Tag Archives: etf

TiVo Jumps 21%: Rovi Merger Would Combine Intellectual Property In Pay TV

TiVo ( TIVO ) stock surged on reports the DVR pioneer is in talks to be acquired by Rovi ( ROVI ), a provider of interactive programming guides to pay-TV companies and smart-TV manufacturers. Shares in TiVo surged 21% in the stock market today  by midafternoon. Rovi stock fell 4%. Both TiVo and Rovi hold intellectual property for features built into pay-TV set-top boxes and garner licensing revenue. Rovi and TiVo face big changes among their customers as the pay-TV industry faces growing competition from Internet video providers, such as Netflix ( NFLX ), Alphabet -Google’s ( GOOGL ) YouTube as well as new TV hardware from Apple ( AAPL ) and Roku. Federal regulators aim to open up the set-top box TV market . TiVo shareholders would reportedly get cash and stock in the deal and own about 30% of the newly formed company. TiVo has expanded beyond hardware sales and patent licensing to online subscription services. TiVo’s customers include small and midsize pay-TV companies. Analysts have said TiVo aims to provide more cable firms with next-generation features, including its cloud platform and mobile apps, analysts say. Apple and Google have been among companies rumored to be interested in acquiring TiVo in the past. Rovi gets an IBD Composite Rating of 86 out of a possible 99, though today’s drop puts it below its key 50-day moving average. TiVo holds just a 26 Composite Rating. “Together, the combined TiVo and  Rovi entity would have more than 6,000 issued or pending patents,” said Mike McCormack, a Jefferies analyst, in a research report. “TiVo alone has generated around $1.6 billion of settlements to date from patent enforcement lawsuits vs. Dish Network ( DISH ), AT&T ( T ), Verizon ( VZ ), and Cisco-Motorola-Time Warner. There are 380 issued patents in TiVo’s portfolio, plus 340 pending patents, many of which expire beyond 2018.”

The Dynamic Duo Of Risk Factors: Part I

The value and momentum factors have earned high praise in recent years as complementary sources of risk premia for designing and managing equity portfolios. AQR’s widely cited paper “Value and Momentum Everywhere” a few years back helped popularize the idea, pointing to applications in equities and beyond. There’s no shortage of support from the wider world of investment management. Earlier this week, for instance, Jack Vogel at Alpha Architect outlined “Why Investors Should Combine Value and Momentum.” Not surprisingly, there are several investment funds focused on the strategy, including the recently launched Cambria Value and Momentum ETF ( VAMO ). The rationale for a value-momentum mix can be summarized by reviewing the historical results. Consider rolling five-year annualized returns (a time window used in AQR’s paper), which captures a fair amount of mean reversion. The chart below hints at the possibilities from a portfolio-design perspective. Using the risk premia numbers via Professor Ken French’s data library suggests that value and momentum do in fact exhibit a fair amount zigging when the other factor’s zagging. The correlation between the two sets of rolling 5-year returns since the early 1930s is moderately negative – roughly -0.24 (based on monthly returns). That tells us that no one will confuse one risk premium for the other. But how does correlation stack up over shorter periods? From a practical perspective, the results over, say, five years offer more insight into the potential for tapping into the value-momentum dynamic. As the next chart shows, the relationship is far from static. Indeed, the rolling five-year correlations ebb and flow through time by more than a trivial degree. The implication: a dynamic system for managing risk with these factors may be superior to buying and holding. Sometimes, and perhaps for several years at a stretch, these two risk factors generate similar returns. During those times, you’ll probably read stories proclaiming the “Death of Diversification For Value and Momentum Strategies.” But if history’s a guide, the tight correlation will only be temporary. There’s nothing magical about rolling five-year windows, of course. A serious research project would review multiple rolling periods by running the numbers through a battery of risk analytics. But the preliminary, if inconclusive, profile above implies that looking at the equity market (and other asset classes) through a value-momentum prism has intriguing possibilities. One question that comes to mind: How does a value-momentum strategy fare as a buy-and-hold proposition (with naïve year-end rebalancing) vs. a tactical asset allocation application? How much improvement, if any, should we expect with a dynamic system? In an upcoming post, I’ll explore this question with a back-test and review the results by adjusting for risk. Several researchers have already run similar tests and produced encouraging results. Let’s see if we can replicate the data. The literature suggests that’s likely. But the devil’s in the details. There are several ways to define “value” and “momentum” and there’s a rainbow of possibilities for implementing tactical strategies. Therein lies the potential for success… or failure. But it’s always best to start with a simple model. If there’s truly an opportunity for enhancing a buy-and-hold version of a value-momentum strategy, the evidence should be clear in a basic tactical model.

Mom Survey: Upside For Netflix, Toy Makers, Disney In Media Trends

Netflix ( NFLX ) has a growing audience among kids, and there’s upside in merchandising for programming partners Dreamworks Animation, Walt Disney ( DIS ) and others, says a Piper Jaffray report on trends in family media and toy purchases. According to the Piper Jaffray survey of 428 mothers on media and consumer products, Netflix accounted for 19% of kids’ video viewing, up from 14% a year earlier. “We believe Dreamworks ‘ ( DWA ) massive output deal to Netflix positions the company right in the center of a paradigm shift in youth entertainment,” said Stan Meyers, a Piper Jaffray analyst. Netflix has been investing in kids’ programming , including deals with Disney and Dreamworks. Piper Jaffray has buy ratings on Dreamworks, Disney and toy-maker Hasbro ( HAS ). It rates Mattel ( MAT ) at neutral. UBS, meanwhile, initiated coverage on toy makers Thursday, rating Mattel a buy with a price point of 36. UBS rates Hasbro neutral. IBD’s Leisure Toys-Games group is ranked No. 47 out of 197 industry groups. Hasbro has a Composite Rating of 94 out of a possible 99, while Mattel’s CR is 87. According to the Piper Jaffray survey, frequent moviegoers spend $481 annually on toys, 90% more than the occasional moviegoers. Nearly 80% of mothers picked Disney and its Pixar unit as their most preferred brand when selecting a film for their child.