Waving the Red Flag on Three Companies
Monday April 3, 7:00 am ET
Below are three companies we highlighted as Red Flags in recent past editions of StockInvestor. Though these stocks could very well bounce, none will make for good long-term investments, in our opinion. We simply think there are companies in the market that offer far better risk/reward propositions today.
US Airways (NYSE:LCC - News)
Rating: 1 Star
Economic Moat: None
Risk: Speculative
Stewardship Grade: B
From our Analyst Report: "Let's get one thing straight: Newlywed US Airways is not a low-cost carrier, no matter what its ticker suggests. Despite its newfound financial stability and some favorable near-term industry trends, US Airways cannot escape its poor business fundamentals. Considering the airline industry's history of value destruction and Morningstar's long-term, intrinsic value investing philosophy, we spend what may be inordinate time and effort evaluating the outlook for these businesses. What reason do we have to believe that the future will be different than the past? None. Near-term fluctuations in such factors as fuel costs, passenger demand, and fares will always make for plentiful speculative opportunity, but the industry's underlying fundamentals indicate extraordinarily slim operating profits in the long run."
Monday April 3, 7:00 am ET
Below are three companies we highlighted as Red Flags in recent past editions of StockInvestor. Though these stocks could very well bounce, none will make for good long-term investments, in our opinion. We simply think there are companies in the market that offer far better risk/reward propositions today.
US Airways (NYSE:LCC - News)
Rating: 1 Star
Economic Moat: None
Risk: Speculative
Stewardship Grade: B
From our Analyst Report: "Let's get one thing straight: Newlywed US Airways is not a low-cost carrier, no matter what its ticker suggests. Despite its newfound financial stability and some favorable near-term industry trends, US Airways cannot escape its poor business fundamentals. Considering the airline industry's history of value destruction and Morningstar's long-term, intrinsic value investing philosophy, we spend what may be inordinate time and effort evaluating the outlook for these businesses. What reason do we have to believe that the future will be different than the past? None. Near-term fluctuations in such factors as fuel costs, passenger demand, and fares will always make for plentiful speculative opportunity, but the industry's underlying fundamentals indicate extraordinarily slim operating profits in the long run."