New Oriental Training & Tech Grp (ADR) Keeps Shining Bright

Right now, it seems as if New Oriental Schooling (NYSE:EDU) has done a good job of consulting its crystal ball. Coming out of the Great Recession, the Chinese company focused almost entirely on preparing Chinese high school students hoping to attend college in America to take English-language exams.

But sensing shifting winds in the business climate, encroachment from competitors, and an opportunity closer to home, founder and then-CEO (now Chairman) Michael Yu decided to pivot the company's focus to K-12 tutoring and after-school programs. Based on the company's string of encouraging quarterly reports -- including the one released Tuesday morning -- it was the right decision.

Just the numbers
For investors focused on the bottom line, there was a lot to like from the most recent report, which covered the company's first fiscal quarter.
In constant currency, revenue growth was even more impressive, up 24% according to Yu. This helps explain why the stock was trading up as much as 8% following its earnings release. Long-term investors -- focusing on deeper issues -- should be equally pleased with what's happening at the company.

After-school tutoring continues strong growth
Yu kicked off the company's announcement by saying: "We are very pleased with what was a very strong start to fiscal year 2017. ... By all accounts, this is a very solid start to the new fiscal year."

He isn't exaggerating.

Perhaps the most important metric for investors to note is total enrollments. In all of the company's K-12 after-school tutoring programs, enrollments jumped to 1.33 million, up an impressive 31.2%. At the same time, the company increased its number of locations throughout China by only 7%, to 771 learning centers and schools. That means that each existing school has seen its enrollment swell.

CFO Stephen Yang explained that some of this growth was due to New Oriental's approach to the start of the fiscal year: "In order to rapidly acquire grade 7 student customers before they start the first year of secondary school, we rolled out a large scale promotion this summer, by offering low price experiential courses for multiple subjects."

Balancing efficiency with reinvestment
Equally impressive was New Oriental's ability to balance its spending during the quarter. Total operating expenses grew slower than revenue, but were up 16.1% for the quarter. And the areas where the company was spending its money were the right ones: increasing teacher salaries and ramping up marketing for the start of the school year.

Ideally, that marketing spend will wane in the coming semesters as the back-to-school rush subsides. But coaching and keeping excellent teachers is vital. As Chinese families become familiar -- and comfortable -- with their children's after-school teachers, they will likely be loath to switch out.

At the same time, New Oriental continues to invest heavily in its online-to-offline (O2O) network. In short, this allows for a seamless transition between educational education and purchases made online, with real-world, paper-and-pencils instruction happening in classrooms. That type of network -- along with the aforementioned high switching costs and the company's impressive build-out of 771 locations in the Middle Kingdom -- will provide a sustainable moat for years to come.

This investment is the reason EPS grew much more slowly than revenue, but it's a trade-off that long-term investors should be more than willing to take.

Looking ahead
The midpoint of management's forecast for revenue growth next quarter is $330 million. That's 19% higher than the same time last year, and signifies 25% growth in constant currency. After today's jump, the stock is now trading for 35 times trailing earnings, but just 17 times free cash flow.
Many investors were bearish on Costco (NASDAQ:COST) as the wholesale retailer made its transition from American Express to Visa. In this episode of Industry Focus: Consumer Goods, Vincent Shen and Fool.com contributor Dan Kline talk about how the company managed to make the switch with just a few minor stumbles, as they focus on the more pressing challenges the company is going to have to address in the next few years.

The team also dives into Cabela's (NYSE:CAB) buyout by Bass Pro Shops. Find out why the outdoor sports giants are banding together, details behind the deal, and what this will mean for the combined entity going forward.

A full transcript follows the video.I'm Vincent Shen. Welcome to the latest episode of Industry Focus, the podcast that dives into a different sector of the stock market every day. It is Tuesday, Oct. 11, and I am joined via Skype by Fool.com contributor Daniel Kline, who is beaming in from an area of the country that has been in the headlines quite a bit recently -- that's West Palm Beach in South Florida. How are you doing, Dan?

Dan Kline: I'm happy to say we're still here.

Shen: Yeah, I was really happy to hear that you guys came out OK following the hurricane. I heard it was pretty rough.

Kline: I don't want to minimize the people who actually lost property or got hurt, but compared to what they were predicting, it wasn't that bad. It was very windy, very rainy, scary. I'm sure if you live right on the ocean, it was terrifying. But they were predicting 125 to 130-mile winds, and we only got about half that. So, we're very lucky.

Shen: Yeah. It seems like certain regions were right in the path, others were able to avoid it. Overall, I think, especially in your situation, having just moved down to Florida in the past month or two, and having to encounter what was generally considered to be one of the biggest storms in recent memory, that's interesting timing, to say the least.

Kline: I'm hoping none of my neighbors put together that I have bad luck when it comes to the weather. They're predicting snow for next week.

