iBankCoin
Home / Commentary (page 179)

Commentary

Coffee Costs: 5 Ways to Save Money on K-Cups

via dailyfinance.com 

The convenience of single-cup coffeemakers is undeniable — the sheer simplicity of popping a pod into a brewer that dishes out premium brew in a minute or two. There’s no mess. There’s no old coffee going bad.

It’s no wonder more and more java sippers are tossing out their coffee pots for single-serve machines.

Green Mountain Coffee Roasters (GMCR) shipped a whopping 4.2 million Keurig brewers through its partners during the holiday quarter. Revenue more than doubled to $1.16 billion as earlier buyers loaded up on the K-Cup portion packs that provide the bean-based caffeinated kicks.

Keurig isn’t the only single-serve specialist. Tassimo, Nespresso, Senseo, CBTL, and now even Green Mountain’s brand new Vue system are just some of the one-cup platforms vying for your morning swig.

Slick, But Not Cheap

Single-serve coffee is certainly easier on the pocketbook than hitting up the Starbucks (SBUX) barista every time you need a caffeine fix. But you may be surprised at how much you’re actually paying for the ground coffee that shakes in the proprietary pods like maracas.

The New York Times‘ Oliver Strand did the math earlier this month. He looked at Nespresso Arpeggio pods that retail at $5.70 for 10 espresso capsules. Since each capsule contains just five grams of coffee, we’re looking at about $51 a pound. Ouch!

He also priced the Folgers Black Silk blend available for Keurig machines at $10.69 for a dozen K-Cups. Since each of those pods contains eight grams of coffee, it would take nearly 57 K-Cups — setting a fan of joe back close to $50.50 — for a pound of the stuff.

Thankfully for Strand and others with single-serve machines, there are ways to avoid paying $50 a pound for coffee. Here are tips on ways to save. Though specifically for Keurig’s K-Cups, many of these suggestions apply to rival makers as well.

1. Buy in bulk
If Strand’s prices seem outrageous, it’s because you’re probably not paying them. His article singles out retail pricing and not what savvy sippers can find if they shop around.

Amazon.com (AMZN) offers larger counts of pods at substantial savings through its website. For instance, the same Folgers K-Cups that he was pricing at $0.89 per refill can be had for about $0.47 a K-Cup through the leading online retailer.

Amazon sells three of the 12-packs bundled together for $16.97. A buyer is paying a little more than half per K-Cup, but they can even do better than that.

2. Subscribe for Savings

Amazon has a “Subscribe and Save” program, offering buyers who commit to automatic repeat purchases discounts of as much as 15% on select items.

It’s a forgiving program. You can go online to skip deliveries or change the frequency of the shipments. If you’ve found your favorite single-serve brand — and it’s available through Amazon’s subscription plan — what do you have to lose? Your K-Cup consumption is likely to be pretty steady anyway.

Soon other plan choices outside of Amazon may be available, too. Target (TGT) revealed last month that it’s exploring a subscription service to provide shoppers with discounts on regularly purchased merchandise.

3. Be Less Brand-Loyal

Remember that last tip about finding your favorite brand? Forget about it! There are more than 200 varieties of K-Cups on the market. Rival single-serve systems offer dozens of options.

If you’re not stuck on a particular flavor, there will probably be different price points available to you across the many K-Cup varieties. You won’t find the same kind of pricing disparity for smaller platforms, but it never hurts to hunt for sales or more compelling prices on other pods.

4. Buy a reusable filter

Environmentalists worried about the disposable nature of single-serve capsules have flocked to reusable Keurig filters for years, but they’re also a great way to save money.

Consumers willing to sacrifice a little on quality can buy a reusable K-Cup filter, filling it with the ground coffee of their choice. Yes, it’s perfectly legal. It doesn’t void the appliance’s warranty. Green Mountain even makes its own reusable filter.

It won’t be as clean, but wiping the counter for stray coffee grounds is a small compromise for the serious money that can be saved by the pound.

5. Be Patient

Green Mountain is going to lose some key intellectual property later this year. The two patents related to Keurig’s K-Cup portion packs expire in September. At that point, anyone will be able to make K-Cup refills without having to pay Green Mountain a royalty that amounts to a few cents per K-Cup.

The move should drive prices lower, obviously. The level playing field will make it easier for companies that have been sitting on the sidelines to throw their K-Cups into this brew ring.

There’s serious money to be saved now, and more to be saved later. So drink up!

 

Comments »

Gapping Up and Down This Morning

Gapping Up

SPWR +13.6%, AMAT +6%, ACHN +5.5%, GMO +5.5%, CLD +5.2%, BGS +3.6%, BIDU +3.4%, DVA +2.9%, JASO +2.7%, HL +2.6%, ECA +2.6%, TSL +2.5%,

CBEY +2.3%, YGE +2.2%, WWWW +1.9%, LDK +1.8%, SINA +1.2%,

Gapping Down

RMTR -22.5%, QLIK -7.4%, MDRX -5.7%, MXWL -4.9%, FTR -4.7%, PRGN -4.2%, WOOF -3.5%, JWN -2.6%, ROG -2.4%, ARUN -2.3%, RP -2%, ROVI -2%, KEG -1.8%,

Comments »

U.S. Equity Preview: ZNGA, WWWW, WOOF, SPWR, JWN, MXWL, LEAP, GILD, BIDU, & AMAT

Source

Applied Materials Inc. (AMAT) rose 5.6 percent to $13.95. The largest producer of chipmaking equipment predicted higher second-quarter profit than analysts had estimated, signaling that semiconductor makers are pulling out of a spending slump.

