Apple Inc and Amazon.com Inc will soon battle in the nascent but fast-growing market for electronic books, and Wall Street has ring-side seats.


Both stocks have outperformed in the past year, roughly doubling in value, but which is the better pick for 2010?
Apple, flush with cash and a less lofty valuation than Amazon, may be the wiser choice in the short term as consumers snap up its devices to enjoy all forms of digital media, some analysts and investors say.
But for those with longer investment views, Amazon is showing stronger growth momentum coming out of the recession, as more traditional retail business moves online, others say.
"Apple seems to be the better deal, just purely on valuation," said Erick Maronak, chief investment officer for the Victory Large Cap Growth Fund, who describes the company led by Chief Executive Steve Jobs as "one of the best-run companies out there."
Shares of Apple, which has a market value of over $170 billion, are trading at 17 times estimated forward earnings, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Amazon, which has a market cap of about $50 billion, is trading at 40 times.
"Apple is cheap. I know people find that hard to believe, but they are," said Maronak, whose fund has owned Apple shares since 2004 and got into Amazon only last year.
Ted Parrish, who runs the Henssler Equity Fund, echoed that sentiment. "The main reason that I haven't warmed up to Amazon is it's always been pretty pricey," he said."
But for investors looking at growth trajectories Amazon is expected to outpace Apple's earnings growth in the next 12 months, which could justify the richer valuation.
Amazon's earnings per share are pegged to increase 40 percent over the next 12 months, according to estimates from Thomson Reuters StarMine, which give more weight to predictions from top-ranked analysts. That compares to Apple's 23 percent.
Benchmark analyst Frederick Moran likes Amazon, forecasting 30 percent earnings growth for the online retailer in 2010.
"We think as Amazon proves the sustainability of its 30 percent earnings growth rate, it will justify its valuation levels which are obviously higher than other retailers and most Internet companies," Moran said.

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