Archive for July, 2016

  • Morning News: July 6, 2016
    , July 6th, 2016 at 7:06 am

    Hong Kong Unlikely to Return Bookseller Wanted in Mainland China

    Brexit Aftershocks Shake U.K. Real Estate, Pound

    Financial Markets Show Lingering ‘Brexit’ Worries

    Gold Races to 28-Month High, Oil Pressured as Brexit Fears Return

    Oil Prices Continue to Tumble on Concerns Over Global Growth Prospects

    U.S. Mortgage Refinancings Surge as 30-Year Rate Lowest Since May 2013

    Melrose, U.K. Turnaround Specialist, Buys Nasdaq-Listed Nortek for $1.44 Billion

    Verizon’s Pursuit of Yahoo Puts the Spotlight on a Rising Star

    Walgreens Revenue Falls Short of Estimates

    What It Took To Save The Twinkie

    Chipotle Web Video Takes Aim at Rivals

    Under Armour’s Quest to Dethrone Nike and Jump-Start Baltimore

    A South Korean Copy of Snapchat Takes Off in Asia

    Cullen Roche: Short-Termism Gets Brexecuted

    Roger Nusbaum: Markets Brecover?

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  • Is the Utilities Sector in a Bubble?
    , July 5th, 2016 at 7:34 pm

  • 10-Year Treasury Hits All-Time Low
    , July 5th, 2016 at 3:57 pm

  • Bond Yields Plunge to New Lows
    , July 5th, 2016 at 11:41 am

    What’s been happening continues to happen. This morning, the yield on the 10-year Treasury dropped to an historic low. The yield got down to 1.37% which is a post-1790 low. On September 30, 1981, the yield peaked at 15.84%.

    The indicated forward dividend yield for the S&P 500 is 2.18%. That means you’re being paid 0.81% to take on the risks of owning stocks, which doesn’t include the fact that stocks like to grow their dividends.

    The British markets are still reeling from the Brexit vote. The pound slid to $1.30 for the first time in more than 30 years.

  • Morning News: July 5, 2016
    , July 5th, 2016 at 7:05 am

    Bank of England Eases Rules for Banks to Meet Brexit Challenge

    ECB’s Angeloni Sees Trade-off Between Competition, Stability in Banking

    Switzerland Orders UBS to Hand Over More Client-Related Data

    Return of the Crude Short Sellers

    Worries Over China, Brexit Push Treasury Yields to Record Low

    Fed Will Tighten Before Rate Hike

    Will Social Security Fix Its Mistake That May Be Costing You Tens of Thousands?

    Is Baidu Getting Ready To Unleash A Huge New Revenue Stream?

    Chevron, Exxon Commit to $36.8 Billion Expansion Project in Tengiz

    Ghosn Tasks Top Lieutenant to Hunt for Mitsubishi Motors Savings

    Sucking Robot Arm Wins Amazon Picking Challenge

    Lufthansa Targets Growth as Strong Start Offsets Slump

    Hostess Brands, Maker of Twinkies, to Get a New Owner

    Jeff Carter: With All The Pomp And Circumstance

    Josh Brown: The Broker Who Saved America

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  • Morning News: July 4, 2016
    , July 4th, 2016 at 6:56 am

    The Bank of Japan Paints Itself Into a Negative Rate Corner

    Farage Resigns as UKIP Leader Adding to Brexit Political Turmoil

    Osborne Floats 15% Business Tax to Boost Post-Brexit Economy

    Bank of Israel Buying ‘Hundreds of Millions’

    Great News But A Looming Shadow For Oil

    Gold’s Shimmer Is Sign Of Dark Days Ahead

    Will Social Security Fix Its Mistake That May Be Costing You Tens of Thousands?

    Coal Baron Promises Huge Layoffs, Then Tells Workers To Vote Trump

    Amazon Is Quietly Eliminating List Prices

    Brexit Kicks Wal-Mart’s Asda

    Midea of China Moves a Step Closer to Takeover of Kuka of Germany

    Dick’s Sporting Goods Wins Sports Authority Brand Name in Bankruptcy Auction

    VW Says U.S. ‘Dieselgate’ Settlement Not To Be Replicated in Europe

    Cullen Roche: Short-Termism Gets Brexecuted

    Jeff Miller: Time For The Summer Rally?

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  • The Original Brexit
    , July 2nd, 2016 at 10:03 pm

    Happy Birthday, America!

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  • Good Sales Month for Ford
    , July 1st, 2016 at 10:54 am

    Ford Motor (F) had another decent month for sales:

    Sales grew 6.4% in June with 240,109 vehicles sold, topping estimates for a 4.9% gain. Ford sold more than a half million trucks in the first half of the year, a 13% gain, further widening its truck lead vs. rivals.

