5 Reasons Not to Worry This Week

Updated

Things are starting to look up in 2012, but it's not all perfect.

There are still some rough patches out there. Greece's parliament voted to approve austerity measures earlier this morning to avoid a messy default, but it's not a long-term fix. China -- which had been one of the stronger economies during the global downturn -- is now facing the shrinking of both its exports and imports.

I recently went over some of the companies that are targeted to post lower quarterly profits when they report this week.

Thankfully, they're the exceptions and not the rule. Let's go over some publicly traded companies that are expected to stand tall this week by posting year-over-year improvement on the bottom line.

Company

Latest Quarter EPS (estimated)

Year-Ago Quarter EPS

My

Watchlist

American Capital (NAS: ACAS)

$0.20

$0.19

Add

Ancestry.com (NAS: ACOM)

$0.34

$0.25

Add

Baidu (NAS: BIDU)

$0.91

$0.50

Add

Vonage (NYS: VG)

$0.11

$0.06

Add

Build-A-Bear Workshop (NYS: BBW)

$0.52

$0.36

Add

Source: Thomson Reuters.

Clearing the table
Let's start at the top with American Capital.

Investors buying into the business development company for its once-juicy yield were understandably frustrated by its move to suspend its dividend. The merits of a recent buyback are being actively debated by bulls and bears. Lost in all of the drama and the steep losses during the financial crisis is that American Capital is posting respectable profitability now.

Ancestry.com mans the country's largest genealogy website. Folks are apparently willing to pay to dig deeper into their family trees judging by Ancestry's growing subscriber base. Things should pick up again, as NBC kicked off the third season of Who Do You Think You Are? earlier this month.

The popular Friday night show partners with Ancestry.com to trace the lineage of famous celebrities, cleverly feeding the inquisitive appetite of viewers into doing the same. Ancestry's quarter ended several weeks before the third season debuted, but analysts still see heady growth here.

Baidu is China's leading search engine. Market-research firm Analysys International pegs Baidu's share of the market at a healthy 78.3% slice in the fourth quarter.

China's economy is running into some near-term challenges, but the world's most populous nation -- and now the world's largest concentration of Internet users -- can't be denied. Baidu's been a speedster through its nearly seven years of public trading, and the 82% bottom-line burst that Wall Street is projecting for in its latest quarter is too scintillating to ignore.

Vonage wasn't as celebrated when it went public at $17 a share a year after Baidu's debut. The Web-based consumer telephone service tanked. In a head-shaking incident that Vonage has been trying to live down, it actually had to go after deadbeat customers who agreed to buy shares of the IPO but balked when they saw the stock fall.

Life has been kinder to Vonage these days. It may be as competitive as ever in the Internet telephony niche, but Vonage is routinely profitable. It has posted three consecutive quarters of earning exactly $0.10 a share. Wall Street sees a record $0.11 a share showing this time around.

Finally, we have Build-A-Bear Workshop.

I was surprised to see the stuffed animal retailer make the cut. Store comps were plunging year after year since peaking in 2004. The novelty of overpriced bears stuffed to life seemed to wear thin. Sales are still being challenged, but the analysts still following Build-A-Bear see a dramatic spike in profitability during the seasonally potent holiday quarter.

Cross those fingers, but know the fundamentals
Investors in these five stocks have a right to be excited. They are all improving their financial situations. They are worthy of the gains that the market rally has bestowed upon them over the past year.

I wouldn't be uncomfortable owning any of these companies. They're doing the right thing, regardless of Mr. Market's mood swings.

The expectations may be high, but these five stocks wouldn't have it any other way.

David Gardner has been behind some of these winning picks, but now there'sa new multibaggeron his growth newsletter's radar. Read up in a free report that'savailable right now.

At the time thisarticle was published Motley Fool newsletter services have recommended buying shares of Ancestry.com and Baidu. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.Longtime Fool contributor Rick Munarriz calls them as he sees them. He does not own shares in any of the stocks in this story. Rick is also part of theRule Breakersnewsletter research team, seeking out tomorrow's ultimate growth stocks a day early.

Copyright © 1995 - 2012 The Motley Fool, LLC. All rights reserved. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Advertisement