Entries Tagged 'tickers' ↓
July 11th, 2009 — BWLD, stocks, tickers
In 2008, I picked Buffalo Wild Wings (BWLD) in a stock picking contest. YTD, it’s up around 30%. But I ate there for the first time the other week (after picking up $75 of chicken wings for other occasions). I’m not so bullish now. Why?
The atmosphere. Okay, I’ll admit I was kind of overwhelmed the first time I went there. Boneless wings costing between 75 cents and a buck each? Yeah, good stuff, but not the kind of thing that I’d do once a quarter.
Eating there was disorienting. Dozens of screens. Noise through the roof. Lousy acoustics. Air temp designed to drive you out of the place. Sensory overload. Cheap burgers, pithy amount of fries. Great wings. Even the kids were overwhelmed. Everything oriented towards turning you over quickly.
It reminded me of the time we took a Caribbean cruise, almost a kind of tourist trap, complete with smiling kitchen staff peering out through their porthole sizing up the next round of suckers they were reeling in. Perfunctory service. We won’t be back anytime soon.
So I’m down on BWLD. Yes, they’ll do well simply because they are in that stage where they aren’t mainstream yet, and there are plenty of folks who have yet to experience the store, dropping a load of cash there in the process. But it has no legs. Watch for this thing to jump the shark sometime in the next 24 months. This isn’t even analysis, it’s just a channel check. No one there appeared to be enjoying themselves. They all looked like anxious monkeys waiting to flee.
February 9th, 2009 — AMZN, kindle
Several times over the last seven years, I’ve purchased an AAPL product instead of buying the stock. Without fail, I would have been better off financially buying the stock rather than the device.
Tonight, I pre-ordered a Kindle 2.0
and the same effect may be at play, despite Amazon’s big run up since its lows.
The new Kindles aren’t available until the 24th, so that gives me a few more days to try to get back into my AMZN position that was called away at 50. The more I study Amazon, the more amazed I am at their strategy and coherency of vision.
November 30th, 2008 — PETS, Uncategorized, investing, stocks
And the PETS shall lead them
A long time since the last update—very busy with work and the vacation days and weekends have been spent trying to salvage some alpha by putting cash to work in very aggressive daytrading behaviors which have netted around 110% return on a very small amount of cash, mainly through a combination of swing trading AAPL and hedging the rest of my shredded long portfolio with SPY puts. More details on my foray into trading in a future post.
But the family stock picking contest is in need of an update, just to humble all idiot retail investors like me who think that individual stock picking combined with a buy and hold strategy makes sense in the long run. Of the 40 stocks selected by the 5 participants, only one is in the black: PetsMed Express (PETS +48.18%).
I happen to be in a close second in the contest now, with my eight picks (BRK.B, MR, PHO, BWLD, MWA, CEDC, CTSH, GRP) down only 37.88%; the worst participant, identified only as “The Nephew” is down a miserable 69.06% on the heels of his -5% performance last year.
The quick rundown from top to bottom:
In the lead
The Nephew’s Bride (pets fxi vlo nvs pep wfmi fpl ba) -37.79%. PETS is up an amazing 48.18%, but this can’t offset FXI (China) being down 84.4%, and Whole Foods (WFMI) down 74.07%.
Me: (stocks—see above) -37.88%. I’m basically getting killed due to a combination of Buffet’s financial exposure and my global exposure (what I thought was a lesson learned last year). Best stock: Buffalo Wild Wings (BWLD: -1.12%). Grant Prideco was acquired for a combination of cash (yeehaw) and Valero stock (booooo!) in April; that didn’t help.
| Berkshire Hatha Class B Ord Shs |
-26.12% |
| Mindray Medical International Ltd |
-57.92% |
| PowerShares Water Resource Portfolio |
-36.54% |
| Buffalo Wild Wings Inc |
-1.12% |
| Mueller Water Products Series A Ord Shs |
-35.29% |
| Central European Distribution Corp |
-59.30% |
| Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp |
-43.43% |
| Grant Prideco Inc |
-43.34% |
Middle of the Pack
Mrs Firebones (down 40.15% with AET DE ARG CVS NTDOY AAPL COST GMCR) got creamed due to Aetna and Deere (each down around 62%). Retail exposure hurt as well, although some of the quality stocks held up okay relative to the market.
Firebones Jr (down 51.48% with CERN ADDYY VIA.B PEP SNS TWX SCHL PIE) has one down 67% (PIE—picked solely because the ticker symbol was PIE). I like his chances to improve before the end of the year through strength in Scholastic.
Bringing Up the Rear
The Nephew (down 69.06% on bidu isrg fwlt vip cmg stp nov rimm). Suntech is down 89%; when your best stock (ISRG) is down 58.97%, it’s hard to dig yourself out of the hole. Quick analysis is that this is overexposed to energy at the height of that market; looking at it another way, the double whammy of oil falling from $140/barrel and the falling dollar crushed him.
Overall
Overall the combined portfolios are down 47.17%, compared to a positive return of 15.82% last year. There is not a single major index that the combined portfolio is beating. My picks happen to be beating the S&P, the NYSE Composite and most of the international indices, but trailing the three Dow Jones averages (Industrial, Transportation and Utilities).
September 7th, 2008 — BWLD, contest, stocks
Overall portfolio of all family contestants is off 19%. I manage to still be in the lead with a 2.1% overall gain, buoyed by Buffalo Wild Wings and Mueller Water Products. But wow. Caveat: there may be some splits I haven’t accounted for in the overall results, but from what I can tell at first glance, these were stocks that just halved their prices without a split.
My results:
| Berkshire Hatha Class B Ord Shs |
-17.40% |
| Mindray Medical International Ltd |
-12.12% |
| PowerShares Water Resource Portfolio |
-4.81% |
| Buffalo Wild Wings Inc |
63.57% |
| Mueller Water Products Series A Ord Shs |
11.97% |
| Central European Distribution Corp |
-8.87% |
| Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp |
-18.24% |
| Grant Prideco Inc |
3.39% |