    Its top-selling F-series trucks jumped 29% in June. However, overall car sales declined 12.1% to 68,478 units. The company’s flagship Ford brand was up 6% at 231,300 vehicles, and the luxury Lincoln brand grew 6% to 8,809 units.

    The shares are up to $12.85 today after bouncing off $12 on Monday.

  • 10-Year Yield Hits All-Time Low
    , July 1st, 2016 at 10:41 am

    It only happened in the European market so I don’t think it’s quite official just yet, but the U.S. 10-year Treasury reached an all-time low this morning.

    The bid yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note fell to 1.385% during European morning trade, briefly breaking below its previous intraday record of 1.389% hit on July 24, 2012, according to Tradeweb. The yield closed at a record low of 1.404% that day. Yields fall as bond prices rise.

    The yield recently hit 1.422%, according to Tradeweb, still down around 0.07 of a percentage point on the day.

  • CWS Market Review – July 1, 2016
    , July 1st, 2016 at 7:08 am

    The market is fond of making mountains out of molehills and exaggerating
    ordinary vicissitudes into major setbacks.” – Benjamin Graham

    As I wrote last week’s CWS Market Review, I was keeping a close eye on the Brexit referendum results from our cousins across the pond. Going into Election Day, the Remain camp appeared to have a slight lead. Once the polls closed, the media reported that it was too close to call, and that’s what I assumed as I wrote last week’s newsletter.

    However, as soon as I instructed my valet to press “send” and email the newsletter to you, things started to change—and they changed dramatically. The Leave side gained momentum. Soon it became apparent that a majority of British voters wanted out of the European Union. Wow!

    The Brits Vote to Leave the EU

    This was a shock to the global political establishment—and to global financial markets. Last Friday, European markets plunged. The British pound dropped from $1.50 to a three-decade low of $1.32 (see below). All hell broke loose in England’s green and pleasant land. David Cameron said he’ll resign as Prime Minister. The Labour Party faces an internal revolt as well.

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    I started off last week’s issue talking about how calm things had become (ha!) and about how the S&P 500 hadn’t had a 1% drop in 54 days. Clearly, I jinxed it. On Friday, the S&P 500 lost 3.17%. That was its biggest drop in nearly a year.

    All across the world, investors dumped stocks and ran to the safety of conservative assets. The U.S. dollar soared. So did the Japanese yen. The yield on the 10-year Treasury approached its lows from four years ago, which were the lowest yields since 1790!

    Oh, and the idea of a Fed hike? As my New York friends like to say, “fuggedaboutit!” The Fed’s not going to do anything anytime soon. I don’t think we’ll see a rate increase this year. There’s even talk that the Fed’s next move would be a rate cut (which I strongly doubt).

    The selling continued into Monday, and soon we heard dire predictions of what lay ahead. Britain was headed towards recession! Other countries were going to abandon Europe! Trade protectionism would sweep the developed world! The S&P 500 lost another 1.81% on Monday and closed a fraction above 2,000.

    Then what happened? Everything reversed itself. The U.S. stock market rallied strongly on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. The index gained more than 1% for three days in a row. A number of our Buy List stocks like AFLAC, CR Bard, Fiserv and Stryker broke out to new highs. By the closing bell on Thursday, the S&P 500 gained back 88% of what it lost.

    big07012016b

    In fact, if you had completely ignored the market from last Thursday’s close to yesterday’s close, you probably would have assumed not much happened. The index lost a scant 0.68% over that time. For a one-week period, that’s no biggie. Sure, a lot happened during that time, but you get my point.

    I often tell investors that investing is unlike any other activity. Imagine if you went to a tennis instructor for tennis lessons and the instructor told you that the best way for you could improve your game would be to immediately stop playing tennis, put your racket in storage and don’t even think about tennis. You might think the instructor had lost his marbles. Yet, as odd as it sounds, that advice is quite sound for investing. The less you try, the better you’ll do. Not panicking last week was a wise move, yet it’s simply too hard for so many.

    Markets are instruments that process information. That means they tend towards short periods of freaking out and long periods of not doing much. Last Friday and Monday were freak outs. The world assumed the British would vote to stay in the EU, and the world was wrong. That happens. The selling was exaggerated because the areas seen to benefit from a Remain victory had been rallying.

    I can’t claim any foresight. I thought the Remain side would pull it out as well. The difference is that our strategy of focusing on high-quality stocks isn’t dependent on a particular election outcome. We’re prepared for whatever comes our way. Actually, some of the immediate effects, like a stronger yen, will help our portfolio. AFLAC (AFL) closed out Thursday at a new all-time high.

    What’s the Impact of Brexit?

    So what does all this mean for our portfolio? That’s a difficult question to answer, but I think the long-term effect will be minor. Remember that we’re hearing people who didn’t see this vote coming now confidently predicting what it all means.

