Monday, April 26, 2010

US HOT STOCKS: Hertz, Thomas Weisel, Whirlpool, Goldman, Citi:


U.S. stocks were mixed Monday, as the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 24 points to 11228, but the Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 1.3 points to 1216 and the Nasdaq Composite Index declined 2.1 points to 2528. Among the companies whose shares are actively trading in the session are Hertz Global Holdings Inc. (HTZ), Thomas Weisel Partners Group Inc. (TWPG) and Whirlpool Corp. (WHR).

Car-rental company Hertz ($15.13, +$2.25, +17.43%) plans to acquire rival Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group Inc. (DTG, $42.32, +$3.47, +8.93%) for $1.27 billion in cash and stock, giving Hertz a larger foothold in the leisure-rental market when its core business-travel operation remains in the doldrums. Avis Budget Group Inc. (CAR, $16.62, +$1.95, +13.29%) also traded higher.

Stifel Financial Corp. (SF, $53.28, -$2.46, -4.41%) and Thomas Weisel ($7.18, +$2.82, +64.68%) agreed to merge. Each Thomas Weisel share will be exchanged for 0.1364 shares of Stifel stock in a deal valued at over $300 million.

Whirlpool's ($117.64, +$15.42, +15.09%) first-quarter earnings more than doubled, smashing analysts' estimates, as revenue surged and margins increased amid an improving global economy. The appliance maker also raised its 2010 earnings outlook.

Financial stocks slid Monday as proposed regulation from Senate Democrats about sweeping new rules for the derivatives market would likely hurt revenue at most big banks, though many investors think there is little chance of the measure passing in such a stringent form. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS, $152.52, -$4.88, -3.10%), Morgan Stanley (MS, $31.14, -$0.80, -2.50%), J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM, $43.99, -$0.95, -2.11%) and Bank of America Corp. (BAC, $18.29, -$0.14, -0.76%) all fell.

The Treasury Department said Monday it would sell up to 1.5 billion Citigroup Inc. (C, $4.69, -$0.18, -3.60%) shares, the first round of a plan to divest its entire 7.7 billion share stake in the bank holding company.

Caterpillar Inc. (CAT, $72.21, +$3.43, +4.99%) swung to a sharply higher-than-expected profit in the first quarter following prior-year restructuring charges, though sales fell and taxes rose. The heavy machinery maker also raised its 2010 forecast. Other machinery stocks also rose, with Deere & Co. (DE, $62.95, +$1.16, +1.88%), Terex Corp. (TEX, $28.44, +$0.70, +2.53%), Joy Global Inc. (JOYG, $63.88, +$2.43, +3.95%), Manitowoc Co. (MTW, $16.28, +$0.65, +4.16%) and Bucyrus International Inc. (BUCY, $70.94, +$2.57, +3.76%) all gaining.

Switch & Data Facilities Co. (SDXC, $19.61, +$1.91, +10.79%) said federal regulators raised no antitrust concerns about Equinix Inc.'s (EQIX, $102.12, +$6.38, +6.66%) purchase of the company. The two data-center providers expect the deal to close next Friday.

Digirad Corp. (DRAD, $2.62, +$0.56, +27.18%), which makes medical-imaging products, said it got clearance from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to market and distribute its ergo large field-of-view, general-purpose portable imaging system.

Mortgage insurer PMI Group Inc.'s (PMI, $6.27, -$0.36, -5.43%) first-quarter loss widened and was worse than analysts expected. In addition, its main mortgage insurance unit may have fallen below a minimum capital threshold. As a result, the unit may be required to stop selling new business in some states, the company said in a regulatory filing Monday.

[b]Other Stocks In Focus:[/b]

Biotechnology company AspenBio Pharma Inc. (APPY, $4.27, +$0.53, +14.17%) shares hit their highest level since January 2009 amid chatter that a partnership or takeover is in the works. AspenBio has been gaining lately as data from a pivotal trial on its blood-based diagnostic test for appendicitis is expected this quarter. ThinkEquity didn't dismiss the chatter, but said a partnership/takeover is more likely after the company gets further down the regulatory pathway. Based on its recent naming of a CEO with sales and marketing experience, it looks like APPY wants to be the one to commercialize the test, ThinkEquity said.

While medical-products company Baxter International Inc.'s (BAX, $47.81, -$1.51, -3.07%) shares have fallen 16% since its 2010 guidance cut last Thursday, JPMorgan thinks they'll be "range-bound" around this level because of lasting uncertainty about the plasma market. The firm lowered Baxter's rating to neutral from overweight. JPMorgan said management lowered the bar enough for 2010, but that isn't the concern. "The underlying issue is the lack of visibility on 2011, an absence of catalysts, and the likelihood that we won't have visibility until December at the earliest or more likely 1Q next year," it said.

