Archive for May, 2015

  • CWS Market Review – May 29, 2015
    , May 29th, 2015 at 7:08 am

    Foul-cankering rust the hidden treasure frets,
    But gold that’s put to use more gold begets.
    – Venus and Adonis

    We’re back from a nice holiday respite. I hope everyone had an enjoyable Memorial Day weekend. This has been a quiet time on Wall Street and for our Buy List. Since I sent you the last issue of CWS Market Review, our Buy List is up a whopping 0.04% while the S&P 500 has careened for a massive loss of 0.01%.

    Maybe Wall Street knew I was going on vacation!

    But don’t despair; there’s good news to pass along. Two of our Buy List stocks, Hormel Foods (HRL) and Ross Stores (ROST), both posted strong earnings last week. I’ll have more details in a bit. I’ll also bring you up to speed on some of the other news impacting our Buy List.

    In this week’s CWS Market Review, I’ll tell you that our old friend the Strong Dollar Trade is back in town. I wrote about this a lot last year. All investors need to understand how the rising greenback impacts the stock and bond markets, and in turn, our Buy List. This is a complicated topic and I’ll break it down without using fancy econo-jargon.

    Wall Street is still in a good mood. Last Thursday, the S&P 500 closed at an all-time high and one week later, we’re less than 0.5% away from record territory. Several of our Buy List stocks, like eBay (EBAY) and Snap-on (SNA), are at or near new 52-week highs. I’ve also noticed that Wall Street has mostly stopped paring back earnings estimates for Q2. That could be a good sign. Now let’s take a closer look at the return of the Strong Dollar Trade.

    The Strong Dollar Trade is Back On

    Late last year, I started talking a lot about the Strong Dollar Trade. This was when the U.S. dollar started soaring against other major currencies like the euro and yen. The fallout of this trade could be felt in many different arenas such as in the commodity pits as the price of oil price plunged (crude is traded in dollars) and in the stock market as energy and materials stocks floundered.

    To be more precise, it wasn’t that the dollar was doing well; it was that everything else was doing worse, so the dollar, by default, looked good. In Europe, Mario Draghi finally convinced policy makers to give Quantitative Easing a shot. In Japan, after trying everything else for 25 years, the government also launched a plan to weaken the yen in hopes that it would boost the economy. In early August, one dollar would get you 102 yen. Four months later, it got you 121.

    For most of this year the yen stabilized against the dollar, but recently, it’s started to fall again. In fact, the yen has lost ground against the dollar in ten of the last 11 trading sessions. The greenback just hit a 12-year high against the yen. The weak-currency tonic may be working; the Japanese stock market is in the midst of its longest rally in 27 years.

    big.chart05282015

    The reason why the strong dollar is back is that the market assumes that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates at some point and those higher yields will make dollar-denominated assets more attractive. Honestly, it doesn’t look like interest rates will go up in Europe or Japan anytime soon.

    The recent economic data hasn’t been great, but it’s showing that the economy is indeed moving ahead. That seems to be good enough for Janet Yellen and her friends at the Fed. Jobless claims have been below 300,000 for 12-straight weeks. Consumer confidence is up. This week we learned that pending home sales reached a nine-year high. Housing starts were up 20% in April.

    The Strong Dollar Trade isn’t as pronounced as it was before. For one, the dollar hasn’t been as strong against the euro as it has been against the yen. We also see that commodities aren’t getting pounded like they did before. The price of oil is holding steady around $58 per barrel and gold is just below $1,200 per ounce. The dollar may make a run at parity with the euro, which it hasn’t seen since 2002, but it has a way to go.

    I doubt we’ll see the rising dollar take a big bite out of corporate earnings like it did in the first quarter. Analysts have mostly stopped cutting back on their expectations for second-quarter earnings. The most important impact of the rising dollar will be felt in new-found respect for growth stocks. This will be seen in areas like tech. In fact, the tech sector has been outpacing the rest of the market for the last six weeks.

    On our Buy List, this means that stocks like Microsoft (MSFT), Cognizant Technology (CTSH), Oracle (ORCL) and Qualcomm (QCOM) are poised to do well. As always, pay attention to my Buy Below prices. Now let’s take a closer look at two of our recent Buy List earnings reports.

