Monday, August 6, 2018

Cavium Inc (CAVM) Shares Bought by Montag & Caldwell LLC

Montag & Caldwell LLC raised its stake in shares of Cavium Inc (NASDAQ:CAVM) by 37.3% during the second quarter, according to its most recent filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The fund owned 6,311 shares of the semiconductor provider’s stock after acquiring an additional 1,714 shares during the quarter. Montag & Caldwell LLC’s holdings in Cavium were worth $546,000 at the end of the most recent quarter.

A number of other hedge funds and other institutional investors also recently bought and sold shares of CAVM. Inverness Counsel LLC NY lifted its position in shares of Cavium by 0.3% in the 1st quarter. Inverness Counsel LLC NY now owns 279,825 shares of the semiconductor provider’s stock worth $22,213,000 after buying an additional 855 shares during the last quarter. Amalgamated Bank lifted its position in shares of Cavium by 6.8% in the 1st quarter. Amalgamated Bank now owns 14,322 shares of the semiconductor provider’s stock worth $1,137,000 after buying an additional 909 shares during the last quarter. First Mercantile Trust Co. lifted its position in shares of Cavium by 94.3% in the 1st quarter. First Mercantile Trust Co. now owns 2,015 shares of the semiconductor provider’s stock worth $160,000 after buying an additional 978 shares during the last quarter. Xact Kapitalforvaltning AB increased its holdings in shares of Cavium by 19.3% in the 2nd quarter. Xact Kapitalforvaltning AB now owns 9,895 shares of the semiconductor provider’s stock worth $856,000 after acquiring an additional 1,600 shares during the period. Finally, State of Alaska Department of Revenue increased its holdings in shares of Cavium by 32.3% in the 2nd quarter. State of Alaska Department of Revenue now owns 8,160 shares of the semiconductor provider’s stock worth $705,000 after acquiring an additional 1,990 shares during the period. Hedge funds and other institutional investors own 85.82% of the company’s stock.

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Cavium stock remained flat at $$86.23 during trading hours on Thursday. The company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.77, a current ratio of 2.94 and a quick ratio of 2.36. The firm has a market cap of $6.04 billion, a P/E ratio of 1,077.88 and a beta of 1.45. Cavium Inc has a 12-month low of $56.96 and a 12-month high of $92.66.

Cavium (NASDAQ:CAVM) last posted its quarterly earnings data on Wednesday, May 2nd. The semiconductor provider reported ($0.60) earnings per share for the quarter. The firm had revenue of $230.76 million during the quarter, compared to analyst estimates of $249.58 million. Cavium had a negative net margin of 6.12% and a positive return on equity of 6.16%.

CAVM has been the topic of a number of analyst reports. ValuEngine cut shares of Cavium from a “hold” rating to a “sell” rating in a report on Thursday, April 19th. BidaskClub cut shares of Cavium from a “hold” rating to a “sell” rating in a report on Wednesday, April 4th. One investment analyst has rated the stock with a sell rating, nine have issued a hold rating and six have assigned a buy rating to the stock. The company currently has a consensus rating of “Hold” and an average price target of $78.82.

Cavium Company Profile

Cavium, Inc designs, develops, and markets semiconductor processors for intelligent and secure networks in the United States and internationally. The company offers integrated semiconductor processors that enable intelligent processing for wired and wireless infrastructure and cloud for networking, communications, storage, and security applications.

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Institutional Ownership by Quarter for Cavium (NASDAQ:CAVM)

Friday, August 3, 2018

Favorable News Coverage Somewhat Unlikely to Affect Innovative Industrial Properties (IIPR) Stock Pr

Media headlines about Innovative Industrial Properties (NYSE:IIPR) have trended positive on Thursday, according to Accern Sentiment Analysis. The research group rates the sentiment of media coverage by analyzing more than twenty million blog and news sources in real-time. Accern ranks coverage of companies on a scale of negative one to positive one, with scores closest to one being the most favorable. Innovative Industrial Properties earned a news impact score of 0.50 on Accern’s scale. Accern also gave news headlines about the company an impact score of 48.1448106054572 out of 100, meaning that recent media coverage is somewhat unlikely to have an impact on the company’s share price in the immediate future.

