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Hasbro, jealous of Marvel, reacquires Sunbow Cartoons

The Marvel Entertainment (NYSE: MVL) release of the box office hit Iron Man, still No. 1 in world wide distribution, has got Hasbro Inc. (NYSE: HAS) rethinking its potential opportunities to leverage its stable of characters into larger than life features.

Hasbro, the nation's #2 toymaker, has reacquired the worldwide distribution rights to over 1,000 hours of animated programming.

Under the terms of its new deal with Sunbow Productions, Hasbro has regained ownership of 1,000 hours of cartoons featuring G.I. Joe, Transformers, My Little Pony and Littlest Pet Shop. With the tremendous success of the live action Transformers movie, and a second Transformers as well as a G.I. Joe live action film in production, Hasbro clearly wants full control over its intellectual properties in order to maximize their exploitation.


Hasbo closed yesterday pennies off it's 52-week high of $37.35 and is trading around $36 midday today. Meanwhile Marvel also closed yesterday just off it's 52-week high of $35 closing at $34.27. It is down now in midday trading around $34.50. However, it is up since I posted Chasing Value: Marvel's Iron Man will be HUGE!

UPDATE: HAS closed at $36.26 down -$0.93, and MVL closed at $33.73 down -$0.54.

Sheldon Liber is the CEO of a small private investment company and the principal for design and research at an architecture & planning firm. He writes the columns Chasing Value and Serious Money. Disclosure: I do not hold any position or own shares of HAS or MVL.

Earnings highlights: Bank of America, Merck, Mattel, Phillip Morris, AFLAC and others

Here are some highlights from this past week's earnings coverage from BloggingStocks:

Continue reading Earnings highlights: Bank of America, Merck, Mattel, Phillip Morris, AFLAC and others

JAKKS Pacific loses expectations game, but is it still reasonably priced?

Toymaker JAKKS Pacific (NASDAQ: JAKK) lost the expectations game earlier this week, my friend. Wall Street was looking for more in terms of earnings per share than the company was apparently able to deliver. Was JAKKS playing around too much these last three months? Who knows -- this business can certainly be fickle, after all.


For the first quarter, JAKKS saw its revenues increase over 5% to nearly $131 million. Earnings per diluted share came in at $0.03 if you take into account litigation expenses, restructuring charges, etc. On an adjusted basis, JAKKS earned $0.13 per share, compared to a year-ago adjusted earnings of $0.14 per share. According to Briefing.com, this was $0.06 less than what the Street wanted.

JAKKS, which competes with Hasbro (NYSE: HAS) and Mattel (NYSE: MAT), didn't have a great quarter, it's true. But I've always found this company and stock to be an interesting one, as it seems to do well over time with its various licensed products, such as merchandise based on some Disney (NYSE: DIS) brands, including Hannah Montana, and toys based on Viacom's (NYSE: VIA) Nickelodeon channel.

Whenever the stock is on a pullback, it always catches my attention (although, I should point out, I have never owned it). In addition, the balance sheet appears to be in good shape: there's a nice amount of cash and cash equivalents at $238 million, long-term debt has remained stable, and the accounts receivable line is down.

JAKKS is still forecasting $2.91 per diluted share for the current fiscal year. Given the share price as of this writing, the P/E ratio on the stock remains compelling.

Disclosure: I own shares of Disney; positions can change at any time.

Mattel isn't well today as earnings loss sinks its stock

Mattel's (NYSE: MAT) Q1 earnings report wasn't as fun as its toys, I can tell you that. Let's start at the top line -- net revenues declined by 2%. Operating income was negative -- the company booked a loss of $36.5 million; in the previous year's quarter, operating income was positive at $20.6 million. Mattel had a net loss of $0.13 per diluted share this year versus net income of $0.03 per diluted share in Q1 2007. Gross margins also saw pressure in the current quarter.

Oh, are the powers that be over at Hasbro gloating today or what! While Mattel's stock price, as of this writing, is down 9%, Hasbro's (NYSE: HAS) stock price is rising almost 8%. That's because Hasbro reported a nice profit instead of a loss -- see Eliza Popescu's entry about that toymaker's delightful earnings missive to investors.

Mattel obviously had problems getting people excited about its various brands during the last few months, but maybe the summer will help the company out, as merchandise based on the new Batman and Speed Racer films are set to hopefully win the hearts of kids and collectors everywhere when the movies hit the multiplexes. And Mattel's stock does have an interesting yield at the moment. Still, if I were trying to decide between Hasbro and Mattel, I think I'd probably go for the former -- Hasbro does have the rights for toys from the new Marvel (NYSE: MVL) projects -- Iron Man, The Incredible Hulk -- and it does have the Transformers and Star Wars brands. There's no way to spin this, I guess -- it just wasn't Mattel's day.

