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Monday, June 01, 2009 

Coal and Oil

Tommy,

Glad someone looks through my notes. I just added this to my to-do list --- which is currently 7 companies long.

My dad ran a business called ARM Computing for 15 years. I am just carrying on the legacy.

A couple things:

1. Your notes reflect that you dig deep enough and that you have a sense of what you are looking for. That's a plus.
2. If I had any advice, or a cautionary statement --- make sure you never get caught up in 1 company and try to continue to prove that it is a good value. Always be nimble and always be comparing that which you are invested in to that which you could be invested in. If you like another opportunity better. Switch.

A couple similar companies off the top of my head that you might be interested in/familiar with

oil
Cneh, lpih, I think snen too. (snen is not a buy for me, but it's interesting)

Coal:

Sclx, chgy, pudc

Anyway, I'm sure there are more. The bottom line: Find the best way to allocate your money so that you are the most confident that you will not lose. I can't emphasize that enough. By doing that, with that mindset, you should do fine. The trick is figuring out what not to own instead of wasting lots of time evaluating 1 single potential opportunity. I call this relative valuation.

Maybe I have no idea what I'm talking about, but empirical evidence suggests otherwise,

Glen

-----Original Message-----
From: Tommy Gallagher [mailto:thomasmgal
Sent: Monday, June 01, 2009 9:51 PM
To: Bradford, Glen Richard
Subject: Re: CCGY

Hey Glen - congrats on getting the hedge fund started up. I wish you
luck. Does the ARM name have any significance? How'd you come up with
it?

A stock I came across tonight is CCGY - China Clean energy. Looks
like it may have bottomed in early March at .10 cents. With the
increase in diesel margins today of 8% and their new facility coming
online in September - this may be decent bargain. Their earnings
weren't impressive for last year or the first quarter. I didn't see
this in any of your round robins and was wondering if you've looked
into this stock at all. At 20 cents its pretty inviting. they were
initially on the docket to present at the china rising conference, but
they didn't. I'm not sure why Glass half empty - i should stay away,
there is a bad reason why they didn't present, couldnt get their act
together, were disinvited etc...glass half full - too much going on
with the economy, not enough time, another, some other benign reason
and now not everybody knows about this stock yet since it didn't
present and its an opportunity.

looks like it is getting some notice with 175k volume today.

Below is the link to the china conference website showing they were
originally scheduled to present and a piece of their quarter
filing...let me know what you think.

Thanks,

Tommy


http://www.chinarisingconference.com/news/news20090416.html

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Sunday, May 24, 2009 

Coffee = Overpriced

gmcr, cbou, ddrx --- i dunno. i had a list somewhere of the overpriced coffee stocks. i'm just saying like in Disney's movie Jungle 2 Jungle. Get out of Coffee.
cphi - still like it
chbp - scared, not always profitable
skbi/skbo - will look again later during when the market is open so i can look at the bid/ask. this thing is thinly traded and might be good.
hlf - not cheap enough for me to buy right now, but will likely outperform the market in the next 2 years, revenues sucked last 2 quarters
utvl - this thing is going to the NYSE. Tom suggested that there are more shares than google says there are out there, dont have time to check. mcconnel (purdue professor) suggested 5% appreciation on average before listing and 5% decline in price for 6 months post listing on NYSE.
pcap - like it
acas - like it
mcgc - like it
gnw - like it
cno - like it
ahr - like it
grvy - seems poorly managed. no increase in revenues and yet increased expenses.
gfre - guidance includes dilution, i'm scared!
jadae - most of its income is from its discontinued operations in 2008
sclx - following up with company, added to my sorting list.
utvl - huge growth potential, will it be exercised? i'll buy some
chcg - topside catalyst: franchise strategy, downside force: decreasing profit margins, i'll buy some - i sold at around $1.50 to buy other deals.
gtls - prolly will appreciate in price over the next 2 years. just not enough for me to mention
snen - blah, just don't know. what happens when this loss goes away? is the business growing? you'd think so... but there isn't a very clear trend to me. negative cash from operations lately. lets wait and see .. throw this with nwd

i need to look at
bucy, cedc, midd, and my old stocks again to dump some money into for an investor that wants a safer play.

