Property Curbs Weigh on China Shares

Chinese stocks plunged on Monday after Beijing introduced new policies to control the property market.

The Shanghai Composite dropped 2.9%, with property developers leading the fall, after the central government late last week introduced measures such as higher down payments and mortgage rates in cities where house prices have risen too quickly, as well as stricter enforcement of a 20% capital gains tax on property transactions.

The Property Index was down 9.1% in Shanghai, while its counterpart in Shenzhen dropped 8.7%. Big developers dropped to their daily limit: China's largest property developer China Vanke fell 10.0% in Shenzhen, while Poly Real Estate Group also lost 10.0% in Shanghai.

"The measures are a big blow to property stocks. The implementation of imposing a 20% capital tax on property transactions will definitely affect housing demand," said Amy Lin, analyst at Capital Securities.

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Mainland developers were also down in Hong Kong, where the Hang Seng Index dropped 1.3%. China Resources Land fell 7.7% and China Overseas Land & Investment retreated 5.2%.

Also in Hong Kong, China Merchants Bank declined 2.3% despite the lender announcing that its fiscal year 2012 net profit rose 25.3% on-year, beating analysts' expectations.

The impact was even felt in Australia, where the S&P ASX 200 was down 1.4%, as local resources companies extended their declines as weakness in the Shanghai market became apparent. China is Australia's largest trading partner and a slowdown in the resource hungry property market could affect demand for commodities.

Rio Tinto dropped 3.2% and Fortescue Metals Group lost 3%.

More broadly across the region, investors were digesting mixed economic developments from the U.S. on Friday. The manufacturing sector grew at its fastest pace since June 2011 in February, according to the Institute of Supply Management's manufacturing purchasing managers' index, while U.S. consumer confidence was at its highest level since November, according to Thomson-Reuters and University of Michigan's consumer-sentiment index.

This was offset however, by concerns over the sequester, $85 billion in automatic budget cuts that started Friday in the U.S. after lawmakers in Washington failed to reach a deal to avert the situation.

The U.S. dollar dropped against the yen Monday at �93.36, eating into Friday's 1.1% gain, after Bank of Japan governor nominee Haruhiko Kuroda delivered no surprises while speaking to parliament, saying that his most important task will be to end deflation as soon as possible.

The comments come ahead of the Bank of Japan's next policy meeting, scheduled to start on Wednesday and conclude on Thursday.

Current Bank of Japan governor Masaaki Shirakawa "is unlikely to do anything, so the focus will be on the Kuroda rhetoric. There are expectations of further action when Kuroda takes over in April," said Wee-Khoon Chong, Asia rates strategist at Soci�t� G�n�rale in Hong Kong.

Japanese stocks started the session with a strong gain, though this moderated as the yen pushed higher against the greenback. The Nikkei Stock Average was last up 0.4% at 11,650.62, after marking a fresh 2013 high above 11,700 in early trading.

Exporters and property developers gained in Tokyo: Toyota Motor Corp added 0.6% and Mitsubishi Estate rose 4.2%.

South Korea's Kospi Composite was down 0.4% after a holiday-extended weekend.

Write to Daniel Inman at daniel.inman@wsj.com

Will These Numbers from Synchronoss Technologies Be Good Enough for You?

Synchronoss Technologies (Nasdaq: SNCR  ) is expected to report Q4 earnings on Feb. 7. Here's what Wall Street wants to see:

The 10-second takeaway
Comparing the upcoming quarter to the prior-year quarter, average analyst estimates predict Synchronoss Technologies's revenues will increase 12.8% and EPS will compress -26.5%.

The average estimate for revenue is $70.1 million. On the bottom line, the average EPS estimate is $0.25.

Revenue details
Last quarter, Synchronoss Technologies tallied revenue of $69.0 million. GAAP reported sales were 16% higher than the prior-year quarter's $59.2 million.

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Quarterly periods. Dollar amounts in millions. Non-GAAP figures may vary to maintain comparability with estimates.

EPS details
Last quarter, non-GAAP EPS came in at $0.28. GAAP EPS of $0.16 for Q3 were 78% higher than the prior-year quarter's $0.09 per share.

Source: S&P Capital IQ. Quarterly periods. Non-GAAP figures may vary to maintain comparability with estimates.

Recent performance
For the preceding quarter, gross margin was 57.8%, 470 basis points better than the prior-year quarter. Operating margin was 15.7%, 640 basis points better than the prior-year quarter. Net margin was 9.0%, 300 basis points better than the prior-year quarter.

Looking ahead

The full year's average estimate for revenue is $271.3 million. The average EPS estimate is $1.07.

Investor sentiment
The stock has a five-star rating (out of five) at Motley Fool CAPS, with 449 members out of 475 rating the stock outperform, and 26 members rating it underperform. Among 109 CAPS All-Star picks (recommendations by the highest-ranked CAPS members), 108 give Synchronoss Technologies a green thumbs-up, and one give it a red thumbs-down.

Of Wall Street recommendations tracked by S&P Capital IQ, the average opinion on Synchronoss Technologies is outperform, with an average price target of $28.58.

Software and computerized services are being consumed in radically different ways, on new and increasingly mobile devices. Many old leaders will be left behind. Whether or not Synchronoss Technologies makes the coming cut, you should check out the company that Motley Fool analysts expect to lead the pack in "The Next Trillion-dollar Revolution." Click here for instant access to this free report.

  • Add Synchronoss Technologies to My Watchlist.

Which Bottom-5 S&P 500 Stock Has the Best Chance to Bounce Back?

The market has seen an incredible run off its lows over the past four years. Chances are good that if you've owned a diversified portfolio of investments, you're sitting on a handsome return. However, it wasn't all sugar and spice for a handful of companies within the broad-based S&P 500 in the first-quarter. The index closed at an all-time high on Thursday, but these five companies were the worst of the worst in the first quarter. The good news is that one has a very good chance at rebounding in the second quarter.

Cliffs Natural Resources (NYSE: CLF  ) (50.5%)
It was a horrendous quarter for Cliffs, a miner of iron ore and metallurgical coal, which lost half of its value. A cornucopia of analyst downgrades shelled the company after it reduced its quarterly dividend by a whopping 76% to $0.15 from $0.625. The most recent downgrade came courtesy of Morgan Stanley, which warned that new iron ore supplies in the U.S. may reduce iron ore pricing. Iron prices are well off their highs of $187 per dry metric ton, but they've also crept off their recent lows of just $99 per dry metric ton set last September.�

J.C. Penney (NYSE: JCP  ) (23.3%)
As unbelievable as this might be, struggling retailer J.C. Penney shed only 23% in the first quarter despite reporting what I deemed to be the worst retail quarter ever. Its fourth-quarter report highlighted a 28.4% decline in total sales, a nearly 32% drop in same-store sales, and a 34.4% tumble in direct-to-consumer sales. Penney CEO Ron Johnson has backtracked on the company's no-sale pricing policy, but it remains to be seen if customers will return or if the damage has already been done.�

Peabody Energy (NYSE: BTU  ) (20.3%)
It definitely wasn't a kind quarter to coal producers, with Peabody shares shedding 20% after reporting dismal fourth-quarter results in late January. Coal prices have been under serious pressure because of low-cost natural gas, which has persuaded electric utilities to make the long-term switch from coal to natural gas. Reduced stockpiles of coal have helped somewhat stabilize prices, but the prospect of higher costs in its Australian mines and stagnant coal prices didn't sit well with its shareholders this quarter.

U.S. Steel (NYSE: X  ) (18.1%)
Another underperformer, another commodity-based company! This time it's U.S. Steel, which saw its shares dip by 18% on the quarter as weak steel prices and tempered demand both domestically and overseas weighed on results. For 2012, U.S. Steel's net loss widened to $124 million from $53 million in the previous year, but that's primarily attributed to a whopping $353 million loss on the sale of U.S. Steel Serbia.

Garmin (NASDAQ: GRMN  ) (17.9%)
Finally, navigation and GPS device maker Garmin shed nearly 18% during the quarter after its full-year outlook failed to impress investors. Garmin forecast a profit of just $2.30-$2.40 for the year on revenue of $2.5 billion to $2.6 billion as compared with estimates at the time calling for $2.89 in EPS on $2.77 billion in sales. Garmin continues to offer investors a premium dividend but is falling short in the innovation department, with numerous apps on smartphones and tablets replacing its products.


Source: Finviz.

Which company has the best chance to bounce back?
As some of the greatest minds on Wall Street have stated before, stocks drop for a reason. As we've seen from these brief summaries, the drop in all five cases appears well justified. However, one company among the five has a very strong chance of a rebound in the coming quarters.

That company is certainly not J.C. Penney. I didn't even know it was possible to deliver a same-store-sales drop of 31.7% in a single quarter, but Penney proved me wrong. Management appears completely lost as to what to do. CEO Johnson says he'll let the customer dictate Penney's plans moving forward, but that seems a tough sell considering that Johnson attempted to dictate how customers should react since taking over.

Garmin is another company we can easily extract from the bounce-back list. Garmin is investing heavily in research and development to drive sales, but its product is antiquated next to today's smartphones and tablets. In areas where reception is limited (e.g., the ocean), Garmin still offers incredible value, but it's likely that its total sales potential will continue to dwindle.

U.S. Steel is another company that can be pretty easily removed from this equation. It isn't that I don't like steel companies (because I do); it's that U.S. Steel is one of the worst of the bunch. With one of the highest debt-to-equity ratios among its peers, U.S. Steel has a long way to go in terms of paying down its debt before it's back on my buy radar.

What this came down to is a tough call between Cliffs Natural Resources and Peabody Energy. Ultimately, I've chosen Cliffs Natural Resources, the first quarter's worst performer, as my best bet to rebound moving forward.

