Archive for December, 2015
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November NFP +211,000; UR 5.0%
Eddy Elfenbein, December 4th, 2015 at 8:32 amThe November jobs report is out. Non-farm payrolls rose by 211,000. The unemployment rate held steady at 5.0%.
The September NFP was revised higher by 8,000 and October was revised up by 27,000. Average hourly earnings rose four cents to $25.25.I think this pretty much guarantees a December rate hike.
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CWS Market Review – December 4, 2015
Eddy Elfenbein, December 4th, 2015 at 7:08 am“There are two kinds of people who lose money: those who know
nothing and those who know everything.” – Henry KaufmanMark your calendars for two weeks from today! That’s when the 2016 Crossing Wall Street Buy List will be unveiled. Tens of millions of investors all over the world are eagerly awaiting our new list.
With only 19 trading days left this year, it looks like we’re going to beat the market yet again. The 2015 Buy List is currently up 4.04% for the year compared with a loss of 0.45% for the S&P 500 (not including dividends). And remember, we haven’t made a single trade all year.
In this week’s CWS Market Review, I’ll give you a sneak preview of some names that I’m considering for next year’s Buy List. I’ll also bring you up to speed on the latest announcements from the Federal Reserve. (I think a December rate hike is a foregone conclusion.)
Later on, I’ll cover the outstanding earnings report we got from Hormel Foods (HRL). The Spam stock not only raised its dividend for the 50th year in row but it also announced a 2-for-1 stock split. Hormel is now a 45.4% winner on the year for us! That’s more than Starbucks (SBUX) and Google (GOOGL). I’ll give you all the good news in a bit, but first, let’s see where Mr. Market stands right now.
The ECB Disappoints Investors
We’re now in the final trading month of the year, and going by recent history, December has been quite good for stocks. While the S&P 500 lost ground last December, it had rallied for 25 of the 30 Decembers previous to that including the last six in a row.
Thanks to losses on Wednesday and Thursday, the S&P 500 is now slightly negative for the year. It just dipped below its 200-day moving average (see below). The Dow is down 2% this year, and it may soon snap a very impressive streak. The index has rallied during the third year of an election cycle for the last 18 cycles in a row.
Personally, I would call 2015 a flat year for the market. Neither the bulls nor bears could hold center stage for very long this year. What happens after flattish years? History is on the side of the bulls. The S&P 500 has gained an average of 19% after years when it finished between -3% and +3%.
On Thursday, the European Central Bank announced its latest stimulus plans and Wall Street was not impressed. The economy in the Old World is still a mess, so everyone was expecting Mr. Draghi and his friends at the ECB to announce some seriously easy money policies. The ECB cut interest rates, which are already negative, from -0.2% to -0.3%. It also plans to step up its bond-buying program, but investors had expected more. In reaction, stocks sold off, and the euro did something it hasn’t done much lately—it rallied against the dollar.
At the same time, the Federal Reserve in the U.S. is getting ready to raise interest rates at its meeting on December 15-16. This week, Janet Yellen gave a fairly upbeat assessment of the economy. Personally, I think a rate hike this month is a done deal, but Wall Street still has some doubts. The futures market currently puts the odds at 79%.
What’s important for investors is that I doubt the Fed will go on a rate-hiking binge. Even a year from now, I think the real Fed funds rate, meaning adjusted for inflation, will still be negative. That’s a very good thing for stocks. As always, the name of the game is competition. As long as you can lock in a solid dividend (Ford at 4.3%, Microsoft at 2.7%), there’s not much to worry about from a one-year Treasury paying you 0.55%—and that’s up from 0.2% just a few weeks ago. That’s still the highest one-year yield in several years.
As I’ve explained before, at the center of world financial markets is the fact that the U.S. economy is out of sync with the rest of the world. From that fact radiates nearly everything we’re seeing—stocks, bonds, commodities, you name it. In fact, I could amend that statement by noting that the worsening of the Chinese economy leaves them out of sync with the rest of the world, but at the opposite end.
The economic reports out of China are notoriously unreliable, so we have to look at other indicators. Commodity prices, for example, have been quite weak. Gold recently fell to a six-year low. The price of iron dropped by $40 per metric ton. The government is finally cracking down on many shady brokers and insider trading. I expect the negative reaction to the ECB’s tepidness to carry over into Asian markets.
