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One Guy's Investments

The story of Travis Johnson's investment portfolio, with analysis and thoughts on the stocks and funds I've considered, bought and sold. I don't claim to have brilliant picks that will make you money, and I'm not an investment advisor, registered or otherwise, so don't follow my moves unless you're happy to lose money without suing someone. I'm just one guy. My articles get republished in several places, but always appear here first -- subscribe now(totally free via RSS) to see them before they're on Yahoo Finance.

Thursday, September 13, 2007 -- Subscribe free

Clearing out More Positions

As we gird our loins for what appears to be an extremely unsteady market -- though whether it will go up or down, I have no idea -- I've taken the opportunity to simplify my investments a little bit.

What does that mean?

Well, in my case, it means selling some of the more vulnerable, long-shot, non-profitable or highly valued companies in my portfolio -- particularly the small positions that I never got the urge to fill out with more cash.

So I've sold a half dozen or so of my smaller holdings in the last few days, a few at more or less break even and most at significant gains (these are primarily stocks that I've held for more than a year, most cases significantly longer).

And as with some of my earlier sell decisions, many of these are more personal than stock-related. I do not have specific news or numbers that make me want to sell these, but they don't fit what I want with my portfolio right now.

So what have I sold?

Myriad Genetic (MYGN) -- I bought this one because of the high growth of the genetic testing business and the promise of their early-stage drugs, but the story has changed somewhat. This has more than doubled for me, almost entirely on the promise of their Alzheimer's drug, Flurizan, that I wasn't all that confident about. That makes me extremely nervous -- many nice news articles and analysts have touted Flurizan as the most promising Alzheimer's drug currently out there, which may be true, but that's kind of like being the best dressed guy at the tractor pull -- Alzheimer's drugs are extraordinarily costly to get through FDA approval, and so far almost none of them have worked at all. I'll take my profits here instead of bucking the odds -- I might be wrong, but this small position isn't worth chewing my fingernails over. If Flurizan takes a big hit and the shares fall hugely on the news, I might reconsider my initial investment thesis and get back in.

Blackboard (BBBB) -- It's lovely to have a monopoly, which is why these shares are up quite nicely for me ... but I wouldn't buy more here, and it's a small position. They have so far had some difficulty in turning their near-monopoly into real profits, though it hasn't been that long since they took out their competitor, and I'm a little bit worried about higher education budgets moving forward. Out they go.

Barrett Business Services (BBSI) -- This one has mostly treaded water for me. I bought it because they had an appealing regional-to-national story unfolding and because they had piles of cash on the books and had recently instituted a dividend. That story still holds, but the difficult undercurrent is that they are still primarily a California staffing business, and they are going to have some serious difficulty making up for all the construction business that's falling by the wayside out West. They may get through this fine, they may not, but I wasn't going to add more to this small position unless it got hit for no good reason ... and if it hits now, I'm afraid it will be for a good reason. I'll keep this one on the watchlist to maybe get back in if the economy really tumbles and puts them on sale.

Akamai (AKAM) -- Oh, how sad I was to see this one go. Again, mostly for personal reasons -- I'm not terribly comfortable holding any significant amount of margin in my accounts right now, and stocks that are richly valued are vulnerable. Akamai is the titan of their industry, but there are lots of little guys nipping at the heels and I'm not confident that their growth is guaranteeed ... or that they will be able to continue to charge relatively high prices. I could certainly be wrong, and I like the company very much, but I would prefer to book my 100%+ gains at this point (even though I missed the chance to sell it all at the top).

Universal Display (PANL) and Harris and Harris (TINY) -- these are both relatively small holdings that I've had in my portfolio for a long time. PANL gave me a nice profit, TINY I'm selling at about the same price I paid for it ages ago. Why? Neither one is going to show a profit for a very long time, so while they may be in an important business segment (Organic LED lighting and display, and nanotech venture capital, respectively) I have no particular confidence that they're going to weather a bad market or become profitable in the near future. Expensive and uncertain seem to me to be the wrong holdings to focus on right now, so I'll move along to shares that I'm more confident in.

So ... for the first time in a long time I'm using no margin and have some cash available. Hopefully, many of the companies I'm most interested in will go on sale soon, but at least I do feel more insulated from some of the shares in my portfolio that had been the most likely to falter on bad company or economic news. I remain significantly overweight foreign companies, now at more than 50%, and have also pared back my long options positions significantly.