Baidu Inc. (BIDU) (BIDU US): China’s biggest Internet company by market value said earnings in the fourth quarter were 95 cents a share, excluding some items, beating the average analyst estimate of 90 cents.

Frontier Communications Corp. (FTR) . The phone company serving rural U.S. markets cut its quarterly dividend to 10 cents a share from 18.75 cents.

Gilead Sciences Inc. (GILD) dropped 20 percent to $44. The Foster City, California-based biopharmaceutical company said six out of eight participants in a study using its experimental hepatitis C drug showed “viral relapse” within four weeks after stopping a 12-week treatment plan.

Leap Wireless International Inc. (LEAP) : The pay-as-you- go wireless carrier reported a smaller quarterly loss than analysts predicted as smartphone sales increased and subscribers added the company’s Muve Music streaming service.

Maxwell Technologies Inc. (MXWL) fell 4.9 percent to $20. The maker of electronic components declined as Robert W Baird & Co. shifted the company to “neutral” from “outperform,” based on lower-that-expected fourth quarter revenue.

Nordstrom Inc. (JWN) : The U.S. chain with more than 100 namesake department stores projected full-year earnings that trailed analysts’ estimates amid rising costs.

SunPower Corp. (SPWR) (SPWR US) rose 13 percent to $8.45. The solar panel company majority-owned by Total SA reported better- than-estimated earnings and 2012 sales in line with previous guidance.

VCA Antech Inc. (WOOF) : The largest U.S. operator of veterinary hospitals and clinics reported fourth-quarter profit of 21 cents a share, excluding some items, missing the average analyst estimate of 25 cents.

Web.com Group Inc. (WWWW) : The company that builds websites for small businesses said earnings in the fourth quarter were 28 cents a share, excluding some items, surpassing the average analyst estimate of 26 cents.

Zynga Inc. (ZNGA) (ZNGA US) gained 2.4 percent to $12.34. The online game site that sold shares to the public in December plans to unveil a set of services designed to promote other developers and lessen its dependence on Facebook Inc., two people with knowledge of the matter said.

Comments »

The One Apple Analyst Who Says ‘Sell’ as the Stock Keeps Climbing

by Peter Burrows

There are 57 Wall Street analysts in Bloomberg’s database who follow Apple Inc., and only one of them has a “sell” rating: Edward Zabitsky.

His reasoning? Zabitsky, an analyst at Toronto-based ACI Research, doubts Apple will be able to maintain the margins of its top product, the iPhone. He’s betting that a new web standard called HTML5 will overcome some of the deficiencies of web apps that led to the rise of so-called native apps, the type sold in Apple’s App Store.

Web apps — applications that are accessed through a mobile Web browser — are useless if the phone isn’t connected to the Internet. HTML5 apps will allow users to do some off-line activities, such as working on documents that can later be synched over the web. If that standard takes off, customers will be able to get to most of their favorite services without the need of Apple’s app ecosystem, he says. The move to speedier 4G cellular networks and the increased availability of Wi-Fi hotspots will also make the web apps more useful.

As a result, he expects iPhone prices to tumble to better compete with Android and Windows phones. Over time, he predicts the gross margin on the iPhone will fall from more than 50 percent to about 25 percent — roughly the same as the iPad and Mac. Or maybe worse. Since Samsung Electronics makes many of the parts used in its own phones — displays, chips, modems — it will be able to undercut everyone, including Apple.

“If a price war breaks out in Android phones, Samsung wins hands down,” he says.

Zabitsky also says cell carriers are getting tired of watching profits from iPhone sales accrue to Apple.

“I think carriers’ attitudes are already changing,” he says, citing a recent promotion in which Verizon offered more data per month to owners of Android phones.

Read the rest here.

Comments »

$AAPL, Filling Gaps, & the Markets

So recently the market has been led by a few companies with $AAPL being the star leader.

Yesterday, as Apple spiked so did the market. Apple about faced the market seemed to have fallen apart. Granted there was a lot of moving parts to yesterday’s minor sell off, but Apple seemed to have some hand in the downside.

At any rate you players know that all gaps get filled. Apple has a chance of filling three recent gap ups. One @ $480, one @ $476, and one @ $441. It might be a good idea to pay attention to these numbers.

Oddly the S&P has almost similar gap ups….

GLT

[youtube://http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yPS9MpRLCd0 450 300]

Comments »

BlackRock’s Bob Doll: Ignore Any Correction, Stay Long Stocks

“The strong market run of early 2012 might not continue, but investors should stay long stocks, says Bob Doll, chief equity strategist for fundamental equities at investment firm BlackRock.

The U.S. economy is likely to “muddle through” and, despite the unlikelihood of ever-improving economic data, stocks will remain a good bet, Doll writes in his weekly commentary.

Corporate earnings should close ahead of expectations and the problems in Europe, while significant, will continue on a path of central bank policy actions and slow government reaction to crises as they happen. That is creating a “risk on, risk off” environment, but one that investors should continue to buy, Doll contends….”

Read more 

Comments »