Shen: Our two big stories for today, first, we have the multi-billion dollar deal that was recently announced between the privately held Bass Pro Shops and its major outdoor retail rival Cabela's, ticker C-A-B. Second, we'll take a look at investor favorite Costco, just to see how the company is faring after its switch from American Express. Dan, let me provide a little bit of background for Bass Pro and Cabela's before we dive into the details behind the buyout. In case anyone has never had the opportunity of visiting one of these stores before, or even heard of them, maybe if you're a die-hard city dweller, both Bass Pro and Cabela's are two of the major big box stores catering to outdoor enthusiasts. They sell apparel, equipment, accessories for activities like hunting, fishing, camping. That includes firearms as well.

With that, Dan, I'm going to let you take it away. Can you give us a little bit of detail behind the deal?

Kline: These are two very similar companies. They each have around 100 stores, they each have around 20,000 employees. And it was sort of the case of, given all the internet competition, there wasn't really room for two players. It's not necessarily that they have too many stores. But if you combine them, their buying power goes up, their branding goes up, their marketing goes up, or both go down, and it gets easier to not have to compete with each other when they're both looking at Amazon and other online retailers selling a lot of the same things.

It's worth noting that these aren't just stores. They're destinations. They're 180,000 to 200,000 and up square feet. They have shooting galleries, live animals, restaurants that serve wild game. It's a really fun place to go. And in some ways, those have been the most resilient retailers -- stores where there's a reason to go when you're not necessarily going to buy anything.

Shen: Yeah. I want to point out, based on that, we were talking about before the show as well, it's really incredible, some of the attractions that their biggest flagship stores offer. For Cabela's, they take two different approaches. They have their current smaller store approach, think 40,000 to 100,000 square feet. Then, there's the legacy format, their larger stores, going up to 250,000 square feet, the biggest location being in Hamburg, Pennsylvania. You mentioned shooting galleries and things like that. This has, of course, the shopping, but then a restaurant, aquarium, museum, animal displays for regional game for hunters. You can actually take a virtual tour of that store specifically with Google Street View technology to give you a sense of how large it is and what it has to offer.

Bass Pro Shop actually takes it to the next level. Their stores are largely in the 150,000 to 250,000 range for their Outdoor World flagship branding. The largest store in the Bass Pro fleet is an unbelievable 535,000 square feet. They basically took over an old sports and concert arena in Memphis, Tennessee, called the Pyramid. Think of a former stadium that's now a big store that has two restaurants, a hotel, a bowling alley, an aquarium, the tallest free-standing elevator in the world which leads to an observation deck at the top of the Pyramid. The Pyramid itself is one of the tallest in the world. To put that in perspective, that 535,000 square feet for that store, by comparison, the average Wal-Mart Supercenter -- which is huge, walking through that is its own experience -- they're only 180,000 square feet. So, this thing is just absolutely enormous.

Kline: It's worth noting that most of the Cabela's and Bass Pro Shops are not in malls, they're in outlying areas, cheaper real estate. The big store has something important going for it. There's a reason to go there. I used to walk around with my son when he was four or five into one of these. But, we'd buy a little candy, maybe have lunch there. I'm not a big fisherman or hunter, but we would look at the stuff and play with the shooting gallery. And I spent a little bit of money. It was very crowded on the weekends, so the destination draws. The problem with that is, on Tuesday, as someone who has a background in retail, you don't have the same customer base. There's no families out on Wednesday afternoon looking to browse and not buy. So, you have the positive that this huge store almost functions as a museum. But you also have the negative that, a lot of the week, it's not that busy.

So, going forward, there's a pretty big opportunity, and it sort of ties in to the Cabela's small format. You have all these malls around the country that have realized they can't just be stores. They have to have movie theaters and bowling alleys and restaurants and other destinations to drive business, because people aren't shopping in retail stores the way they used to. A smaller-format Cabela's, maybe with one attraction, builds into that really well. You're going to see a lot of vacancies in malls. There's a lot of Sears and K-Mart anchor stores that are going to become vacant. And the new Bass Pro Shops/Cabela's is really going to get some deals to be able to expand, if that's what they want to do.

Shen: Absolutely. I love that idea, actually. They definitely have the attraction/entertainment aspect down. There's plenty of stories and testimonials you can hear from customers, especially in the more rural parts of the country where these stores cater to the people who are into fishing, gaming, and camping, where they will drive hours to go to one of these stores, because the selection and the things to do are limitless when you get to one of these bigger flagship locations.

Kline: This is really just a smart mash-up. You simply didn't need two companies of a similar size fighting with each other. As we've talked about, we saw this happened in sporting goods. Sports Authority went out, and Dick's has been thriving because of it, because there's a certain amount of sporting goods -- and Cabela's and Bass Pro Shop are loosely in the sporting goods space -- that you want to touch. You don't necessarily want to buy a fishing rod that you've never handled. So, a certain percentage of people might go into a Bass Pro Shop, handle the fishing rod, and then go buy it online for cheaper. But, that person might at least buy something on the way out. Maybe they need some lures, maybe they really want some fudge, it doesn't really matter, they're going to spend money. They don't have to advertise to get you to not drive down the road to Cabela's, and that's an advantage.

