• The S&P 500’s Price/Earnings Ratio
    Posted by on December 27th, 2010 at 1:54 pm

    Although the market has had a strong run over the past 21 months, the S&P 500 doesn’t appear to be overpriced according to the market’s P/E Ratio.

    For 2008, the market earned just $48.51. Last year, earnings climbed to $56.86. This year, earnings are projected to be $83.68. Earnings for next year are projected to be $94.76.

    Here’s a look at the S&P 500 (black line, left scale) along with its trailing operating earnings (gold line, right scale). The two lines are scaled at a ratio of 16 to 1 which means that when the lines cross, the P/E Ratio is exactly 16.

  • The New Normal
    Posted by on December 27th, 2010 at 11:14 am

    In the NYT, Paul Lim explains why investor optimism may be a red flag:

    It’s worth remembering that even though a strong year-end surge has pushed the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index up 20 percent since the start of September, it’s just part of a tremendous rally over the past two years.

    Since the bull market began in March 2009, the S.& P. 500 has climbed more than 86 percent. And investments that are considered riskier than blue-chip domestic stocks — such as emerging-market equities or shares of fast-growing but volatile small companies — have done even better during this stretch. Both the Russell 2000 small-stock index and the Morgan Stanley Capital International Emerging Market index have gained 130 percent.

    “We were told that this was supposed to be a ‘new normal’ era where investors should expect lower returns and shouldn’t take much risk as a result,” says James W. Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management. “But the performance of risk assets over the past 18 months shows that this was anything but a new normal.”

    Risk-taking hasn’t been rewarded over just the last 18 months. Despite all the talk about what a “lost decade” this has been for investors, risky asset classes have actually produced sizable gains over the last 10 years. For instance, though the average fund that invests in large-capitalization domestic stocks gained just 1.5 percent, annualized, in that period, small-stock funds returned nearly 7 percent a year. And emerging-market stock funds returned nearly 15 percent, annualized, during that stretch, according to Morningstar.

    Risk-taking was also well rewarded in the fixed-income markets. While safe government bond funds gained 4.8 percent, on average, for the past decade, slightly riskier investment-grade corporate bond funds gained 5.4 percent, annualized, and high-yield bond funds — even riskier — returned nearly 7 percent a year.

    In general, the more risk you took in asset allocation, the greater your relative performance over the past decade, says Jeffrey N. Kleintop, chief market strategist at LPL Financial.

    But that can’t go on forever. Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at S.& P., looked at how bull markets have unfolded historically since 1949. He found that while the S.& P. has soared 35 percent, on average, in the first 12 months of a new rally, those gains have slowed to an average of 17 percent in the second year of a bull market and just 5 percent in the third year.

  • Stocks Down In Early Trading
    Posted by on December 27th, 2010 at 10:34 am

    I hope everyone had a great weekend. The stock market has started the week down slightly. Trading volume will probably be light today since much of the northeast has been affected by snow (we barely got any in D.C.). I’ve noticed that several airline stocks are down today.

    The major concern weighing on stocks is that China just raised rates by 0.25%. The stocks feeling the most pain are raw material stocks that do a lot of business with China. Oil is near a 26-month high.

    The yield on the two-year Treasury is up 7 basis points to reach a new six-month high. That sounds more impressive than it is since the yield is now just 0.72%. Still, the movement out of bonds continues. The 10-year yield is now up to 3.41%.

    For our Buy List, five stocks are up, fourteen are down and Nicholas Financial hasn’t traded yet.

  • Morning News: December 27, 2010
    Posted by on December 27th, 2010 at 7:29 am

    Dollar Weakens Against Euro as Asia Stock Gains Counter China Rate Concern

    China Stocks, Bonds Drop on Concern Central Bank Will Boost Rates Further

    New Voters May Sway Fed Actions

    Stocks, U.S. Futures Drop as China Moves to Cool Economy; Treasuries Fall

    Oil Trades Near 26-Month High on China Growth Speculation, U.S. Stockpiles

    Euro Pain Turns to 23% Gain for Europeans Through S&P Rally

    Retailers Hurt by East Coast Blizzard as Post-Christmas Shoppers Stay Home

    Sony to Spend $1.2 Billion to Double Image Sensor Output

    Hon Hai to Invest $1.2 billion in Hitachi LCD Unit

    Russian Watchdog Favors PepsiCo’s Buy of Wimm-Bill-Dann

    Intel, AMD to Unveil Combination Chips

    Half a Billion Smartphones in 2011?

