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Whoa! My Stock Just Whupped the Market!

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Hoping against hope that Greece will get its financial act together, the markets staged another rally yesterday. But just because your stock strapped on a rocket pack and went even higher, resist the urge to high-five everyone in the cubicles next to you. Smart investors won't celebrate until they know that upward leap was justified. Without a fundamental basis for the bounce, these stocks can quickly make the return trip down.

Is now the time to lock in profits, or is this just the first step toward even higher valuations down the road? Let's examine several stocks that just hit the afterburners, and see whether they're truly headed into orbit.

Stock

CAPS Rating (out of 5)

Thursday's Change

Medivation (Nasda: MDVN) ** 140.5%
Orbitz Worldwide (NYSE: OWW  ) ** 44.7%
MercadoLibre (Nasdaq: MELI  ) *** 30.9%

With the markets rising 208 points yesterday, or 1.8%, stocks that went appreciably higher are pretty big deals.

Shining a light on growth
Unlike with some of the treatments going through clinical trials and building up investor hopes, Medivation is proving that its therapy actually works. Its prostate cancer drug candidate MDV3100, taken orally, helped patients live on average five months longer than a placebo while inducing relatively mild side effects. The announcement about the late-stage trials sent investors into a frenzy.

It wasn't just the positive results that got investors ebullient, but also the fact that this came on the heels of Dendreon (Nasdaq: DNDN  ) reporting lackluster growth of Provenge and the potential for falling sales, and Exelixis starting the week off by failing to convince the FDA to sign off on a trial design for its own treatment.

CAPS member MajorBob04 thinks the dramatic run-up in the stock isn't over yet for Medivation: "This stock will skyrocket now that trial results are positive and indicating that trial participants receiving the placebo will switch to the actual drug because of efficacy."

Add the biotech to your watchlist to see how it performs from here and whether it will fulfill the promise that Dendreon and Exelixis seem to be falling short on.

Taking flight
Investors also liked what they heard from online travel agent Orbitz Worldwide. Even though its domestic bookings business, which comprises the greatest portion of its total revenues, fell 4% from the year-ago period, its international bookings rose 31%, helping Orbitz raise its full-year revenue forecast from a range of $752 million-$762 million to $760 million-$764 million.

The domestic business was very much like that experienced by Expedia last week, which saw U.S. airline ticket sales fall 10%. Despite its TripAdvisor subsidiary reporting decent growth, the fact that it is spinning the division off muted the benefit that would contribute to the remaining business.

This is exceptional news for priceline.com (Nasdaq: PCLN  ) investors, since the Name Your Own Price leader dominates the international travel markets through its Bookings.com and Agoda services. International bookings represented more than three-quarters of Priceline's total last quarter, so if Orbitz is seeing international growth, it's mostly likely going to play into Priceline's hands, too.

Highly rated CAPS All-Star mdicksonjr thinks the market's reaction to Orbitz's earnings is much ado about nothing:

Basically, flat revenue growth and excessive debt. Why buy this? Trade fodder.

Tell us on the Orbitz CAPS page or in the comments section below whether you agree that investors should be focusing more on how its domestic business is performing. Then go and add it to your watchlist to see how it plays out.

Pump up the volume
There's a benefit to making up in volume what you give up in price. Just ask e-commerce retailer MercadoLibre, which reported profits soaring 40% from last year on a 46% increase in revenues. By offering its retailers lower-price ad options, it was able to increase the number of sellers on its site. Gross merchandise volume grew 52% to $1.3 billion, while total payment volume nearly doubled.

The growth of Internet usage in Latin America is a secular trend MercadoLibre is taking advantage of. While its home country of Brazil saw 38% growth, Agentina was up 55% and Venezuela rose 57%. Taking a page from both eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY  ) and Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN  ) , MercadoLibre is setting itself up as the dominant Internet e-commerce platform throughout Latin America.

Earlier this summer, CAPS member drewsd35 figured that as long as the southern hemisphere didn't lapse into recession as the rest of the world seemed to be doing, MercadoLibre should come out ahead: "Leader in Latin America ecomerce this company is heading in the right direction and as long as the US does not fall into a recession [MercadoLibre] will still hold."

Add MercadoLibre to the Fool's free portfolio tracker if you'd like to see whether it can up the volume for additional opportunities in the future.

The Steve Jobs Betrayal
You may already know that in the final year of his life, Jobs revealed a stunning betrayal — and told his biographer, "I will spend my last dying breath... and every penny of Apple's $40 billion in the bank to right this wrong." What was it that made Jobs so irate — and why could it make a few in-the-know investors some major profits over the coming months and years?

Enter your email address below to find out what made Jobs so enraged!

Fool contributor Rich Duprey holds no position in any company mentioned. Click here to see his holdings and a short bio. The Motley Fool owns shares of Dendreon and Exelixis. Motley Fool newsletter services have recommended buying shares of MercadoLibre, priceline.com, Amazon.com, eBay, and Exelixis. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.


Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On November 07, 2011, at 11:13 AM, naughtyguy wrote:

    Amazing how much less motels charge with the rest area coupons than any travel agency. Go figure!

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Related Tickers

5/25/2012 4:05 PM
OWW $3.43 Up +0.08 +2.39%
Orbitz Worldwide,… CAPS Rating: *
MELI $74.73 Down +0.00 +0.00%
MercadoLibre CAPS Rating: ****
EBAY $40.35 Up +0.68 +1.71%
eBay CAPS Rating: ****
PCLN $652.88 Down -16.09 -2.41%
Priceline.com CAPS Rating: **
AMZN $212.89 Down -2.35 -1.09%
Amazon.com CAPS Rating: ***
DNDN $7.11 Down -0.11 -1.52%
Dendreon Corp CAPS Rating: **

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