Here's a great explantion by Abelson as to why NSOL and BCST went ballistic last week:Irrational Complacency By Alan Abelson and Rhonda Brammer
The Internet Effect.
That, as much as anything, explains the explosive start of the stock-market year.
If stocks like America Online, Amazon and Yahoo, not to mention a host of lesser-fry, can sell at incredible and often infinite multiples and boast market capitalizations that run well into the tens of billions, why, everything else by comparison looks like a wild bargain.
So powerful was the Internet Effect that in Wednesday's brilliant run to new highs -- by the Dow finally, as well as the S&P 500 and Nasdaq -- presumably sentient people were induced to buy steel stocks.
Since there is no evidence of disenchantment with the Internet shares -- indeed, quite the opposite -- Thursday's modest decline can only be traced to a generous desire on the part of the market masters to give investors addicted to buying the dips a chance to indulge their fancy.
Besides the sheer size of their surge, notable about the Internet stocks is that the usual order of investment has been reversed. Usually, the institutions buy early and then the public pours in, attracted by the rise in prices. This time, however, it was the public, particularly computer nerds who use the Internet to buy Internet stocks and then talk them up on the Internet, that was first in, and the institutions were the Johnny-come-latelys.
They had no choice. How could they explain to their investors why their portfolios lagged so egregiously the performances of e-this and e-that? And, of course, when America Online joined the Standard & Poor's 500, both overt institutional indexers and the closet variety were compelled to add that worthy to their portfolios.
Institutional demand stoked the Internet rage, since the number of shares available for anyone hot to buy these sizzling stocks is quite limited. On that score, we think it's awfully nice of the men and women who run the Internet companies to try to accommodate would-be shareholders. Insider selling of the group has been heavy.
The Internet Effect, which makes the rest of the market look irresistibly cheap, deserves most -- but not all -- of the credit for the market's burst out of the starting gate in the opening days of 1999. A big bow also should go to, in the neat phrase of our friends at Smith Barney, "irrational complacency."
Such complacency is especially evident among investors who are totally convinced that the market has nowhere to go but up. By way of proof, they point to the second half of last year when the faint of heart got faked out of their long positions, only to come back in sheepishly at much higher prices in the inevitable recovery.
Symptomatic of such complacency are the folks who put out market letters. Investors Intelligence, the estimable service that tracks their views, reports that in its latest survey, the letter writers were 58.3% bullish. That's the highest percentage in seven years. In other words, they're more bullish now than they
were when the market was at 3300.
But irrational complacency also extends to the economy. Despite the deflationary tide sweeping over much of the world and despite a further decline in the purchasing managers' index, for non-manufacturing as well as manufacturing, the prevailing sentiment is that our economy is immune to ills, abroad and at home. And even should it prove not to be, said sentiment is confident, the gods of the economy, led by Zeus Greenspan, will make it all better.
We're doubly lucky because that attitude, as well as blithe assumptions about the stock market, were on full display last week at a gathering of economists, dues-paying members all of the American Economic Association. One of the eminences from Harvard said, in effect, that if there really was a stock-market bubble, it would have occasioned more talk at the meeting. But remember, he's an economist, not a logician.
Besides, he added, if, by some weird chance, it turns out that there is a bubble and it bursts, "there is a sense that the Fed will lower interest rates and everything will be fine." Zeus Greenspan to the rescue!
To further quote the New York Times' report on the conclave, the received wisdom among the attendees was that the stock market isn't a big reason for the economy's strength nor much of a threat to the expansion as it heads into its ninth year. And they're right!
The stock market isn't a big reason for the economy's strength, it's the biggest reason. And if it collapsed, it wouldn't have all that great an impact on the expansion: It would stop it dead in its tracks.
Not a small part of Wall Street's irrational complacency, as intimated, springs from last year's stock- market action. Not only did the market weather some very rough seas in late summer-early fall, but it wound up with a real kick, the averages racking up double-digit gains for the fourth year in a row. So, why worry?
In fact, 1998 was fine for the lucky souls who owned the averages or, even better, the high-techs, whose index was up a mere 80%-plus. But alas, 1998 was not the best of years for an awful lot of investors.
Truth is, as our friend Bob Farrell, Merrill Lynch's astute market watcher, points out, the majority of stocks suffered a losing year in 1998. Losers on the year outpaced winners both on the Big Board and, more dramatically, on Nasdaq, where the 1,690 stocks that registered higher prices for 1998 were handily outnumbered by the 3,351 that fell.
That sort of experience normally would encourage rumination, reflection, a bit of grumpiness, perhaps-anything but complacency. But of course, we're talking "irrational," aren't we?
Not everyone, happily, has succumbed. The redoubtable Abby Cohen, who never met a stock market she didn't like, last week demonstrated her remarkable cool by cutting sharply the portion of stocks she recommended for Everyman's portfolio.
Specifically, she urged slashing the stock component a whole 2%, to 70%, from 72%. Alas, try as we might to follow brave Abby's advice, our stocks keep going up so fast that we can't get them down to less than 71% of our humble portfolio. But we're determined not to be complacent
Up & Down Wall Street, Part 2
Return to Up & Down Wall Street, Part 1
Great demographics! At least if you happen to run a drugstore chain. The population of geezers -- those who pop the most pills -- is soaring.
