Archive for April, 2021
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Abbott Labs Earns $1.32 per Share for Q1
Eddy Elfenbein, April 20th, 2021 at 8:15 amEarnings season has begun for our Buy List stocks. This morning, Abbott Labs (ABT) reported fiscal Q1 earnings of $1.32 per share. That topped estimates by five cents per share. However, revenues came in lighter than expected: $10.5 billion versus $10.7 billion.
What was the culprit for the sales shortfall? Ironically, it was good news. It appears that as Covid vaccines take hold, there’s less of a need for Abbott’s Covid tests. Sales of Abbott’s Covid test kits came in at $2.2 billion, but that was down from $2.4 billion in Q4.
“We’re off to a very strong start to the year, with all four of our major businesses achieving strong growth,” said Robert B. Ford, president and chief executive officer, Abbott. “We’re particularly pleased with the growing momentum of several recently launched products and continue to forecast more than 35 percent EPS growth for the year.”
The most important news is that Abbott is standing by its full-year guidance figure of $5 per share. That’s very conservative guidance. Abbott should have no trouble topping $5 per share this year.
The stock is currently down about 4% today.
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Morning News: April 20, 20201
Eddy Elfenbein, April 20th, 2021 at 7:10 amDogecoin at $50 Billion Makes It Bigger Than Ford and Kraft
A Global Tipping Point for Reining In Tech Has Arrived
Why A U.S. Hospital and Oil Company Turned to Facial Recognition
U.S. Readies Small-Business Grants as P.P.P. Nears End
Oil Prices Went Negative A Year Ago: Here’s What Traders Have Learned Since
Tobacco Stocks Drop on Report Biden Administration Is Planning to Cut Nicotine Levels in Cigarettes
Canadian National Offers More Than $30 Billion for Kansas City Southern
Lumber Prices Soar, But Logs Are Still Dirt Cheap
Soccer’s Super League Finds There Are Some Things Money Can’t Buy & The Growing Fallout From the Super League Fight
McDonald’s New BTS Meal Is Coming, Featuring Flavors You Weren’t Able to Get in the US
Howard Lindzon: Momentum Monday…Still So Much Pessimisim Amidst The Speculation
Cullen Roche: Credo Wealth Interview on the Macro Landscape
Ben Carlson: The Most Annoying Bull Market of All-Time
Nick Maggiulli: The Craziest Market I’ve Ever Seen
Jeff Carter: Watching Developing Financial Markets
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CWS Market Review – April 19, 2021
Eddy Elfenbein, April 19th, 2021 at 6:26 pm“I want to take you higher.” – Sly Stone
(This is the free version of CWS Market Review. Don’t forget to sign up for the premium newsletter for $20 per month or $200 for the whole year. Thanks for your support.)
The S&P 500 was down modestly today, but the stock market has been in a buoyant mood lately. Through Friday, the index made eight all-time highs in eleven trading sessions. So far this year, the S&P 500 has closed at a new all-time high 23 times. That’s nearly one out of every three trading days.
How Does the Market Act At An All-Time High?
This naturally raises an important question: How has the market performed historically when it’s been at an all-time high?
So I crunched the numbers and counterintuitively, the answer is that the market’s done pretty well. I say counterintuitively because for many investors, the natural response is to get nervous and sell when things are going well. But the smart move, according to the data, is to sit tight and enjoy the rally.
Here’s what I did. First, I took all the daily closes on the S&P 500 going back to 1960 and sorted out all the days when the index closed at an all-time high. There were over 1,000 such days, which is roughly 7% of the time.
Next, I looked at the performance of just those days. On days following an all-time high, the S&P 500 has gained an annualized 14.20%. That’s quite good. On days not following an all-time high, the stock market has risen at an annualized rate of just 6.71%.
In other words, the market’s done better than twice as well when it’s been at an all-time high.
Not only that, but the daily volatility has been much lower as well. Coming off all-time highs, the daily volatility is about half that of the other days. In fact, when the market is at an all-time high, it’s fairly rare to see it jump by more than 1% the following day (although it happened earlier this month).
I found only three times when the market rallied more than 2% coming off an all-time high. The biggest one came on January 5, 1999 when the S&P 500 gained 2.21% after making a new high. That sounds impressive but on all the days since 1960, that day only ranks as the 283rd best.
What does all this mean? The important lesson for us is that the stock market is a momentum-friendly data series. Bull markets tend to build on themselves. Things get better which leads people to think things will get better. The downside is, of course, the turning points because bear markets also build on themselves. Better begets better. Worse begets worse.
