FeedPosted Nov 4th 2009 5:45PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: 3M Corporation (MMM), Stocks to Buy

I'm reiterating my Buy rating for
3M Co. (NYSE:
MMM), first recommended
on April 20, 2009 at a price of $51.97. If you bought 3M in April, you're up an impressive 46%.
Way back in the spring, I argued, among other factors, that a strong case for buying 3M shares could be made based on the company's large free cash flow and net returns on capital, and reasonable P/E (then about 11), before everyone else jumped on the bandwagon.
Well, with a current P/E of about18, 3M is no where near as cheap, but I still like the shares here, around $75.
Continue reading 3M is in an uptrend
Posted Oct 24th 2009 2:20PM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Apple Inc (AAPL), Amazon.com (AMZN), McDonald's (MCD), 3M Corporation (MMM), Caterpillar (CAT), New York Times'A' (NYT), Bank of New York (BK), Hershey Co (HSY), Gannett Co (GCI), Morgan Stanley (MS), Kimberly-Clark (KMB), United Parcel'B' (UPS), Lockheed Martin (LMT), Broadcom Corp'A' (BRCM), SLM Corp (SLM)
Continue reading Earnings highlights: Amazon, Apple, Caterpillar, Hershey, McDonald's, UPS ...
Posted Oct 22nd 2009 10:00AM by Jim Cramer (RSS feed)
Filed under: 3M Corporation (MMM), S and P 500, DJIA, Cramer on BloggingStocks, Travelers Companies Inc. (TRV)
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says that as long as we're trapped in a commoditized stock market, use the futures to go bargain-hunting.
What if individual stocks want to go up, but the market wants to go down? Don't laugh. In 1982, when The Kansas City Board of Trade started trading Value Line futures (before there were S&P futures), we used to kick around in securities classes what would happen if eventually stocks became so commoditized that individual companies couldn't be removed from the gravitational pull.
For example, we know today looks like a terrible day, with Europe down horribly and our futures real soggy. But then we look and see that J. Crew (NYSE: JCG) (Cramer's Take), one of the best retailers, is not just saying that the fall season is good; it is saying it is blowout beyond imagination. The big Dow stock 3M (NYSE: MMM) (Cramer's Take) is not just saying that things are getting better; it is showing that business is very strong. The monster insurer and fellow Dow stock Travelers (NYSE: TRV) (Cramer's Take) is boosting the dividend and showing you how a responsible financial can behave.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Great stocks at better prices
Posted Sep 23rd 2009 10:00AM by Jim Cramer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), General Electric (GE), Market matters, International Business Machines (IBM), 3M Corporation (MMM), Caterpillar (CAT), Boeing Co (BA), EMC Corp (EMC), Honeywell Intl (HON), United Technologies (UTX), Eaton Corp (ETN), Cramer on BloggingStocks
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says the weak dollar is benefiting U.S. corporations and no longer going against them. Why have the industrials been so red-hot? Why do they seem to levitate? One reason, of course, is that people think the economy's getting better. A second reason is that even if the economy stands still vs. last year the comparisons will be amazing and nothing gets the juices going more rapidly than easy comparisons.
Why will they be so glaring? First, the layoffs have been brutal, the cost-cutting immense and it hasn't hurt at all ... yet. It is totally and unequivocally positive.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Weak dollar powering profits
Posted Sep 9th 2009 10:00AM by Jim Cramer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Apple Inc (AAPL), General Electric (GE), Wal-Mart (WMT), PepsiCo (PEP), Intel (INTC), Market matters, 3M Corporation (MMM), Caterpillar (CAT), Citigroup Inc. (C), Bank of America (BAC), Costco Wholesale (COST), FedEx Corp (FDX), Research in Motion (RIMM), Procter and Gamble (PG), Lennar Corp'A' (LEN), Toll Brothers (TOL), QUALCOMM Inc (QCOM), Palm Inc (PALM), Cypress Semiconductor (CY), Broadcom Corp'A' (BRCM), United Technologies (UTX), Wells Fargo (WFC), salesforce.com inc (CRM), Union Pacific Corporation (UNP), Cramer on BloggingStocks, Marvel Entertainment (MVL)
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says the action that is linked to the futures markets, such as oil, is distorting rational analysis. Maybe one day we can escape the commodity linkage and begin to trade on the fundamentals again, something that seems more distant now than any time I can recall. We are totally marching to gold, to oil, to copper, and not the fundamentals.
Throughout the era in which China has become a superpower and hedge funds have become the super arbiters or what goes up or down, we have been stuck with this fairly bogus linkage that corrupts trading and makes a mockery out of some of the most important financial analysis out there, the actual attempts to discover what's really happening at companies.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Fundamental distortion
Posted Sep 8th 2009 10:20AM by Jim Cramer (RSS feed)
Filed under: General Electric (GE), Market matters, 3M Corporation (MMM), Costco Wholesale (COST), Kraft Foods'A' (KFT), Cramer on BloggingStocks
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says takeover deals and major stock upgrades are going to be hard to fight. Worldwide funded freight train coming at you. Hard to fight. Hard to stand in front of. That's what I think is happening here. It is clear that Ron Insana, in his fabulous
Market Movers commentary this morning and with his quick moves to catch some of the move, totally agrees with me. It doesn't take much to see that
Doug Kass is going full bore against me.
