CWS Market Review – April 6, 2018
“Whenever people agree with me, I always feel I must be wrong.” – Oscar Wilde
On Monday, it finally happened. For the first time in 443 trading days, the S&P 500 closed below its 200-day moving average. Dun dun duuuun!
Actually, this is a big deal. The 200-DMA is one of those things I file under “Simple Ideas that Actually Work.” The concept isn’t that hard. The stock market is prone to momentum, and the 200-DMA is a simple way to gauge how the market is doing relative to its previous trends.
Over the long haul, the market does poorly when it’s beneath its 200-DMA. Let me be clear—I don’t favor jumping ship. In fact, I think this is actually a good time for us, and our strategy. More on that later. But it’s important to understand that this is a different market than the one we experienced over the last several months.
Here’s a good example. In the last two months, guess how many times the S&P 500 has fallen more than 2% in one day? I’ll give you a hint. Six. Now guess how many times it happened in 16 months prior to that? Another hint. Zero. Not one.
The market has become more volatile, more unpredictable and more unforgiving. In this week’s issue, I’ll discuss the good earnings report we got from RPM International. Also, Hormel Foods seems to be benefiting from the growing trade war. Who knew tariffs could impact pig prices? I’ll tell you what it all means. But first let’s look at why this is such a good market for stock pickers.
This Is a Good Market for Stock Pickers
One metric I like to keep track of is the relative performance of the Equally Weighted ETF (RSP) versus the S&P 500 ETF (SPY). The concept is pretty simple. The RSP is a fund that equally weights all the stocks in the S&P 500. The SPY is weighted by market value. The relationship between the two often tells us how “broad” the market is.
Over the last 16 months, the RSP badly lagged the SPY. In simple terms, the big fish have been doing most of the work while the minnows have been left behind. As a very general rule, stock pickers tend to like the minnows more than index funds or institutional investors. Whenever you hear that it was a bad year for active managers, in all likelihood, that’s a reflection of how broad the market was.
Some markets are broad and some are narrow. We had a very, very narrow one, but that changed abruptly in March. Now the RSP has been crushing the SPY. The big stars of the rally, like the FAANG stocks, have been feeling the pain. Facebook, for example, is more than 18% off its high. Tesla is down more than 21% from its high. The fractured market has been a good one for our Buy List, and I think this will continue. Many of the former high fliers are still overpriced. Also, a good portion of our Buy List stocks have been in unpopular sectors. It was tech that grabbed all the gains.
But the real test for stocks will be the first-quarter earnings season. Twenty of our 25 stocks will report earnings from mid-April to early May. Earnings season is the key time for every rational investor. I don’t have all the dates yet, but it looks like it will start for us around April 19, with Alliance Data Systems (ADS) and Danaher (DHR). Signature Bank (SBNY) usually reports about the same time, but they seem to enjoy waiting till the last minute to inform me.
I’m particularly looking forward to this earnings season. Analysts on Wall Street currently expect the S&P 500 to have earnings of 35.64. That’s the index-adjusted number, and it’s a very good one. (Every point in the index is worth about $8.5 billion.) If that estimate is right, then it would represent a 23.7% increase over last year’s Q1. That’s very strong growth, and the final number will probably be even better. Typically, about 60% to 75% of earnings reports exceed expectations. Indeed, on Wall Street, you’re expected to beat expectations.
Obviously, tax reform is playing a big role in the increased expectations. We’ve seen that in several of our stocks, but that’s not the only factor. The business climate is improving. Typically, Wall Street pares back its earnings estimates as earnings season approaches. Not this time. At the start of the year, analysts were expecting Q1 earnings of $33.97. Over the last four months, Wall Street’s estimate has increased by 5%.
For all of 2018, Wall Street expects the S&P 500 to earn 156.13. That’s up about 7% since the start of the year. The current estimate means the index is currently going for just over 17 times forward earnings. Valuation is a tricky game, but I’d call the current valuation elevated but not dangerous. Our stocks, however, are quite reasonably priced. Carriage Services (CSV), our funeral home operator, is going for less than 14 times earnings. ADS is going for less than 10 times earnings.
In particular, I’m also looking forward to the earnings report from Torchmark (TMK). They probably have the steadiest “earnings line” of any major stock on Wall Street. Their earnings seem to grow by a similar amount each quarter. Since late January, the shares are down about 9%. TMK is probably going for about 14 times this year’s earnings.
