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Fitbit Face-Plants After Giving Weak Q1 Guidance, User Numbers

Fitbit ( FIT ) stock fell off the treadmill Tuesday, a day after the maker of wearable fitness devices reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter results, but guided Wall Street much lower than expected for the current quarter. Fitbit shares were down 19%, near 13.40, in midday trading on the stock market today , and at least five investment banks downgraded their rating on the company. Fitbit stock hit its all-time low of 12.90 on Feb. 11, after the company went public in June at 20 a share and peaked in August near 52. Several analysts downgraded the stock or cut their price targets after the San Francisco-based company late Monday posted Q4 earnings and gave Q1 and full-year 2016 guidance. In Q4, Fitbit earned 35 cents a share, excluding items, on sales of $712 million. Non-GAAP earnings per share rose 67%, and sales jumped 92% on a year-over-year basis. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected 25 cents ex items on sales of $648 million. But for the current quarter, Fitbit is targeting non-GAAP earnings per share of 1 cent on sales of $430 million, at the midpoint of its guidance range. Analysts were modeling 23 cents and $485 million. Fitbit’s New Products Out In March Fitbit Chief Financial Officer Bill Zerella said Q1 is a product transition quarter, with the launch of the Fitbit Blaze smart fitness watch and Alta fitness wristband in March, as well as the discontinuation of the Fitbit Charge. Fitbit expects to incur higher sales and marketing expenses because of the global product launches, plus additional manufacturing expenses to maximize production of the new products. Piper Jaffray analyst Erinn Murphy downgraded Fitbit stock to neutral from overweight and slashed her price target to 14 from 24. The outlook for Fitbit’s new products is cloudy, and the company faces tough year-over-year comparisons in the second half of the year, she said in a research report. Pacific Crest Securities analyst Brad Erickson downgraded Fitbit stock to sector weight from overweight. He cited the risk of hardware commoditization and poor user metrics as reasons for the change. “We see little likelihood of dispelling anytime soon the longer-term bear thesis of slowing growth, pricing pressure and longer-term commoditization,” he said in a report. Fitbit is looking like the next GoPro ( GPRO ), a hardware company facing market saturation, slowing growth and margin and earnings erosion, he said. Erickson is also concerned about active-user trends. Fitbit added 18 million new registered device users in 2015, of which 13 million, or 72%, were active users at year-end. Erickson says Fitbit stock has a fair value of 14. Cowen analyst John Kernan reiterated his market perform rating on Fitbit stock but axed his price target to 19 from 41. FBN Securities analyst Shebly Seyrafi maintained his outperform rating but cleaved his price target to 25 from 50. Sterne Agee CRT analyst Rob Cihra kept his neutral rating on Fitbit and price target of 18. To turn things around, Fitbit needs to show leverage in the corporate wellness market, improve customer retention, and come out with new products with breakthrough sensors. Despite shipping over 30 million devices in the past two years, Fitbit ended 2015 with 16.9 million active users. “This kind of ‘churn’ is likely just natural and systemic to the health/fitness market, as some Fitbits ending up in drawers seems comparable to well-intentioned health club memberships that don’t get used,” Cihra said in a report. Fitbit faces competition from makers of dedicated fitness products such as Garmin ( GRMN ) and Under Armour ( UA ), but also from makers of smartwatches with fitness features such as Apple ‘s ( AAPL ) Apple Watch.

MWC: Apple Rivals Prep Waterproofing, Dual-Cam, Force Touch Display

Apple ’s ( AAPL ) rivals aim to get a jump on the upcoming iPhone 7 at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, strutting out new smartphones with some of the features that have been linked to Apple’s plans. “We find the improvements in rival smartphones — better display, slimmer camera modules, dual cameras, waterproofing, more (memory) and high-speed charging — a preview of the fall iPhone 7 launch,” Jeffrey Kvaal, a Nomura Securities analyst, said in a research report. The  iPhone 7 has been rumored to feature waterproofing for the first time. Apple does not officially take part at the MWC, but the company casts “a lengthy shadow” nonetheless, Kvaal added. Samsung on Sunday rolled out the Galaxy S7 and Galaxy S7 Edge. The handsets boast sleek designs with advanced camera features, water resistance and external memory. Sony ’s ( SNE ) Xperia X Performance also features waterproofing. At Citigroup, analyst Jim Suva wrote:  “While Apple does not participate in MWC, there was no lack of apps, software, and hardware support for the iPhone.  We were surprised that even Apple’s largest competitors commented that Apple is likely working on some very innovative and easy to use future enhancements. Thus the rush to launch competing products before Apple’s big September launch.” According to another Citigroup report, based on observations at the MWC, dual cameras also are becoming a standard feature. LG’s G5 and the ZTE Axon Elite are expected to feature dual cameras as well as new devices from Huawei and Xiaomi, says Citigroup. Apple’s rivals, though, are still playing catch-up in fingerprint security technology, such as its  pressure-sensitive “Force Touch” display, which uses technology known as “haptic feedback.” Citigroup forecasts that 19% of smartphones will use haptic technology in 2016 and 25% in 2017.