I like Peabody; don't get me wrong. However, I'm concerned that Peabody's overseas costs will get out of hand and depress its margins for the next couple of quarters.

I don't have those same worries with Cliffs Natural, which has its costs under control -- especially with a 76% dividend cut -- and which cut its net debt in half with a 10.4 million secondary share offering. A $157 billion infrastructure bill in China aimed at boosting GDP growth, coupled with a revival in homebuilding activity in the U.S., should have both met-coal -- which is used to strengthen steel -- and iron ore prices stabilizing and rising in no time. In fact, iron ore prices in February were at their highest levels since September 2011. At just eight times forward earnings and with a yield nearing 3%, Cliffs Natural is a good bet to rebound strongly in the coming quarters.

Is Cliffs an amazing value, or a deceptive value trap?
Cliffs Natural Resources has grown from a domestic iron ore producer into an international player in both the iron ore and metallurgical coal markets. It has also underwhelmed investors lately, especially after its dramatic 76% dividend cut in February. However, it could now be looked at as a possible value play because of several factors that are likely to remain advantageous for Cliffs' management. For details on these advantages and more, click here now to check out The Motley Fool's premium research report on the company.

Why Oracle Overspent on Acme Packet

Shares of Acme Packet (NASDAQ: APKT  ) have surged 68% over the past three months since reaching a low of $15.31 in late October. Clearly investors were placing huge bets ahead of the company's Q4 earnings report released Monday. But what they got was a surprise buyout by Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL  ) for $2.1 billion. And with telecoms ravaged by poor carrier spending, it's not yet clear that Acme Packet deserved this premium.

Absent clear signs that spending will rebound, it doesn't justify the optimism in Acme Packet. Besides, with a P/E ratio well over 300, it's fair to ask where the value is. Although Acme Packet has a sizable lead in the session delivery market, it pales in comparison to Cisco, which has a superior portfolio. And for value investors, Cisco also comes with much less risk.

Disappointing fourth quarter, but it's Oracle's problem now
While the Q4 report would have been the perfect starting point to this relationship. Acme Packet's results made me question whether or not Oracle truly knows what it's getting itself into. Granted, Acme Packet issued a warning to investors that the results would be light, saying revenue would arrive in the range of $84 million to $86 million, with earnings coming in at $0.26-$0.28 per share.

Granted, both targets were well below Street estimates. But the numbers were consistent with the outlook given by rivals. I was nonetheless shocked by what the company actually reported. Revenue dropped 15% year over year to $70.7 million. This was well below the low end of the company's own revenue estimates of $84 million. Never mind that it missed the consensus projections of $93.4 million

Non-GAAP net income dropped 64% to $6.5 million, or $0.09 per share. Essentially, not only did Acme Packet miss its own prior EPS estimates by 65%, but the company managed to also miss revenue estimates by 16%. Now these are pretty wide margins of error -- even for a lemonade stand.

Then again, not much was expected seeing as carriers have yet to open their wallets, which was evident in ADTRAN's�fourth-quarter earnings report. The good news for Acme Packet is that Adtran's results were broadly in line with estimates with earnings arriving at $4 million, or $0.06 per share. Then again, for Adtran, both net income and revenue dropped 87% and 20%, respectively.

By comparison,�Ciena (NASDAQ: CIEN  ) didn't woo the Street with its 2% revenue growth, but unlike Acme Packet, there is evidence that the company has begun to turn things around. Despite Ciena's soft report, shares jumped 5%. For Ciena, its solid fundamentals continue to reassure investors of its sound management.

Essentially, the Street believes Ciena's soft numbers were the result of macro conditions and not a lack of execution. That's not the case with Acme Packet. Plus, the Street was pleased with how Ciena performed categorically, including 66% growth in carrier Ethernet service delivery, or CESD. Likewise, service revenue soared 21%. And even with the half-point-drop in gross margin, it rose sequentially by over 3 points.

Essentially, in Ciena's situation, it's hard to punish the company for reporting earnings that merely arrive in-line with estimates, particularly in tough macro climates. However, when the stock carries a valuation multiple 20 times the industry standard, as Acme Packet does, the scrutiny is warranted -- especially when cheaper rivals outperform.

Then again, it's reasonable to suspect that Acme Packet knew the importance of its guidance as it was negotiating its deal with Oracle. Guiding too low would have sent investors into a panic, potentially shedding valuable negotiating leverage. On the other hand, there's no way Oracle would have done this deal without prior due diligence. Oracle is too smart.

For that matter, there are a couple of ways to assess this deal. Either Oracle sees an imminent sector rebound and feels there's too much unrealized value in Acme Packet, or it's a defensive move, aimed at keeping Acme Packet out of the hands of another rival. But what does Oracle know about networking?

Can the Net-Net 6300 help fight off the competition?
Another concern for Oracle and Acme Packet will be the increased competition from Alcatel-Lucent (NYSE: ALU  ) , which has recently been given new life. Alcatel-Lucent has seen its shares spike upward, partly because the company is no longer facing concerns related to liquidity after having secured a $2.1 billion financing pact.

This new financing will help Alcatel buy time while it seeks out some new business that might develop when the industry fully rebounds. However, working in Acme Packet's favor is that the company has new technologies such as the Net-Net 6300 that should help stimulate growth over the next couple of years. Whether or not this can fend off more prominent names such as Cisco remains to be seen.

Nonetheless, it should help Acme Packet fight smaller rivals like Ciena and Alcatel-Lucent. The Net-Net 6300 is able to supply customers with high-capacity network communication between service providers. The device plug-and-play and also offers large-scale subscriber access environments such as VoLTE.

What's more, it supports one million subscribers and has the capability of handling 200,000 simultaneous calls. In other words, this has game-changing potential for carriers as they begin to switch to session initiated protocol trunking, Acme Packet's main area of expertise. CEO Andrew Ory recently described the Net-Net 6300 this way: "It improves our capabilities to meet the needs of our customers in three areas: for high-capacity network interconnect between service providers, for large-scale subscriber access environment, such as VoLTE, and for large-scale contact center and enterprises."

There's no question that this should help Oracle and Acme Packet preserve market share. But to what extent can the Net-Net 6300 help Oracle acquire more business and produce the growth that investors are paying for? Prior to the acquisition, analysts were projecting Acme Packet to grow at a 12.5% rate over the next five years. Will it be enough for Oracle?

A too-pricey premium
For as brilliant as Oracle has shown to be over the years, it's too early in the game to start second-guessing its decision to buy Acme Packet. But the Q4 results were too horrible to warrant the premium that Acme Packet received. Also, while I'm not going to cry foul play here, I'm nonetheless flabbergasted that Acme Packet's management was able to miss this badly on guidance. I believe Oracle knows exactly what it's getting itself into with this deal. But I'm not so sure investors of Acme Packet realized what just happened.

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UTX, Microsoft Slipping on Slow Day for Dow

Following the best day in the market for 2011, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down by about 0.1% to under 12,575 in early trading Wednesday, led lower by United Technologies (NYSE:UTX) and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT)

United Technologies was down in early trading with a loss of more than 2.52% to around $86.50, a drop of more than $2.25. While revenues rose at all of the business units for United Technologies, traders still were disappointed with the results.

Microsoft also was down more than 1.05% in morning action to under $27.25, shedding about 30 cents. Microsoft is trading above its 20-, 50- and 200-day moving averages and has a relative strength index of 66, with 70 being the standard for when a stock is considered being overbought.

IBM (NYSE:IBM), after its earning report produced a strong day Tuesday, was lower Wednesday by about $1.20 to around $180 as traders booked profits. Big Blue has a relative strength index of 74.74 and is trading 17.39% above its 200-day moving average.

Boeing (NYSE:BA) was up more than 2.6% to over $72.75, a pick-up of more than $2.20, as American Airlines announced the largest plane order in history � 230 from Boeing and 230 for Airbus�� as part of a $40 billion fleet renewal program.

After reporting earnings yesterday that took the stock to a year low, Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) rebounded to around $9.75, up about 2% for a gain of more than 17 cents. BAC remains the worst performing stock on the Dow this year, down more than 25% for 2011. Bank of America will need a $50 billion cash cushion, according to reports, to cover all of the mortgage expenses from the acquisition of Countrywide Credit and meet Basel III capital requirements.

Reporting stronger-than-expected results earlier in earnings season, JP Morgan (NYSE:JPM) continued to rise, up more than 1.85% to over $41.10, higher by more than 70 cents in the early session. JP Morgan is trading more than 2.5% higher for the week based on its earnings strength, good news from its China operations and increased hiring in Florida.

�Johnathan Yates did not own any of the aforementioned stocks as of this writing.

Top Stocks For 3/28/2013-14

GreenHouse Holdings, Inc. (OTCQB:GRHU), a San Diego, California-based integrated energy solutions provider and developer of eco-friendly infrastructure, recently announced the results of operations for the third quarter of Fiscal Year 2010 and is providing a shareholder update.

Revenues for the nine months ended September 30, 2010 were approximately $4,428,000 compared to approximately $3,486,000 for the nine months ended September 30, 2009, an increase of approximately $942,000 or 27%. This increase was due to increased sales of our energy efficient products and services to residential customers as a result of our expansion of our sales and marketing infrastructure.

Gross profit percentage increased from 37% for the nine months ended September 30, 2009 to 41% for the nine months ended September 30, 2010 due to our increased focus on negotiating better prices and discounts from our suppliers and vendors, our increased focus on sales training and customer pricing, and sales of higher margin products and services.

For the 2009 fiscal year and for the nine months ended September 30, 2010, GreenHouse’s gross profit percentage has fluctuated between approximately 40% and 50% due to normal fluctuations in the sales mix of products and services.

