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Option Update: Card providers volatilities flat; AXP, COF, DFS, MA, V

American Express (NYSE: AXP) closed at $37.43 Wednesday. Friedman Billings Ramsey says "Considering AXP needs to roll over 32% of its total managed debt (both corporate debt and securitized debt) within the next six quarters, we believe there is a risk there could be a material increase in the funding costs for AXP and thus materially reduce profitability." AXP overall option implied volatility of 48 is above its 26-week average of 45 according to Track Data, suggesting slightly larger price movement.

Capital One Fin'l (NYSE: COF) closed at $41.29 Wednesday. COF October option implied volatility of 76 is above its 26-week average of 65 according to Track Data, indicating larger price movement.

Discover (NYSE: DFS), an electronic payment services company, closed at $14.59 Wednesday. DFS overall option implied volatility of 63 is above its 26-week average of 60, suggesting non-directional price movement.

MasterCard (NYSE: MA) closed at $243.32 Wednesday. MA overall option implied volatility of 43 is near its 26-week average, indicating non-directional price fluctuations.

Visa (NYSE: V) closed at $74.57 Wednesday. V September option implied volatility of 42 is near its 23-week average, suggesting non-directional price movement.

Option Update is provided by Stock Specialist Paul Foster of theflyonthewall.com

Gerstner leaves the Carlyle Group

Private equity powerhouse, The Carlyle Group, has more than 500 investment professionals across 21 countries. Of course, some of them are corporate luminaries like Louis Gerstner.

Well, after being the chairman of Carlyle since 2003, he is now departing -- his last day will be September 30th. Although, he will remain as a Senior Advisor to the firm.

Gerstner has had a stellar career. In 1993, he took the challenge of becoming IBM's (NYSE: IBM) chairman. At the time, the company was crumbling.

Despite not having much tech experience, Gerstner set forth an ambitious strategy that not only saved IBM but returned the company to greatness. He even wrote a book about his experience in a book called Who Says Elephants Can't Dance?: Leading a Great Enterprise through Dramatic Change, which is definitely worth reading.

Before his tenure at IBM, Gerstner was the CEO of RJR Nabisco, where he had to deal with the debt-load from a mega leveraged buyout (from KKR). He was also the president of American Express (NYSE: AXP) and a director of management at McKinsey & Co., Inc.

While at Carlyle, Gerstner made a big impact. He helped globalize the firm as well as diversify the investment base. As of now, Carlyle manages about $75 billion in assets across 57 funds and controls a portfolio that has aggregate revenues of $87 billion.

Tom Taulli is the author of various books, including The Complete M&A Handbook and The Edgar Online Guide to Decoding Financial Statements. He also operates MergerBook.com.

Closing Bell: Dow sinks almost 2%, and even the Olympics can't save financials from water torture

The bear came back today after a long nap. Financial stocks led the DJIA lower today on three key pieces of news, not at all tied to each. Some may call today profit taking, some might be disappointed that the ECB and UK didn't give any concessions on overnight interest rates. Oil was up over $1.00 and back over the $120 mark. But no matter how you call the day, it looked like another day of Chinese Water Torture in another bear market.

Below are today's unofficial closing bell levels:
D.J.I.A. 11,431.19 -224.88 -1.93%
NASDAQ 2,355.73 -22.64 -0.95%
S&P 500 1,266.14 -23.05 -1.79%
10YR T-Bond 3.935% -0.113%
52-Week Lows
Top Analyst Upgrades
Top Analyst Downgrades

American Express Company (NYSE: AXP) was another huge loser after Moody's put the credit card operation debt on negative credit watch. As that affects some $89 Billion in securities and deposits, you know this makes people nervous even if the debt ratings agencies have proven to be as worthless as gold to a dead man. Shares were down almost 5% at $36.06 in today's final minutes.

Continue reading Closing Bell: Dow sinks almost 2%, and even the Olympics can't save financials from water torture

Seven ways that companies cope with high gas prices

High gasoline prices are putting the squeeze on companies and their workers. People are leaving their jobs due to the high commuting costs. The New York Times reports that a resume service received "14 calls last week and 9 of those named high gas prices as their No. 1 reason for leaving their job."

