Among the biggest losers in Friday's early trading are
Vivus (Nasdaq: VVUS)
,
Polycom (Nasdaq: PLCM)
and
Google (Nasdaq: GOOG)
.
|
Top Percentage Losers -- Friday, July 16,
2010
|
|
Company Name (Ticker)
|
Intra-Day Price
|
Intra-Day
% Loss
|
52-Week High
|
52-Week Low
|
| Vivus (Nasdaq: VVUS) |
$5.16 |
-57.4%
|
$13.68 |
$4.90 |
| Polycom (Nasdaq: PLCM) |
$28.90 |
-9.7%
|
$34.14 |
$21.00 |
| Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) |
$25.69 |
-5.2%
|
$629.51 |
$423.50 |
|
*Table includes companies with minimum market
capitalizations of $200 million and three month trading
volumes of at least 100,000 shares. All percentage returns
are listed as of 10:56AM Eastern Standard Time . Click on
ticker symbols for up-to-the-minute price quotes and
percentage gain data.
|
FDA Denies Vivus' Anti-Obesity Bid
Well,
Vivus (Nasdaq: VVUS)
knew it was playing a high-stakes game, trying to get the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration (
FDA
) to approve its anti-obesity drug that was simply a pairing of two
established drugs, each of which had safety concerns. So the
company can't be completely surprised that an advisory panel to the
FDA voted against the company's bid on Thursday evening. But some
bullish investors were seemingly surprised, and they're dumping
shares today, to the tune of a -58% drubbing. Vivus plans to still
lobby for the drug's approval before a final FDA meeting in
October, but its wishes are unlikely to be heeded.
The FDA rejection should be good for Vivus' rivals, as they would
face less competition for their anti-obesity drugs -- if they get
FDA approval. Curiously,
Arena Pharmaceuticals (Nasdaq: ARNA)
is soaring +18% while
Orexigen (Nasdaq: OREX)
is trading down -8%. Those firms will go before the FDA advisory
panels in September, and December, respectively. Orexigen's
approach is being seen as somewhat similar to Vivus' approach, and
thus is also seen as less likely to get the FDA nod. But Orexigen's
drug combo did appear to have somewhat more benign safety profiles.
Meanwhile, Arena's drug, lorcarserin, received positive comments
form a respected biotech trade journal Thursday morning in terms of
safety, but that drug is seen as only mildly effective.
Action to Take -->
Arena has the potential to be the real winner in this space, and
could garner massive royalty revenues if it gets approval and sees
commercial success. But there is a chance that the FDA won't play
ball, citing limited benefits for lorcaserin. If shares rise much
further, investors may want to book profits as the risk and reward
will be in balance. As for Vivus, there seem to be few near-term
positives to take away from this.
-------------------------------------
Polycom's Tepid Outlook
One of the concerns going into
earnings season
is that companies would post strong results but offer muted forward
guidance.
Intel (Nasdaq: INTC)
kicked off the week with a bullish tone, but
Polycom (Nasdaq: PLCM)
released quarterly results Thursday evening that underscored the
bear
case. The company, which makes video-conferencing equipment, met
second-quarter expectations but noted that
backlog
is dropping, a key tell on future results. Of equal concern,
revenues at the company's network infrastructure unit were below
plan. Customers often need to invest in this area before buying
ancillary video and audio conferencing products down the road.
Action to Take -->
Polycom may also be feeling the heat from rival
Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO)
, which is better equipped to sacrifice pricing in order to secure
a broader network equipment sale. With such a fierce rival,
investors might want to think twice about getting behind Polycom,
unless its stock falls back toward the 52-week low of $21.
-------------------------------------
Google Shares drop on Weaker-than-Expected
Profits
Shares of tech giant
Google (Nasdaq: GOOG)
are shedding -5% after the company reported stronger-than-expected
sales but weaker-than-expected quarterly profits on Thursday
evening. The weak
bottom line
came from a combination of a slight
uptick
in the company's tax rate, and high operating expenses. Google is
pursuing so many game-changing initiatives right now that heavy
spending seems warranted. The company is back on a mini hiring
spree, adding 1,200 new employees in the quarter.
Search advertising revenues still account for more than 90% of
sales, but help is on the way. The company is activating more than
150,000 new Android-based phones every day, which should eventually
lead to surging revenues in this area as mobile advertising takes
off.
Despite the weak bottom line,
free cash flow
was robust, and Google's cash balance just crossed the $30 billion
mark for the first time in history. With shares near a 52-week low,
a stock buyback might be increasingly tempting, at least to offset
the dilution coming from employee stock option grants.
Action to Take -->
Wall Street has a way of flinching at higher expenses, especially
if they lead to a modest pullback in near-term profit forecasts.
But Google is still boosting profits at a +15% to +20% clip, and
shares now trade for around 14.7 times projected 2011 profits.
Could it be that the world's fastest growing large tech company is
actually becoming a bargain? The key concern for investors would be
the broader perception about tech stocks in general, and not this
company's still-stellar sales execution.
-- David Sterman
David Sterman has worked as an investment analyst for nearly two
decades. He started his career in equity research at Smith Barney,
culminating in a position as Senior Analyst covering European
banks. David has also served as Director of Research at Individual
Investor and has made numerous media appearances over the years,
primarily on CNBC and Bloomberg TV. David has a master's degree in
management from Georgia Tech. Read More...
Disclosure: Neither David Sterman nor StreetAuthority, LLC hold
positions in any securities mentioned in this article.
StreetAuthority