Monday, May 21, 2018

This Sears Holdings Deal With Amazon.com Isn't Enough

Sears Holdings (NASDAQ:SHLD) latest partnership with Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN) is the kind of smart, strategic thinking that could have saved the retailer had it been implemented five or 10 years ago. But today, it simply serves as a reminder of what could have been.

Sears recently announced that it will serve as the official installer for tires purchased on the e-commerce site, which Sears said was a first for a brick-and-mortar retailer. After making a tire purchase -- which includes Sears' DieHard tires, which it began selling two years ago -- customers can select an appointment time to have the tires installed and balanced. A Sears Auto Center representative will then contact the customer to confirm the appointment.

A man in a plaid shirt and a blue hat installing a tire in a garage.

Sears Auto Centers are one of the retailer's few remaining valuable assets. Image source: Getty Images.

It's another smart deal that Chairman and CEO Eddie Lampert has made. Along with selling Kenmore appliances and DieHard products on Amazon, Lampert has arranged for the brands to be sold at different retailers around the world and to extend the brands to new products like gas grills and flashlights, respectively. He even rebranded at least one auto center under the DieHard brand.

Unfortunately, most of these flashes of brilliance have been for naught as sales continue to spiral down out of control. Same-store sales at Sears plunged 18.1% in the fourth quarter and were down an equally dismal 12.2% at Kmart. Now that the retailer seems to be careening toward a bankruptcy filing, none of these deals, including the latest, can stop it.

Amazon gains bricks-and-clicks insights

Amazon.com is the one who benefits the most here. Selling tires online is a tough business if you have nowhere to install them. By partnering with Sears Auto Center, one of the few remaining prized assets left at the retailer, Amazon is able to further bridge the gap between itself and its customers through brick-and-mortar stores, and it doesn't have to build any physical locations.

The service will initially be available at 47 Sears Auto Centers in eight of the top U.S. metropolitan areas, but will eventually be expanded to all 400 or so centers across the country.

There's little downside for Amazon here. It gets a national tire installer without the hassle of dealing with independent installers and it gets to see whether there is an online market for automotive installation services that it can potentially expand.�Lampert is still interested in offloading the auto centers to generate cash and Amazon could be using the opportunity to gauge interest in enhancing its physical store strategy.

Sears gets to delay the inevitable

One can only surmise from the reaction to the news that investors are hoping this means Amazon might one day buy Sears, not just its automotive business. Why else would Sears stock soar more than 20% of the news? But that is a misplaced hope.

Amazon has lots of relationships with brick-and-mortar retailers. Beyond having major brand storefronts on Amazon's site, the e-commerce giant sells its Alexa-powered AI products in Kohl's and customers can process their returns there as well. It also has its Lockers in malls, on college campuses, and in 7-Eleven stores across the country. This is simply paving another avenue of access to its customers.

And it must be noted these are Amazon customers, not Sears customers. While Sears does get some remuneration out of the deal because it charges around $17 per tire for an installation, plus the potential for some ancillary sales from customers hanging out waiting for their tires to be put on, it's Amazon that is making the sale and generating the bulk of the revenue.

Moreover, buying tires online and having them shipped to the retailer still isn't as convenient as going into a local tire service center and purchasing them.

The partnership isn't necessarily a bad one and it continues Lampert's string of smart deals over the past year or so. But Sears is too far gone to be saved. Had this thinking been in place when it could have made a difference, we'd be singing a different tune today, but Sears is a broken brand and cobbling together a bunch of small deals, no matter how strategic they might seem, can't change its direction.

Sunday, May 20, 2018

Somewhat Positive News Coverage Somewhat Unlikely to Affect Ciena (CIEN) Share Price

News headlines about Ciena (NYSE:CIEN) have trended somewhat positive this week, Accern Sentiment reports. The research firm identifies positive and negative media coverage by reviewing more than 20 million blog and news sources in real time. Accern ranks coverage of companies on a scale of negative one to positive one, with scores nearest to one being the most favorable. Ciena earned a daily sentiment score of 0.13 on Accern’s scale. Accern also assigned news headlines about the communications equipment provider an impact score of 46.1569413852432 out of 100, meaning that recent media coverage is somewhat unlikely to have an effect on the company’s share price in the next few days.

