Today, it’s Boyd’s turn to shine

Even the illusion of a rising tide lifts all boats, it would appear. Yesterday’s big stock-pump by Caesars Entertainment carried Boyd Gaming up with it, as did much-better-than-expected first-quarter numbers from Boyd. Shares that closed Tuesday at $8.94 were riding as high a $11.70 today. As one Wall Street newsletter put it “What to do 23% later”? Set a higher price target, for one thing. Boyd executives have long held that the stock is undervalued, largely due to Boyd’s vulnerability in the urban and suburban Las Vegas markets, with the former showing some worrisome slippage.

As Motley Fool pointed out, Peninsula Gaming acquisitions are driving all of the 1Q13 growth. Still, J.P. Morgan analysts assigned 25% of their new, higher stock valuation to Borgata alone — and its ability to penetrate New Jersey‘s intrastate Internet-gambling market. “Organic revenue growth is negative and the company still isn’t making a significant profit. I’d sell on the bump and move on to higher quality gaming companies,” wrote Fool analyst Travis Hoium. Boyd CEO Keith Smith pounded the theme of greatly improved cash flow in the Vegas market, even if not all were persuaded. Carlo Santarelli predicted near-term cashing out by shareholders and argued, in essence, that Wall Street was “yearning for a locals inflection with legs”  and other indications of recovery — and was therefore willing to overlook the difficulty (in his view) of sustaining this momentum. Even so, Santarelli likes BYD better than does his Morgan opposite number, Joseph Greff, who will only raise his price target to $8, compared to Santarelli’s $10. If you invest in Boyd, you ship will eventually come in, but today’s rally demonstrates how long the wait can be.

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