This is why fairly simple metrics like the 50-day moving average tend to have a good track record. It couldn’t be simpler. The 50-DMA is just the average price over the last 50 days. Yet most of the best and worst days tend to come when the index is below its 50-DMA. It’s an example of a dumb rule that works because it understands the nature of the market.
What’s interesting is that the big market crashes usually haven’t come at the peak. Instead, they’ve come on growing downward slides from the peak.
Texas Pacific Land Trust
I probably get the most feedback when I write about some obscure company that no one’s heard of that’s creamed the market for years. People often ask me how I know about these stocks and I don’t have a good answer except that I collect them over many years.
Today I want to tell you about a fascinating company called the Texas Pacific Land Trust (TPL). TPL is all about land. Lots and lots of land down in Texas. The Texas Pacific Land Trust currently owns over 900,000 acres in the Lone Star State. As Mark Twain said, “Buy land. They’re not making it anymore.”
TPL has a colorful history. It was born over 130 years ago when the Texas and Pacific Railway went bust. The aim of the T&P was to build a southern transcontinental train route.
You may remember the transcontinental railroad from history class. You know – U.S. Grant, golden spike, Promontory Point. Ring a bell? Well, that ran across the country, but it was mostly through the North. If you were in the South, you had to go north and then go east or west. The aim of the Texas Pacific was to change all that. The plan was to connect Austin to San Diego.
They borrowed tons of money and bought tons of land. Despite the name, the T&P never made it to California. Like many dreamers before them, the railway went bust. Now they had tons of debt. There are vestiges of the old Texas and Pacific Railway. For example, the impressive Texas and Pacific Station still stands in Fort Worth.
Instead of selling off the land, a trust was formed with 3.5 million acres of land. People who held the railway’s worthless bonds got shares of the new land trust. The trust made money, and everyone was happy. Eventually, those shares started trading on the NYSE in 1927. (On a technical point, Texas Pacific Land Trust is not a REIT. It’s a land trust.)
Over the years, TPL has sold off 75% of its holdings. Despite that, it’s still one of the largest private landowners in Texas. The trust gets its income from land sales, oil and gas royalties and grazing fees. They really don’t try to sell their land, and on rare occasions, they’ll actually buy some land. It’s rare, but it happens.
TPL has mostly evaded the looming gaze of Wall Street. Not many people know their story. What I really like that is that much of what TPL owns is in the booming Permian Basin.
But here’s what I really like about TPL. It’s the buyback king. The trust uses any excess cash to buy back its own shares. This is particularly important because as a landowner, the trust doesn’t require large capital investments. They’re just the landlord. Until a few years ago, the entire company employed just ten people. Over the last 40 years, TPL has reduced its share count by two-thirds.
Check out this 30-year chart:
(Pro tip: It’s usually a good sign when a stock has done so well that the log scale numbers on the right turn into a blur.)
Since TPL owns the land outright, they’re not as impacted by the boom-and-bust cycle that characterizes so many companies connected to oil and gas. You’ll notice how often investment bubbles are truly credit bubbles masquerading as something else. That’s not such a problem for TPL since it’s raison d’etre is not being in debt.
TPL was recently the subject of a nasty proxy fight. There were lawsuits and counter suits. Both sides accused the other of fraud. I won’t go into the details except to say that that the legal mess seems to have died down and the two sides have reached an agreement. One side effect is that TPL has converted into a regular corporation. Officially, it’s now the Texas Pacific Land Corporation.
Twenty-five years ago, you could have picked up a share of TPL for about $5. Today that share is worth more than $1,500, and that doesn’t include the dividends you would have collected on the way. In December, TPL paid out a special dividend of $10 per share.
Even though TPL has an amazing track record (+70,000% since 1992) and a market cap of $12 billion, I don’t want you think that it’s completely ignored by Wall Street. Not at all!
Two analysts cover it.
If you haven’t had a chance yet, please subscribe to our premium newsletter. It’s only $20 a month or $200 a year. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.
– Eddy
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Barron’s Highlights Disney
Eddy Elfenbein, April 19th, 2021 at 10:37 amThe stock market is down a bit this morning but not too much. This looks to be a busy week for earnings, and next week will be even busier. This morning, Coke reported earnings of 55 cents per share. That was five cents more than expectations.
