the 10-year note 10_YEAR �used in determining mortgage rates and other consumer loans rising to 1.84%.

As the market kicks off the new year with a rally, Mark Hulbert has evaluated the significance of January for stock investors. Read his column here on how different January is from other months.

Hulbert also has another column looking at why the smallest-cap stocks tend to be favored in January. Read that column here.

And for investors wondering whether it�s best to trade or not to trade, here�s a good analysis by Michael Kahn. Read: Don�t be afraid to trade.

What the Fiscal Cliff Deal Could Cost You

A fiscal cliff deal sailed through the Democrat-controlled Senate late in the night on New Year's Eve in an 89-8 vote.

The proposed deal then headed to the Republican-controlled House on New Year's Day, expected to meet at least some opposition from a party that has lobbied during most of the fiscal cliff negations for no tax increases at all. It went through with a 257 - 167 House vote.

At the deal's forefront was maintaining tax cuts for singles earning less than $400,000 and couples earning less than $450,000. The tax increase marks the first time in two decades that rates will rise for the wealthiest Americans.

While it does save millions of middle-class taxpayers from increases, workers will still feel the pinch because the payroll tax holiday has expired.

Also saved were benefits for some two million unemployed workers who were on the brink of losing their federal checks.

The measure postpones the biggest and thorniest part of the fiscal cliff deal until March, when Congress will again have to wrangle over steep spending cuts that were set to kick in on Wednesday to defense and other industries.

Plus, nothing was resolved regarding the $16.4 trillion debt ceiling that we reached Monday.

Here are a few major changes that will hit your paycheck and savings.

The Devil's in the Details
  • Payroll Tax Holiday Expired
About 77% of American households will still be subjected to higher federal taxes in 2013 under the new deal, according to projections from the Tax Policy Center.

The hike will come from an increase in Social Security payroll taxes, temporarily trimmed two percentage points in 2012. The share workers pay into Social Security has now jumped from 4.2% to 6.2%, costing an extra $1,000 on average for U.S. households.

Data from the Tax Policy Center showed that households earning $40,000-$50,000 a year will see an average tax increase of $579 this year. Those bringing in $50,000-$75,000 annually face an increase to their tax bill to the tune of $822.

  • Higher Income Taxes on the Wealthy
America's highest earners will see income rates rise to 39.6% from 35%.

The Tax Policy Center estimates that households making $500,000 - $1 million will shell out $14,812 more in taxes. Those earning more than $1 million will see their bill increase by $170,341.

  • Paying for Obamacare
In order to pay for President Obama's healthcare reform law, a fresh 3.8% tax will be tacked on investment income for individuals making more than $200,000 and couples making more than $250,000.

Who Won the Fiscal Cliff Fight?The White House deems the deal a win for the president.

"The president has delivered on a major campaign promise and broken Republicans' backs on a 20-year pledge" to oppose tax rate increases, a White House Official told the Wall Street Journal.

But President Obama and his party may not revel in the victory for long.

"The president just doesn't play well with others. I do think he's up for a bumpy road given his tactics," Rep. Mike Rogers, R - MI, said following word of the deal.

Republicans will use spending cuts as leverage when talks resume about what to do with the debt ceiling.

Republicans will want some very steep cuts in government spending because raising taxes on the wealthy will not make the slightest dent in bringing down the country's $16 trillion debt.

Although Americans breathed a sigh of relief at the rushed deal, plenty of uncertainty remains.
The slowly recovering U.S. economy is sure to feel a jolt.

While we may have avoided a hard fall off the fiscal cliff, we are sure to feel a fiscal drag in 2013.

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United Technologies Is Looking Good in 2013

Responding to big promises from Boeing (NYSE: BA  ) and Airbus, about a big market for commercial airplanes over the next few decades, United Technologies (NYSE: UTX  ) �has bought Goodrich... but sold both off Pratt & Whitney Power Systems, and UTC Power as well, saying it wants to focus on its "core aerospace and commercial businesses." It gets a Fool to wondering -- is United Tech up to something?

Actually, Fool contributor Rich Smith thinks it just might be. Listen in as he explains how UTX is moving to rearrange its business, and boost its profit margins, dramatically in the new year.

