Dick Bove Puts a Stop to Goldman’s Intra-Day Rally

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by StockJockey
Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Goldman Sachs (GS-NYSE) and mighty Stifel Financial Corp. (SF-NYSE) might be the only Sellside firms left standing, but if Dick Bove has his way, soon there will only be one.

Stifel's thinly traded stock is printing new 52-week highs, which Lloyd Blankfein and his minions can only reminisce about. Mid-day Monday Bove took a hatchet to his Goldman estimates, throwing cold water on a rally in the banks & brokers as the Financial Select Spyder ETF (XLF-AMEX) just as they tried to challenge their recent highs:

Ladenburg Thalmann analyst Richard Bove on Monday reiterated a "sell" rating on Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and cut his full-year profit estimate on the investment bank, citing dwindling revenue sources.

For the fiscal year ending November 30, Bove now expects earnings of $14.16 per share, down from a previous estimate of $15.45 per share.

Analysts polled by Thomson Financial, on average, anticipate earnings of $16.77 per share in 2008.

"Business has dried up," Bove wrote in a note to clients. "Key drivers of revenue such as investment banking, and mergers and acquisitions have simply not been happening enough to stimulate related business."
FBN

Yes, mighty Goldman has shrinkage, and the deal calendar is barren. Dried up, indeed. Perhaps cross border M&A activity will pick up if the dollar continues to rally, as foreigner who have been on the fence strike before the dollar strengthens further, if they believe so. Possible, but it would only provide a brief respite.

Painting the Tape, Bear Stearns Style

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by StockJockey
Monday, August 11, 2008

I might be mentally deranged, but so are the best traders/managers on the Street. And while I don't put myself in that company, I think some of them might agree with my take on the Bear Stearn's options
trade.

Clearly Bear was wounded, but a confluence of events, including an email reportedly sent from Goldman Sachs, were the catalysts that finished off Bear. But with Options Monster and every two-bit trader seizing on unusual put activity in the options market, it is not a stretch to say the person who put on a small out of the money options trade knew it would get an inordinate amount of attention.

The 57,000 puts that traded March 11 at the $30 strike price and the 1,649 that traded at $25 were collectively worth about $1.7 million, Bloomberg data show. Each put is equal to 100 shares of stock. Bloomberg

In my mind, anyone who argues otherwise is missing the point of the trade. It might have been a small trade, but it was worth a shot. It created suspicion, and panic. Was it the work of the Human Piranha? It is no surprise that copycats tried it with Lehman Brothers, but that is another story.

Merrill’s Transformation Into Goldman Is Nearly Complete

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by StockJockey
Thursday, August 07, 2008

Mother Merrill is six-feet under, and it is just about time to shovel dirt on her grave as Merrill completes its evolution into a clone of Wall Street's apex predator:

Merrill Lynch & Co. said David Sobotka, the commodities trader who stepped in to lead the fixed-income division when it was reeling from mortgage losses, will take over a new unit to make bets with the firm's capital.

The Global Proprietary Trading group will consolidate units that trade stocks, bonds, currencies and commodities, New York- based Merrill said today...
Bloomberg

Of course, if you are going to adopt Goldman's model you might as well hire their people; a new arrival from 85 Broad will oversee the trading effort:

The group will specialize in ``liquid markets,'' in which trading is frequent and buyers and sellers numerous.

``The group will continue to look to create superior returns from trading equities, fixed-income products, currencies and commodities on a global basis,'' according to the memo, written by Chief Executive Officer John Thain and Tom Montag, who joined Merrill this week as head of sales and trading (from Goldman Sachs).

Meredith Whitney’s Blond Ambition Tour Rolls On

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by StockJockey
Monday, August 04, 2008

Will Meredith Whitney's Blond Ambition tour ever end? Her widely derided pitchbook and marketing campaign of the same name have enjoyed a longer half life than plutuntiom, and much like the uranium-234, she is deadly.

Her day started on CNBC, but she was also given a huge spread in Fortune, whose PR folks blanketed the blogosphere this morning with a blast email announcing the piece. I have to admit I am tiring of her marketing campaign; could she spend more time crunching numbers and less on TV? Make no mistake about it, this is all about her, and now you know more than you ever needed:

Just who is Meredith Whitney, and how the heck did a little-known analyst from a second-tier firm become the oracle of the bear market? The first question is simpler to answer. Whitney, 38, grew up in Bethesda, Md., one of three daughters born to Richard Whitney, a venture capitalist and onetime official in Richard Nixon's Department of Commerce (but not part of the famous Whitney clan that includes Eli and John Hay Whitney), and Barbara Gentry, an executive recruiter. She prepped at Lawrenceville, graduated from Brown University in 1992 (Whitney and I overlapped at Brown but didn't know each other), and has been working in Wall Street research pretty much ever since. Fortune

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