GreenHouse Holdings, Inc. is a San Diego, California based integrator of some of the world’s most innovative environmental, public safety, infrastructure technologies.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Hiru Corporation (PINK:HIRU) is considering a merger with a Canada-based health products company. This company operates a full-service natural health clinic and distributes its signature brand of health products.

Hiru Corporation’s various products promote brain health, pain management and hormone balance, and help combat high blood pressure and high cholesterol. These products come highly regarded by the Chinese market, and have already received positive online testimonials from consumers who say using the products improved their health.

Services at the natural health clinic include specialty massage, EIS scanning, acupuncture, and computer-guided biofeedback scanning.

Hiru Corporation is excited at the prospect of merging with this growing medical company, which has distributors and franchise outlets opening across the country. The name, revenues and all other details will be released by Hiru Corporation shortly, as the discussions progress. Hiru Corporation is of the opinion that this is a material event that warrants a public announcement.

In other corporate news, Hiru Corporation intends to rescind the 5-1 forward split previously under consideration, as upon further review the management is of the opinion that this course of action would not be in the best interest of the shareholders.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Herman Miller (NASDAQ:MLHR) announced recently the launch of a direct-to-consumer eCommerce store through the Herman Miller website at HermanMiller.com/store. The primary focus of the new eCommerce launch is to strengthen brand awareness and communicate the Herman Miller story directly with consumers.

Herman Miller works for a better world around you�with inventive designs, technologies and related services that improve the human experience wherever people work, heal, learn, and live.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Portec Rail Products, Inc. (NASDAQ:PRPX) recently announced unaudited net income of $1,241,000 or $0.13 per share for the three months ended September 30, 2010, and $2,562,000 or $0.27 per share for the nine months ended September 30, 2010.

Portec Rail Products, Inc. engages in the manufacture, supply, and distribution of various rail products in the United States and internationally.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc. (NYSE:HE) recently, the board of directors of Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc. maintained the regular quarterly cash dividend of 31 cents per share, payable December 10, 2010, to shareholders of record at the close of business on November 15, 2010 (ex-dividend date is November 10, 2010). The dividend is equivalent to an annual rate of $1.24 per share.

Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc., through its subsidiaries, primarily engages in electric utility and banking businesses primarily in the state of Hawaii.

S&P 500 Breaks Above Closing High

After weeks of false starts, the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index finally broke a six-year-old closing high to mark a new record.

The push to record territory came in midmorning trading, as the S&P 500 broke past its previous record close of 1565.15 on Oct. 9, 2007.

The S&P 500 gained 6.34 points, or 0.4%, to 1569. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 52.38 points, or 0.4%, to 14578.54, also finishing the quarter at a new closing record. The Nasdaq Composite index tacked on 11.00 points, or 0.3%, to 3267.52.

The S&P 500 had flirted with its closing record for two weeks before finally vaulting over that level Thursday. It had come within five points of the closing high in seven of the past 10 sessions.

MFA Financial Raises Regular Dividend

MFA Financial (NYSE: MFA  ) �will hand out a quarterly dividend for its fiscal Q1 2013. The company will distribute $0.22 per share of its common stock on April 30 to shareholders of record as of April 12. That amount represents an even 10% increase over the previous payout of $0.20, which was paid at the end of January.

Between that disbursement and the current one, the mortgage REIT also dispensed a special dividend. This was $0.50 per share, and it was paid earlier this month.

The new regular dividend annualizes to $0.88 per share. That yields 9.4% at MFA Financial's current stock price of $9.32.

Talking to Clients About Turmoil: Evensky, Cortazzo, Springer & More—a Slideshow

During the markets and economic crisis of 2008-2009, research, and anecdotal evidence, revealed that the best advisors communicated often and in different ways with their clients. Their intent was to educate and commiserate, but the result was keeping clients invested in the market and reminding them that they had committed to a financial plan designed to protect their assets regardless of the fluctuations of the overall market and to help them reach their goals.

In the wake of the turmoil in the Mideast and the tragic earthquake, tsunami and nuclear plant crisis in Japan, the world’s third-largest economy, the AdvisorOne editorial team asked some leading advisors to share with their peers what they’re communicating to clients now, how they communicate, and what changes, if anything, they’re making to client portfolios.

We talked to Harold Evensky, Keith Springer, Mark Cortazzo, Mike Patton, Ben Warwick and others. Their thoughts and client communication strategies at this time of volatility are related on the pages following.

 

At times of crisis and market volatility, the best advisors reach out to their clients proactively. That’s the case with the five leading advisors that AdvisorOne editors contacted to hear what they’re telling clients now, and how.

HAROLD EVENSKY
Evensky & Katz

While there hasn’t been a spike in client calls in to his firm due to the crisis in Japan, reports Harold Evensky, founder of the RIA firm Evensky & Katz Wealth Management, he is reaching out to let them know that they “are monitoring” the unfolding situation in Japan and “talking to money managers to see what they are thinking.” 

“Things are up in the air; until there’s a solution, or containment, there’s nothing to do. I don’t recommend changes in the portfolio,” he says. The firm abides by Evensky’s “five-year mantra” in which “everyone has plenty of liquidity built up,” for five years of expenses—because anything “less than a market cycle is not enough.” But for those clients who are feeling uneasy, they can lighten up short-term fixed-income positions, adding a bit more cash for “psychological liquidity.”

While clients are not calling for the most part, Evensky says, “The key is, that’s great—let’s get to them before they call us.” —Kate McBride

Read here a more complete version of Evensky’s thoughtson communicating with clients and portfolio building in crisis.

 

At times of crisis and market volatility, the best advisors reach out to their clients proactively. That’s the case with the five leading advisors that AdvisorOne editors contacted to hear what they’re telling clients now, and how.

KEITH SPRINGER
Springer Financial Advisors

When it comes to communicating with clients over any concerns they might have about the markets and the economy, or the impact of disasters like Japan or the turmoil in the Mideast, Springer says “I like to answer the question before it’s asked.”

Springer, the founder and president of the RIA firm Springer Financial Advisors in Sacramento, Calif., says he doesn’t “react to events unless they have a consequence,” and in his judgment, the events in Japan “will not have an effect on worldwide demand for goods and services; it won’t change.” 

In fact, Springer views the Japanese earthquake and its after-effects as positive for the Japanese economy, at least in the short run, while acknowledging the tragic nature of the events for the people of Japan. “Now they have an excuse for borrowing and spending,” he said in a Wednesday interview, referring to the Japanese government and its central bank.

In reaching out to regularly to clients through e-mail, Facebook and through his blog, Springer is informing clients that he’s “aware of what’s going on; that I have an opinion” on these economic and market events. “They know I’m not going to be perfect, but I’ll be damn close.” When informed that some advisors contacted for this article said they hadn’t reached out to their clients to educate or console over the recent events in Japan and the Mideast, he said that “most advisors are pretty much wimps; you don’t wake a sleeping dog.”

His conclusion on Japan? “It’s not the beginning of a stock market debacle like we had in 2008-2009.” —James J. Green

 

 

At times of crisis and market volatility, the best advisors reach out to their clients proactively. That’s the case with the five leading advisors that AdvisorOne editors contacted to hear what they’re telling clients now, and how.

MIKE PATTON
Integrity Wealth Management

Patton sends out a monthly newsletter to clients by e-mail that includes his take on the markets and the economy, but “at times like this, I communicate more often,” Patton said in an e-mail message on Tuesday.

Patton, who blogs for AdvisorOne weekly on practice management issues and writes regularly for Investment Advisor on his Road to Independence, sent out a message on Tuesday to clients of his RIA firm Integrity Wealth Management in Baton Rouge, La., whose title was timely and to the point: “Important News About Japan and Your Portfolio.”

From the conflicts in the Middle East to the state's budget crisis to the devastating earthquakes in Japan, there is no shortage of headline news. The story in Japan is very sad indeed. To compound the problem, Japan has been in an economic recessionary environment since shortly after its stock market bubble burst in 1989.

Japan did much the same as we did: they reduced interest rates and printed money (QE). When the printing was engaged, their market went up. However, when they stopped the presses, their market fell again.

The newsletter asks, “What may happen from here? Well, Japan will certainly need a lot of money to rebuild. This money could come from one of three places: donations, selling Japanese bonds, and/or printing money.” His conclusion: Printing money “is where Japan will find the money to rebuild.”

He concludes, “When an event such as this occurs, fear immediately grips the marketplace and the price of most everything declines. Then, after the fear subsides and people come back to rational thought, prices will rise again...in some sectors. In short, there will be great entry points for those looking to buy...again in certain areas.” —James J. Green

 

 

At times of crisis and market volatility, the best advisors reach out to their clients proactively. That’s the case with the five leading advisors that AdvisorOne editors contacted to hear what they’re telling clients now, and how.

BEN WARWICK
Aspen Partners
and QES

Warwick, the CIO of Aspen Partners and QES in Denver, says he has been “communicating lots more” with clients in the wake of the Japan disaster and the ongoing events in the Mideast. One of the ways he does communicate with clients is by informing them by e-mail each time he posts a blog on AdvisorOne, and he’s been blogging several times a week since these tragic events have been unfolding.

Moreover, Warwick, who also comments monthly to AdvisorOne readers through his index newsletter, Searching for Alpha, is writing a longer think-piece on these events  and how they “affect our investing style” that he will send to clients, and promises to share with AdvisorOne readers, by next week.

His blog from March 16 puts his thoughts succinctly:

  • The S&P 500 index is about 5.5% off its Feb. 19 high, which may potentially make the sell-off an opportunity to put more risk in the portfolio if the major indices continue to trade lower.
  • There should be improved economic growth due to the rebuilding in Japan, but it will not show up until Q3 or Q4 2011; infrastructure damage (especially to the power grid and transportation) must be stabilized first.

