Author Archives: Scalper1

Red Hat Earnings: Amazon A Threat In Linux Landscape?

There’s a notion out there, says Deutsche Bank analyst Karl Keirstead, that Amazon ’s ( AMZN ) flavor of the Linux open-source operating system is about as good as other Linux distributions — and since it’s free and Amazon Web Services (AWS) offers good support, converting is cheap. So does that stand to hurt Red Hat ( RHT ), which reports its fiscal fourth-quarter 2016 earnings after the stock market close Tuesday? “Bottom line, we conclude that the number of migrations from RHEL (Red Hat Enterprise Linux) to Amazon Linux remains quite modest and mostly confined to small enterprise customers,” Keirstead wrote in a research note March 13. “Larger RHEL-centric customers have only a small mix of workloads on AWS, they value OS consistency across their hybrid infrastructures, they prefer support from RHT and/or view the cost savings of a switch as being too modest to be worth the hassle. “These advantages appear to more than offset a view that AMZN Linux is at/near functional parity with other Linux distributions.” Keirstead reiterated Deutsche’s buy rating for Red Hat with a 95 price target, which might take Red Hat a couple of months to achieve if it stays on the same upward trajectory that it’s maintained since bottoming out Feb. 8 at a two-year low of 59.59. Red Hat stock was unchanged at 74.90 on Monday after rising 3.2% last week, closing just below its 200-day moving average. Shares are just 12% off a 16-year high set Dec. 30, 24% above its Feb. 8 low. But it looks like Red Hat is rebounding firmly from the Software Sag of ’16 that battered many of Red Hat’s rivals and tech players in January through early February. Red Hat stock gets an IBD Composite Rating of 84 out of a possible 99, factoring in earnings, sales, stock performance, institutional ownership and other metrics. Enterprise software developer Salesforce.com ( CRM ) carries an 81, Microsoft ( MSFT ) ranks 76, software giant Oracle ( ORCL ) earns a 61 and SAP ( SAP ) a 70. For its Q4 ended Feb. 29, analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expect Red Hat earnings per share up 9% from a year earlier to 47 cents minus items, matching the company’s guidance. Analysts expect revenue up 16% to $537 million, which also would match the midpoint of the company’s guidance of between $535 million and $539 million, and rival the year-ago sales growth rate of 16%. At those levels, Q4 would be Red Hat’s first quarter decelerated to single-digit growth since EPS flattened at 42 cents in fiscal 2015’s Q3. It would be the 16th consecutive quarter of mid-to-high-teens sales growth. In a research note issued Thursday, Robert W. Baird analyst Steven Ashley warned that Red Hat’s long-term revenue growth in Q4 could have fallen below expectations as seen in historical, sequential long-term growth weakness every three years, going back to Q4 2007. This is due to what he theorizes as three pools of larger deals that renew every three years in Q4, with the most recent cohort in Q4 being smaller than the others. “We believe this nuance (if correct) is truly just ‘noise’ and short-term billings should remain strong,” Ashley said. He models Q4’s total billings growth (long-term and short-term) at a 10% year-to-year improvement vs. the 12% consensus. “Where could we be wrong?” Ashley asked. “Signing a bunch of ‘new’ large three-year deals could augment the smaller renewal pool.” He tipped his hat to Baird’s outperform rating on Red Hat with an 80 price target.      

