Motley Fool Money - Motley Fool Money: 05.30.2014
Episode Date: May 30, 2014Apple buys Beats. Michael Kors reports some fashionable numbers. And Google unveils its latest self-driving car. Our analysts discuss those stories and share some stocks on their radar. And ac...tor, comedian, and podcaster Adam Corolla talks about his new book, President Me. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Everybody needs money.
That's why they call it money.
The best thing in life are free,
but you can get them to the pot.
From Fool Global Headquarters, this is Motley Fool Money.
It's the Motley Fool Money Radio Show.
I'm Chris Held, joining me in studio this week from Motley Fool's Supernova.
Matt Argusinger from Motley Fool income investor James Early,
and for a million dollar portfolio, Ron Gross.
Good to see you, Jens.
We'll break down the latest news from the retail industry, the sports industry, and more.
actor, comedian, and best-selling author, Adam Carolla, is our guest this week.
And as always, we'll give you an inside look at the stocks on our radar.
But we begin this week with a couple of big deals.
And, Ron, let's start with Apple, which is buying music company Beats Electronics for $3 billion in cash and stock.
Apple is now going to offer beats streaming music service and premium headphones.
Apple's got the money.
Sure.
They can spend whatever they want.
And will.
But does anyone expect this acquisition to really result in a lot of new revenue for them?
I do not.
I think it's kind of much ado about nothing.
To be honest, I didn't even open my Excel spreadsheet to make any adjustments.
It just, we'll see where it goes.
They clearly spent this kind of money for the talent.
There's 500 folks over at Beats, good people, obviously Jimmy Iveen and Dr. Dre.
They want to do the streaming business right.
Apple radio has not been what they had hoped it would be.
They think finally Beats is one of the companies or the company that is getting this right versus Pandora, Spotify, and those folks.
And $3 billion is not a lot of money for Apple.
It's weird to say, but it's not a big ticket.
James said, did they just do it for the cool factor?
I think so.
I mean, you have to wonder why couldn't Apple just do this themselves?
I mean, they're big enough.
Why do they need Beats to do this?
They're paying, I mean, they're getting some value.
They're just paying a lot of money for it, and that's my question.
Maddie, Ron mentioned Pandora and Spotify.
If you're at either one of those companies, how nervous are you?
I don't know if I'm that nervous if I'm a Pandora, because I just feel like Pandora is a little bit of a different model.
I think I know Apple wants to do radio.
They want to do iTunes radio.
They want to get it right.
I still think this is more of a streaming music play versus a music discovery service that Pandora is.
So I feel like Pandora's got it.
Do you subscribe to a streaming music yourself?
Just Pandora.
Okay.
So you actually pay.
I pay? You do. I like the free.
Ron, Tim Cook
has maintained throughout this year that by the end
of 2014, a big new
product is coming. Does this
acquisition tip his hand that
it's absolutely going to be related to music?
I don't necessarily think so.
What caught my eye this week, more so than the beats
even, was a comment from a VP
at Apple who said, Apple's product
lineup for the rest of this year is the
best it's been in 25 years.
Those are big, bold
words. The word
Worldwide Developer Conference for Apple is in San Francisco on Monday. I hope to learn more about what's coming. But I think this is the year, finally, where we're going to see some innovation.
Well, and it's amazing to see the new Love Fest for Apple. I mean, Apple is, the stock has been up. I mean, I don't know how many consecutive days in a row, but I mean, it is just, you've got upgrades out there.
Stocks up 14% this year, 64% from its 52-week low. I mean, so finally people have woken up, as you said.
Bron's got the numbers.
All right. From technology to the sexy world of package.
meats. Shares of Hillshire
brands up more than 40%
this week after two separate
companies made bids. First, Pilgrim's
Pride offered to buy Hillshire
for $6.4 billion.
Two days later, Tyson Foods comes in with
an offer of $6.8 billion.