And by my count, the Times presents seven ways that companies are changing to relieve the pressure:

  • Encourage more telecommuting. The Times describes how "Citigate Cunningham, a public relations company, now encourages workers to stay home whenever possible, providing laptop computers and BlackBerrys to enable telecommuting, and reimbursing them $40 a month for high-speed Internet connections in their homes."
  • Give employees money to pay for gas. Since June, OperationsInc., a human resource consulting firm, gave employees up to $100 a month on an American Express (NYSE: AXP) card "to offset rising gas prices."
  • Rent offices closer to workers' homes. Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) recently "leased three large office complexes far from its headquarters" to cut 7,000 employees' commutes.

Continue reading Seven ways that companies cope with high gas prices

American Express: Don't leave home without ... Concur

Back in 2001, Concur Technologies, Inc., (NASDAQ: CNQR) hit a low of 31 cents per share. At that time, investors had lost all confidence in the Internet. What's more, Concur was in an un-sexy space; that is, a provider of software to help companies with travel expenses.

But the company's CEO, Steve Singh, was still a believer and thought the market opportunity was huge.

Well, as of now, things are starting to pay off. In fact, this week, Concur announced that it received a $251 million strategic investment from American Express (NYSE: AXP) at $39.25 per share. There is also a warrant to purchase an additional 1.28 million share (see more of today's earnings news).

Continue reading American Express: Don't leave home without ... Concur

Earnings highlights: The Q2 crunch continues

Here are some highlights from this past week's earnings coverage from BloggingStocks:

Continue reading Earnings highlights: The Q2 crunch continues

Closing Bell: Market defies cautious earnings

Hank Paulson led the charge this morning talking about the need and credibility of the GSE's. Oil was up for a while but after Tropical Storm Dolly headed further south than the oil and gas infrastructure that locked in heavy oil selling. The major focus continues to be earnings and financial stocks in particular. Below are today's unofficial closing bell levels:
DJIA 11601.60 (+134.26)
S&P500 1276.80 (+16.80)
NASDAQ 2303.96 (+24.43)
10YR T-Note 4.097 (+0.03%)
52-Week Lows
Top Analyst Calls

American Express Company (NYSE: AXP) was one of the more poor financial stocks today after the company choked on earnings last night. It is also facing deteriorating business despite it being thought of as the highest quality credit card around. Shares were down 9.2% at $37.13 in today's final minutes.

Continue reading Closing Bell: Market defies cautious earnings

Funds suffering biggest exoduses, beware gas-saving deals & smartest advice - Today in Money 7/22

In the News:

Town Bankruptcy Bad Sign for Other Towns
The mortgage crisis, the limping economy and a recent bankruptcy filing by Vallejo - the first municipality to do so since Desert Hot Springs, Calif., in 2001 - have hobbled this town of 120,000. Vallejo's closely watched Chapter 9 bankruptcy filing in federal court in Sacramento may be a warning sign of dangers that could befall other cash-strapped municipalities.
Economy hobbles Calif. town - USATODAY.com

10 Funds Suffering the Biggest Exoduses

Which mutual funds are seeing the biggest outflows in 2008? They include some very well-known popular funds like Fidelity Low-Priced Stock, American Funds Investment Company of America and the Legg Mason Value funds.
The 10 Funds Suffering the Biggest Exoduses

Continue reading Funds suffering biggest exoduses, beware gas-saving deals & smartest advice - Today in Money 7/22

Cramer on BloggingStocks: Shorts are not and should not be equal

TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says they're not just the opposite of longs -- they have the power to destroy companies.

Today will be riotously ugly. Today's a day where you could take down a Capital One (NYSE: COF) (Cramer's Take) or a Citigroup (NYSE: C) (Cramer's Take) -- some bad credit card exposure there -- off of American Express (NYSE: AXP) (Cramer's Take). You can bang down Nat City (NYSE: NCC) (Cramer's Take) into oblivionville off of it and hammer Merrill Lynch (NYSE: MER) (Cramer's Take) to the point where you could hear the rumors fly of capital needs. Freddie (NYSE: FRE) (Cramer's Take), merciless Freddie, right at ya. Today's the day when the uptick rule would be the only friend to the notion of owning stocks without fear every minute, fear that they will break your stock. Today's the day that the uptick rule can save Lehman (NYSE: LEH) (Cramer's Take) from $14 or lower. Today's why we need it.

