Category Archives: oud

Apple Won’t ‘Risk’ Intel iPhone 7 Chip; PC Woes Expected To Hurt Q1

Wall Street split Friday on Intel ‘s ( INTC ) shrouded PC future. At least one analyst hedged on Intel getting an Apple ( AAPL ) iPhone 7 chip win, as the No. 1 chipmaker prepares to unveil Q1 earnings after the close Tuesday. Intel stock was down a fraction in afternoon trading on the stock market today , near 32. Shares tanked 18% in January and early February on reports of more PC weakness , hitting a year-low 28.22 on Feb. 11. Since then, Intel stock has recovered 13%. For Q1, Intel is expected to report $13.86 billion in sales and 48 cents earnings per share, up a respective 8.5% and 17% from Q1 2015, per the consensus of 45 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters. Three months ago, Intel guided to $14 billion in sales, plus or minus $500 million. Pacific Crest analyst Michael McConnell and S&P Global Market Intelligence analyst Angelo Zino expect Intel to miss the midpoint of its guidance. And McConnell sees Intel cutting its full-year guidance. In January, Intel guided to mid- to high-single-digit sales growth over its $55.36 billion in 2015 sales. Zino notes, “The PC landscape appears to be softer than originally anticipated.” MKM analyst Ian Ing acknowledged Intel’s strong data center sales (about 30% of revenue) but expects Intel’s PC weakness “(to) more than offset strength in cloud computing.” He expects a flat Q2 for PC sales following a subseasonal Q1. But Zino sees Intel’s year-over-year PC losses becoming less pronounced exiting 2016, despite a likely challenging first half. Industry trackers IDC and Gartner predicted 11.5% and 9.6% PC shipment declines in Q1. “We see an aging PC landscape (over 600 million devices more than five years old), market share gains and new innovative devices supporting CCG (client computing group) revenue as the year progress,” Zino wrote in a research report. He reiterated his 39 price target on Intel stock. McConnell has a 35 price target and overweight rating on Intel stock. Ing maintained his buy rating but cut his price target to 38 from 40 on Intel stock. Intel has striven to get its chips inside the iPhone, and rumors recently circulated that Apple might tap the No. 1 chipmaker to source some of its iPhone 7 modems . Qualcomm ( QCOM ) has supplied the iPhone modem in the past four flagship smartphones. But Ing doubts that Apple would risk implementing an Intel chip. Teardowns show that Intel last supplied an iPhone chip in the 2008 iPhone 3G. “We retain some skepticism that Apple would add risk to their global launches,” he wrote in a report.

Should Investors Take Notice When Reward Prospects Diminish?