With this earnings season, I’m also on the lookout for increased guidance. Not all companies are required to provide guidance to investors. The better ones do, and I prefer to see it. The trick is spotting the ones that try to low-ball investors. Apple loves to do that, as does Ross Stores (ROST). This is still early in the year to see much in the way of higher or lower guidance. Still, companies are always talking with their suppliers and customers so they have a good sense of how the next few months will shake out.
Make sure your portfolio is well-diversified, and focus on high-quality stocks. Don’t try to catch a bottom in any of the falling stars of the bull market. The selling there isn’t over yet. I expect to see more volatility and more testing of the 200-DMA. The best defense in an environment like this is a solid portfolio of Buy List stocks. Now let’s look at the recent earnings beat from RPM International.
RPM International Beats Earnings
On Thursday, RPM International (RPM) reported fiscal Q3 earnings of 30 cents per share. That profit included a one-penny non-recurring gain due to the tax-reform act, plus another eight cents due to lower tax rates, so let’s call it 21 cents per share. Wall Street had been expecting 18 cents per share.
This is one of our quieter stocks, but don’t overlook it. RPM had a solid quarter. Net sales rose 7.8% to $1.1 billion. Quarterly EBIT (earnings before interest and taxes) rose 52%.
“RPM’s operating performance for the third quarter was outstanding, despite severe, continued industry-wide headwinds from higher raw-material costs. We continue to generate exceptional EBIT leverage, reflecting the early success of cost-savings initiatives we began implementing last year and rigorous SG&A spending discipline we have exercised throughout this year,” stated Frank C. Sullivan, RPM chairman and chief executive officer.
The company has three business segments. The largest is the industrial group. For Q3, they had revenue growth of 9.2% to $569 million. The consumer group was up 6.4% to $363 million. The specialty segment had revenue growth of 6.5% to $170 million.
For Q4, RPM expects consolidated revenue growth in the “mid-to-upper” single digits. The company is narrowing its full-year guidance from $3 to $3.10 per share to $3.05 to $3.10 per share. That means RPM is going for less than 16 times earnings.
RPM shares haven’t done much of anything lately, but the stock got a little boost after the earnings report. This is a good company going for a good valuation. I’m dropping my Buy Below on RPM down to $52 per share.
Buy List Updates
You may be familiar with the “Butterfly Effect,” the idea that a very tiny event, like a butterfly flapping its wings, can cause a hurricane at the other end of the world. I often think of that when we consider the second- and third-order effects of financial markets. For example, Hormel Foods (HRL) had a very strong day on Wednesday. At one point, it was almost up 7%. That’s a huge move for a company like HRL.
What happened? China decided to respond to the Trump administration’s tariffs on steel and aluminum by proposing tariffs on pork. That caused hog prices to plummet. This is important because rising commodity prices had been squeezing Hormel’s operating profits in recent quarters. In a matter of days, geopolitics bailed them out. Hormel looks quite good here. The company will report earnings again in later May.
This week, the New York Stock Exchange, which is owned by Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), reached a deal to buy the Chicago Stock Exchange (CHX). A few weeks ago, an investor group led by a Chinese conglomerate tried to buy the CHX. The SEC blocked the deal. The CHX used to be a big regional player, but it’s small potatoes nowadays. They didn’t disclose the numbers of the deal, but the WSJ said it was around $70 million. That’s barely a dent compared with ICE’s market cap of $42 billion. Still, it’s nice to see ICE expand.
Also, this week, JM Smucker (SJM) said they’re buying Ainsworth Pet Nutrition for $1.7 billion. They make the Nutrish dog treats which are endorsed by Rachel Ray.
Premium pet food is a fast-growing sector. Recently, General Mills snapped up Blue Buffalo for $8 billion. In my opinion, that was way too much. But unlike General Mills, Smucker already has a pet-food division (they have the Meow Mix brand). SJM claims this will help them cut overhead costs for Ainsworth. We’ll see.
The good news is that Smucker is getting a pretty good deal for Ainsworth. They’re paying 12 times EBITDA for it. Smucker also said they’re considering ditching their baking business which includes brands like Pillsbury. Interestingly, shares of SJM didn’t get slammed, which often happens to the acquirer when big deals are announced.
