We don't own any of these global engineering stocks at this moment, because effectively the market has chased us out of the names. We closed out of Jacobs Engineering in early September in the mid $60s; within 6 week it had fallen below $30. It is really quite sad to see the stocks performance when you consider how the best of breed are still performing "business as usual". The problem with owning these now is you have "reality" 1 day a quarter (when they report earnings) then rumors and innuendos of lost contracts, cancelled business, blah blah blah every other day of the quarter. As tempting as it is to buy these now, it won't take long for the bad economic news to come back to the forefront and calls of global slowdown to punish these type of stocks. But they were so oversold they had to bounce at some point. But unless your timing is perfect it is near impossible to make money on the long side - even with today's tremendous move and the past week's great action the stock is only back to where it was 2 weeks ago. If you have a 5 year time horizon these prices should be a highway robbery but for the next 6-9 months the whole complex is still iffy based on perception more than reality. Earnings were solid
Fluor (FLR) and Jacobs Engineering (JEC) continue to appear to be best of breed although some of the other names are even cheaper - KBR (KBR) for instance has been trading below cash for parts of the past two weeks - quite pathetic. For traders, a stock like JEC could potentialy trade back to its 50 day moving average of $49 but I'd consider it, in the current market, a short from there as "worries" will be "resurface" about the global economy soon enough. But that's still a 20% upside trade with a tight stop below $38.50 for those who are jumping in and out of stocks on a very short term basis. I'd rather buy it when I can hold onto it for a few quarters in a row without experiencing the -15% down days we get the pleasure of experiencing in this group on a now almost weekly basis.
as always - revenue up 41%, earnings up 36%, backlog continues to grow (bears will say all these contracts can be cancelled at any second, and everything gets cancelled sub $60 oil anyhow) despite a dispute with a large Canadian customer...