    Earnings from Hormel Foods and Ross Stores

    We had two Buy List earnings reports last week. On Wednesday, May 20, Hormel Foods (HRL) reported fiscal Q2 earnings of 67 cents per share. That was four cents more than Wall Street had been expecting. It was also a nice increase over the 52 cents per share Hormel had made in last year’s Q2.

    This was especially-welcomed news because there were concerns over the impact of the avian flu on Hormel’s business. I should say that the company has been transparent about the issue which shows you why it’s important to stick with high-quality stocks. Good companies don’t treat investors as if they’re the enemy. Quarterly revenues climbed 1.5% to $2.28 billion which was below Wall Street’s estimates of $2.39 billion.

    “We achieved record second quarter earnings and sales, driving double-digit earnings growth with all five segments delivering increases,” said Jeffrey M. Ettinger, chairman of the board, president and chief executive officer.

    “Although declining pork markets drove lower pricing and net sales this quarter, Refrigerated Foods increased operating profit by 52 percent with strong sales growth of foodservice and retail value-added products,” commented Ettinger. “Jennie-O Turkey Store entered the quarter with excellent momentum and drove robust sales and earnings gains, but exited the quarter with substantial supply chain challenges brought on by avian influenza. Grocery Products benefited from input cost relief and growth of our SPAM® family of products, while the export business in our International segment continued to be challenged by port issues and the strong U.S. dollar,” commented Ettinger. “Specialty Foods delivered earnings growth as the team continues to achieve synergies with the recently acquired CytoSport business.”

    Hormel again acknowledged that avian flu will be an issue for them, but they’re sticking with their full-year guidance of $2.50 to $2.60 per share. That seems quite reasonable. With two quarters down, they’ve already made $1.30 per share this fiscal year.

    “While we enjoyed an excellent first half, we expect Jennie-O Turkey Store to be significantly challenged going forward due to the impacts of avian influenza on our turkey supply chain,” commented Ettinger. “Refrigerated Foods and Grocery Products will continue to benefit from value-added product growth and lower pork input costs. Specialty Foods is positioned to deliver substantial earnings increases in the back half with the CytoSport business. Taking these factors into consideration, we are maintaining our 2015 non-GAAP earnings guidance at the lower end of our previously stated $2.50 to $2.60 per share range.”

    The stock got a very big boost after the earnings report; HRL broke above $59 the afternoon of the earnings report. But soon after, HRL retreated back below $57. That was until this week. The stock got another boost on Wednesday when Hormel said it’s buying Applegate Farms for $775 million. Applegate is a leader in natural and organic prepared-meats. If you want 100% grass-fed beef hotdogs, then Applegate is the place to go. Hormel is wisely following eating habits as more Americans move away from those awful carbohydrates.

    Hormel closed the day on Thursday at $58.20 per share. I’m keeping my Buy Below at $61. This November, I expect to see Hormel raise its dividend again. That will make 50-straight years of dividend increases. This is a good stock.

    In the last issue of CWS Market Review, I told you that Ross Stores (ROST) would beat the guidance they gave—and I was right. Frankly, Ross tends to be pretty conservative with their numbers. The company projected fiscal Q1 coming in between $1.21 and $1.27 per share.

    Please. I said I was expecting $1.30 and they beat that. Ross reported earnings of $1.33 per share. Quarterly sales rose 10% to $2.938 billion. Comparable store sales were up 5%. These are very good numbers.

    Barbara Rentler, Chief Executive Officer, commented, “We are pleased with our better-than-expected sales and earnings in the first quarter. Our results continue to benefit from value-focused customers responding favorably to our fresh and exciting assortments of name brand bargains. Operating margin for the first quarter grew to 15.7%, up from 14.6% in the prior year, driven by a combination of higher merchandise margin, strong expense controls, and the aforementioned favorable timing of packaway-related costs.”

    Ms. Rentler continued, “During the first quarter of fiscal 2015, we repurchased 1.7 million shares of common stock for an aggregate price of $176 million. As planned, we expect to buy back a total of $700 million in common stock during fiscal 2015 under the new two-year $1.4 billion authorization approved by our Board of Directors in February of this year.

    The bad news is that Ross offered Q2 guidance of $1.19 to $1.24 per share with same stores sales rising by 2% to 3%. That’s pretty weak; Wall Street had been expecting $1.26 per share. But as I said, Ross tends to be conservative with their guidance.

    big.chart05292015a

    The weak outlook clearly upset traders as shares of Ross dropped more than 4.4% last Friday. I’m not worried at all and neither should you be. Two weeks ago, I told you that Ross’s full-year guidance was too low—and the company raised it. Ross now sees full-year earnings ranging between $4.72 and $4.87 per share. The old range was $4.60 to $4.80 per share.