Disclosure: I own shares of Marvel; positions can change at any time.

Hasbro (HAS) Q1 profit rises on strong international sales

Shares of world's second biggest toy company Hasbro Inc. (NYSE: HAS) have been been rallying in early trading after the company reported better-than-expected first quarter earnings, as its strong international business was able to offset declining domestic sales.

Hasbro said that its profit jumped 14% to $37.5 million, or 25 cents per share, helped by strong sales in its Transformers and Littlest Pet Shop lines. These numbers are up from $32.9 million, or 19 cents per share, a year earlier. Analysts, on average, expected earnings of 14 cents.

The toymaker also posted posted a respectable growth of 13% for its first-quarter revenue, which climbed to $704.2 million from $625.3 million. During the period, Hasbro benefited from the weak dollar which was a major driver for its international sales. The company saw overseas sales rise 22% to $248.3 million while revenue in the U.S. and Canada rose only 6% to $428.5 million. Analysts expected $582.2 million in sales in the first quarter, according to Reuters Estimates.

Continue reading Hasbro (HAS) Q1 profit rises on strong international sales

Analyst upgrades: PETM, MMC and PNCL

MOST NOTEWORTHY: PetSmart, Marsh & McLennan and Pinnacle Airlines were today's noteworthy upgrades:
  • Banc of America upgraded PetSmart (NASDAQ:PETM) to Buy from Neutral on valuation, as they believe the market is overly negative on the company's cyclicality.
  • Keefe Bruyette upgraded shares of Marsh & McLennan (NYSE:MMC) to Outperform from Market Perform on increased confidence management will be able to improve margins.
  • JP Morgan upgraded Pinnacle Airlines (NASDAQ:PNCL) to Overweight from Underweight citing the company's FCF and contract certainty.
OTHER UPGRADES:
  • Hasbro (NYSE:HAS) was upgraded to Buy from Hold at Needham.
  • Calyon raised Airtran Holdings (AAI) to Add from Neutral.
  • Liberty Entertainment (LMDIA) was raised at Merrill to Buy from Neutral.

Hasbro could be fun this year

According to analyst Felicia Hendrix, who works at Lehman Brothers (NYSE: LEH), Hasbro Inc. (NYSE: HAS), a toy company that competes with Mattel Inc. (NYSE: MAT), might do better than she previously expected. She originally was counting on a 2.5% drop in top-line sales for all of 2008, but she now believes that the business may beat such a dire call. Further, she thinks Hasbro can do $1.93 per share in 2008; previously, she was only willing to credit the company with $1.88 per share for the year. I like it; and in case you were wondering what 2009 might bring, she's thinking $2.10 per share is completely conceivable.

Ah, Hasbro, Hasbro -- I've been watching you, and I've thought about you, but I never pulled the trigger. I should have; I remember counseling myself when the stock was trading near its 52-week low that I maybe should take a chance on it. I was thinking about how the company had some cool catalysts coming up -- Marvel Entertainment's (NYSE: MVL) films Iron Man and The Incredible Hulk might be big blockbusters this summer, so Hasbro could end up selling a lot of product based on the properties. And then there's the upcoming Star Wars: The Clone Wars project -- come on, the figures and sets based on this one should do very well since Hasbro is an ace marketer of Star Wars merch. I should have been on the ball, I guess.

If Hasbro does around $2 in earnings in 2009, that gives the toy vendor a forward P/E of about 15 right now. That's attractive, especially considering Hasbro's current dividend yield. Hasbro looked more exciting to me about ten points ago, but I think it is nevertheless an interesting investment idea at the moment. I'll want to watch for any significant pullbacks in the share price that might make Hasbro even more interesting.

Disclosure: I own shares of Marvel; positions can change at any time.

4Kids Entertainment needs a new fad

4Kids Entertainment (NYSE: KDE) is an interesting company that attempts to cash in on fads for the younger set; it supplies programming for almost 200 affiliated stations of News Corp.'s (NYSE: NWS) Fox network on Saturday mornings. It also struck a deal to program the Saturday-morning kids block for The CW -- which is a joint venture between Time Warner (NYSE: TWX) and CBS (NYSE: CBS) -- beginning this fall. The company attempts to generate buzz for its properties so that it may sell a lot of merchandise tied to them.

