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16 bargain stocks to buy before the bailout

Posted Sep 29 2008, 09:36 PM by admin
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This post is by MSN Money columnist Michael Brush:

Unless you’ve been in the markets for over two decades, you’ve never seen anything like the one-day wipeout that took major indices down a gut wrenching 9% Monday. The last time things got this ugly was during the market crash on Oct. 19, 1987.

So like a lot of people, you may be dazed and confused -- and wondering what to do with your stock portfolio or even your money in the bank.

Seasoned money managers and market experts I spoke with after the close Monday expect a financial rescue plan to be approved by the end of the week. Between now and then, expect more turmoil that will give you an opportunity to pick up some bargains. Just avoid the financials.

Here’s a five-point plan for surviving, and profiting from, what happens over the next week and beyond:

1. Expect a bailout towards the end of the week.

The financial rescue plan died in the House largely because of ideologues on the right, who oppose greater involvement of government in the private sector.

They made their point. But now they have a new problem: Turmoil in stocks and the credit markets will almost surely continue until lawmakers agree to some kind of bailout plan.

“There’s no question they will act. It’s just a question of how bad things get before the ideologues wake up,” says Whitney Tilson, a co-portfolio manager of the Tilson Focus Fund.

“They were not convinced the sky was falling, so the sky needed to get a little closer to their heads,” says Eric Barden of Barden Capital Management in Austin, Texas. “A couple more days of this and there is going to be political pressure to swallow a deal. I have to think it is political suicide for House Republicans to try and stand in the way of the bailout plan.”

“We will reach a threshold for the amount of pain that certain people in the House of Representatives want to cause the rest of us in their anger over the cost of the bailout,” says David Nierenberg of Nierenberg Investment Management. “When Congress realizes it has caused sufficient punishment indiscriminately to the right people and to innocent people, then it will do the right thing.”

Like other money managers I spoke with, Nierenberg thinks that will happen by Friday.

2. Expect a lot of market turmoil between now and then.

Approval of a rescue plan would stabilize the markets. In the meantime, stocks will continue to be volatile, with more downside very likely.

“Stock will go down 5% a day until Congress passes a bill,” predicts Tilson. “I would be surprised if there is a sharp rebound until there some clarification on the rescue package,” says Barden. “My guess is the market continues to suffer.”

History shows that a common scenario after such a big one-day drop is another woosh down during the first hour and a half of trading the next day, Tuesday, followed by a reversal. “Now we just need the final short-term washout and reversal, and we should then be well on our way to a better long-side trading environment,” says Jason Goepfert of SentimenTrader.com..

But he warns the cost of failure in making such a short-term bet can be great. “We saw this level of selling just before the ’87 crash,” he says. “If we just keep selling off Tuesday with no upside reversal after the first one to two hours of trading, then we better hold on to our hats, and expect a massive announcement from the government.”

3. Use the turmoil to pick up cheap stocks.

“You are seeing panic selling, so there’s a real discontent between what stocks are trading at and what the fundamentals are,” says Craig Hodges of the Hodges Fund. “There is a buyer’s strike.”

In the sell off, Hodges likes energy stocks which he describes as “coming absolutely unwound.” High on his list are: Transocean (RIG), Atwood Oceanics (ATW), Chesapeake Energy (CHK) and Devon Energy (DVN). “I don’t think we are going to stop heating our homes and driving our cars, yet the stocks are trading like it’s over now,” says Hodges.

He also likes the shipper DryShips (DRYS) and Potash of Saskatchewan (POT) which sells fertilizers and feed products. Like the other money managers mentioned here, he has positions in stocks he mentions in funds he manages.

Barden thinks this is the time to be getting out of “safe” investments like government bonds and moving it into riskier plays like stocks that have been beaten up. “Basically to me this is a transfer of wealth from investors who lack staying power to those who have staying power.”

Like Hodges, he likes energy plays: particularly XTO Energy (XTO) and Chesapeake. He also thinks China Mobile Limited (CHL) has been overly punished because it is a major position in China-related exchange traded funds like iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index (EEM), which are being liquidated by hedge funds.

Tilson, who has made several great calls in the market confusion of the past few months, likes Fairfax Financial Holdings (FFH) because it has bets against financial stocks – bets that should benefit as that group continues to have problems. He’s also a fan of Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) because it is trading well below its intrinsic value.

Nierenberg says top positions in his portfolios that look attractive because they are down so much include Superior Energy Services (SPN), NATCO Group (NTG), MedCath (MDTH), Asset Acceptance Capital (AACC) and Move (MOVE).

4. Avoid financial stocks.
They’ve gotten hammered, but there’s so much uncertainty about what’s on their books that it’s hard to know what is going to happen next. “There is still no visibility. That’s the problem,” says Hodges.