Maddie, I like Ballpark
Franks and Jimmy Dean sausage as much
as the next guy, but what is going on
here? Well, where's the beef? And it's clearly
a hillshire brands. No, this
to me, I mean, this is
this says more to me about the M&A market than in particular about Hillshy brands and what they have and sausages and hot dogs and beef.
I mean, what you have now is a market, especially in the food and beverage industry where, you know, companies have, to pardon the pun, cut the fat.
And we've seen that a lot across the board.
I mean, so these companies are running lean operations.
They're looking to grow.
And, you know, there's not a lot of growth to be had, yet there's a lot of cash on the balance sheet.
So this is an easy way.
With food and beverage, it's very easy to sort of tack on operations or take on operations or, you know,
tack on brands, flow it through the distribution system, gain global scale. It makes a lot of
sense. I mean, so we see this happen a lot if you've studied market cycles in the past.
We're at that point now where there's not a lot of growth to be had. Companies are going to
start losing the purse strings, and it's not surprising to see the food beverage industry be first.
But from the standpoint of society, is this something we want more of, more tube-form meat?
I mean, in terms of the... Absolutely.
My dad used to work as a sausage delivery boy, and he won't eat sauces to this day
when he was young, just because he saw.
But how about those commercials with the sun,
the Jimmy Dean sausage?
That's a great commercials.
You don't need tubed meat and you don't watch TV.
I don't need tube meat, yeah.
Are you American James?
You know, they put the tube meat in the animal intestine.
They clean it out, then that's what they stick the sausage in.
So it's doubly gross from my standpoint.
I like to think that the process has been cleaned up
since your dad was making sausage back in the day.
But it is animal intestine.
That's what they use.
Well, someone, they synthesize out of cow fat also.
Well, then animal intestine.
business is somehow worth about $7 billion apparently.
People like it.
Ron, to the point Maddie made, the IPO market over the last six, 12 months has gotten a lot
of attention, but it really does seem, when you see deals like this, it really does
seem like we could be seeing more M&A activity throughout the year.
I think that's right.
And Mattie's right.
The balance sheets are so bloated.
We've got so much cash.
We've raised dividends.
We've bought back stock.
And yet there's still tons and tons of cash out there on these balance sheets.
So we're going to start to consolidate.
People are going to cut costs.
It probably doesn't bode well for employment, by the way, because people get laid off when synergies abound.
But I think we're going to see more of it.
This week at the Code Conference in California, Google unveiled the latest version of its self-driving car.
James, no steering wheel, maximum speed of 25 miles an hour.
And Google says they're not selling them.
They've made 100 prototypes.
They're just going to sort of get them out there to test.
But I've got to say, I watch the videos that they put together.
I'm starting to turn around on this idea.
Turn around in a good way or a bad way.
In a good way.
Before I just thought it was yet another step in the rise of the machines
and our robotic overlords were one step closer.
And now I look at it and I think I think I want one of those.
Well, they put people, the idea is people can ride in this car
who you might not otherwise want to have behind the wheel.
And that's a good thing.
I mean, that's safer.
I mean, maybe its initial use is a punitive measure.
someone whose driver's license has been revoked has to ride at 25 miles per hour in this car.
I mean, big picture-wise, it's certainly interesting technologically speaking, but it's sort of
reinventing the same wheel instead of doing something new for transportation.
And it doesn't take away cars.
It just makes more slow-moving cars in the cities.
And maybe they'll be faster, blah, blah, blah.
We can use them on college campuses or retirement communities.
But it's not a big step forward.
It's just like a refined version of an existing step.
One day I look forward to commuting to work, eating the tuba meat, watching TV.
Yes.
I would sleep.
I would sleep in my self-driven car.
Yeah.
All right.
Let's move over to retail.
Michael Coors, fourth quarter profit, up 59 percent.
Revenue up more than 50 percent.
And, Maddie, they're North American.
Samstra sales up more than 20 percent.
And yet, the stock didn't really move.
