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Weekend EditionThe Best of The S&A DigestSaturday, June 30, 2007 Bloomberg said RadioShack (RSH) is one of the two top-performing stocks in the entire S&P 500. I wanted to pull my hair out…
I identified RadioShack as a world-class investment about a year ago. It was dirt-cheap – trading for about six times cash earnings. It has a terrific competitive advantage – it operates more than 7,000 RadioShack locations, one within five miles of 95% of the U.S. population. Best of all, to me, Wall Street hated the stock: It was one of the most heavily shorted on the market. These factors led the company's management to buy back stupendous amounts of stock – nearly 30% of the float over the last five years.
If you'd asked me when I recommended the shares, I would have told you that RadioShack was the kind of stock everyone should own: It was totally safe, it was set to soar on valuation and buybacks, and eventually Wall Street would reverse its opinion of the stock, setting up the opportunity to make 30%-50% per year for the next five years.
It was perfect… until the CEO admitted having lied on his resume. Uncertainty about the company's leadership caused the shares to fall from $25 all the way to below $14. We were "stopped out" at a loss. Today, the stock is sitting near $35 per share… about 50% above where I initially recommended it.
Even when you get everything right about a business… sometimes it doesn't work out as an investment. Life's not fair, is it?
Of course, our own Steve Sjuggerud recently returned from a trip to Macau and has found the single-best way to take advantage of the booming real estate trend. Sjuggerud Confidential subscribers can find the details in the May 2007 issue, called The Greatest Growth Story on the Planet. If you'd like more details on the situation, click here.
This news brings two things to mind… First, if you believe (as I do) that the U.S. government in general, and our foreign policy in particular, is the pawn of large multinational corporations, right about now is when the CIA will act to overthrow Chavez.
Second, we noticed that our friend Mohnish Pabrai has continued to add to his position in Harvest Natural Resources (HNR). HNR is an oil company whose sole operations are in Venezuela. While the big boys are moving out, HNR cut a deal to operate dozens of additional wells on behalf of a new joint venture it established with the Venezuelans. Last year, at our S&A Alliance meeting in Aspen, Pabrai told us the stock fit his strategy perfectly… and we've been watching it closely since.
Regards,
Porter Stansberry
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Date Range:6/25/2007 to 6/30/2007
Date Range:6/25/2007 to 6/30/2007
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