Shen: Yep. Diving into a few of the details behind the deal. Keep in mind, Bass Pro Shop is privately held, where as Cabela's is publicly traded. So, the cash offer for Cabela's was $65.50 per share. In total, that's about a $4.5 billion deal. Part of that deal, also, is Cabela's has its CLUB store co-branded credit card. That was previously managed by an entity they created, World's Foremost Bank. Part of the negotiation process was finding some financial firm card processor to take over that part of the operation. Capital One will be taking over that. There will be no change for customers themselves who are part of the Cabela's CLUB, and also the Bass Pro side -- they have a card and loyalty program, too. So, all that will keep going in operation as the companies come together. The combined entity will actually have a network of about 180 stores and 40,000 employees. The new company will also remain private, with the deal expected to close in the first half of 2017.

Dan, did you have a chance to pull up any info on the buyout premium? I have to say, overall, Cabela's shareholders should generally be pretty happy based on the previous trajectory that their stock had seen in the past year or so.

Kline: Yeah, it's about a 19% premium, if I remember correctly, over where the stock was trading when the deal was announced. It's one of those where you can't exactly say that's all it is, because the stock had moved at various points as this deal has been rumored and talked about. This is one of those cases where the quarterback of the football team and the head cheerleader, everyone wants them to get together, so eventually, they're going to go to prom together whether they like each other or not.

What they're not talking about, because you don't want to scare people, is there's going to be some synergy from this. There's going to be some cost-saving. They're going to keep both brands. Supposedly, they're going to keep both headquarters. But the reality is, if you have a guy who's in charge of purchasing sleeping bags at Cabela's and a guy at Bass Pro Shop, there's no reason to have those separate, people. So you're going to start to see some back-office functionality. And maybe they'll have separate marketing teams. Maybe they'll have separate brands. But purchasing and payroll and some of those things are going to come together, so it's going to get cheaper for these two brands to exist.

Shen: Also keep in mind that their geographic footprint of the store fleets themselves are pretty complementary. Bass Pro has the large majority of its stores in the eastern part of the United States. Only about a dozen locations spread out between Colorado, California, Nevada, Arizona, and Washington. Cabela's adds about 30 to 40 more stores in those states in the western part of the country. So, while there's quite a bit of overlap toward the East Coast, Cabela's gives Bass Pro Shop that exposure in the more western states.



Then, going back to that premium that you mentioned, the 19%, that's to the Oct. 2 close, right before the deal was announced. But when Cabela's announced that they were pursuing strategic alternatives back in December of 2015, since that point, that's a 40% premium, that $65.60 per share. Then, if you go back even further than that, which is part of the story of why this deal even came to be, is that an activist hedge fund, Elliott Management, they took an 11% stake in the company in October, and immediately, they stated their intention to push Cabela's toward finding an entity to buy it out. Since that point -- about one year ago -- there's a 96% premium since the Elliot Management stake was disclosed. Again, for a stock that hasn't traded in the $65 range since around early 2014 -- the shares peaked around $71 during that period -- this is a pretty nice takeaway for shareholders. I think a lot of people who came in during that peak are happy to recoup quite a bit of their investment.

Kline: You have to be happy. But the reality is, the reason the stock has gone up since this rumor has happened is, there was only one logical buyer, and a deal was going to happen. It was simply the right thing to do. Even just looking at going from 100 stores to 180, you improve your supply lines, improve your warehouses. Even as you look at your online ability to fulfill orders, you now have locations and warehouses, so you can leverage things like ordering online and picking up in stores. The stock basically doubled since it became a rumor, because it just made so much sense. And now that it's happened, there's every reason to believe it's the right move.

Shen: Yep. Final takeaway if you're Cabela's investor: As it stands right now, the offer from Bass Pro Shop values the company at about 22.5 times trailing 12-month earnings. So, quite favorable based on Cabela's outlook. Frankly, the company was in a tougher spot before Elliot Management came along and started pushing the company.

Kline: Yeah, it had a rough quarter. When you're looking at this type of store, comparable sales is really the metric. Comparable-store sales were down 1.3% to the most recent quarter. That's not a disaster -- that's not Sports Authority numbers. But you look at all the people creeping up on it. You have a stronger Dick's, you have Amazon, you have various online retailers, REI, which is a much smaller-format store that inches up on this. So, you can see where the pressure was coming from. Getting bigger fast is a really good way to push back against that.

Shen: The company ultimately had quite a few challenges to overcome if they wanted to work on their revenue, their profitability, expanding their network of stores. Ultimately, you mentioned some of those other names, this is a retail environment that does not take hostages.

Kline: Yeah. To wrap up, this is also a case where a healthy company was having very negative stock pressure because of the short-term nature of many investors. Nobody was looking and saying, "OK, down 1.3%, but Cabela's is well-positioned, it's in the right places, it has a type of store that's doing well even in the internet economy." By going private, the company can now say, "We're going to invest, we're going to do certain things, and we're not going to be tied to the quarterly reporting cycle." For a retail store in a quickly changing environment, that might mean shuttering the very big store, or making a big change to a format, or opening up 10 new mall stores, and that might not reflect well in the one, two, three quarter picture. But, as a private company, you can take the long view in a way that, frankly, retail companies can't when they're publicly traded.

