SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.

   Non-TechSFD: Smithfield Foods, Inc.


Next 10 
From: ms.smartest.person3/22/2001 9:41:44 PM
   of 15
 
[BW 04/02/01] Inside Wall Street: Smithfield, Hancock, GM

Sizzling Smithfield

There is a stock play for almost any event--even the dreaded foot-and-mouth outbreak in Europe.
The disease has sent hog prices soaring, and that's good news for Smithfield Foods (SFD ), says
Dennison Veru, president of Palisades Capital Management, who has been buying shares.
Smithfield is the world's largest hog producer and pork packer, and in the U.S., it is the top pork
processor. Smithfield's stock, trading at 23 in October, has since kicked up to 32.

"Foot-and-mouth could lead to huge increases in demand for U.S. pork in countries normally
supplied by Europe," says John McMillin of Prudential Securities. He says hog prices jumped from
an average of $40 a hundredweight in February to $47 in March.

Denmark, where Japan buys 31% of its supplies, could get hit next, warns McMillin. If Danish pork
gets banned, "it would create a huge opportunity for Smithfield." Japanese demand could push
prices of pork from the U.S. up to $60 per hundredweight. In addition, says David Nelson of CS First
Boston, "the Dutch government believes it has found evidence of the disease." That means there's
risk of further spread on the Continent, he says.

All this suggests that Smithfield, which raises 3 million hogs per quarter, will see "mighty big
numbers," says McMillin. So he has raised Smithfield's fourth-quarter earnings estimate from 60
cents a share to 75 cents, upped his 2001 number from $2.89 to $3.04, and, for 2002, from $3.10 to
$3.25.
By Gene G. Marcial

John Hancock's Name Looms Large

Unbelievable but true: A stock that went public at 17 last year is now at 35. That's John Hancock
Financial Services (JHF ), a diversified insurer that also manages mutual funds, with assets of $12
billion. "The stock has the best technical credentials in its sector," says Andrew Addison of Addison
Investment Management. Hancock has been hitting new highs almost every month.

What's driving it up? Two things: Hancock is a leading candidate to replace American General,
which is being acquired by Prudential, in the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index. This means that
more institutions may have to buy the stock. And there's takeover talk. Addison thinks Hancock is
ripe for a buyout by the likes of FleetBoston Financial. One thing FleetBoston lacks is an insurance
arm. "FleetBoston and Hancock have good synergies, and a merger would make strategic sense,"
he says.

Hancock's stock has outperformed both its peer group and the market. Still, the stock remains
cheap, notes Addison, trading at 13 times estimated 2001 earnings of $2.65 a share, and 12 times
2002's estimated $2.95. Vanessa Wilson of Deutsche Banc Alex. Brown says Hancock's "valuable
brand name and established financial service franchise" should be worth 55 to 60 in 18 to 24
months. She sees Hancock beating the S&P 500 and other insurers over the next 12 months.
By Gene G. Marcial

Hidden Power under GM's Hood

You don't have to look beyond the 30 companies in the Dow Jones industrial average to find solid
buys: With the market sinking nearly every stock in sight, the Dow is full of underpriced stocks
brimming with long-term value, argue some market strategists.

One Dow stock they find irresistibly cheap: General Motors (GM ), which tumbled from 93 in April to
50 in December, before edging up to 53 on Mar. 21. "The world's largest car and truck producer is
one of the biggest bargains around," says Charles Lemonides, who is buying.

The Street, fearful that economic woes will further slow auto sales, is not thrilled by GM. The
consensus rating of 20 analysts: Hold. They see it earning $3.21 a share in 2001 and $4.56 in 2002,
down from $8.43 in 2000.

But to Lemonides, chief investment officer at ValueWorks@M&R Capital Management, GM has
become a "sum-of-the-parts" play. With 550 million shares, GM's market cap of $30 billion is too low,
he says. He figures GM deserves a value of $62 billion, or $113 a share.

Here's how Lemonides breaks up GM: Based on a multiple of four times cash flow, he puts the auto
business at $40 billion, or 70 a share; at 10 times its operating income, he puts General Motors
Acceptance Corp. (GMAC) at $15 billion, or 27; GM's 30% stake in Hughes Electronics, at $6 billion,
or 11; and cash and equivalents, at $10 billion, or 18. Adjusted for GM's debt of $13 billion, or 13 a
share, total value comes to $62 billion, or 113 a share.

