Motley Fool Money - Motley Fool Money: 12.11.2009

Episode Date: December 11, 2009

What do better-than-expected retail numbers mean for investors? Why is Yahoo! bullish on Tiger Woods? Has Goldman Sachs seen the light on executive compensation? And what will AOL do with its newfound... independence? In this installment of Motley Fool Money, we tackle those stores and share three stocks on our radar. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:01:31 increased 1.3% in November. Largest increase since August. Shannon, what was your takeaway for investors? Takeaway is this. As with last week's unemployment tick down, this is at least at a glance, good news. It certainly warrants a lot of security just in terms of the methodology that they use to collect this information. But at a glance, I think it's good news. I don't think the news is good enough, though. We had an event from one of the services that I run here, and one of our colleagues, David Meyer did a fantastic presentation about the case for deflation and inflation. And the scariest slide was the level of reserves that banks have on reserve at the Fed right now. They're not lending. And as the credit market goes, so goes consumer spending. The uptick is nice. I don't
Starting point is 00:02:12 think it's sustainable. James? Yeah, I would say that my faith in humanity has been restored, but it hasn't. I'd prefer if we saved more and didn't spend, but we're really not spending as much as we think we are. The gas was way up in terms of gain. So it was cars. I think that the actual retail gain was only 0.6% if you take out gas in cars. No, you can't. Clothing was actually down. What happens if you take out bacon? That's a good question.
Starting point is 00:02:41 Clothing was actually done. I did work with a guy once. His name is not Shannon. This guy would say, oh my gosh, oh my gosh, I'm so stressed out. I just got to get to the mall. And that guy is not spending yet, which is actually a good sign. And I like that. Well, you might like that, but our companies, our stocks don't like that.
Starting point is 00:02:56 There's a lot of interesting news here. I think one thing to note is that ex-gasoline in motor vehicles, as James said, not nearly as robust as you'd expect. There was some also good news, and you can't see it by making the finger quotes, about consumer sentiment. However, when you look at the absolute level, it's still well under recession territory. And if you draw a line backwards in time on the graph, you see that it's at heights we had in, you know, the 82 recession, 90 recession. So it's still not all that great. The final point I want to make about this retail sales report is that there has been some stories lately out there among financial bloggers and other analysts that I respect. And they've basically said this, hey, sales tax receipts don't seem to be matching what we're seeing in these retail sales reports.
Starting point is 00:03:44 What's the deal? What is the deal? Well, it's hard to say because the methodology of the retail sales report is to survey about 5,000 businesses and then extrapolate from that survey and say, here's what happened. But that doesn't take into account everybody. And so it could be that maybe smaller businesses, the very smallest businesses, are going bankrupt. They're disappearing. And those sales are moving to surviving businesses. Maybe that survivorship bias is not properly reflected in the survey entirely possible.
Starting point is 00:04:12 It's hard to say, but I think it's worth scratching your chin and saying, whenever there's that big a disconnect between sales tax receipts and supposed gains in retail sales. This sounds a bit like an X-Files episode. No, no, no, no, no. In terms of holiday sales as we come into the home stretch for the holidays, are there retailers that you think are in a really good position right now based on their sales? I'm looking at Amazon pretty closely right now. I have always thought this was, well, not always, but for the most part, an absurdly expensive stock.
Starting point is 00:04:40 It certainly looks that way to me now in terms of evaluation that prices it at 50 times current earnings. And it looked that way to us all like six months ago when it was cheap. And you have to discount for a cheapscape bias among those of us here on the podcast. But to me, it's a storystock, not exactly like Google is a storystock or Apple is. That company, Google gets into people's brains and they feel smarter for owning it. Apple gets into their libido. They feel sexier for owning it. I think that Amazon is more of a finance geeky kind of play right now.
Starting point is 00:05:10 It's the rock and sock-and-robot game between Walmart and Amazon. And every time Amazon peels away a little bit of Walmart's market share, people like us get excited, but I can't get too excited because of the ridiculous valuation. Wow. It's hard to follow up on that. I think it is what I said about the sales tax discrepancy, this may be an example where stocks like this are going, and any stocks, actually, retail stocks may stand to benefit because if you own a stock in a company, it's presumably a bigger company. And if they are taking market share, if they're taking more of the dollars that are out there, even if that total pool of dollars is less, that still might mean good things for the share prices. That's right.
