Bank of America Drops 3%

Frequent readers of this blog will know that I have been long Bank of America (BAC) since the stock plummeted in 2009. I used the market weakness of yesterday to buy more shares of Bank of America. The stock dropped to $13.04 in the after hours market. I always use weakness to add to my position. Bank earnings may take a hit but I still believe that the stock is trading at a huge discount based on the earnings power of BofA.

Banking On Bank Of America

I read an article today about how Bank of America has seen a rise in short interest. Traders are betting against the nation’s largest bank and expecting a decline in price over the short term. While this may be true I think that any weakness in the stock should be looked at as a buying opportunity. I have been buying more Bank of America(BAC) whenever the stock drops to the $15 range. Shorts may temporarily drive the stock lower but I would just look at this as an opportunity to purchase more shares at a cheaper price.

Over the next few quarters Bank of America will be taking billions in write-offs from its home loan portfolio, small business loans and its credit card division. The country’s largest mortgage lender has seen its earnings hurt by foreclosures and loan modifications. Bank of America’ has seen loans in its small business division rise to the high teens. BofA is the nation’s 2nd largest credit issuer and has seen defaults rise to the low teens. 2010 may be a rough year for the banking giant but 2011 and 2012 should be better. The stock trades at 20 times 2010 earnings but just nine times 2011′s estimated earnings. BofA is selling at just 1.3 times tangible book value and should earn close to $3 a share by 2012. While BofA is the riskiest of the three major banks(Bank of America, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan); I believe that the banking giant has the most upside potential as well.

GE Stock Position Update

I sold off some of my GE stock position because the stock has gained over $4 a share in less than three weeks. The stock has advanced much faster than I originally thought.  I still like the company long term but I figured I should take the 20% gain.

4 Sleep Easy Stocks

 

 

 

 

 

 

There are some stocks that I have never sold and don’t plan on selling. I have owned these stocks for years and will probably always own at least a share of these companies. I call these stocks my sleep easy portfolio because these are companies that I do not worry about. They are relatively boring companies that should remain profitable 5, 10 or 20 years from now. I think they are solid companies with major competitive advantages. In my opinion these are safe stable companies that all pay a dividend and can grow at reasonable rates going forward.

Nike – Dominates the athletic shoe and apparel market, From Jordan to Tiger Woods nobody sells more tennis shoes than Nike, Great financial position

McDonald’s – King of fast food industry, Great earnings power, Excellent marketing and good management. Plus, how often do you see a McDonald’s go out of business?

Hershey’s – Great brand name, Top 3 in chocolate industry, Unless people stop eating Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups, Kit Kats, Hershey’s Kisses, Almond Joys, Twizzlers, etc. Hershey’s should do just fine.

Kraft – Tons of brand names: From A1 steak sauce, Chips Ahoy cookies, Koolaid, Oscar Mayer, Nabisco, Oreo, Planters to Stove Top this consumer staple sells it.

Stock update

Purchased an additional 100 shares of GE stock today right before the market close Thursday at $12.60 price. The stock is risky but I think it is significantly undervalued.

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