Update: J&J Reports Messy Q4, Free Cash Flow Remains Robust But Looming Kenvue Split Adds Uncertainty

March 3, 2023

Image: Johnson & Johnson’s free cash flow generation remains far in excess of its cash dividends paid. Image Source: J&J By Brian Nelson, CFA Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) reported messy fourth-quarter 2022 results January 24 with GAAP revenue falling 4.4% and reported earnings per share dropping 24.9%. On an adjusted basis, operational growth excluding COVID-19 vaccine sales advanced 4.6%, while adjusted earnings per share advanced 10.3%, to $2.35 per share. The top line missed the consensus estimate modestly, while adjusted earnings per share came in slightly better than expected. Looking ahead to 2023, J&J expects adjusted operational sales growth, excluding COVID-19 vaccine, of 3.5%-4.5%, and adjusted operational earnings per share of $10.40-$10.60, which reflects 3.5% expansion at the midpoint. We

Our Reports on Stocks in the Oil and Gas Complex Industry

February 27, 2023

Dividend Yield: Estimated on a forward-looking annualized basis. VBI: The Valuentum Buying Index, a timeliness indicator that overlays a price-to-fair-value estimate consideration. Fair Value Estimate: Derived by Valuentum’s enterprise valuation process. Dividend Cushion ratio: A ratio assessing the health of the dividend (the higher, the better). Data as of the date of this article. Individual company reports may have been updated subsequent to the publishing of this article, so please download a company’s stock and dividend report for its latest information and data. Note: The data in the tables of each of the below companies’ respective stock pages is updated the weekend after the publishing of this update. Please click on a company name below to view the corresponding equity

This Remains a Technically-Driven Stock Market

February 23, 2023

Image: We expect the S&P 500 (SPY) to test support at both its technical uptrend and the 200-day moving average. In the event the SPY breaks through technical support, we’d be looking to “raise cash” across the newsletter portfolios. By Brian Nelson, CFA S&P 500 companies will end 2022 with roughly a 4%-5% decline in fourth-quarter 2022 earnings, according to a February 17 report from FactSet. The Communications Services (XLC), Materials (XLB), Consumer Discretionary (XLY) were the three weakest sectors showing year-over-year earnings declines in the fourth quarter. The two biggest earnings misses during the quarter, in our view, were Goldman Sachs’ (GS) nightmare report and Intel’s (INTC) huge miss and terrible outlook. However, for the most part, fourth-quarter earnings

ICYMI: As Expected, Stock Pickers Trounce the Indexes When It Matters

February 22, 2023

Image: Charles Dickens. Image Source: Public Domain  “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of light, it was the season of darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.” — Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities By Brian Nelson, CFA It was the best of times with respect to relative “outperformance,” it was the worst of times with respect to absolute “performance.” During 2022, that is. If all that our readers were focused on last year were our missteps in Meta

Follow Up on Intel’s Dividend Cut: We Will Strive to Do a Better Job Communicating

February 22, 2023

The Dividend Cushion ratio is one of the most powerful financial tools an income or dividend growth investor can use in conjunction with qualitative dividend analysis. The ratio is one-of-a-kind in that it is both free-cash-flow based and forward looking. Since its creation in 2012, the Dividend Cushion ratio has forewarned readers of approximately 50 dividend cuts. We estimate its efficacy at ~90%. By Brian Nelson, CFA As noted in our brief note on Intel this morning, “Intel Cuts Dividend, As Expected,” we have now refreshed the company’s reports on the website, with updated Dividend Safety and Dividend Growth Potential ratings, both as VERY POOR. After factoring in Intel’s updated outlook to our valuation model from its fourth-quarter release, our

Intel Cuts Dividend, As Expected

February 22, 2023

  Image Source: Aaron Fulkerson By Brian Nelson, CFA The Dividend Cushion ratio caught another dividend cut. This time it was Intel’s (INTC). With a Dividend Cushion ratio of 0.4, Intel announced February 22 that it has slashed its dividend by nearly two thirds, to $0.125 on a quarterly basis, down from its prior quarterly dividend of $0.365. The company’s estimated forward yield now stands at ~1.9%, and we can’t say that the dividend cut was unexpected given its massive net debt position and significantly weakened free cash flow generation–the two most important components behind an assessment of its cash-based intrinsic value and dividend health. Intel’s fourth-quarter results and outlook for 2023, released January 26, were atrocious. Here’s what we

