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Showing posts from September, 2017

FAANG

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For those who may not be conversant in market jargon and acronyms, FAANG stands for Facbook/Amazon/Apple/Netflix/Google. Sometimes it's simply FANG but I like the double A for obvious reasons... Below is a chart of the FAANG stocks with SHLD - First, you'll notice FB and GOOG toward the lower right. FB launched in 2012 and Google, much like Sears, spun itself as Alphabet so their rise, while precipitous, appears quite compressed. Even AMZN seems quite humble with a mere 3000% uptick! NFLX and AAPL are the clear winners here. But, again, I 'm interested is around the end of the Great Recession.   I I find it uncanny this basket of  stocks, other than AAPL, were so highly correlated. But then, beginning in 2010, they (except poor SHLD) exploded! I have a theory as to why - more on that next time...

SHLD v. AMZN

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Last post was a (very) brief history of AMZN. Today I would like to put in play a more comprehensive (IMHO) comparison. Below is a chart of SHLD and AMZN going back a scant 3 years prior to 2007, when Kmart merged with Sears. Funny, but to my eyes this chart shows a very different picture than the SeekingAlpha chart that began in 2007. I can't blame the authors for wanting to use visuals that buttressed their argument. But I believe it only tells part of the story. In particular, the Great Recession - The circled area is the 'technical' Great Recession - December 20017 to June 2009. Those of us who lived through it will attest that it started sooner and ended later. Something like $15 TRILLION of household net worth disappeared during this time frame. Ouch! That's 22%, the same 22% that the Dow dropped on Black Monday 1987. Just a coincidence... Yet you'll notice by 2010, the worst had seemingly passed and for a while Sears and Amazon's fortunes

AMZN

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My last post focused on Sears, Where America Shops. Today, I want to focus on the other side of the equation - Amazon, Where America (The World?) REALLY Shops. First, a quick history lesson. Amazon was founded by Jeff Bezos in 1994. Fun fact, Sears published it final catalog in 1993! Amazon started out selling only books but by the early part of THIS century they branched out into to anything and EVERYTHING. Recently they purchased Whole Foods for $13+Billion. A brick and mortar grocery. Perhaps we can explore that a bit later. AMZN went public in 1997. They didn't actually show any sort of profit until 2001 and at that point, it was a penny a share. But they survived the Dot-Com implosion (probably by hoarding their cash) and began to thrive after many of their competitors had cratered. Below is AMZN chart since IPO - If you have ever been to a pitch meeting where a company is trying raise capital, you've seen this chart before. It is affectionately known as a HOC

Where America Shops!

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In my last post, I wrote of the correlation between Sears fortunes (or the lack thereof) and Amazon. To wit - But I was struck by something. So, with no further adieu... Remember, Sears was found in 1886. In fact, they went public in 1906, the FIRST major retailer IPO in history! So, naturally I wanted to know what was lurking behind the left side of the chart. What I found was more than a bit surprising... First, some additional backstory. Although there should be 100+ years of Sears stock history, I couldn't find a chart! What I did discover (which I actually already kind of knew) was that in 2004, Kmart, of all companies, bought Sears and the whole shebang was rolled into Sears Holdings (SHLD). Sears Holdings is run by Eddie Lampert, a Howard Rourk like character and billionaire. He has staked a considerable amount of his reputation and personal wealth on the company albeit if (or when) it fails, he won't be lining up for food stamps - unlike many of his empl

I'm back...

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A blog isn't much good if it isn't consistently updated. In fact, one could argue that one would be better served NOT to have a blog than to have one that has become dusty... With that in mind, I pledge to do better! I was recently afforded the opportunity to speak at a conference. Thus, I have been brainstorming ideas for a topic and for this particular audience, one obvious choice would be Amazon. This group consists of entrepreneurs many of whom are affiliate marketers. AM's reside in a unique niche since by and large they do not act much more than as a pass-thru engine. The AM market has exploded with the enormous growth of AMZN and many mom-and-pop operators are trying to exploit said growth. In most cases, the barriers to entry are minimal so the entire arena is fertile ground to those I often refer to as 'wantrepreneurs'. Thus, first I would like to divine some macro trends, patterns that account for the explosive growth of Amazon. My initial thought