Over the weekend, Barron’s had nice things to say about Disney:
Under Chapek, Disney has faced the severest of financial stress tests and come out ahead. When parks and theaters emptied out a year ago, costs kept rolling in, and the fastest-growing part of the business, streaming, was consuming cash—as it still is. Yet, Disney generated $3.6 billion in free cash during its fiscal year ended last September.
It’s seen producing $3.3 billion this year, before the numbers begin a sharp rebound.
Investors have applauded the story. The company suspended its modest dividend last year. Yet the stock is up 45% since Chapek took over, versus 33% for the S&P 500 index. Netflix had passed Disney by stock market value. Now Disney, recently valued at $340 billion, is ahead by $100 billion, and bullish investors say there’s more to come.
(…)
Back in November 2019, when Disney+ launched, the company had a goal of reaching 60 million to 90 million subscribers by fiscal 2024. In March, it hit 100 million. Netflix took a decade to reach that milestone. It took Disney less than a year and a half. “We were very confident in our proposition, but I think it caught everybody by surprise,” says Chapek.
(…)
Disney bull Alexia Quadrani, who covers the stock for J.P. Morgan, reckons the shares can hit $220 by the end of this year, 18% above their recent quote. That price comes from a sum-of-the-parts analysis that assumes the streaming business is worth 10 times revenue. Netflix trades at eight times revenue.
Earnings are due out on May 13.
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Morning News: April 19, 2021
Eddy Elfenbein, April 19th, 2021 at 7:08 am‘We Were Left With Nothing.’ Argentina’s Misery Deepens in the Pandemic.
Harassment Allegations and Fear Haunt European Investment Bank
Bob Diamond’s African Bank Exits Another Market with Botswana Deal
Crypto Stock Mania Tested by Sliding Prices, Bitcoin Slump
‘Britcoin’ Not Bitcoin? UK Considers New Digital Currency
Fearing Foreclosure Crisis, U.S. Watchdog Cracks Down on Mortgage Servicers
The Fed Faces Criticism As It Wades into Climate and Equity Issues
AB InBev Tries to Sell a Better Climate with Solar-Powered Beer
Toyota to Review Climate Stance as Investors Turn Up the Heat
Arizona Mining Fight Pits Economy, EVs Against Conservation, Culture
Tesla Runs on Faith, Exxon Runs on Discipline. Only One Is Right
GameStop CEO George Sherman to Step Down
Howard Lindzon: Brother Can You Spare Me A DOGE? and Was That The Top?
Michael Batnick: It Gets Harder From Here, Have Bear Markets Changed Forever?, Fundamental Growth & Animal Spirits: The Biggest Week For Crypto
Ben Carlson: How Much Should You Have Saved in Your 30s?, What’s A First-Time Homebuyer To Do Right Now? & Talk Your Book: Crypto Update with Zac Prince
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Nerd Rule
Eddy Elfenbein, April 16th, 2021 at 10:50 amOne of the important characteristics of the stock market that many newer investors may not realize is how widely distributed the size of companies is on Wall Street.
Simply put, you have a very small group of very, very large companies. You also have a very large group of tiny companies.
Here’s a super nerdy rule of thumb for finding the largest X% of stocks that make up Y% of its total market cap.
Take the square root of X and multiply by 10, and that’s a good ballpark for Y.
For example, the largest 16% of stocks should make up 40% of the total market cap.
Or 49% should make up about 70%. This should work for just about any reasonably-sized index or randomly-selected portfolio.
This is like the 80/20 Rule but in this case, it’s the 50/25 Rule.
No, it’s not perfect, but it’s a pretty good estimate.
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Morning News: April 16, 2021
Eddy Elfenbein, April 16th, 2021 at 7:02 amWorld Stocks Near Record Highs as China, U.S. Data Back Global Recovery Hopes
Sanctions on Russian Debt Are Called a ‘First Salvo’ That Sends a Message
China’s Economy Is Booming. Shoppers Are Skittish Anyway.
‘It’s a Roller-Coaster Ride’: Global Chip Shortage Is Making Industries Sweat
Old-School Quant Investor Is Taking a Value Victory Lap
Family Offices Are Targeting 800% Returns With SPAC Economics
Toshiba Bid to Test Japan’s Corporate Governance Rules
As Sanjeev Gupta Rose From Trader to Tycoon, Several Banks Backed Away
Vaccinated Will ‘Likely’ Need Third Pfizer Jab Within 12 Months, Then Annual Shots
The New Mercedes Is a Mix of Tesla and Ferrari
Why the Amazon Workers Never Stood a Chance
Joshua Brown: Five Superpowers
Michael Batnick: Housing Bubble Two Point No
Ben Carlson: Some Thoughts on Coinbase
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Retail Sales Soar
Eddy Elfenbein, April 15th, 2021 at 10:48 amThere’s a lot of news this morning. Let’s start with jobless claims which fell to a new pandemic low of 576,000. That’s down from last week’s report of 769,000. The report is still very bad but at least things are moving in the right direction.