    For some context, Ross earned $4.42 per share last year. (By the way, Ross’s guidance from last May was for $4.09 to $4.21 per share which shows you how conservative they tend to be.) All the evidence tells me that Ross is executing well. Remember that ROST will split 2-for-1 next month so don’t be alarmed when you see the lower share price. Ross Stores remains a good buy up to $107 per share.

    Updates on Other Buy List Stocks

    In a few weeks, I expect to see CR Bard (BCR) raise its dividend again. That’s not much of a surprise since the company has increased its payout every year since 1972. Bard currently pays out 22 cents per quarter which is rather puny. For the year, that’s less than 10% of Bard’s net. Business is going well for them and they had another good earnings report last month. CR Bard is a buy up to $184 per share.

    Shares of Ford Motor (F) have been weak again—the company announced a recall this week—but I encourage you not to give up on this stock. The automaker is going for less than 10 times earnings and the dividend yield is nearly 4%. Things are clearly going well for Ford. Last month, Ford raised its estimate for operating profit margin in North America. The company is standing by its forecast of a pre-tax profit of $8.5 billion to $9.5 billion for this year. Don’t let the soggy stock scare you. Ford remains a buy up to $17 per share.

    Last week, Qualcomm (QCOM) said it was launching their accelerated share repurchase program. This is part of their $15 billion buyback program they announced in March. Qualcomm aims to purchase 57.7 million shares for $5 billion. The purchase is being funded by Qualcomm’s recent $10 billion bond deal. Until the offering, Qualcomm didn’t have a dime of long-term debt.

    The stock hasn’t done much in the last year, and I think the activist investors are finally having an impact on Qualcomm. The company gave us a nice dividend increase and the big share buyback. Jana Partners wants them to go further and break up the company. I don’t know if that will happen, but I agree there’s a lot of untapped value here.

    Qualcomm gapped up on Wednesday of this week after the news that Broadcom (BRCM) is being bought out. Qualcomm is a buy up to $72 per share.

    Barron’s recently profiled Express Scripts (ESRX). Here’s a sample:

    Express Scripts will benefit from a number of trends in the health-care industry. The rising demand for so-called specialty drugs, for instance, is a one-two punch for the company. First, as a pharmacy benefit manager, it uses its clout to negotiate favorable prices from drug makers for health plans — and gets a cut of those savings. But the company also operates a large mail-order and specialty drug pharmacy. So, somewhat incongruously, it also profits from growing demand for the same high-priced therapies that are playing havoc with health insurers’ medical cost trends. These two forces should combine to push shares higher.

    The article noted that ESRX trades at a lower valuation than CVS (CVS). But if you tack a multiple of 17, which is quite reasonable, onto next year’s earnings estimate that gives you a share price of $102.51. That’s a 15% climb from here. This week, I’m raising my Buy Below on Express Scripts to $92 per share.

    That’s all for now. With the beginning of June, we’ll get several important turn-of-the-month economic reports next week. On Monday, the ISM report for May comes out. The April ISM was unchanged from March, and the five reports prior to that all showed declines. I want to see an improvement here. Car sales come out on Tuesday. I expect more good news from Ford Motor (F). Wednesday is the Fed’s Beige Book plus the ADP jobs report. Then on Friday is the big May jobs report. The April jobs report was a nice rebound from the weak number for March. 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

  • Morning News: May 29, 2015
    , May 29th, 2015 at 7:03 am

    Greek Bank Deposits Bleeding Worsens in April

    Swiss Economy Unexpectedly Shrinks After Strong Franc Stifles Exports

    U.S. Oil Producers Are Back In the Money, But OPEC Is Not

    With A $1.2 Billion Hammer, The FTC Closes Loophole To Prevent Generic Drugs

    What Will Happen to a Generation of Wall Street Traders Who Have Never Seen a Rate Hike?

