Friday, March 9, 2012

Chasing Altria's (MO) Ex-Dividend Date, Dodging Yelp, Xilinx Inc. (XLNX) and Energy Transfer Partners (ETP) Pays Me Some Dividends and Can Anyone Stop Apple (AAPL)?

I just bought 7 more shares of Altria (MO).  

I executed a limit order for $30.41 which bumped my shares of MO to 10.3151.  It cost me $222.82. I bought 7 shares for $212.87 plus the transaction fee was $9.95.  This order was $5.95 more than what it would have cost if I had waited for the Automatic Investment Plan.  I did not wait for the AIP because it would buy the shares on MO's Ex-Dividend Date (Tuesday, March 13, 2012) which would make me ineligible to receive the dividend (per SEC definition of the Ex-Dividend Date).  This would have been a loss of $2.87 (7 x $0.41/share).

Where would I gain the $3.08 difference?  That would come from stock price appreciation (MO's chart has been trending up and today it closed at $30.46) and yield (I'll be paid dividends for 10.3151 shares instead of 3.3151).  I would be able to use the $4.22 ($4.2291 rounding down) to reinvest in MO pushing my yield higher.  

The dividend would be paid on April  9, 2012.

Speaking of dividends, Energy Transfer Partners (ETP) and Xilinx Inc (XLNX) just paid me some nice dividends.  XLNX paid $1.19 and ETP paid $5.91.  These dividends were reinvested in the stocks my yields.  I love dividends.

In other news, Yelp (YELP) went public recently.  Just like LinkedIn (LNKD), Zynga (ZNGA), Pandora (P) and Groupon (GRPN), I avoided these new IPOs since I did not get any shares pre-IPO and I do not have enough cash (and time) to get in the deal at the moment of the IPO.  With the exception of LNKD and in some way, ZNGA, these new tech IPOS have no profits to speak of.  Their business models rely heavily on Online Advertising and "Eyeballs" while their costs are going up (content licensing, customer acquisition and labor).

Although I'm not a total Bear on these tech stocks, I am not risking my hard earn cash investing in companies that make no money.   I am even on the belief that even Facebook would fail to satisfy Wall Street post-IPO.

Only time would tell.

Finally, Apple (AAPL) just announced their first major product launch since the death of Steve Jobs.  The new iPad is poised to keep Apple's lead in the tablet market and is targeting the market share of laptop makers.  During the keynote presentation, Apple CEO Tim Cook declared the iPad as the major leader  of the  Post-PC era.  Mr. Cook and company did really well during the keynote and even though it lacked the Steve Jobs Halo Effect, the recent keynote was filled with oohs and ahhs from the crowd and the tech community.  The new iPad boasted the new Retina Display, 4G LTE, a faster graphics processing chip and an amazing battery life all in the same "low" starting price of $499.  Apple also kept the iPad 2 at a lower $399 price.  Tech pundits and analysts predict AAPL would sell at least 10-15 million units on the first weekend.  I'm even willing to bet they would sell up to 20 million units.  My only fear with this prediction is whether Apple has enough iPads to sell that weekend.  I'm sure the workers at FoxConn worked double/triple overtime since November producing these magical devices.  

AAPL's stock price played around $528-$536 during the announcement.  Normally, an Apple event brings down the stock price low enough for a nice re-entry but this time, the stock price held its own.  Perhaps Tim Cook symbolized stability in the company and not seeing a frail looking Steve Jobs made investors "feel" secure about Apple.

Although Apple fans including me would have preferred seeing Mr. Jobs work his magic on stage, his presence, in spite of his health issues, was sorely missed.  As for AAPL's future, I am bullish that this company would keep printing money for years to come.  Their stock price though high, is cheap compared to it's competitors.  The PEG ratio is at 0.66, making it the cheapest of my positions (believe it or not).  The product line, high profit margins and brand equity would keep AAPL on top for a while.  As long as the company continues to innovate and execute, I would keep investing in Apple (and buy a product or two).

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