John Maikin's Comments re Inflation & Fed policy
In this essay by John Makin of the American Enterprise Institute, he suggests that monetary policy may need to be tightened more than most investors anticipate.
A celebration of value thinking, a salute to common sense and straightforward logic. I hope to explore the logic of Wall Street recommendations in a value context. Many of these ideas are employed in my portfolios and those of my family, friends, and clients. Please bear in mind that ALL ideas, opinions, and/or forecasts are for informational or entertainment value ONLY and should NOT be construed as a recommendation to invest, trade, or speculate in the stock market.
In this essay by John Makin of the American Enterprise Institute, he suggests that monetary policy may need to be tightened more than most investors anticipate.
Gawd...starting to feel like a frustrated economist. Got to get back to my comments on stocks! Some terrific commentary though.
Some value investors become almost evangelic about their need NOT to utilize economic inputs in their thinking. I apologize if I offend you, but since I believe that most companies do have some economic sensitivity, particularly smaller companies, I do find it useful to spend a bit of time in economic thinking. Though signs of excess seem to be present primarily in housing and real estate markets, and less so in other capital markets, one should always be somewhat defensive in at least considering the downside risk in your portfolio.
The yield curve rarely inverts. And when it does, it usually spells trouble for the economy. It means that investors and the Federal Reserve are fretting about inflation in the short term, and that investors are pessimistic about long-term growth. Most economists believe that periods of prolonged inversion of the curve between two-year and 10-year government bonds have generally presaged recessions. The most recent period of inversion ran from February 2000 through December 2000—just before the 2001 recession. Note the duration of that inversion. At this point, this represents a faint glimmer of an amber caution light.
“The fact that I have entered into IT-related business is proof that businesses have to evolve and keep with time. One has to re-invent continuously.”
Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah! However you celebrate this holiday season, we wish you the best of the season!
As most of you know, diversification has been described as a hedge against stupidity. Unfortunately, most investors tend to cower when they see very concentrated portfolios. Those stocks that present the greatest consternation to the average investor, because they represent a departure from conventional thinking, cannot really provide major league hits in a portfolio where they are accorded a minor league weighting.
TSYS (TSS) formerly, Total System Services, was one of the worst performers on the NYSE yesterday as a result of the loss of its contract with Bank America.
This morning’s WSJ Personal Journal section features an article on Housing Affordability hitting a 14 year low.
Understanding the sustainable competitive advantage period should be the most important focus in understanding any business. This is true both for us as investors as well as for management itself.
Historically, I have not been a fan of restaurant stocks. I can think of few industries that have such ease of entry. I can recall the story of one restaurant chain’s CEO who proclaimed at his retirement party (after far too much libation) that there is one problem in the restaurant business, too many seats and not enough a##holes! The chain would likely prefer that both it and he remain anonymous. Despite his admonitions of some years ago, a lot of smart money has been looking at this industry.
NIKE ( NKE) reported record results for its second quarter with revenues up 10%, net income up 15%, and earnings per share were up 18%.
I note that a research analyst at Morgan Stanley upgraded Flextronics (FLEX) this morning to an overweight.
Barron’s features a wonderful article on Irving Kahn this weekend. Today is Mr. Kahn’s 100th birthday. Mr. Kahn served as served as the second teaching assistant to Benjamin Graham at the Columbia Business School after Leo Stern. He helped Ben Graham with some of the statistical work for his seminal book, Security Analysis.
According to Arjun Murti, the peak in oil production will occur sooner than the consensus expects, and the post-peak production decline will be more rapid as well unless there is a sustained increase in investment in production, greater consumer efficiency, and development of alternative energy sources.
Methode (METH) receives about 75% of its revenues from automotive electronics, switches and connectors for the steering column as well as instrument panels. Non-automotive business focuses on telecom and network markets and produces PC cards and poly-optic connectors. Since the bulk of the business is auto OEM's, METH has been weak.