  • RIP: Roy R. Neuberger
    Posted by on December 26th, 2010 at 10:51 am

    Amazing obituary in the NYT:

    Roy R. Neuberger, who drew on youthful passions for stock trading and art to build one of Wall Street’s most venerable partnerships and one of the country’s largest private collections of 20th-century masterpieces, died on Friday at his home at the Pierre Hotel in Manhattan. He was 107 and had lived in New York City for 101 years.

    His death was confirmed by a grandson, Matthew London.

    Mr. Neuberger had set out to study art, but ended up as a stockbroker, a life path once likened to Gauguin’s in reverse. As a founder of the investment firm Neuberger & Berman, he was one of the few people to experience three of Wall Street’s major market crises, in 1929, 1987 and 2008. Although his artistic ability left no lasting impact, his wealth did.

    Believing that collectors should acquire art being produced in their own time and then hold on to it, giving the public access but never selling, Mr. Neuberger accumulated hundreds of paintings and sculptures by Milton Avery, Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning and others, becoming one of America’s leading art patrons. Those works are now spread over more than 70 institutions in 24 states, many of them in the permanent collection of the Neuberger Museum of Art, which opened in 1974 on the Purchase College campus of the State University of New York.

    The money to buy the works came from his investments at Neuberger & Berman (now Neuberger Berman), the brokerage and investment firm he founded in 1939 with Robert B. Berman. The firm catered to wealthy individuals but also took on a less affluent clientele with the establishment, in 1950, of the Neuberger Guardian mutual fund, one of the first funds to be sold without the usual 8.5 percent upfront sales commission.

    His art collecting drew on the lessons he learned in the financial world. Each year he would buy more than he had bought the previous year, often purchasing large lots at a time. In 1948, for example, he bought 46 paintings by Milton Avery, whom Mr. Neuberger counted as a close friend. He eventually owned more than 100 Avery works.

    “My experience on Wall Street made it possible for me to be comfortable buying a lot of art at once,” he later wrote. “In my investment firm, when we like a security after careful analysis, we buy a modest quantity. Sometimes after the purchase, we will find that we like it very much. If a large quantity of the stock then becomes available, and we are still enthusiastic about its value and its future, we will buy in quantity quickly, even though the day before we had no such plan and no knowledge that the stock would be available.”

    “The same principle,” he added, “applied to my purchase of the Avery paintings.”

    Roy Rothschild Neuberger was born on July 21, 1903, in Bridgeport, Conn. His father, Louis, who was 52 when Roy was born, had come to the United States from Germany as a boy. His mother, the former Bertha Rothschild, was a native of Chicago, a lover of music (she played the piano) and a “nervous, troubled woman from a large, well-to-do Jewish family, not related to the famous Rothschilds,” Mr. Neuberger wrote in an autobiography, “So Far, So Good: The First 94 Years” (John Wiley & Sons, 1997).

    His father was half owner of the Connecticut Web and Buckle Company and had an interest in the stock market, owning thousands of shares in a Montana copper company. The Neuberger family moved to Manhattan in 1909, settling on Claremont Avenue opposite Barnard College on the Upper West Side. Mr. Neuberger attended DeWitt Clinton High School, where in his senior year he was captain of the tennis team that won the Greater New York championship.

    “Looking back on my youthful addiction to tennis, I find it not much different from my fascination with the market,” Mr. Neuberger wrote in his autobiography. “You have to make fast decisions. You can’t wait to think about it overnight.”

    A similar impatience led him to leave New York University after a single year. He felt, he wrote, “that I could learn much more out in the world of business.”

    It was while working for two years as a buyer of upholstery fabrics for the department store B. Altman & Company that he said he developed an eye for painting and sculpture as well as a sense for trading. Both would greatly influence his later life, as would John Galsworthy’s series of novels “The Forsyte Saga,” which described the practice among well-to-do English families of educating their children on the European continent, and “Vincent van Gogh,” a biography by Floret Fels.