His posting concludes with the argument that “The most rational plan in our view is to let the selling take its course, with the mindset of rebalancing toward more risk-based valuation shifts and other factors. I think the adjustment process is days, not weeks, away from implementation.” —James J. Green

 

At times of crisis and market volatility, the best advisors reach out to their clients proactively. That’s the case with the five leading advisors that AdvisorOne editors contacted to hear what they’re telling clients now, and how.

JEREMY WELCH
Burton Enright Welch

Call it serendipity, but San Francisco-based Burton Enright Welch began underweighting Japan well before the onslaught of the latest crisis. It makes client conversations much easier, as the portfolio is inoculated from potential effects.

“As a firm, we’re heavily diversified,” said Welch, one of the firm’s partners. “We were conservative on Japan before the crisis because they have a debt-to-GDP ratio that would embarrass Greece or Portugal. They have an aging population, so the spending can’t continue."

"They’ve gotten away with it until now because the country has a high savings rate. The 'we’re in this together' mentality meant that many citizens didn’t mind giving more to the government to foster spending. But with their approaching ‘age-wave’ that can’t continue. They’ll have to rein it in, and it will hurt.” —John Sullivan

 

At times of crisis and market volatility, the best advisors reach out to their clients proactively. That’s the case with the five leading advisors that AdvisorOne editors contacted to hear what they’re telling clients now, and how.

MARK CORTAZZO, Macro Consulting Group

“In 2008, when the entire world was down, diversification wasn’t a mitigating factor in downside protection,” says Cortazzo, senior partner with Parsippany, NJ-based MACRO Consulting. “But with this type of event driven issue, like with Russia in 1998 and the emerging market downturn, it’s a case when diversification works.”

MACRO Consulting was never all that bullish on Japan, so client conversations in the wake of the crisis haven’t been a serious issue (for instance, the firm is allocated to an Asia fund that excludes Japan).

“Some companies will be hurt by the crisis; but Japan’s construction sector, obviously, will do very well,” Cortazzo says. “It an adaptive and vibrant culture, so despite its aging population and debt issues, they should come out of this okay.”

One area of concern however, is the country’s tendency towards secrecy and a lack of transparency, something currently illustrated in the handing of the nuclear reactor damage.

“As a foreign investor, that’s problematic,” Cortazzo says. “I can handle bad news. I can adjust and incorporate bad news, but I have to first know what it is. The uncertainty [this lack of transparency] creates is worse than any news that might come out of the country. The U.S endured a tremendous amount of bad news, but we largely ripped the bandage off and dealt with it. The result is a doubling of the S&P 500 in the quickest amount of time since its inception.” —John Sullivan

------------------------------------------------------

(All main photos by The Associated Press)

Japan Quake: Tokyo Hit by ATM Failures, Power Outages, as Gold Rises

Beset by rolling power blackouts and ATM failures, Tokyo’s citizens sought supplies of rice, cash, and gold or applied for passports to leave Japan on Thursday.

Reuters reported that airports were crowded and some Mizuho Bank ATMs failed under the weight of transactions as many in Tokyo tried either to leave the country or to set aside stores of food, cash and precious metals.

The Tokyo Passport Center in the Yurakucho district, on the second floor of its building, was faced with lines that stretched all the way to the first floor as people sought to find a way to escape the threat of radiation. Airports were thronged by people without tickets who were nonetheless hopeful of finding a way to safety; the U.S. was reportedly sending in planes to evacuate American citizens.

Mizuho Bank said that the ATM failures were due to a concentration of transactions at some unidentified branches. ATMs were out of commission for almost two hours earlier in the day, and again in the evening. Customers were also unable to make foreign currency withdrawals and other transactions. The bank’s shares closed down 1.46% on the day’s trading.

Gold, however, rose in Tokyo. The premium on gold bars rose as high as $2 an ounce in the beleaguered city, which was largely quiet and uncharacteristically dark, its neon signs falling prey to power outages and to voluntary cuts in power usage from businesses that allowed employees to remain at home. Many schools were also closed. Banri Kaieda, Japan’s trade minister, said that unexpected, large-scale power outages were possible but unlikely as the nation struggled to maintain its remaining power supply.

Should AstraZeneca and Bristol-Myers Squibb Get Married?

It's been quite a while since we had a big wedding in the pharma world. Sure, there have been plenty of small acquisitions, but no really big merger has happened over the past few years. One potential pharmaceutical friendship often rumored to possibly develop into something more serious involves AstraZeneca (NYSE: AZN  ) and Bristol-Myers Squibb (NYSE: BMY  ) . Would a marriage between these two companies be a match made in heaven? Let's take a look.

Going to the chapel
If AstraZeneca and Bristol-Myers were people, we could easily spot one good reason for them to get married: They have a lot in common. Just look at the two companies' portfolios.

Both organizations boast a strong presence in the cardiovascular market. AstraZeneca's Crestor stands as a leading cholesterol drug with sales over $6.2 billion in 2012. Bristol-Myers' blood thinner, Plavix, brought in $2.5 billion in sales.

Neuroscience stands out as another strong area for both companies. AstraZeneca made $2.8 billion last year from Seroquel IR and Seroquel XR schizophrenia and bipolar disorder drugs. Bristol-Myers' Abilify treats the same indications and likewise brought in around $2.8 billion in 2012 sales.

Of course, it's also important that married couples have differences that complement each other. That's true for our two potential lovebirds. While sales for AstraZeneca's Nexium and Losec/Prilosec are slowing down, they're still contributing significantly. Bristol-Myers doesn't count any gastrointestinal products among its leading drugs.

However, Bristol-Myers Squibb can claim success in at least one area that isn't strong for AstraZeneca -- treatment of HIV and AIDS. Combined sales for the company's Reyataz and Sustiva HIV drugs topped $3 billion last year.

Another argument in favor of AstraZeneca and Bristol-Myers getting hitched is that they have children together. Well, sort of. Bristol-Myers Squibb bought Amylin Pharmaceuticals last year for around $7 billion. Nearly half of that amount was financed by AstraZeneca. Both companies share in the profits from Amylin's diabetes drugs, including Bydureon and Byetta.

This wasn't the first time AstraZeneca and Bristol-Myers collaborated in the diabetes arena. The two companies previously developed Onglyza together. However, sales for Onglyza weren't as strong as hoped for as Merck's (NYSE: MRK  ) Januvia won greater market share. They also partnered on Forxiga, which has encountered its own difficulties.

Staying single
Cupid might need to shoot his arrows in another direction, though. There are at least a couple of reasons why a marriage between AstraZeneca and Bristol-Myers could be unlikely to happen.

First, both companies like to play the field quite a bit. While AstraZeneca's relationship with Bristol-Myers has been close, the British drugmaker's ties with Merck have been even closer in some ways. The company has also forged alliances with smaller companies, including a deal with Isis Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: ISIS  ) for developing cancer drugs using Isis' antisense technology. But the real merger prospect for AstraZeneca most frequently mentioned of late is Forest Labs. Several analysts see the company as an ideal fit for AstraZeneca.

Meanwhile, Bristol-Myers and Pfizer (NYSE: PFE  ) are joined at the hip with blood thinner Eliquis. The drug, which was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in December, is expected to be another blockbuster for both companies. Bristol-Myers also has had an alliance in the past with Sanofi, but that relationship appears to be winding down with loss of patent exclusivity for Plavix in several markets. As with AstraZeneca, other smaller companies have been rumored as targets for Bristol-Myers.

The second reason this marriage might not happen is that neither company's pipeline could be strong enough to offset patent cliff losses for the other. And those potential losses are large.

AstraZeneca's U.S. exclusivity for Atacand, Losec/Prilosec, Seloken/Toprol-XL, and Seroquel IR already expired. Nexium faces generic competition next year, with Crestor going off-patent in 2015. These drugs totaled around $6.5 billion in U.S. sales during 2012.

Bristol-Myers lost patent protection for Plavix and Avapro last year. The company faces possible generic rivals for Baraclude this year. Sustiva goes off-patent in the U.S. by the end of 2015. Bristol-Myers also loses commercialization rights for Abilify around the same time. These drugs combined for nearly $9 billion in 2012 sales.

Speak now
In real weddings, the point usually comes where the minister says that if anyone has reason that the parties shouldn't be married, they should "speak now or forever hold their peace." So, just in case a marriage between these two companies is actually under consideration, allow me to speak up.

I don't think a merger between AstraZeneca and Bristol-Myers would serve the best interests of either company's shareholders. My preference would be for both companies to pursue smaller deals with companies that have great near-term growth catalysts. And I think this scenario is much more likely, by the way. I hope AstraZeneca and Bristol-Myers Squibb will be happily married -- but just not to each other.

Is Merck a better match?
This titan of the pharmaceutical industry stumbled into 2013 and continues to battle patent expirations and pipeline problems. Is Merck still a solid dividend play, or should investors be looking elsewhere? In a new premium research report on Merck, The Fool tackles all of the company's moving parts, its major market opportunities, and reasons to both buy and sell. To find out more click here to claim your copy today.


Has Cliffs Natural Resources Finally Hit Rock Bottom?

It's been an ugly year for investors in Cliffs Natural Resources (NYSE: CLF  ) . The free fall in the company's shares just doesn't want to end -- shares were hammered again following a downgrade by Morgan Stanley. Is this the final nail in the coffin or have Cliffs' shares finally hit bottom?

For whatever reason, the Morgan Stanley downgrade appears to have come as a surprise to the market, which sent shares down by double digits. Maybe it's the fact that the price target was cut all the way to $14 a share. Maybe it's the language citing deteriorating market conditions in the company's core iron ore market. Whatever the reason, the stock took another big drop.

