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Apple vs. Microsoft: What’s the Smart Money Think?

The following article was written by our guest autor Indider Monkey. Apple (AAPL) versus Microsoft (MSFT). It is a clichéd contest debated by everyone from tech bloggers to university professors. If you follow the equity markets, we’re willing to bet you’ve taken a side once or twice, or at least thought about it. So instead of picking favorites using the same old tired P/E or earnings growth metrics, we are going to give you some information that’s a bit more useful.

We’re talking about hedge fund sentiment.

At Insider Monkey, our goal is to help you understand how to parse down the vast hedge fund industry into insight you can use. Our empirical research on hedge funds has allowed us to hone our small-cap strategy into a market-beating machine. In its first year ended last month, this strategy returned 47.6%, outpacing the S&P 500 by more than 29 percentage points.

The crowd’s pick: Apple

We track a little over 500 of the best and brightest hedge funds in existence (out of around 8,000 total), and in the Apple-Microsoft debate, the consensus filings are intriguing. According to the final numbers from last quarter, Apple was the third most popular stock among the money managers we track, with 122 hedge funds invested. Ninety-two elite hedge funds were long Microsoft at this time.

Relatively speaking, Google (GOOG) was a much more well-liked tech stock last quarter with a whopping 157 hedgies, but both Microsoft and Apple finished in this measure’s top 10, easily outpacing peers like Nokia (NOK) or Intel (INTC). This overarching form of analysis isn’t the only way to compare the duo, though.

Einhorn’s pick: Apple

Within the aggregate data, there are quite a few interesting cases of noteworthy hedge fund managers choosing between the two based on a variety of factors. David Einhorn, for example, chose to go with Apple while closing out of Microsoft last quarter. His rational was explained in his Q2 2013 shareholder letter, in which Greenlight Capital wrote, “Windows 8 appears to be a flop, and a decade of mismanagement has put Microsoft at risk of becoming a shrinking company.” Apple, meanwhile, is still Einhorn’s No. 1 stock pick, accounting for just over 16% of his $5.3 billion equity portfolio.

Yacktman’s pick: Microsoft

One hedge fund manager who feels precisely the opposite is Donald Yacktman. At the Value Investing Congress on Monday, Yacktman—who’s particularly skilled at finding opportunities in the large cap space—said Apple isn’t as cheap as most think, reasoning that it can’t sustain its high profit margins.

Yacktman remarked his "hat's off to Steve Jobs, he hit 4 home runs in a row," to those in attendance, but in response to a question posed by an audience member on why he holds Microsoft but not Apple stock, his response was interesting. Essentially, Yacktman said that Microsoft's profit margins are protected, i.e. there aren't competing viable operating systems or Office products, while Apple's margins are not. Assuming Samsung's smartphones are close substitutes to Apple's iPhone, Cupertino is theoretically more vulnerable to a shift in consumer preferences and/or a prolonged lack of innovation.

Ubben’s pick: Microsoft

Behind the next proverbial door we’ll take a look at Jeff Ubben of ValueAct Capital, an activist investor who has a longer-term focus than many of his corporate raider peers. Ubben and ValueAct took a huge stake in Microsoft back in April, and the position represents close to $2 billion on the books.  In the eyes of most analysts familiar with the matter, it’s widely understood that Ubben’s aim is for Microsoft to concentrate on cultivating its Azure platform to become the top dog of cloud computing.

Ubben was also at the VIC in New York, and his statements on Microsoft echoed those of Yacktman. According to CNNMoney, the crux of his bullish thesis—in addition to the recently approved buyback and dividend boost—is that Microsoft can rely on its enterprise contract staple for the long term. Apple and its peers, on the other hand, “have to run faster every year to keep up,” Ubben said.

Final thoughts

At the end of the day, it’s up to each individual investor to make up his or her own mind about the Apple-Microsoft debate. The elite hedge fund crowd is leaning toward Apple, and Einhorn is sticking with his guns now that Tim Cook and management have shown their shareholders the money.

Apple’s apparently cheap valuation can be called into question, though, if you’re in Yacktman’s camp with regard to margin pressures. Or, if you’re like Ubben and are more confident in Microsoft’s cloud opportunity and existing strengths in enterprise computing, it’s reasonable to feel like the company represents a safer investment than Apple. Either way, the world’s richest investors are split on the matter, and this is a debate that doesn’t look like it will be decided any time soon.

Disclosure: none

Ex-Dividend Stocks: Best Dividend Paying Shares On September 25, 2013

The best yielding and biggest ex-dividend stocks researched by ”long-term-investments.blogspot.com”. Dividend Investors should have a quiet overview of stocks with upcoming ex dividend dates.

The ex dividend date is the final date on which the new stock buyer couldn’t receive the next dividend. If you like to receive the dividend, you need to buy the stock before the ex dividend date. I made a little screen of the best yielding stocks with a higher capitalization that have their ex date on the next trading day.

In total, 44 stocks go ex dividend - of which 13 yield more than 3 percent. Here is a full list of all stocks with ex-dividend date within the current week.

