#3 Signet Jewelers
At the end of the second quarter, roughly 40% of Signet Jewelers Ltd. (NYSE:SIG) common stock was held by 44 of the funds in our database, down from 55 registered at the end of the first quarter. Dan Loeb changed his mind regarding Signet Jewelers Ltd. (NYSE:SIG), having only established a position for his fund, Third Point, during the first quarter. The fund dumped its entire holding, which had previously contained 1.0 million shares. Although at first it looked like Signet Jewelers was staging a rally, the stock plummeted at the end of August and is currently down by 9.5% since the end of the second quarter. The company’s second quarter financial report was the reason behind the fall. Signet Jewelers Ltd. (NYSE:SIG) posted adjusted earnings of $1.14 per share on $1.37 billion in revenue, while investors were expecting $1.45 billion in revenue and earnings of $1.47 per share. A number of analysts have subsequently downgraded the stock, citing a shift in the company’s fundamentals. JPMorgan reduced its rating to ‘Neutral’ from ‘Overweight’ and lowered the price target to $90 from $136, while Citigroup’s rating went from ‘Buy’ to ‘Neutral’, with a lower price target of $83 per share.
Follow Signet Jewelers Ltd (NYSE:SIG)
Follow Signet Jewelers Ltd (NYSE:SIG)
#2 Occidental Petroleum
At the end of June, Occidental Petroleum Corporation (NYSE:OXY) could be found in the portfolios of 38 of the funds tracked by Insider Monkey, down from 50 a quarter earlier. Although he did not completely unwind his fund’s position, billionaire Steve Cohen has significantly reduced exposure to Occidental Petroleum Corporation (NYSE:OXY), having dumped 60% of Point72 Asset Management’s position. According to its latest 13F filing, the fund holds just 220,000 shares worth $16.6 million at the end of June. Occidental Petroleum Corporation (NYSE:OXY) has a market cap of $55.6 billion and pays an annual dividend of $3.04 per share, providing shareholders with a 4.43% yield. Since the start of the third quarter, the stock has fallen by 3.9% through Wednesday’s closing price of $71.90 per share. During the 2016 second quarter, Occidental Petroleum swung to a loss, having reported a loss of $0.18 per share, in line with analysts’ expectations. Revenues fell 27% to $2.53 billion, missing analysts’ estiamate of $2.66 billion in revenue.
Follow Occidental Petroleum Corp (NYSE:OXY)
Follow Occidental Petroleum Corp (NYSE:OXY)
#1 McDonald’s
Over the course of the second quarter, the number of hedge funds holding a long position in McDonald’s Corporation (NYSE:MCD) decreased to 63 from 83 registered at the end of the first quarter. Having bought into the stock during the first quarter, Clint Carlson made a complete u-turn during the second quarter and sold off the 185,000 shares his fund had reported at the end of March. Billionaire Ken Griffin has also took steps to reduce exposure to McDonald’s Corporation (NYSE:MCD), as his fund, Citadel Advisors, cut its position by 82% to just 130,961 shares. Investors suffered a torrid ride during the third quarter, with the stock having shot up by 6.9% only to fall back down, currently trading down by 3% for the quarter. McDonald’s Corporation (NYSE:MCD)’s CEO, Steve Easterbrook, earlier this week has announced a 6% increase in the company’s quarterly dividend to $0.94 per share. Given the current price of the stock, the annual dividend of $3.76 per share would provide investors with a 3.2% yield. Analysts are not very bullish on this stock and recommend it mainly as a ‘Hold’ with an average price target of $126.13, which indicated an upside potential of 9.5%.
Follow Mcdonalds Corp (NYSE:MCD)
Follow Mcdonalds Corp (NYSE:MCD)
Disclosure: none.