Starting point is 00:05:50 Yahoo is getting a big boost in traffic thanks to Tiger Woods. CEO Carol Bartz said this week that when it comes to making money, the Tiger Woods saga is, quote, better than Michael Jackson dying, because in her words, quote, it's kind of hard to put an ad up next to a funeral. Guys, you know I continue to profess my love for Carol Bartz. Your endless love. Has Yahoo found a business model here, Seth? I'm going to punt on that one.
Starting point is 00:06:19 I'm just going to say that I love it. Any week where Carol Bartz opens her mouth is a great week in here because no matter what we say, it's going to pale in comparison. It's going to be less outrageous. The sad thing is, I got nothing right now. I got nothing naughty. Guys, take over. We should invite her on to the podcast every week until she comes. We should. She doesn't sound like she's in the PR business, but she has sort of a charm that way, all the same. A horrible truth about advertising kind of charm. What's interesting, you know, Tiger Woods has lifetime earnings over a billion dollars, and over a billion dollars is about equal to the annual GDP of Bhutan, or maybe Maldon. So he's almost a small country on a yearly
Starting point is 00:06:54 basis. And what I'm reading now from the Vancouver Sun, and I've heard similar reports from the Sun of England, Tiger Woods might even quit golf. And this is obviously a bonanza, a bonanza for the news agencies, because people like me with nothing better to do are reading about Tiger Woods. But what does this mean for Nike? What does this mean for Nike and some of these sponsors if these alleged photos surface? Don't you think that a lot of companies have to be doing disaster planning. Nike, which paid him $35 million last year, Gillette, Gatorade,
Starting point is 00:07:30 even the PGA and the television networks. Tiger Woods means a whole lot to these companies when it comes to ratings, and if he's not in golf, that means a whole lot less money in golf. Oh, he's not leaving golf. If he leaves golf, I will eat a golf ball
Starting point is 00:07:44 on the show that week. Well, to bring it a little closer to home, too. We need to walk back our, I think we had unanimous endorsement of Tiger Woods and his brand last week. like, oh, this sexes it up, this is great, it's a new trajectory for him. Not so much. I think we should reduce our exposure to Tiger Woods. I'm going back into Elliot Spitzer.
Starting point is 00:08:00 I'm holding out for the nude photos, but I think I will reduce it. I wonder if I could have Tiger Woods video game on the cheap list. I'm buying more out-of-the-money calls. The dirtier this gets, the more famous Tiger gets when it finally blows over, he's more famous. Goldman Sachs said this week, it's 30 top executives will not receive cash bonuses this year. The executives instead will receive stock that cannot be sold for five. years. Goldman's been criticized for using $10 billion in government aid to boost its aggressive trading business. James, not every day that you hear about Wall Street not handing out bonuses.
Starting point is 00:08:34 This seems like a step in the right direction. That's pretty interesting, Chris. And, you know, this is sort of a southern playbook. And here in Washington, D.C., we're probably, probably the southernmost portion of the northeast. We're not really Southerners, but Southerners will know what I'm talking about. If you ever heard the term, go get me a switch, which means you're in trouble, and you have to get something that I can. Spank you with, basically. My heart just palpitated in it. And there's psychology, because if you get too big of a switch, then you get whacked harder.
Starting point is 00:09:01 If you get too little of a switch, you'll be sent back, or maybe your parent will get a switch of his own. And so it's kind of a tough situation. Goldman is motivated by greed and fear. Very little nobility, I will say, despite doing God's work. And if you notice the headlines today. That's a quote from the CEO, by the way, everybody. Which he rescinded, but he still made it. The UK and now France, and now Germany. he's interested to. UK and France are taxing executive bonuses in Walls, and his trading firms at 50
Starting point is 00:09:28 percent. That's crazy. Goldman, I think, is trying to get out ahead of the curve saying, okay, okay, we already had a situation where our top 30 people, we're getting 30 percent of their bonuses in cash, just 30 percent, 70 percent in stock, which is delayed four years. We'll push it all to five years and make it all stock. So it's actually a very responsible thing to do for a corporation, is to stall executive pay until the actions that these people took are actually manifest to make sure it actually worked. In other words, they can't do something really quick, then get out and pocket the money. It's a step in the right direction. Step in the right direction.