    The first book led Mr. Neuberger to a sojourn in Europe. Using money inherited from his father, he set out in June 1924 for a life of leisure. While living mainly on the Left Bank in Paris, he spent afternoons at a cafe, played in tennis tournaments in Cannes and traveled to Berlin and other European capitals.

    In Paris, Mr. Neuberger was inspired by the van Gogh biography to collect and support the work of living artists.

    “Of course, to do so, I had to have capital of considerably more than the inheritance that gave me an annual income of about $2,000,” he later wrote. “In those days you could live very comfortably, almost luxuriously, on $2,000, but you couldn’t buy art in quantity. So I decided to go back to work in earnest.”

    He arrived on Wall Street in the spring of 1929, as the bull market was roaring toward its peak. Hired for $15 a week as a runner for the brokerage firm Halle & Stieglitz, he soon learned all aspects of the business, at the same time managing his own money.

    One of the first big trades he executed on his own behalf was designed to hedge his own wealth against the possibility that the stock market might fall from its precarious height. He sold short 100 shares of the Radio Corporation of America, the most popular stock of the era, betting that its price would decline from its lofty level of $500.

    In October 1929 came the crash that ushered in the Great Depression, and while Mr. Neuberger’s blue-chip stocks fell, his bet against RCA paid off well: the stock’s price eventually fell into the single digits. He said he lost only 15 percent of his money in the crash, while many others lost everything.

    On June 29, 1932, the Dow Jones industrial average dipped to 42 and Mr. Neuberger married Marie Salant, a graduate in economics from Bryn Mawr who had gone to work in the research department of Halle & Stieglitz two years earlier.

    “I can report that by June 29, 1996, the Dow Jones industrial average had climbed to 5,704 and Marie and I had had 64 wonderful years together,” Mr. Neuberger later wrote. Mrs. Neuberger died in 1997.

    Besides Mr. London, Mr. Neuberger is survived by his daughter, Ann Neuberger Aceves; his sons, Roy S. Neuberger of Lawrence, N.Y., and James A. Neuberger of New York City; seven other grandchildren; and 30 great-grandchildren.

    Emboldened by his management of his own assets, Mr. Neuberger became a stockbroker at Halle & Stieglitz in 1930, leaving nine years later to start his own firm, Neuberger & Berman. The firm was later acquired by Lehman Brothers, but spun off in 2008 as a stand-alone company with Lehman’s bankruptcy. Mr. Neuberger continued to go to his Neuberger Berman office every day until he was 99, Mr. London said.

    Mr. Neuberger began to build his art collection in the late 1930s, and although he was asked to do so many times, he never sold a painting by a living artist. “I have not collected art as an investor would,” he said. “I collect art because I love it.”

    He preferred to share his love by donating works to museums and colleges. In May 1965, Mr. Neuberger received an anonymous offer to buy his art collection for $5 million, a sum he considered a fortune at the time.

    Years later he learned that the offer had come from Nelson A. Rockefeller, then governor of New York. Mr. Rockefeller went on to play a key role in Mr. Neuberger’s art collection. In May 1967, while Mr. Neuberger was visiting Mr. Rockefeller at his Pocantico Hills estate in Westchester County, the governor offered to have New York State build a museum to house the collection at the State University campus at Purchase.

    Designed by Philip Johnson, the museum opened in May 1974. Mr. Neuberger often said that the true spirit of his collection could be found on the second floor, which held seminal paintings by Pollock, Stuart Davis, Edward Hopper and Georgia O’Keeffe, as well as many Milton Averys.

    Mr. Neuberger made an additional gift of $1.3 million to the State University at Purchase in 1984 and other major gifts to the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He also served as a president of the New York Society for Ethical Culture and the American Federation of Arts.

    Mr. Neuberger’s second memoir, “The Passionate Collector,” was published by John Wiley & Sons in 2003. At a White House ceremony in 2007, President Bush presented Mr. Neuberger with a National Medal of Arts.