UTX's strategy, as it dynamically pivots to capture big profits and dump its losers,�almost makes the company look like a GE wannabe. Could UTX actually "out-GE" GE? And if it tries to do so, what are the risks? An understanding of GE could help answer those questions. Today, we're offering comprehensive coverage of the world's most famous industrial conglomerate, in our premium report on General Electric, where we break down GE's multiple businesses. You'll find reasons to buy or sell GE, and you'll receive continuing updates as major events unfold during the year. To get started, click here now.

3 Mineral Miners to Buy in 2013

Santa may have gone back to the North Pole until next year, but I'm always making lists and checking them twice to find out which companies have been naughty and nice. With our calendars having rolled over to the new year, it's time we take a closer look at the mineral mining sector.

According to a research report from JPMorgan Chase, global mining capital expenditures totaled $136 billion in 2012. With figures like these, it's important to know which companies will be raking in big profits in 2013. Here are three mineral miners that I feel will outperform this year.

Silver Wheaton (NYSE: SLW  )
Silver Wheaton is in an advantageous position this year for a number of reasons. As a silver royalty interest company, Silver Wheaton's average cost of silver is just a shade over $4 per ounce. This means that any silver spot price above this point goes straight into the company's pockets. Silver is slated to have what I figure will be a banner year with an expected rebound in spending in the tech sector, a big consumer of silver. In addition, I foresee the consistent increase in the U.S. money supply as a reason for investors to continue to seek inflationary shelters in both gold and silver.

Silver Wheaton's huge operating margins, which have earned the company the title of "Most profitable company in the world" according to fellow Fool Christopher Barker, allow it to rake in hoards of cash and strike deals heavily in its favor. Just last year Silver Wheaton gave HudBay Minerals (NYSE: HBM  ) $500 million upfront, plus the option to receive two additional $125 million payments assuming certain conditions are met, in return for a fixed averaged cost of silver of $5.90 per ounce on 100% of all silver produced at HudBay's Constancia and 777 mines, and a fixed cost on all gold mined at its 777 mine at $400 an ounce until at least 2016.�

Alliance Resource Partners (NASDAQ: ARLP  )
I apparently missed the class where the U.S. government and electric utilities said they were going to completely eliminate using coal, which accounted for 42% of all electrical generation in 2011, and move entirely to alternative energies. You'd think that was the case given what a horrid year most coal companies had in 2012. Alliance Resource Partners, though, could be ready to ascend to a new high this year.

As I've pointed out on numerous occasions previously, Alliance Resource Partners has recorded 11 straight years of record profits, has boosted its very generous dividend -- currently yielding north of 7% -- for 18 consecutive quarters, and has locked in more than three-quarters of its mined coal through 2018 because of its focus on long-term contracts. These long-term contracts leave, on average, just a fraction of its mined coal exposed to volatile coal market rates giving the master limited partnership incredible cash flow visibility. With President Obama focused on boosting the United States' independence from foreign sources of fuel, coal is set to play a vital role in America's plan for energy independence for at least the next decade.�

Thompson Creek Metals (NYSE: TC  )
I know this might seem like an Oakland Raiders fan picking his team to go to the Super Bowl in 2013 (forgive me Raiders fans) since I own Thompson Creek in my own portfolio, but the importance of both its Mt. Milligan coming on line in the fourth quarter and a boost in molybdenum demand cannot be overstated!

Since December 2011, Thompson Creek shored up its financing by twice divvying out royalty interests in Mt. Milligan's gold production to Royal Gold (NASDAQ: RGLD  ) in exchange for what will total $781.5 million in cash payments. Thompson Creek also shut down production at its primary molybdenum-producing mine, Endako, in order to reduce costs; it will sell off its stockpile in the meantime.�This move could have a very beneficial effect on moly prices; demand for the metal, used to strengthen steel, could soar in 2013 as steel demand from China picks up and supply levels of the steel-strengthener thin out.

As stated earlier, production is on track to begin in the fourth quarter of 2013 for Mt. Milligan. With 2.1 billion pounds of copper, and China looking for ways to ramp up its "paltry" 7.4% GDP growth, I fully expect Thompson Creek to skyrocket in anticipation of production commencing. Then again, remember I'm brutally biased as a current shareholder.