Starting point is 00:10:00 Second thing is shareholders get a non-binding vote on pay. And, you know, non-binding, yeah, probably submitted the Star Trek communicator so they don't actually get the vote in the first place. But same idea here, though. Congress is postulating some sort of say on pay legislation. And Goldman says, well, wait a minute. Let's get out ahead with our own plan that's very sort of softball and hope that people buy it because of first-mover advantage. Yeah, you have to hand golden the small golf clap, but this is also a lot of PR and posturing. You still got hundreds and hundreds of people making obscene amounts of money.
Starting point is 00:10:39 And you can't really blame them for doing what they're doing, but the fact does remain that a lot of their money they're making is enabled by the taxpayers. There's all of you listening out there, all of us in the room, who lend them this money at ultra-low rates. I mean, if you and I could go around borrowing money at about 0%, we'd have no trouble turning it into profits. But is it the fault of Goldman, though? Whose fault is it? No, well, I don't know. These guys are doing what they do. They just have an easier way of doing it because of the government.
Starting point is 00:11:09 Yeah, and they are connected. They are very well connected in government. What's a Timmy Geithner guy? Who is that guy? Hank, Hank. Dr. Evil. Paulson. Yeah, there are four or five Goldman guys in the White House. And if, you know, they can't get bonuses, they can get jobs with the Obama administration. I'm not sure if Goldman or city is better represented, but they could basically open a branch office. What if you're one of these other major firms? Do you follow suit? So, yes, it's a step in the right direction, but it's a very small one.
Starting point is 00:11:36 No, they don't because they're not getting enough heat. Really? Goldman is doing this because they are taking a lot more heat than most firms. And it's because they've been more successful than a lot of the other firms. Yeah, much better to delay a bonus than to have it taxed. I think that's what they're trying to do. Apple is starting to think different about iTunes. After buying music streaming service, Lala, Apple is considering allowing iTunes users to buy music straight from the web. Currently, users have to download iTunes software.
Starting point is 00:12:04 Shannon, is this a good move for Apple? They make a lot of money off of iTunes sales. I think this is the first chapter in what seems like a small story, but could be a huge one. I think that Apple knows that the subscription models that Rhapsody and Napster have tried, That's the better user experience. And Zune. And Zune. Of course, the mighty Zoon.
Starting point is 00:12:22 But the metaphor has been wrong all along. People don't like to feel that they're renting their music and it's going to evaporate if their account goes dry. But now that the sort of cloud computing is becoming the metaphor of choice, Apple knows that that's the better user experience. And if it can get out in front of that and own it in a way that Rapsie and Napster to this point have not been able to, they can reinvent the way people consume music again. This could be ultimately on a part with iPod. You mean recopy? because there are people already doing this. Oh, no, absolutely, absolutely.
Starting point is 00:12:49 But bringing it to the masses in the way that the, I love Rhapsody, but they've not been able to grow their audience. Just indulge my ignorance for a second. The benefit here is the user does not have to download the iTunes program, so if you're traveling someplace or whatever, and just don't have the capacity to download, you can still listen. That's right. I think ultimately this is an acknowledgement, and I think we would all agree,
Starting point is 00:13:11 physical storage is becoming irrelevant. Apple knows that, and they must be laughing at how much money they have made, getting people to pay a buck a song, downloading it so they can have it on their hard drives. AOL is back to being just AOL. The divorce from Time Warner is final, and AOL now trades under its own ticker again. The company is worth $2.5 billion today. A very far cry from January of 2000, when AOL put together a $182 billion stock and debt deal
Starting point is 00:13:40 to buy Time Warner and create a company with a combined market cap of $350 billion. Guys, as we close out the decade and we close out this business deal, what do you make of it all? Let's go back to more numbers quick. According to what we, if we've got this right on our charts here, AOL itself was worth about $150, $160 billion at the time or something. So it's worth today an 80th of what the standalone AOL was worth back then. That should tell you something about the price people were paying for tech stocks back in the day. It's interesting because in a furtive way almost, AOL has gone back to its roots and is quite successful. They have the weblogs network.