Cliffs, as some might remember and others want to forget, was at more than $70 stock this time last year. Those holding on to hope that the stock can someday make its way back should take a look at what Morgan Stanley had to say about the company. For starters, it sees the company's core iron ore business being cut in half in the coming years as new supply begins to come on line. That new supply would affect both volumes and pricing for the beleaguered�miner. According to Morgan Stanley is that this would obliterate about 30% of Cliffs' bottom line.

However, Morgan Stanley isn't the only big Wall Street bank throwing around its weight when it comes to having an opinion on Cliffs. Goldman Sachs actually upgraded the stock, though it's mainly a valuation call. According to Goldman, the company shored up its liquidity after cutting the dividend and issuing equity while also idling a high-cost plant. It thinks the company's risks are already priced into the stock and are basically calling the bottom.

So who are you to�believe? When it all comes down to it, the overarching problem is that Cliffs' cost of production is too high, especially when compared to global giants BHP Billiton (NYSE: BHP  ) and Rio Tinto (NYSE: RIO  ) . These two can remain profitable even if iron ore prices continue to fall. Meanwhile, with its debt load weighing the company down, Cliffs' investors could be left with a worthless stock.

While I don't think that's a likely scenario, I'm not inclined to be a buyer, even at these levels. High cost of production and heavy debt levels typically don't end well. Further, Cliffs simply doesn't have the commodity diversity to weather these storms as well as its more diversified global peers. Sure, a pure play is a great investment when a cycle turns up, but its not a great play for someone who wants to sleep at night knowing their investments are safe.�

Personally, the risk-reward balance isn't enticing enough, especially when there are so many questions surrounding the company's future profitability. I'd much rather stick with a diversified global miner than take a flier on a company that just might have further to fall.�

There's a lot more to the story. Cliffs Natural Resources has grown from a domestic iron ore producer into an international player in both the iron ore and metallurgical coal markets. If you'd like more information on why the company could now be looked at as a possible value play due to several factors that are likely to remain advantageous for Cliffs' management, click here now to check out The Motley Fool's premium research report on the company.

Baseball 2013: Here Come the Flamethrowers

As Major League Baseball prepares to open its season Sunday, high-octane pitching is dominating the game as never before. One day it's the Cincinnati Reds' Aroldis Chapman, the"Cuban Missile," firing 103-mile-per-hour fastballs out of the bullpen. The next, starters like the Washington Nationals' Stephen Strasburg and the Tampa Bay Rays' David Price are clocking triple digits deep into games when they should be tiring.

View Slideshow

Getty Images

Dylan Bundy, the Baltimore Orioles' 20-year-old, started lifting weights when he was 10, and he threw in the high-80s in middle school. He broke 90 as a freshman in high school, and had hit 100 before graduation.

In the 2003 season, there was only one pitcher who threw at least 25 pitches 100 mph or faster (Billy Wagner). In 2012, there were seven, according to Baseball Info Solutions.

In 2003, there were only three pitchers who threw at least 700 pitches 95 mph or better. In 2012, there were 17. There were 20 pitchers a decade ago who threw at least 25% of their fastballs 96 mph or faster. Last year there were 62, including Carter Capps, the Seattle Mariners' 22-year-old right-hander, whose average fastball travels 98.3 mph, tying him with the Royals' Kelvin Herrera for the top spot in the game.

At the same time, just a decade after performance-enhancing drugs helped power an unprecedented boom in offense, hitters are spiraling into ineptitude. Last season the game's batters struck out 36,426 times, an 18.3% increase over 2003.

"It's pretty simple," said Rick Peterson, director of pitching development for the Baltimore Orioles, who sees a direct link between strikeouts and the increase in velocity. "The harder you throw, the less time the batter has to swing and the harder it is to make contact. Everybody can square up a slow-pitch softball. A 95-mile per hour fastball is a little different."

View Graphics

Nearly 20% of all plate appearances last season resulted in a strikeout. In 1968, just 15.8% of plate appearances resulted in strikeouts. And that was the so-called "year of the pitcher," when the dominance of the likes of Bob Gibson and Denny McLain caused baseball to lower the mound and begin experimenting with a designated hitter.

Baseball's speed revolution is an outgrowth of a series of radical�and sometimes surprising� shifts in the way both children and adults approach the game at every level.

This isn't just about bigger, stronger athletes. In terms of the stress placed on a human body part, nothing in sports compares with what the shoulder undergoes when a top pitcher throws a fastball. The joint can rotate at roughly 7,000 degrees per second. Since a full rotation equals 360 degrees, the arm would complete nearly 20 full rotations in a single second if it were physically able.

"That's about as fast as a human joint can move, so pitchers probably won't ever throw much faster than they do now," said Glenn Fleisig, a biomedical engineer at the American Sports Medicine Institute in Alabama and one of the leading researchers in the science of pitching. "But now you're seeing more and more pitchers every year getting close to the ceiling, so the question becomes, why?"

Photo illustration by John Kuczala; Getty Images (pitchers)

Aroldis Chapman, the 'Cuban Missile,' and reliever for the Cincinnati Reds was clocked at 105.1 mph in 2010.

Part of the flamethrowing trend is a function of simple economics. The best pitchers now command some of the game's highest salaries. Being merely average is worth $11.5 million a year (Bronson Arroyo, 12-10, 3.74 earned-run average). As a result, the game's biggest and best young athletes are gravitating toward the pitching mound.

On average, the game's pitchers have gained about a half-inch in height since 2000, according to Adrian Bejan, an engineering professor at Duke University, who studies sports evolution and wrote a recent study of body size in baseball.

That makes sense, Bejan reasons, because the pitching motion mimics the action of a trebuchet, the medieval weapon for throwing stones against heavy fortifications. Early designers of trebuchets figured out the key to flinging a stone faster was increasing the height of the body and the length of the arm and rope, which together function like the pitcher's body and arm. A longer rope just required more weight to propel it forward. Baseball scouts have essentially come to the same conclusion. Think Randy Johnson, who is 6-foot-10, or even Capps, who is 6-foot-5.

5 FTSE 100 Dates for Your April Diaries

LONDON -- April will start off quite slowly for company news, but things will pick up around the middle of the month. There will be updates from a good few FTSE 100 companies, and we'll keep you updated on them as the month progresses. But in advance, here are five of the most important diary dates.

April 11: Marks & Spencer (LSE: MKS  )
Marks & Spencer will be bringing us a fourth-quarter update on the 11th, shedding light on how the year to March 31 has gone -- full results will be with us on May 21. The share price got a bit of a boost last week to 395 pence on rumors of an 8 billion pound bid in the offing from the Qatari Investment Authority, but other than that the shares have had a pretty lamentable few years.

Forecasts suggest a 7% drop in earnings per share, putting the shares on a price-to-earnings ratio of 12, with a nearly twice-covered dividend yield of 4.3%. With modest earnings and dividend rises penciled in for 2014 and 2015, the P/E would fall to 11 and 10.5, respectively, while the yield would rise to 4.5% and then 4.8%.

April 17: Tesco (LSE: TSCO  )
Full-year results from Tesco are due on the 17th after what has been quite a tumultuous year. The share price famously slumped in January 2012 after the U.K.'s biggest supermarket reported a weak Christmas trading period. But since about October, the price has been steadily rising, reaching 378 pence today.

And this time around, things looked better over Christmas and New Year, with U.K. like-for-like sales up 1.8%, and the company reported "recovering in-store performance." Forecasts for the year to Feb. 28 put the shares on a P/E of 12, with a 4% dividend yield.

April 24: GlaxoSmithKline (LSE: GSK  )
It's time for first-quarter figures from GlaxoSmithKline on the 24th. The pharmaceuticals giant reported flat earnings for the year to December 2012 but lifted its total dividend by 5.7% to 74 pence per share for a yield of 5.5%. At the time, chief executive Sir Andrew Witty told us the firm expects 3% to 4% growth in core EPS for 2013, along with "further strong cash generation," which should support increasing dividends.

Analysts are forecasting a 5.4% boost to this year's annual payment, which would provide a yield of 5.2% on a share price of 1,506 pence -- and that's significantly above the average FTSE 100 dividend of around 3.1%.

April 24: Barclays (LSE: BARC  )
Barclays will also deliver first-quarter results on the 24th, continuing on from a strong performance in 2012, when the high-street bank reported a 24% rise in EPS and the fourth annual dividend raise in a row. After the 2009 payment was slashed to just 2.5 pence per share, it has crept back to 6.5 pence last year, with about 7.25 pence currently forecast for 2013. With the shares currently changing hands for 287 pence, that would be a yield of 2.5%.

And that 287 pence share price is up 90% since last July's low (and it has been even higher, exceeding 320 pence in February), but even after that, the shares are still on a forward P/E of less than eight.

April 30: BP (LSE: BP  )
It's BP's turn to deliver first-quarter figures on the last day of the month, and a lot of people will be eyeing up the oil giant's cash situation. After disposing of assets over the past couple of years to help meet the costs of the Gulf of Mexico disaster, BP announced last week that it will embark on a share buyback program worth up to $8 billion. That amount represents the cost of its original 50% stake in TNK-BP, which it has just sold to Russian state oil company Rosneft for $12.5 billion.

The shares have not moved much over the past couple of years, standing at 463 pence as I write, and they're currently on a P/E of just 8.2 based on forecasts for the 2013 full year.

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Did You Miss Out on the Housing Rebound?

For years, it seemed like the housing market would never turn around. However, recent data indicates that the U.S. is finally in the midst of a housing recovery. But have investors missed out?