The other side of the rock
Stay tuned for the second half of this article when I reveal three mineral mining companies that I wouldn't dig into if you gave me free money.

If you are looking for a company whose success is determined by the metals market, but without involving itself in the risks of physically mining the metals, then Silver Wheaton provides a unique play on the future of silver. SLW chooses to finance the mining of silver; it has grown sales and net income every year since 2008, and also has increased competitive advantages over its limited peer group. More details�about our outlook for Silver Wheaton can be found here�in our Motley Fool analyst report.

Gas Producers Having a Bad Day

Bloomberg NewsHoping for snow

While the stock market is having a pretty good 2013 so far, there’s one group that’s missing out on the the gains: oil and gas producers.

Cabot Oil & Gas (COG) is the biggest decliner on the Standard & Poor’s 500 index, falling more than 3% so far today. Also down are are shares of Consol Energy (CNX), EQT Corp. (EQT), both down about 3%, and another energy stock, coal miner�Peabody Energy�(BTU), which has lost 2.5%.*

The reason for this broad move seems to be the sharp drop in natural gas futures prices, which are down 4.5% today. As Alison Sider writes for Dow Jones Newswires today:

As investors for the moment are spooked by the prospect of a warmer-than-expected winter, “my sense is when natural gas took its run late last year, it was driven by hopes of a really cold winter” and not fundamentals, says Argus’ Phil Weiss.

In particular, according to Bloomberg, it was a research report that’s triggered the latest fears.

Gas dropped as much as 9 percent after Commodity Weather Group LLC in Bethesda,�Maryland, said colder-than-average weather in most of the lower-48 states this week would give way to above-normal temperatures from Jan. 7 through Jan. 11. The low in New York on Jan. 9 may be 38 degrees Fahrenheit (3 Celsius), 11 higher than usual, according to�AccuWeather Inc.

*Update: As noted in the comments, this post originally seemed to suggest that Peabody is also a gas producer; it’s not, and I’ve clarified the fact.

More Entrepreneurs Trying Etsy

Etsy is a virtual marketplace for entrepreneurs with a product to sell and many more people are becoming interested in the prospect of using the website as a springboard to start small businesses. Etsy sales grew by 30% in 2011 to $700 million and there are now 800,000 people selling their wares to buyers around the world. Some sellers, or “Estsians,” who have seen success say there are a few important keys to making the website work. One is build the product brand outside of Etsy by being proactive in getting word of the product out into the world; another lesson is to stay current on Etsy features and to be willing to open a dialog with customers. For more on this continue reading the following article from TheStreet.

Etsians. It's a term for those who use Etsy, the online marketplace for handmade and creative goods.

The seven-year-old company is still a growing cult. More than 800,000 creatively inclined entrepreneurs now use the site to reach more than 20 million registered users globally. For sale is unique accessories, clothing, even furniture.

Many who sell on Etsy aren't looking to grow into large-scale companies or develop the newest patented technology. Instead, these entrepreneurs, mainly women with multiple sources of income, want an inexpensive storefront for their handmade, artisanal goods.

Before it was launched, artist and founder Rob Kalin was looking for a place to sell his own creative projects. He tried eBay (EBAY), but didn't think his art was a fit there. He realized there wasn't an online place available for others like him and in just three months, he partnered with two engineers to create, design and write the code for Etsy.

"There was no business plan, no grand strategy," says Matt Stinchcomb, Etsy's vice president of values and impact (a fancy way of saying customer-service relations). "Just a need for something like it." Stinchcomb was Kalin's roommate at the time and Etsy's first employee.

Sales on the website this year were up to $700 million as of early November, up more than 30% for all of 2011, according to the company. On Cyber Monday, more Etsy sellers had sales than on any other day in company history, with a third of the total sales coming from first-time buyers.

"With the current momentum, in 2013 we will begin measuring sales by the Etsy community in billions and sellers in the millions," the 400-employee company says.

While Etsy may be a growing destination to find the perfect hand-painted jewelry box, the company is striving to be more than just another Amazon (AMZN).

