Olin Corporation, a company that makes chlor alkili products and owns Winchester Small Arms as a division, lowered its guidance on July 27th after the bell. The stock plummeted the next day. As of now, though, it's closed at above its July 27th high. That high was $14.26; today's close was $14.59.
I offer this follow-up as grist for thought. Olin is the second Bin stock to take an earnings-related tumble; General Electric was the first. GE announced its 2Q earning before the bell on July 17th. On July 16th, the stock closed at $12.40. The day of the announcement, GE stock got hammered down to $11.65 and drifted lower for a couple of days. Today's close was $13.99.
Olin's was a guidance tumble; General Electric's was an earnings tumble. Both ended up shaking off their respective slam-downs in less than two weeks.
There's a time to dump a stock that's disappointed and a time not to. My little experience with the Low P/E Bin suggests that, at this stage in the market, selling a low-P/E, high-yield stock because of a near-term disappointment is usually a bad idea. Even Tesoro, a refining stock that got pummeled for more than a week in early July because its crack spreads were being squeezed, eventually recovered to the level it was at before a Goldman Sachs analyst had panned it. As I noted earlier, the stock's took quite a pounding that caught me flat-footed. Currently, Tesoro is fluctuating around the price it was at when Goldman disseminated the report.
I hesitiate to offer a definitive conclusion, because we're in an expected-recovery market. I have no experience of a bear market as a Bin watcher, nor have I even experienced a full-fledged bull market. So, I'll confine myself to this observation: I had all three of the above stocks in my actively-managed Marketocracy mock fund. I still have GE, which I don't regret. I don't have Olin anymore, as I sold it the day after the guidance lowering, and I regret having done so. I got rid of Tesoro at a loss, and I have some grounds for regret.
It's sometimes a good idea to think twice before letting go of a stock that's run into some near-term difficulty. I offer the opinion that, for low-P/E high-yield stocks, now is one of those times when thinking twice is called for.
Note: I am not licensed to offer investment advice in my home jurisdiction of Ontario in Canada, nor an I qualified to become licensed.
No one cares more about your money than you do
22 hours ago
That old saying they bring good things to light may not always be true.
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