Walmart Warns: “Prices Are Still High and There Is Considerable Pressure on the Consumer”

February 22, 2023

  Image Source: Mike Mozart By Brian Nelson, CFA As we wrote in “The Fed ‘Can’t Stop, Won’t Stop” in early January, the trade-down trends that we’re seeing in big box retail and with groceries, more generally, are interesting. Inflation started to accelerate with food-at-home prices moving aggressively higher in early 2022, and consumers have been trading down to better value. It probably wasn’t until egg prices soared, however — driven in part by a shortage of egg laying chickens (not just inflationary pressures) – that tipped everyday consumers to budget more cautiously, and the largest big box retailer in Walmart (WMT) is seeing this impact first-hand. Here’s what’s happening on the ground, per Walmart’s CEO Doug McMillon on the

Home Depot’s Comps, Operating Income Fall in Q4; Hikes Dividend 10%

February 21, 2023

Image Source: Mike Mozart By Brian Nelson, CFA  On February 21, home improvement retailer Home Depot (HD) reported weak fourth quarter 2022 results that showed comparable store sales for the period falling 0.3% and operating income dropping 1.5% from the same period a year ago. Diluted earnings per share advanced 2.8% from last year’s quarter. The company is dealing with a weakened consumer spending environment and difficult comparisons from pandemic-driven demand of a year ago. Home Depot raised its dividend payout 10%, to $2.09 per share, or $8.36 per share on an annualized basis. That translates into a forward estimated dividend yield of ~2.6%. Looking to fiscal 2023, Home Depot’s sales guidance was rather weak. The company expects sales and

Phillip Morris’ Acquisition of Swedish Match Accelerates Smoke-Free Push

February 20, 2023

Image Source: Phillip Morris By Brian Nelson, CFA On February 9, Phillip Morris (PM) reported fourth-quarter 2022 results. The company’s performance continues to be impacted by the War in Ukraine. Net revenue growth came in at 0.6% for the quarter, while operating income fell 0.8%. However, excluding sales in Russia and Ukraine, net revenue growth advanced 7.9% in the quarter, while operating income growth advanced 10.3%, a much better showing on an adjusted basis. Smoke-free products accounted for ~36.0% of total net revenue in the period. Here’s what Phillip Morris’ CEO Jacek Olczak had to say about the quarterly results:  Despite the challenging operating environment in 2022, due to the war in Ukraine, as well as supply-chain and global inflationary

Our Reports on Stocks in the Recession Resistant Industry

February 19, 2023

Dividend Yield: Estimated on a forward-looking annualized basis. VBI: The Valuentum Buying Index, a timeliness indicator that overlays a price-to-fair-value estimate consideration. Fair Value Estimate: Derived by Valuentum’s enterprise valuation process. Dividend Cushion ratio: A ratio assessing the health of the dividend (the higher, the better). Data as of the date of this article. Individual company reports may have been updated subsequent to the publishing of this article, so please download a company’s stock and dividend report for its latest information and data. Note: The data in the tables of each of the below companies’ respective stock pages is updated the weekend after the publishing of this update. Please click on a company name below to view the corresponding equity

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About Our Name

But how, you will ask, does one decide what [stocks are] "attractive"? Most analysts feel they must choose between two approaches customarily thought to be in opposition: "value" and "growth,"...We view that as fuzzy thinking...Growth is always a component of value [and] the very term "value investing" is redundant.

                         -- Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway annual report, 1992

At Valuentum, we take Buffett's thoughts one step further. We think the best opportunities arise from an understanding of a variety of investing disciplines in order to identify the most attractive stocks at any given time. Valuentum therefore analyzes each stock across a wide spectrum of philosophies, from deep value through momentum investing. And a combination of the two approaches found on each side of the spectrum (value/momentum) in a name couldn't be more representative of what our analysts do here; hence, we're called Valuentum.



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