The world’s central banks devise conventional and unconventional ways to depress interest rates. The impact? Consumers purchase goods and services on credit with favorable financing terms. Corporations issue low-yielding debt in order to buy back shares of their own stock. And governments issue low-yielding treasuries to continue spending far more than they generate in tax revenue. For some investors, then, the only thing that matters in the determination of whether to acquire assets like stock and real estate is ultra-low interest rate policy. On the other hand, what if the macro-economic environment is deteriorating? Should investors ignore wavering home sale trends, declining consumer sentiment, faltering retail developments, floundering total business sales, weakening economic growth on the domestic front as well as economic stagnation on the world stage? When things are getting worse, investors ought to take notice. Why? Because the central banks may not be capable of arresting the development of bear market declines indefinitely. In spite of ever-decreasing mortgage rates over the last year, do pending home sales appear to be accelerating or decelerating? They seem to be getting worse to me. Perhaps real estate asset prices have climbed to a level that even a 3.5% 30-year mortgage cannot fix. Surely, consumers are giddy about low gas prices and bountiful job opportunities, right? And yet, consumer sentiment has been trending lower and lower over the past 12 months. Perhaps consumers are spending more of their money from energy savings and fat paychecks at a variety of retailers. Nope, that’s not it. Maybe retailers are the only stragglers? Unfortunately, that’s not the case either. Corporations have been languishing to sell their goods and services since the business cycle peaked in July of 2014. Theoretically speaking, investors would want to be careful about owning companies that are selling less. One should feel more comfortable about paying up when sales per stock share are climbing. However, when revenue per stock share is wilting, one should recognize that he/she is paying an exorbitant price relative to those declining sales. The S&P 500 has not been this overvalued (1.86) since the dot-com tech wreck collapsed in the early 2000s. Well, it might be that corporate profits are all that matter. Earnings have been looking better, haven’t they? Hardly. The price investors have been willing to pay relative to GAAP S&P 500 earnings has been hitting extraordinary overvaluation levels (24x). What’s more, earnings per share have been falling each quarter since Q3 2014. Is it possible that some of these trends will reverse themselves if the underlying economics around the globe improves? After all, China may be stabilizing, Japan may be escaping its recession and the euro-zone may be gradually recovering. I am not sure there’s a whole lot of evidence for those suppositions. China’s economy just posted its slowest quarterly growth in seven years (6.7%). Japan and the euro-zone now rely on the lunacy of negative interest rate policy . The International Monetary Fund (NYSE: IMF ) just cut its global growth forecast. And world trade has not looked this anemic since the Great Recession. Bottom line? There will be a point where a lack of sales and a lack of profits will collide with the endless hope for central bank low rate manipulation. And the result is not likely to pretty. I am maintaining the lower-risk asset allocation that I have had in place for roughly a year. Specifically, we remain underweight equities for our moderate growth-and-income clients. Our current allocation of 45%-50% stock – only large-cap U.S. stock – is spread across ETFs holdings such as the iShares MSCI USA Minimum Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA: USMV ), the iShares MSCI USA Quality Factor ETF (NYSEARCA: QUAL ) and the Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (NYSEARCA: VYM ). Our current allocation of 25%-30% to income holdings – only investment grade – is spread across ETF holdings such as the iShares 7-10 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: IEF ), the Vanguard Long-Term Corporate Bond Index ETF (NASDAQ: VCLT ) and the SPDR Nuveen Barclays Municipal Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: TFI ). The remaining 20%-30% in cash equivalents continues to provide value as a buffer against downside volatility, as well as serve as a storage place until it is time to acquire assets at more attractive prices. 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.

Noted Tech Editor Swisher Vows To Run For Mayor Of San Francisco

Re/code executive editor Kara Swisher has declared her intention to run for mayor in her home city of San Francisco. She says her 2023 bid for the position currently held by the embattled Edwin Lee — his 2016 inauguration was interrupted by protesters, for example — is sparked by a desire to shake up the political establishment. And she hopes to tackle the seemingly inexorable issue that Baghdad by the Bay struggles with: the divide between tech and the rest of the city. “Also this whole election cycle has struck a chord in me that I have always thought about, related to professional politicians and how we need to shift thinking about who should serve and the duty of citizens to be, you know, citizens,” she wrote in an email message to the San Francisco Chronicle. “There is an important and necessary role for good government and I hate this wholesale tearing down of it. “Also the increasing divide between tech sector and the city is something that I think a lot about. Not that I have solutions as yet.” She insisted to the Chronicle that her bid was serious — but doesn’t plan to run until 2023. The Re/code editor declined to comment to IBD. @chernandburn No! Podcasts and then my kid’s 11th birthday. Passel o’ tweens takes full attention (also why I would be a good mayor) — Kara Swisher (@karaswisher) April 15, 2016 Swisher is a longtime and one of the best-known Silicon Valley and tech journalists, providing definitive coverage of Yahoo ( YHOO ), among other firms. She began covering digital issues in 1997 for the Wall Street Journal. Her longtime spouse, Megan Smith — they are now separated — was once a high-ranking executive at Google, which is a unit of Alphabet ( GOOGL ), and is now the U.S. chief technology officer for the Obama administration.