5. Don’t worry about your money in the bank.

It’s safe. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) has enough funds to insure your deposits, as long as you are under the legal limits of $100,000 per account, more for joint accounts and retirement accounts. Don’t rush to the bank to get money to put under the mattress. You will only be making things worse.

At the time of publication, Michael Brush did not own shares of any of the companies of funds mentioned in this column.

Related reading:

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Comments

 

Obviously you are in favor of padding Democrats' pockets at the taxpayers' expense, which is the real reason the Republicans (oh, and 95 Democrats) were against the "buy in", er, bailout. The fact that there was a little attachment to the bailout that strictly benefited the liberal Democrats is a rather large detail that you've chosen to overlook. Good luck at having my comment posted.

This is an upsidedown pyramid. The pointy end is the foundation, the foundation is an assumption (a bailout occurs). I like the "don't worry about your money in the bank" - If your bank goes under it's so easy and convenient to draw funds from your local FDIC ATM!

says David Nierenberg of Nierenberg Investment Management. “When Congress realizes it has caused sufficient punishment indiscriminately to the right people and to innocent people, then it will do the right thing.”

Wow, "sufficient punishment...to innocent people..." If this were another government, we would call this terrorism. Our policy is not to give in to terrorist demands. Do we have to be held hostage till these guys get their money? I say let them all be poor and learn how we live...Oh they would still be 10 times as rich as you and I.

WakeUpandSmelltheLiberals: it's YOUR team that's padded their pockets; had enough of GOP military-industrial complex robbery of our treasury yet? Had enough of bank ceos paying themselves gazillions and not regulating CDOs? That's a direct gift from GOP Sen. Phil Gramm in the 90's Senate, who killed CDO regulation and host of other disclosures that would have helped stop the slicing and dicing of mortgages. Gramm is a one-time McCain economic advisor...had enough America?

Well, the Repubs shot down America's hope to protect the US economy. It's like the 911 attack on new York... now Repubs are the greatest threat to America's security.

How many innocent people will be destroyed before the House Repubs can be arrested for terrorizing America?

Can't wait till Thursday where I can only hope Congress shoots down another bailout. Let those in the market (including me) suffer just a little more. Really, I don't care cause I'll be buying more great companies @ basemant bargin prices. This is a going th be a great time to be a real long term investor (that's more than 1 yeary'all) when this market drops another 20%. This is where we seperate the wheat from the chaff, WHICH ARE YOU. I say load up on what you like and wait 5 yrs your going to be really happy if you do. People only wants a free market when we all can just merrily make easy money, pretend no dowturns will every happen. Try and short the dowturn ect.. guess which way the market will go. I call these individuals SPECULATORS and DIMWITS who are to EMOTINAL and can't evaluate PROFITABLE long-term business. That's all you need to do evaluate increasing profitable business over the long-term, it's simple. Most people are this way cause they can't see the beatuy of a panic selling Did anyone think housing appreaciation doubling in 5 years was normal! HAHAHAHAHA if you did. You fall into the HUMANS DON"T UNDERSTAND FINICIAL RISKS. Humans who don't understand finances do this, speculate for a quick buck, don't understand the risks involved and think the government will bail me out when I screw up. Well I'm a tax payer, voter and I say YOUR SCREWED IT UP YOU DEAL WITH IT.

Everyone's worried about losing their money of late.  We have been losing America for well over 2 decades now, as the humble and stalwort citizen hides behind blaming their elected..."elected" officials.  It just may well come to a head in the form of a financial crisis/revolution but WE THE PEOPLE have continued to trash our planet, wage war on unsuspecting oil-rich countries around the globe, and turn deaf our ears to what America... .the "American Dream" means and has meant to millions through-out its relatively brief existence (1776). It's all but over.  The Republicans (and CEO's)  have lined their pockets with war-chest revenues since they found  'J Q Public Voter' so willing to turn yet another deaf ear to the dismantling of the Bill of Rights, the Constitution and the sovereignty of a once great Nation pursuing "happiness."  Some day the story will reveal that money was the bait, Bin Laden the catalyst for terror (not captured) and there has NEVER been seen a hearse pulling a U-HAUL. Serves us right. We had it all; WE THE PEOPLE:  lazy, complacent, mollycoddled "Americans" watched it all fall as once again money -not the Dream- dominated center stage, the TV, and the lives of our children's children's children. Shame on US!

If you have some money than pick up the good companies that are on sale thanks to the madness that is going on.America has turned into a madhouse but fortunately it will get back to normal as always.

I cashed out ALL my positions 18 months ago...until this past 9/17, when I bought fannie mae at 36 cents. It's now 1.50 and in 2 years will be back in the $60 range. Now is the time to make some dough folks.

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