BioSante Pharmaceuticals Inc. (BPAX, $2.19, +$0.05, +2.34%) said it entered into a deal which carries an option for "a major pharmaceutical company" to get a non-exclusive license to use BioSante's antibody technology.

BlackRock Inc.'s (BLK, $193.50, -$17.52, -8.30%) first-quarter earnings quintupled as the money-management firm continues its integration of Barclays Global Investors, which it bought late last year. However, the results missed analysts' estimates as the company has run into some trouble with the deal.

Jefferies International lowered British Sky Broadcasting (BSY, $38.07, -$0.92, -2.36%) to hold from buy ahead of the company's fiscal third quarter results, due Thursday, saying it expects "uninspiring" results with net adds below last year. At 18 times calenderized 2010 per-share earnings, the stock is up with events and fully valued, the firm said, adding it thinks the stock is likely to be influenced by the court decision expected imminently relating to a stay of execution on channel wholesale regulation. News Corp. (NWS, $18.64, +$0.14, +0.76%) which owns Dow Jones & Co., publisher of this newswire, has a roughly 39% stake in BSkyB.

Pharmaceutical-research Charles River Laboratories International Inc. (CRL, $34.30, -$5.47, -13.75%) and Chinese drug-research contractor WuXi PharmaTech (Cayman) (WX, $19.44, +$2.87, +17.32%) will merge in a $1.6 billion deal. Charles River also announced first-quarter earnings that slightly missed expectations, while revenue came in ahead of views.

CKE Restaurants Inc. (CKR, $12.37, -$0.48, -3.74%) said Saturday it has agreed to be sold to Apollo Management Group for $694 million, or $12.55 a share, after private-equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners declined to match Apollo's higher offer for the operator of the Carl's Jr. and Hardee's fast-food chains. CKE shareholders will get $12.55 a share, but shares slipped Monday as it appeared there would be no bidding war.

Dendreon Corp. (DNDN, $41.99, +$1.89, +4.71%) gained after Brean Murray Carret raised its target price on the stock to $50 from $40. Analyst Jonathan Aschoff said the boost emphasizes his confidence Dendreon will get U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval for Provenge, the drug company's prostate cancer candidate. Some of Brean Murray's peers are backing out of the stock at what Aschoff believes is "exactly the wrong time," he wrote.

Eagle Materials Inc.'s (EXP, $34.18, +$1.73, +5.33%) fiscal fourth-quarter profit declined 73% as sales fell and extended plant shutdowns increased operating costs. But results at the maker of concrete, cement and gypsum wallboard for buildings and infrastructure beat analysts' estimates.

BMO Capital Markets adjusted its ratings on several real-estate investment trusts ahead of first-quarter earnings reports. The firm said it believes "management teams are on the verge of becoming collectively more optimistic about the future, and we think this improvement in operating expectations could happen as soon as this coming earnings season." The firm boosted its ratings on Equity Residential (EQR, $45.26, +$0.66, +1.48%) and Mid-America Apartment Communities Inc. (MAA, $54.78, +$0.95, +1.76%) to outperform from market perform and Essex Property Trust Inc. (ESS, $105.98, +$1.99, +1.91%) to market perform from underperform, but it cut its ratings on Apartment Investment & Management Co. (AIV, $22.19, +$0.08, +0.36%) and Colonial Properties Trust (CL, $83.76, +$0.49, +0.59%) to underperform from market perform.

Oppenheimer downgraded regional bank First Midwest Bancorp (FMBI, $16.36, -$1.55, -8.63%) to perform from outperform, saying the stock was strong last week on much better-than-expected results. First Midwest also had an FDIC-assisted transaction last week in which it acquired the assets of a failed bank, and the firm said it is concerned investors might be disappointed with that news, as two other banks had multiple, larger deals.

Guess? Inc. (GES, $50.63, +$1.01, +2.04%) shares have more than doubled in the past year, but they may well rise another 25%, Barron's said. Sales could grow in the double digits this year, and profit margins are strikingly high. The apparel retailer is finding a new edge, updating its trademark jeans and peddling in-the-moment items like jeggings (jeans/leggings) for young women and embroidered, distressed t-shirts for men.

Credit Suisse turned indecisive, downgrading ITT Educational Services Inc. (ESI, $109.51, -$2.28, -2.04%) and DeVry Inc. (DV, $64.69, -$4.77, -6.87%) just two weeks after upgrading them as it says government draft policy on "gainful employment" regulation may not be so generous after all. Other for-profit education companies trading lower included Apollo Group Inc. (APOL, $62.59, -$0.94, -1.48%) and Corinthian Colleges Inc. (COCO, $17.27, -$0.62, -3.47%).