    What Google Just Announced Is a Bombshell

    Avago to Buy Broadcom in $37-Billion Deal

    Charter-Time Warner Deal Reflects Changing TV Industry

    Hanergy Relied on Chinese Backing in Solar Firm’s Meteoric Rise

    Altera Rises in Germany on Report Intel Is Near $15 Billion Bid

    Dick Fuld: ‘Lehman Was Not a Bankrupt Company’

    Big Lots Reports Rise in Profit

    U.S. Data Giant Equinix Buys Telecity

    Jeff Carter: The Tech Trends

    Joshua Brown: The Riskalyze Report: Advisors Simplify their Fixed Income Exposure

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  • S&P 500 High Quality Index
    , May 28th, 2015 at 9:25 pm

    Today I learned that S&P tracks a “High Quality” segment of the S&P 500. Wow, you really do learn something new every day. There’s also a “Low Quality” segment.

    Since I’m a big proponent of investing in high-quality stocks, I wanted to check out this index. There are currently 135 stocks in the S&P 500 High Quality Index.

    This is how S&P describes it:

    The S&P Quality Rankings System measures growth and stability of earnings and recorded dividends within a single rank. Scores have been calculated on common stocks since 1956. S&P 500® High Quality Rankings are designed for exposure to constituents of the S&P 500 identified as high quality stocks – stocks with Quality Rankings of A and above.

    There’s an ETF that tracks the index under the symbol SPHQ.

    Here’s a chart of the High Qual index (blue line, right scale) along with the S&P 500 (red line, left scale).

    image1474

    I scaled the two axes to have the same proportions. Just by looking at this, it appears that High Qual isn’t as volatile. Sure enough, I calculated the beta and came up with 0.946.

    Now here’s the High Quality index divided by the S&P 500. This is somewhat similar to the relative performance of our Buy List.

    image1475

    High Qual got crushed during the last 10 months of 2007. Since the cycle low on July 14, 2008, High Qual has done very well beating the S&P 500, 107.98% to 72.66%.

    I also looked at the total return numbers. High Quality usually has a higher return from dividends, but the effect isn’t that great.

  • Morning News: May 28, 2015
    , May 28th, 2015 at 7:19 am

    Greece Aims to Have Bailout Deal by Sunday

    China May Official Factory PMI Seen Lackluster Despite Stimulus Moves

    June OPEC Meeting Won’t Cut Output

    The Tanker Market Is Sending a Big Warning to Oil Bulls

    Fed’s Williams Says U.S. Rate Rise Likely This Year, Economy to Bounce Back

    Borrowing to Replenish Depleted Pensions

    Amazon RollsOut Free Same-Day Delivery

    Hong Kong Regulator Confirms Hanergy Thin Film Power Investigation

    Why The Avago-Broadcom Deal Is A Game-Changer

    Tech Champion De Blasio Under Fire on Plan to Regulate Uber Apps

    Costco Wholesale Profit Rises

    TV’s ‘Golden Age’ Won’t Last Because You’re Not Watching Enough

    19 Things That Actually Happened in 1999

    Jeff Carter: Winter is Coming

    Howard Lindzon: ‘Howie’ Meeker responds to Mary Meeker on the State of The Internet

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  • Morning News: May 27, 2015
    , May 27th, 2015 at 7:11 am

    German Consumer Confidence Hits 13.5-Year High

    Greece Said Likely to Miss May Deal Deadline as Talks Go Nowhere

    Fischer Says Fed May Slow Rate Rises If World Growth Falters

    Breach Exposes I.R.S. Tax Returns

    Oil Rebounds on Expected U.S. Stock Draw, Weaker Dollar

    Snapchat CEO: ‘We Need to IPO’

    Vox Media Acquiring Re/code Company Revere Digital

    TiVo Revenue Up as Subscriptions Grow

    IAG Expects Aer Lingus to Boost Its Earnings Soon After Takeover

    First Solar Slides Most Since November as RBC Downgrades Shares

    Hormel Foods to Buy Organic Meat Company Applegate

    GeekNet (GKNT) Stock Doubles Following $122 Million Acquisition by Hot Topic

    Soccer Corruption Charges Brought by U.S. Amid Swiss FIFA Raid

    Roger Nusbaum: Yeah, the Fed Still Wants to Hike Rates

    Credit Writedowns: A Parallel Currency for Greece: Part I, Part II

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  • Hormel Foods Up on Meat Merger
    , May 26th, 2015 at 4:51 pm

    Shares of Hormel Foods (HRL) are up more than 4% in the after-hours market after the company said it’s buying Applegate Farms for $775 million.