Pointing to a recovery
New home purchases recently spiked to numbers we've not witnessed since 2008. Builders are constructing new homes at a pace not seen since five years ago, and building permits, considered a leading indicator of construction, are nearing a five-year high.

The housing market is also witnessing limited inventories. According to the National Association of Realtors, "Total housing inventory at the end of February represented a 4.7-month supply, up from 4.3 months in January, which was the lowest supply since May 2005. Listed inventory is 19.2% below a year ago when there was a 6.4-month supply." �

And cheaper borrowing costs are enticing buyers who are able to qualify for mortgage loans. Even though the 30-year mortgage rate hit a record low of 3.31% last November, the average rate on a 30-year fixed loan still hovers at an unbelievably low 3.53%.

Putting on the finishing touches... or just laying the foundation?
Put together, this trifecta of robust sales, limited inventories, and cheap borrowing costs are driving new home orders. Business is booming again for builders such as Lennar (NYSE: LEN  ) and KB Home (NYSE: KBH  ) . New home orders for Lennar recently surged 34%. The homebuilder's most recent quarterly profit tripled, handily beating Wall Street's expectations. And in its March 21 earnings release, KB Home beat expectations on both top and bottom lines, and its new orders also grew.

So where does this recovery leave investors? Did we miss the wave? Well, the surge in share prices of homebuilders would suggest we have.

Source:�KBH Total Return Price data by YCharts.

Over the past year, KB Home's share price returned 10 times that of the S&P 500. Meanwhile, homebuilding peer Lennar's stock increased 58% during the same period. But gains in homebuilding also filter through to other parts of the economy. Home-improvement retailers Home Depot (NYSE: HD  ) and Lowe's (NYSE: LOW  ) have also vastly outperformed the broader stock market.

In response to homeowners putting the minimal amount of dollars in their homes during the past several years, Home Depot and Lowe's got accustomed to years of slashing costs and trimming jobs. But these companies are preparing for a change. Home Depot acquired two companies last year, both aligned with its view that home remodeling will pick up in the near future. Both retailers have enhanced their websites, allowing homeowners to design their home-improvement projects and communicate with retailers' employees.

Lowe's CEO Robert Niblock recently summed up his thoughts at a recent analyst conference when he stated, "Consumers feel much better when it comes to spending on their home if they believe the value is going up. It's just that kind of, I call it, the psychological permission to spend and feel good about it." In preparation for the anticipated surge in remodel spending, Lowe's is adding 9,000 permanent part-time employees. �

Specialty home-goods and furniture retailers have benefited from the housing market recovery as well. Williams-Sonoma (NYSE: WSM  ) stock is up more than 32% over the past 12 months, buoyed by last week's report that quarterly profit exceeded estimates. The niche retailer�announced that revenue increased 11%, citing an improved U.S. housing market that has encouraged consumers to refurnish their homes. Meanwhile, competitor Restoration Hardware (NYSE: RH  ) is in the midst of expanding beyond its current 73 retail locations. It's stock is up nearly 13% since its November 2012 IPO.

Foolish bottom line
It's official. The data clearly points to a housing turnaround. But have you missed out on the rebound? If you own any of these stocks, you've recently enjoyed nice returns. But the nuggets of good economic news are just the start of a housing recovery that may take the better part of a decade to come to fruition. So, don't be discouraged if you've missed this initial wave. These companies have plenty of growth potential beyond their recent successes.

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Has Japan Created a Day of Reckoning for U.S. Automakers?

In the past six months, the yen has plunged in value relative to the dollar. Whereas $1 was worth less than 80 yen in late 2011 and throughout most of 2012, the exchange rate has moved by more than 20% since October, so that $1 approximately equals 94 yen.

U.S. Dollar to Japanese Yen Exchange Rate data by YCharts

This devaluation has come about primarily because of a change in government in Japan. Shinzo Abe's LDP came to power in the December parliamentary elections, and Abe promised to restart economic growth by fighting deflation. Abe has since appointed a new governor of the Bank of Japan, Haruhiko Kuroda, who has promised a more dovish monetary policy. The shifting political winds have led to sharp declines for the yen against every other major currency.

A cheaper yen is a boon to Japanese exporters, such as automakers Toyota Motor (NYSE: TM  ) and Honda Motor� (NYSE: HMC  ) . By contrast, American automakers, such as Ford (NYSE: F  ) and General Motors (NYSE: GM  ) could be at risk as their Japanese rivals gain a cost advantage. However, the ultimate impact of the yen's move on these stocks depends on the strategies adopted by the Japanese automakers.

A white knight?
Japanese automakers have been complaining for some time about cost inflation caused by the strong yen. All of the major Japanese automakers have been moving production overseas in recent years to counteract the strong yen. That said, yen exposure is still high. For example, Toyota -- by far the largest of the Japanese automakers -- built roughly 3.5 million vehicles in Japan in 2012, more than half of which were exported. As recently as last summer, The Wall Street Journal reported that Japanese automakers were planning to move even more production overseas because they could not profitably export vehicles built in Japan.

The yen's precipitous decline has made this point moot: the dollar cost of producing a car in Japan (with 100% Japanese components) is now nearly 20% lower than it was last summer. This is good news for all of the Japanese automakers. With lower costs, they can either pocket more profit per vehicle, or they can cut prices in order to gain market share in key regions like the U.S., while boosting export production to meet the additional demand.

However, this does not mean you should go running to buy Toyota today. While yen devaluation lowers production costs for vehicles built in Japan, it also lowers the dollar value of earnings from within Japan. This affects all of the Japanese automakers, but especially Toyota, which has captured nearly half of the Japanese market in recent years.

Moreover, the expiration of certain government tax credits in Japan in late 2012 led to several months of declining auto sales there. Lower sales volumes in Japan could cut significantly into profit for Toyota, Honda, Nissan, and other rivals. Toyota, as the dominant player in the Japanese market, would bear the brunt of any slowdown. Lastly, Japanese automakers have seen a significant drop in sales in China due to the fallout from a dispute over several islands last year. While the pace of declines has been leveling off in recent months, it is unclear whether Japanese automakers will ever be able to regain their previous market shares in China.

North American possibilities
In the North American market, the impact of yen devaluation largely depends upon the actions of Japanese automakers. If Toyota, Honda, and Nissan simply pocket the profits from a cheaper yen, devaluation would have no impact on other automakers, such as Ford and GM. However, there is good reason to believe that the Japanese automakers will aggressively cut prices or increase incentives to gain market share. This is exactly what these companies did in order to regain market share in late 2011, after tsunami-related supply chain problems had constrained sales in the spring and summer.

A significant increase in incentive spending could hurt Ford and GM, which have benefited from strong margins in North America recently, as the result of cost-cutting and new product introductions. Ford has seen particularly good performance, with a North American operating margin of 10.4% last year, which exceeded the company's long-term goal. If Toyota, Honda, Nissan, and others cut prices, Ford and GM will have to accept lower market share, lower margins, or both.

The one saving grace for Ford and GM is that they derive most of their profits from sales of full-size pickup trucks. Ford and GM dominate this market, while the Japanese automakers have little to no presence there. However, Toyota is about to make another push to gain a foothold in the full-size pickup market, with a redesigned Toyota Tundra coming this fall. I expect Toyota to price the Tundra very aggressively in order to give current Ford, GM, and Dodge Ram truck owners sufficient reason to switch. The Tundra could still flop, but if lower prices entice some customers away from Ford and GM, this could have an outsized impact on those companies' profits.

Foolish conclusion
The recent drop in the yen's value could have massive implications for the auto market.� Japanese automakers will generally benefit from the favorable exchange rate, but U.S. shareholders of those companies will also see a reduction in the dollar value of earnings from Japan. On the other hand, U.S. automakers like Ford and GM could see North American margins tighten if (as I expect) Japanese automakers ramp up incentive spending to chase market share. It is critical for investors to keep a close eye on developments in this rapidly evolving industry.

Learn more
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Why Did My Stock Just Die?

Yesterday investors chose to concentrate on positive domestic economic news rather than gloomy European financial crises, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped 115 points on the day. Their ignorance will eventually come back to bite them, but exuberant traders enjoyed their moment in the sun.

The three stocks below, however, were in hot water for reasons of their own, but don't go running over the cliff with them like a bunch of lemmings just yet: this could just be a temporary situation. Let's first see whether they had good reason to fall as panic-fueled routs can sometimes lead to excellent buying opportunities.

Company

% Change

ZIOPHARM Oncology (NASDAQ: ZIOP  )

(64.5%)

National Bank of Greece (NYSE: NBG  )

(8.1%)

Star Scientific (NASDAQ: STSI  )

(7.5%)

Running on empty
When you run out of gas, the only thing you can do is get out and push your car to the shoulder and wait for assistance. That's effectively the situation ZIOPHARM Oncology finds itself in as its soft tissue cancer treatment palifosfamide failed to achieve its goals in a late-stage trial. With nothing else available to it, the drugmaker is limping to push the therapy to the curb and have it tested for use on other cancers.

ZIOPHARM said the treatment failed to extend progression-free survival rates, and with "no way the drug will get approval anywhere in the world," according to the CEO, it will stop the drug's development on that particular tangent and will instead examine its efficacy as a possible treatment for small-cell lung cancer. In the process, it will convert an ongoing study into a mid-stage trial.

Investors really didn't much care to hear about what the next hurdle and wiped out two-thirds of its value. When analysts forecast a 50-50 chance of success, I cautioned against investing in ZIOPHARM, so at this point there's no reason to get in now, either.