Besides being a marketplace where small crafters can sell their items to customers around the world, the company offers a growing amount of support and education, such as SEO best practices, product photography and accounting.

The site charges 20 cents to list each item for four months. Additionally, each time a product sells, Etsy collects a 3.5% commission whether the price of the item is $4 or $400. Etsy does have other ancillary revenue sources, such as an advertising program for sellers to promote their products. It also plans to launch a wholesale platform in the first quarter of 2013, where sellers will be able to connect with boutique owners to broaden the exposure of their goods.

In February, Etsy became one of the first B Corp. companies, or benefit corporation, in New York. Like a growing list of socially responsible companies, the certification means Etsy is legally required to balance its mission between profit-making and contributing to environmental and socially responsible causes.

The B-corp. certification "has been really important for us," Stinchcomb says. "Our mission as a company is to re-imagine commerce in ways that build a more fulfilling and lasting world."

TheStreet spoke to a handful of Etsy sellers about their secret sauce to being successful on the site. While all appreciated Etsy's increasing support, education and general ease in using the platform, success did not come without a passion for their products, being amenable to customer demands and using social media to boost their brand. In between frantically shipping orders to meet Christmas deadlines, five entrepreneurs shared their stories, which are featured below. 

1. Carol's Niece

Silver Spring, Md.

Etsy Lesson: Build your brand outside the platform.

Katrina Briggs Gordon launched Carol's Niece, which sells crocheted fashion accessories as well as handmade greeting cards, in January 2011 after being frustrated with the public school system where she was a school counselor. Her entrepreneur husband inspired her to make a change.

"I'd always crocheted gifts and made handmade greeting cards and my husband encouraged me to sell them," Briggs Gordon says. "I posted one item on Etsy and it sold. That was all the validation I needed. I dove right in and I have not looked back!"

While her Etsy store is still relatively new -- this year was her first at selling a full product line -- every month she sees steady growth in business.

Briggs Gordon says her initial success has already changed her life. "It showed me that this life I was imagining for myself and my family was not a dream, but totally possible," she says.

The community of "like-minded people who spend their time creating and who understand the rewards and challenges of owning a handmade business" is further inspiration, she says. Briggs Gordon has joined several online communities with other local Etsy sellers to share information.

For most of the year, Briggs Gordon also sells her wares at neighborhood outdoor markets, which allows customers to see the products in person and get comfortable with the designer behind them. By enhancing her branding awareness, it ultimately drives traffic back to her Etsy store.

"As a new Etsian, I think people should not get caught up in numbers. Yes, this is a business and you want to get sales, but more importantly you want to build your brand, you want to learn to take great photos, you want to learn the most appropriate words to keep your listings relevant," Briggs Gordon recommends. "Review the tutorials and the Etsy handbook to learn how to make your shop better. Join groups and request a shop critique." 

2. Kind Label

Huntington, N.Y.

Etsy Lesson: Keep current of new Etsy features.

Fashion designer and animal lover Stacey Effman has been frantic this month. Her store Kind Label, where she sells comfort-fitting long and short-sleeve shirts and tanks with inspirational sayings that are hand-printed using a silkscreen, has never seen so much business. She says it's because of Etsy.

Effman, who has a degree in business administration, began designing T-shirts in 2007 as a side hobby. She tried creating an online storefront of her own by using Shopify, but after investing a lot of money in design, set-up fees and monthly maintenance, the site ultimately failed because she couldn't figure out how to drive traffic to the site.

A friend introduced her to Etsy in 2010 and since then she has been learning everything she could about the site to build her business.

Shopify was "was too much of an investment, with very little return," Effman says. "Etsy offers a free e-commerce platform with a built-in customer base, charges 20 cents to list an item and takes a small percentage of each sale. It was an easy switch!"

"Basically, you pay Etsy to bring you customers, and you only pay them if they do! On top of that, they offer a welcoming community of sellers and [administration] to help you when you're stuck with something. You don't get any of that with your own site," Effman adds.

As of last week, Kind Label's revenue had increased more than 15-fold over 2011, she says, though this was her first year of full-time work.

