Top 10 Food Stocks For 2015: Post Holdings Inc (POST)
Post Holdings, Inc., incorporated on September 22, 2011, is a holding company. The Company is a manufacturer, marketer and distributor of branded ready-to-eat cereals in the United States and Canada. The Company's portfolio of brands includes Honey Bunches of Oats, Pebbles, Great Grains, Grape-Nuts, Shredded Wheat, Raisin Bran, Golden Crisp, Alpha-Bits and Honeycomb. It markets and sells ready-to-eat cereal products in three different categories: sweetened, balanced and unsweetened. Its sweetened products include Pebbles, Honeycomb, Golden Crisp, Alpha-Bits and Waffle Crisp. Its balanced products include Honey Bunches of Oats, Post Selects, Great Grains and Shreddies. The Company's unsweetened products include Post Shredded Wheat, Post Raisin Bran and Grape-Nuts. Effective January 1, 2014, the Company announced it has completed the acquisition of private label pasta manufacturer Dakota Growers Pasta Company, Inc. Effective January 2, 2014, Post Holdings Inc acquired Ag ricore United Holdings Inc from Viterra Inc, a unit of Glencore Xstrata PLC, and the transaction also included Dakota Growers Pasta Company, Inc. Effective January 1, 2014, Post Holdings Inc acquired Dymatize Enterprises LLC, a Farmers Branch-based manufacturer and wholesaler of nutrition supplement. Effective January 1, 2014, it acquired Dymatize Enterprises LLC and Golden Boy Foods Ltd.
Honey Bunches of Oats is in the ready-to-eat cereal market. The Company's Pebbles brands include Cocoa and Fruity Pebbles. The products are manufactured through a flexible production platform consisting of four owned primary facilities and sold through a variety of channels, such as grocery stores, mass merchandisers, club stores, and drug stores.
Advisors' Opinion:- [By Roberto Pedone]
Another potential earnings short-squeeze trade idea is diversified foods player ! Post Holdings (POST), which is set to release its numbers on next Monday after the market close. Wall Street analysts, on average, expect Post Holdings to report revenue $980.04 million on earnings of 7 cents per share.
The current short interest as a percentage of the float for Post Holdings is extremely high at 24.9%. That means that out of the 44.14 million shares in the tradable float, 10.87 million shares are sold short by the bears. This is a large short interest on a stock with a relatively low tradable float. Any bullish earnings news could easily trigger a large short-covering rally for shares of POST after earnings are announced.
From a technical perspective, POST is currently trending above its 50-day moving average and well below its 200-day moving average, which is neutral trendwise. This stock has just started to bounce right off some near-term support at $35 and off its 50-day moving average of $35.18 a share. That bounce is starting to push shares of POST within range of triggering a major breakout trade post-earnings.
If you're in the bull camp on POST, then I would wait until after its report and look for long-biased trades if this stock manages to break out above some near-term overhead resistance levels at $38 to $38.80 a share with high volume. Look for volume on that move that hits near or above its three-month average volume of 771,663 shares. If that breakout kicks off post-earnings, then POST will set up to re-fill some of its previous gap-down-day zone from August that started at $45 a share.
I would simply avoid POST or look for short-biased trades if after earnings it fails to trigger that breakout and then drops back below some near-term support at around $35 a share with high volume. If we get that move, then POST will set up to re-test or possibly take out its next major support level at its 52-week low of $30.94 a share.
- [By cody56]
The fund took advantage of an opportunity to purchase shares of Post Holding (POST) when! stock fe! ll sharply after Post Holdings quarterly earnings came in below Wall Streets analysts estimates and the company lowered its full year earning guidance.
- [By Vera Yuan]
Dear Fellow Shareholder: The U.S. economy continues to gradually expand, building on the 5+ year recovery from the Great Recession. Employment levels are improving, though progress has been slower than expected. Inflation, for now, remains subdued. As signaled and on cue, the Fed has been weaning the economy (and investors) off of the extraordinary 'quantitative easing' stimulus. Investors have generally shrugged off world events that might otherwise cause high anxiety (ISIS and the Middle East, Russia and Ukraine, etc.). As attention now turns to when the Fed will raise short-term interest rates, it seems plausible that volatility may intensify as the stimulus security blanket is removed. In the meantime, companies are taking advantage of the artificially low interest rate environment and sanguine investor sentiment. Merger activity remains robust, fueled by cheap and readily available credit. The IPO market has been very active, headlined by the successful Alibaba offering in September. Corporate treasurers continue to issue loads of debt on attractive terms, locking in generationally low interest rates for long terms. While these conditions will not last forever, they have helped opportunistic managers accelerate equity value growth at many companies.Investment Commentary and Outlook After three years of seemingly non-stop gains, the stock market took a pause in the third quarter. While most large cap indices eked out modest positive returns, the broader investing waters were far less placid. Small cap stocks sold off as the Russell 2000 declined more than 7% during the quarter. Energy stocks, both large and small, fell materially as investors worried about too much oil and gas supply coming online in North America (what a difference a decade makes). High yield bonds wobbled briefly in July, then again in S! eptember.! Increasingly, investors are not treating all securities the same, and as stock pickers we welcome this development. Our equity funds' resu
source from Top Stocks For 2015:http://www.topstocksblog.com/top-10-food-stocks-for-2015-2.html
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