"Management under John F. Smith Jr. has been unlocking part of the value in some of GM's assets,"
notes Lemonides. GM is in the midst of either selling or restructuring Hughes. The next target, he
says, is its financing unit, GMAC.
By Gene G. Marcial

Copyright 2001 , by The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. All rights reserved.
Message 15550785

Share RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last ReadRead Replies (1)


To: ms.smartest.person who wrote (1)3/25/2001 11:23:58 PM
From: Chispas
   of 15
 
Smithfield Enacts Measures to Protect Hog Farms

pilotonline.com

Share RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last Read


From: kendall harmon3/26/2001 7:53:01 PM
   of 15
 
What is the U.S. threat here?

vny.com

Share RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last ReadRead Replies (2)


To: kendall harmon who wrote (3)3/27/2001 2:44:57 PM
From: ms.smartest.person
   of 15
 
There is a Hoof and Mouth board on SI and a Hoof and Mouth Portfolio

Foot and Mouth....How can we profit?
Subject 51002

Portfolio:
siliconinvestor.com

Merry

Share RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last Read


To: kendall harmon who wrote (3)3/31/2001 8:21:56 PM
From: flint
   of 15
 
On the news wire for SFD the rumor about Hoof and Mouth in a North Carolina pig hit almost immediatly.I was reading a North Carolina newspaper site and saw that in early afternoon the test turned up negative. The negative test results never hit the news wire for SFD.

Next time the rumor of an animal infected with hoof and mouth surfaces I suggest you follow the local news, good news just does travel as fast as bad.

Share RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last Read


From: flint3/31/2001 8:23:30 PM
   of 15
 
North Carolina judge throws out lawsuite. The tide may finally be turning where anybody and everybody sues the pig farmer.

Share RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last Read


From: flint4/3/2001 12:38:34 PM
   of 15
 
Germans fear hoof and mouth. Slaughtering pigs.

Share RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last ReadRead Replies (1)


To: flint who wrote (7)4/11/2001 9:24:24 PM
From: flint
   of 15
 
I received Chart Geek's, at TheStreet, replied to an offer I gave him.

He had nice smug replied when I told him he was wrong about SFD being a short as he was about LVLT heading to $60.00. I could not help but notice the response I received today was a bit more defensive than the one on April 3.

The idiot knows he is a fool that cost people their savings, but his grammer is better than mine. Thats all that counts - ain't that so Chart Geek.

Chart Geek - Pay me the $1,000 per week for me to review your picks. Stop looking like a fool.

Its time to load up on SFD.

Flint

Share RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last ReadRead Replies (1)


To: flint who wrote (8)6/4/2001 9:23:56 PM
From: Zeev Hed
   of 15
 
Hey, Flint, SFD reports Wed. Morning, I see the consensus is only $.76 (from "Whispers"), but I have them north of $.83, do you have any estimates?

Zeev

Share RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last Read


From: 2494435/18/2002 10:01:09 AM
   of 15
 
"Naked Hogs Aren't Pretty"

This is my nomination for best Research Paper Title of the year!

"Merrill Lynch & Co . reduced earnings estimates for Smithfield Foods Inc. (SFD) Thursday, citing unhedged hog inventory positions.

In a report he titled "Naked Hogs Aren't Pretty," analyst Leonard Teitelbaum cut his estimate for the current fiscal fourth quarter to 22 cents per diluted share from 30 cents, and to $1.78 from $1.86 for the year. His fiscal 2003 range dropped to $2 to $2.10 from $2.15 to $2.20 per diluted share.

The Thomson Financial/First Call consensus for the quarter is 25 cents and for the year $1.80. For FY03 it is $1.97 per diluted share.

Teitelbaum said pork producer Smithfield hadn't hedged live hog prices recently and that "naked" position left it vulnerable to a profit margin squeeze when selling prices declined more rapidly than wholesale prices. It could be fall before margins increase, the analyst wrote."

Share RecommendKeepReplyMark as Last ReadRead Replies (1)
Next 10