Shares of Innovative Industrial Properties traded up $0.52, reaching $33.32, during trading on Thursday, according to MarketBeat Ratings. The stock had a trading volume of 2,374 shares, compared to its average volume of 94,744. Innovative Industrial Properties has a fifty-two week low of $16.35 and a fifty-two week high of $39.75. The stock has a market capitalization of $219.72 million, a PE ratio of 49.73 and a beta of -1.22.

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Innovative Industrial Properties (NYSE:IIPR) last released its earnings results on Wednesday, May 9th. The company reported $0.09 EPS for the quarter. Innovative Industrial Properties had a return on equity of 1.42% and a net margin of 14.26%. The firm had revenue of $2.76 million during the quarter. analysts expect that Innovative Industrial Properties will post 1.19 EPS for the current year.

The business also recently announced a quarterly dividend, which was paid on Monday, July 16th. Investors of record on Friday, June 29th were paid a dividend of $0.25 per share. The ex-dividend date was Thursday, June 28th. This represents a $1.00 annualized dividend and a yield of 3.00%. Innovative Industrial Properties’s payout ratio is 149.25%.

IIPR has been the subject of a number of research reports. Zacks Investment Research raised Innovative Industrial Properties from a “sell” rating to a “hold” rating in a research note on Thursday, April 5th. ValuEngine raised Innovative Industrial Properties from a “hold” rating to a “buy” rating in a research note on Wednesday, May 2nd.

In related news, VP Brian J. Wolfe sold 6,013 shares of the business’s stock in a transaction on Wednesday, June 6th. The stock was sold at an average price of $37.34, for a total transaction of $224,525.42. Following the completion of the transaction, the vice president now directly owns 12,502 shares of the company’s stock, valued at approximately $466,824.68. The transaction was disclosed in a legal filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission, which is available at the SEC website. Insiders have purchased a total of 400 shares of company stock valued at $14,612 over the last three months. 6.20% of the stock is currently owned by insiders.

Innovative Industrial Properties Company Profile

Innovative Industrial Properties, Inc is a self-advised Maryland corporation focused on the acquisition, ownership and management of specialized industrial properties leased to experienced, state-licensed operators for their regulated medical-use cannabis facilities. Innovative Industrial Properties, Inc has elected to be taxed as a real estate investment trust, commencing with the year ended December 31, 2017.

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Insider Buying and Selling by Quarter for Innovative Industrial Properties (NYSE:IIPR)

Thursday, August 2, 2018

Investors who have pulled billions out of stocks may be making the wrong call amid tech sell-off

The slaughter of consumer internet stocks Facebook, Twitter and Netflix has led investors to run scared of technology stocks in software and semiconductors that have actually done well. But this may cost them.

Reflections of people are seen in the windows of the Nasdaq offices in Times Square in New York. Don Emmert | AFP | Getty Images Reflections of people are seen in the windows of the Nasdaq offices in Times Square in New York.

On Monday investors pulled $1.3 billion out of the Invesco QQQ Trust, a broadly focused technology fund that follows the Nasdaq 100 index. And in the past one-week period through Monday, they yanked $2.4 billion from the ETF, three times greater than outflows from any other equity ETF in the past week, according to XTF.com. In semiconductors, the investor outlook is mixed, with almost $300 million of new investor money coming into Van Eck Market Vectors Semiconductor ETF (SMH) in the past week, but the only semiconductor ETF that was positive in the past week is one that shorts the sector. Of the 51 tech sector ETFs tracked by XTF.com, only two had significant positive flows in the past week, SMH and the broad Technology Select Sector SPDR (XLK).