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Thursday, February 23, 2006 -- Subscribe free

Another small step for PANL

Universal Display (PANL -- click to register for free RT streaming quote) is a research company and intellectual property bank that conducts research on and holds patents in phosphorescent LED technologies.

The bear case on them was clearly made by ClearFish Research over at Seeking Alpha a few days ago: They don't make money, and they're probably not going to start turning a real compelling profit for quite some time.

But I am invested, with a small position at least, in PANL ... so as you might guess, I find the bullish case more compelling. As I wrote in my annual checkup on PANL a while back, I like that they use research grants to subsidize their R&D to some extent, and I like that they seem to be in the lead in developing PHOLED technology. Competitors like Cambridge Display (OLED) are using different technologies or pointing their research in different directions and seem to me to be a bit behind, and PANL continues to rack up new incremental gains in the capability of their PHOLEDs and, slowly, gains in their development of licensing partners for possible manufacture of PHOLED-based products.

The stock is pretty wild. When I bought in last year, the hope was that Samsung's licensing deal with PANL would grow and lead to some significant product development sooner rather than later. It hasn't happened yet, nor have we heard much in the way of news about specific new products that might use this technology (Samsung and it's affiliates generally hedge their bets -- I think they've licensed other bleeding edge display technologies as well). Lately we've been hearing about their lab advances -- stronger blue PHOLEDs for a nearly complete spectrum, and about new small research contracts with the US government, most recently for lighting using PHOLEDs.

But today, some more news ... and a typical jump up on the news. PANL cagily announced that an unnamed company has licensed their technology for an active matrix PHOLED for the first time to a "leading display manufacturer."

Of course, that doesn't mean much ... what we're really waiting for is announcement of a manufacturing deal, not just an exploratory license. PANL does not itself make anything, though it contracts with a manufacturer to supply their patented materials for use by their licensees. But still, this confirms to some degree that active matrix displays are possible with PANL's PHOLED technology, not just the simpler passive matrices, and that can only be good -- opening up another potential market for their patents.

I'm treating my PANL investment as a long term option on what I believe to be a compelling technology, and it's nice to see some more of their work validated today. If they keep on signing contracts for lighting and display research work and building up relationships with potential manufacturers, we're still on the right track and I'm happy to be patient.

And I really want one of those windows that turns into a TV screen on command. And one of those flexible PDAs with a screen that rolls out of a tiny tube would be handy too, please.

They might lose it all, but they also might be the holder of the patents that enable the next revolution in display technology -- I guess you can tell what I'm guessing, even though I wouldn't bet more than I can afford to lose on this one.

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Thursday, January 12, 2006 -- Subscribe free

Annual Checkup -- PANL

I have hardly written about my investment in Universal Display (PANL -- click to register for free RT streaming quote) at all during the six months or so that I've owned it. I bought this one initially on a newsletter recommendation from the Motley Fool, and though it's extraordinarily speculative even in comparison with my other holdings I still like the company. My average purchase price is just a couple cents under $10, so I'm sitting on a nice little gain -- especially after today's news-related advance to near $13. PANL has moved wildly up and down on news, and the news has generally been of two varieties for this investment in LED intellectual property -- news related to government contracts and to possible products using their technology, and news about their scientific advances. Today's move and the other recent one that I mentioned briefly back in August are both related to the science of organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs). As with all other displays, OLEDs require a combination of core colors to display a full spectrum -- and the recalcitrant color that they've been trying unsuccessfully in recent times to produce has been blue. PANL produced a short-lived sky blue in August, and today announced a much longer lived (and therefore commercially viable) sky blue as well as an advancement in developing a richer hue of blue (sky blue is a big advance but isn't that useful -- a deeper blue is required to display a full enough spectrum to make a display viable). So cleary the science is going well, and PANL is on it's way to making it possible to create a completely-OLED display in the relatively near future (they've had to use regular LEDs for the blue so far). They've also gotten some more government contracts to study low-power LEDs for lighting (not display) and develop OLED screen technology for military applications, which is a nice way of funding their continuing R&D (this is not unlike SpaceDev's strategy, by the way -- use government contracts and grants to fund your R&D with an eye to commercial products being built based on the science you develop using those funds). Since their relationship with Samsung and other display manufacturing partners has not yet advanced to the product deployment level to any serious degree, and there are many competing technologies in this quickly changing space, I consider this to be a very long shot -- I'm not planning to invest any more in PANL in the near future, but I like what I've seen so far and I'm willing to hold this for some potentially dramatic returns several years down the line.

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