We're all in this together
Most people still probably can't even find Cyprus on a map, let alone understand why it's about to bring down the eurozone. A good question to ask is: How did it manage to pass all those stability tests last year yet suddenly come to the edge of the precipice? Likely it was all done with a wink and a nod as finance ministers whistled past the graveyard, but their solution of seizing 40% of the wealth from Cypriot depositors to pay for its bailout puts other countries with equally stressed out finances at risk of a bank run. If it can be done in Cyprus, then Greece, Italy, and Portugal can easily have the "template" applied to them.

National Bank of Greece, with substantial exposure to Cyprus -- and Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Spain, and Hungary -- is reeling from the prospects of what will occur if the dominos start falling. Its own financial situation is still fragile, and other European banks like Banco Santander stand on the edge as Spain looks to wipe out shareholders at troubled Bankia and cause bondholders to take a 30% haircut to repair the ailing bank.�

There's no reason why investors need to jump into foreign financial institutions, either, as there's likely a lot more pain in their future.

This star is dimming
It couldn't have been that much of a surprise, could it, that Star Scientific would face shareholder lawsuits after revealing the U.S. Attorney's Office was investigating it?

Last week, the supplements maker said the investigations centered on private stock placements the company made since 2006 along with various related party transactions. That trial lawyers would jump into the fray is to be expected, but Star elevated the threat they pose by responding to their claims and announcing it would vigorously defend against the charges leveled.

Whether the back and forth between the lawyers and the company is really worth additional losses in the stock is doubtful, though the actual investigations themselves are worrisome and, like the other two companies looked at today, should serve as a caution against diving into Star Scientific any time soon.

Ready for a resurrection
Many investors are scared about investing in big banking stocks after the crash, but the sector has one notable stand out. In a sea of mismanaged and dangerous peers, it stands out as The Only Big Bank Built To Last. You can uncover the top pick that Warren Buffett loves in The Motley Fool's�new report. It's free, so click here to access it now.

Top Stocks To Buy For 3/28/2013-4

Research In Motion Limited (USA) NASDAQ:RIMM opened at $57.98 and with a gain of 0.10% closed at $58.13. Company’s fifty days average price is $57.55 whereas it has a market capitalization $30.33 billion.
The total of 4.24 million shares was transacted over last trading day.


Baidu.com, Inc. (ADR) NASDAQ:BIDU opened at $98.00 and with a fall of 1.71% closed at $96.53. Company’s fifty days average price is $106.67 whereas it has a market capitalization $33.62 billion.
The total of 4.21 million shares was transacted over last trading day.

Amgen, Inc. NASDAQ:AMGN opened at $55.47 and with a fall of 1.13% closed at $54.90. Company’s fifty days average price is $55.53 whereas it has a market capitalization $51.87 billion.
The total of 4.00 million shares was transacted over last trading day.

Amazon.com, Inc. NASDAQ:AMZN opened at $181.96 and with a fall of 1.50% closed at $180.00. Company’s fifty days average price is $171.62 whereas it has a market capitalization $80.79 billion.
The total of 3.45 million shares was transacted over last trading day.

Starbucks Corporation NASDAQ:SBUX opened at $32.41 and with a fall of 0.86% closed at $32.13. Company’s fifty days average price is $30.69 whereas it has a market capitalization $23.81 billion.
The total of 30.69 million shares was transacted over last trading day.

 

Supply Squeezes Pending Home Sales for February

The Pending Home Sales Index fell a slight 0.4% to 104.8 in February, according to a National Association of Realtors (NAR) report released today.

After improving a revised 3.8% in January, economists point to restrained housing supply as the primary cause of this month's flatline. Despite the dip, these newest results managed to beat analyst expectations of a 0.7% decrease.

Source: Author, data from NAR.

The index is based on contract signings (with sales usually finalized one or two months later) and is benchmarked to 2001 contract activity. (An index of 100 is equal to the average level of contract activity during 2001, which was the first year to be examined by the association.) Although February's month-over-month results are lackluster, this report clocks in as the second-highest reading in nearly three years and is 8.4% higher than February 2012.

"Only new home construction can genuinely help relieve the inventory shortage, and housing starts need to rise at least 50 percent from current levels," said NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun in a statement today. "Most local home builders are small businesses and simply don't have access to capital on Wall Street. Clearer regulatory rules, applied to construction loans for smaller community banks and credit unions, could bring many small-sized builders back into the market.

A report released yesterday by the Department of Housing and Urban Development shows that new home sales fell 4.6% in February.

Looking ahead, Yun expects existing-home sales and prices to increase 7% in 2013. Yun also noted that, although mortgage interest rates should remain at historical lows, he expects an upward trend to push rates to 4% by Q4 2013.

link

Can Micron Hold On to Its Momentum?

Shares of memory maker Micron (NASDAQ: MU  ) have been on a tear. Upon reaching $10.27 last week, the stock has essentially doubled after bottoming out at $5.16 on Oct. 24. With the stock now only percentage points away from a 52-week high, investors want assurances that Micron has enough ammo to support the recent optimism. I don't blame them.

Micron is known for its volatility. And it certainly doesn't help that the commodity memory industry, which has posted weak margins due to low average selling prices, or ASPs, has been shaky at best. But with names like SanDisk (NASDAQ: SNDK  ) , Samsung and Applied Materials, there's also been a lot of value in this sector. And Micron certainly fits in that category. So, heading into the company's earnings results, there was a lot to prove. And Micron delivered.

Who and what is Micron today?
Unlike previous reports, Micron's second-quarter results left very little for investors to complain about. Revenue arrived at $2.1 billion, up 3% year over year. While not exactly a strong number, when compared to the first-quarter results, it represents a 13% sequential jump. Plus it was enough to beat Street estimates of $1.92 billion.

The company's flash memory business consists of NOR and NAND, non-volatile storage technologies that requires no power to retain data. Both work the same way, but are different in functionality. NAND, which is used in devices like MP3 players, is able to retain more storage, whereas NOR, which is used in mobile phones, is faster. Micron arguably perfected this market. But there have been plenty of struggles.

Not only has Micron lost market share to SanDisk and Samsung, but the declining PC industry and soft ASPs left investors no choice but to bail on the stock. So, the Street rejoiced that the strong performance was largely due to its flagship chips, NAND and DRAM (dynamic random access memory, the type often found in personal computers).

Is this the same management team?
Though I've followed this company for several years, I can't say that I recognize this management team anymore, which is a good thing. The deficits that once aggravated investors are slowly being addressed. For instance, in the quarter, DRAM revenue surged 24% sequentially due to a 38% increase in sales volume. This is despite a 10% drop in ASPs.

Ordinarily, the soft ASP situation, while not new, would be cause for concern. But the Street didn't expect much price movement. Plus, it seems that Micron focused more this quarter on moving PC-related DRAM, which has much lower margin. In other words, this is where the higher sales volume, while typically good, might have actually hurt.

Impressively, however, NAND revenue shot up 8%, which was offset by continued struggles in the NOR segment, which fell 14% year over year. Management, however, made up for this weakness in profitability. Gross margin arrived at 18%, a 6% improvement sequentially and 5% better year over year. This resulted to a 76% sequential improvement in operating loss, which arrived at $23 million.

Ordinarily, investors would take issue with a company like Micron that still operating at a loss. But signs of improvement are everywhere. The Street loved the improved inventory position, which Micron was able to reduce by $360 million year over year. This, along with the growing margins, indicates that profitability could be just around the corner. While management has been beaten up in the past, today, the team deserves credit for a solid second-quarter performance.

You've got our attention, now what?
For this momentum to continue, Micron can't let its foot off the throttle. Management has done a great job diversifying the memory business, but it needs to continue. To that end, the completed acquisition for bankrupt chip maker Elpida�should help. This should position Micron for stronger growth in other end markets, such as servers and mobile devices.

Plus, Elpida should help propel Micron to the second-largest player in the DRAM market. Micron will be ahead of names like Hynix, a South Korean chip maker, but will remain behind Samsung. But the good news, though, is that Elpida will help Micron build leverage with Apple.

Needless to say, Apple would have an interest in helping Micron improve its memory business against Samsung. In the meantime, with new device launches from Apple and Samsung spurring the growth in mobile, Micron's NAND business should grow commensurately. But that can also be said about SanDisk, and other names like RF Micro Devices and (of course) Qualcomm.

What of the stock?
With continued margin and cash flow improvements, as well as better diversification, there's still a lot of value here. However, the negative earnings stand out like a sore thumb. That said, based on fiscal 2014 estimates, which is when the company is expected turn profitable, these shares are only trading at 14 times forward earnings, which is not too demanding in this sector.

A fresh idea for 2013
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More Expert Advice from The Motley Fool After its sell-off, Apple is priced like it'll never grow again, despite being the dominant technology company of this generation. Is it time to load up on Apple while panicked investors run to the exits for all the wrong reasons? We've outlined the reasons Apple could rebound as well as the biggest threats to the company in The Motley Fool's premium Apple research service, written by senior technology analyst Eric Bleeker, CFA. It may give you the courage to be greedy when others are fearful. If you're looking for some guidance on Apple's prospects, get started by clicking here.

In Germany, Some Want to Boogie Every Day of the Year

In Germany there is a centuries-old rule on Good Friday called Tanzverbot. Translation: Dancing is forbidden. In the past few years, thousands have gathered across the country on Good Friday to protest the ban. WSJ's Laura Stevens reports.

FRANKFURT�Every year on Good Friday, Germany becomes a little like the fictional town in the movie "Footloose"�dancing is verboten.

The decades old "Tanzverbot," or dance ban, applies to all clubs, discos and other forms of organized dancing in all German states.

In a country that takes pride in its disco traditions�immortalized by Mike Myers's Dieter character in Saturday Night Live's "Sprockets" sketch�the ban has begun to chafe.

At a rally in the center of Frankfurt on Thursday, a couple dozen protesters gathered to call for an end to the ban. The rally's slogan: "I'll let you pray�you let me dance."