What's going on?
Well, there's questions.
over margins. There's also the stock price that's just been on an absolute tear. And I think the number
here you said, I mean, plus 20% comps in North America. Contrast that with Coach, whose comps in
North America. How dare you? I'm sorry, sorry, Ron, but they were down 21%. And really,
paradoxically, that is why I can never get excited about Michael Quartz. Because to me, what you have
there is a complete fashion shift. Essentially, all those people who for years had gone over to coach
to buy the leather handbags or to buy the jackets, the coats and everything, they're just
going across the mall floor to Michael Coors now, and I just think that's something that can shift
very quickly. To me, I can't find anything that says Michael Coors, on a long-term competitive
basis, is doing anything more special than Coach. I will say that in all of the positives
in this quarter, I didn't see a ton about their e-commerce strategy, and maybe I just wasn't
looking hard enough, but it does seem like the retailers over the last six months who have done well,
the specialty retailers, part of it has been a really strong e-commerce.
commerce strategy. I'm thinking about William Sonoma, Kate Spade, that sort of thing.
I hear what you're saying about the fashion stuff. It seems like if Michael Kores wants to
take the next step, doesn't it have to be online? I believe so. So that's the real test of it,
I think, truly, of whether or not this kind of business can sustain itself long term.
You're not a long-term believer, it sounds like. I am not in Michael Kores. Fashion's a tough
business. I mean, I don't hate it, but I just, I'm not a usual fan of that industry. It's
too tough.
Coming up, former Microsoft CEO Steve Balmer appears to have found himself a brand new job.
Stay right here. This is Motley Fool Money.
Welcome back to Motley Full Money.
Chris Hill here in studio with Matt Argusinger, James Early, and Ron Gross.
Let's keep going with retail guys.
Costco's third quarter profits up 3 percent, revenue up 7 percent.
Ron, it seemed like on balance a pretty good quarter, but it didn't really blow anyone away.
I think that's fair.
Compared to other retailers, pretty good.
but otherwise relatively mediocre.
Thank goodness we didn't hear about the weather.
We had Comstar sales up 4%, 6%, and if you exclude fuel and foreign currency exchange,
which is pretty good, especially compared to the other folks.
Margins a little bit weak, SG&A operating expenses, a little bit higher than I think some
were expecting.
But all in all, you know, company continues to execute, 88% retention rates for its membership
model.
New store openings, probably another 30 this year.
year, international expansion continues. So the company continues to do what it's done for quite some
time. Stock's not screamingly cheap at $150 a share. You mentioned the international expansion. When
you look at the same store sales, they are no two ways about it. They're better in the U.S.
than they are internationally. Is that a challenge that management has spoken to? I'm just
wondering if the Costco model is just not as sticky outside the U.S.
That might be fair. They haven't spoken directly to it, at least not that I've seen.
It also may take a while for the warehouse model in general to kind of become more pervasive overseas.
Shares of Abercrombie and Fitch up 5% on Thursday after first quarter results were better than expected,
which, James, that means they just lost less money in the quarter than Wall Street was expecting them to.
Yeah, I mean, they're actually making some smart changes to be fair to them.
They're changing the format of Abercrombie.
They're lightening up their Hollister stores.
I mean, the place looked like a drug den before.
I felt like I needed night vision goggles every time.
Ron and I would go in there with our high school friends before.
I've never been into a Hollister, but...
I've never socialized with James.
Their cons dropped 4%, which sounds bad, was better than the 5.9% expected
and better than the 5.5% drop in the overall teen retail index.
But, you know, compared to...
This is from a MarketWatch article, I think, compared to, like, 2007, their EPS is, like, way less than half
and operating margins are down by 50%.
So these guys have got to do something.
Just like we talked about Coach earlier,
retail is –
Coach and Michael Corr's retail is fickle,
and they're bust of the fire here.