Shen: But, one thing I will counter that with before we wrap up on this deal is that, the company, bottom line, net income fell 10% in 2014, another 6% in 2015, all this while revenue grew 11% over the same period. So, definitely, there are parts of the business that they needed to work on, frankly. Overall, in the outdoor sporting goods industry, with this tie-up and combined entity, there's still a ton of competition. Keep in mind, you mentioned REI, there's also Dicks, you also mentioned Gander Mountain, Big 5, Academy Sports, Modell's. That doesn't even include the e-commerce side of it. Besides Amazon, there are a lot of smaller players that are pure plays online. So, Bass Pro with Cabela's, larger entity. I think they have a pretty bright future. But ultimately, on the investing side, Cabela's shareholders, there's not much to do at this point but see the deal go through. It's expected to close in the first half of next year.

Next up, we have our discussion of Costco. Before we dig into the company following its breakup with American Express, I wanted to thank Tommy John for supporting the show. Tommy John is revolutionizing men's underwear with a focus on fit, fabric, and function. Shirts that stay tucked, socks that stay up, and underwear that keeps everything in place, whichever way a man moves. It's funny that, when I was still wearing a suit everyday for work, I thought that all guys suffered together and were willing to put up with socks that would bunch up around your shoes every hour, having to retuck your shirt all the time. The Fool might let me get away with more casual dress around the office, but after having the opportunity to wear Tommy John gear, I have seen the light. Think of it like a mattress. You invest in that because you spend a third of your life sleeping. Well, you spend most of the remaining two-thirds in underwear most of the time. Tommy John can make that two-thirds of your day so much more comfortable with its breathable, lightweight, non-pilling and quick-drying fabrics. Tommy John offers a wide selection of styles, and the company provides a best-pair guarantee. If their underwear isn't the best you have ever worn, it's on Tommy John. As a special offer to our listeners, get 20% off your first order by going to tommyjohn.com/fool and using the promo code "fool". Plus, you can get free shipping on any order over $50. That's tommyjohn.com/fool, with promo code "fool".

All right, Dan. Costco. This is right in your wheelhouse. I know you've been following this company for some time. Can you give us some background? I mentioned American Express a few times. What exactly happened with this transition that they've made to Visa?

Kline: Costco switched from its long-term credit card provider, American Express, to Visa. It was very much an abrupt transition, at least in the stores. There was messaging for almost a year to card holders. But basically, you went into Costco on June 19, and you could use your American Express. When you went in on June 20, that card no longer worked. The retailer no longer even took American Express at all, and you had to use your new Visa card. When that happened, the media exploded. "Oh my God! People are going to leave Costco! They're never going to handle this, this is a disaster!"

Some of its rivals, BJ's and Sam's, offered free entry to their stores for people holding the old cards. It had seemed like they made a mistake. That was backed up a little bit by the fact that Citigroup, which provides the cards, was overwhelmed with calls, about 1.5 million calls in the first few days. It seemed like people were having big problems, it was causing checkout problems, and this was going to create some real ill will. The reality is, things smoothed out pretty quickly. Within a few days, the call volume was well down. I talked about with some of the Citigroup people about this. Once people figured out the switch, they realized, "OK, now I have a Costco Visa, not a Costco American Express." And the rewards were actually a fairly decent amount better, an extra percent on gas and some tick ups across the board. This was played up like it was going to be a huge drag on earnings. I think -- you have some of the numbers in front of you -- it just wasn't.

Shen: I think the company specifically mentioned in one of its recent reports that the switch to Visa from AmEx has saved the company enough money in fees to offset some of the falling-through prices that it's seen that have negatively impacted its business. So, we see that the transition wasn't the end of the world, wasn't as big of a negative impact that a lot of people feared it would be. That was definitely a news cycle that got a lot of headlines. But what about longer-term outlook for Costco? Something I know they've had challenges with is with e-commerce, that's been lagging, it seems like it's passing them by entirely. What do you think?

Kline: I don't want to say I expect the bottom to fall off Costco. I think there's a certain percentage of its users that, "Internet be damned, it's fun to go to Costco and sample things that you wouldn't sample." Like, someone has cut up a Twizzler into little pieces -- you know what a Twizzler tastes like, but it's still fun to get one for free as you walk around and look for bargains and hunt for things, and come home with a pallet of meatballs even though you're a vegetarian. There's sort of the thing about going to Costco that's always going to protect some of their business. But as you mentioned, they've done very little on the internet. They send emails, they have some Web specials. But for the most part, it's not a great shopping experience, it doesn't feel like going to Costco in any way with the bargain hunting. It's not what they've built on.

I do expect that, at some point, people are going to realize that the cost savings aspect of Costco -- you pay your $55 membership so you can save money by buying whatever it is, your toothpaste for your breakfast cereal in bulk quantity to save money. The problem is -- and, I'm a Costco member and an Amazon Prime member -- many of the things I used to buy from Costco in inconvenient quantities can be purchased from Amazon in the amount that I actually want them in. So, instead of having to buy six deodorant sticks, and I have to remember where they are over the next eight months or however long it takes to use them, I could just order the same thing from Amazon at roughly the same price. Costco has not had major sales dips because of this, but at some point, you have to think they're going to.

