Analysis equals performance: Charles Payne of Wall Street Strategies uses three critical measures to select winners.When Charles Payne, founder, CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. , and chief analyst of Wall Street Strategies, looks for stocks he thinks will outperform the market, he focuses on three key areas that he says indicate whether or not a company will increase its stock price. The first involves the fundamental analysis of a company's intrinsic value--whether a company can be innovative, deliver products, cut costs, and increase market share. The second is a technical analysis of the company's historic trading patterns, which shows the supply and demand of a stock. Payne's third criterion is what he calls behavioral analysis. "Behavioral analysis involves what we think the rest of the world would do," he explains. "In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke" put differently , often we will buy stocks that we know Wall Street does not like, knowing that alter the stock has made a substantial move, the rest of the Wall Street community will begin to like it and provide recommendations on it." Payne's company, a 13-year-old independent stock market research firm, provides stock analysis to institutional investors, stockbrokers, portfolio and pension fund managers, and individual investors. Wall Street Strategies tracks over 700 companies, many of which Payne says, will see an upswing in stock price, partly because they have used the slow economy to reorganize their business. "I like the fact that corporate America has had three years to clean out inventories, streamline operations, and really become ultra productive," he says. "I also think that the current Bush administration's stimulus measures have helped the economy." Using his analysis, Payne selected four stocks he believes will perform well over the next three years. The first is Bristol-Myers Squibb Bristol-Myers Squibb (NYSE: BMY), colloquially referred to as BMS, is a pharmaceutical corporation, formed by a 1989 merger between pharmaceutical companies Bristol-Myers Company, founded in 1887 by William McLaren Bristol and John Ripley Myers in Clinton, NY (both were Co. (NYSE NYSE See: New York Stock Exchange : BMY BMY Bristol Myers Squibb ), which produces and distributes pharmaceutical and other healthcare-related products. Payne believes Bristol-Myers can stand out among its peers. "They have a steady business and a pretty good pipeline of drugs. They also have a very good management team that executes well," he explains. "They deliver earnings the way Wall Street typically thinks they will. They don't surprise, they don't disappoint." Another manufacturer of healthcare products Payne believes will do well is Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ JNJ Johnson and Johnson (stock symbol) JNJ Journal of Nursing Jocularity ). Last year, the company developed the CYPHER See cipher. [TM] Sirolimus-eluting Coronary Stent sirolimus-eluting coronary stent Cardiology A coronary artery stent graft which has sirolimus, an imunosuppressive and antimitotic agent incorporated into its matrix, which significantly ↓ restenosis of stents. See RAVEL. for heart patients, which significantly reduces the likelihood of patients requiring treatment for restenosis, a condition in which a blocked artery that has been cleared becomes clogged again. "Johnson & Johnson was a victim of its own success because it outperformed the market in 2002 based on excitement over the new coronary stent coronary stent Intracoronary stent Cardiology An expandable tubular device which can be inserted percutaneously, and left within a coronary artery lumen to maintain its patency Pros Clinical and angiographic outcomes are better with intracoronary artery stent ," says Payne. Although he believes "the stock got ahead of itself," Payne says, "Johnson & Johnson will be a viable competitor in that arena, regardless of the competition. It's a value play with limited downside risk Downside Risk An estimation of a security's potential to suffer a decline in price if the market conditions turn bad. Notes: You can think of this as an estimate of the amount that you could lose on a stock or other investment. ." In the energy sector, Weatherford International Weatherford International Ltd (NYSE: WFT) is one of the world's largest diversified upstream oilfield service companies. Weatherford provides services ranging from directional drilling, open and cased-hole wireline logging to underbalanced systems expertise, drilling, Ltd. (NYSE: WFT WFT Weatherford International (stock symbol) WFT Waterfront (real estate) WFT World Family Tree (genealogy) WFT Wet Film Thickness ) has caught Payne's attention. The company provides equipment and services used in the drilling and production of oil and natural gas wells. In his view, Weatherford stands to benefit from an increased demand for oil. "You're probably going to see more drilling demand over the next couple of years, driven by the global economy and the fact that oil prices will probably stabilize at just over $30," Payne observes. And finally, in technology, Payne's research points to Harmonic Inc. (NASDAQ NASDAQ in full National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations U.S. market for over-the-counter securities. Established in 1971 by the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), NASDAQ is an automated quotation system that reports on : HLIT), a company that designs, manufactures, and markets a variety of broadband solutions. Payne thinks the company should benefit from greater demand for their broadband access networks. Harmonic is a leading provider of digital video, broadband optical networking, and IP delivery systems to cable, satellite, telecom, and broadcast network operators. Their edge lies in their ability to offer companies the chance to exchange data at greater speeds. "I think you're going to see demand ramp up Ramp Up To increase a company's operations in anticipation of increased demand. Notes: A company might 'ramp up' operations if they just signed a contract creating substantially more demand for their product. See also: Demand, Economies of Scale for Harmonic's products. People are going to need to be able to transmit very large documents and large amounts of data between offices in different cities across the country at higher speeds than are currently available," Payne says.
Company 12- to 18-Month
Exchange: Symbol Price Price Target
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. $29.55 $40.00
(NYSE: BMY)
Johnson & Johnson $53.00 $64.00
(NYSE: JNJ)
Weatherford International $41.59 $55.00
(NYSE: WFT)
Harmonic $9.85 $20.00
(NASDAQ: HLIT)
Est. 3-yr.
Company P/E on Projected Annual EPS
Exchange: Symbol 2004 Earnings Growth Rate
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. 18 Flat
(NYSE: BMY)
Johnson & Johnson 22 13%
(NYSE: JNJ)
Weatherford International 28 33%
(NYSE: WFT)
Harmonic 80 100%
(NASDAQ: HLIT)
Company
Exchange: Symbol Why Stock Will Outperform
Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. They have a good management team that
(NYSE: BMY) executes well and they produce quality
products.
Johnson & Johnson Their CYPHER[TM] Sirolimus-eluting
(NYSE: JNJ) Coronary Stent for heart patients will
continue to increase revenues.
Weatherford International The company will benefit from an
(NYSE: WFT) increased global demand for oil.
Harmonic There will be greater demand for
(NASDAQ: HLIT) high-speed data transfer services.
SOURCE: CHARLES PAYNE; WALL STREET STRATEGIES; YAHOO! FINANCE
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