Here is the sheet of the best yielding, higher capitalized ex-dividend stocks:

Company
Ticker
Mcap
P/E
P/B
P/S
Yield
Healthcare Trust of America
2.47B
274.00
1.86
8.09
5.29%
Hawaiian Electric Industries Inc.
2.51B
18.43
1.54
0.76
4.87%
Canadian Imperial Bank of Comm.
32.40B
10.17
2.08
2.82
4.59%
Staples, Inc.
9.64B
-
1.60
0.40
3.25%
Nucor Corporation
15.91B
38.37
2.11
0.86
2.95%
Sempra Energy
21.44B
22.12
2.00
2.05
2.86%
Bancolombia S.A.
12.30B
14.55
2.06
2.91
2.86%
Equity LifeStyle Properties, Inc.
2.93B
35.97
3.97
4.10
2.84%
Ryder System, Inc.
R
3.07B
13.83
1.98
0.48
2.28%
ProAssurance Corporation
2.85B
8.81
1.22
3.87
2.17%
Protective Life Corp.
3.35B
11.09
0.87
0.92
1.90%
Weight Watchers International
2.11B
8.85
-
1.18
1.86%
Axiall Corporation
2.66B
12.61
1.10
0.68
1.68%
Stantec Inc.
2.44B
19.46
3.18
1.49
1.21%
Regal Beloit Corporation
3.06B
16.14
1.53
0.99
1.17%
Canadian Pacific Railway Limited
21.97B
32.05
4.03
3.81
1.08%
Ralph Lauren Corporation
14.98B
20.86
3.98
2.14
0.97%
Zimmer Holdings, Inc.
14.17B
20.67
2.41
3.14
0.95%
Flowserve Corp.
8.89B
20.17
5.18
1.84
0.90%
Whole Foods Market, Inc.
21.63B
40.17
5.72
1.68

Cheapest Dividend Paying Large Caps As of September 2013

Cheap large capitalized stocks with high growth originally published at “long-term-investments.blogspot.com. Cheap stocks, bargains or undervalued companies can promise you good returns if you believe that they receive a better valuation within the next months or years. It’s very difficult to discover those stocks because of the hundreds of thousands technical and fundamental measures.

I often used my static ratios like earnings multiples or book ratios to identify cheaply valuated stocks. Today I like to change my recent criteria about cheapest dividend paying large caps a little bit. I tighten the restriction Price-To-Sales to a value of less than one and look at forward P/E’s. In the past, I’ve looked at current earnings multiples.

These are the criteria for my cheapest dividend paying large cap screen:
- Market Capitalization over USD 10 billion
- Expected Earnings per share growth over 10 percent for the next five years
- Forward P/E ratio under 15
- P/S under 1 and P/B ratio under 2
- Positive Dividends

The number of my results rose. Eighteen stocks fulfilled these criteria of which one pays a high yield of more than five percent. Nearly all, fourteen in total, got a buy or better rating by brokerage firms.

Ex-Dividend Stocks: Best Dividend Paying Shares On September 24, 2013

The best yielding and biggest ex-dividend stocks researched by ”long-term-investments.blogspot.com”. Dividend Investors should have a quiet overview of stocks with upcoming ex dividend dates.

The ex dividend date is the final date on which the new stock buyer couldn’t receive the next dividend. If you like to receive the dividend, you need to buy the stock before the ex dividend date. I made a little screen of the best yielding stocks with a higher capitalization that have their ex date on the next trading day.

In total, 16 stocks go ex dividend - of which 7 yield more than 3 percent. Here is a full list of all stocks with ex-dividend date within the current week.

Here is the sheet of the best yielding ex-dividend stocks:

Company
Ticker
Mcap
P/E
P/B
P/S
Yield
Invesco Mortgage Capital Inc.
2.19B
5.40
0.90
3.52
16.05%
Two Harbors Investment Corp.
3.62B
4.40
0.94
6.65
11.32%
Chambers Street Properties
2.28B
57.50
1.49
10.66
5.43%
Ark Restaurants Corp.
70.42M
17.36
2.21
0.53
4.61%
Philip Morris International, Inc.
147.56B
17.53
-
1.88
4.16%
Getty Realty Corp.
666.27M
35.00
1.74
6.77
4.01%
Cypress Semiconductor
1.69B
-
10.00
2.26
3.82%
Frisch's Restaurants Inc.
125.51M
17.98
1.50
0.62
2.90%
Gazit-Globe, Ltd.
2.32B
10.75
1.12
1.21
2.72%
Salem Communications Corp.
209.03M
-
1.09
0.90
2.49%
International Flavors & Fragrances
6.76B
24.74
4.93
2.35
1.88%
Analogic Corporation
1.01B
33.25
2.07
1.83
0.49%
Embraer SA
6.14B
28.66
1.88
1.03
0.24%
Citigroup, Inc.
C
155.71B
16.36
0.81
2.39
0.08%
Gordmans Stores, Inc.
266.71M
16.69
2.48
0.43
-
Quintiles Transnational Holdings
Q
5.49B
30.22
-
1.12
-