Shen: Yeah. I think, it's kind of similar to the topic we were talking about previously. Maybe not as directly. Bass Pro and Cabela's create these attractions. But at the same time, I have been to a Costco on Friday evening and seen whole families there, and it's the Friday night entertainment. It's very amusing to see. And powerful, I think, as part of Costco's business model. This warehouse model translates very well to that in-person shopping experience. Now, how do you take that appeal and attractiveness of the warehouse bulk shopping experience and translate that into e-commerce, especially in a situation where, arguably, in most cases, those bulk orders and the savings you get translate to more expensive logistics for the company to get that item or order to you? It's going to be difficult.

Kline: Absolutely. I'm guilty, I spend a Sunday afternoon entertaining my 12-year-old by promising him a $1 churro at Costco, and walking around. I mean, you can eat -- I can't, I have a gluten allergy -- but they have cheap pizza and hot dogs. People will go and have lunch and browse the store and come home to find a book on sale, or something ridiculous they never planned for. I don't think you can replace that aspect. I think the problem is, there are some interesting digital things you can do in bulk.

Amazon has actually beat them to the punch. Amazon owns a company called Woot.com. I don't know if you've ever heard of Woot, but what they do is a sale of the day. It's now morphed into more than that, but basically, they take a few items that they purchased -- on clearance, likely, from someone else, or have in their own warehouses that wouldn't sell -- and they put out, "OK, today we have this HP laptop, it's $249," and that's maybe half of the regular price. And people go crazy and buy them. I know I buy a lot of t-shirts from them. I've ordered things and thought, "Oh boy! It will be great to have a 12-pack of HDMI cables!"

I think that's very much like the Costco experience. You go to their website every day, and you don't know what's going to be there. Then, you make a purchase that might not be the smartest purchase. Costco could do that. They have a user base. They could even do it on a broader level. They could put a car on sale, they could put health insurance on sale, or, "Come into a store and get a hearing aid exam." There's a lot of ways that Costco could leverage its physical stores, its ability to buy product. If you've ever watched Shark Tank, whenever we talk about Costco, they're notorious for negotiating, getting the price down and getting things very cheap. So it's not crazy to think Costco could say, "OK, Christmas is in 10 weeks, we're going to have a different toy every day on our deals site," and mimic that in-store experience.

Shen: If they are able to successfully launch something like that -- and, I do know of Woot, but I did not know that Amazon had taken it over. That's news to me. Ultimately, this is a company with $120 billion in trailing-12-month revenue. And in that time, their net income margin is usually around 2% or less. So, profitability is really thin. People talk about the business benefits from those membership fees --

Kline: It's roughly 70%, 66% to 70% of profits, depending on the quarter.

Shen: There you go. That would be something the company has to manage and work around as they transition to e-commerce. That is something they will really have to invest in and face off against, and realize it's a do-or-die situation at some point in the future.

Kline: There are some trends. The Costco members, overall, are good. When you look at the same-store sales, and you subtract out the fact that gas prices are a drag because gas prices have been lower, they actually post some slight gains. It's basically flat when you factor gas in. That's not bad. But when you look at the membership numbers, overall membership revenues are up because they've managed to transition some people into more expensive memberships -- either business membership, and in a couple of countries, they've raised prices. But the overall renewal rates have ticked down a very slight amount, about 0.1% when you look at the different markets. That is by no means a cause to panic. It could absolutely be that a small amount of people, with the credit card, just went, "Nah, I never really used this, I'm not going to take the new credit card."

About 85% of the credit card portfolio moved over, which is pretty close to the active number of people on the old credit card. So, that 15% that wasn't active, some of them might have said, "Nah, I'm not going to renew this, I'm just going to cut this card in half and not pay my membership fee this year." So, these aren't warning signs. They're almost like baby warning signs. You look at them and it's like, "OK, if they start to lose 0.1% here and 0.1% there, at what point does it snowball and become renewal rates going from 89% to 83%?" Then it becomes a real problem.

Shen: Absolutely. OK, I take it that you're still relatively bullish with Costco, and think the prospects will be able to --

Kline: I think they have a lot of time. I think there's an absolute flaw in their business. They pretty openly said they don't care that much about the internet, and they'll get to it when they get to it -- I'm really paraphrasing, nobody said anything that brash. That's indirectly what they said. But, I think because of the nature of their business and the fact that the mall as a destination has maybe faded, that Costco as a destination can buy them two or three years to figure out an internet strategy, or figure out more things like gas, that you can't buy on the internet. Amazon is not an effective delivery method for a tank of gas. So, if Costco can bring me in for gas, an eye exam, a hearing aid exam, maybe they'll add haircuts, maybe they'll expand their restaurants, it doesn't necessarily have to be directly competing with Amazon. Just has to be continuing to give people reasons to pay that $55 and occasionally visit the store
What happened
Shares of computer-accessory maker Logitech International (NASDAQ:LOGI) were surging after the company posted blowout second-quarter earnings today, roaring past estimates on the top and bottom lines. As of 11:26 a.m. EDT, the stock was up 16.2%.