Yesterday, BCR had an analyst meeting where it forecast earnings growth of a minimum of 14% for next year as well as reviewed its product pipeline. Bard, which I suspect suffers from a false perception as a relatively boring and staid company, has actually demonstrated significant growth in the last five years. Earnings per share have grown at about a 20% rate and return on invested capital has improved steadily to20% versus about 11% in 2000.
Amgen (AMGN), the world's largest biotechnology company, and Abgenix, Inc. (ABGX,) a company specializing in the discovery, development and manufacture of human therapeutic antibodies, today announced that they have signed a definitive merger agreement under which Amgen will acquire Abgenix for approximately $2.2 billion in cash plus the assumption of debt. All in, about an 80% premium to Abgenix’ market cap.
TSG announced after the close an improved outlook for 2006. Return on capital should exceed 18% this year and has steadily improved from levels post 9/11 that were only 1-2%.
Yesterday, Diebold (DBD) announced the retirement of chairman and CEO, Wally O'Dell. O'Dell who had been CEO since 1999, had lost credibility in recent years with the execution difficulties that the company had experienced. Tom Swidarski, who had been appointed COO just two months ago, has assumed O'Dell's position.
One of the best performers of last week was Salesforce.com (CRM) which rose over 12% for the week. Clearly, CRM does have a commanding share (some 60%) of the on-demand CRM market. Siebel in the midst of its takeover by Oracle has other priorities at the moment; Microsoft and SAP both appear to be slow off the mark. In the most recent quarter, it appears that subscription revenue has grown by 79% YOY.
"Calculated Risk," has a fascinating chart which demonstrates the enormous effect that mortgage refis have had in holding up GDP. The impact of the bursting of the housing bubble would greatly diminish expected growth rates due to the direct effect on a loss in housing and construction related employment, and indirectly on personal consumption expenditures.
The stock market resembles a huge laundry in which institutions take in large blocks of each other's washing...without true rhyme or reason. This quote is from the Financial Analysts Journal September-October 1976. Twenty nine years later, the words still ring true.
Foundry Networks (FDRY) was downgraded by Robert Baird this morning based on valuation and increased competition. Let's look at the fundamental picture. Hewlett Packard has introduced its own high end Ethernet switch and this could potentially affect the sourcing relationship that FDRY currently enjoys with Hewlett. Similarly, Alcatel and Nortel are becoming more formidable competitors.
If the basis of owning a steel stock is global demand emanating from China, this article should cause you some concern.
McKesson Corp announced a replenishment of its $250 million share buyback authorization.
This morning, KeyBanc Capital Markets (formerly McDonald Securities) initiated coverage of Magna International with a buy.
Wharton grad Seth Klarman returns to campus to discuss value investing. He warns that value investing has hit a new high in popularity. Beware of the value pretenders, those who buy stocks because they are down but not necessarily cheap.
One of today’s brokerage downgrades was Sanderson Farms, Inc (SAFM) resulting in about a 7% drop in the stock.
This article by Grail Partners, consultants based in Boston, provides some interesting thinking about the evolution of the hedge funds industry.
A lot of my friends keep looking for an opportunity to buy General Motors or Ford because they are "down." Old friends of mine from Windsor and Detroit wonder if there is any future in the automotive industry.
The global wall of cash is driving down returns but increasing risk as investors seek higher return investment vehicles or utilize leverage. This article by William Bernstein of "The Efficient Frontier"addresses these issues.
An interesting study on stock picking has emerged from academe. Two profs at Indiana University, Utpal Bhattacharya and Neal Galpin did an investigation into the prevalence of indexing versus actual stock picking in global narkets. Notwithstanding Buffett’s comments on indexing, I have found another fabulous quote which precedes Buffett’s view:
Freddie (FRE) increased its dividend by 34% to $0.47, a surprise since the company generally doesn't increase its dividend until the March quarter. The dividend has increased 81% in the last two years!