You mentioned the changes,
and Abercrombie CEO, Mike Jeffries
gave an interview recently
where he talked about some of the changes
that they are making,
and I was really surprised by what he said
because it made complete sense to me.
He talked about things like,
oh, we're going to cut down
on the fragrance that we spritz in the stores,
the advertising, which seems so focused
on showing model.
abs. They're cutting back on that. They're making bigger sizes. It really seems like they're
trying to make their stores and their clothing more attractive. Which is funny. In 2010,
the CEO said that his clothes are only for, quote, with the good-looking cool kids. And there
are certain people who don't belong in his clothes, specifically overweight people. So he's really
done in about face, eating his own words here. But it's what they need to do. Average-looking
people have money to spend, too. One, I mean. But the models are only Abercrombie models. He said he
wants to make it like a movie experience. That's why everything's all black and white.
You can follow this radio show on Twitter. At Motley Fool Money is our handle. If you follow
Matt Argusinger on Twitter, then you saw this nugget that he tweeted out this week.
I've got this bad feeling that 3D systems is the next nuanced communications, a mashup of
bad acquisitions and shareholder abuse, which gives me the chance to point out that shares of 3D systems
down more than 10% this week after the company announced a secondary stock.
offering of around 6 million shares. What are they going to do with that money? Just go out and make some more acquisitions?
Well, first of all, you know, Twitter, I tend to be a little more sensational on Twitter than I am in real life,
certainly on the radio show. But no, yeah, they've got a secondary offering, 300 million. This is not
unusual for 3D systems. They've done this many times in their past, and I wish they had had done it
when the stock was at $95 a share back in January, because that would have been, you know, much cheaper for
shareholders. But the thing with 3D systems, the thing that is starting to bug me,
a little bit. It's bugged me for a while now, is that, you know, this is a company that
essentially is issuing stock, which is a good thing. It's a pricey stock, but issuing stock to raise
capital and just spending like mad on new acquisitions. I mean, this is a company that makes
dozens of acquisitions every year. And the idea here is, well, you know, the growth looks great.
And so you have to focus on the organic growth. And even if you go back to last quarter,
you know, they had 28% organic growth. But you have to remember, that's just for acquisitions
that were made prior to one year ago. And so the company makes so many acquisitions that, you know,
It's able to report general good revenue growth and organic revenue growth.
And at some point, like nuance, I believe they're going to make some bad acquisitions.
They probably already have.
And that's going to result in lower growth.
It's going to result in write downs.
And for a company like this, that's priced the way it is.
It's not good for the stock.
You were at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas at the beginning of the year.
You saw a ton of companies in this space.
Are we going to see a lot of consolidation when it comes to 3D printing?
Well, we already have.
And with 3D systems, and Trassus and the others,
are buying a lot of these smaller companies.
My problem is, though, they're making a lot of acquisitions in the consumer space,
which I view as really just not the place you want to be investing if you're looking at 3D printing technology.
Former Microsoft CEO, Steve Ballmer, is buying the Los Angeles Clippers for $2 billion.
Some people seem surprised he paid so much for a team that has never been considered to be very good.
Ron, maybe they're unfamiliar with his history of overpaying for stuff when he was CEO of Microsoft.
Wow.
Nice one.
said before we started taping, I'm happy for Steve Bomber. I'm happy that he's doing this because
he's learned one of the secrets of life, which is find an easy act to follow. And Don Sterling,
for the moment, still the owner of the LA Clippers is not just the most hated owner in pro
sports. According to a recent poll, he's the most hated man in America. Yeah, it's good to be the
white knight that rides in. Even though he's relinquished power to his wife, I read that he's still going to
fight this and he's not selling. So there might be a quite.
a road ahead here. It still needs to get approval
from the league. But yeah, good. I think
it's good for the team. And then, as
I said, they needed a white night. There were
several bidders. He went a little bit
higher than the rest. That's quite a big number.
I think it's good for sports franchises in general
if you're an owner.