    Most importantly, this is almost purely a financial matter. Let me explain. There are really two economies. There’s the “production economy,” which consists of people going out and building things or providing services for people. That’s the real economy. Then there’s the make-believe economy, also known as the financial economy, which consists of people in expensive suits who trade pieces of paper.

    The two economies are related to each other, but sometimes that relationship can appear to be rather distant. The stock for any particularly company can move sporadically, even though the company’s operations are as stable as ever.

    In the case of Brexit, we’re talking about an event firmly based in the world of the financial economy. Many European banks dropped sharply on hearing the news, and many American banks did poorly as well, including our own Wells Fargo (WFC) and Signature Bank (SBNY). That’s probably due to the belief that interest rates are going to stay low. Long-term bond yields have been closely correlated with the relative strength of financial stocks, meaning bonds and banks are moving in opposite directions.

    If I ran a London-based investment bank that many clients used as an entryway to the European economy, then I suppose I’d be very concerned about the future implied by Britain’s not being in the EU. Since I don’t, and since our Buy List doesn’t reflect anything like this, I can’t say I’m terribly worried about Brexit. I would be more concerned by a larger wave of voters protesting free trade, but that doesn’t appear to be a major concern. In fact, many in the Leave camp stressed that they’re not opposed to trade or immigration. Rather, the issue for them is their own parliament, not Brussels, deciding such matters.

    I think it’s interesting that the major British stock index, the FTSE 100, is actually higher than where it was before the vote. Some of that, of course, is due to the weakening of the British pound. Even on Friday, shares of Hormel Foods (HRL) closed higher. HRL rallied on Monday as well. We are truly playthings for the market gods.

    The Buy List at the Halfway Mark

    The first half of 2016 is now over. I’m afraid to say that our Buy List has lagged the S&P 500 during the first half of this year; however, it’s not doing that poorly.

    For the first six months of 2016, our Buy List is down 2.04%, while the S&P 500 has gained 2.69% (see below). Once we include dividends, our Buy List is down 1.45%, while the S&P 500 is up 3.84%.

    Twelve

    What did we do wrong? Nothing really. The issue is that the stock market reversed course in early February. That rally has been led by many cyclical stocks and “high-beta” stocks, which are underweighted on our Buy List. For example, the Energy Sector ETF (XLE) is up more than 30% from its February low. Our Buy List doesn’t have any energy stocks, so we haven’t enjoyed a bounce like that. On the other hand, we never suffered a 50% crash as the XLE did in the 20 months prior to that.

    Underweighting those sectors wasn’t a strategic decision. I just didn’t see that many bargains there. I’m still optimistic for our Buy List for the remainder of this year. The only stock that I’m leaning toward regretting is Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY). But even that one is so cheap, we might as well stick with it.

    Stryker (SYK) is our #1 winner so far this year, with a YTD gain of 28.93%. In the cellar is Alliance Data Systems (ADS), with a loss of 29.16%. Earlier this year, ADS dropped 19% in one day.

    I always try to be up front about our track record. While the first half has been disappointing, I’m looking forward to better second half of 2016.

    Buy List Updates

    Despite the market’s drama of the past week, there hasn’t been much news impacting our stocks. One big story is that Wells Fargo (WFC) passed the Fed’s latest stress test. The bank is pretty solid, and it’s never had much trouble passing muster with the Fed.

    Now that Wells’s capital plan has gotten its gold star from the Fed, the bank is free to raise its dividend. Wells has been, by far, the most generous of the major banks. Last year, WFC paid out 75% of its net income as dividend or share buybacks.

    In April, the bank raised its quarterly dividend by half a cent, from 37.5 to 38 cents per share, but that was under last year’s capital plan. The board said it’s going to meet to decide what to do with the dividend. Wells Fargo is due to report Q2 earnings on July 15, two weeks from today.

    In last week’s issue, I mentioned how the rising yen is good news for AFLAC (AFL). I wrote, “there’s talk of it soon breaking 100.” By soon, I apparently meant a few hours. Thanks to this week’s chaos, investors rushed to buy safe-haven assets like the yen. At one point, the yen got to 99 to the dollar. It’s since settled back at 103. That’s an impressive rally. Late last year, the yen had been going for 123 to the dollar. AFL closed Thursday at $72.16, which is a new all-time high. The company will report earnings again on July 28.

    That’s all for now. The stock market will be closed on Monday in honor of July 4. Next week, the Fed will release the minutes of its last meeting. I suspect that much of that discussion is already out of date, but it will be interesting to hear what the central bank said. On Thursday, we’ll get the latest initial-claims report, plus the ADP payroll report. That leads us up to the big June jobs report on Friday. The last jobs report was a major disappointment. I’ll be curious to see if some of those numbers will be revised. 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