Jim Jubak

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Posted 11/16/2005

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 Jubak's Journal
5 tech stocks to ride the rally

The end-of-year technology-stock run-up is here, but it's not lifting all stocks in the sector. The key to getting a piece of the gains? Follow the hot money. And be ready to sell.

By Jim Jubak

A funny thing happened on the way to the traditional end-of-the-year technology rally: Some of the biggest names in the sector decided not to join in.

Since the Nasdaq Composite ($COMPX) started to rally back on Oct. 12, the technology-laden index is up 13%.

But such sector bellwethers as Dell (DELL, news, msgs) and Cisco Systems (CSCO, news, msgs) have gone nowhere, dropping 9% and 1%, respectively, during the rally.

The leadership, instead, has come from small capitalization technology stocks such as Trident Microsystems (TRID, news, msgs), market cap $890 million, up 18% during the rally.

That out-performance by smaller technology stocks in this rally doesn't have much to do with fundamentals, although it certainly doesn't hurt that Trident Microsystems smashed through Wall Street earnings estimates of 19 cents a share by more than 30%. Or that the company upped its guidance for the next quarter. And split the stock two-for-one.
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That's sure better than issuing an earnings warning for the third quarter, as Dell did, and then warning again for the next quarter, while admitting that the slump in growth leaves the company stumped.

Big mo
But when it comes to end-of-the-year rallies -- especially end-of-the-year rallies in a stock market dominated by short-term hedge fund money -- it's momentum that counts. Last year, a year-end rally bailed out many mutual-fund and hedge-fund managers who had been trailing their benchmarks going into the fourth quarter. And the hope in hedgeville, where the size of the manager's fee depends on beating the index, is that a strong fourth-quarter rally will do the trick again.


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And if you're looking for a fourth-quarter rally to save your year, you go with the hot stocks. No time to wait for a company to turn around or for hidden value to come to the surface. It's the time of year to put money into stocks that have been going up in the belief that they'll keep going up.

For a while this kind of momentum-following produces its own success. Money flows into a stock that's been moving up, because it has been moving up, and that in turn drives the stock up further. And, of course, it's a whole lot easier for money flows to push up a stock like Trident Microsystems -- with its 26 million shares outstanding, total market value $890 million -- than it is to move a stock like Dell, with its 2.4 billion shares outstanding and its $71 billion market capitalization.

Historical data shows that stocks could rally for a while here. Stocks have gone higher on average during the period from late October through late January. (No one is quite sure why this trend exists. The best explanations, in my opinion, point to tax-loss selling in October and November and cash flows from investors and managers who need to put money to work before the calendar year ends.)

So if you want to play the end-of-the-year rally, now's the time. And here are three stocks with the right stuff for that year-end trip to the moon that I recommended in my weekly appearance on Wednesday, Nov. 16 on CNBC's Morning Call.

Keep your finger on the trigger
One BIG caveat before I get to these picks. Remember how the energy sector turned from red hot to ice cold in a matter of days at the end of September? I'd expect a repeat of that turn-on-a-dime performance when this technology rally ends. The problem with momentum markets driven by quarter-end performance anxiety is that once the quarter's end is in sight, the smart thing to do is to sell. If you want to play this rally with these small-cap momentum stocks, you have to be prepared to do the same.

  • Trident Microsystems (TRID, news, msgs): A good story is essential for a momentum stock and, boy, does Trident Microsystems have a great story. On Oct. 26, the company announced earnings for the first quarter of fiscal 2006 of 25 cents a share, 6 cents a share above Wall Street estimates, and said that revenue had grown 100%. The company makes video-processing chips for the flat-screen digital LCD TV market (85% of Trident's revenue). Prices for large flat-screen TVs continue to fall, which is just fine with Trident, because lower prices mean more TV units sold. The company's revenues come from China (20%), Japan (39%) and Korea (32%). The stock trades at 31 times projected earnings for the fiscal year that ends in July 2006. Wall Street analysts project that the company will grow earnings by 36% in fiscal 2007. (Calculating a growth rate for fiscal 2006 isn't possible since the company showed a loss for fiscal 2005.) Our StockScouter rates these shares a 7 out of a possible 10.
  • M-Systems Flash Disk Pioneers: Here's the story behind this stock, up 13% from Oct. 12 through Nov. 15: The company has just made an acquisition, Microelectronic Espanola, completing the company's memory-card portfolio and enabling M-Systems to address the market for embedded cards, for semi-removable cards and for removable cards. That gives the company products for just about anyone manufacturing multimedia phones, MP3 players, and GPS and portable electronic game machines. Not that the Israeli company was doing so badly before the deal: On Nov. 3, M-Systems reported third-quarter earnings of 34 cents a share, seven cents above the Wall Street consensus. Revenues climbed 55% and beat estimates by 13%. For all of 2005, M-Systems increased projected earnings per share to $1.08, up from prior guidance of $1 a share. The stock trades at 29 times projected 2005 earnings per share. Wall Street projects 67% earnings growth for M-Systems Flash Disk Pioneers (FLSH, news, msgs) in 2005 and 34% in 2006. Our StockScouter does not rate overseas companies.