I was surprised that Draghi’s move disappointed the U.S. bond market as much as it did. The 10-year yield jumped to 2.33%. Of course, that’s not that high, but it’s certainly a big increase from several weeks ago. We need to keep an eye on this, because once those yields become competitive with stocks, stocks will lose their appeal.
The yield on the two-year Treasury is up to 0.94%, which is a five-year high. The 10-year TIP’s yield (that’s the inflation-protected security) is up 0.72%. Again, that’s still quite low. I would say that the 10-year TIP isn’t competitive with stocks until its yield gets up to 2.4% or so. In other words, we’re a long way from that. Now let’s take a look at some names I’m considering for next year’s Buy List.
Ten Possible Additions for Next Year’s Buy List
For next year’s Buy List, I’m going to add five new stocks. Here are ten stocks I’m strongly considering for next year’s Buy List:
Alliance Data Systems (ADS)
Cerner (CERN)
Church & Dwight (CHD)
FactSet Research Systems (FDS)
F5 Networks (FFIV)
Footlocker (FL)
HEICO (HEI)
Sherwin-Williams (SHW)
VF Corp. (VFC)
Zimmer Biomet (ZBH)
I still haven’t finalized my decision, but I wanted you to know some names that are under serious consideration. Now let’s look at one of our new stocks for 2015.
Hormel Foods Soars
Since I took off last week, I need to fill you in on Hormel Foods (HRL). The Spam stock has taken off recently. First, the company reported outstanding results for its fiscal fourth quarter. Hormel earned 74 cents per share which beat expectations by five cents per share.
“I am proud of the excellent fourth quarter delivered by our team, achieving record earnings for the tenth straight quarter. We reported record bottom-line results for the full year, with fiscal 2015 adjusted net earnings up 19 percent over last year and all five segments registering earnings growth,” said Jeffrey M. Ettinger, chairman of the board and chief executive officer.
For the year, Hormel earned $2.64 per share, which topped its announced range of $2.57 to $2.63 per share. That’s a 19% increase over last year. For 2016, Hormel projects a range of $2.85 to $2.95 per share. That was above Wall Street’s consensus of $2.83 per share.
Best of all, the Spam company raised its quarterly dividend by 16% to 29 cents per share. That comes to $1.16 per share for the year. This is Hormel’s 50th-straight annual dividend increase. If that’s not enough, Hormel also said it’s going to split the stock 2 for 1 early next year. The split will take effect on February 8 for shareholders of record as of January 26.
Hormel is now our top-performing stock this year with a YTD gain of 45.4%. This week, I’m raising my Buy Below on Hormel to $81 per share.
Buy List Updates
In the last issue of CWS Market Review, I covered the strong earnings report from Ross Stores (ROST). The deep discounter beat earnings for Q3 but didn’t raise guidance for Q4 as I expected. However, the shares jumped 10% the day after the earnings report and continued to rally from there. Ross has had a very impressive turnaround. From the low on November 13 to the high on December 2, the stock has gained more than $10 per share. On Wednesday, Ross came within two pennies of matching my $54 Buy Below price before pulling back on Thursday. For now, I’m going to keep the Buy Below on Ross at $54 per share.
Ball Corp. (BLL) is prepared to do whatever it takes to get regulator approval for its big Rexam merger. Ball said last week that it plans to sell 11 plants in order to appease the EU. Ball and Rexam are the two largest beverage-can makers in the world.
Shares of AFLAC (AFL) have been recovering nicely over the past few weeks. The duck stock broke $66 this year after being below $57 as recently as early October. On Wednesday, the stock got to its highest point since early 2014.
Unfortunately, AFLAC got stung for a 3.8% loss on Thursday after its presentation at the Goldman Financial Services conference. The company said it’s going to expand into commercial loans and equities. I don’t know why that would be seen as a negative for its business. The simple fact is that global interest rates are very low, so you need to adapt to the new environment. AFLAC isn’t the only insurer doing this.
AFLAC also said it expects to see currency-neutral EPS growth of 3% to 7% for next year. We don’t have the final numbers for 2014 yet, but that probably translates to a range of $6.30 to $6.50 per share. AFLAC remains a solid buy up to $67 per share.