Etsy's commitment to helping sellers succeed by offering resources and information is especially appreciated, but Effman acknowledges that she makes it a point to stay on top of Etsy's ever-increasing features and developments and changing SEO formulas.

"They make it very transparent by making announcements in the forums and through email, so it's easy to do so, but many shop owners don't pay attention to these details," Effman notes.

As for the sayings and prints on her products, Effman finds inspiration in her other passion in life -- animals as well as her husband's music business.

"Etsy allows me to give my ideas a trial run. It's immediate idea to market and that doesn't really happen unless you have your own shop," she says. "It's a unique concept, and I think people are opening their minds to the idea that handmade can equal quality and value."

In the end though it's all about the product.

"If you're trying to sell something that you yourself wouldn't pay money for, no one else is going to either just because it's on Etsy," she says. 

3. Stil Novo Design

Oregon House, Calif.

Etsy Lesson: Open up a dialogue with customers.

Stil Novo Design creates sustainable custom furniture, lighting, and home and wedding decor using recycled French oak wine barrels.

Owners Camilla Pistilli and her husband, Stefano Capaccioli, launched their Etsy shop in 2008 after a friend thought the designs would be a perfect fit for Etsy's 100% handmade philosophy. The market opportunities that Etsy opened up for Stil Novo Designs kept the business from failing during the worst of the recession.

"We had a few successful experiences with selling at fairs and shows, but as we got deeper into the recession, the profits couldn't adequately justify the investment in time and money," she says. "At that time, Etsy was already the largest marketplace on the Internet focused on handmade products, attracting the type of clientele we were hoping to reach. Over the years, we opened a few more online shops on different sites, but none of them had brought us the same volume of success we have experienced on Etsy."

Pistilli emphasizes that they make themselves available to answer any questions a potential customer may have. The pair even encourages custom requests and, more importantly, working with customer's input to produce the exact piece desired.

"Often custom requests have given us the opportunity to create new designs or variations that we wouldn't have thought of on our own," Pistilli says. "This is one of the most valuable aspects of this sort of 'old worldly' relationship between client and artisan, only possible through handmade [objects]."

Pistilli says sellers shouldn't underestimate the value of personal dialogue with customers.

"We like to keep our customers well-informed about every step of the making of their order through multiple emails. We're always happy to accommodate every special request in order to make their experience with us somehow different from the otherwise sterile Internet market."

But being on Etsy doesn't guarantee automatic success.

"Sellers should make their work stand out by keeping it creative and innovative," but also by putting in extreme care to their shop's settings, photo listings and descriptions, she says. "Our returning clients and referrals are a testimonial of how a solid reputation is key to sustain any business."

To be sure, Stil Novo Designs are comparatively pricey, begging the question, will customers who come to Etsy pay for the craftsmanship. Pistilli says yes.

"Surprisingly, our more affordable home décor items at the moment are not the bulk of our sales," she says. "Nowadays most people are confident, experienced online shoppers, more so than even just four or five years ago; therefore they are quite able to determine the quality and suitability of an item even just by looking at a photo on their computer screen." 

4. Manzanita Kids

Seattle

Etsy Lesson: Constantly re-evaluate your business.

Two years ago, the idea for Adrienne and David Minnery's Etsy business, Manzanita Kids, came after David lost his job and decided to spend more time at home, while Adrienne continued at her teaching position.

"Manzanita Kids embodies a lifestyle change for us that began with the birth of our first child," David says. "Having our own business gives us the flexibility to work around our family's schedule."

With David's background in sculpture and design and Adrienne's education experience, it ended up being the perfect combination for making quality wood children's toys -- at first made only for their son.

"One of the amazing things about Etsy is that it is a platform for both hobbyists and craftspeople relying on their business for income," he says.

While the market for their toys seems to be strong, Etsy sellers should be reminded of the old saying "you get what you pay for."

"We work on our business all day, every day. We respond to conversations usually within an hour of receipt. We constantly work on toy design and our photographs," David says.

"It's also about taking your business seriously," he says. "Etsy provides a great framework and access to a community but you still need to work, have a plan and be willing to change. We constantly evaluate our progress, our photographs, our designs and our marketing plans."