And so, yeah. Are you a basketball
fan yourself, Ron? No,
not really. Two billion, I mean, like two billion
dollars for the L.A. Clippers, that is
I mean, if I'm any other
major sports franchise owner,
I'm sitting here with the job of the hut, who
If you think about any other team, I mean, other teams, A, own arenas, they own real estate, they own all other retail operations around.
I mean, they own TV rights.
They're very valuable.
L.A. Clippers for $2 billion, I'm still blown away.
I'm speechless.
Ron, if you had $2 billion to blow on something, are you buying a sports team?
What are you buying for $2 billion?
Wow.
Not a sports team.
No?
No, I don't think so.
You go on an island?
Private island.
That really, really is where I'm going.
Maddie, what about you?
Oh, I would love a sports franchise.
But I can't afford one now with $2 billion.
If I can only get the clippers for $2 billion, forget it.
James, you're not buying a sports team.
No, no, I would do something.
I'd buy some sausages and destroy them just to help humanity.
Let's bring in our man from the other side of the glass.
Steve Brodow.
Steve, $2 billion, what are you going to pony up for?
Your own set of olive gardens?
I'm buying the biggest water park in the universe.
Really?
Yeah, I love water parks.
Bigger the better.
You can always drop us an email, Radio at Fool.
is our email address. That's radio at fool.com. We got about a minute left, guys.
Email from Rick Baker in Connecticut. As one of your dozens of listeners and an ardent student
of the market, I find the flood of information regarding not just the market, but individual
stocks. A bit overwhelming. So my question is, if you were limited to evaluating just three
financial metrics to determine if a stock was worthy of consideration, what would you use?
Let's just go down the line. You can each take one. Ron, a lot of things. Price earnings,
price to sales. There are metrics that talk about.
about the health of a company and how they're doing, and there are metrics that talk about
the stock and if it's cheap or not. I'm going stock here, and my favorite metric would be
priced to free cash flow. All right, Maddie, what about you? It's a good one, but I'm going
with insider ownership. I mean, if I, if an insider, if a major insider executive at a company
owns more than 5 or 10% of the company, that answers so many questions right off the bat.
James?
Going with return on invested capital. It's sort of like, if you borrow money from a bank and you
owe 7% on that loan, you better invest it to make at least 7%, right, to be viable.
So that's the same idea for a company.
All right.
James Early, Ron, Gross, Matt Argusinger.
Guys, we'll see you a little bit later in the show.
Keep those emails coming.
Radio at Fool.com is our email address.
Adam Carolla is next.
Don't go anywhere.
You're listening to Motley Full Money.
Welcome back to Motley Fool Money.
I'm Chris Hill.
Throughout American history,
prominent leaders have written books before running for President of the United States.
The book is a chance to share their vision for the country.
And with the next presidential election, just two years away, this scenario is playing out one more time.
Adam Carolla is a radio and TV host, comedian, actor, bestselling author, and his latest book is President Me, the America that's in my head.
Adam, thank you so much for being here.
So this book is your manifesto, your vision for America.
one of the things in your book that comes across when you're writing about energy is
you're pretty focused in your day-to-day life on energy efficiency.
This seems to be an issue that you have a lot of passion about.
Well, I was thinking about it.
I mean, every day when I come through my front door, some light my kids' rooms on,
I came home the other day.
My family had barbecued without me.
me because I was out on the road. I walked outside. It was a gas in natural gas barbecue,
but a day later, the barbecue, a day in, like JFK's Eternal Flame. And I realized I walk
around just shutting things off, turning off TVs, turning off computers, shutting off barbecue.
I realize all we do is talk about tracking and natural gas and solar and alternative fuels
and wind power.
Our country, honestly, and I'm not kidding,
could start saving 25% in energy costs
starting tomorrow
if everyone would just wake up and start shutting crap off.
If we honestly just took every child, woman, man,
everyone who was in the house
and who wasn't currently paying,
the electricity bill, the gas bill, the energy bill,
if we put them all on the clock,
we could save 25% tomorrow.