    Closely held Applegate’s annual sales are expected to be about $340 million this year, Hormel said in a news release Tuesday announcing the deal.

    A deal would follow other transactions over the past year involving protein companies. In 2014, Tyson Foods Inc. paid $7.7 billion for Hillshire Brands Co., which makes Jimmy Dean sausages, and Post Holdings Inc. bought egg and dairy-goods company Michael Foods Group Inc.

    A change in consumer eating habits is underpinning consolidation in the sector. Americans are moving to more protein-heavy diets and eschewing carbohydrates, while seeking more organic products.

    Hormel has been diversifying its portfolio of food brands to capitalize on growing protein demand and higher-margin foods. The company last year paid $450 million for CytoSport Holdings Inc., maker of Muscle Milk-brand protein shakes and powders, and in 2013 it acquired the Skippy peanut butter brand from Unilever PLC for about $700 million.

    Buying Applegate would help Hormel appeal to consumers that increasingly are seeking organic meats, including meat from animals raised without antibiotics. Hormel mainly sells conventional meat products, while rivals including Tyson Foods Inc. and Pilgrim’s Pride Corp. have ramped up sales of antibiotic-free meats.

    The deal is expected to close within two months. Applegate will operate as a stand-alone company.

  • Charter to Buy Time Warner Cable
    , May 26th, 2015 at 9:36 am

    Last month, Comcast (CMCSK) pulled out of its deal to buy Time Warner Cable (TWC). The regulatory hurdles were apparently too much to bear. At the time, I said this clears the way for Charter Communications (CHTR). Today, Charter made it official.

    Charter Communications agreed on Tuesday to buy its much larger rival Time Warner Cable for $56.7 billion in a deal that would transform the company into one of America’s largest cable and broadband operators.

    The announcement represents the latest in a flurry of takeovers in the sector as companies struggle to keep pace with changes in how Americans watch and pay for television. As customers increasingly stream videos through the Internet, cable providers have sought deals to gain scale and greater bargaining power with content providers.

    The multibillion-dollar offer also marks a culmination for Charter and its main backer, the 74-year-old billionaire media mogul John C. Malone, who will have transformed Charter from a small operator born in St. Louis in 1993 into the country’s second-largest cable company, behind Comcast.

    This is a deal made out of fear. When the first deal was announced, TWC was at $135. Now it’s at $170.

  • Durable Goods Fall 0.5% in April
    , May 26th, 2015 at 8:51 am

    More bad economic news this morning. Orders for durable goods fell 0.5% last month. The good news is that business investing rose by 1%.

    The Commerce Department says that total orders for durable goods slipped 0.5 percent from March, when total orders had surged 5.1 percent. The big swing was driven by changes in commercial aircraft, an extremely volatile category that had jumped in March but fell in April.

    Orders in the business investment category rose 1 percent in April after a 1.5 percent increase in March. The results followed a sizable 5.1 percent fall in February. Business investment has been hurt by a stronger dollar cutting into exports and cutbacks in the energy industry.

  • Morning News: May 26, 2015
    , May 26th, 2015 at 7:10 am

    Germany Sees Progress on Greece, Officials to Confer on Thursday

    Varoufakis Says Greece Committed to Reforms, Rules Out More Austerity

    IMF Official Says Chinese Yuan No Longer Undervalued

    China to Reduce Import Taxes to Spur Spending and Growth

    When Predicting China Stocks There’s Only Wrong and Very Wrong

    Bond Traders Uncover Secret to Rates That Fed Just Doesn’t Get

    Fischer Flagging Gradual Fed Increases Flattens Treasuries Curve

    Four Words That Imperil Health Care Law Were All a Mistake, Writers Now Say

    Charter Agrees to Acquire Time Warner Cable for $55 Billion

    Latest Deal Another Step in Overhaul of Samsung

    Amazon Changes Tax Practices in Europe Amid Investigations

    As Facebook Sweeps Across Europe, Regulators Gird for Battle

    Goldman’s New Cop Is FBI Agent Who Put Away Madoff, Rajaratnam

    Cullen Roche: Being a Good Loser Is Essential to Becoming A Good Investor

    Howard Lindzon: The Stocktwits Transportation Index…Uber is worth MORE Than Federal Express and Should be Included

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  • In Memoriam
    , May 25th, 2015 at 8:28 am

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