I feel like Michael Corleone in the lamented
Godfather III. Every time I want to get out, they pull me back in again, and this time the pull is from the macro, where the central bankers keep plowing the money in, and from the micro, where one of the biggest deals in ages -- the
Kraft (NYSE:
KFT) (
Cramer's Take) hostile on Cadbury -- reminds us that stocks aren't expensive, they are cheap.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Catch the big move, or it'll get you
Posted Sep 1st 2009 10:30AM by Connie Madon (RSS feed)
Filed under: 3M Corporation (MMM), Citigroup Inc. (C), Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY), US Airways Group (LCC), Texas Instruments (TXN), Financial Crisis
What are auction rate securities? How did these securities cause billions in losses to investors and businesses?
Auction rate security, according to Wikipedia, "refers to a debt instrument (corporate or municipal bonds) with a long term maturity for which the interest rate is regularly reset at a dutch auction."
Throughout the 1990s and up to 2008, bank loans became more expensive. As a result, ARSs became increasingly attractive. They were lower in cost and flexible for variable rate debt. Auctions were typically held every 7, 28 or 35 days.
So what happened to cause such big losses?
Continue reading Has Wall Street betrayed businesses with auction rate securities?
Posted Jul 31st 2009 10:00AM by Jim Cramer (RSS feed)
Filed under: Apple Inc (AAPL), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), Ford Motor (F), Market matters, Walt Disney (DIS), International Business Machines (IBM), AT and T (T), 3M Corporation (MMM), Caterpillar (CAT), Schlumberger Limited (SLB), Citigroup Inc. (C), Johnson and Johnson (JNJ), JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Bank of America (BAC), Bed Bath and Beyond (BBBY), Best Buy (BBY), FedEx Corp (FDX), Verizon Communications (VZ), Lennar Corp'A' (LEN), United Parcel'B' (UPS), Anadarko Petroleum (APC), Wells Fargo (WFC), Stocks to Buy, Norfolk Southern Corp. (NSC), Union Pacific Corporation (UNP), Cramer on BloggingStocks
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: You can't afford to be certain
Posted Jul 25th 2009 3:40PM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, General Electric (GE), 3M Corporation (MMM), Caterpillar (CAT), Halliburton (HAL), Boston Scientific (BSX), duPont(E.I.)deNemours (DD), Texas Instruments (TXN), United Technologies (UTX), Eaton Corp (ETN)
Continue reading Earnings highlights: Caterpillar, DuPont, GE, Halliburton, Texas Instruments ...
Posted Jul 23rd 2009 7:40AM by Melly Alazraki (RSS feed)
Filed under: Before the bell, International markets, Earnings reports, Deals, Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon.com (AMZN), Ford Motor (F), Market matters, McDonald's (MCD), AT and T (T), 3M Corporation (MMM), American Express (AXP), Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY), Economic data, Oil

U.S. stock futures rose on Thursday morning after Ford reported a surprise earnings and following some mergers-and-acquisition activity. Another fresh wave of earnings releases awaits investors today, as well as jobless, homes data.
Ford Motor Co. (NYSE: F)
surprised Wall Street this morning when it posted a profit in the second-quarter of $2.3 billion due mainly to a huge gain for debt reduction. While Ford would have reported a loss of $424 million, or 21 cents per share, without special items, the loss is still far smaller than the 50 cents analysts had expected.
Continue reading Before the bell: Futures higher after Ford's surprise profit, ahead of data
Posted Apr 25th 2009 3:40PM by Trey Thoelcke (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Yahoo! (YHOO), eBay (EBAY), Coca-Cola (KO), PepsiCo (PEP), Amazon.com (AMZN), International Business Machines (IBM), 3M Corporation (MMM), Caterpillar (CAT), Schlumberger Limited (SLB), Netflix, Inc. (NFLX), Bank of America (BAC), United Parcel'B' (UPS), Merck and Co (MRK), Hasbro Inc (HAS)
Here are some highlights from this past week's earnings coverage from BloggingStocks:
Continue reading Earnings highlights: Bank of America, Amazon, Coke, eBay, UPS, Yahoo!, IBM, and more
Posted Apr 25th 2009 1:10PM by Steven Mallas (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings reports, Industry, General Electric (GE), 3M Corporation (MMM), Johnson and Johnson (JNJ), duPont(E.I.)deNemours (DD)
3M (NYSE: MMM) had a not-that-great first quarter. The declines were significant and ugly. First, net sales plunged over 20%. Second, net income on an adjusted basis likewise spiraled out of control, declining over 40% to $0.81 per share. And no, that didn't meet expectations. Wall Street was looking for $0.86 per share. Sorry, gang.
You've got the dollar and the global recession to blame. Currency translations affected sales, and declines in economic activity didn't help much, either. Many people look to 3M as a staunch dividend play. As such, cash flow is important. Unfortunately, the statement of cash flows this quarter was hard to read. Net cash from operations decreased 30%, and free cash flow lost 35% of its value when compared to the year-ago period. Thankfully, there was enough free cash to cover the dividend.
Continue reading 3M misses Wall Street's mark -- sell the stock?
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