I mean, how often have you just driven a building on a Saturday
and just seen it lit up like a Christmas tree and there's nobody in it?
Or just you drive by an office and you see up on the 8th floor,
it's all lit up at 10 o'clock at night.
How many times I live in Los Angeles, there's always a drought going on.
I'll drive along the freeway the two days out of the year.
It's raining.
I'll see the sprinklers going off, the automatic.
sprinklers will be turned on while it's raining, we could honestly save 25% in this world
without doing anything, building no grid, doing no solar, not putting another coal-fired power plant
online, nothing, just 25% start tomorrow if everyone would just wake the hell up.
You're listening to Motley Full Money talking with Adam Carolla. His new book is President
Me, the America that's in my head. You also host...
the Adam Carolla show, which holds the Guinness World Record for the most downloaded podcast.
We were talking about this during the break. You're involved in a lawsuit right now that I find
in some ways hilarious, but in other ways, a little scary. And I was hoping you could talk a
little bit about it because on our daily podcast, Market Foolery, last month, we actually
took an entire episode, just talking about legal issues. And we talked about the fact that
that you're now being sued by someone who claims to have the patent on podcast technology,
and I guess they're looking to get a cut of the money you make off your podcast?
What is the status of that right now?
Big issue.
There's your government snapping into action, once again, everybody.
Well, I should mention you have a legal defense fund that you have set up for this lawsuit.
I've contributed to it.
Anyone else interested in contributing to it can go to fund anything.com
slash patent troll.
Yes.
Thank you for mentioning that.
It's pretty simple.
Patent trolls have been around for a while.
They buy a patent, and they use them, and they used them to, you know, like a stick to beat
businesses, a normally big business, but once in a while small business,
our case and these guys sue. And they have a district in eastern Texas that is very friendly.
The court cases, we tried to get a venue change. The judge who doesn't get elected and is not
going anywhere. He basically has tenure said, no, it'll take place in eastern Texas in my district,
even though all they have is a PO box. Could you imagine telling the government, oh, yeah, I live in California.
in California, but I have a P-O-Boc to Nevada, so those are the taxes I'm going to pay.
You can only imagine how good that would go over.
But either way, the government is kind of with these guys, or at least this part of Eastern
Texas is because it brings a lot of commerce.
Juries are friendly to them, and they sue people for a living.
They buy a patent.
They say you're using our technology without our...
Then either pay us or we'll see you.
We realize if we pay them, then they're just going to go.
after every podcast. So why wouldn't they go after your podcast as soon as they're done
cashing my check? So instead, we circled the wagons. I spoke to many other people in the podcast
community and we said, look, we're going to raise money. We're going to fight these guys.
Fortunately, this kind of litigation is. It is literally $1.5 million is the estimate like this.
Now, we will win because we didn't do anything. Lose. Look out. It's $1.5.5.5. You know,
million dollars they didn't have a case and this is why we need reform because these guys sue with
impunity they know just how expensive it is to defend yourself and they know that most people
settle because you're business and you don't want to pay $1.5 million to attorneys and go back and forth
to eastern Texas it's the cost of doing business and lost opportunity as well so there needs to be
reformed does about it and tells us we get it and it's all going toward
beating the
well we we have a lot of podcast listeners
not as many as your show has
but again the the website
if you're looking to contribute is fun to anything
dot com slash patent troll
Adam you strike me as someone
who I think a lot of people
know from one aspect
of your professional life maybe they listen to the
podcast or they've read one of your books
or they remember you from the man show
or something like that but when I step back
and look at the body of your work
You've been involved in pretty much every aspect of the entertainment business.
I am curious, do you have one that you particularly enjoy more than the others, whether it's for monetary reasons or just because you enjoy doing it?
Really hard work, but really satisfying.
As I get a little bit older and as I raise twins, I start to sort of thing in radio all these years and doing a podcast all these years and all kind of stuff.
