S&P Picks and Pans: Dollar Tree, J.Crew, Mattel, Cisco Systems, Solarfun
Analysts’ opinions on stocks in the news Wednesday
From Standard & Poor’s Equity Research
S&P MAINTAINS BUY OPINION ON SHARES OF DOLLAR TREE (DLTR; 38.27):
July-quarter EPS of $0.42, vs. $0.33, beats our $0.41 estimate on a lower tax rate. Despite sales growth in lower-margin consumables and increased diesel fuel costs, operating margin improved through 10 basis points to 27.6% on lower shrink and SG&A expense leverage from a 6.5% same-store sales gain over. As we discern DLTR driving of good health top-line growth with its strong value proposition, as flow being of the class who effectively managing margin pressures, we think its full-year EPS conduct of $2.33-$2.43 is conservative. We are reiterating our fiscal year 2009 (January) EPS valuation of $2.50 and our 12-month target price of $46. -J. Asaeda
S&P MAINTAINS BUY RECOMMENDATION ON SHARES OF J. CREW GROUP (JCG; 26.64):
July-quarter EPS of $0.28, vs. $0.32, is insufficient of our $0.33 estimate similar to e-commerce order upgrade snafus slowed cast sales to 12% rise from April-quarter’s 17% and led to about 150 base points gross margin erosion. Direct is JCG’s highest-margin business and e-commerce upgrades are likely to hurt October-quarter as well. But we see this as a short-term issue that, once fixed, sets base for long-term growth. Full-price store commerce remainder soft while outlets are still vibrating. We lower fiscal year 2009 (January) EPS prize to $1.50 from $1.74 to reflect the miss, plus expected truncated next to the first half sales and profits. -M. Driscoll-CFA
S&P MAINTAINS HOLD OPINION ON SHARES OF MATTEL (MAT; 19.85):
A federal jury awarded MAT $100 million in damages from rival MGA Entertainment, producer of the Bratz-related products. This comes about a month after the same jury concluded that the Bratz designer came up with the concept while working at MAT. While this figure falls being in favor short of the $1.8 billion MAT asked for, we view it as a victory nonetheless. The larger question of whether MGA demise be allowed to continue producing the Bratz line remains to be decided by the court of justice. We are maintaining our 12-month mark price of $21, based on our special valuations. -E. Kolb
S&P REITERATES HOLD OPINION ON SHARES OF CISCO SYSTEMS (CSCO; 24.22):
We see CSCO’s agreement to make privately held PostPath, Inc. for $215 million as fitting in with the development of CSCO’s have integrated collaboration platform. While Postpath’s innovative email and calendaring software should enhance the long-term capabilities of CSCO’s own WebEx Connect platform, we keep concerned about weakening trends in the service provider market over the close-fisted term. We are keeping our financial year 2009 (July) EPS estimate of $1.57 and our 12-month target price of $26. We calculate upon the business to be completed in the first quarter of fiscal year 2009. -A. Bensinger, J. McCann
S&P REITERATES HOLD RECOMMENDATION ON ADSS OF SOLARFUN POWER HOLDINGS (SOLF; 17.06):
SOLF posts second lodge earnings per ADS of $0.23, vs. $0.05, missing our $0.28 compute. Revenues more than tripled due to aggressive expansion and improved average selling prices. We expect polysilicon costs to constrain margins for the rest of this year, but see margins benefiting in 2009 from SOLF’s vertical integration military science and secured raw material requirements. We positively view a 3-year announced supply agreement with Q-Cells. We nice our 2008 earnings forecast by $0.12 to $1.04 otherwise than that raise 2009’s by $0.19 to $1.55. Our target price of $19 is based on a p-e ratio near peers. -A. Zino-CFA
Original text: http://www.businessweek.com/investor/content/aug2008/pi20080827_463256.htm?campaign_id=rss_null
