The Oklahoman

Microsoft’s purchase of LinkedIn may prove to be company’s latest expensive gamble

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Two questions: What do you think of America First Multifamil­y Investors, which pays 8.7 percent tax-free? And what do you think of Microsoft’s purchase of LinkedIn? I’d like to sell 1,000 of my 2,000 shares of Microsoft and put the money in America First. At 73, I figure I don’t need more capital gains and want to maximize my income.

America First Multifamil­y Investors LP (ATAX-$5.71) is a $65 million-revenue company chartered in 1986 to acquire, hold, sell and otherwise manage a portfolio of federally taxexempt mortgage revenue bonds issued to provide financing for multifamil­y residentia­l apartments.

Management will purchase additional tax-exempt mortgage revenue bonds, use

Malcolm Berko

TAKING STOCK leverage to increase its tax-free income, diversify to reduce risk and hedge interest rates to maintain a steady dividend. ATAX owns 65 mortgage revenue bonds, issued through various state housing authoritie­s, on 44 properties. These properties comprise 8,230 living units in Ohio, California, Iowa, Texas, Tennessee, Louisiana, New Mexico, Maryland, Minnesota and both Carolinas.

Between 1993 and the present, through thin and thick, through recession and prosperity, through good markets and bad markets, in low-interest and high-interest environmen­ts, ATAX has paid annual dividends between 50 cents and 54 cents a share. And in those 23 years, its share price has ranged from a low of $4.27 last January to a high of $9.44 in December 2002.

I’m always suspicious of high-yielding investment­s, especially those that are leveraged (ATAX is 37 percent leveraged), those that are not taxable and those that derive income from housing bonds. ATAX has a $6.50 book value, $43 million in cash, a current ratio of 1.2 and $21 million in free cash flow, with 60 million shares outstandin­g. And according to Andy Grier, a fund analyst with ATAX, the 50-cent dividend, yielding 8.7 percent, is 90 to 92 percent nontaxable. You must understand that ATAX is a rank speculatio­n, but it’s a good rank speculatio­n. If that $50,000 represents a small portion of your portfolio, I’d be comfortabl­e taking a leap of faith with 9,000 shares, which will bring in $4,500, of which $4,000 may be tax-free.

Microsoft (MSFT-$58) may be making a dreadful boo-boo with its $196-per-share purchase of LinkedIn (LNKD-$192), which since 2011 has dumbly traded between $56 and $275 and never earned a dime. MSFT’s new CEO, Satya Nadella, will be the old CEO if this LNKD acquisitio­n fails as I and some important insiders think it will. Nadella believes that adding a profession­al social network to its businessfo­cused software line will allow MSFT to wean itself from its legacy of personal computers. LNKD, with zero earnings prospects in sight, isn’t a bargain at $26 billion; rather, it’s an expensive and seemingly frantic gamble.

And MSFT has a really stinky record with takeovers and buyouts. Its purchase of Nokia’s handsets quickly morphed into a $7.5 billion write-off. Microsoft bought Yammer for $1.2 billion, which turned into a black hole, and then put $605 million into Barnes & Noble’s Nook e-reader, which flopped, and its Skype purchase is an embarrassi­ng failure. MSFT paid $6.3 billion for aQuantive, an online advertisin­g company that’s worthless. MSFT bought Visio for $1.4 billion, Navision for $1.5 billion and Tellme Networks for $800 million, and they’re all worthless. During Steve Ballmer’s tenure, MSFT bought 149 companies, and 121 of them have vaporized into the ether. No wonder Ballmer is bald.

Nadella sees a synergy in LNKD, with MSFT’s Office productivi­ty suite, which is delivered online, and LNKD’s core

IN STOCK

EAGLE

Stock prices can be elastic; yesterday’s loser becomes today’s big gainer.

That’s a bit of what happened with last week’s topperform­ing stock among Oklahoma-based companies.

Shares of ADDvantage Technologi­es Group Inc. were our worst performer two weeks ago. That came soon after the cable and telecom equipment company announced a slump in sales had shaved profits.

But, as I noted then, the Broken Arrow company remains persistent­ly profitable.

AEY shares last week jumped nearly 9 percent, closing Friday at $1.96 after briefly touching $2 during the week’s final trading day.

Although AEY has topped $2 in intraday trading more recently, the stock hasn’t closed above that mark since late 2015.

BEAGLE

Here’s something we haven’t seen much of database of 433 million profiles. Nadella suggests that a LKND and MSFT merger represents the coming together of the profession­al cloud and the profession­al network. I think that it’s the coming together of profession­al idiots and that Nadella’s gone bonkers. This is the marriage of two uncommonly diverse management cultures and business goals. MSFT’s business is developing, licensing and supporting software products and services, not social pages for profession­als seeking business connection­s and new jobs.

After the merger is completed, I suspect that MSFT’s share price will be dead in the water for a couple of years as LKND and MSFT people fight to find common ground.

EAGLE & BEAGLE lately: A local energy company set a 52-week high this month.

Shares of that company, Tulsa’s WPX Energy, hit $12.45 on Aug. 19 after a fairly steady climb since oil prices bottomed out early this year.

Back in January, shares of the oil and natural gas exploratio­n and production company briefly slid below $3.

With that impressive recovery, it shouldn’t be surprising that traders and others may have opted to bank some profits.

That might have produced last week’s 5.6 percent dip for WPX, which closed Friday at $11.67.

 ??  ?? Don Mecoy
Don Mecoy
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