It's great, but it sort of goes up into the ether, so to speak, whereas writing a book,
making a movie, just finishing an independent documentary, driving.
So for me, leaving something behind, you know, just a couple of DVDs and a couple of books
that says I was on this planet is kind of a nice legacy, but doing the podcast is fun.
it's on my own terms. It's in my own studio that I built and so and so forth. But it's really,
it's literally, you know, I'm sure right now and I'll be up on stage in Chicago later on
questions about the book. And then on the ride home, I'll be on the airplane looking at a
rough cut of my independent romantic comedy and working on that. And when I can touch us on the
Newman documentary, and then we'll do a podcast that night. And a month from
now start working on season two.
A contractor,
my Spike show,
Home Improvement Show.
So it's really the variety.
I suppose if I did any one of them for any length of time,
I would probably get tired of them.
Do you ever sleep?
You know,
something happened.
I lost my job in that terrestrial radio about five years ago.
And I no longer,
my career,
I didn't have a contract.
And it was really kind of scary not having income, not having a guaranteed anything, just, you know, living gig to gig, so to speak.
And I just, and it was right about the time, or with short, you know, my twins were two years old, you know, nothing but speculation on the horizon.
And I just sort of kicked into overdrive.
And it's worked out quite nicely.
Unfortunately, I haven't slowed down.
So I'm going to have to just sort of realize, you know, I'm going to have to stop, you know, show business is an easy business.
It's a lot of here today, gone tomorrow, and you don't know, you know, you're only good as your last book or your last podcast or your last.
I guess at a certain point, I should just go look, you know, take it easy.
And I think that's what I'm going to start doing as soon as I've done with this book door.
You mentioned your kids that you and your wife, the future first lady Lynette, have.
Your kids are getting a little older.
I'm curious because we have parents who listen to the show.
What is one thing about money that you've tried to teach your children?
Well, I'm trying to teach them that it exists because I'm trying to teach my wife that too.
And the reason I say that is everything is plastic now.
Everything is a debit.
Everything is automatic payment.
They don't see money.
They don't handle money.
It's, you know, my stuff goes right in an account.
Everything gets sort of paid for automatically.
When they go out for frozen yogurt,
Mama pulls a piece of blue plastic out of her wallet,
just swipes it.
Daddy magically pays for it.
It doesn't exist in its own weird way.
It's not tangible.
I mean, you know, back in the day when you paid for things with peltz,
and you had to go get those pelt.
or you had to go get that silver or that gold.
Man, it meant something.
When you bartered, it meant something.
If somebody said, you know, I'll give you a pint of ale,
but you go cut a cord of wood for me,
it meant it.
It meant it.
That pint of ale it was in your hand.
And now I'm trying to teach them that this stuff does feel like something.
And the reason I'm on a book tour is the reason
and mama gets to swipe her credit card and get your frozen yogurt.
So I'm trying, but it's hard in a world where everything's a debit card and a swipe
and you walk out of the store with whatever you want.
The final question, and then I'll let you go because I know you're busy with your book tour.
Just this week, Taco Bell appointed a new CEO.
Brian Nichol had been one of Taco Bell's executives prior to getting the top job.
Are you surprised that you didn't get some consideration as the next CEO of Taco Bell?
Well, your material.
It would have been nice, as I said, to at least have gotten a,
I applied for a job at the North Hollywood Taco Bell when I was 16,
and I was turned your ego as a 16-year-old male coming up.
But it would have been nice.
And my first order of business would be to bring back the Bell Beaver,
which if your listeners don't,
familiar with they can look up in Marvel at.
The book is President Me, the America that's in my head.
It's already an Amazon bestseller, Adam Carolla.
Thank you so much for being here and keep fighting the patent trolls.
Thanks so much, Chris.
Coming up, we'll give you an inside look at the stocks on our radar.
This is Motley Fool Money.
As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about
and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against,
so no buyer sell stocks based solely on what you're here.