Starting point is 00:14:21 And so folks who go to TMZ or NGadget or Fan House, very popular sports site may not know these are AOL properties, but they're a part of that network and quite successful. TMZ, which has been in the forefront of the Tiger Woods thing. TMZ is owned by AOL. It's a part of the weblog ink, which is a unit of AOL. And so to me, it is that they've gone back to their original days. When I first came to the Motley Fool in 1998, we were the most popular personal finance channel on AOL. My job then was to learn a scripting language called Rain Man that we used to populate the scripts. And I felt like a Latin scholar because everybody knew it was a dying language, but you still had to do it because AOL is how you played.
Starting point is 00:14:58 And everyone's parents thought AOL was the web. Instead, AOL thrived in that confusion. And then enough kids convinced their parents to, oh, wait, there's a whole worldwide web out there. And they met their demise. I think the question is, what does AOL do now? They keep talking about content, content. you're going to put all those great content out and get this ad money, but there are a lot of people out there putting out content.
Starting point is 00:15:17 I just don't see where it's going to come from. I think they're cooked in the long term. It's sort of a smart, almost an app store mentality because they're not doing this stuff in-house. They're going out to places that are fairly well-established and getting the best of the best. True, and they do have TMZ. Not that I would know anything about that, but there is potential.
Starting point is 00:15:36 Yeah, it could be a value play. As we head into the next week, guys, give me one stock that is on your radar, and Shannon, we'll start with you. you. So I am looking at a stock that is actually very widely held in the Duke Street service that I run, and it's KCI kinetic concepts. And it's interesting sort of health care play, cutting-edge technology, but with some problems. About 70% of its revenue comes from a single product, and now there's competition that they thought they were going to be able to put off
Starting point is 00:16:03 via litigation. Maybe they will. I think that that's probably unlikely. Nonetheless, dirt cheap, great forward-looking company and the risk that it runs relative to the competition probably at least two to three years out. So it's a good stock for looking at right now and then watching very closely over the next two to three years. Get out of the door before everybody else? Exactly. Get those elbows ready. James Early. Chris, I'm going to recycle an idea that I used at the Duke Street Conference. As I just did. Exactly. Not because I'm lazy, but because it's good. Because he's an environmental guy. Flowers Foods is a bakery. It makes all kinds of high glycemic, high-carb sort of things.
Starting point is 00:16:39 Nature's own bread is the number one soft bread in the country. They sell a lot to Walmart and a lot of other places. Over 12% insider ownership. I think there's a lot of management team has 25 years or more tenure. And the thing that sticks out to me is return on capital, which is a fundamental profitability measure, has gone from a bit over 8% in 2005 to over 13% today. And for a company that's been around as long as Flowers has,
Starting point is 00:17:03 this is very, very impressive stats. So I like how it's run. FLO is the ticker. You're saying that Wonderbread is not the number one bread in the country? Apparently not. Not the number one sources. Wow, Ricky Bobby steered me wrong again. It's the number one bread in Chris's house.
Starting point is 00:17:18 Seth? I can't recycle from the Duke Street seminar panel discussion that I did with the guys because I had recycled a motley full money idea there. I'm going to go with a breaking news here. IMS Health, the ticker is RX. This was a hidden gems portfolio candidate. We later bought it. then it got a buyout offer.
Starting point is 00:17:40 The stock soared some 40, 50% from where we got into it. Today, opened up, dropped about 20%. What happened is in the Senate version of the health care bill, there was some language about prohibiting data mining, and this is sort of what IMS Health does, except that the devil is in the details here, and it's about personally identifiable data, which IMS Health will be able to cope with probably no matter what.
Starting point is 00:18:06 So this stock dropped about 20% people panicked before actually reading the language, before thinking about it. It's only down about 6% now, but there's still a buyout offer on the table. $22 a share trading for about $20 right now. I don't think the deal is going to be scuttled. If you were the kind of person who looks for arbitrage opportunities, you might want to look here. So at first it was down 20% and now just six? It's amazing how the market. How bad the market?
Starting point is 00:18:33 How inefficient the market really is. Nobody read the language. All right. That's it for this edition of Motley Full Money. Seth Jason, James Early, Shannon Zimmerman. Guys, thanks for being here. Good to be with you, Chris. Thank you, Chris. As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they talk about. Don't buy or sell stocks based solely on what you hear. Do your homework and make your own decisions. And remember, the conversation continues 24-7 at fool.com. I'm Chris Hill, and we'll see you next time.

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