Now some Wall Street experts are making the prediction that this tech sell-off is the signal that the long reign of growth stocks over lower-priced, slower-growing value companies is ending. But the sell-off seemed to run out of steam on Tuesday, as the Nasdaq rebounded, up near 0.6 percent at the close, and Apple reported strong results for the fiscal third quarter. Apple stock was up 4 percent Wednesday morning and the Nasdaq continued higher in early trading.

The debate now is whether investors acted too quickly to unload what has been the dominant group of stocks in the market since the last recession.

The top of a fund's holdings list matters

As measured by the Invesco QQQ Trust, an ETF that tracks the Nasdaq 100, the drop in tech stocks since Facebook missed second-quarter earnings forecasts on July 25 is about 2.5 percent. But nearly half of the QQQ's holdings are in Apple (11 percent), Amazon (10.5 percent), Microsoft (10 percent) and Google parent Alphabet (9 percent), the only four stocks that represent more than 5 percent of the fund. Facebook was next at just under 5 percent, as of July 30.

Some tech stock ETFs have been hit hard for the right reasons, such as the Global X Social Media ETF (SOCL), down more than 9 percent in the past week. With large-capitalization tech stocks central to market gains for the last year, the Netflix drop of nearly 9 percent, and Facebook decline of over 21 percent, are not surprising after each missed consensus forecasts.

The hottest tech ETF, the First Trust Dow Jones Internet Index ETF (FDN), was down more than 6 percent in the week through Monday. As of July 30, Facebook and Netflix were its third- and fourth-largest holdings, after Amazon and Alphabet. FDN has taken in more this year than any other tech ETF, over $2 billion in positive flows from investors.

But Amazon has dropped more than 4 percent, and Alphabet has lost nearly 5 percent, even though those companies met or exceeded analyst expectations for second-quarter profits.

"Great opportunities can surface when investors overreact to short-term setbacks for companies. That has happened with Amazon.com and Google (Alphabet) countless times just in the nine years I've been managing the portfolio." -Ken Allen, manager of T. Rowe Price's $5.3 billion Communications and Technology Fund (PRMTX)

Market history shows evidence of tech rebounds after big declines. Tech stocks declined by more than 5 percent over three consecutive sessions through Monday. According to hedge fund analytical tool Kensho, since the end of the financial crisis in March 2009, the NASDAQ Composite dropped by at least 1 percent in three straight sessions on five previous occasions to current tech sell-off. After these drops, the Nasdaq rebounded sharply over the next month, up over 5 percent and generating a positive return in all five instances.

Even amid the heavy tech selling in recent days, the NASDAQ remains on pace to end up for the fourth-consecutive month, with a 2.5 percent return in July.

Bill Miller still likes Facebook

Famed value investors such as Miller Value Partners chief Bill Miller and Ken Allen, manager of T. Rowe Price's $5.3 billion Communications and Technology Fund (PRMTX), argue that technology and internet companies are still in the early- to middle stages of exploiting their opportunities.

Miller, for one, has no intention of giving up on Facebook.

"Facebook is quite attractive at these levels, trading at 17 times next year's earnings, a lower multiple than many much slower-growing consumer-staple stocks," said Miller in an email to CNBC. He bought heavily when Facebook slipped to about $150 earlier this year, from $193 on Feb. 1, and had made a paper profit of about 40 percent as shares surged to $217.50 last week before the post-earnings crash. "The current actions they are taking to spend more to strengthen security and safety should enhance their competitive position and extend their growth runway," Miller wrote.

show chapters Buy these 3 tech ETFs on the dip, says Kevin O'Leary Buy these 3 tech ETFs on the dip, says Kevin O'Leary    10 Hours Ago | 05:20

Microsoft is trading at 21.7 times next year's profit, a relatively high number for the software giant as it pushes into cloud computing, a business that has long commanded high price-to-earnings ratios. Alphabet is trading at 30.5 times the average analyst estimate of 2018 profit and 25 times next year's projected earnings, according to Thomson Reuters data. Netflix and Amazon, as has always been true, have much higher multiples.