Their effort is paying off. This year Manzanita Kids, the Spanish translation of "little apple," doubled their sales vs. 2011, David says.

"With our toys, you don't have to worry about whether the toy contains toxic chemicals, whether it is part of a recall, whether parts will break off, where it came from and who you might be supporting," David says. "Pick up one of our toys and you can feel the weight of the wood, the smooth satin surface and you can see our hand in each piece. These toys are meant to be passed down to the next generation. We have many repeat customers, which is a good indication that we are on the right track." 

5. AHeirloom

Brooklyn, N.Y.

Etsy Lesson: The more unique your products, the more recognized you will be.

It shouldn't come as a surprise that many Etsy sellers got the inspiration for their businesses from shopping on the site themselves. That's certainly the story of AHeirloom, launched in 2010 after Amy Stringer-Mowat was looking for some items for her wedding to fiance Bill. Seeing the dearth of offerings on the site, the two wanted to give their cutting boards a try.

Their product, handcrafted cutting boards in the shape of states, was something they had started making for themselves.

"One of the reasons why the boards are so successful is that our product line is essentially unlimited. While there is a base set of borderlines, state/nation shapes, the placement for the personalization can be anywhere within those bounds, thus creating thousands of options," Stringer-Mowat says. "Our products are manufactured in the USA, using a very specific skill set and this is something that we feel very proud of."

The workmanship shows. Stringer-Mowat recalls hearing from a bride who said her entire bridal party ended up purchasing boards after she received one as a shower gift.

"I think our customers feel really great about supporting a small business that is manufacturing in the United States, as many Etsy artists do," Stringer-Mowat says. "It is also important to note that Etsy is quite beautifully curated and has a strong creative vision. The site ... feels exciting. These kinds of feelings aren't easy to express through the Internet -- you usually get this feeling from walking into a [boutique] shop, but Etsy has managed to replicate this experience virtually with a uniquely vibrant website."

AHeirloom's sales this year rose 15% over 2011. Including wholesale orders (AHeirloom ships blank state boards to places like Amazon and targeted boards to gourmet gift shops), sales are up 20%, according to Stringer-Mowat.

Etsy gave us "an audience that is confident in us because we sell on Etsy -- they have brought us somewhat instant credibility from which to grow our business," she says. "Our brand is recognized as an 'Etsy brand.'"

Fiscal cliff resolved, but super cliff ahead

Our prediction that the fiscal cliff would be resolved has turned out to be partially right.

It is important not to get carried away with optimism because only one part of the three-part puzzle has been addressed. The three parts are: taxes, spending and the debt ceiling.

The fiscal-cliff deal only partially addresses taxes and totally kicks the can down the road on spending and debt ceiling. Republicans are on the record as ready to put up a stiff fight on spending and debt-ceiling issues. Democrats are on the record saying that they are still going to try to further raise taxes by closing loopholes.

All of these issues are supposed to be resolved in the next couple of months. Expect a more divisive debate ahead. As market participants realize the foregoing, the enthusiasm being seen this morning may wane. The fiscal cliff has only been superficially resolved, but the super cliff is still ahead.

Big institutional investors have been putting on risk (taking higher risk) in the wake of the last-minute fiscal-cliff deal. DJIA futures jumped 250 points before backing off. Notable strength has emerged in broad-based ETFs such as the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust, PowerShares QQQ Trust Series and SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF Trust. The largest stock by market cap, Apple has moved up to around $550. Strong rallies are in progress in Asia and Europe. Notable strength is being seen in a variety of emerging-market ETFs, as well as those for Germany, the UK, Italy and Spain.

Treasury bonds are falling. Popular issue iShares Trust Barclays 20+ Year Treasury Bond Fund is falling. Inverse ETFs, such as the ProShares UltraShort Lehman 20+ Year Treasury and ProShares Short 20+ Year Treasury are rising strongly. Apparently investors no longer seek the safety of treasurys.

Junk bonds are rallying. Notable strength is being seen in popular ETFs iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond Fund and Barclays High Yield Bond ETF. High-quality bonds are falling and weakness is being seen in the related ETF iShares iBoxx $ InvesTop Investment Grade Corp. Bond Fund.

