Top Pros' Top Picks

One Financial Worth a Look
Specialty: STOCKS
Keyword Image
Published: 12/19/2012
By Paul Goodwin, Emerging Markets Specialist and Analyst, Cabot Heritage Corporation
Tickers mentioned: OCN

It may seem crazy to recommend looking into mortgage companies, but in this case it would be crazy not to, writes Paul Goodwin of Cabot Wealth Advisory.

It’s a basic principle of ecology that when there is a lot of something to eat, nature will see to it that there’s something to eat it. The same principle holds for economics, as well.

And if there is anything that the global economy is oversupplied with right now, it’s just got to be underperforming mortgages. Bad mortgages are a major reason the global economy in general, and the US economy in particular, is having such a hard time getting going again.

The Fed is taking about $40 billion of these mortgages out of circulation every month, but the supply is still enormous. And that’s where Ocwen Financial (OCN) comes into the picture.

Ocwen used to be a pretty standard mortgage lender, but it has shifted its main focus onto mortgage servicing—the collecting of payments and late fees, renegotiating terms, and if all else fails, conducting foreclosures. Banks are happy to be rid of the responsibility and estimates are that there may be $3 or $4 trillion of mortgage assets that will be subbed out to servicers like Ocwen in the next few years.

Ocwen’s 38% revenue growth in 2011 pales in comparison to the 90% revenue growth it reported in the latest quarter or the 100% growth it booked in the second quarter. And earnings estimates for the year are estimated to come in at 87%, with 2013 estimates now at a whopping 210%!

OCN went on a strong growth spree from November 2010 to February 2012, roaring from $8 to $17. But after a mild pullback that lasted ten weeks, the stock really exploded, ripping from $14 last May to $38 at the beginning of October.

Since then, OCN has been trading sideways, including five weeks in a tightening consolidation between $34 and $36. That’s the kind of flat base that can produce real sparks when the stock makes a move.

The catch, of course, is that you don’t know which way to move is going to go. So while a sizable buy of OCN might pay off, it could also land you with a sizable loss. My advice is to put OCN on your watch list and monitor it closely for signs (moves either way on increasing volume) of a breakout from this tight trading range.

Ocwen has the story and the numbers, and if the chart signals that it’s time to buy, quick action may give you a great opportunity.

Subscribe to Cabot Wealth Advisory here...

Related Reading:

Trading the January Effect

A Drug Name with a Huge Pipeline

2 Super Growth Stocks for 2013

TRADESHOW LOCATIONS

Show Logo
San Francisco
 • August 15 – 17, 2013
Free eLetters

Receive all-new market analysis and commentary, timely recommendations, exclusive videos, and much more from hundreds of top experts. Subscribe today!

INVESTING ELETTERS

   More Details

Daily Investing Alert

Weekly Investing eLetter

Hot Off The Tape Weekly Video eLetter

TRADING ELETTERS

   More Details

Daily Trading Alert

Trading Lessons

Trader Talk Podcast

Most Popular

Keyword Image The Week Ahead: Will 2013 Be Another Double-Digit Year?
A test of all-time stock highs looks highly likely next year, but the market's reaction to fiscal...
Large-Cap Winners & Losers
15 Most Overbought S&P 500 Stocks
Rising Sun Redux
Sponsored Links

CEMIG

Cemig (NYSE:CIG) is one of Brazil's largest and most profitable electricity concession holders.…

Royal Dutch Shell, plc

The Shell Group, (The Group), is a diverse group of energy companies with around 90,000 employees…

Best Choice Software, Inc.

Seasonal/Cycle Charts are the newest and latest development by Best Choice Software and have…

Procter & Gamble Company

P&G serves approximately 4.6 billion people around the world with its brands. The company has…