  • Standard Microsystems (SMSC, news, msgs): Standard Microsystems is set to go from strength to strength. In the August quarter the company delivered earnings of 25 cents a share, 32% above projections. At the same time the company guided Wall Street to expect revenue of $81 million to $86 million in the November quarter -- not the $77 million that Wall Street had projected. Earnings, the company said, would be 31 cents to 37 cents a share, well above the Wall Street consensus of 21 cents. The company's March acquisition of OASIS Silicon Systems pushed the company's sales of input/output controllers, USB devices and other networking solutions to second place. Standard's sales of multimedia connection and networking solutions into the automobile sector now make up 51% of revenues. Wall Street is projecting earnings growth of 224% in the fiscal year that ends in February and 23% in the following fiscal year. The stock currently trades at 26 times projected fiscal 2006 earnings per share. Our StockScouter rates the shares a 7 out of a possible 10.
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    Video: Jubak on "Tech stocks to ride the rally"

    And, as always, I have two "exclusive" picks for the readers of CNBC.com on MSN Money. In this case, they are two tech stocks for the tech rally for those investors who'd like to buy conservative fundamentals with their momentum.

  • Microsoft (MSFT, news, msgs): The parent of this site has kept pace with the small caps in the early stages of this rally, climbing 13% from Oct. 12 through Nov. 15. I think this is more than end-of-the-year momentum, too. The stock now trades for just 23 times trailing 12-month earnings per share and 20 times projected earnings for the fiscal year that ends in June 2006. As the stock's valuation has fallen, ownership of the shares has passed from growth investors to value investors. Those new owners are looking ahead to the huge product cycle beginning with the November launch of the Xbox 360 and continuing into next year's release of the new version of Windows. Our StockScouter rates these shares a 6 out of a possible 10.

  • Broadcom (BRCM, news, msgs): Broadcom shares, up 5% from Oct. 12, have done all right in this rally, and the stock is testing recent highs, but the real story for Broadcom is long-term rather than short. With leadership in the chip sector increasingly passing to the consumer-media chip makers from PC chip leader Intel (INTC, news, msgs), Broadcom is increasingly a must-own stock for technology investors (along with Texas Instruments (TXN, news, msgs) I'd argue.) The company's business is about equally divided among chips and chip sets for broadband (34% of sales), mobile and wireless (27%) and networking (39%). Broadcom's strength in each of these areas is its proven ability to get the functions needed by the next generation of consumer products on highly integrated chipsets that are smaller and cheaper than competitors'. Earnings growth, Wall Street projects, is set to climb to 21% in 2006, up from 14% in 2005. The stock currently trades at 33 times projected 2005 earnings per share and 27 times projected 2006 earnings. Our StockScouter rates the shares a 9 out of a possible 10.

    Editor's Note: A new Jubaks Journal is posted every Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday. Please note that Jubak's Picks recommendations are for a 12-to-18 month time horizon. See Jubak's CNBC Picks for shorter six month recommendations. For picks with a truly long-term perspective see Jubak's 50 best stocks in the world or Future Fantastic 50 Portfolio.

    E-mail Jim Jubak at jjmail@microsoft.com.

    At the time of publication, Jim Jubak owned of controlled shares in the following equities mentioned in this column: Microsoft. He does not own short positions in any stock mentioned in this column.

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