Author Archives: Scalper1

3D Systems Earnings Show Ongoing Struggle In 3D Printer Market

3D Systems ( DDD ) missed with its Q1 revenue posted early Thursday, its third straight quarter of year-over-year declines in sales, as the 3D printer market resets expectations. Before the open, 3D Systems reported Q1 revenue of $152.5 million, down 5% year over year and missing the consensus of $156.3 million. Excluding the contribution of consumer products and services that the company no longer sells, revenue fell 2%. The company posted flat earnings per share minus items of 5 cents. 3D Systems stock was down nearly 6%, near 14, in afternoon trading in the stock market today , and it touched a seven-week low. Vyomesh Joshi, named CEO last month, sees big market opportunities ahead. “I’ve spent the past month listening to and learning from customers, partners and employees,” commented Joshi said. “I will be focusing on improving quality, reliability and supply chain. The next phase for us is to develop a strategy to drive profitable growth with operational excellence and an appropriate cost structure.” Joshi had been executive vice president of the imaging and printing business of HP Inc. ( HPQ ), formerly part of Hewlett-Packard before its split. HP plans to enter the 3D printer market this year. In the company’s earnings conference call, 3D Systems CFO David Styka said demand for professional 3D printers remained soft last quarter. Revenue from professional printers excluding desktop decreased 23%, on a 50% decline in unit sales. “The decrease in units was partially due to the availability gaps for new MultiJet Printers rolled out during the first quarter,” he said. CEO Joshi, on the call, repeated several times he was in a learning mode, but optimistic ahead. “The other important part that I am learning and that’s the vertical approach where we want to go after health care, aerospace, automobile, and also higher education,” he said, “because, if you think about the universities, we need to get a lot of people trained in understanding the 3D market.” 3D Systems did not give earnings guidance. It and and Stratasys ( SSYS ) are the two largest providers of 3D printers. Stratasys is set to report earnings before the market open Monday. Its shares were down nearly 3% Thursday afternoon. 3D printer makers ExOne ( XONE ) and Voxeljet ( VJET ) are set to report earnings on May 11 and May 13, respectively, both before the market open. Needham analyst James Ricchiuti last week lowered his rating on 3D Systems to hold from buy, “as shares might be pricing in too much,” he wrote. “Notwithstanding solid sequential improvement in Q4 from the publicly traded 3D printing companies, we believe business remains challenging, compounded by the normal seasonal weakness experienced in the March quarter,” Ricchiuti wrote.

Are You Considering ‘Sell In May, Go Away?’