    Like any collector, Mr. Neuberger rued the ones that got away. He remembered passing up a Grant Wood painting as well as refusing to pay $300 for a Jasper Johns in the late 1950s. One time a dealer offered him a Picasso sculpture for $1,500, but he declined because he was buying works only by American artists. “I was such a square that I stupidly didn’t buy it,” he told The New York Times in an interview in 2003.

    Mr. Neuberger bought all his works himself, usually through dealers. And his taste ran toward the bold. “I liked adventuresome work that I often didn’t understand,” he told The Times as he was celebrating his 100th birthday. “For art to be very good it has to be over your head.”

    But he said he enjoyed the challenge that the work posed to the viewer. “Those who understand the mysteries of art,” he said, “are made happier by doing so.”

  • Yo Yo Ma & Allison Krauss
    Posted by on December 25th, 2010 at 1:13 pm

  • Merry Everything!
    Posted by on December 25th, 2010 at 12:42 pm


    I want to wish everyone a Merry Christmas and a happy, healthy and profitable New Year.

    I also want to thank all my readers over the past year. I enjoy getting emails and questions from folks all over the world. I really don’t think I could do it without all the feedback I get. I’d also like to thank all of the folks who have linked to this site over the past year, which has brought Crossing Wall Street to an even larger audience.

    I also owe major thanks to Howard Lindzon, Phil Pearlman, Dominic Rivera and the whole StockTwits team who helped me with the site redesign. I also want to thank Marcia Hippen for her invaluable editing skills and also her help with getting the e-letter off the ground.

    Let’s hope 2011 brings us more profits—in all our endeavors.

  • Morning News: December 24, 2010
    Posted by on December 24th, 2010 at 8:05 am

    German Bunds Rise for First Week in Almost 2 Months on Debt Woes

    Irish Government to Take Control of a Fourth Bank

    China Support Steadies Euro, Outlook Shaky into 2011

    Copper Approaches Record as Swiss Franc Weakens on Global Recovery Signs

    Economists See Signs of Stronger Recovery

    U.S. Stocks Close Higher as Banks Get M&A Jolt

    IRS Says Tax Changes Will Cause Some Filing Delays

    Goldman Adopts ‘Brake’ Provision on Bonuses

    Toshiba to Outsource System Chips to Rival Samsung

    FCC Chairman Seeks Conditions on Comcast, NBC Deal

    Giant Oil Pipeline in the Works from Alberta to the Gulf

    Definition of a BULL Market ….2010

  • CWS Market Review – December 24, 2010
    Posted by on December 24th, 2010 at 7:08 am

    Merry Christmas!

    The markets are closed today so this is a good chance for us to recap recent market activity.

    Earlier I had predicted that the market would pull back after the Federal Reserve announced its QE2 policy, giving us some buying opportunities before an end-of-the-year rally.

    Well, I was partly right. The market actually rallied right after QE2, then it pulled back. Later, we got an impressive rally. The S&P 500 closed higher for 14 out of 16 sessions before falling slightly on Thursday. Remarkably, that was just the third down day for the month.

    The stock market has now regained all it lost since Lehman Brothers went bankrupt. Since March 9, 2009, the S&P 500 is up over 85%. I’m happy to see that our 2010 Buy List is closing out the year on a strong note.

    I should point out that most of these daily moves have been quite small. Daily volatility has been falling off sharply. The VIX, the Volatility Index, got down to as low as 15.40 on Wednesday. That’s very low. To put that into some perspective, it’s very close to the lowest level since July 2007. During the height of the financial crisis, the VIX nearly hit 90. Even as late as this past May, the VIX got as high as 48. Now we’re close to 15.

    I wouldn’t be surprised to see the VIX make a multi-year low soon. What does it mean for us? It means that we will probably see a lot less daily jitters in the market. Overall, I think that’s a good thing for the Buy List, and I hope it will lure more investors to return to the market from more stable assets like bonds. This process has already been unfolding for a few weeks.

    The best news for the Buy List this week came after the close on Wednesday when Bed Bath & Beyond ($BBBY) reported very strong earnings for its fiscal third quarter. You may recall that I highlighted BBBY two weeks ago as an especially attractive buy. Their Q3 earnings came in at 74 cents per share which was nine cents better than what Wall Street was expecting. That’s a pretty big earnings beat.