Yet, every time I do a piece that talks about the need to reinstate the uptick rule or enforce the naked short laws, I am immediately greeted with the same nonsense: why should the longs get protection the shorts shouldn't? In fact, other than the usual gang of two -- Patrick Byrne and David Patch -- I don't get any positive feedback on these pieces like the one I did last night on "Mad Money."

Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Shorts are not and should not be equal

Not a good time to buy American Express

American Express (NYSE: AXP) saw a big sell-off in its shares during the after-hours session on Monday following the release of its second-quarter earnings numbers. The shares already closed down over 11%.

It isn't difficult to comprehend this one. According to Earnings.com, Wall Street was hoping for the credit company to make 83 cents per share. American Express only delivered 57 cents per share from continuing operations. Not only did the company disappoint the Street by a very wide margin, but it disappointed itself, since that 57 cents per share represents a 35% drop compared to the bottom-line results achieved a year ago.

Yep, the financial crisis is still with us. American Express needed to significantly add to its credit reserves. Management stated that the economy is having a negative effect on its cardmembers, and that previous guidance can no longer be relied on. Translation: don't buy this stock! At least, that's my opinion.

I simply can't see allocating investment funds to American Express at this point. If investors wanted to get some exposure to plastic, all they would need to do is consider Visa (NYSE: V) or MasterCard (NYSE: MA). Both of these businesses are based primarily on transactions, not on credit risk. Whenever a card is used, these businesses get a little cut. And that adds up, my friends. Granted, both of these companies sold off on Monday and have been weak lately, and they have litigation risk, but I'd at least look at them for the long-term. Over time they should do well.

American Express, however, is way off my list of potential investment ideas. Not even going near this one. Name a timeframe (e.g. year-to-date, one-year, five-year, etc.), and you'll find that the stock is down. The economy is going to have to turn sharply before I even remotely consider it.

Disclosure: I don't own any company mentioned; positions can change at any time.

Before the bell: AAPL, AXP, SNDK, TXN, DD, WB, CAT, XMSR, HAL ...

Stocks futures are lower Tuesday morning, indicating U.S. stock markets will start on a down note following weak outlooks and disappointing financial results from several companies including Apple and American Express. With oil steady and no economic data out today, Wall Street will focus on earnings.

Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) reported after the close Monday a record quarter that beat analyst estimates, posting a 31% surge in earnings. Mac and iPod sales satisfied investors, while iPhone sales were somewhat on the lighter side. What concerned investors most was the very weak guidance Apple gave, which was weak even by Apple's standards of lowballing. Other issues included margin squeeze and Jobs health. Apple shares were 10% lower in Frankfurt and premarket trading.

American Express
(NYSE: AXP), said late Monday its second-quarter results fell 38% due to the weakening economy. The company, which missed projections, caters to the more affluent who have good credit, and yet even this company felt the pains from the slowing economy. AmEx earned 56 cents per share compared to estimates of 83 cents per share. The company's stock tumbled AXP shares are down over 12% in premarket trading.

Also reporting Monday after the close were Merck & Co., Inc. (NYSE: MRK), Texas Instruments (NYSE: TXN) and SanDisk (NASDAQ: SNDK). MRK shares are down over 6.6% in premarket trading as the company said it would stop give guidance of results. TXN shares are also declining over 10.5% in premarket trading after it gave a disappointing forecast. SNDK shares are plunging over 16% in premarket trading after it swung to a Q2 loss, missing analyst estimates.

This morning we'll have another wave of earnings, and already started were DuPont and Wachovia.

Continue reading Before the bell: AAPL, AXP, SNDK, TXN, DD, WB, CAT, XMSR, HAL ...

Pre-market movers (AAPL) (WB) (AXP) (TXN)

Foundry Networks (NASDAQ:FDRY) is up over 30% on a buy-out by Brocade (NASAQ:BRCD). Brocade is off nearly 20% on the same news.

Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) is off 10% on a weak forecast for the next quarter.

Wachovia (NYSE:WB) is off 12% on poor earnings and a dividend cut.