Political activists, pirates and a person in a hot-pink bunny costume were all in attendance as observers stopped by booths set up with information in the busy shopping district.

The Tanzverbot "severely limits the rights of those who are either atheists or who believe in other religions," said Horst Weintraut, a member of the Pirate Party who was dressed in a black cloak and hat. "When someone is dancing Friday evening in a club in the basement, that doesn't disturb any Christians who are praying or doing something in the church during the day."

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Protesters of the historic dance ban blew bubbles and danced on Good Friday last year in Frankfurt.

Protests to overturn the Tanzverbot have grown over the past couple of years as students, atheists and club owners alike have lobbied to strike the law, which they say is outdated and unreasonable.

On Good Friday last year in the largely Catholic city of Cologne, around 150 dancers wearing headphones bopped silently in the shadow of the city's towering cathedral. A conga line formed as police stood by to keep order.

Those who support the law contend that a sacred day for reflection isn't asking too much.

"They can dance on 364 days a year," said Lars Witteck, the district president of the town of Giessen. "We cannot just forget our history. We have certain types of laws that show the respect to our tradition."

Germany has a rich Christian tradition, from Martin Luther to Pope Benedict XVI. Yet much like the rest of Europe, German society is increasingly secular and a dwindling number of people regularly attend church services.

Still, German law has been slow to reflect the trend. Shops across the country remain closed on Sunday. More controversial is the government "church tax" on those in Catholic or Protestant religions, among others, which is collected to fund churches regardless of attendance. The only way to avoid the tax is to officially leave the church, a step many Germans are unwilling to take.

The Tanzverbot was first established by the church and was later adopted by many city governments starting in the Middle Ages, said Wolfgang Kaschuba, director of the Institute for European Ethnology at Humboldt University in Berlin. Largely, explicit laws weren't needed, however, due to existing traditions.

Now, each of Germany's 16 states has its own Tanzverbot law. In addition to Good Friday, dancing is forbidden in many states on several of the so-called quiet religious days throughout the year, including Christmas Eve.

But protesters have rallied around Good Friday, where organized dancing is banned for at least several hours in every state. The strictest bans start at 4 a.m. on Thursday and run through Saturday. Penalties vary, but fines can range from �5 to �500, or about $6.50 to $650.

Adding to the push to allow partying: Good Friday is a public holiday and the start of a four-day weekend. Easter Monday is also a holiday.

"When only 30% of the people belong to a church in a given city, then religious traditions face some backlash," Mr. Kaschuba said.

At Thursday's rally in Frankfurt, protesters called on their countrymen to officially declare themselves atheists to the government and to stop paying the tax levied on members of some religious communities. Organizers even offered a prize: A book on personal freedom.

About an hour north of Frankfurt, in the small university town of Giessen, the local branch of the antiestablishment Pirate Party has taken the Tanzverbot on as a major issue.

"There's a very strong community pressure that you're not able to criticize the church," said Christian Oechler, a Pirate Party leader and one of the organizers. "But now, the people are confident enough to take to the streets."

Last year, members were denied permission from officials to organize an official protest on that day. Still, some gathered and started moving around because they wanted "to warm up because of the weather," Mr. Oechler said.

Protesters try to keep the demonstrations respectful and from interrupting any church activities planned for the day, said Mr. Oechler. He said it is important to keep the church and state separate.

Mr. Witteck, however, argued it was a matter of mutual respect and tolerance.

"For many people, this is the highest sacred day of the year," he said. "Our society has become so fast. Everybody tells us we have to be international, multifunctional. It's not the worst thing to have a certain break during this time."

The Giessen Regional Commission, led by Mr. Witteck, stepped in last year to prohibit the planned demonstrations on Good Friday.

"I like to dance, and I want people to dance, and I think it's important to have fun. I think it's very important to allow everyone to protest," Mr. Witteck said. "But it's the way it is done�This is a provocation."

This year, the Pirate Party of Giessen is maintaining that it isn't organizing an official protest. However, it has posted a Web page under the slogan: "Dance against the Tanzverbot�Alone instead of together."

The notice proposes dancing alone "in your own backyard, on a busy street or perhaps at 6:30 p.m. in front of the Regional Commission" building, where Mr. Witteck's government is based.

There is also a link to a special sign for dancers to print out and carry in case police try to enforce the ban on organized dancing or demonstrations.

The sign reads: "Safety warning: I'm here alone!"

Write to Laura Stevens at laura.stevens@wsj.com

Wealth Creation Cycle

The wealth creation cycle is has a few main components to it that make wealth a continuous cycle, rather than a one time high with an eventual down or loss. Creating wealth is not necessarily hard, it is the consistency of staying wealthy and making your money work for you that is hard. I compare someone that gets wealthy to a nice Ferrari. You can have the Ferrari, but if you never turn it on and go for a spin, then what is it really worth to you. The same thing applies to a new wealthy person. They can have some wealth creation come their way, but if they don’t consistently create more wealth, then eventually they start back at at square one and that original wealth did them no good. You got to continue to drive wealth your way, and it takes a few key principles that can get you cycling in more and more wealth.

MAKE MONEY WORK

So one reason a lot of people struggle to get wealthy is because they focus on how they can continue to make money rather than making the money they already work for them. If you talk to any millionaire that has had wealth for a long time, they will tell you that that is key to building wealth. I have always loved the saying don’t pay interest, make it. One thing that happens is people get money and they spend it, or they finance things. You need to be in charge of your money, don’t let it control you. So many people are working to pay the bills and live paycheck to paycheck. What if one day that paycheck stops coming? Hopefully you have put money in vehicles that have been earning you interest that you can fall back on. Get the perspective in your head that each penny is a soldier ready to work for you.

CONSISTENCY IS KEY

If you have had success in creating wealth, don’t ever stop and hit the break. It is called a cycle for a reason. If you find a system that is successful then milk it until you dry it out. Always be improving your abilities to build wealth. Look to develop many streams of income. Once you have built a good cash flow, you will have the ability to try some new investments or business opportunities that can also cycle in some more wealth creation. Always be researching and looking to find ways to keep your wealth creation going. Michael Jordan didn’t just get complacent once he won his first championship. He kept getting better and continued to win championship after championship. Keep working for those victories, whether big or small, they are all good.

COLLABORATE WITH OTHER WEALTHY PEOPLE

This does not mean get rid of friends or family members that are not wealthy. I hate business people that say in order to be successful you must be around successful people. I think with your wealth you can do much good for others who may not be as fortunate. Where much is given, much is required. Do not act like you are better then people because you may have more money then them. My purpose in this component is to work with other people that have good ideas or systems that have been proven and work in creating wealth. It is always good to see what others are doing.

Follow these principles and you will see great results in creating wealth consistently.

S.Webb

Visit us at our website: http://www.freehealthdrinks.info

Also visit us at our blog: http://wealthcreationcycle.blogspot.com

Google, Microsoft Up Slightly in comScore Feb. Search Share

ComScore just published the firm’s count for search engine market share in the U.S. for February, and the stats show little change for the major players.

Google (GOOG) had 66.4% of the keyword search volume in the month, up two tenths of a point from the prior month. Microsoft (MSFT) showed a one-tenth-of-a-point rise for its sites, at 15.3%, including Bing. Yahoo! (YHOO) was third with 13.8%, down three tenths of a point. IAC/InterActive’s (IACI) Ask Network was unchanged at 3% and AOL (AOL) was down a tenth of a point at 1.5%.

Interestingly, all the providers fell slightly in terms of their volume total queries except for Ask, who saw its total volume of queries rise 2%, though it remained in fourth place. Google served 17.6 billion U.S. queries, reports comScore, down from 17.8 billion in January.

Fin

should help verizon continue to capture the lion’s share of new smartphone subscribers and potentially a much higher share of tablet subscribers

Netlist: Buy, Sell or Hold?

In a world full of change, very few trends can be counted on to continue.� One trend that has almost guaranteed odds of continuing is the need for computer data storage and memory.� As computers grow faster and become more intertwined with all aspects of life, the need to store the data and ramp up memory capability will expand exponentially. This creates opportunity for small, nimble, creative companies who can ride this trend into the future.� One of these memory companies is Netlist (Nasdaq: NLST).� The company�s stock price has been beat down lately, opening up great opportunities for savvy investors.

Founded in 2000, Netlist designs and manufactures high-performance, logic-based memory subsystems for data center server and high-performance computing and communications markets. Netlist’s leading products include HyperCloud Memory and NVvault, a flash memory-based subsystem that enables data retention weeks following a disaster. The memory technologies are developed for applications in which high-speed, high-capacity memory, enhanced functionality, small form factor and heat dissipation are key requirements. These applications include tower-servers, rack-mounted servers, blade servers, high-performance computing clusters, engineering workstations and telecommunication equipment. �The company has its headquarters in Irvine, Calif., with manufacturing facilities in Suzhou, China.

The company just posted bang-up positive fourth-quarter and yearly results.� Year-over-year revenues were up 51% with fourth-quarter revenues surging 105%.� Gross profit increased by 94% year-over-year and an astounding 230% in the fourth quarter.� However, despite the improvement, net losses increased to $15.1 million from $12.9 million last year.� Netlist attributes the amplified loss to higher engineering, sales and marketing costs.� CEO C.K. Hong stated positively, “We are very encouraged with the progress during the fourth quarter and the year and anticipate continued growth in 2011, especially as challenges in memory capacity and performance continue to emerge across industry segments.�

Technically, price is below both the 50 and 200-day simple moving averages with slight support existing at the $2.15 per share level and strong support at $2.09.� Upside resistance exists at $2.45 and $2.65 per share.