Welcome back to Motley Full Money, Chris Hill here in studio with Matt Argusinger, James Early, and Ron Gross.
Guys, it is that time, once again, time for the stocks on our radar.
And we'll bring in our man, Steve Brodow, from the other side of the glass to hit you with a question.
Ron Gross, you're up first. What do you got this week?
Finally, finally, finally. I am able to recommend Amazon.
Really?
Amzzi.
What? Stock is off 25% from its 52-week tie.
We've been waiting for a pullback.
We really like this business. Jeff Bezos knows what he's doing.
many different ways this company can go, but obviously they are the big gorilla in the e-commerce business,
and we think there's good things to come.
Steve, question about Amazon.com?
So I'm a shareholder, and my dad always yells at me about this and says, when are they going to make any money?
Exactly why the stock is off 25%.
I think people are getting fatigued waiting for profits.
We like the fact that they're spending money to build out their distribution facilities,
their technology, their marketing.
We're okay waiting.
We're long-term investors.
profits will come. So that sounds like, I don't know.
Yeah, I don't know. When are they going to make money?
I don't know. Maddie, what are you looking at?
I got a company that's about to make a lot of money, and it's Yahoo, ticker Y-H-O-O.
As most people know, Alibaba, which is the ginormous Chinese e-commerce, giant, speaking of
e-commerce, that's about to go public any day now, and that's going to bring a huge windfall to Yahoo!
Yahoo! Which owns about 24% of the company. If you strip out Alibaba, strip out Yahoo!
Yahoo Japan has about some cash from Yahoo. Yahoo, the core business, say what you will about it,
is trading for about one and a half times EBDA. Incredibly cheap. And I'm not a guy who usually
likes cheap stocks, but I just think it looks too good to pass up right now. We just recently
recommended it in Supernova. And I'm excited to see what happens with the Alibabi IPO and what
that does for Yahoo. Steve, question about Yahoo? What about all of Yahoo's legacy stuff that
people used to know the Yahoo forums and the chat and Yahoo? They were involved in everything, Yahoo!
it seems like all that's pretty much gone by the white side.
Well, you'd be surprised.
There's still many, many users that use those platforms.
But, again, Marissa Myers-Myers taking the company a little bit different direction, investing hard into content, mobile.
We'll see if any of that pays off.
But she's really going to be tested after this Alibaba IPO, and that's what I'm interested in seeing.
James Shirley, what are you looking at this week?
Going with a company called Orange, formerly France Telecom, but then they adopted the name of their mobile brand.
This is an income investor recommendation.
It's up 30% year to date.
I've just upgraded the valuation.
This got pounded for the past several years.
It just really crawled out of the toilet.
It was down because they had suicide problems.
They had all kinds of economic issues.
There's this former porn entrepreneur in France who has now made a rival telecom brand called Free,
which is really taking market share.
But now Orange has finally found some footing and their free fall has been sort of averted.
Dividends around 7%.
That's going to get cut.
But I see still a nice div-in and certainly upside in this stock.
O-R-A-N is the ticker.
Steve, question about orange?
Seems like a lot of drama there.
James, do you have a favorite French film star?
Is there more than one?
You're asking the wrong guy.
You're asking the wrong guy.
I've not seen a movie in many years to my watch.
Malin Brando, last thing I'm paris.
Giraudet d'Ire d'I.
I was just going to say that.
He's a winemaker now, you know that?
I did not.
Steve, do you have a favorite French?
Julia Pinoche, perhaps?
The lovely and talented, Juliet Benoche.
We'll wrap up there.
Ron Gross, Matt Argusinger, James Early, guys.
Thanks for being here.
Thank you.
That's going to do it for this edition of Motley Fool of Money.
The show is mixed by Rick Engdal.
Our engineer is Steve Broido.
Our producer is Matt Greer.
I'm Chris Hill.
Thanks for listening.
We'll see you next week.