American Express (NYSE:AXP) is down over 10% after reporting a weak quarter.

Texas Instrument (NYSE:TXN) is off over 10% on poor numbers.

Shares may trade differently in the pre-market than they do in the regular session.

Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com

Before the bell: BAC, DNA, YHOO, AAPL, MRK, AXP, TWX, HAS ...

Stock futures were higher this morning after Bank of America joined recent financials and topped Wall Street estimates. Also pushing futures higher is a deal in the pharma sector with Roche bidding nearly $44 billion for the rest of Genentech. However, both Merck and Schering-Plough said they'll postpone reporting their financial results after the close; Apple will also be reporting results then. Finally, oil prices came off a six-week low and are trading back above $130 a barrel due to escalating Middle East tensions. Higher oil prices could dampen the mood on the Street.

Bank of America Corp. (NYSE: BAC), the biggest U.S. consumer bank and home lender, said profit fell 41% to $3.41 billion, or 72 cents a share, much better than analysts estimates of 21 cents according to Bloomberg. The bank curtailed loan losses, adding $2.2 billion to loan loss reserves. The bank has completed the purchase of Countrywide Financial Corp. on July 1. With these results, BAC joins other big banks that have recently reported better-than-expected results. BAC shares are up 8.6% in premarket trading.

Roche Holding on Monday said it was offering $43.7 billion to take over the remaining 44.1% shares of Genentech Inc. (NYSE: DNA) for $89 per share, 8.8% above DNA's closing price Friday. DNA shares are up nearly 18% in premarket trading to $96.50.

Yahoo! Inc. (NASDAQ: YHOO) said Monday morning it settled its fight for control of the board with billionaire investor Carl Icahn. The board will expand to 11 members to include Icahn and the remaining two seats will be filled by the board upon the recommendation of its nominating and governance committee. In addition, Icahn, who owns about 5% on Yahoo common shares, agreed to withdraw his nominees for consideration at the annual meeting and to support the board's nominees. YHOO shares are declining 2% in premarket trading.

Continue reading Before the bell: BAC, DNA, YHOO, AAPL, MRK, AXP, TWX, HAS ...

Market rally ends, stocks sell-off on financials, economy and earnings concerns

When last week one analyst after another suggested a bankruptcy at one of the automakers is inevitable, many readers commented that bankruptcies at financials were very likely as well. One holiday weekend later and it seems Wall Street is more inclined to agree with this analysis than ever.

The day started off nicely with stocks staging a quiet rally as crude prices declined more than $5 a barrel and the dollar strengthened. But by midday, the bears, it seems, have had enough of entertaining the bulls and returned in drove to sell more of their financials holdings, taking the rest of the stock markets with them. By 1:15 p.m., the Dow was off a 100 points, or 0.9%, the S&P 500 was down 1.28% and the Nasdaq composite declined 0.85%.

Citigroup Inc. (NYSE: C) shares were down over 5%, American Express (NYSE: AXP) shares down over 4.2% and JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM) shares were off 4.8%.

Financial regulators also announced not too long before the selloff began an information-sharing agreement between the Federal Reserve and the Securities and Exchange Commission "aimed at better detecting potential risks to the U.S. financial system." Perhaps the agreement reminded investors of the fragile condition financials are still in and eroded confidence in their ability to bounce back without any more nasty surprises. Recent mentions of liquidity concerns at banks and brokerages, and their need to raise more capital and sell assets, has been weighing markets and financials down.

Continue reading Market rally ends, stocks sell-off on financials, economy and earnings concerns

Analyst upgrades: LRCX, DT and FTE

MOST NOTEWORTHY: Lam Research, Deutsche Telekom and France Telecom were today's noteworthy upgrades:
  • Credit Suisse upgraded Lam Research (NASDAQ:LRCX) to Outperform from Neutral citing margin expansion and valuation. Lam was named the firm's top pick in SCE names for 2H08.
  • JP Morgan upgraded shares of Deutsche Telekom (NYSE:DT) to Overweight from Neutral as they expect a stronger second half of the year for the industry.
  • France Telecom (NYSE:FTE) was upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Merrill and to Buy from Hold at Societe Generale after the company walked away without bidding for Sweden's TeliaSonera.
OTHER UPGRADES: