Saturday, March 23, 2019

A happy retirement is more than just money

Reports of Americans being unprepared for retirement have become so widespread that it no longer seems to elicit any emotional response.

The Employee Benefit Research Institute found that 40.6 percent of all U.S. households (where the head of the household is between ages 35 and 64) are projected to run out of money in retirement. Moreover, the average Social Security benefit provides an income equivalent to the poverty level for a family of four.

Daunting numbers indeed, but these conditions speak to priorities undertaken years earlier. Many families would list education as their No. 1 goal, and given the exorbitant cost of college tuition, it only makes sense that their nest egg is less than robust.

This is an important distinction to make, that insufficient retirement savings could be more a function of conscious decisions made in the past than a failure to behave responsibly.

More from Fixed Income Strategies:
Now may be the time for bonds in portfolios
Surprising spending truths could upend your retirement
Financial worries prevent earlier retirement for many

Furthermore, saving for retirement is not as easy as advertised.

Glossy financial planning brochures with couples in their mid-50s riding a sailboat notwithstanding, this is simply an unrealistic expectation for many households. Given our increasing life expectancy, accumulating enough money in 35 to 40 years of working to sustain us for the remainder of our lives is no easy task.

To put this into perspective, if you take out 5 percent from a diversified portfolio each year, you stand a 58 percent chance of running out of money within 30 years of retirement.

After all, anyone taking withdrawals during the 2008 housing crisis would have a dramatically different outcome than investors who retired in 2009 and lived off market returns in the beginning of retirement. Volatility matters. This would suggest that you need $2,000,000 saved to generate $100,000 in annual income.

It's also worth mentioning that distributions from retirement accounts are subject to ordinary income taxes. In other words, there's a fair chance that a great many savers — unless they make lifestyle sacrifices or wiser investment decisions or have an actual pension — won't be able to maintain their current quality of life once they leave the workforce.

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However, for many retirees, saving enough for those golden years is only part of the formula for a good retirement.

The key to achieving an active, satisfying and happy retirement involves more than having adequate savings. It also entails interesting leisure activities, creative pursuits and mental and physical well-being.

Fortunately, there are a number of viable solutions that might address any financial shortfall, including working part-time at something related to your profession. A teacher, for example, might begin a tutoring service and accumulate innovative metrics that validates his or her approach. A scientist may decide to teach an online class at a community college two days a week.

In lieu of brick-and-mortar offices, entire new job niches are being created online with Twitter handles and YouTube channels, so it pays to get creative. Many of us have hobbies or passions during our working careers that can provide both supplemental income and access to a social network of likeminded people.

"Success in retirement can be defined as waking up in the morning and going to sleep at night and doing exactly what you want in between." -Ivory Johnson, founder of Delancey Wealth Management

If you enjoy gardening, consider working part-time at a nursery a few years before leaving your job. Those who prefer bike riding can create a personal training regiment, teach novices about biking and lead groups through trails for a fee.

During the planning phase, you have time to complete any license requirements and build relationships with business owners and centers of influence. Some of us may even consider moving to a state with a lower cost of living. Perhaps renting out and depreciating your residence in a high-cost state subsidizes the mortgage in one with lower income taxes; sometimes it just takes a little imagination.

If meeting new friends in retirement or after relocation is uncomfortable for you, plan a vacation or getaway with three or four other couples who find themselves in a similar financial predicament: reasonable Social Security benefits, a little home equity and not enough savings.

Success in retirement can be defined as waking up in the morning and going to sleep at night and doing exactly what you want in between.

Write down exactly what you want your life to look like during retirement, and develop a plan to make it happen. You might be surprised to learn that retirement planning has more to do with "what you'll be doing" than "how much you'll have to do it with."

Saturday, March 16, 2019

Best Medical Stocks To Buy Right Now

tags:DPG,CYRX,MDR,CASS,TERP, &l;p&g;&l;img class=&q;dam-image getty wp-image-950702784 size-large&q; src=&q;https://specials-images.forbesimg.com/dam/imageserve/950702784/960x0.jpg?fit=scale&q; alt=&q;&q; data-height=&q;691&q; data-width=&q;960&q;&g; Getty Royalty Free

Bitcoin has had a wild ride according to most. It hit $20,087 on December 17 and crashed back to earth to settle around $6,000. It is at $6,497 as I write.

It was $4,400 a coin a year ago. So, to some bitcoin has made them a 47% return in a year and for others a 68% loss in nine months.

This is how bubbles work.

Today the latest bubble is medical marijuana stocks. &l;strong&g;Tilray&l;/strong&g; (TLRY) is the poster boy for this bubble:

&l;img class=&q;size-full wp-image-58320&q; src=&q;http://blogs-images.forbes.com/investor/files/2018/09/tilray.jpg?width=960&q; alt=&q;Tilray: the poster boy for the medical marijuana bubble&q; data-height=&q;589&q; data-width=&q;900&q;&g; Tilray

Bubbles always look like this:

Best Medical Stocks To Buy Right Now: Duff & Phelps Global Utility Income Fund Inc.(DPG)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Shane Hupp]

    Media headlines about Duff and Phelps Global Utlity Inm Fd (NYSE:DPG) have been trending somewhat positive this week, Accern Sentiment Analysis reports. The research firm rates the sentiment of news coverage by monitoring more than 20 million blog and news sources in real-time. Accern ranks coverage of publicly-traded companies on a scale of negative one to one, with scores nearest to one being the most favorable. Duff and Phelps Global Utlity Inm Fd earned a media sentiment score of 0.02 on Accern’s scale. Accern also assigned media coverage about the investment management company an impact score of 48.1454031211079 out of 100, indicating that recent news coverage is somewhat unlikely to have an effect on the company’s share price in the near future.

Best Medical Stocks To Buy Right Now: CryoPort, Inc.(CYRX)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Shane Hupp]

    CryoPort (NASDAQ:CYRX) had its price objective lifted by Cowen from $11.00 to $16.00 in a research report sent to investors on Monday morning, MarketBeat.com reports. Cowen currently has an outperform rating on the consumer goods maker’s stock.

  • [By Max Byerly]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on CryoPort (CYRX)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    CryoPort (NASDAQ: CYRX) and C. H. Robinson (NASDAQ:CHRW) are both transportation companies, but which is the superior investment? We will contrast the two businesses based on the strength of their profitability, institutional ownership, valuation, earnings, dividends, risk and analyst recommendations.

Best Medical Stocks To Buy Right Now: McDermott International, Inc.(MDR)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    News coverage about McDermott International (NYSE:MDR) has trended somewhat positive on Monday, Accern reports. The research firm rates the sentiment of news coverage by reviewing more than 20 million news and blog sources. Accern ranks coverage of publicly-traded companies on a scale of negative one to one, with scores nearest to one being the most favorable. McDermott International earned a coverage optimism score of 0.09 on Accern’s scale. Accern also gave news headlines about the oil and gas company an impact score of 45.977488181263 out of 100, indicating that recent news coverage is somewhat unlikely to have an impact on the stock’s share price in the next several days.

  • [By Lisa Levin]

    McDermott International, Inc. (NYSE: MDR) shares shot up 14 percent to $6.87 after the UK-based offshore oil service company Subsea 7 made an unsolicited bid to buy McDermott for $7 per share. However, the acquisition offer is contingent on McDermot terminating its pending merger with Chicago Bridge & Iron Company.

  • [By Ethan Ryder]

    Get a free copy of the Zacks research report on McDermott International (MDR)

    For more information about research offerings from Zacks Investment Research, visit Zacks.com

  • [By Matthew DiLallo]

    Shares of McDermott International (NYSE:MDR) tumbled nearly 25% by 10:30 a.m. EST on Wednesday after the engineering and construction company disclosed that it experienced some cost overruns while constructing the Cameron LNG project in Louisiana.

  • [By Motley Fool Staff]

    In this segment from the MarketFoolery podcast, host Chris Hill is joined once again by Million Dollar Portfolio's Jason Moser, and Stock Advisor Canada's Taylor Muckerman to talk about the latest news around McDermott International (NYSE:MDR), which spurned a buyout offer from fellow oil and gas engineering firm Subsea 7.

Best Medical Stocks To Buy Right Now: Cass Information Systems, Inc(CASS)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Stephan Byrd]

    Bessemer Group Inc. bought a new position in shares of Cass Information Systems (NASDAQ:CASS) during the 2nd quarter, according to the company in its most recent filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission. The institutional investor bought 12,600 shares of the business services provider’s stock, valued at approximately $867,000. Bessemer Group Inc. owned approximately 0.10% of Cass Information Systems as of its most recent filing with the Securities & Exchange Commission.

  • [By Logan Wallace]

    Press coverage about Cass Information Systems (NASDAQ:CASS) has been trending somewhat positive this week, according to Accern Sentiment Analysis. The research group identifies negative and positive media coverage by analyzing more than 20 million news and blog sources in real time. Accern ranks coverage of public companies on a scale of negative one to one, with scores closest to one being the most favorable. Cass Information Systems earned a coverage optimism score of 0.18 on Accern’s scale. Accern also assigned media stories about the business services provider an impact score of 44.0125451243393 out of 100, indicating that recent media coverage is somewhat unlikely to have an impact on the stock’s share price in the immediate future.

Best Medical Stocks To Buy Right Now: TerraForm Power, Inc.(TERP)

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Jason Hall, George Budwell, and Daniel Miller]

    For instance, TerraForm Power Inc. (NASDAQ:TERP) is easy to miss because it operates in what's still something of a niche: owning renewable energy projects and selling the electricity to utilities and industrial users. Then you have Stanley Black & Decker, Inc. (NYSE:SWK), the company behind a handful of relatively well-known tool brands but not one that's widely known among investors. It can get even more obscure, like Petmed Express Inc. (NASDAQ:PETS), the online pet pharmacy that's certainly not a household name for most people and certainly not investors. 

  • [By Matthew DiLallo]

    As that table shows, FFO, which is a proxy for cash flow, dipped slightly overall in the second quarter, with a bigger decline on a per unit basis due to the recent sale of equity to fund its growth initiatives, including its investment in wind and solar company TerraForm Power (NASDAQ:TERP).

  • [By Matthew DiLallo]

    Shares of wind and solar power company TerraForm Power (NASDAQ:TERP) have been scorching hot in recent months, rising more than 9% in the last quarter alone. Because of that, some investors might wonder if TerraForm Power's stock is still a buy. While that recent pop suggests that shares aren't as cheap as they were, it doesn't mean they're not still attractive, especially considering that the stock is down about 2% for the year and sits more than 15% below its 52-week high.

  • [By Maxx Chatsko]

    That means there's a whole lot of money to be made for the companies cashing in on the trend. The same can be said for investors when those renewable businesses divert excess cash flow into the pockets of shareholders. Luckily, there are quite a few solid dividend stocks to buy in renewable energy. Here's why investors should take a closer look at TerraForm Power (NASDAQ:TERP), Pattern Energy (NASDAQ:PEGI), and NextEra Energy (NYSE:NEE).

  • [By Jason Hall]

    It might be surprising to learn that there are a handful of solid dividend stocks in the renewables space: A segment more readily known for high-growth (or just high-risk) solar stocks is also where you can find some of the best dividend stocks out there. Three that look particularly compelling today are Pattern Energy Group (NASDAQ:PEGI), TerraForm Power (NASDAQ:TERP), and NextEra Energy Partners (NYSE:NEP).

Friday, March 15, 2019

Want a stronger economy? Support financially literate girls and women

The recent U.S. government shutdown reminded us of the importance of financial literacy by highlighting how unprepared many U.S. households were to weather the month-long storm.

According to a survey by Prudential Financial, more than a quarter of federal employees missed a mortgage or rent payment, while nearly half fell behind on bills during the shutdown.

Ensuring that girls and women, in particular, understand the basics of personal finance and economics — not just to be ready for rainy days but also to plan for a successful financial life — is critical for at least two key reasons: American women often live longer than men and more frequently manage their household's finances.

More from Invest in You:
Here's how to get the job you really want
Friends don't let friends stay clueless about money
Five easy ways to save $1,000 in three months

Educated girls and women increase the odds that families will be able to manage costs such as college, health care and retirement. Financially secure families, in turn, improve the outlook for the broader U.S. economy.

There is work to be done. A study of 8- to 17-year-old girls and their parents by the Girl Scout Research Institute found nearly all girls surveyed wanting jobs and expecting to take care of their families, but having little confidence around personal finances.

"Educated girls and women increase the odds that families will be able to manage costs such as college, health care and retirement." -Rebecca Patterson, Managing Director and Chief Investment Officer, Bessemer Trust

Only about a third of girls said they are knowledgeable about how to invest money and make it grow, while just more than 10 percent felt very confident about financial decisions.

Other recent studies show similar trends among women — both a lack of confidence and a lack of planning for life events such as retirement, even after accounting for education and income levels.

Boosting our economy through greater female financial literacy will take time and require greater focus from both public and private sectors. But there is plenty we can do today — even simple things. Encourage girls to study math and look for ways for them to make money (lemonade stands, babysitting, etc). Talk with girls about how to manage earnings (saving versus spending or investing). Consider a child-friendly savings account.

Talk about the family's finances. Explain the value of money when you shop. Push your local schools to incorporate basic economics and financial literacy in curriculum. Anyone who wants a strong U.S. economy should push for a financially literate population — especially girls and women.

Tune In for Rebecca on Closing Bell today, 3/13

show chapters Staying the course will benefit you in the long run Staying the course will benefit you in the long run    12:44 PM ET Wed, 13 Feb 2019 | 00:48

Disclosure: NBCUniversal and Comcast Ventures are investors in Acorns.

Wednesday, March 13, 2019

Ultra Clean (UCTT) Downgraded by ValuEngine

ValuEngine downgraded shares of Ultra Clean (NASDAQ:UCTT) from a hold rating to a sell rating in a research report sent to investors on Saturday.

Several other equities research analysts have also commented on the stock. Craig Hallum lowered shares of Ultra Clean from a buy rating to a hold rating in a report on Friday, February 22nd. Needham & Company LLC reaffirmed a buy rating and issued a $15.00 price target (up from $13.00) on shares of Ultra Clean in a report on Friday, February 22nd. Finally, BidaskClub lowered shares of Ultra Clean from a buy rating to a hold rating in a report on Friday, March 1st. Two investment analysts have rated the stock with a sell rating, one has given a hold rating and five have given a buy rating to the company. The stock currently has a consensus rating of Hold and an average target price of $20.60.

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NASDAQ UCTT opened at $10.11 on Friday. The company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.74, a quick ratio of 1.63 and a current ratio of 2.76. Ultra Clean has a 1 year low of $6.94 and a 1 year high of $21.95. The firm has a market capitalization of $384.25 million, a P/E ratio of 6.09, a PEG ratio of 0.64 and a beta of 1.28.

Ultra Clean (NASDAQ:UCTT) last released its earnings results on Thursday, February 21st. The semiconductor company reported $0.23 earnings per share (EPS) for the quarter, missing the consensus estimate of $0.25 by ($0.02). Ultra Clean had a net margin of 3.34% and a return on equity of 15.56%. The firm had revenue of $257.39 million during the quarter, compared to analyst estimates of $248.30 million. On average, analysts expect that Ultra Clean will post 0.86 earnings per share for the current fiscal year.

In other Ultra Clean news, CFO Sheri Savage sold 30,000 shares of the company’s stock in a transaction on Thursday, March 7th. The shares were sold at an average price of $10.17, for a total value of $305,100.00. Following the sale, the chief financial officer now directly owns 135,491 shares of the company’s stock, valued at $1,377,943.47. The transaction was disclosed in a filing with the SEC, which is available through the SEC website. 1.90% of the stock is currently owned by corporate insiders.

A number of large investors have recently bought and sold shares of UCTT. Benjamin F. Edwards & Company Inc. boosted its stake in shares of Ultra Clean by 57.8% during the 4th quarter. Benjamin F. Edwards & Company Inc. now owns 3,362 shares of the semiconductor company’s stock worth $28,000 after acquiring an additional 1,231 shares in the last quarter. Bank of Montreal Can boosted its stake in shares of Ultra Clean by 170.5% during the 4th quarter. Bank of Montreal Can now owns 4,184 shares of the semiconductor company’s stock worth $36,000 after acquiring an additional 2,637 shares in the last quarter. Advisory Services Network LLC boosted its stake in shares of Ultra Clean by 104.7% during the 4th quarter. Advisory Services Network LLC now owns 4,565 shares of the semiconductor company’s stock worth $39,000 after acquiring an additional 2,335 shares in the last quarter. Penserra Capital Management LLC purchased a new stake in shares of Ultra Clean during the 4th quarter worth about $44,000. Finally, Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. NY boosted its stake in shares of Ultra Clean by 273.4% during the 4th quarter. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. NY now owns 12,360 shares of the semiconductor company’s stock worth $105,000 after acquiring an additional 9,050 shares in the last quarter. 87.52% of the stock is currently owned by institutional investors.

Ultra Clean Company Profile

Ultra Clean Holdings, Inc designs, develops, prototypes, engineers, manufactures, and tests production tools, modules, and subsystems for the semiconductor and display capital equipment industries primarily in North America, Asia, and Europe. It offers precision robotic systems that are used when accurate controlled motion is required; gas delivery systems, which include one or more gas lines consisting of small diameter internally polished stainless steel tubing products, filters, mass flow controllers, regulators, pressure transducers and valves, component heaters, and an integrated electronic and/or pneumatic control system; and various industrial and automation production equipment products.

Further Reading: Investing in Dividend Stocks

To view ValuEngine’s full report, visit ValuEngine’s official website.

Analyst Recommendations for Ultra Clean (NASDAQ:UCTT)

Tuesday, March 12, 2019

CELYAD SA/ADR (CYAD) Receives Consensus Rating of “Buy” from Analysts

CELYAD SA/ADR (NASDAQ:CYAD) has received a consensus rating of “Buy” from the seven ratings firms that are currently covering the stock, Marketbeat Ratings reports. Two investment analysts have rated the stock with a hold rating and five have issued a buy rating on the company. The average twelve-month target price among brokerages that have issued a report on the stock in the last year is $47.50.

A number of analysts have commented on the stock. Zacks Investment Research upgraded shares of CELYAD SA/ADR from a “hold” rating to a “buy” rating and set a $31.00 price target for the company in a research note on Thursday, November 15th. HC Wainwright restated a “buy” rating and set a $46.00 price target on shares of CELYAD SA/ADR in a research note on Monday, November 12th. William Blair restated a “buy” rating on shares of CELYAD SA/ADR in a research note on Monday, November 12th. Finally, Piper Jaffray Companies decreased their price target on shares of CELYAD SA/ADR to $51.00 and set an “overweight” rating for the company in a research note on Monday, November 12th.

Get CELYAD SA/ADR alerts:

CYAD stock traded up $0.18 during midday trading on Monday, reaching $20.99. 2,633 shares of the company’s stock traded hands, compared to its average volume of 4,687. The firm has a market capitalization of $211.36 million, a PE ratio of -5.93 and a beta of 1.86. CELYAD SA/ADR has a 52 week low of $15.36 and a 52 week high of $38.48.

Institutional investors and hedge funds have recently bought and sold shares of the business. Millennium Management LLC purchased a new position in CELYAD SA/ADR during the 2nd quarter worth $582,000. Wells Fargo & Company MN boosted its holdings in CELYAD SA/ADR by 1,109.0% during the 3rd quarter. Wells Fargo & Company MN now owns 6,045 shares of the company’s stock worth $160,000 after acquiring an additional 5,545 shares during the last quarter. Finally, Victory Capital Management Inc. boosted its holdings in CELYAD SA/ADR by 2.8% during the 3rd quarter. Victory Capital Management Inc. now owns 621,162 shares of the company’s stock worth $16,374,000 after acquiring an additional 17,160 shares during the last quarter. 7.29% of the stock is currently owned by hedge funds and other institutional investors.

About CELYAD SA/ADR

Celyad SA, a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company, focuses on the development of CAR-T cell-based therapies. The company utilizes its expertise in cell engineering to target cancer. Its CAR-T cell platform has the potential to treats a range of solid and hematologic tumors. The company's lead drug product candidate, CYAD-01 (CAR-T NKG2D), has been evaluated in a Phase I clinical trial to assess the safety and clinical activity of multiple administrations of autologous CYAD-01 cells in seven refractory cancers, including five solid tumors, such as colorectal, ovarian, bladder, triple-negative breast, and pancreatic cancers; and two hematological tumors comprising acute myeloid leukemia and multiple myeloma.

Read More: S&P 500 Index

Analyst Recommendations for CELYAD SA/ADR (NASDAQ:CYAD)

Monday, March 11, 2019

Better Buy: Square vs. Mastercard

Several converging trends appear to be increasing the use of electronic and digital payment methods, seemingly at the expense of cash. E-commerce sales, where credit card use is twice as high as transactions made in person, continue to outpace total retail sales in the U.S., according to the Census Bureau. Global e-commerce sales are expected to grow to $4.8 trillion by 2021, an approximate 75% increase over 2018's projected totals. Two companies poised to take advantage of this trend are Mastercard Inc (NYSE:MA) and Square Inc (NYSE:SQ). Let's take a closer look at each to determine which of these companies makes for a better investment today.

Two different-colored Post-It notes with the words "WIN" written on them using a black marker side by side.

Both Mastercard and Square offer investors the chance to capitalize on the growing trend of the digitization of money. Image source: Getty Images.

The case for Square

In Square's 2018 fourth quarter, adjusted revenue rose to $464 million, a 64% increase year over year, and adjusted EBITDA grew to $81 million, a 97% increase year over year. The primary driver of Square's incredible growth remains its payment processing operations. In Q4, gross payment volume, the total amount of money processed by Square, grew 28% to $23 billion. Transaction-based revenue and profit rose 27% and 29%, respectively.

What's important to note, however, is that Square is no longer a simple smartphone attachment that accepts card and digital payments at the point of sale. It has developed a robust ecosystem that small businesses are increasingly using to run their entire businesses, including facilitating payroll, gaining immediate access to financing, booking appointments with customers, sending invoices, and setting up recurring payments -- to name just a few examples.

These services are accounted for in the company's subscription and services-based revenue, which continues to grow by leaps and bounds. In Q4, this segment saw revenue shoot up to $194 million, a 144% increase year over year. Even taking out the Weebly and Zesty acquisitions last year, the segment rose 112%. The growth was primarily driven by the Cash Card, Caviar, Instant Deposit, and Square Capital. These diverse features are not just driving revenue growth, but deepening Square's customers' dependence on the company's platform, making it more difficult for them to even consider leaving for a competitor.

The case for Mastercard

As a payments network, Mastercard makes its money by taking a small fraction of each transaction facilitated with one of its cards, whether literally or virtually. The company does not loan money to consumers -- that responsibility belongs to the issuing banks. The end result is an asset-light business model with high margins in a growing space that faces no credit liabilities -- nice!

In Mastercard's fourth quarter, revenue rose to $4.8 billion, a 15% increase year over year, and adjusted earnings per share (EPS) grew to $1.55, a 36% increase over last year's fourth quarter. The strong top- and bottom-line results were driven by growth in switched transactions, or the total number of transactions across Mastercard's network, and the total number of cards in circulation, which increased 13% and 5%, respectively.

Like Square, Mastercard is also working hard to deepen its relationships with its customers -- the financial institutions that issue its cards and the merchants that accept them. Through organic development and acquisitions, Mastercard has released a number of security, reward program management, and data analytics tools to supplement the core network service it provides. As financial institutions adopt these tools, it makes it more unlikely they will switch to rival Visa Inc (NYSE:V). In Q4, the "other revenues" segment, where these services are accounted for, rose to $996 million, a 17% increase over last year's quarter.

Final verdict? Look at the valuation

Full disclosure: I am bullish on both of these companies' futures, which is why both reside in my own personal portfolio. Square is becoming the commerce platform of choice for small brick-and-mortar business owners, as evidenced by its explosive growth rates. Mastercard sports an operating margin of 52.3%, incredibly high for a company its size. Better yet, the extra services it is developing give it a perfect place for the company to reinvest its profits back into its business.

While I like both companies very much, I own roughly twice as much, in real dollars, of Mastercard as I do Square. Why? Well, when comparing two companies that both show strong financial metrics with quality business models, I have to value each company's stock. In Mastercard's case, with a full-year adjusted EPS of $6.49, it has a P/E ratio of about 35. Not cheap, by any means, but for a company growing EPS at a 36% clip with high margins, within the ballpark of being fair.

Square's 2018 adjusted EPS was $0.46, giving the company a sky-high P/E ratio of about 170! In other words, while showing a much higher growth rate, it is evident that a lot of growth has already been priced into the stock. Of course, for a company just becoming profitable, the P/E ratio is not always the best way to value stocks. Yet, even when looking at the company's price-to-sales ratio, Square features a rich valuation.

There are a lot of good things to be said about each of these companies, and I personally believe both will beat the market in the years ahead. While Square can certainly appeal to growth investors willing to feature a little more risk in their portfolios, given the choice, I would invest in Mastercard over Square.

Saturday, March 9, 2019

BlackCoin (BLK) Trading 5.3% Higher Over Last Week

BlackCoin (CURRENCY:BLK) traded down 0.8% against the dollar during the 1-day period ending at 23:00 PM E.T. on March 9th. During the last week, BlackCoin has traded 5.3% higher against the dollar. BlackCoin has a total market cap of $6.88 million and $121,041.00 worth of BlackCoin was traded on exchanges in the last 24 hours. One BlackCoin coin can now be purchased for $0.11 or 0.00002788 BTC on popular cryptocurrency exchanges including CoinEgg, Upbit, Trade By Trade and Livecoin.

Here’s how similar cryptocurrencies have performed during the last 24 hours:

Get BlackCoin alerts: Qtum (QTUM) traded flat against the dollar and now trades at $2.17 or 0.00055008 BTC. BitBay (BAY) traded up 5.4% against the dollar and now trades at $0.0067 or 0.00000169 BTC. Rubycoin (RBY) traded 13% lower against the dollar and now trades at $0.22 or 0.00005565 BTC. Global Currency Reserve (GCR) traded up 0.8% against the dollar and now trades at $0.0344 or 0.00000873 BTC. Radium (RADS) traded 1.5% higher against the dollar and now trades at $0.70 or 0.00017788 BTC. NuShares (NSR) traded 0.9% higher against the dollar and now trades at $0.0002 or 0.00000006 BTC. Atmos (ATMOS) traded flat against the dollar and now trades at $0.0059 or 0.00000161 BTC.

About BlackCoin

BlackCoin is a proof-of-stake (PoS) coin that uses the Proof of Stake hashing algorithm. It was first traded on February 24th, 2014. BlackCoin’s total supply is 62,635,380 coins. BlackCoin’s official Twitter account is @CoinBlack and its Facebook page is accessible here. The Reddit community for BlackCoin is /r/blackcoin and the currency’s Github account can be viewed here. BlackCoin’s official website is blackcoin.org.

Buying and Selling BlackCoin

BlackCoin can be bought or sold on the following cryptocurrency exchanges: Trade By Trade, CoinExchange, Upbit, Bleutrade, LiteBit.eu, Tux Exchange, Livecoin, Bittylicious, CoinEgg, Cryptopia and Bittrex. It is usually not currently possible to buy alternative cryptocurrencies such as BlackCoin directly using US dollars. Investors seeking to trade BlackCoin should first buy Bitcoin or Ethereum using an exchange that deals in US dollars such as Changelly, GDAX or Gemini. Investors can then use their newly-acquired Bitcoin or Ethereum to buy BlackCoin using one of the exchanges listed above.

Friday, March 8, 2019

Here's Amazon's strategy to bring Hollywood into its shopping mall

When Amazon pursued the rights to a "Lord of the Rings" series in 2017, the company knew it would have to overcome some major obstacles to lure the J.R.R. Tolkien estate to its video-streaming platform.

Amazon was a relative newcomer in video, with no track record of shepherding a blockbuster series. HBO, meanwhile, could tout its long history of hits, most notably "Game of Thrones," a similarly epic series based on fantasy novels with a rabid fan base. Netflix, with more than 100 million subscribers, pioneered the on-demand model with hits such as "House of Cards" and "Orange is the New Black."

And not to be ignored, Apple was also in on the negotiations to acquire the rights for the upcoming TV show, according to people familiar with the matter.

Amazon didn't have much by way of Hollywood cred. What it had was the richest person on the planet in CEO Jeff Bezos, a big "Lord of the Rings" fan, who was promising the Amazon Studios team a huge budget to nab the series, a prequel to Tolkien's "The Fellowship of the Ring."

But money alone wasn't going to separate Amazon from the pack — Amazon's $250 million offer wasn't even the highest bid for the show's rights, according to a person familiar with the matter. The ultimate selling point, according to people with knowledge of the negotiations, related to Amazon's original business from over two decades ago: books.

The Tolkien estate was convinced that in promoting the series, Amazon could sell truckloads of Tolkien's fantasy novels, including "The Hobbit" and "The Silmarillion" as well as "The Lord of the Rings." During meetings with the Tolkien estate and publisher HarperCollins, Amazon's Sharon Tal Yguado, who was hired from Fox in 2017, demonstrated a near encyclopedic knowledge of Tolkien's characters, stories and geography, said the people, who asked not to be named because the talks were private.

Amazon's ability to connect content to commerce won over the Tolkien estate. But just in case, to seal the deal, Amazon sent representatives of the Tolkien estate and its law firm, Greenberg Glusker, several crates of brand-new Amazon Echo speakers. Tolkien's people were flattered, though they also joked that Amazon delivered the home assistants to eavesdrop on the negotiations, two of the people said.

The "Lord of the Rings" series will start production in the next two years.

The huge investment in a TV series has made Hollywood wonder just how much Bezos will spend on content. So far, Amazon has dabbled across the TV spectrum, with original content such as "Lord of the Rings," a growing back catalog of movies and shows, as well as live sports from the National Football League and the Premier League. Just last month, Bezos was spotted chatting with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell at the Super Bowl, a reminder that Amazon has several opportunities in the coming years to make a big splash in America's most lucrative sport. Meanwhile, The New York Post reported Thursday that Amazon is nearing a $3.5 billion deal to acquire the YES network, the regional sports network in New York that carries Yankees games.

Bezos has always taken the long view when getting into new business areas. Amazon Web Services launched in 2006 with simple hosted services targeted mostly at start-ups and companies with an experimental bent. By the time the rest of the industry realized Amazon was on to something and raced to launch their own cloud competitors, the company had built a huge lead. AWS now dominates the industry with 34 percent market share. It's the main driver of the company's profitability, earning $7.3 billion on sales of $25.7 billion last year — about 70 percent of the company's overall operating profit on only 10 percent of revenue.

The company can afford to take a similar long view with its media business and try many different approaches. So far, Amazon has used video primarily as a way to build Prime subscriptions. But the company's investments point to blending content and commerce in ways the world hasn't yet seen, eventually pitting Amazon against Apple and other tech giants for control of the home.

"Amazon hasn't gotten to the place yet where it has put together all of the levers that would make the video opportunity great," said Fred Seibert, the founder of independent production studio Frederator Networks, which is launching the animated show Costume Quest on Prime Video on Friday. "But five years from now, they're going to be one of the giants in media. There's no doubt about it."

Less threatening than Apple

When it comes to building businesses, Bezos doesn't follow traditional playbooks. Entertainment is no exception. Unlike HBO and Netflix, which buy content and spend on marketing and try to make all that money back through monthly subscriptions, Amazon has a more complex calculation that involves signing people up to Amazon Prime and making the annual membership package so compelling that they never leave.

If same-day and two-day delivery, Whole Foods discounts and unlimited music aren't enough, perhaps your addiction to "The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel," "Catastrophe" or "Lord of the Rings," plus a steady stream of exclusive feature-length films, will keep you happy. Jennifer Salke, who took the helm of Amazon Studios about a year ago, told the Hollywood Reporter last month that her strategy in acquiring content is to enhance Prime and "invest in things that we think will be great for the service."

Jennifer Salke Stephen Desaulniers | CNBC Jennifer Salke

Apple has a similar plan in mind with its yet-to-be-released streaming service, which will offer device owners free video and subscriptions to third-party cable channels, according to people familiar with the matter. The idea is to give users enough value that it becomes a hassle to ditch the hardware.

Amazon is so confident in Prime that last year it increased the yearly price to $119 from $99, the first hike since 2014. According to estimates from Consumer Intelligence Research, the number of Prime subscribers recently topped 100 million, and on average those customers spend about $1,400 per year, compared with about $600 per year for shoppers who aren't members.

Amazon is playing many games at once with media: It not only offers its own Netflix-like service but also its own streaming hardware — Fire TV devices — and connections to other content channels. Once in the Amazon universe, cord-cutters can pay for streaming services separate from a traditional cable bundle. For example, Prime users can add Showtime or Starz for $8.99 a month. Amazon takes a cut of the revenue, typically about 25 percent for the largest companies, when a customer signs up.

"We view them as a partner." -Jeff Hirsch, Starz COO

Amazon Channels — as the third-party service is known — has given traditional media companies a global platform to launch shows, said Jeff Hirsch, chief operating officer at Starz, which last year expanded into the U.K. and Germany.

Hirsch said Channels has helped Starz, which is owned by Lionsgate, attract a broader audience of subscribers, because they can get the channel via the Amazon app rather than having to download the separate Starz app through Roku, Apple TV or another streaming device. Amazon also poses less of an existential threat in media than Apple, which blew up the music industry by eradicating album sales with 99-cent digital tracks, or Netflix, the original Hollywood disruptor.

"We view them as a partner," Hirsch said. "We have a wonderful relationship with Amazon, and it's gotten stronger. We've been very successful in terms of driving customers to their platform, and they've been great partners in helping us grow digitally."

The Channels business replicates the traditional TV model of aggregating video channels, but without forcing customers to pay for a package of stuff they'll never watch. And there's all sorts of niche content that can now potentially find an audience.

Think of it as an extension of Amazon's retail play: Create the world's largest online shopping mall and then invite smaller businesses to pay a toll in exchange for using the site to reach many millions of new customers. Seibert envisions Costume Quest, which is about supernatural monsters, being promoted alongside searches for physical comic books and related merchandise.

Amazon will be "one of the biggest friends to viable specialty channels in the next several years," Seibert said. "Offering media is a great service for customers looking for something special."

From hobby to strategy

If Amazon Channels is the neutral platform playing nice with content creators, Amazon Studios is a different beast altogether. It competes directly with the entertainment industry for original shows and movies.

Amazon will spend $5 billion to $6 billion this year on content, according to an estimate from BTIG media analyst Rich Greenfield. That is a decent-sized bet for Hollywood but a tiny fraction of Amazon's operating expenses, which topped $220 billion last year. Netflix will likely spend about $15 billion on content this year, Greenfield estimated.

There's no questioning Bezos' willingness to up the ante. He's got an increasingly healthy balance sheet — net income tripled to $10 billion in 2018. And investors have given him plenty of rope when it comes to spending.

Still, Amazon hasn't rolled out a three- or five-year plan to reach Netflix-level spending. In fact, the company has no specific multiyear road map at all when it comes to content purchases, according to people familiar with the matter. Bezos and Jeff Blackburn, senior vice president of business development and digital entertainment, prefer not to plan more than 12 months in advance, the people said.

That lack of planning and strategic focus may help explain why Amazon Studios has floundered at times in recent years. Prior to Salke taking over last year, Amazon Studios had been run by Roy Price, who departed Amazon amid sexual harassment allegations in late 2017.

show chapters Roy Price, Amazon Studios Amazon Studios chief resigns after harassment allegations    4:51 PM ET Tue, 17 Oct 2017 | 00:16

Like Salke, Price's stated strategy was to invest in shows that supported Prime. Amazon looked at who was watching a given show and saw how much that person was using Prime for other perks, mainly free shipping. If a Prime subscriber watched a show a lot and wasn't taking advantage of Prime's other benefits, the show got credit for that customer's subscription dollars, according to people familiar with Amazon's internal methods.

Price was focused on high-minded, potentially award-winning content to lure users into Prime. His team had several hits, including "Transparent" and, more recently, "The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel," which won the 2018 Emmy Award for best comedy series. He also bought "Manchester By The Sea," winner of the 2017 Academy Award for best original screenplay, and "The Big Sick," which received an Academy Award nomination for its screenplay.

Price also had some expensive misfires, such as Spike Lee's 2015 film "Chi-Raq" and a disastrous five-year movie deal with Woody Allen, who's now suing Amazon Studios in a $68 million breach-of-contract lawsuit.

In his three years running the business, Price purposefully avoided mass-appeal broadcast content, so that he could clearly differentiate Amazon from normal TV and justify the Prime membership. But buying niche, art house content wasn't a great approach to drawing tons of new people to Prime. David E. Kelley, the creator of shows such as "Ally McBeal," described Amazon's entertainment division in 2017 as "a bit of a gong show," in an interview with The Wall Street Journal. He added, "They are in way over their heads."

Insert Salke, who was hired because of her prior experience at NBC and 20th Century Fox, where she bought and developed shows including "Modern Family," "Glee" and "The Good Place." Her mandate was to deliver broader hits with more of a broadcast sensibility, according to people familiar with the matter.

Under Salke, Amazon has finally started to focus on "films and series with broader appeal that resonate with the wider consumer base that uses Amazon," said Floris Bauer, the co-founder and president of independent studio Gunpowder & Sky. "It's not to say you can't do award-winning films, but you're only hitting a certain group. It was a missed opportunity initially."

Amazon didn't make Salke available for an interview for this story. An Amazon spokeswoman declined to comment for the story.

The next step: Connecting content to retail

Perhaps the biggest wild card in Amazon's role in the entertainment universe is live sports, a market that's still dominated by legacy networks and cable and satellite companies.

Amazon is tinkering around the edges. Last year, the company inked a deal with Ultimate Fighting Championship to air pay-per-view fights. There's no discount available for Prime customers, but Prime is still very much in the equation. In the negotiations, Amazon asked the mixed martial arts league if it would consider scheduling more pay-per-view female fights, people with knowledge of the discussions said. Amazon told UFC its internal data indicated that an increase in female matches would appeal to Prime users, the people said, thus offering opportunities to promote Prime before, during and after matches.

The pitch didn't work — UFC said top-level female fighting is still in its infancy and can't fill out a schedule — but the request underscored Amazon's broader effort.

In August, Amazon hired Marie Donoghue from ESPN to run sports programming, and the company will almost certainly become more aggressive at buying live sports rights in the coming years, according to people familiar with the company's long-term strategy. Separate from Amazon Studios, Donoghue's team also reports to Blackburn.

Paige VanZant attempts to land a kick against Jessica-Rose Clark during the UFC Fight Night event inside the Scottrade Center on January 14, 2018. Dilip Vishwanat | Zuffa LLC | Getty Images Paige VanZant attempts to land a kick against Jessica-Rose Clark during the UFC Fight Night event inside the Scottrade Center on January 14, 2018.

The NFL is by far the most-watched league in the U.S., and chatter about its potential future with Amazon has picked up since Bezos' appearance at the Super Bowl.

AT&T's DirecTV has locked up NFL Sunday Ticket, which allows millions of Americans to watch out-of-market games on satellite TV or their mobile devices, through 2022. Sunday Ticket was central to AT&T's $49 billion acquisition of DirecTV in 2015, and the joint company is now paying $1.5 billion a year for the rights.

But the NFL has an opt-out clause after the 2019 season that would allow it to end the DirecTV deal or potentially sell streaming rights separately.

That's not Amazon's only opportunity for getting into the action. ESPN's contract for Monday night games ends after the 2021 season, and Fox and CBS own rights to Sunday games through 2022. Thursday night games, currently on Fox, and Sunday night games on NBC come up for renewal at the same time.

Amazon has streamed Thursday night games globally for the past two seasons and will next year as well, but those rights are digital only, so they don't require fans to choose Amazon over traditional TV. The company has also been pursuing baseball, holding talks with the New York Yankees for joint ownership over the YES Network, CNBC has reported. And Amazon struck a deal last year to exclusively stream 20 Premier League soccer matches.

It all adds up to a hodgepodge of assets that Amazon could potentially own as it expands its empire.

'All-out war'

"This is not just about showcasing football games on Thursday night," Greenfield said.

"This is selling you a jersey. This is potentially selling you a ticket. There's so much more that Amazon can do than just simply stream a game. They can probably sell advertising better than any TV network because of the data they have and they know exactly what I like."

Amazon has one other weapon that gives it a distinct advantage over Netflix and its other media peers: the Echo. As more of the Alexa-powered devices populate consumers' homes, it's not hard to imagine tighter integrations with smart TVs. That opens Amazon up to all sorts of untapped opportunities with advertising and cross-selling products.

"Amazon knows how to run a store," said Seibert of Frederator Networks. "They're walking toward how to make media work. If they can marry the two, everyone else in the media business will start to scramble."

It was the Echo, after all, that Amazon used to sweeten its offer to the Tolkien estate for "Lord of the Rings."

"There is an all-out war for the control of your media life," Greenfield said. "I think the reality is these big tech platforms, who have valuations and market caps and cash piles that are massive relative to traditional media, they are just getting started."

— With assistance from Michelle Castillo

Disclosure: NBCUniversal is the parent company of NBC and CNBC.

Thursday, March 7, 2019

Hold Supreme Industries; target of Rs 1018: Geojit


Geojit's research report on Supreme Industries


Supreme Industries Ltd (SIL) is India's leading player in plastic products; the wide range of offering includes Plastic Piping system, Packaging, Industrial and Consumer products. Despite 10% YoY revenue growth in Q3FY19, PAT declined by 22% YoY due to weak operating performance. Volume growth was muted at 4% YoY due to poor performance of packaging segment and industrial segment.


Outlook


However, given weak earnings outlook in the near term we downgrade SIL to "Hold" from "Accumulate" with a target price of Rs1,018.


For all recommendations report, click here


Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by investment experts/broking houses/rating agencies on moneycontrol.com are their own, and not that of the website or its management. Moneycontrol.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.

Read More First Published on Mar 7, 2019 02:45 pm

Wednesday, March 6, 2019

1,712 Shares in ANSYS, Inc. (ANSS) Purchased by Wisconsin Capital Management LLC

Wisconsin Capital Management LLC bought a new position in shares of ANSYS, Inc. (NASDAQ:ANSS) during the fourth quarter, according to the company in its most recent 13F filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The firm bought 1,712 shares of the software maker’s stock, valued at approximately $245,000.

Other hedge funds and other institutional investors have also recently made changes to their positions in the company. AdvisorNet Financial Inc boosted its position in ANSYS by 77.8% during the fourth quarter. AdvisorNet Financial Inc now owns 320 shares of the software maker’s stock worth $46,000 after acquiring an additional 140 shares during the last quarter. Meeder Asset Management Inc. purchased a new position in ANSYS during the fourth quarter worth approximately $69,000. Carroll Financial Associates Inc. raised its stake in ANSYS by 36.9% during the fourth quarter. Carroll Financial Associates Inc. now owns 527 shares of the software maker’s stock worth $77,000 after purchasing an additional 142 shares during the period. Enlightenment Research LLC purchased a new position in ANSYS during the fourth quarter worth approximately $101,000. Finally, Private Capital Group LLC raised its stake in ANSYS by 9.0% during the fourth quarter. Private Capital Group LLC now owns 791 shares of the software maker’s stock worth $113,000 after purchasing an additional 65 shares during the period. Hedge funds and other institutional investors own 92.84% of the company’s stock.

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In other news, CEO Ajei Gopal sold 883 shares of the firm’s stock in a transaction on Thursday, February 28th. The shares were sold at an average price of $186.00, for a total value of $164,238.00. The sale was disclosed in a filing with the SEC, which is accessible through this link. Also, VP Richard S. Mahoney sold 8,347 shares of the firm’s stock in a transaction on Thursday, January 3rd. The shares were sold at an average price of $140.44, for a total transaction of $1,172,252.68. The disclosure for this sale can be found here. In the last three months, insiders sold 28,475 shares of company stock worth $4,790,266. Insiders own 1.10% of the company’s stock.

Shares of ANSS stock traded up $0.11 during mid-day trading on Wednesday, reaching $178.86. The company’s stock had a trading volume of 6,982 shares, compared to its average volume of 438,953. ANSYS, Inc. has a 12-month low of $136.80 and a 12-month high of $190.45. The company has a market cap of $14.66 billion, a PE ratio of 34.43 and a beta of 1.34.

ANSYS (NASDAQ:ANSS) last issued its earnings results on Wednesday, February 27th. The software maker reported $2.13 EPS for the quarter, beating the Zacks’ consensus estimate of $1.49 by $0.64. ANSYS had a net margin of 27.00% and a return on equity of 15.33%. The business had revenue of $340.07 million for the quarter, compared to the consensus estimate of $365.03 million. During the same quarter last year, the firm posted $1.07 EPS. The business’s revenue for the quarter was up 12.1% compared to the same quarter last year. As a group, equities analysts forecast that ANSYS, Inc. will post 4.95 earnings per share for the current fiscal year.

A number of equities analysts have weighed in on ANSS shares. Zacks Investment Research raised shares of ANSYS from a “hold” rating to a “buy” rating and set a $178.00 price target on the stock in a research note on Thursday, January 24th. Wedbush increased their price target on shares of ANSYS from $192.00 to $201.00 and gave the stock an “outperform” rating in a research note on Friday, March 1st. Stifel Nicolaus started coverage on shares of ANSYS in a research note on Tuesday, December 18th. They set a “hold” rating and a $162.00 price target on the stock. BidaskClub raised shares of ANSYS from a “sell” rating to a “hold” rating in a research note on Saturday, January 19th. Finally, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group increased their price target on shares of ANSYS to $203.00 and gave the stock an “overweight” rating in a research note on Thursday, February 28th. One research analyst has rated the stock with a sell rating, six have given a hold rating and eleven have issued a buy rating to the company. The company presently has a consensus rating of “Buy” and an average price target of $180.77.

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ANSYS Profile

ANSYS, Inc develops and markets engineering simulation software and services worldwide. The company offers ANSYS Workbench, a framework upon which the company's engineering simulation technologies are built; ANSYS multiphysics software to simulate the interactions between structures, heat transfer, fluids, and electronics in a unified engineering simulation environment; and structural analysis product suite that provides simulation tools for product design and optimization.

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Institutional Ownership by Quarter for ANSYS (NASDAQ:ANSS)

Dragonglass (DGS) Market Capitalization Tops $75,206.00

Dragonglass (CURRENCY:DGS) traded down 19.6% against the US dollar during the 1-day period ending at 19:00 PM ET on March 3rd. Dragonglass has a total market capitalization of $75,206.00 and $98.00 worth of Dragonglass was traded on exchanges in the last 24 hours. Over the last seven days, Dragonglass has traded 59.9% higher against the US dollar. One Dragonglass token can now be purchased for $0.0003 or 0.00000008 BTC on popular cryptocurrency exchanges including EtherDelta (ForkDelta) and CoinExchange.

Here is how other cryptocurrencies have performed over the last 24 hours:

Get Dragonglass alerts: XRP (XRP) traded 1% lower against the dollar and now trades at $0.31 or 0.00008139 BTC. Tether (USDT) traded 0.1% lower against the dollar and now trades at $1.01 or 0.00026300 BTC. Stellar (XLM) traded 3.6% higher against the dollar and now trades at $0.0872 or 0.00002271 BTC. Binance Coin (BNB) traded down 2.7% against the dollar and now trades at $11.54 or 0.00300455 BTC. TRON (TRX) traded 1% lower against the dollar and now trades at $0.0227 or 0.00000591 BTC. Bitcoin SV (BSV) traded down 2.4% against the dollar and now trades at $65.42 or 0.01703346 BTC. NEO (NEO) traded 1.4% lower against the dollar and now trades at $8.71 or 0.00226768 BTC. VeChain (VET) traded 1.5% lower against the dollar and now trades at $0.0044 or 0.00000116 BTC. Basic Attention Token (BAT) traded down 4.2% against the dollar and now trades at $0.17 or 0.00004441 BTC. TrueUSD (TUSD) traded 0% lower against the dollar and now trades at $1.01 or 0.00026401 BTC.

About Dragonglass

Dragonglass’ total supply is 1,324,993,251 tokens and its circulating supply is 244,801,094 tokens. Dragonglass’ official website is dragonglass.com. The official message board for Dragonglass is medium.com/dragonglasscom. Dragonglass’ official Twitter account is @dragonglasscom and its Facebook page is accessible here.

Buying and Selling Dragonglass

Dragonglass can be purchased on the following cryptocurrency exchanges: EtherDelta (ForkDelta) and CoinExchange. It is usually not possible to buy alternative cryptocurrencies such as Dragonglass directly using U.S. dollars. Investors seeking to acquire Dragonglass should first buy Ethereum or Bitcoin using an exchange that deals in U.S. dollars such as Gemini, Coinbase or GDAX. Investors can then use their newly-acquired Ethereum or Bitcoin to buy Dragonglass using one of the exchanges listed above.

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Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Baozun (BZUN) Upgraded to Buy at BidaskClub

Baozun (NASDAQ:BZUN) was upgraded by stock analysts at BidaskClub from a “hold” rating to a “buy” rating in a note issued to investors on Thursday.

A number of other equities analysts have also issued reports on the company. ValuEngine lowered Baozun from a “buy” rating to a “hold” rating in a report on Monday, November 12th. Zacks Investment Research lowered Baozun from a “hold” rating to a “strong sell” rating in a report on Tuesday, November 27th. Two investment analysts have rated the stock with a hold rating and two have given a buy rating to the company. Baozun currently has a consensus rating of “Buy” and an average target price of $50.71.

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Shares of BZUN stock opened at $37.06 on Thursday. Baozun has a 12-month low of $27.81 and a 12-month high of $67.41. The company has a market capitalization of $2.05 billion, a P/E ratio of 63.76 and a beta of 3.21. The company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.03, a current ratio of 2.01 and a quick ratio of 1.57.

A number of hedge funds have recently modified their holdings of BZUN. Quantamental Technologies LLC bought a new position in Baozun in the 4th quarter worth approximately $47,000. Daiwa SB Investments Ltd. bought a new position in Baozun in the 4th quarter worth approximately $117,000. Oppenheimer Asset Management Inc. acquired a new stake in Baozun in the fourth quarter worth approximately $136,000. Mitsubishi UFJ Kokusai Asset Management Co. Ltd. lifted its position in Baozun by 13.5% in the fourth quarter. Mitsubishi UFJ Kokusai Asset Management Co. Ltd. now owns 5,057 shares of the technology company’s stock worth $143,000 after purchasing an additional 600 shares during the period. Finally, Financial Advocates Investment Management lifted its position in Baozun by 23.6% in the fourth quarter. Financial Advocates Investment Management now owns 2,225 shares of the technology company’s stock worth $159,000 after purchasing an additional 425 shares during the period. 54.02% of the stock is owned by institutional investors and hedge funds.

Baozun Company Profile

Baozun Inc provides e-commerce solutions for brand partners in the People's Republic of China. It offers end-to-end e-commerce solutions, including IT infrastructure setup and integration, online store design and setup, store operations, visual merchandizing and marketing campaigns, customer services, warehousing, and order fulfillment.

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Sunday, March 3, 2019

Clear Harbor Asset Management LLC Has $8.37 Million Holdings in Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. Co. Ltd. (

Clear Harbor Asset Management LLC grew its position in Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. Co. Ltd. (NYSE:TSM) by 1.0% in the fourth quarter, according to its most recent Form 13F filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The institutional investor owned 226,687 shares of the semiconductor company’s stock after buying an additional 2,180 shares during the quarter. Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. accounts for 1.9% of Clear Harbor Asset Management LLC’s holdings, making the stock its 8th largest holding. Clear Harbor Asset Management LLC’s holdings in Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. were worth $8,367,000 at the end of the most recent reporting period.

Several other hedge funds and other institutional investors have also recently modified their holdings of TSM. WCM Investment Management LLC raised its stake in Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. by 4.7% during the 4th quarter. WCM Investment Management LLC now owns 24,640,081 shares of the semiconductor company’s stock valued at $909,465,000 after acquiring an additional 1,099,476 shares during the last quarter. Fort Point Capital Partners LLC raised its stake in Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. by 11.5% during the 4th quarter. Fort Point Capital Partners LLC now owns 9,675 shares of the semiconductor company’s stock valued at $357,000 after acquiring an additional 1,000 shares during the last quarter. Northcape Capital Pty Ltd raised its stake in Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. by 22.7% during the 4th quarter. Northcape Capital Pty Ltd now owns 3,185,706 shares of the semiconductor company’s stock valued at $117,584,000 after acquiring an additional 589,766 shares during the last quarter. Mirae Asset Global Investments Co. Ltd. raised its stake in Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. by 13.9% during the 4th quarter. Mirae Asset Global Investments Co. Ltd. now owns 365,899 shares of the semiconductor company’s stock valued at $13,505,000 after acquiring an additional 44,532 shares during the last quarter. Finally, Brandes Investment Partners LP raised its stake in Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. by 19.5% during the 4th quarter. Brandes Investment Partners LP now owns 91,859 shares of the semiconductor company’s stock valued at $3,391,000 after acquiring an additional 14,992 shares during the last quarter. 19.24% of the stock is owned by institutional investors and hedge funds.

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NYSE TSM opened at $39.33 on Friday. The company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.04, a quick ratio of 2.34 and a current ratio of 2.67. Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. Co. Ltd. has a 12-month low of $34.22 and a 12-month high of $45.75. The company has a market cap of $203.94 billion, a price-to-earnings ratio of 17.56, a price-to-earnings-growth ratio of 1.20 and a beta of 0.97.

Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. (NYSE:TSM) last released its earnings results on Thursday, January 17th. The semiconductor company reported $0.63 earnings per share (EPS) for the quarter, hitting the Thomson Reuters’ consensus estimate of $0.63. Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. had a return on equity of 22.33% and a net margin of 34.04%. The company had revenue of $9.40 billion for the quarter. As a group, equities research analysts forecast that Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. Co. Ltd. will post 2.19 EPS for the current year.

TSM has been the subject of several analyst reports. Zacks Investment Research raised Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. from a “sell” rating to a “hold” rating in a research note on Friday, November 9th. ValuEngine raised Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. from a “hold” rating to a “buy” rating in a research note on Tuesday, December 18th. Morgan Stanley upgraded Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. from an “underweight” rating to an “equal weight” rating in a research report on Friday, November 16th. Finally, CLSA cut Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. from an “outperform” rating to an “underperform” rating in a research report on Thursday, January 17th. Two equities research analysts have rated the stock with a sell rating, two have given a hold rating and three have issued a buy rating to the company’s stock. The stock currently has a consensus rating of “Hold” and a consensus target price of $50.00.

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About Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited, together with its subsidiaries, engages in manufacturing, selling, packaging, testing, and computer-aided design of integrated circuits and other semiconductor devices. The company manufactures masks and electronic spare parts; researches, develops, designs, manufactures, sells, packages, and tests color filters; and offers customer and engineering support services.

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Institutional Ownership by Quarter for Taiwan Semiconductor Mfg. (NYSE:TSM)

Saturday, March 2, 2019

Fitbit Added 2.2 Million Active Users Last Year

Fitbit (NYSE:FIT) only discloses its active user metrics on an annual basis, and the company reported fourth-quarter and full-year 2018 results this week. The wearables specialist's outlook failed to impress investors, sending shares lower. Fitbit remains in the midst of an ongoing turnaround, driven by its transition to smartwatches.

The company added 2.2 million active users in 2018, about the same number of active users it added in 2017.

Collection of Fitbit Versas next to each other

Image source: Fitbit.

27.6 million and counting

Fitbit's active user base grew from 25.4 million at the end of 2017 to 27.6 million at the end of 2018. Active user growth has moderated in recent years, after Fitbit's initial surge in popularity in 2015, when it added over 10 million active users.

Chart showing Fitbit active user growth

Data source: SEC filings. Chart by author. User figures as of end of period.

The company sold 13.9 million wearable devices throughout the year, with 38% of all device activations coming from repeat customers. Of those repeat customers, 52% of activations came from customers who were previously inactive but have become active again.

Here's the bad news: If 62% of device shipments in 2018 -- 8.6 million -- went to new customers but active users only increased by 2.2 million, that suggests many of those devices are not being used. High abandonment rates have long been a problem for Fitbit.

The Versa, Fitbit's mainstream smartwatch, has been instrumental in growing the user base, CEO James Park said on the earnings call. "A part of the strategy is growing our community of active users," Park added. "We are bringing new users onto the platform with new products and experiences, and we are successfully retaining our existing customers."

Improving active user monetization

Beyond just device sales, Fitbit is now turning its attention to improving monetization of its growing active user base. The need to build a stronger subscription business has been apparent for quite some time now, but Fitbit still derives less than 1% of revenue from subscription-based services, and the Fitbit Coach subscriber base is tiny. I estimated in November that Fitbit Coach has at most 393,000 subscribers.

Park said that Fitbit is planning to launch "an enhanced paid premium service offering" in the back half of the year in an effort to "more effectively monetize our growing community of users." This would initially be a consumer-oriented service, as opposed to being part of the enterprise-oriented Fitbit Health Solutions segment that offers corporate wellness programs.

"If you project a reasonable in-industry competitive attach rate, that there's a pretty big revenue opportunity there, and we're pretty excited about it," Park said. After launching for consumers, the company would likely bring it to the enterprise side. "Our strategy around [Fitbit Health Solutions] with that offering is actually to take what we've developed on the consumer side and then sell it into enterprises with the appropriate level of administrative software and control," Park clarified. "So I think there's a dual opportunity." 

When asked about the new service and how it will be differentiated from Fitbit Coach, Park replied:

Yeah, I think our existing premium offering Fitbit Coach is pretty narrow in how it's targeted. It's very focused around activity and more geared toward high-intensity activity, and so the offering that we're envisioning will be more mass appeal and cover a lot of different needs for consumers ranging from activity to one of our core strengths, which is sleep. So it will be more holistic and more broadly targeted, and therefore we feel it's a much bigger opportunity than the premium offering that you see today.

Friday, March 1, 2019

Itron Inc (ITRI) Q4 2018 Earnings Conference Call Transcript

Logo of jester cap with thought bubble.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Itron Inc  (NASDAQ:ITRI)Q4 2018 Earnings Conference CallFeb. 27, 2019, 5:00 p.m. ET

Contents: Prepared Remarks Questions and Answers Call Participants Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good day, ladies and gentlemen and welcome to the Itron Inc. Year End and Q4 2018 Earnings Conference Call. Today's call is being recorded.

For opening remarks and introductions, I would like to hand things over to Mr. Ken Gianella. Please go ahead, sir.

Kenneth Gianella -- Investor Relations

Thank you, operator. Good afternoon and welcome to Itron's fourth quarter 2018 earnings conference call.

We issued a press release earlier today, announcing our results. The press release includes replay information about today's call. A presentation to accompany our remarks on this call is also available through the webcast and on our corporate website under the Investor Relations tab.

On our call today, we have Philip Mezey, Itron's President and Chief Executive Officer; Joan Hooper, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; and Tom Deitrich, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer.

Following our prepared remarks, we will open the call to take questions using the process the operator described.

Before I turn the call over to Philip, please let me remind you of our non-GAAP financial presentation and our Safe Harbor statement. Our earnings release and financial presentation include non-GAAP financial information that we believe enhances the overall understanding of our current and future performance. Reconciliations of differences between GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures are available in our earnings release and on our Investor Relations website.

We will be making statements during the call that are forward-looking. These statements are based on current expectations and assumptions that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially from these expectations because of factors discussed in today's earnings release, the comments made during this conference call and the Risk Factor section of our Form 10-K and other reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. We do not undertake any duty to update any forward-looking statements.

Now please turn to Page 4 in the presentation and I'll turn the call over to our CEO, Philip Mezey.

Philip Mezey -- President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you, Ken. Good afternoon and thank you for joining us. We have a lot to cover today so let's get started.

We ended 2018 with Q4 performance as expected, while also operating our first full quarter under our new segments of Device Solutions, Networked Solutions and Outcomes.

You will hear details from Joan in a moment, but to highlight our Q4 2018 performance, revenue was $587 million, adjusted EBITDA was $59 million, adjusted non-GAAP EPS at $0.88 was above our guidance due to onetime favorable tax items and we had another strong quarter of free cash flow performance of $25 million.

Customer pipeline continues to be healthy with a Q4 book-to-bill ratio of just over 1.3:1. We ended 2018 with a book-to-bill ratio greater than 1:1. Our total backlog at the end of the year was a record $3.17 billion and our 12-month backlog was $1.35 billion.

As I reflect on this past year, while we made tremendous progress in many areas of the business, we also had mixed financial results. We encountered unexpected headwinds, both internal and external, in our supply chain, which resulted in lower revenue and profitability than we expected.

In terms of strategy execution, we gained strong market momentum, which will lead to long-term value for our customers and our investors. First, we strengthened our position as the industrial Internet of Things leader in the Smart Energy and Smart City space with the acquisition of Silver Spring Networks. This acquisition allowed us to extend our software and services capability deeper into solutions such as distribution automation and smart street lighting. By expanding our product portfolio, this allows us to offer our customers end-to-end support in navigating the evolving complexity of their business environment.

As a combined company, we have delivered over 200 million one and two-way communicating endpoints with over 60 million under our active management. We are one of the largest providers of connected streetlights and have some of the largest cellular deployments for advanced metering, making us one of the largest industrial IoT companies in the world.

To strengthen our leadership position long term, we introduced a technology roadmap that merges two world-class networks and leaves no customer behind. Our customers will have the ability to securely and efficiently manage the proliferation of devices, sensors and intelligent endpoints all on our platform. We worked with partners to increase our reach through network standards like Wi-SUN, NB-IoT, 5G and other transport technologies to ensure seamless operational capabilities for our customers.

We continue to prioritize organic investments that will drive higher margin software and services deeper into our footprint of connected devices. These efforts will enable our customers to successfully manage their operations, information and consumer engagement needs for decades to come.

Finally, we are laser focused on our commitment to expanding gross margins and executing on our operational cost improvements. We made tremendous strides on our committed restructuring and integration plans by achieving over $70 million in cumulative savings through the end of 2018. And we expect to deliver the full $140 million in cumulative savings by 2020. We are pleased with the progress on our strategy and look forward to the year ahead.

I will now hand off to Joan to discuss the full Q4 results and our 2019 guidance.

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Philip.

Before I discuss our fourth quarter results let me remind you that this is our first quarter reporting under the realigned business segments of Device Solutions, Networked Solutions and Outcomes. We held an informational call on February 21st to review historical results for these new segments.

As Philip mentioned, fourth quarter results were in line with our expectations. A summary of consolidated GAAP results is shown on Slide 7 and non-GAAP results are shown on Slide 8. Revenue of $587 million increased 7% versus last year driven by strong performance in the Networked Solution segment and the acquisition of Silver Spring Networks. Fourth quarter gross margin of 30.1% was lower than last year, primarily due to special -- higher special warranty cost in 2018.

Moving to earnings per share. Our fourth quarter GAAP net income was $24 million or $0.60 per diluted share compared with $2 million or $0.05 last year. You may recall, Q4 2017 results included a onetime tax charge related to the newly enacted U.S. tax reform legislation.

Regarding non-GAAP metrics, adjusted EBITDA was $59 million or 10% of revenue. Non-GAAP net income for the quarter was $35 million or $0.88 per diluted share compared with $40 million or $1.01 per share in 2017. A lower 2018 effective tax rate contributed a $0.22 per share year-over-year EPS increase.

Free cash flow was $25 million in the fourth quarter, lower than in the prior year primarily due to the timing of working capital as well as restructuring and acquisition related outflows. Cash equivalents and restricted cash at the end of the fourth quarter was $122 million, up $11 million from Q3.

Turning to Slide 9. Total debt decreased slightly from Q3 to just over $1 billion following further payments in the revolving credit facility and the required principal payments on the term loan. The balance sheet remains flexible with net leverage of 3.9 times and our operations continue to generate positive free cash flow.

Now turning to the fourth quarter year-over-year revenue bridge on Slide 10. Total Company revenue grew by 7% or 9% on a constant currency basis. Device Solutions revenue was down 5% as reported and flat in constant currency. Networked Solutions revenue grew 21% in constant currency, driven by continued strength in North America on Smart Energy deployments. Outcomes revenue was down 6% in constant currency due to lower EMEA revenue business and the completion of onetime software deployments in the prior year.

The non-GAAP year-over-year EPS bridge is on Slide 11. Q4 non-GAAP EPS was $0.88 per diluted share compared with $1.01 in the prior year. Net operational improvements contributed to a $0.04 per share year-over-year increase after normalizing for higher special warranty expense, which had a negative $0.22 per share impact year-over-year. Higher interest expense from debt used to finance the acquisition of Silver Spring Networks decreased EPS by $0.17 versus last year.

Partially offsetting these expenses was a lower 2018 non-GAAP tax rate, which benefited EPS by $0.22 year-over-year. The lower rate was driven by onetime favorable discrete tax items booked in Q4. We do not expect these discrete tax benefits to continue in future quarters.

Slides 12 through 14 show results by business segments for the fourth quarter. Device Solutions revenue was $228 million on gross margin of 16.9% and operating margin of 11.1%. The lower 2018 margin was driven by higher special warranty expense as well as higher component cost, supply chain efficiencies and product mix.

Networked Solutions revenue was at $305 million on gross margin of 40.3%, down slightly year-over-year due to lower OpenWay shipments, partially offset by a higher mix of software. Operating margin was 31.1%, down 160 basis points due to lower gross margin and higher product development expense as we invest in the technology roadmap following the Silver Spring Networks acquisition

Outcomes revenue was $54 million on gross margin of 28.5%, up 300 basis points year-on-year. The increase was driven by improved scale and the continued integration of Silver Spring Networks. Operating margin improved 590 basis points to 12.3% on the higher gross margin combined with lower operating expenses.

Now before we move on to 2019 guidance, I'd like to normalize our 2018 results to provide a more meaningful comparison to 2019. Turning to Slide 15. We have prepared a bridge that normalizes 2018 revenue and non-GAAP EPS for current FX rates and onetime tax benefit booked in 2018. The FX rate normalization allows us to focus on the operational performance drivers versus year-over-year currency fluctuations.

In 2018, our revenue would have been approximately $40 million lower in today's exchange rates, primarily due to the movement in the euro to USD dollar rates. For 2019, we are forecasting a euro to U.S. dollar rate of $1.14 versus the $1.18 realized in 2018. This 2019 forecasted rate is very close to the 27 (ph) actual rate for comparison. On this chart, we also normalized 2018 non-GAAP EPS for onetime discrete tax items. This normalization brings the 2018 effective tax rate to 30% versus the booked rate of 22%. This tax normalization equates to $0.28 per share.

So after adjusting 2018 revenue and non-GAAP EPS for the normalized tax rate and forecasted FX rates, revenue reduces to $2.34 billion from $2.38 billion on an FX-adjusted basis and non-GAAP EPS on an FX and tax adjusted basis is $2.33 per share versus the actual of $2.65. This normalization is important to understand the operational performance embedded in our 2019 guidance.

Now moving on to the 2019 guidance on Slide 16. We anticipate full year revenue to be in a range of $2.35 billion to $2.45 million and non-GAAP EPS between $2.35 to $2.75 per share. The 2019 revenue guidance is a range of 1% to 5% growth on a constant currency basis or approximately 3% at the midpoint. The revenue guidance assumes nearly double-digit growth in the Networked Solutions and Outcomes segments, partially offset by a high single-digit reduction in Device Solutions segment. The decline in the Device Solutions segment is attributable to lower EMEA business following a very strong 2018.

The non-GAAP EPS guidance range represents 1% to 18% year-on-year improvement over normalized 2018 performance. At the midpoint, the non-GAAP EPS guidance is 9% normalized year-over-year growth. Other guidance assumptions are the euro to U.S. dollar foreign currency exchange rate of $1.14 that I just mentioned, average non-GAAP effective tax rate of 31%, total interest expense of approximately $50 million and average shares outstanding for the full year of 40.65 million.

Turning to Slide 17. We bridge from the normalized 2018 not GAAP EPS of $2.33 to the midpoint of our 2019 guidance of $2.55 and highlight the key drivers year-over-year. We expect net operational performance to increase year-over-year EPS by $0.46 per share. This category includes the flow-through of the revenue increase I just discussed as well as additional year-over-year benefits from ongoing restructuring programs and acquisition synergies. Partially offsetting this is the addition of variable compensation versus the prior year. We have also assumed an improving supply chain environment in the second half of the year.

To add some color to the gross margin profile over 2019, we expect gross margin in the first half of the year to be in line with our Q4 2018 exit rate of approximately 30%. Looking to the second half of 2019, we anticipate gross margins will improve by 150 basis points to 200 basis points versus the first half from easing of the supply chain constraints and our operational initiatives. All combined, we expect net operational performance improvement of $0.46 per share over our normalized 2018 results.

Moving on to other factors in our guidance. We anticipate a significant increase in projected tariffs in 2019 over 2018 levels. While we are working on our supply chain strategy to reduce the tariff charges, we currently anticipate approximately $0.15 per share of negative year-on-year EPS impact. We will continue to monitor this global situation.

Other key assumptions are the tax rate of 31% in 2019 versus the normalized rate of 30% in 2018 and a year-over-year increase in share count. Combined, these decreased EPS by $0.09 per share year-over-year. The expected 2019 tax rate is slightly higher than 2018 due to jurisdictional mix of income.

We are encouraged by the strong revenue growth in our Networked Solutions and Outcomes segments. And throughout 2019, we will update you on our restructuring progress and margin improvement outlook.

Before I turn the call back to Philip, I'd also like to announce, we will be holding an Investor Day on Thursday, June 27 at the NASDAQ Investor Center in New York City. We plan to provide updates on our strategy and market outlook, details on our long-term operating model as well as outlooks for each of our realigned business segments, updates on our technology roadmap and our restructuring efforts. More information on the event will be posted in the coming weeks.

Now I'll turn the call back to Philip.

Philip Mezey -- President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you, Joan. As Joan discussed, while our Device Solutions business is facing a softer European market, we are very pleased with our bookings momentum in North America where we expect Networked Solutions and the Outcomes business units will continue to grow at significant rates in 2019. This will be supported by our record backlog and strong pipeline of upsell and book-and-ship business.

In our guidance, we do see a slight easing in supply chain lead times. Last quarter, we reported over 550 parts with lead times over six months, that has now decreased by approximately 14%. While this decrease is promising, we still have ways to go and are not standing still at our gross margin improvement efforts. We continue to introduce selective price increases, are aggressively targeting lower manufacturing costs and will continue to rotate our business to solutions with higher profit margins. As Joan mentioned, we have an upcoming Investor Day where we will go deeper into our strategy and outlook for both the Company and our new segments.

Before we turn it over to Q&A, I wanted to give some insight into our segment realignment strategy and our planned execution for 2019. Starting with the Device Solutions business. The meters and sensors that we manufacture are a critical part of our customers' infrastructure. Safety and quality continue to be our top priority in delivering products to our customers. With factory optimization and the impact of supply chain headwinds in 2018, we are focused on meeting our customers' demand with improved quality and the prompt delivery of product in 2019.

We will continue to expand the Device Solutions product portfolio with the introduction of new products across our regions, including the release of new Intelis static meters for our gas and water market, a next generation prepayment solution for gas and a new electricity meter platform that will serve as the basis for all future development in IEC electric markets globally.

Moving to Networked Solutions. We're excited about the continued growth in our Networked Solutions business in 2019. Combined with our technology roadmap and planned investments, we will reaffirm our strategy of being the industrial IoT leader in the energy and Smart City space. We look to expand product and partnerships allowing us to support an even greater selection of network devices for sensing, metrology and control.

As the demand for smart infrastructure continues to grow, our investment in Riva6, the converged platform of OpenWay Riva and our Gen5 networks will position our customers to manage and analyze the proliferation of devices and data for decades to come.

And finally, our Outcomes segment. Outcomes was created from three strong assets within the Company; Itron's existing solutions, the Distributed Energy Management assets from the former Comverge acquisition and the former Silver Spring Networks Managed Services and Outcomes business. We are focused on delivering value-add services, software and products that organize, analyze and interpret data. With a portfolio of turnkey solutions that range from endpoint management to data analytics, we're excited about the opportunities that lay ahead for our Outcomes business unit.

Over time, we expect Outcomes to be the fastest growing of all of our segments and are still working through efficiencies of scale. We are balancing growth and margin improvement with our customers' experience during the integration of the Comverge and Silver Spring Networks portfolios. We are investing ahead of the growth curve in Outcomes, on future products with higher margin security and data analytic offerings. This will increase the capabilities for our customers and improve our operating margins for our Outcomes business.

By combining our segment strategy with near-term execution on gross margin expansion and free cash flow, we will deliver long-term value for our customers and shareholders. Thank you.

Operator, please open the call to take some questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you, sir. (Operator Instructions) We'll take the first question today from Chip Moore, Canaccord.

Chip Moore -- Canaccord Genuity -- Analyst

Hey, thanks. Appreciate the color you gave on guidance -- on margins in the first half versus the back half, Joan. Maybe is there a way to talk about margin progression with the new reporting structure? How should we think about that by segment?

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, we're not going to provide a specific segment guidance. But -- I mean, you can get a feel based on looking at historical segment margins relative contribution. But again, the first half versus second half is more a function of the easing of supply chain as well as some of the restructuring things that we're doing kicking in.

Chip Moore -- Canaccord Genuity -- Analyst

Got it. And just a follow-up on margin. The special warranty in the quarter, what was going on there? And anything lingering from that to think about into the current quarter?

Thomas Deitrich -- Executive Vice President & Chief Operating Officer

Chip, this is Tom. I'll take that one. What was behind that was an error that we had made in a product transfer as part of our manufacturing restructuring that was going on. We moved the product from location X to location Y and had some problems in the bring up. The product that was affected there was time-bound, meaning it was manufactured during a certain period. Since then, we've understood the problem, corrected it and made sure we learn from the mistake going forward. So no overhang expected into 2019.

Chip Moore -- Canaccord Genuity -- Analyst

Got it. Okay, I'll let others hop on. Thanks.

Operator

The next question is Noah Kaye, Oppenheimer.

Noah Kaye -- Oppenheimer -- Analyst

Good afternoon and thanks for taking the questions. Maybe we could just start with the top line. Your comments around devices being down high single-digits and you pointed to EMEA. Is high single digits decline year-over-year your view of where the market is going to be?

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

No, I'll start and then Tom may want to answer. I would say, no, the market though for devices is probably anywhere from zero to 3% growth, but we had a very strong 2018 with our Linky program in France and some of our other programs. So it's more a function of projects that really ramped up in 2018 and they won't continue into 2019. Tom (multiple speakers).

Thomas Deitrich -- Executive Vice President & Chief Operating Officer

No, I think Joan nailed it. It is more a function of specific project transitions and country-specific rollouts and timing. I don't know that I would reference a full trend based on that.

Philip Mezey -- President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

(multiple speakers) the way I would think about that is we -- sorry, Noah, the way we thought about that is in the past we talked about the migration from standard meters to smart meters, this is a similar kind of a transition that's occurring over time, it's now just expressed between that -- what we're calling devices and networks.

Noah Kaye -- Oppenheimer -- Analyst

Yeah, that makes sense. I guess just a related question for the avoidance of doubt. I mean, last quarter you talked about just not being able to fill some of that book-and-ship business because of the supply constraints. Is that embedded in your guidance or is that no longer an issue in your view for '19?

Thomas Deitrich -- Executive Vice President & Chief Operating Officer

So Noah, Tom here. What we do see is the supply chain environment starting to improve. That's all is actually happening. It takes a little while to work through. We think the supply chain environment will continue to improve during 2019 and that's reflected in the guidance. So the revenue overhang, I guess that we saw back in the back half of last year continues on although probably at a lower rate in this year but should improve throughout 2019.

Noah Kaye -- Oppenheimer -- Analyst

Okay. That's helpful. And then I guess just turning to thinking about the profitability profile of the business. You had a nice strong bookings number in networks, so backlog looks good exiting the year. Really where you're losing revenue is in that lower margin devices business and you're going to see -- you said close to double digits. On the other side, and I'm not sure if I'm doing my math right, but just taking the midpoint of your guidance, working backwards from the assumptions, I'm coming to around, call it $250 million type EBITDA number implied in the guidance, which is healthy but about a 40 bps margin expansion year-over-year. And I guess just wanted to understand, you called out tariffs, but are there any other considerations that we should be really thinking about as kind of a headwind to profitability in '19? It seems like the things are a little bit slower than (inaudible) before.

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Well again, if you went to the Slide 17 in the deck that I talked to, the net operational improvement of $0.46 per share has a lot of puts and takes in it. So it has higher revenue and again the higher revenue is really going to be coming from Networked Solutions and Outcomes and obviously lower in Devices, have benefits of restructuring in there but there are some offsets in there. So if you recall, we zeroed out variable comp in 2018 and so we have restored some variable comp in 2019. So that would all be netted out in there as well.

As well as just the deal, Silver Spring business in particular. There are some general lumpiness when you have projects and software deployments that come in and out. So that's all factored in. We're looking at our backlog, which is quite healthy, as you indicated and we know the profile of the backlog that's going to roll off in 2019 and that's been reflected in the guidance as well.

Noah Kaye -- Oppenheimer -- Analyst

Okay, that's very helpful. And if I could just squeeze one more, and just my own comprehension. I think the tariffs, the incremental headwind, where are you really expecting that to come from? Is that list three, China? Can you just give us a little bit of color because I think previously (inaudible) more manageable. So I just wanted to understand how it's playing out for you this year.

Thomas Deitrich -- Executive Vice President & Chief Operating Officer

Right. It is generally an East-West not a North-South kind of phenomenon, meaning a China-based or Asia-based goods tend to be more affected. The types of commodities that are generally in focus there are metals, so casting types of products as well as cables and connectors. Those are some of the types of things that are in play. Obviously, the environment is pretty fluid. Ongoing global discussions, probably even as we speak. So it's tough to call but we wanted to make sure we were as transparent as we could be. Clearly, our objective is to mitigate as much of that as possible by working within the rules, but finding better ways that we can develop our supply chain to sidestep some of those things. So that's our ongoing mission, but at least I wanted to point out what we saw today.

Noah Kaye -- Oppenheimer -- Analyst

Okay. Perfect. Thank you so much.

Operator

Next question will come from Jeff Osborne, Cowen and Company.

Jeff Osborne -- Cowen and Company -- Analyst

Yeah, good afternoon, guys. A couple of questions on my end. I was just curious on the philosophy or how you sat down and came up with the guidance, is any approach in terms of your top line assumptions different than years past, more conservative, more aggressive? I'm just curious as you look at backlog, what the philosophy was and if there's any change versus prior years?

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

No, I would say it's a similar process. Obviously, there's new segments, so this time last year we would have been integrating Silver Spring when we had our old Electric, Gas and Water and so there are new segments so we had to go through the process of recasting history, which we shared last week. But it's the same process. We look at the backlog, we look at the sales models, we obviously talk with the business leaders and come up with what we think is a reasonable range.

Jeff Osborne -- Cowen and Company -- Analyst

Got it. And then Joan, I don't know if you can remind me, but when you came up with the 2018 guidance, was some of those nonrecurring tax benefits, were those included and called out? I forget, from a year ago.

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

No, most of it the tax benefits that occurred in 2018, most of them occurred in Q4. So if you looked at our Q4 2018 non-GAAP tax rate, it's actually negative 2%. So we had several large settlements of different countries, multiyear tax returns that settled as well as we had some statute limitations, expirations that rolled off at the end of the year. So it was really a Q4 phenomenon.

Jeff Osborne -- Cowen and Company -- Analyst

Got it. And then is there any way that we can peel back the onion on Slide 17 of the $0.46? In terms of what the benefit is on an absolute dollar basis to restructuring in '19 and '20, in particular '19, I guess as you have your $140 million program, and then you called out variable comp and how people weren't paid last year, but want to be paid this year. What are those two numbers in particular would be helpful.

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, I'm not going to give you the variable comp. That's a pretty sensitive number but we have talked about restructuring, so I can give you that one. So as Philip mentioned in his opening comments, we've laid out three restructuring programs, the 2016 and 2018 and Silver Spring, which totaled about $140 million. We're a little over $70 million through '18 of that. So there's a -- think about it as roughly another $70 million to come split equally between '19 and '20. And if I look at '19, think about it is equally between above the line and below the line. So roughly $17 million, $18 million gross margin and $17 million, $18 million in OpEx and those are embedded in our guidance.

Jeff Osborne -- Cowen and Company -- Analyst

And is it safe to say that the variable comp would be the next -- you said there are multiple puts and takes, is restructuring the largest and variable comp the second largest, if you are half willing to break it out?

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Well, no, I mean, the revenue fall through is quite large as well, right? So we have revenue growth embedded in here as well. So revenue again, there's lots for numbers but revenue fall through is a sizable number, the variable comp add back, you've got mix, you've got all kinds of different things that go -- even merit that was happened late in '18, you get a run rate effect into '19, so there's all kinds of things we have to factor in.

Jeff Osborne -- Cowen and Company -- Analyst

And the last one I had was just on the supply chain constraints. And can you talk about specifically what you're doing to mitigate that and give investors comfort for the second half of '19 as that improves or are you putting cash deposits on future supply or developing or qualifying new suppliers? Anything you can give us that's anecdotal or specific would be helpful.

Thomas Deitrich -- Executive Vice President & Chief Operating Officer

Sure, I can take that one. What we have been doing is a number of activities and you mentioned some of the bigger ones. It is multi-sourcing components to make sure that we can have the best diversity of supply as products roll in. We have been working hard on making sure we have forecast accuracy, we have buffered inventory, so bought more when it was available and you can see that in our balance sheet today to try to be prepared. The part of our business that's most exposed here is that the book-and-ship business and making sure that we could do our best job to anticipate that and give us diversity of supply.

So it's multi-sourcing, it's inventory buffering, it is building ahead on selected products that we had are really the best medicine and that's what we are indeed seeing and finding a way to better manage the situation. We do see lead times starting to come down. While Philip quoted the number of components that are still more than a six months lead time are many hundreds but it's improved by about 15% quarter-over-quarter in terms of -- and using that as your measure of the health of the supply chain. We do anticipate that it will take a couple of more quarters for this to fully work its way through but do see steady improvement and better environment for the second half of the year based on the visibility we have today.

Philip Mezey -- President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

And then Jeff, maybe just a structural comment that says, this is an identified plan, many line items and owners that it is administrated and reported on very, very regularly. There's quite a lot of structure around the achievement of these improvements.

Jeff Osborne -- Cowen and Company -- Analyst

Makes sense. Maybe just a follow-up on that if you don't mind. So is there a way to potentially -- maybe it wasn't an issue, but some of your competitors have indicated that there was lost revenue in '18. Did you lose any revenue in '18 or is there anything in the guidance as it relates to losing revenue in '19 as it relates to the component issue?

Philip Mezey -- President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yeah, I mean, we did on a recent call actually bring the revenue down, we're down by $70 million and talked about the effect of -- on our -- specifically on our purchase order business, which is sort of shorter cycle within the quarter business, which is what led to providing that number of the 550 parts that are over six months to sort of give a feeling for the challenge of capturing some of that business. And through both inventory buffering and the initiatives that Tom has talked about, we feel that we've accurately captured in the revenue and margin guidance -- EPS guidance that we've captured the effects of the supply chain constraints in the numbers provided.

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, and as Tom indicated, there's still some hangover effect, if you will, on net revenue, probably more so in the first half of the year than the second.

Jeff Osborne -- Cowen and Company -- Analyst

Yeah. And I apologize for squeezing in one last if you don't mind. But Joan, the tax benefit that you had in the fourth quarter, that was unforeseen as it relates to the original guidance. So if some of those jurisdictions hadn't showed up, obviously the numbers would have been worse. But I'm just trying to get a sense of did you have that in the plan but you just weren't sure if they would come in? Or how do we think about the $0.30 headwind that you flagged in Slide 17, the $0.28, I'm just trying to reconcile all the moving pieces on tax and what (multiple speakers)?

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

So, yeah, if you go back to our last call, we guided to an EPS range and that had probably about $5 million or $6 million of a discrete tax benefit embedded in the range. So that was basically about half of what we got. So the rest of it was settlements that came in that we weren't expecting to come in or a statute limitation expiration. So you might have a lots of different jurisdictions where the statute expires on 12/31, you really don't know whether or not you're going to have an issue with that particular jurisdiction until it expires and so we don't typically bake that into forecast. But I would say about half of it was baked in the EPS guidance that we provided you.

Philip Mezey -- President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thanks, Jeff.

Operator

From JMP Securities, Joseph Osha has the next question.

Joseph Osha -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

Hi there, yeah, thanks for taking the question. A couple of things. First, back to this issue of the warranty charges in Q4, the fact that those aren't going to recur, Joan per your comments when combined with the margin guidance suggests that there might maybe be some other headwinds in the first part of the year given the fact that the gross margin is flattish or am I missing something?

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

No, it's primarily going to be the timing of software related deployments. So if you have a lot of software in Q4 that doesn't reoccur in Q1, you're going to have a natural dip in gross margin from that. The special warranty not reoccurring in Q1 will go the opposite way, so it's puts and takes of a lot of different things. But I would say software is the biggest one that goes the other way.

Joseph Osha -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

Okay. And the idea being then that those don't recur in the second half?

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Well, again a software deployment is very project-based. So with particular customers, they're not -- they don't necessarily go every single quarter. So in the fourth quarter, we did have some large projects that concluded, that allowed us to recognize the software revenue and that tends to be very high-margin business.

Joseph Osha -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

Okay. Second one then would be as you think about the second half of the year, thank you for the detail on how those cost savings break down, but to return to an earlier question, is there any organic improvement in gross margins that occur as the revenue rises or should we basically think about gross margin as being static with the exception of these benefits flowing through from the cost reduction efforts?

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Well, again there's mix in there as well. So to the extent our Networked Solutions and Outcomes business are growing, those are higher margin businesses than the Device business, which is shrinking. So you are going to have the benefit of that mix as well.

Joseph Osha -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

Okay. So there is some organic improvement there. And then I guess the last question would be, I think it's -- we can see how EBITDA is trending. I'm wondering what your thoughts are about the business' ability to generate free cash flow in 2019.

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, I mean I think the free cash flow continues to be very healthy for the year, this year we generated about $50 million of free cash flow, I would expect it to close to double that next year.

Joseph Osha -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

Okay. And is that just operational improvement or is that working capital management or what's driving that nice improvement?

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

It will be a combination of both.

Joseph Osha -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

Okay. All right. Thank you very much.

Operator

The next question will come from Pavel Molchanov, Raymond James.

Pavel Molchanov -- Raymond James & Associates -- Analyst

Thanks for taking the question. In Q3 and Q4, as I recall, in talking about component shortages, the main culprit was MLCCs and many of the component suppliers and consumers have commented in the last two, three months that the situation with MLCCs have largely normalized. Is that consistent with what you're seeing? And if so, which other components continue to be a headwind right now?

Thomas Deitrich -- Executive Vice President & Chief Operating Officer

Yeah, I'll take that one, this is Tom. MLCCs are starting to normalize, from our point of view. I don't want to go too technical but depends on the case size, some of the smaller sizes are in a little bit better shape than some of the legacy technology, some of the older versions. So MLCC is getting better but I would say not quite solved yet. Other passes and discretes, so MOSFETs being another one that tends to be troubling. So FETs and MLCCs, chip resistors, you get some hot spots in each one of those depending on age of technology and specific type.

Pavel Molchanov -- Raymond James & Associates -- Analyst

Okay, that's useful. Follow-up, kind of a broader question. We just had the biggest electric utility in the Western United States call bankrupt. Has that had any impact, positive or negative, on AMI modernization, the willingness of utilities to invest in modernizing the grid, perhaps from the standpoint of trying to avoid the infrastructure issues that PG&E obviously ran into?

Philip Mezey -- President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Yes, Pavel. So, I would say yes, it has a beneficial -- I mean, it's a sad way to say it, a beneficial impact. The regulatory conferences and many utility conferences that I attend, the discussion is about reliability and resiliency. It's not just wildfires in California, that has to do with polar bombs and superstorm Sandy at hurricanes hitting the Southern United States that there is a broadening awareness that volatile climatic events are going to require investments in hardening electric, gas from water infrastructure and therefore that -- we feel that that is a sign that additional grid infrastructure is going to be made in the coming years.

Pavel Molchanov -- Raymond James & Associates -- Analyst

Okay. I'll leave it there. Thank you.

Operator

Our next question will come from David Katter, Baird.

David Katter -- Baird -- Analyst

Hi guys, thank you for taking the question. Wanted to ask a quick one on the backlog. It seems like sequentially you booked some kind of longer tail business. I was wondering if you can talk about some of the dynamics at play there, and whether that's kind of a trend you're seeing with the longer total backlog going up and the 12 months going down?

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

I don't think it changed that much.

Kenneth Gianella -- Investor Relations

No, I think -- this is Ken Gianella, the ratio within our backlog, it's just a slight change, we came with a record total backlog of 3.17 and the 12 months came out about 1.35 and change. So it's flat on that perspective. As we said on the call, the mix associated with that, two-thirds of that heavily weighted toward that Network business. And when you do that, you normally see a three to four-year rolloff of backlogs. So for the additions we have and the amount I see in one year, that ratio pretty much fits to the models that we see for the profile we have in the backlog, David.

David Katter -- Baird -- Analyst

Got you, that makes sense. And then one more quick one, I know you touched on this, but the restructuring with the $70 million over the next two years, I was just wondering at a high level, if you could talk about how some of the supply chain headwinds have impacted the cadence of the restructuring, which was, kind of focused on the supply chain, has that kind of delayed progress or how have you managed to navigate both the headwinds and the need to kind of optimize the supply chain?

Thomas Deitrich -- Executive Vice President & Chief Operating Officer

Yeah, Tom here. I would say, I don't know that it has materially changed it. It certainly has put some extra stress on the team and probably made us use some outside resources here and there to best cope with the situation. But I would say, I don't know that it has materially changed the timing of what you see in motion. Certainly, it created the financial impact that you saw but I don't know that I would talk too much that it has affected the timing of programs that are in-flight.

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

That said, had we not been in the midst of a restructuring, I think the supply chain headwinds would have hurt us a lot more than they did. So the ability to leverage the purchasing power of contract manufacturers was very useful.

David Katter -- Baird -- Analyst

Got it. That's helpful. Thank you, guys.

Operator

And everyone, at this time, there are no further questions. I'll hand the conference back to Philip Mezey for any additional or closing remarks.

Philip Mezey -- President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Thank you, everyone. So again, a tremendous amount of progress that was made in 2018 from a strategic point of view, in terms of not only our restructuring plans, but obviously the acquisition and integration of Silver Spring, which has gone extremely well, the integration of all of our financial systems and back offices, a lot of heavy lifting that's gone on in 2018. Some of which is obscured as you know, by the supply chain headwinds that we face. And with that significant progress, we feel very strongly that the momentum that we're entering '19 is quite strong. And however, based upon the misses that we had in 2018, we are appropriately projecting for continued first half margin pressure and think that is absolutely the prudent thing for us to do. But the opportunity for us to continue to drive margins in the second half is there and in place and the projects are identified.

So, thank you all for your interest and look forward to talking to you all soon.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, there will be an audio replay of today's conference available this afternoon. You can access the audio replay by dialing 1-888-203-1112 or 1-719-457-0820 with the passcode of 9539336 or you can go to the Company's website, www.itron.com.

That does conclude today's conference. Thank you all for your participation and you may now disconnect.

Duration: 47 minutes

Call participants:

Kenneth Gianella -- Investor Relations

Philip Mezey -- President, Chief Executive Officer & Director

Joan Hooper -- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Chip Moore -- Canaccord Genuity -- Analyst

Thomas Deitrich -- Executive Vice President & Chief Operating Officer

Noah Kaye -- Oppenheimer -- Analyst

Jeff Osborne -- Cowen and Company -- Analyst

Joseph Osha -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

Pavel Molchanov -- Raymond James & Associates -- Analyst

David Katter -- Baird -- Analyst

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