That’s all for now. Next week will be fairly quiet for economic news, but towards the end of the week, we’ll start seeing the first batch of Q1 earnings reports. Our Buy List earnings report won’t start until the week after that. There are a few things to keep an eye out for. On Wednesday, we’ll get the minutes from the most recent Fed meeting. Also on Wednesday is the latest CPI report. There have been some muted signs of greater inflation. Be sure to keep checking the blog for daily updates. I’ll have more market analysis for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review!
– Eddy
Syndication Partners
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Sell These 2 FAANG Stocks About to Be Destroyed
In what was a very poor April Fool’s joke, the stock market took a tumble on Monday, closing below its 200-day moving average for the first time since June 2016. U.S. stocks had their worst start to an April in many decades as measured by the S&P index. The 2.2% plunge was exceeded by only the 2.5% dive in 1929 when the index only consisted of 90 stocks. This drop followed the worst three month period for global stocks in more than two years.
This selloff was once again led by technology stocks – the Nasdaq 100 index lost 2.9% – as more reasons to sell tech outweighed expected stellar earnings reports (average gains of 22%) later this month. The so-called FAANG stocks extended their recent fall. On Monday, they lost $78.7 billion in market value, bringing the total decline in value to $397 billion just from March 12
The reasons behind the tech selloff were many and included: the continuing worries over regulation of social media, thanks to Facebook; a stupid April Fool tweet from Tesla’s Elon Musk joking about bankruptcy; tweets from President Trump continuing his rants about Amazon; further tweets from the President threatening the future of NAFTA, reigniting the market’s worries about a global trade war; and finally a report that Apple may use chips of its own design in Macs rather than Intel’s chips.
Hopefully, the political worries coming from the White House will eventually fade: if so, then that means the main long-term worry surrounds the social media stocks and in particular, Facebook.
Warren Buffett Loves the Industry of this Beaten Down High-Yield Stock. You Should Too.
Last year at the Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholder meeting, billionaire Warren Buffett stated: “We have got a big appetite for wind or solar.” This high-yield stock is a pure play wind and solar energy producer that was just upgraded by Goldman Sachs. View the recent share price decline as an opportunity to invest in the renewable energy sector at a great buy-in price.
Pattern Energy Group (Nasdaq: PEGI) is an owner/operator of 20 wind power facilities, including one project it has agreed to acquire, with a total owned interest of 2,736 MW in the United States, Canada and Chile. Each power facility is contracted to sell all its energy output, or a majority, on a long-term, fixed-price power sale agreement. Ninety-two percent of the electricity to be generated by the facilities will be sold under these power sale agreements, which have a weighted average remaining contract life of approximately 14 years.
The company has been focused on growing its portfolio since the 2013 IPO. At that time the company owned 1,041 MW of energy production capacity. The added and future acquisitions for Pattern Energy Group are sourced and developed by a related private investment company called Pattern Development. Pattern Development is more like an investment fund that searches out renewable energy production projects to fund. Management has a stated goal of reaching 5,000 MW of owned capacity by 2020. At this time the company already has over 1,000 MW of new projects where PEGI has the right of first offer to purchase the projects when they are ready to come on line. In its long-term development pipeline, management claims visibility on up to 10,000 MW.
Investors have participated in the growth, with the PEGI dividend increasing every quarter until the most recent announcement. From 2014 through the end of 2017 the dividend grew by 35%. On March 1, 2018 the company chose for the first time to not increase the dividend. It was kept level with the previous rate. While the market did not like the lack of dividend increase, it was a prudent move by the Board of Directors to not announce an increase. Cash flow from recent acquisitions had not kicked in to boost free cash flow to pay a higher dividend. In February the company announced the purchase of a 206 MW portfolio of wind and solar projects in Japan. The portfolio has three operating facilities and two under construction. It is an almost certainty that PEGI will soon resume dividend growth.
The PEGI share price peaked above $24 in September 2017. The shares now trade at $17 and change with a 9.75% current yield. This is a dividend growth stock, in the growing renewable energy sector. The current sell-off of the stock is not justified by fundamentals. When the dividend again starts to grow this stock could be bid up again into the mid-$20’s.
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on April 6th, 2018 at 7:08 am
The information in this blog post represents my own opinions and does not contain a recommendation for any particular security or investment. I or my affiliates may hold positions or other interests in securities mentioned in the Blog, please see my Disclaimer page for my full disclaimer.
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