Is Volatility A Useful Signal For Dynamic Currency Hedging?

By Jeremy Schwartz WisdomTree and Record Currency Management Ltd. 1 partnered to create a family of dynamic currency-hedged Indexes that utilize three factors to determine the dynamic hedge ratio on each individual currency: interest rate differentials, momentum and value. In the field of currency hedging one oft-debated question is whether there are other effective signals and, in particular, whether volatility could also be a useful signal. We have, of course, carefully considered which signals we believe to be most optimal, and although we recognize that volatility in currency markets can show patterns of behavior, we are convinced that it is not an appropriate independent signal to use in a hedging strategy, for the simple reason that volatility is by definition non-directional. Volatility Does Not Dictate Direction What do we mean by non-directional? Simply that rising (or falling) volatility tells us something about the size of observed movements in a currency pair, but nothing about the direction of those movements. Knowing that the standard deviation of exchange rate movements has become wider or narrower could be consistent with either one currency strengthening or the other-or, indeed, neither. In a dynamic currency-hedging strategy, which is naturally long equities, the only trade available is to be currency hedged (e.g., long U.S. dollar and short euro, or yen, or another currency)-or not. Since the purpose of dynamic hedging is to seek greater exposure to hedges that are expected to be profitable, and less exposure to hedges that are expected to be loss-making, it is essential for each signal to have some explanatory power as to which currency in any pair is expected to appreciate, i.e., to be directional. An example may serve to illustrate the point. We have tried to create a signal hedging strategy that is as widely applicable within developed market currencies as possible, without having been ” curve-fitted ” to one particular domestic currency or set of foreign currencies. Volatility seems to defy this. If, for example, one investor was looking for a strategy that worked well for hedging euro exposure into dollars, and another wanted to hedge dollar exposure into euros, then rising volatility in the euro/dollar exchange rate might tell both of them to hedge more. Since the exchange rate will only go one way, only one of these hedges will be profitable, while the other will be loss-making-so the signal will have worked for only one of the investors. Interest Rates, Value and Momentum Are Directional Hedging Signals By contrast, higher U.S. interest rates, or the momentum of the U.S. dollar, or an undervalued dollar, will all signal to U.S. investors to hedge their euro exposure, while also being a signal to euro-based investors to not hedge their U.S. dollars. These three signals are thus consistent by virtue of being directional. Looking for Volatility Reduction? Adopt Full Passive Hedging Finally, there’s the question of whether an investor wouldn’t always want to hedge more in a more volatile environment, simply because currency movements are at risk of being bigger. To this we would respond that bigger movements can come in both positive and negative directions, so once again the directionality of the signal is vital. If an investor is concerned about currency volatility, a full currency-hedged strategy may be most appropriate, as the long-term results showing currency exposure in a broad international framework has historically increased the volatility of international investments. 2 This is why WisdomTree has long suggested that fully currency-hedged strategies could serve better as core, strategic long-run allocations. Dynamic Hedging Can Help Returns The goal of the dynamic hedged Indexes WisdomTree and Record created were to tactically add value and return potential above fully hedged and fully unhedged offerings by incorporating the dynamic signals. Our signals were designed to be directional, so while they do lower volatility compared to unhedged benchmarks, they are likely to see a small volatility pickup over a fully hedged strategy. But our research leads us to believe that higher returns could compensate investors for this small pickup in volatility. Sources No WisdomTree Fund is sponsored, endorsed, sold or promoted by Record Currency Management (“Record”). Record has licensed certain rights to WisdomTree Investments, Inc., as the index provider to the applicable WisdomTree Funds, and Record is providing no investment advice to any WisdomTree Fund or its advisors. Record makes no representation or warranty, expressed or implied, to the owners of any WisdomTree Funds regarding any associated risks or the advisability of investing in any WisdomTree Fund. WisdomTree, Bloomberg, as of 12/31/2015. Important Risks Related to this Article Hedging can help returns when a foreign currency depreciates against the U.S. dollar, but it can hurt when the foreign currency appreciates against the U.S. dollar. Jeremy Schwartz, Director of Research As WisdomTree’s Director of Research, Jeremy Schwartz offers timely ideas and timeless wisdom on a bi-monthly basis. Prior to joining WisdomTree, Jeremy was Professor Jeremy Siegel’s head research assistant and helped with the research and writing of Stocks for the Long Run and The Future for Investors. He is also the co-author of the Financial Analysts Journal paper “What Happened to the Original Stocks in the S&P 500?” and the Wall Street Journal article “The Great American Bond Bubble.”