While the controversy of high drug prices has affected other stocks, Express Scripts (ESRX) has largely been unharmed. This week, the drug-benefit manager is working on a deal to get patients a $1 alternative for Daraprim. That’s the stock that was marked up 50-fold this year by Martin Shkreli, the CEO of Turing Pharmaceuticals. For his part, Shkreli said he messed up by not raising the price even higher. Express Scripts is a buy up to $92 per share.
Shares of Wabtec (WAB) have been very weak lately. Since mid-September, the shares are off by more than 22%. I’m not worried about this one. The last earnings report missed by a little bit, but it wasn’t that bad. Stick with Wabtec. This week, I’m lowering my Buy Below on Wabtec to $82 per share.
That’s all for now. The November jobs report is due out later today. Next week, we’ll get the consumer-credit report on Monday. Then on Wednesday is crude inventories. The Treasury budget and initial jobless claims are out on Thursday. On Friday, we’ll get retail. Not one retail-sales report has beaten expectations this year. 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
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Morning News: December 4, 2015
Eddy Elfenbein, December 4th, 2015 at 7:02 amECB Disappointment Halts U.S./Euro Zone Yield Divergence For Now
Why Negative Interest Rates Are Becoming the New Normal
Bonds Tumble by $270 Billion as Draghi, Yellen Batter Markets
German October Factory Orders Rebound After Three-Month Drop
China to Start Stock Circuit Breaker in January to Calm Swings
What to Expect From the Latest Jobs Report
A Full Break-Up Of Yahoo Vs. Swift Completion Of The Aabaco Spin-Off
Finding Treasure in Japan’s Computer Scrap Heap
Brown-Forman Profit Falls 3.8%
IDC Doesn’t Think Apple’s iPhone Business Will Grow in the Fourth Quarter
Lyft Joins With Asian Rivals to Compete With Uber
Avon Surges on Report Cerberus Is Buying North American Unit
Charitable Deductions Like Zuckerberg’s Generate Giving
Cullen Roche: Could the Fed Have Prevented the Financial Crisis?
Howard Lindzon: All Hail Verisign? ….Is The Boom in Internet Security about to Broaden
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Average Decade for the Dow
Eddy Elfenbein, December 3rd, 2015 at 12:43 pmI had some spare time today so I’d thought I’d organize the entire 120-year history of the Dow Jones into an average decade.
This is what it looks like.
The chart begins at 100 at the beginning of the average decade. The Dow has historically been flat for nearly the first half of each decade. The Dow is still in the negative by August 6th of the fifth year (year ending in 4).
The back half of the decade is much better, although there’s historically been a spot of trouble during September and October of the eighth year (ending in 7).
The Dow has gained an average of 125% every ten years.
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Morning News: December 3, 2015
Eddy Elfenbein, December 3rd, 2015 at 7:12 amAfter Yellen’s Teaser, Markets Hope for Draghi the Easer
Gold Rout Deepens on Yellen Remarks as Investors Flee From Funds
OPEC States Push for Output Cuts in Face of Saudi Opposition
Japan’s JX Holdings and TonenGeneral to Merge, Creating Oil-Refining Giant
Elon Musk: Only a Carbon Tax Will Accelerate the World’s Exit from Fossil Fuels
How Alibaba Can Help Clean Up Yahoo’s Mess
Google’s Latest Steps to Increase Its Use of Renewable Energy
Qualcomm Inks Critical Licensing Deal with China’s Xiaomi
Why Tech is Better Than Barclays
AB InBev Confirms It Wants to Sell Grolsch, Peroni Brands
E.U. Inquiry Into Possible McDonald’s Tax Breaks in Luxembourg
For Facebook’s Zuckerberg, Charity Is in Eye of Beholder
Jeff Carter: We Know How We Will Work, But What The Hell Are We Going To Do?
Roger Nusbaum: Managing ETF Liquidity
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The ADP Jobs Report Was Quite Good
Eddy Elfenbein, December 2nd, 2015 at 3:53 pmThe market is focused on Friday’s jobs report. If you recall, the one for October was quite strong. We got a preview today when ADP, the private payroll firm, said that 217,000 new private sector jobs were created last month. That’s a good number. Wall Street expects 190,000 for the government’s report due this Friday.
Also today, Janet Yellen gave a somewhat optimistic outlook for the economy:
Ms. Yellen described an economic backdrop that fit that description, a strong hint that she is leaning toward moving rates higher soon. She also warned Wednesday that delaying a rate increase could hurt the economy, for instance by inducing risk-taking among investors that could destabilize the financial system.