Earlier in the week, 4Kids reported earnings for the fourth quarter. I didn't like the numbers (all the data here represent continuing operations). Revenues for the fourth quarter declined 10%, and the company lost $1.26 per diluted share versus a loss of $0.19 per diluted share in the year-ago quarter. For the full year, revenues dove over 22%, and the loss came in at $1.77 per diluted share; for comparison, the loss in the previous year was $0.13 per diluted share. Yeah, I didn't like the numbers, and I'd like to meet the person who did.

The problem with 4Kids is that, well, kids are fickle, and it's difficult to consistently make money from such a capricious audience. Yu-Gi-Oh! and Chaotic trading cards can be hot one minute, and then not so hot the next minute after that. It's all a crapshoot, and I suppose 4Kids will probably again hit upon a fad as significant as Pokemon in the future, but as to when that will happen, who knows. I do enjoy checking in on the company's latest mix of brands -- it currently promotes such diverse intellectual properties as Viva Pinata and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. But, I don't like the losses or the random nature of this particular business. If I want to gain exposure to licensing and intellectual properties for kids, I would perhaps look at a Mattel (NYSE: MAT) or a Hasbro (NYSE: HAS), as I perceive them to be safer bets. 4Kids is fighting the good fight in terms of building brands, but I won't go near its stock since there are better alternatives out there.

Disclosure: I don't own any of the companies mentioned here.

More losses for LeapFrog

LeapFrog Enterprises (NYSE: LF) is a toy company which competes with Hasbro (NYSE: HAS), Mattel (NYSE: MAT), and JAKKS Pacific (NASDAQ: JAKK). At least, it tries to compete with those other companies.

According to LeapFrog's latest earnings report, the amphibious one hasn't jumped over to the black lily pad just yet. For the fourth quarter, revenue was flat at $181.3 million and the loss was 51 cents per share compared with a loss of 73 cents in the year-ago period. For the full year, revenue decreased 12% to $442.3 million, and the loss was $1.60 per share versus $2.31 in 2006.

Yeah, the losses may be narrowing, and the gross margins may be improving, but the company had negative operational cash flow, and it experienced write-offs for its major Fly Fusion brand. These are bad things, but the company has a few good plot points to its toy story: no debt, a good set of licensed products for its Leapster brand, and something called the Tag reading system, which Zack Miller covered back in January.

This one seems to be a no-brainer to me: LeapFrog just isn't worth one's investment dollars. Sure, it may come back at a later date on the heels of an innovative product launch, but it is a low-priced equity (currently trading in the area of $6 a stub as of this writing) that is losing money in a sector where better ideas exist. Don't leap into this one, folks! (Please tell me I didn't just write that...).

Hasbro continues to go Hollywood

Hasbro (NYSE: HAS) is becoming quite the Hollywood power. Sure, the company helped launch a new sci-fi/fantasy franchise last year with Transformers, but that doesn't mean it wants to sit back and relax by the pool just yet. Instead, Hasbro is taking meetings and getting deals done.

General Electric's (NYSE: GE) Universal Pictures has entered into a six-year deal with Hasbro to produce four feature films using some of the toy maker's various intellectual properties. Included in the mix are the major boardgames we all know and love -- Candy Land, Clue, Battleship, and, of course, perhaps most famous of them all, Monopoly. The first project should be out around 2010.

I'm not sure about Candy Land, but a movie based on Monopoly would be pretty cool. I have no idea what Universal Pictures has in mind for these properties -- I mean, will the boardgames come to life and intrude upon the real world, or will the stories be set literally inside the boardgames themselves? -- but I think this deal has real potential. A few more big hits like Transformers will do wonders for Hasbro and its brand equity. And I do believe these movies could be big hits, especially if the right stars are attached (imagine Jim Carrey and Donald Trump in a Monopoly movie, for example).

Continue reading Hasbro continues to go Hollywood

JAKKS Pacific had a merry holiday season

JAKKS Pacific (NASDAQ: JAKK) didn't toy around during the holiday quarter -- it got serious and delivered some solid growth. For the fourth quarter, JAKKS increased its top line by nearly 20% to $285.1 million. Earnings per diluted share jumped 45% to $1.06.

The company cited various members of its toy portfolio as drivers for the Q4 season, including those joystick videogames that you plug directly into the TV -- you've got to admit, those are pretty fun, especially the one with Galaxian. Also, the company mentioned that items based on Disney (NYSE: DIS) properties turned out to be big helpers during Christmas. And, yes, they had to mention Hannah Montana -- they have a plug-and-play joystick title based on the pop princess. Sure, she's a fad, but she's still going strong for now.