These are some of the headlines that may have effected Accern’s scoring:

Get Ciena alerts: Has the Tide Turned in Boot Barn Holdings, Inc. (BOOT) and Ciena Corporation (CIEN) Stocks? (nmsunews.com) Ciena (CIEN) SVP Sells $50,500.00 in Stock (americanbankingnews.com) Is Ciena Corporation (CIEN) In Search of Flying? (nmsunews.com) Ciena inks deals with Caucasus Online and GlobeNet (telecomlead.com) Ciena’s GeoMesh chosen to enhance submarine networks in Caucasus and Latin America (fibre-systems.com)

Shares of Ciena stock opened at $25.30 on Friday. Ciena has a 12 month low of $19.40 and a 12 month high of $27.98. The company has a market cap of $3.66 billion, a price-to-earnings ratio of 16.98, a PEG ratio of 1.51 and a beta of 1.40. The company has a quick ratio of 1.79, a current ratio of 2.06 and a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.33.

Ciena (NYSE:CIEN) last announced its earnings results on Tuesday, March 6th. The communications equipment provider reported $0.15 EPS for the quarter, beating analysts’ consensus estimates of $0.07 by $0.08. Ciena had a return on equity of 14.10% and a net margin of 27.76%. The business had revenue of $646.14 million during the quarter, compared to analysts’ expectations of $641.77 million. During the same quarter in the prior year, the firm earned $0.17 earnings per share. The business’s revenue was up 4.0% compared to the same quarter last year. equities research analysts anticipate that Ciena will post 1.08 EPS for the current fiscal year.

CIEN has been the subject of a number of analyst reports. Citigroup upped their price target on Ciena from $30.00 to $32.00 and gave the stock a “buy” rating in a report on Friday, March 9th. ValuEngine raised Ciena from a “hold” rating to a “buy” rating in a report on Friday, March 9th. Jefferies Group reaffirmed a “buy” rating and issued a $31.00 price target on shares of Ciena in a report on Wednesday, March 7th. MKM Partners upped their price target on Ciena to $32.00 and gave the stock a “buy” rating in a report on Wednesday, March 7th. Finally, Needham & Company LLC reaffirmed a “buy” rating and issued a $29.00 price target (up previously from $24.00) on shares of Ciena in a report on Wednesday, March 7th. One equities research analyst has rated the stock with a sell rating, five have given a hold rating and twenty-two have given a buy rating to the stock. The stock currently has a consensus rating of “Buy” and an average price target of $30.04.

In other news, SVP Scott Mcfeely sold 1,000 shares of the company’s stock in a transaction that occurred on Thursday, March 15th. The stock was sold at an average price of $26.95, for a total value of $26,950.00. The transaction was disclosed in a document filed with the Securities & Exchange Commission, which can be accessed through the SEC website. Also, SVP Stephen B. Alexander sold 2,500 shares of the company’s stock in a transaction that occurred on Monday, April 16th. The shares were sold at an average price of $25.51, for a total value of $63,775.00. The disclosure for this sale can be found here. Insiders sold 90,505 shares of company stock valued at $2,346,927 over the last 90 days. Company insiders own 1.38% of the company’s stock.

Ciena Company Profile

Ciena Corporation provides hardware, software, and services that support the transport, switching, aggregation, service delivery, and management of voice, video, and data traffic on communications networks worldwide. The company's Networking Platforms segment offers hardware networking solutions optimized for the convergence of coherent optical transport, optical transport network switching, and packet switching.

Insider Buying and Selling by Quarter for Ciena (NYSE:CIEN)