So what
The maker of gadgets, including keyboards, mice, and headphones, said overall revenue was up 9%, to $564.3 million, and retail sales jumped 14%. The company closed its OEM business last year, and all sales now come from its retail division, meaning sales from continuing operations were also up 14%.

Adjusted earnings per share increased 40%, to $0.35. Both numbers easily beat Wall Street's targets, coming in at $526.3 million in revenue and $0.25 in EPS.
Sales grew in seven of Logitech's nine product categories in the quarter, with particularly strong growth in mobile speakers, audio, and video collaboration. Keyboards and mice remain its biggest categories by sales, contributing more than 40% of revenue.

Now what
Looking ahead, management projected retail sales growth of 8%-10% in constant currency for the full year, and sees non-GAAP operating income of $195 million to $205 million, which should equate to an EPS midpoint of $1.08.

Though the rise of mobile would figure to zap the earnings of computer-accessory companies like Logitech, legacy gadget makers like Logitech and Garmin have found a way to innovate and adapt to a changing market. After Logitech blew past estimates in its last two quarters, I wouldn't be surprised to see it top its full-year guidance, which looks conservative.
Many value investors are constantly searching for stocks that are trading on the cheap. One common way that these investors search for value is to look for stocks with low P/E ratios. Knowing that, I ran a simple screen using Finviz that sorted all of the companies in the S&P 500 by their P/E ratios. I then picked out the three companies with the lowest numbers on the list.

The screen identified three stocks -- Transocean (NYSE:RIG), American Airlines Group (NASDAQ:AAL), and General Motors (NYSE:GM) -- that all have trailing P/E ratios well under 5, which suggests that they are absurdly cheap. Let's take a closer look at each to see if any of them is worth buying today.

When will the market turn?
Transocean is one of the largest offshore-drilling contractors in the world. The company owns and operates a fleet of offshore-drilling rigs that are leased out to major oil producers.
With a trailing P/E ratio of 3, you might think that Transocean's stock is now so cheap that it has turned into a value investor's dream. However, the company's net income is projected to turned negative next year, which threatens to turn this formerly highly profitable business into a money-losing pit. Worse yet, demand for the company's services are highly leveraged to the price of oil, so it is nearly impossible to predict when demand will return.

That suggests to me that this stock could be a value trap, so I'd recommend that potential investors should proceed with caution.

Profits are flying south
The massive fall in energy prices has been a boon to the airline industry, leading several carriers to book record profits. However, falling costs have caused carriers to compete heavily on price in order to fill seats, which has caused unit revenue to decline. That fact has held back American Airlines Group's stock, currently down more than 13% from its 52-week high. Mix soaring profits with a declining share price, and you get a stock that is currently trading at 3.9 times trailing earnings.

Investors have been waiting patiently for the major airlines to follow through on their plans to reduce capacity, which in theory should cause unit revenues to pick up. Thus far we haven't seen that happen, although there are emerging signs that higher revenue could be in the cards for next year.
Of course, while revenue growth is important, investors want to see revenue and profit growth at the same time. Right now that doesn't look like it is going to happen. While market watchers expect American's revenue to grow by 3% next year, profits are expected to shrink by nearly 12%. The situation seems even worse when you look out over the next five years, as profits are expected to plunge by 16% annually.

On a trailing basis, American Airlines' stock certainly looks cheap, but if we use next year's earnings estimates, then the company's P/E ratio jumps to 8.8. That's still a low enough figure to hint that there could be value here, but with profits expected to contract, this company isn't as crazy-cheap as its trailing P/E ratio would otherwise suggest.
Investors have had a hard getting bullish on the automaker's prospects, and it is not hard to figure out why. Low gas prices have fueled sales of trucks and SUVs, leading some to believe that we are at peak U.S. auto sales. There was also the ignition-switch debacle that caused the company's brand to take a hit. Longer-term, it is still unclear how emerging trends like car-sharing, autonomous driving, and the move to electric cars will affect the legacy automakers. Add it all up, and General Motors' stock hasn't moved much.

GM's profits have been heading up, so its sideways stock has pulled its trailing P/E ratio all the way down to 4. However, like American Airlines Group's, analysts are projecting that the company's earnings per share will drop next year, though only modestly. That pushes its forward P/E ratio all the way up to 5, which I don't think you could call "expensive" with a straight face.

Are any worth buying?
I'm not terribly bullish on any of these stocks right now, but I do think that General Motors is the most attractive of the group. While profits are expected to modestly decline next year, market-watchers believe that the company will be able to grow profits by more than 10% annually over the next five years. Investors also get to bank a generous dividend yield of 4.6% while they wait for the growth to play out. Those figures suggest that General Motors is a stock that value investors might want to look at with a fine-tooth comb.
Home Depot was founded in 1978 by now-billionaires Arthur Blank and Bernie Marcus, along with help from banker Ken Langone and merchandising expert Pat Farrah. After nearly a year developing its first store, Home Depot opened its first two locations in Atlanta the following year.

