Just when you thought this market couldn't get loopier, along comes one of our old friends to make us forget the bubble ever happened... I'm talking, of course, about Tupperware Brands (TUP). Back in April, I wrote a mini case study on how such an iconic brand could be so screwed up. As I said [â¦] Not rendering correctly? View this e-mail as a web page [here](.
[Empire Financial Daily] This Time Will Be No Different By Herb Greenberg
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--------------------------------------------------------------- Tupperware itself is trying to shift to a hybrid model, which includes retail... It's doing so because its business model is broken. But barring something coming out of left field to save Tupperware (other than a wing and a prayer), the facts are the facts: - The company hasn't filed a quarterly or annual financial statement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") since November 2022. - The company has "identified multiple prior period misstatements and material weaknesses in internal control" that are likely to lead to "the restatement of its previously issued financial statements." - Maybe the most important: As recently as June, Tupperware said it would file its revised financials by mid-July. That has since been pushed back to late September. Something stinks, like somebody forgot to fully close one of the lids on one of its containers that had something rotten inside. Meanwhile, people are bidding up this stock like it's the second coming of Hertz... As I said on CNBC last week and even last night and I'll say again: What we're seeing is either illegal insider trading (doubtful) or short covering that's feeding on itself (probably) and/or hype feeding on hype (most likely) on the fear of missing out on this "once-in-a-lifetime opportunity." (That last part was sarcasm.) Repeating what I've said before: There is no doubt in my mind that Tupperware the brand will survive. The public company? Not so much. Speaking of survival, or lack thereof... Tupperware isn't the only penny stock on steroids. Have you seen trucking company Yellow (YELL) lately? The stock roughly tripled in two trading days (albeit from nearly zero) after the company, in effect, went out of business. Yellow shut down and said that it's filing for bankruptcy. That makes complete sense, right? Of course, it doesn't. Yellow didn't just say it's filing for bankruptcy, but literally shut down... as it went out of business. Maybe it was short covering or manipulation or betting that this nearly 100-year-old company certainly will be saved. Or not... As transportation guru Donald Broughton of Broughton Capital told me... - With more $7.50 a share in NEGATIVE tangible book value per share there, is absolutely no value in the common equity shares. Also, this calculation doesn't include obligations that are not on the balance sheet, which in YELL's case are substantial (starting with the Teamsters pension fund, which was underfunded before YELL missed making its recent payments). - There are just over 51 million shares outstanding, but today 148.8 million shares were traded. Several possible explanations, with the most likely being amateurs. - Even as the price of shares went up, the price of the put contracts (especially the October and January expirations) stayed the same or only declined by a tiny amount – suggesting the pros know how this ends and didn't blink. My friend Matt Malgari of Kailash Concepts put it best in a note last week about this market, when he said... Today, like in 2001, investors are betting on overpriced quality and speculative garbage due to a predictable combination of behavioral errors. This time will be no different. Regards, Herb Greenberg
August 1, 2023 [Get a 60-day, 100% money-back trial to Empire Real Wealth by clicking here.](
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