Playing The Oil Trend With UWTI

The best way to cash in on a trend in crude oil is not by buying and selling the contracts but watching ETFs that track their prices. Over the past two years, these exchange traded funds have become very popular as oil prices plunged to sub-$30 levels. In a MarketWatch article , the VelocityShares 3x Long Crude Oil ETN (NYSEARCA: UWTI ) was cited as being the fifth most traded security by millennials. UWTI is hardly a tool for hedging against the risk of volatile oil prices. Instead, traders use the derivative as way to bet on different oil trends hoping to cash in on the accelerated payout it offers. This ETF generates a whopping 119 million shares of average volume despite year-to-date losses of over 38%. Its popularity trumps both the iPath S&P Crude Oil Total Return Index ETN ( OIL) and the United States Oil ETF ( USO), which average about 5 million and 51 million shares with YTD losses below 25%. There’s no doubt that UWTI provides traders the opportunity to cash out on an accurate projection of oil prices, but its high leverage and volatility can translate to large, sudden losses if a trend reverses. The best way to reduce risk created by unexpected, short-term fluctuations is to buy at the very bottom of the trend and hold until it tops off in the long run. With the market beginning to tame, investors should start to consider this trade before it’s too late. During the week ending March 12th, the price of West Texas Intermediate contracts rose from the low $30’s as investors finally saw production slow down. Baker Hughes reported earlier that week that rig counts fell to an all-time record low of 480 instigating pent up bullish sentiment. Recent evidence showing a decline in production has caused gains of just over 20% in the past month of trading sessions. While analysts are looking forward to a smaller supply in the future, traders can’t ignore the risks of the current fundamental situation which is still oversupplied by the extra oil still sitting idle in storage. Given how volatile oil trading has been over the past year and a half, skeptics have reason to doubt the rebound and may even see another plunge coming. That would mean complications for those waiting to bet on a bottom. I’m here to tell you not to worry. It’s time to bet on that bottom. Introducing the Deviation Moving Average first published and constantly updated on my blog here . This indicator is similar to a trend line with an adjustment that accounts for a constant deviation in price. The blue line follows WTI price, and is coupled with the orange line, a 50-day moving average plus the 10-day moving average of the actual price’s deviation from its 50-day moving average. With this enhancement, traders can track actual price movements against a deviation that the group has determined is acceptable. Because of intraday trading, the actual price will move either above or below its trend line. Crossover points show a reversal in short-term sentiment. The gap (length of time over or under the orange line) between each point is usually the same size and the variance (absolute value of the difference between the two lines) peaks at about the same height. This idea can be better visualized by the difference chart which is plotted over the past year. In the very volatile 2015, the gaps of smaller sentiment trends lasted just under a month with variance peaking at about $4.00. Using these observations, investors can predict where a small reversal may take place and where the momentum of those reversals are pushing the overall trend. Looking back at the first chart, one can see a curious trend that has developed over the past month. The actual price has not crossed over its deviation moving average line since February 12th, 2015. In fact, the variance has continued to stay constant despite reaching a difference of over $5.00. If the volatile trend of 2015 were to continue, WTI price would have started to fluctuate back downward about a week ago. So why has this not happened? Why has the gap been sustained? The chart shows a change in trend that occurred because of the shift in expectations from oil and gas investors. With the lower rig utilization and the hope of OPEC members freezing output, the buzz saw trend has softened with stability in the long-term price a reality. The new, smaller price channel that emerges might not reach above $50, but it will ease the uncertainty that has plagued oil corporations and oil exporting countries. Because UWTI is a derivative based on the price of oil, volatility there will begin to soften like it has in the WTI spot price trend. As the danger of a sudden plunge in price wanes, it will be safer to establish a long position consisting of UWTI or other energy ETFs. From there, one can ride a long-term trend upward without having to worry about a replay of the bearish tsunamis that drowned out the first month of 2016. Even if WTI were to crossover its deviation moving average in the near future, that point would be linger around the low- to mid-$30 range which is far from the bottoms established in January. With the deepest valley in the past, a smooth, upward climb for the price of oil will allow investors to cash out using the accelerated UWTI exchange traded fund. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Feds Back Down In Apple iPhone Encryption Case

A federal court hearing over whether the Apple ( AAPL ) must help the government unlock an iPhone in a criminal investigation has been cancelled at the Justice Department’s request. Federal prosecutors had asked to postpone a court hearing scheduled for Tuesday in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California in Riverside, Calif. They said an outside party on Sunday had demonstrated to the FBI a possible method for unlocking the iPhone in question. “If the method is viable, it should eliminate the need for the assistance from Apple … set forth in the All Writs Act Order in this case,” prosecutors wrote, according to Politico . The Justice Department asked the court for time to test the method of unlocking the phone. On Feb. 16, U.S. Magistrate Sheri Pym ordered Apple to provide “reasonable technical assistance” to the FBI to unlock an iPhone belonging to Syed Farook, one of the two now-deceased killers in the San Bernardino, Calif., shootings on Dec. 2. Apple has protested the ruling, saying that it would create a “back door” to bypass its security protections and thus threaten the personal data of millions of iPhone users. It said the government was overstepping its bounds by ordering Apple to write special software to hack its own smartphones. Earlier Monday at Apple’s spring product launch event, Apple CEO Tim Cook used the occasion to reinforce the company’s argument that it shouldn’t have to weaken its smartphone encryption. “We need to protect your data and your privacy,” Cook said. “This is an issue that affects all of us and we will not shrink from this responsibility.”