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Weekend EditionThe Best of The S&A DigestSaturday, April 18, 2009 We're making money for our readers by recommending mortgage finance companies like Annaly (NLY). We hope you've profited from our work.
We were moved to act when we saw the CEO saying the company's huge writeoff of goodwill was merely "accounting" and wouldn't hurt the stock. He then promised not to cut the dividend (which the company couldn't afford to keep paying). He sounded like a finance minister on the eve of devaluation. It was easy money.
The stock has rallied over the past several weeks. And unlike many of the other companies we've shorted over the past two years, Gannett still has positive cash flow. That is, it's making enough money from its operations to pay for its debts. That's attracted deep value investors.
I think the stock could rally significantly – back to more than $10 perhaps. If you believe the $250 million or so Gannett is earning in cash each year is sustainable, you might pay 10 times that amount for the business, or $2.5 billion. The stock is currently worth less than $1 billion.
One thing is for certain though: The economics of newspapers are never going to get any better. They will only get worse. Gannett owes creditors nearly $4 billion – money that will be impossible to repay and difficult to refinance. And therefore, it's only a matter of time before Gannett's share price reaches zero.
Ten mortgage servicers control 66% of the market. Three of them (Bank of America, Chase, and Wells) control about one-fifth of it. If we were talking about beer, software, oil, or aluminum instead of mortgages, the Justice Department would be all over them.
It doesn't matter how much money the government throws at bad mortgages. Home foreclosures won't stop until people stop losing jobs... No mortgage modification is enough if you've got zero income. Continuing jobless claims rose to more than 6 million last week, the highest level since recordkeeping began in 1967.
Rogers said he believes we "have further to go" before the market recovers, but commodities' fundamentals are already improving.
Farmers can't get loans for fertilizers [which is constraining crop supply]. It takes 10 years to open a new mine. Stocks peaked in October 2007 and commodities kept going up until July 2008. If the world economy is going to revive, commodities are going to lead it back up.
Even if the economy doesn't revive, commodities are still the place to be – says Rogers – because the government is printing so much money and there are supply constraints. He recently bought all commodities, but he's buying more agriculture than anything else.
Regards,
S&A Research
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Date Range:4/13/2009 to 4/18/2009
Date Range:4/13/2009 to 4/18/2009
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