Author Archives: Scalper1

Globalstar Pops, Could Defeat Google, Microsoft On Wi-Fi Spectrum

Globalstar ( GSAT ) stock popped for the second straight trading day on views federal regulators will green light its petition to open up spectrum airwaves in the 2.4 GHz block for wireless services. Globalstar, a mobile satellite service operator, had faced opposition from Alphabet ’s ( GOOGL ) Google, Microsoft ( MSFT ) and the cable TV industry over concern the airwaves could interfere with Wi-Fi services. Comcast ( CMCSA ) has been expanding its public and residential Wi-Fi network and might jump into wireless services, analysts say. Tom Wheeler, chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, on Friday proposed an order that would allow Globalstar to move forward with its “authenticated Wi-Fi” service. Globalstar stock, which popped 35% on Friday, was up another 15% in morning trading in the stock market today , albeit still trading below 3. It’s possible Globalstar’s opponents such as  Microsoft or Google could make a last-ditch effort to block approval, analysts say. The FCC could issue new rules as soon as  June. Paul Gallant, an analyst at Guggenheim Partners, says a remaining issue is what limitations the FCC’s order puts on Globalstar’s commercial rollout. “There has been some concern that an FCC approval could be a Pyrrhic victory if the agency attached heavy limits on power output or out-of-band-emissions that restricted the value of Globalstar’s proposed service,” wrote Gallant in a research report. “We suspect the technical parameters are likely to approximate what Globalstar initially proposed 2.5 years ago. That would be positive for its new service.” Amazon.com ( AMZN ) reportedly had tested Globalstar’s spectrum a couple of years ago, said one report.

How To Get Statistically Significant Alpha In A Hurry: Financial Advisors’ Daily Digest

MFS Investment Management argues active management can consistently deliver alpha; Mark Hebner says investors would be better off seeking beta. Ronald Surz says investors need not wait decades to determine statistically significant alpha; he offers “microwave alpha,” a quick way to measure manager skill. Jack Waymire gives five reasons why mobile-optimized websites are no longer a luxury for financial advisors. To frightened investors who sense something bad is due after a seven-year bull market and amidst a wobbly economy, MFS Investment Management’s commercials touting a “significant advantage to active management” may be striking just the right chord. These investment pros are working to reduce “downside volatility” and to “consistently deliver alpha,” says the investment firm’s one-and-a-half-minute commercial on the power of active management. But of course, not everybody’s having it. RIA Mark Hebner, a proponent of indexing, applies statistical tests to MFS’ fund lineup and suggests just one out of 87 funds has any alpha to offer (and even that one could be a fluke, Hebner further argues). He concludes that investors would be better served seeking beta. Hebner has previously argued that it could take something like a century to evaluate investment skill in a statistically significant way. Comes along SA contributor Ronald Surz, an innovative thinker, and proposes a method to deliver statistical significance in years rather than decades: “microwave alpha,” he calls it . This quick-cooking alpha is achieved through portfolio simulations: “The breakthrough determines statistically significant success in the cross-section rather than across time… A portfolio simulator creates all the portfolios the manager might have held, selecting stocks from a custom benchmark – thousands of portfolios… To state an extreme example, a return of, say, 1000% is significant, and you don’t have to wait 50 years to declare it significant.” With no further ado, we’ve got many other advisor-relevant stories to start your week with: Your comments on any of the above are, as always, most welcome below.

Charter Stock Falls; Digital Realty Up On S&P 500 Add, Equinix Deal

Charter Communications ( CHTR ) stock fell Monday after the soon-to-be No. 2 cable TV firm was not added to the S&P 500, as some analysts and investors had expected, following the final approval of its Time Warner Cable acquisition. Standard & Poor’s announced late Friday that Digital Realty ( DLR ), a data center operator whose stock has been rising of late, would replace Time Warner Cable in the S&P 500 . Digital Realty will take TWC ‘s place on the index after the close of trading on Tuesday. Charter expects to close its purchases of Time Warner Cable and Bright House Networks on Wednesday, after gaining the final regulator OK on Thursday. It will then become the No. 2 cable company, behind Comcast ( CMCSA ). Equinix ( EQIX ) early Monday announced that it will sell eight European data centers to Digital Realty for $874 million. Regulators required Equinix to divest some assets in approving its acquisition of Telecity. The eight data centers consist of five in London, two in Amsterdam and one in Frankfurt. Shares of Digital Realty, which announced an equity offering to fund the Equinix deal, were up 2.5% early Monday, near 96 and touching an all-time high for the sixth day in the past eight trading days. Digital Realty stock is up 25% this year. Equinix stock was up a fraction early Monday. Charter stock was down nearly 4% in early trading in the stock market today , near 206. California regulators last week approved the Time Warner Cable ( TWC ) deal, the final hurdle to Charter’s makeover. Liberty Broadband ( LBRDA ) will own about 18% of the new Charter, while privately held media firm Advance/Newhouse will own about 13.5%.