Gold and silver are rising, as the momentum crowd continues its aggressive buying. Strength is being seen in popular ETFs, such as the SPDR Gold Trust, iShares Silver Trust, Market Vectors ETF Trust Market Vectors Gold Miners and Market Vectors Junior Gold Miners ETF.

Adding fuel to the fire is the fact that lots of new money flows into the markets during the first three trading days of the year.

It is worth noting that the can has been kicked down the road on two important issues of debt ceiling and sequestration (spending cuts).

The plan

The plan according to the ZYX Change Method is to take partial profits on strength, and then use any dip over the next two months to buy again. One of our favorite ways to play the moves in 2013 is the ETF PowerShares S&P 500 High Beta SPHB . This ETF contains the 100 highest-beta stocks in the S&P 500.

Disclosure: Subscribers to the Arora Report are long TBF and SPHB.

This Morning: Google Challenges MSFT, Apple mini needs Bigger Production

Here are some things going on this morning in your world of tech:

The Nasdaq Composite Index is down half a percent at 2,995.71 following the U.S. holiday break yesterday, slightly underperforming the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index and the Dow.

One of the strongest performers this morning is�Research in Motion�(RIMM), up 79 cents, or over 7%, at $11.40, on no apparent news. In the last 48 hours, images surfaced on MobileSyrup�of what might be a forthcoming touch-screen�BlackBerry running the�BB10 operating system, which is to debut formally on January 30th.

Piper Jaffray’s Gene Munster�was back this morning with another update on how the holiday shopping season has panned out. Shopping trends “remained under pressure” in the week ending December 22nd, writes Munster, citing data from ShopperTrak, with national retail sales estimated to have slipped 2.5%, year over year, versus a 14.4% rise in the same week a the year prior. That may have to do with there having been an extra two shopping days between Thanksgiving and Christmas this year, writes Munster. Full holiday season shopping is off 0.9%, year over year, which is worse than in 2007, which had the same calendar of shopping days, writes Munster.�Cotton Timberlake�of�Bloomberg�had an article citing similarly downbeat retail sales data�from�MasterCard.

Shares of Zynga (ZNGA) are up 5 cents, or 2%, at $2.38, perhaps a result of the continued anticipation of an online gambling offering. TheFlyontheWall noted earlier in the week that the company had posted a brief item online about something called “Zynga Plus Casino,” licensed in the U.K., coming in “early 2013.”

Since there isn’t much in the way of actual news and analysis today, let’s take a look at some of the gossip.

DigiTimes’s Daniel Shen and Steve Shen reported yesterday that Nokia (NOK) and HTC (2498TW) are both considering making tablet computers based on Microsoft‘s (MSFT) “Windows RT” flavor of Windows 8, with Nokia contemplating a 10-inch model and HTC a 7-inch model, they write, citing multiple unnamed “industry sources.”

Also via DigiTimes, Apple (AAPL) may ship 8 million�units of its iPad mini this quarter, fewer than it might have, because the supply of touch-sensitive panels for the device is lagging the rest of the manufacturing process for the mini, write Aaron Lee and Adam Hwang, citing multiple unnamed sources in the supply chain. The authors write that sources say shipments of the mini could increase to 13 million next quarter.

Apple shares this morning are down $6.84, or 1.3%, at $513.33.

The New York Times’s Quentin Hardy yesterday reported that productivity apps from Google (GOOG) are becoming increasingly popular among business users, in part because of steeply undercutting Microsoft‘s (MSFT) Office suite. Google’s $50-per-year seat license compares to a $400 tab for each licensed copy of Office, Hardy notes. Hardy quotes at least one analyst, Melissa Webster, of IDC, as saying that Google’s “good enough product has become pretty good.”

Speaking of Google, The Wall Street Journal’s Jessica Lessin, Greg Bensinger, Evelyn Rusli and Amir Efrati teamed up for a year-ahead article yesterday, writing that the battle will between the search giant and Apple and Amazon.com (AMZN) and Facebook (FB) will escalate this coming year as they each make challenges to the others’ turf.

Google shares are down $4.27, or 0.6%, at $705.23, while Microsoft shares are off 29 cents, or 1%, at $26.77.

