Toyota Motor

Updating the Best from the Brainiest

All the stocks in FundFinds remain buys

 
FundFinds is a stock portfolio with a difference. We don’t look just for stocks we like—we first look for funds we like and then seek out the newest, or biggest, or most unusual of their holdings. Next we evaluate those holdings using our own stringent criteria. If they make the grade, they join FundFinds.
 
Using this approach, which lets us benefit from the expertise of top fund managers, we’ve accumulated a diversified group of 16 stocks. They all remain buys.
 
Our first picks, from Sequoia fund, were giant pharmaceutical chain Walgreen and rug maker Mohawk Industries.
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WHAT THEY’RE BUYING

Fidelity Pacific Basin, which joins our Fund Portfolio this issue, has an outstanding record. So when its managers really like a stock, it pays to listen. And they really like Toyota Motors (TM ADR)—in fact, the automaker is the fund’s single largest position. Moreover, Fidelity Management & Research, the company to which Fidelity Pacific Basin belongs, more than doubled its stake in the stock last quarter, making it the largest U.S. holder of Toyota shares.
 
What’s to like about Toyota? Actually, there’s nothing not to like. The No. 1 automaker in Japan and No. 3 in the world, it’s a truly global company that sells its vehicles in more than 160 countries. This year, for the first time, Toyota captured more than 10 percent of the U.S. market, and almost 40 percent of its revenues come from North American operations.
 
One reason for its success is its commitment to high-quality products. Another is its leadership position in developing new technologies, including those used in creating environmentally friendlier autos.
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Mid-week Update 08-12-09

The government’s “cash for clunkers” program, which offers credits between $3,500 and $4,500 to those disposing of gas-guzzling vehicles and buying new, more fuel-efficient cars, is bolstering auto sales – and auto makers.
 
After the initial $1 billion apportioned to the program was rapidly drained, a proposal to top up the funds with an additional $2 billion passed the Senate Thursday by 60 to 37 votes and was signed by President Obama without delay. So far the program (formally the Car Allowance Rebate System, or “CARS”) has led to about 250,000 cars being sold.
 
As one of the goals of the program was to get more fuel-efficient cars on the road, it should not come as a surprise that some of the best-selling cars are foreign makes. In fact, as of the latest data available, four out of five new cars purchased through the program are manufactured by non-U.S. companies like Toyota Motors (TM) and Honda.
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Mid-week Update 08-12-09

The government’s “cash for clunkers” program, which offers credits between $3,500 and $4,500 to those disposing of gas-guzzling vehicles and buying new, more fuel-efficient cars, is bolstering auto sales – and auto makers.Read more...

Market Update 07-30-08

These three assholes just get more and more pa...

Image by Roscoe Van Damme via Flickr

Volume 5, Number 31 

July 30, 2008 

The erratic market action over the past week clearly had a positive bias. Small cap stocks, the most economically sensitive shares, have also been acting well lately.

One obvious reason supporting a stronger market was lower oil. The unexpected gain in private payrolls, reported this morning, together with all measures the Fed and the government are undertaking to save the housing market, are also helping. With recovering financials and lower oil and natural gas prices, the tradable rally we've expected is underway. We will try to use it to our advantage.Read more...