Geoffrey Seiler
Bullmarket.com
J. Royden Ward
Cabot Benjamin Graham Value Letter
Jack Adamo
Insiders Plus
Chuck Carlson
The DRIP Investor

6 European turnarounds


Bookmark and Share
by George Putnam, editor The Turnaround Letter

George PutnamWe think there could be good profit potential in European stocks. But because we’re just not too sure when that recovery will occur, for now we prefer European stocks with generous dividend yields.

Here's 6 multinational companies based in Europe with worldwide businesses and relatively high yields which will pay you while for the stocks to move up in price.

ArcelorMittal (MT) is a Luxembourg-based integrated steel and mining company. It survived the steel shakeout after 2000 and the 2008-09 worldwide downturn. But once again, headline events around the world have investors worried about another downturn.

Management is responding by selling assets and bolstering the firm’s store of iron ore, thus reducing its dependence on a limited number of suppliers.

They’re also idling some plants to better balance inventory levels. The stock has sold off to compelling valuation levels of just 0.4x book and a forward P/E of below 5.

AstraZeneca PLC (AZN) is a leading worldwide pharmaceutical company formed via the 1999 merger of Astra of Sweden and Zeneca of the U.K.

Despite more than a decade of changes, including the $15.6 billion acquisition of MedImmune in 2007, the stock has gone nowhere. Generic competition, changes in U.S. healthcare, European malaise and compliance issues have crimped recent results.

The company is looking for a new CEO, but Astra- Zeneca’s pipeline has several drugs capable of sparking strong gains, and the financials are solid, as is a 9% dividend.

Koninklijke Philips Electronics (PHG) has operations that span medical equipment, lighting and consumer electronics.

A new CEO who arrived in 2011 is looking to return the company to a growth track. He is making many changes, particularly reducing the company’s complex infrastructure that separated management from the customer.

The turnaround process will take some time, but Koninklijke Philips has survived 120 years of change, and the decent dividend compensates you while you wait.

Siemens (SI) has operations that are well diversified with energy, industrial automation/productivity solutions and healthcare accounting for the bulk of operations.

While the company generates some 60% of revenues from Europe, the lion’s share comes from Germany. Overall, Siemens operates in 190 countries.

While issues in the power transmission segment have led to lowered short-term guidance, the company’s efforts to shed unprofitable businesses and bolster higher-growth segments bode well for the long term. We also like the firm’s growing presence in emerging markets.

STMicroElectronics (STM) is the largest European maker of semiconductors and a major presence worldwide.

STM has gotten favorable coverage as a supplier of gyroscopes used in Apple products that facilitate the shifting of images from portrait to landscape. But they’ve also been in the news as a supplier to Nokia, a troubled handset maker.

The Nokia problems are largely in the past, however, and STM’s innovative technologies bode well for capturing market share and developing new applications.

Total SA (TOT), headquartered in Paris, is one of the world’s largest integrated energy companies.

Declining oil prices, events surrounding a natural-gas production leak and exposure to the general malaise of the European market have led shareholders to sell the stock. But the company is well positioned for long-term growth.

Last year was a great year on the exploration front, including three large discoveries, and management plans to be involved in some 60 new drilling projects over the next couple of years.

And an aggressive expansion of liquefied natural gas operations in recent years should continue. We believe the pull-back in the stock price in recent months is a long-term opportunity.

Learn more about this financial newsletter at George Putnam's The Turnaround Letter.

Related articles:

Advertisement
Banner
News Flash

Charged up over Visa
by Leo Fasciocco, editor Ticker Tape Digest

With solid earnings growth coming for the next several quarters, we see Visa Inc. (V) as a good stock to accumulate in anticipation of a breakout. It is currently an institutional favorite based on its steady earnings growth record.


Read more...

 

William Blair: Small cap risk & reward
by Walter Frank, editor MoneyLetter

With 44% of net assets in micro-cap and another 44% in small cap fare, William Blair Small Cap Growth (WBSNX) truly lands at the tinest end of the small cap fund spectrum. That in itself courts more risk than the typical small-cap growth fund.


Read more...


   

Air and auto parts: Rebound buys
by Richard Moroney, editor Upside Stocks

Here, we profile two are attractive rebound plays -- Penske Automotive (PAG) and Triumph (TGI). Both seem capable of attracting investors’ attention and rallying in the year ahead.


Read more...

 

Fidelity: International buys
by Jim Lowell, editor Fidelity Investor

I continue to think the best way to pursue foreign stock opportunities is through managers with longstanding expertise in the foreign stock arena. Here's a look at four of our buy-rated international funds.


Read more...

 

Parexel: One-stop shop in clinical trials
by Mike Cintolo, editor Cabot Top Ten Trader

Parexel International (PRXL) has a great niche in the pharmaceutical industry. Its main service is outsourcing medical research and clinical trials of candidate drugs. Its one-stop-shopping approach to drug development and trials lets Parexel take over the work of an entire division, saving clients enormous amounts of expense.


Read more...

 

Cisco: 'Plenty of room for growth'
by Brian Hicks, editor The Wealth Advisory

CEO John Chambers is making us look good; it is now nine consecutive quarters that Cisco Systems (CSCO) has beaten analysts' earnings estimates.


Read more...

 

Strong growth at value prices
by Stephen Quickel, editor US Investment Report

In selecting new stocks for the Recommended List we aim for leaders in top growth sectors that we think can generate price gains of at least 20%. Here's a look at 5 'buys'.


Read more...

 

Military matters: Top picks in defense
by Jim Powell, editor Global Changes & Opportunities

I continue to recommend leading U.S. defense stocks that have been greatly oversold by investors who are worried about deep cutbacks. Although some expensive “big iron” contracts will be cancelled, I believe many new high tech orders will more than make up for their loss.


Read more...

 

StoneMor: Timely buy in untimely market
by Steve Mauzy, contributing editor Daily Profit

Thanks to baby boomers hitting their golden years en masse, annual deaths in the United States are expected to rise to 3.2 million in 2030 from 2.6 million in 2010. For income-and-yield investors, there's really only one choice in the cemetery sector -- StoneMor Partners (STON), which yields over 9%.


Read more...

 

Norfolk Southern: Rail for reinvesting
by Vita Nelson, editor Direct Investing

Choosing to own companies that grow their earnings and dividends consistently over time means taking advantage of compounding both within the company and within the stock market, no matter what the latest noise may be.


Read more...

 



Banner



Close
Select Offer: Schwab Options Market Commentary