From its inception, Home Depot placed an emphasis on the customer. In fact, Blank and Marcus envisioned their home-improvement stores being staffed by avid DIYers whose job would be to help customers of all skill levels complete any project rather than salespeople simply hoping to make another sale. This potent combination of business concept and innovative approach to service produced results that speak for themselves, as you can see from this graphic provided by the company.
Home Depot conducted its IPO on September 22, 1981, trading at that time on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol HOMD. Its shares entered the market at $12 per share, though Home Depot also conducted stock splits on nine separate occasions in the intervening years. This means one share of Home Depot at the time of its IPO has increased to 45.4 shares today. This rapid increase in share count combined with the 10 times increase in Home Depot stock's price per share translates into a truly unbelievable 493,000% return, and that doesn't factor in the extra compounding power for investors who reinvested their dividends.

Home Depot's investment outlook today
Today, Home Depot is a large, mature company. However, it would be a mistake to assume that the home-improvement stock can't keep delivering strong returns for its shareholders for years to come. Here's a quick chart of Home Depot's current key investment metrics.
It might surprise investors to learn that the company hasn't opened a new store in the past three years and has no plans to do so in 2016. Despite this same-store sales growth has easily outpaced that of its key rival Lowe's, thanks to savvy integration of its e-commerce offerings and its efforts to attract professional craftsman.

More impressive yet, Home Depot's investment thesis isn't solely predicated on its top-line growth. In recent years, Home Depot's management has sharply focused on cost controls. For example, the company projects that its costs will grow at a mere 32% percent of its sales growth rate, which translates to impressive operating leverage driving disproportionately large gains in profit growth. Case in point: Home Depot's 2016 guidance calls for 5% sales growth and 16% profit growth. Looking to the future, the average of sell-side analyst estimate calls for Home Depot to compound its earnings per share at a 13.4% annually for the next five years. Now, that's the sign of a high-quality business.

Given Home Depot's impressive business model, it should come as no surprise that its stock doesn't seem like an obvious bargain today. However, the company's price-to-earnings ratio does still sit slightly below the 24 times P/E ratio of the S&P 500. The company hasn't maintained a perfect streak of dividend growth, but its 2.1% dividend yield and flexible balance sheet certainly leave room for future dividend increases and stock buybacks. In fact, it's hard to point out a glaring defect in Home Depot's investment prospects, making it a fantastic option for investors to consider adding to their stock portfolios today
The SPDR Select Financial Sector Fund (NYSEMKT:XLF) saw heavy trading ahead of the Federal Reserve's monetary policy meeting next week. Economists don't expect an interest rate hike to happen at that meeting, but hints about a possible December increase could boost prospects for banks. Meanwhile, the United States Oil Fund (NYSEMKT:USO) fell 1.3% as oil prices fell back below $50 per barrel.

Individual stocks on the move included Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and iRobot (NASDAQ:IRBT), which swung in opposite directions following their latest earnings announcements.

Apple's profit letdown
Apple was the Dow's biggest decliner, falling 2.3% after revealing a 9% revenue decline and a 19% drop in earnings for its fiscal fourth quarter. As expected, the consumer tech titan's results were pressured by a double-digit drop in iPhone sales. That segment makes up over 60% of the business, and fell 13% as unit sales worsened to 45.5 million from 48 million in the prior-year period. On the positive side, average selling prices, which have trended lower after the release of the iPhone SE model, ticked up sequentially and may be headed back toward $700 per unit.
Of course, the iPhone 7 and 7 Plus weren't available for most of the quarter and sales of those popular products are still constrained by supply. Management sounded confident that the refreshed lineup is being well received. "We're thrilled with the customer response to iPhone 7, iPhone 7 Plus, and Apple Watch Series 2," CEO Tim Cook said in a press release.

Apple's guidance for the current quarter calls for a return to revenue growth after three consecutive quarters of declines. Yet its profitability forecast, of roughly 38% gross margin, was lower than expected. Judging by the 20% stock price rise in the three months leading up to this report, Wall Street was simply hoping for a more aggressive earnings outlook from Cook and his executive team.

iRobot's holiday season forecast
iRobot shares spiked 12% to reach a new all-time high following quarterly results that position the robotic tech specialist for a banner holiday season ahead. Third-quarter sales jumped 17% and net income soared 52% higher as both the top and bottom lines beat management's July guidance. "Our third-quarter performance was outstanding," CEO Colin Angle said in a press release, partly thanks to what executives described as successful marketing programs for its consumer products like the Roomba line of home-cleaning robots.
It wasn't all good news for investors, though. Gross profit margin fell by a full percentage point as the average selling price of robot units declined to $229 from $252.

Overall, though, iRobot is preparing for a solid finish to its fiscal year. Orders already received from retailers, plus the anticipated orders for the fourth quarter, suggest substantial sales gains ahead.

As a result, management raised full-year guidance for the second straight quarter, bumping the revenue forecast up to $653 million from $642 million. The profit outlook also edged up to $40 million from $38 million as the company believes it has hit the right balance of product innovations and pricing to drive a 25% sales boost in the key U.S. market this year.

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Cable companies have been jamming more and more channels into their bundles over the past decade or so. Since 2009, the average expanded basic bundle has more than doubled in size, going from 78 channels to 181 channels in 2015.