This morning’s retail sales report was off the charts. Last month, retail sales rose by 9.8%. This is what happens when you keep people locked up, then release them and give them stimulus checks. Wall Street had been expecting a gain of 6.1%. The number for February was revised upward to a decline of 2.7%.
The critical bar and restaurant industry saw a 13.4% surge, thanks to the increasing relaxing of restrictions as Covid vaccines accelerate to a pace of more than 3 million a day. Sporting goods spending was the highest percentage gainer at 23.5%, followed by clothing and accessories at 18.3% and motor vehicle parts and dealers at 15.1%.
March’s retail sales report was another sign that consumers overall are willing to spend, even though increasing amounts of stimulus checks are going towards savings rather than spending.
Yesterday, the S&P 500 lost 0.41%. That was the index’s worst day in the last three weeks, and it’s not that bad. The stock market is up again to a new all-time high this morning. The S&P 500 has been as high as 4,163.30 this morning. Before yesterday, the S&P 500 had risen seven times in nine sessions.
Thermo Fisher Scientific (TMO) is having a good day. Our Buy Lister said it’s buying PPD for $17.4 billion. That’s $47.50 per share.
From Bloomberg:
The drug-testing field has become a hotbed of activity as companies worldwide seek to roll out new Covid-19 drugs and vaccines, even as they continue to develop new cancer therapies and other treatments. With Covid-19 case numbers remaining high worldwide, and rising concern about future pandemics, the value of CROs is growing.
PPD has worked with Gilead Sciences Inc. on studies of the Covid drug remdesivir and on research involving Roche Holding AG’s Actemra as an arthritis treatment, according to its website. PPD also offers laboratory services.
What Bloomberg Intelligence says:
“ PPD is one of the largest contract research organizations, with scale in clinical, preclinical and central lab end-markets. The marriage of PPD with Thermo’s Patheon manufacturing unit would create a compelling end-to-end offering for biopharma customers, with compelling financial metrics.”
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Morning News: April 15, 2021
Eddy Elfenbein, April 15th, 2021 at 7:04 amCoinbase’s Public Listing Is a Cryptocurrency Coming-Out Party
Coinbase Gains as Ark Funds Buy, Analyst Sees ‘Immense’ Upside
With Earnings Soaring, Wall Street Banks See Economic Boom Ahead
Biden to Hit Putin With Russia Sanctions After Summit Offer
Big Business Seeks Unified, Market-Based Approaches Ahead of Climate Summit
JPMorgan Shoots for Green Finance Stratosphere as ESG Target Tops Peer Plans
What Happens When an Oil Giant Walks Away
TSMC Sees Chip Shortage Lasting into 2022, Books Solid Profit
Hundreds of Companies Unite to Oppose Voting Limits, but Others Abstain
Changing Strategy, E.U. Bets Big on Pfizer to Battle Covid
Major Airlines Signal Rejection of New CDC Middle Seat Blocking Guidelines
Bernie Madoff’s Downfall Left Behind A Surprising Legacy
Howard Lindzon: The Coinbase Direct Listing
Joshua Brown: Banks Make a Lot of Money When the Fed + Treasury Outlaw Losses
Michael Batnick: Should I Buy Coinbase? & “Money Losing Companies Hits Record High”
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Coinbase to IPO Sometime Today
Eddy Elfenbein, April 14th, 2021 at 11:03 amThe first of the big bank earnings are out today, and they’re looking very good. First up is JPMorgan Chase. The big bank earned $4.50 per share. That beat estimates by $1.40 per share. CEO Jamie Dimon has said the economy is primed for a “Goldilocks moment.”
Next up is Goldman Sachs which earned $18.60 per share. Wall Street had been expecting $10.22 per share.
Also, Wells Fargo made $1.05 per share. Wall Street was looking for 71 cents per share.
Today is the day of the Coinbase IPO. The ticker symbol is COIN. CEO Brian Armstrong owns 20% of the company. He’s going to be a very wealthy man by closing time. The Nasdaq gave them a “reference price” of $250 per share.
Lastly, Bernie Madoff has died age 82. He still had 138 years left on his sentence.
- Tweets by @EddyElfenbein
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