Now --- for some emails:

First, a picture: I picked the bottom on this one. Luck or skill --- your choice.



So, what do we do now? It’s got a P/E of about 10, maybe a little higher than that. You are getting a 6.4% dividend here. The trailing 12 month P/E is 14.

Historically trades between $60-$70. Was as high as $50 recently.

You’re looking at 1 year upside potential of about 75% (maybe going higher than where they traded historically cause they picked up National City). I think we could very easily sell out of this around $50 here shortly --- or you could just bail now and try to ride something else with more upside.
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T --- I didn’t bet on this one. I don’t know whether it will outperform or underperform. If you don’t know, don’t bet.

You bought it at $20, which baffles me because its 52-week low was $20.90 according to Google. So, you got the bottom, luck or skill.

There’s a double bottom on this one in October and March around $21. They just increased their dividend in Q1 2009. Their dividend is sustainable and pays 6.9%. There was some huge acquisition or something at the beginning of 2007 that exploded revenues. I think from mid 2007 to mid 2008, this was overpriced because of this abnormal growth.

I’d be getting out at $30. I might even be willing to jump ship at $25 depending on if there is something else out there that’s better.

I just downloaded all the larger companies I was looking at this fall. Out of the batch of them, there are probably over half that are still improving as if there wasn’t a crisis, but are priced now as if the crisis is supposed to hurt business.

I’ll be sorting through them here shortly and if I think I can choose 2-3 of the best to replace PNC, that’s what I’ll do.
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UTVL-Good call on the details. It is incredibly undervalued compared to its competitors. It just got listed on NYSE amex. There is some dilution.

Their SSD segment is losing sales fast. I don't know if that's due to cannibalization or what. Other segments are growing well. This last quarter they did not grow rev or earnings, but I think that's probably due to seasonality and the worst of the recession.

I'll probably invest a little and see what new things develop.

Tom
On Sun, May 24, 2009 at 10:02 AM, Bradford, Glen Richard wrote:
I think you are wrong here.

There were about 41M shares outstanding according to their 10K.

Then they reverse split on march 31, 2009. http://www.pinksheets.com/edgar/GetFilingHtml?FilingID=6513635

I think google’s share count is right.

What are your thoughts?

Glen

From: tcorm [mailto:tcorso] On Behalf Of Tom Corson-Knowles
Sent: Saturday, May 23, 2009 1:04 PM
To: Bradford, Glen Richard
Subject: UTVL

Hey,

UTVL has the wrong market cap shown on google finance. There are 38M share outstanding, so the real book value is almost $230 M. With $18M expected income for 2009, before dilution, that P/E seems high at over 20.

Tom
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The price goes up about 5% on the announcement and transition weeks, then trails off 5% over the next 6 weeks

________________________________________
From: Bradford, Glen Richard
Sent: Sun 5/24/2009 10:09 AM
To: McConnell, John J
Subject: OTCBB to NYSE Stock
Hey John,

First, I’d like to thank you for passing me in Finance the 3rd module this year. Second, I want your opinion on the average stock price changes on a company that goes from OTCBB to the NYSE.
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Hi Glen,

if you like ACAS, you'll love PCAP.

PCAP is in the same business, but has far fewer bad loans and a lower price/book, P/E and debt/equity.
They have violated bank covenants also, but only barely and recently.

Debt/equity is .96 vs 1.58 at ACAS, P/E (2010) 2.3 vs 4.2, price/book .22 vs .26

Slightly more expensive, but not much, is MCGC, which is in compliance with all covenants and will resume dividends earlier than the other two.

Among the chinese stocks, OPAI.OB is still trading at a P/E of 2, and half of book despite 30% growth.

I enjoy your articles very much. They are the best of all on SA, and I made a lot of money thanks to you.

Regards,

Fred

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