But Verizon (NYSE:VZ) CEO Lowell McAdam recently said he'd rather sell a skinny bundle of 40 channels or so instead of a megabundle of 300 channels. McAdam told the audience at the Internet Association's Virtuous Circle conference earlier this month that, if they could "[Verizon] would sell skinny bundles exclusively."

The only holdup is that media companies such as Disney (NYSE:DIS) are intent on stuffing as many channels as they can into so-called skinny bundles.

Custom TV bundles
Last year, Verizon started offering TV customers a new option called Custom TV. The idea is that subscribers can pick what kinds of channels they want to pay for, and they don't have to pay for anything else. When a potential customer is looking to sign up for television service, Verizon is sure to direct them toward one of its Custom TV packages.

Disney had issues with Custom TV from the start, filing a lawsuit against Verizon on claims of breach of contract. Verizon's agreement with Disney doesn't allow it to sell ESPN as an add-on as in its original Custom TV package. Verizon has since changed the structure of the bundles.

But the pricing of Verizon's Custom TV bundles indicate that it's much more profitable for it to sell them versus traditional bundles. The two Custom TV packages Verizon offers each cost $65 per month plus additional fees for the set-top-box, regional sports networks, and broadcast retransmission. That's just for 65 to 85 channels. Each add-on pack of six to 12 channels costs $6.

Verizon's traditional bundles start at $75 per month for 225 channels. Customers subscribing to one or two add-on packs for Custom TV will probably get more value out of a traditional bundle, but Verizon would make less of a profit.

What's holding Verizon back?
McAdam claims the biggest thing holding back Verizon from offering more skinny bundles are the media companies. Disney, for example, owns over a dozen different television networks. It can use its most popular networks such as ESPN and Disney Channel to force Verizon to include more of its less popular networks in its bundles.

But if McAdam really believes "the 300 channel bundle is gonna go away" and "customers don't want it," Verizon may have more leverage than he's letting on. Disney has already told analysts that it plans to aggressively pursue getting ESPN into more skinny bundles -- that could come at the expense of its less popular networks.

More importantly, others have already shown it's possible to produce a much less expensive bundle. DISH Network (NASDAQ:DISH) offers Sling TV -- an over-the-top service streaming several dozen live networks -- for as little as $20 per month. DISH says its operating margin on Sling TV customer is similar to its full-fledged satellite customers because customer acquisition costs are so much lower.

Verizon has all of the tools to offer a service like Sling TV. If it really wants to sell skinny bundles exclusively, there's very little stopping it.

It appears Verizon wants to sell its highest-margin television service as it bleeds video subscribers. That enables its operating profits to continue climbing despite losing more FiOS TV subscribers than it adds.

With the influx of over-the-top skinny bundles undercutting Verizon's pricing, Verizon may find itself entering that market sooner than later. The good thing is that Verizon has been stocking up on all the technology it needs to make the most of an over-the-top television service. By next year it will have streaming video technology, tons of digital content to differentiate its service, a strong set of digital advertising technologies, and a couple years of experience managing Go90 -- its current on-demand video streaming app. But at that point it could be facing a lot more competitors.

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Shares of embattled fast-casual chain Chipotle (NYSE:CMG) slumped on Wednesday following a third-quarter report that failed to show signs of a turnaround. The company missed analyst estimates badly, reporting a steeper-than-expected decline in comparable sales. At 3 p.m. EDT, the stock was down about 10%.

So what
Chipotle reported third-quarter revenue of $1.04 billion, down 14.8% year over year and $50 million below the average analyst estimate. Comparable restaurant sales dropped 21.9%, with September marking the 11th consecutive month of decline. Comparable transactions fell by a smaller 15.2%, with the discrepancy driven in part by the various initiatives Chipotle has launched following last year's food safety crisis.

Chipotle's earnings fell off a cliff during the third quarter. The company reported EPS of $0.27, down from $4.59 in the prior-year period. Analysts were expecting EPS of $1.59. Restaurant level operating margin was cut in half to 14.1%, driven by lower sales and higher costs. Despite the steep drop in revenue, total operating expenses increased by 4.6% year over year.

Layered on top of Chipotle's lackluster results was the announcement that ShopHouse, the company's Asian concept chain, was being abandoned. Chipotle will now focus on two other concepts, taking an impairment charge in the third-quarter related to the chain.

Now what
Chipotle's management is optimistic that a comeback is in the cards next year. Guidance for 2017 calls for comparable sales growth in the high single-digits, a restaurant level operating margin of 20%, and EPS of $10. Because Chipotle's sales have fallen so far, a sharp rebound isn't out of the question. But investors appear to have little confidence in management's outlook, given the drop in the stock price following earnings.

"Our restaurant teams are very excited to see more customers return to their restaurants, and are working hard to reward them with an excellent guest experience," said co-CEO Monty Moran. "After successfully implementing an industry leading food safety program, and as our marketing efforts are driving more people to our restaurants, it is critical that we are prepared to delight customers on every visit. We are confident that we have the leadership and teams in place to do just that."

Chipotle expects a low single-digit decline in comparable sales during the fourth quarter. If the company comes up short of that goal, watch out below.

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