"Tech stocks often get lumped together when they really shouldn't," said Lara Crigger, who covers tech ETFs for ETF.com "If a social media company is reporting flat user growth [as both Facebook and Twitter did], they should fall. Alphabet and Apple aren't affected as much by that.''

Hot tech ETFs amid the sell-off ETF YTD flows 1-week performance
First Trust Dow Jones Internet $2.2B (-6.2%)
Vanguard Information Technology $1.5B (-2.8%)
Technology Select Sector $1.3B (-3%)
iShares Global Tech $803M (-3%)
Fidelity MSCI Information Technology $653M (-3.6%)
XTF.com, data through July 30

The technology sector as a whole trades at 17.5 times this year's projected earnings, while the broader market's price-to-earnings ratio is 15.9, according to CFRA Research stock strategist Sam Stovall.

"The P/E ratio on the S&P 500 tech sector is nowhere near where it was in 2000," Stovall said, adding that betting on stocks and sectors with stronger gains over the past year, as technology has in the last 12 months, to keep beating the market has been a winning strategy for more than two decades now. "Despite an end-of-month social media meltdown, investors may still be willing to stick with a momentum strategy."

T. Rowe Price's Allen also argues that retail investors should ride out dips in tech companies that are still taking market share from competitors and reimagining how business is done in their industries.

"Great opportunities can surface when investors overreact to short-term setbacks for companies," said Allen, whose fund has beaten the S&P by an average of five percentage points each year for the last decade. "That has happened with Amazon.com and Google (Alphabet) countless times just in the nine years I've been managing the portfolio.''

Why the bears expect more tech selling

On the flip side is Morgan Stanley strategist Michael Wilson, who argues that growth-stock valuations, relative to the market, are at levels only seen in the run-up to the 2000 dot-com bust. "The bottom line for us is that we think the selling has just begun and this correction will be biggest since the one we experienced in February," Wilson said, pointing to the 10 percent drop in the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index between Jan. 23 and Feb. 8, which the market had nearly fully recouped by last week. Wilson says the more an investor has in tech, the worse their portfolio will suffer.

"It could very well have a greater negative impact on the average portfolio if it's centered on tech, consumer discretionary and [smaller-capitalization stocks], as we expect."

There was a greater move into U.S. value stocks in July. According to ETF data from XTF.com compiled by DataTrek Research, U.S. equity ETF flows were very strong in July, at over $12 billion of fresh capital through last Friday, but flows into US equity growth funds slowed in July to $1.1 billion �� its year-to-date average has been $1.3 billion/month. More than double that amount flowed to value funds in July, $2.5 billion, which also is notably higher than its 2018 YTD average of $750 million/month.

The Morgan Stanley strategy argues that the recent moves in tech may represent valuation concerns finally asserting themselves.

"We have been out on a limb the past month with our defensive rotation call, and truth be told, we haven't had much interest from clients wanting to follow us down this path," Wilson and colleagues wrote in a July 30 note to Morgan Stanley clients. "Nevertheless, since our upgrade of [the electric-utility sector] on June 18th, defensive sectors have meaningfully outperformed."

With the market up about 1.8 percent since June 18, technology was down slightly, and overall returns are being driven by 5 percent-plus gains in consumer staples and utilities, Wilson said, using last Friday's closing prices. Consumer discretionary, a category that includes Amazon and Netflix, is also in negative territory over the last six weeks.

The market ran out of good news to look forward to after Amazon's strong earnings report, and the preliminary data Friday, saying the U.S. economy boosted gross domestic product at a 4.1 percent annual clip during the second quarter, Wilson says that with the GDP report out of the way, valuation concerns seem to have moved to the forefront.