One of the signs that a stock market may be transitioning from a bull to a bear? Participants dismiss exorbitant valuations , cast aside disturbing shifts in technical trends, disregard economic stagnation and scoff at historical comparisons. For instance, it has been 352 days since the Dow Jones Industrials Average registered an all-time record high in May of 2015. Since the 1920s, when the Dow has surpassed 350 calendar days without recovering a bull market peak, the index has dropped at least 17% on nine out of 11 occasions. On average, the Dow has succumbed to 30% bearish price depreciation. Adding insult to injury here is that the Dow has failed to hold 18000 since it first notched the milestone back on December 23, 2014. That was 499 days ago. Equally compelling? Five days earlier (12/18/2014) marked the Federal Reserve’s final asset purchase in its third round of quantitative easing (QE3). In other words, the stock market has been unable to make any meaningful progress since the Fed stopped expanding its balance sheet. (Note: This also lends credence to research that attributes 93% of the current bull market’s gains to the Fed’s electronic credit/asset purchase interventions). “Forget corporate earnings, sales, the global economy, technical analysis and history, Gary. You’ve got to be a contrarian here because this is the most hated stock market ever!” I’ve heard this claim dozens of times now. Ostensibly, a lack of excitement for stock assets should push stocks back to record heights and beyond. And there may be some truth to the declaration. After all, corporations have been the only “net buyers” for more than three months, as the other participants (e.g., pensions, hedge funds, “Mom-n-Pop” retail, institutional advisers, etc.) have been “net sellers.” On the other hand, according to the National Association of Active Investment Managers, investment sentiment sits at its highest level since April of 2015. Putting that into perspective? A contrarian who recognized the uber-bullishness last year may have exited the market near the all-time record highs for the Dow and the S&P 500 in May of 2015. Similarly, we may once again be at a point where bullishness is overextended. Granted, the S&P 500 might only need to rise 4% from current levels to register an all-time record. In and of itself, that is relatively impressive. Nevertheless, the year over year and year-to-date outperformance of the S&P 500 by the FTSE Multi-Asset Stock Hedge Index (affectionately known as “MASH”) is reason enough to be wary. We’re talking about the collective success of several key components like the SPDR Gold Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: GLD ), the CurrencyShares Japanese Yen Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: FXY ), the PIMCO 25+ Year Zero Coupon U.S. Treasury Index ETF (NYSEARCA: ZROZ ) and the iShares National AMT-Free Muni Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: MUB ). Click to enlarge Click to enlarge Three-quarters of S&P 500 corporations have reported Q1 2016 earnings. And according to the S&P Dow Jones Indices website, as reported earnings estimates for the S&P 500 (3/31/2016) are now $87.48. The trailing twelve-month P/E? 23.4. “In the era of ultra-low interest rates,” you insist, “it simply doesn’t matter.” Well, then, perhaps you should investigate the four bear markets that occurred in the 20-year period (1936-1955) when the U.S. had similar 10-year yields, yet price-to-earnings ratios that were half what they are right now. Here is one thing that should not be ignored. When precious metals like gold and carry-trade currencies like the yen outperform stocks over 5-6 months as well as one year – when long-maturity U.S. treasuries and Japanese government bonds are behaving in a similar fashion – “risk off” has the edge over “risk on.” Should you sell in May and go away, then? From my vantage point, just make sure you’ve got a comfortable cash/cash equivalent cushion to buy riskier assets at more attractive valuations down the road. Disclosure: Gary Gordon, MS, CFP is the president of Pacific Park Financial, Inc., a Registered Investment Adviser with the SEC. Gary Gordon, Pacific Park Financial, Inc, and/or its clients may hold positions in the ETFs, mutual funds, and/or any investment asset mentioned above. The commentary does not constitute individualized investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities. At times, issuers of exchange-traded products compensate Pacific Park Financial, Inc. or its subsidiaries for advertising at the ETF Expert web site. ETF Expert content is created independently of any advertising relationships.

Why Amazon’s World Domination May Come Sooner Than You Think

Loading the player… Amazon ( AMZN ) has solidified its position as an e-commerce leader, and its global takeover may happen sooner than you think. ‘Momentum’ Seen In Apparel A Cowen & Co. report out Wednesday forecasts Amazon displacing Macy’s ( M ) as the No. 1 U.S. apparel retailer by 2017, driven by selection, fulfillment and brand relationships. Amazon’s momentum in apparel is also seen leading to retailer mergers and acquisitions, as well as store closures. Cowen also projects that Amazon will displace Target ( TGT ), Walgreens ( WBA ) and CVS ( CVS ) to become the No.2 company in consumables, behind Wal-Mart ( WMT ), by 2018. The report calculates a compound annual growth rate of 27% for the e-commerce giant’s consumables market. Amazon Worth $3 Trillion? Meanwhile, Social Capital has set a very bullish $3 trillion, 10-year valuation on the stock, with the venture capital firm citing strength across retail and its Amazon Web Services segment. Amazon’s current market cap is about $314 billion, while Apple — the most valuable public company — has about a $515 billion market cap. IBD’s take: How does Amazon stack up vs. its peers? Find out at IBD Stock Checkup After gapping up on its strong earnings report last week, shares are now extended 10% from a cup-with-handle buy point initially cleared in mid-April. The stock is trading about 5% below its all-time high reached at the end of last year, and it was down 1.4% Thursday. Wal-Mart, Macy’s Stocks Lag Meanwhile, Wal-Mart recently plunged below its 50-day line and has yet to retake that level, as it slumped 0.6% in intraday trade. Shares are sitting 16% below their 52-week peak. And Macy’s shares are trading nearly 50% below their all-time high reached last July. They are on track to hit a nearly four-month low Thursday, falling 2.3%.