Lorillard Inc.'s (LO, $80.50, +$0.93, +1.17%) first-quarter profit jumped 26% as shipments at the tobacco company increased following prior-year disruptions.

Caris & Co. boosted its price target on Netflix Inc. (NFLX, $107.08, +$7.35, +7.37%) by 25% to $120, saying that the online video-rental company continues to post strong growth and has surpassed its price target for the fourth time this year. The firm said consensus expectations are moving up, but fiscal 2011 numbers still look too low.

Bernstein cut its rating on Nokia Corp. (NOK, $12.44, -$0.32, -2.51%) to market perform from outperform, saying the fate of the world's largest maker of mobile phones is now too dependent on the success of Symbian 3, the delayed revamp of its "smartphone" operating system. The broker also told clients that the first-quarter results showed that the improvement in gross margins witnessed since the second quarter of 2009 has been halted and said Nokia's guidance cut for the second quarter of 2010 shows that "this isn't a temporary weakness but a trend that will stop only with the next product portfolio refresh."

Shares of Office Depot Inc. (ODP, $9.01, +$0.56, +6.63%) traded sharply higher Monday after Credit Suisse upgraded its stock-investment rating on the office supplier, with the positive sentiment also boosting shares of OfficeMax Inc. (OMX, $17.48, +$0.85, +5.11%). Credit Suisse said in a note Monday that channel checks point to a modest but slow improvement in the first quarter at Office Depot. "This sector has not yet seen the pickup other retail sectors have shown," the firm said as it raised its rating on Office Depot to neutral from underperform.

Quaker Chemical Corp. (KWR, $35.53, +$2.26, +6.79%) continued on its bullish April, rising to a new all-time high after gaining by a third this month. Shares have nearly doubled over the past three months and the specialty chemicals maker will report its first-quarter results after the close Tuesday.

Global Hunter Securities cut its stock-investment rating on Perry Ellis International Inc. (PERY, $25.31, -$1.44, -5.38%) to neutral from buy based on valuation. The firm said that while it expects to see strong execution from operations due to gross margin expansion and cost controls, the apparel company's shares have exceeded its price target.

PrivateBancorp Inc. (PVTB, $15.04, -$2.03, -11.89%) swung to a first-quarter loss that was wider than analysts' estimates as provisions for loan losses quadrupled.

Private equity firm GTCR LLC said Monday it is acquiring security systems firm Protection One Inc. (PONE, $15.40, +$1.64, +11.92%) from a group including Quadrangle Group LLC and Monarch Capital Partners.

SPX Corp. (SPW, $69.97, +$3.07, +4.59%) was boosted to buy from neutral by Bank of America Merrill Lynch analysts who said the diversified industrial company should see improvements to its businesses, particularly its flow and test measurement segments, while the industrial and thermal markets remain muted.

Thoratec Corp. (THOR, $35.07, +$0.72, +2.10%) agreed to sell its International Technidyne division, which makes a wide range of equipment for hemostasis management and point-of-care testing, to manufacturing company Danaher Corp. (DHR, $84.80, -$0.61, -0.71%) for at least $110 million.

Titan International Inc.'s (TWI, $12.05, +$0.58, +5.06%) first-quarter profit fell by 70% but at 6 cents a share was still twice the Street's consensus as revenue also slightly topped views as well. The maker of wheels and tires used for off-highway machinery, such as tractors, which said agriculture demand should remain strong in the second quarter. It also said mining looks bright and added it was increasing prices.

Travelzoo Inc. (TZOO, $19.00, +$2.50, +15.17%) reported first-quarter results better than the one analyst covering the stock expected. The company, which is paid by travel companies to advertise their offers, said the number of subscribers to its newsletter in North America and Europe jumped 25% from the previous year.

Keefe, Bruyette & Woods cut bank holding company Trustmark Corp. (TRMK, $26.06, -$0.77, -2.87%) to market perform from outperform on valuation, saying the shares have been strong since its exit from TARP in December, and there's limited upside left to its 12-month target price. "We continue to like TRMK's strong core profitability," the firm said.

Tuesday Morning Corp. (TUES, $7.56, -$1.03, -11.99%) shares fell after the home decoration close-out retailer posted third-quarter earnings just shy of expectations. The shortfall comes two weeks after the company raised its full-year earnings guidance to reflect a bump-up in sales on improved traffic.

-By Dow Jones Newswires; write to hotstocks@dowjones.com

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