Top Stocks For 1/2/2013-13

Celebrities team up with Famous Footwear to surprise unsuspecting fans for second phase of popular ‘Make Today Famous’ campaign

ST. LOUIS, Aug. 11 /CRWENewswire/ — Famous Footwear, the more than 1,100-store family footwear chain operated by the retail division of Brown Shoe Company, Inc. (NYSE: BWS, www.BrownShoe.com), announces a new web series that gives consumers the opportunity to feel “Famous for a Day.”

Adding an entertainment layer to the company’s “Make Today Famous” branding, advertising and social media campaign, the “Famous for a Day” series surprises lucky consumers and gives them the opportunity to spend a day with their favorite celebrity. Each surprise encounter is taped for a viral video series that enables consumers nationwide to share in the experience at http://www.famousfootwear.com/famous.

“We launched the ‘Make Today Famous’ campaign a year ago during Back to School to inspire customers on their walk through life, highlighting that magical moment of finding the perfect pair of shoes at the right price from a brand you love. We’re building on that feeling with the ‘Famous for a Day’ web series, giving consumers a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to have a truly famous day with their favorite celebrity and sharing their excitement with the country,” said Famous Footwear Senior Vice President -Marketing Will Smith.

The first video in the “Famous for a Day” series features Grammy-nominated recording artist and 2007 American Idol winner Jordin Sparks who will make her Broadway debut in the Tony Award-winning musical “In The Heights” later this month. In the video, which is now available online at http://www.famousfootwear.com/famous, consumers get to see Sparks surprising 16-year-old Kieriay Moyer at her home in Orlando and ride along as the super-fan is made “Famous for a Day.” Moyer was selected for the surprise due to her dedication to social service and helping others in and beyond her community, attributes especially important to Sparks. The second and third installments of the Famous for a Day video series are expected to go live in late-August and September, respectively.

Famous Footwear’s “Make Today Famous” campaign also includes an integrated advertising effort developed by Minneapolis-based agency Campbell Mithun. Back-to-school television ads feature time-slice stop-motion technology that captures teens mid-air during a variety of fun activities � a garage-band jam, BMX tricks, break dancing and cheerleader jump splits. Two of the seven TV spots include a text-in offer for an additional 20 percent off during the buy-one-get-one-half-off Back-to-School sale. The campaign also includes radio, digital, in-store and print elements, and in-taxi screens.

American Idol is a registered trademark and copyright of FOX and FremantleMedia North America, Inc. and is not affiliated with or a sponsor of Famous Footwear, The Famous Footwear Famous For A Day web series or Brown Shoe Company, Inc.

About Famous Footwear

Famous Footwear is a leading family branded footwear destination, with 1,100 stores nationwide and e-commerce site FamousFootwear.com. The chain offers consumers more than 80 nationally recognized brands, including Nike, Skechers, Naturalizer, Puma, Steve Madden, Converse, New Balance, DC, Rocket Dog and Carlos by Carlos Santana, and features a broad assortment of toning footwear from brands like Skechers and Reebok. A proud national partner of the March of Dimes, the retailer sponsors March for Babies walk events in more than 1,000 communities nationwide. Famous Footwear is operated by the retail subsidiary of Brown Shoe Company, Inc. (NYSE: BWS), which has $2.3 billion in sales as a retailer and wholesaler of footwear. For more information, visit www.famousfootwear.com and www.brownshoe.com.

About Brown Shoe Company, Inc.

Brown Shoe is a $2.3 billion global footwear company. Brown Shoe’s Retail division operates Famous Footwear, a leading family branded footwear destination with over 1,100 stores nationwide and e-commerce site FamousFootwear.com, approximately 270 specialty retail stores in the U.S., Canada, and China primarily under the Naturalizer brand name, and footwear e-tailer shoes.com. Through its wholesale divisions, Brown Shoe designs and markets leading footwear brands including Naturalizer, Dr. Scholl’s, Franco Sarto, Sam Edelman, LifeStride, Via Spiga, Etienne Aigner, Vera Wang Lavender and Buster Brown. Brown Shoe press releases are available on the Company’s website at www.brownshoe.com.