JAKKS may play in the highly competitive world of toys, but it's definitely doing all right, even as it fights it out in the trenches with biggies Mattel (NYSE: MAT) and Hasbro (NYSE: HAS). It focuses on building little unique niches for itself, and it knows how to effectively work the licensing game; in addition to Disney stuff, JAKKS makes products based on Viacom's (NASDAQ: VIA) Nickelodeon characters and Neopets universe. The stock doesn't look too expensive here, so it's worth a look if you are looking to gain some exposure to retail toys, although I'd probably keep it on a watch list in anticipation of a pullback.

Disclosure: Steven Mallas owns shares in Disney.

Earnings highlights: GM, Comcast, UBS, Best Buy, Hasbro, Marriott, and others

Here are some highlights of this past week's earnings coverage from BloggingStocks:

Also, Jim Cramer defends his interest in GM after its record loss.

Upcoming results to watch for include Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT), Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ), OfficeMax (NYSE: OMX), Whole Foods (NASDAQ: WFMI), MGM Mirage (NYSE: MGM), JCPenney (NYSE: JCP), and Safeway (NYSE: SWY).

Visit AOL Money & Finance for more earnings coverage.

Hasbro (HAS) fourth-quarter profit rises on strong sales

Shares of popular toymaker Hasbro Inc. (NYSE: HAS) have been climbing in early trading after the company posted this morning a better-than-expected fourth-quarter profit.

For the quarter, the world's second-largest toymaker reported that its profit jumped 24% up to $133.7 million, lifted by strong sales of its Transformers, Nerf and Furreal Friends product lines. Strong revenue gains offset weaker gross margins and lower U.S. earnings, and the company posted earnings of 84 cents per share. Analysts were expecting Hasbro show earnings of 81 cents per share in the quarter.

Amid a challenging consumer environment, Hasbro announced a respectable jump of 16% in revenue to $1.3 billion, up from $1.1 billion a year earlier. Revenue during the period were helped by a 29% surge in its international sales that outpaced those in North America. Analysts, on average, forecast sales of about $1.22 billion, according to Reuters Estimates.

Continue reading Hasbro (HAS) fourth-quarter profit rises on strong sales

Before the bell: HAS, GRMN, AAPL, MSFT, F ...

According to Ars Technica, Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) has applied for trademark extension relating to gaming. While the folks at Engadget don't want to read too much into it, they can't help but wonder whether "the iPod, iPhone, and Apple TV will soon have even more friends among the company's ever-expanding non-PC ecosystem." Apple shares are up around 1.3% this morning after Citigroup added it to its "Top Picks" list.

Hasbro Inc. (NYSE: HAS)'s profit rose 24% to 84 cents per shareas it avoided the lead-paint related recalls that plagued many of its competitors. Wall Street expected the company to report 81 cents per share in the period. Sales climbed 16% to $1.3 billion.

The 2008 Mobile World Congress in Barcelona is underway and Garmin (NASDAQ: GRMN) the only working mock-up of its Nuviphone. In addition, eBay Inc. (NASDAQ: EBAY)'s Skype was showing its first Skype phone, which is a GSM model that contains new software allowing to make Skype calls over regular cell phone networks.

Continue reading Before the bell: HAS, GRMN, AAPL, MSFT, F ...

Before the bell: YUM, BSX, KBH, PHM, POT, SIRF ...

Yum Brands (NYSE: YUM) reported essentially flat fourth-quarter earnings of 44 cents per shares, beating analyst expectations by two pennies. Robust sales in its China and international divisions countered rising costs and a sluggish U.S. performance. Yum raised its 2008 earnings forecast, but not enough for investors to be satisfied. YUM shares fell over 2.2% in premarket trading.

Boston Scientific (NYSE: BSX) swung to a $458 million fourth-quarter loss, as the $27 billion acquisition of Guidant Corp. nearly two years ago continued to erode its bottom line and obscure an overall sales gain. Net loss for the October-December period equaled 31 cents per share, down from a profit of $277 million, or 19 cents per share the year before. Sales, though rose 4% to $2.15 billion. Excluding charges, Boston Scientific posted a profit of $355 million, or 24 cents per share.

Two unconfirmed reports: Engadget reports that Apple Inc. (NADSAQ: AAPL) may come up with a 16 GB iPhone soon. Staff at AT&T (NYSE: T) and O2 saw the phone listed in the inventory -- wishful thinking or the natural step up?
Meanwhile, MacRumors reports that employees have spotted new MacBook Pros in Best Buy's (NYSE: BBY) inventory tracking system.

Continue reading Before the bell: YUM, BSX, KBH, PHM, POT, SIRF ...

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Symbol Lookup
IndexesChangePrice
DJIA-5.8612,986.80
NASDAQ-4.882,528.85
S&P 500+1.781,425.35

Last updated: May 17, 2008: 02:33 AM

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