Manpower (MAN) - a key tell on the temporary workforce in America and "blue collar" temps especially. Canary in the coal mine type of company.
So my team of analysts made me look bad, and when I saw the big move in MAN on this week's top returner list I had to go investigate... and I discovered a completely different company than I anticipated. France is their #1 country of business?
- Manpower chairman and CEO Jeffrey Joerres noted that some of the company's European operations -- namely Elan, Germany and Italy -- reported revenue increases of 43 percent, 22 percent and 15 percent, respectively. Manpower's largest country of business, France, posted a 16 percent increase in revenue, to $1.7 billion.
- Employment services company Manpower Inc (MAN) posted much-higher-than-expected quarterly profit on Friday, reflecting strength in its international operations and the weakness of the U.S. dollar, and said second-quarter profit will be above Wall Street estimates.
- Milwaukee-based Manpower, which generates the bulk of its sales and earnings outside the United States, said operating profit in its U.S. operations fell 37.6 percent, but were sharply higher in France, Italy and other international markets.
- Investments in international markets, including Asia and the Middle East are paying off at a time when some large economies -- notably the United States -- are slowing, Chief Executive Jeff Joerres told Reuters in an interview.
- "There was a lot of thinking, from the sell-side and the buy-side, that the gig is up and what we're seeing is that there are places that are slowing down, but the portfolio is kicking through," he added.
- Revenue soared 19.0% in dollar terms to $5.4 billion, helped greatly by the weakness of the greenback. Excluding the positive impact of foreign-exchange transactions, revenue increased nearly 8%. (so 11% due to currency only!)
- Marcon also said emerging markets tend to have higher gross margin than more mature markets. Developing countries like China and India have big labor markets and represent a significant long-term opportunity, Marcon said.
- “Manpower plans to increase its percentage of revenue derived from high-margin permanent placement to 15% of total gross profit, up from the current 8% level,” Baird analyst Mark Marcon said.
Am I going to be buying Manpower tomorrow? No, and I think Europe is set to slow down so I don't know the company well enough to know the impact - but the name just got a lot more interesting and officially on my radar. If you read the points above and I didn't tell you what the sector or name of the company was you'd think I was talking about Deere (DE) or some other major multinational.
No position








3 comments:
Mike,
I have observed that you buy stocks that are in verge of breaking from a base or just broke out from a base. Is that your methodolgy to buy on technicals?
The charts you post have just moving averages, volume and MACD.
Don you also see other indicators? Which one, if so?
Thanks
Mike, Mark
Mark, Mike
I am a very simplistic and not comprehensive technical person. There are thousands upon thousands of technical traders who can swim circles around me. I basically use moving averages and volume. It works for me, but I am sure there are many others who could improve on that methodology. My focus is on the fundamentals and simply not being stuck in a stock that has great fundamental situation for months on end while it trades below key moving averages. So yes, I like to buy breakouts since I want to churn my money as opposed to having it sit in dead stocks for months, quarters, weeks, etc. So when a stock looks ready to break out I move it off my watch list and into the fund OR from the bottom of the fund to the top. Sometimes I am wrong on my timing, and need to reverse.
Again, my technical skills pale in comparison to my fundamental work in my opinion. Even MACD I don't use - I just use it to impress readers ;) There are about 50 technical indicators as you well know - I'm a big believer in regressing value the more things you use. Simple is good. Many times one technical indicator completely counteracts another so it becomes less useful once you get past a certain point. But again, there are many experts in the field - I do not count myself as one.
Mark,
Sorry for referring you with a different name.Thanks for the insight.
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