“On balance, economic and financial information received since our October meeting has been consistent with our expectations of continued improvement in the labor market,” Ms. Yellen said in her speech. “Continuing improvement in the labor market helps strengthen confidence that inflation will move back to our 2 percent objective over the medium term.”
On Monday when I was on Bloomberg, I was very confident that the Fed will raise rates this month. I’m sticking by that. The futures are at 75% which seems too low.
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Actual Good News for Qualcomm
Eddy Elfenbein, December 2nd, 2015 at 3:17 pmFor the first time in a very long time, there was some good news for Qualcomm (QCOM). The stock rallied today on news that it reached a licensing deal with Xiaomi, a handset maker in China.
Qualcomm said it had entered into a new 3G and 4G China patent license agreement with Xiaomi, among the world’s fastest-growing smartphone companies and most valuable startups. The Chinese company has, by some estimates, a valuation of $46 billion and has risen to challenge Apple Inc. and Samsung Electronics Co. in China by selling full-featured phones at near cost.
Qualcomm was up as much as 7% today.
Yesterday, Ford (F) reported another good sales month. F-Series sales were up 16%. It was the best month for pickups in eight years. Total sales were up 0.4%. This could be a record year for U.S. auto sales. The old record was set in 2000.
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Morning News: December 2, 2015
Eddy Elfenbein, December 2nd, 2015 at 7:02 amECB Stimulus Hopes Keep Europe Stocks at Three-Month High
China Calls Hacking of U.S. Workers’ Data a Crime, Not a State Act
Thailand Vows to Fix Aviation Problems After US Downgrade
As OPEC Meets, World Oil Traders See Prices Stagnating Into 2017
Meet the Central Bank Governor Who Isn’t Much Impressed by Money
Yellen, in Back-to-Back Appearances, Could Close Out Era of Zero Rates
What Happens to Your Bond Fund When Interest Rates Rise
Puerto Rico Begins Choosing Which Debt Payments to Make
Mark Zuckerberg Announces Birth Of Baby Girl & Plan To Donate 99% Of His Facebook Stock
Yahoo’s Internet Business Could Draw Interest From SoftBank
Toyota, Nissan Gain Share as U.S. Market Booms a Third Month
VW Agrees on Terms of 20 Billion Euro Bridge Loan
Harvard’s Sick of Losing to Yale and Has a Plan to Fix Endowment
Cullen Roche: Conflicting Value Indicators Lead to Confusion Over Clarity
Joshua Brown: The “Next Wave” of Financial Advisors
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Lowest ISM in Six Years
Eddy Elfenbein, December 1st, 2015 at 11:43 amThe monthly ISM report is a pretty good report on the state of the economy. For one thing, it comes out on the first business day of the month. It also isn’t subject to endless revisions. They basically ask manufacturers whether things are better or worse than last month.
Any number above 50 means the manufacturing sector is expanding. Below 50, it’s shrinking. Today’s report, that is the report for November, came in at 48.6. That’s a big miss. Wall Street had been expecting 50.5.
Is this something to worry about? I wouldn’t say “worry,” but it is concerning. I’ve run the numbers and recessions usually correlate with ISMs below 45, so we’re still in the safe zone. Still, this is the lowest ISM since June 2009.
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Morning News: December 1, 2015
Eddy Elfenbein, December 1st, 2015 at 7:12 amIMF Approves Reserve-Currency Status for China’s Yuan
Eurozone Jobless Rate Falls for Second Straight Month
Indian Sovereign Bonds Rally as Rajan Says Policy Accommodative
Moment of Truth as Puerto Rico Faces Crucial Debt Payment
New Fed Rule Limits Emergency Lending Power
Factories Still Struggling as U.S. Rate Hike Looms
Oil Bulls Brace for Repeat of OPEC’s Bearish Blow at Meeting
Morgan Stanley Calls 2016 the Year of the Yen With BOJ on Hold
Standard Chartered, RBS Rise as All Lenders Pass Bank of England Test
Bank of Montreal Profit Rises 13% on U.S. Gains, Raises Payout
Scotiabank Profit Rises 28% as International Business Gains
Target Website’s Near Cyber Monday Crash: In Ironic Twist, Customers Forced To Wait On Line
Roger Nusbaum: Not As Quiet As It Seems
Jeff Carter: #netneut Goes To Court
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