Retail prescription sales jumped 15% last year, to over $100 billion. And more than 60% of those sales were made by chain pharmacies, which continue to muscle business away from small independents.
Tipping the scales in favor of the big guys is the growing role of health maintenance organizations, preferred providers and insurance companies -- in the jargon, third-party payers -- which now account for seven out of every 10 prescriptions filled and, for various reasons, prefer to do business with major chains.
In particular, sponsors love to team up with the big guys because the latter offer lots of locations and sophisticated computer systems that streamline claims-processing.
All of this has not been lost on Wall Street. In the past three years, shares of the three largest drugstore chains -- Walgreen, CVS and Rite Aid -- have more than tripled.
Wall Street analysts, always an optimistic bunch, forecast steadily climbing earnings for all three chains. But even the most bullish are projecting growth rates ranging only around 15% to 17%.
And where are the stocks? Walgreen, CVS and Rite Aid, even after getting roughed up a bit last week, are selling, respectively, at 45, 36 and 30 times forward earnings.
Not quite in the class of Walgreen, CVS or Rite Aid in terms of size, but right up there in stock market popularity, is Duane Reade.
Founded in 1960, the company is New York City's largest drugstore chain. In 1992, the family sold out to Bain Capital, which launched an aggressive expansion program, and the chain fell on very hard times.
In June 1997, investment funds affiliated with DLJ Merchant Banking Partners II acquired 91.5% of the outstanding stock for $79 million, or the equivalent of about $8 a share. Eight months later, in February 1998, DLJ, Goldman Sachs and Salomon Smith Barney took Duane Reade public at $16.50 a share, selling about 40% of the company to the public for $120 million. Insiders sold about $9 million of stock.
Thanks to a new management team led by Anthony Cuti, a former president of Pathmark, Duane Reade has managed to report two profitable quarters -- after years of abysmal losses. (Duane Reade's accumulated deficit is still over $113 million, or $6 a share.)
In the third quarter, on 36% higher revenues, it earned 31 cents a share compared with a loss of 18 cents in the year-earlier span. First Call's consensus for last year is $1.05 a share and for this year, $1.55. Duane Reade is being hailed as a great turnaround story and likely buyout target. Shares, which have sold as high as 45, currently fetch 33-plus.
And while we'd never say never to the possibility of a takeover -- consolidation is rampant in the industry -- it's far from a sure thing that the company would go out at a premium valuation.
First, those estimates are entirely untaxed, thanks to big tax-loss carry-forwards. But apply a normal tax rate, and they drop to 63 cents for 1998, 93 cents for this year. By way of comparison, then, Duane Reade is selling at 36 times this year's estimate -- at a discount to Walgreen but on par with CVS and at a premium to Rite Aid.
It's worth noting, too, that Duane Reade's sparkling gain in revenues last quarter owed heavily to new stores. At the end of September, Duane Reade was operating 134 pharmacies, compared with only 65 in September 1997.
Same-store sales in the third quarter advanced a far more modest 6.3%, down from 7.6% last year and 8.3% in 1996. Again, by way of comparison, recent same-store sales at Walgreen are running ahead 10%; at CVS, 13%, and at Rite Aid, 8% -- though on the East Coast, where Rite Aid competes with Duane Reade, same-store comps were up 11%.
For years, the huge chains pretty much ignored Duane Reade's territory in New York City, particularly Manhattan. Why bother with the headaches of high real-estate costs, shrinkage and expensive labor -- particularly when managed care had yet to take hold? But all that has changed.
Though Duane Reade still reportedly has 21% of the New York City market, Rite Aid now lays claim to 16% and CVS, to 15%. Moreover, Melville, New York-based Genovese Drug Stores, which had about a 13% share, is likely to be a much fiercer competitor: It was recently acquired by Eckerd, a subsidiary of J.C. Penney and the fourth-largest drug chain.
Trouble is, Duane Reade appears to lack the financial muscle to go head-to-head with its aggressive rivals. Its balance sheet, even after last year's offering, is pretty dreadful. At the end of the third quarter, equity amounted to a minuscule $12.5 million, or 75 cents a share, compared with over $300 million, or $18 a share in debt. Worse still, tangible book is a negative $7 a share.
So, again, while somebody may well buy the chain -- it's not all that clear that somebody will pay up for it.
Penney's Eckerd agreed to buy Genovese Drug Stores for about 60% of sales. CVS paid about 68% of sales for Revco, while Rite Aid acquired Thrifty PayLess for 50% of sales.
But be generous, suppose a big spender pays 75% of sales for Duane Reade. And assume further, to be even more generous, that it pays not 75% of trailing sales (as in the examples cited), but 75% of analysts' forecast revenues of $800 million.
An offer of $600 million for Duane Reade, including the assumption of debt, would mean that stockholders would get $300 million. Which works out to just over $17 a share.
And that's about half the current price of the stock.
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