    I was really impressed by BBBY’s numbers. Earnings rose by 25% and revenues climbed 11% to $2.19 billion. Whenever earnings rise faster than sales, we know that profit margins are expanding. For the third quarter of last year, Bed Bath & Beyond earned just 58 cents per share. The company also raised its Q4 earnings forecast. For the full-year, BBBY now sees earnings-per-share ranging between $2.86 and $2.90. Last year, the company made $2.30 per share. I think $3.20 per share is a reasonable forecast for next year (ending in February 2012).

    I still think BBBY is an excellent stock. Unfortunately, the current price isn’t quite as attractive as it was a few weeks ago. I rate BBBY an excellent buy up to $50 per share. If you don’t own it, don’t bother chasing it. Be disciplined and let the good value come to you.

    I’ve also highlighted AFLAC in recent issues of CWS Market Review. This is a great example of not chasing a stock and letting it come to you. For little or no reason (as far as I could tell), the stock dropped to $51 in late November. I’ve said that I expect AFL to make a run for $60. On Thursday, shares of AFLAC got as high as $57.49 which is the highest level since early November. This is an excellent stock and I’m expecting another great earnings report in a few weeks. AFLAC is a buy up to $59 per share.

    A few of our Buy List stocks are moving into bargain territory. Nicholas Financial ($NICK), of course, remains very undervalued. Even though Jos. A Bank Clothiers ($JOSB) didn’t have a very good earnings report, the stock is an exceptionally good buy if it drops below $40 per share.

    Other stocks I like include Reynolds American ($RAI), especially for income investors, Gilead Sciences ($GILD) and Wright Express ($WXS).

    The 2010 Buy List has just one more week to go. On January 3, 2011, the 2011 Buy List will go into effect. You can see the full listing of the new Buy List on website under the post from December 17.

    To reiterate the changes: The five new stocks are Abbott Labs ($ABT), Deluxe ($DLX), Ford ($F), Oracle ($ORCL) and JPMorgan ($JPM). The five stocks I’m deleting are Baxter International (BAX), Eaton Vance (EV), Eli Lilly (LLY), Intel (INTC) and SEI Investments (SEIC).

    The best economic news this week came on Wednesday when the government revised three-quarter GDP growth up to 2.6%. The original report said that the economy grew by 2% for the third quarter, and that was revised last month to 2.5%. This is good news, but the economy needs to grow much faster than 2.6% to see real improvement in the labor market. Still, this is a positive report and many analysts on Wall Street now expect to see strong growth for the fourth quarter.

    That’s all for now. I’ll have more market analysis for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review!

    Best – Eddy

  • Bed Bath & Beyond’s Buy Back
    Posted by on December 23rd, 2010 at 10:00 am

    Here’s the transcript of the earnings call via Seeking Alpha. Here are some key bits:

    Based on these and other planning assumptions, we are now modeling net earnings per diluted share to be approximately $0.91 to $0.95 for the fiscal fourth quarter of 2010, and approximately $2.86 to $2.90 for all of fiscal 2010. This would represent an increase of approximately 25% over fiscal 2009, up from our previous model of approximately 20%.

    Turning to fiscal 2011, while we are still in the process of preparing our budget for next year, and while we still believe that the continued uncertainty and the macroeconomic environment makes it difficult to forecast future results, our preliminary planning assumptions include the following.

    One, we anticipate opening approximately the same number of stores as the current year. As always, we remain flexible to take advantage of real estate opportunities that may arise.

    Two, we expect to continue our program of relocating, remodeling, renovating and expanding a number of our stores in fiscal 2011.

    Three, our operations will continue to be entirely funded from internally generated sources.

    Four, as previously discussed, we anticipate completing the current share repurchase program in early fiscal 2011, and begin our new $2 billion share repurchase program thereafter, which we are planning will take two years or so to complete after it begins.

    Five, in fiscal 2011, the Easter holiday falls three weeks later than in fiscal 2010. This may affect sales trends in the early part of the year.

    Six, we expect continuing variability in our quarterly tax rates.