Valuentum: Still Bullish on Kinder Morgan Since Mid-Teens

“Valuentum called the collapse in Kinder Morgan’s shares from $40 per share to the low-teens, and now we have called the rebound to $20 from the low-teens. Though this action may not fit into the playbook of the “buy and hold” investor, the idea of “selling” overpriced stocks that are going down and “buying” overpriced stocks that are going up is a core part of our methodology.” By Brian Nelson, CFA I’m still getting emails about how wrong we were about our calls on Kinder Morgan (KMI). Will they ever stop? We’re doing our best to relieve investors of the shackles of “buy and hold” thinking, which is separate, distinct and runs counter to investing with a focus on long-term … Read more

Avoid Dividend Double Whammies By Using the Dividend Cushion!

By Brian Nelson, CFA I think a lot of investors sell themselves short. Of course you want a strong and growing dividend, but analysis shouldn’t stop there. One of the most important things you could ever do is evaluate just how strong that dividend truly is via the Dividend Cushion ratio, a metric that measures a company’s dividend coverage via future free cash flow generation with consideration of its balance sheet health. For example, how valuable would it have been to know that Kinder Morgan (KMI), ConocoPhillips (COP), and BHP Billiton (BHP) were going to cut their dividends…in advance of them doing so? Our membership knew these cuts were probable long before anyone else because they paid attention to each … Read more

You Can Change Your Mind!

By Brian Nelson, CFA It looks like the energy master limited partnership (AMLP, AMZ) space has been catching a bid the past few days. It’s so important, however, to keep things in perspective, and the best way to do so is to look at an intermediate-term chart of the group, which remains under considerable stress, “Bye Bye Energy MLPs, Part II (Jan 2016)” The market wants some of the most beaten down equities to rally, including Energy Transfer Equity (ETE) and Energy Transfer Partners (ETP), which have fallen devastatingly from their respective peaks of $35 and near-$70 per share, respectively. If you’re not looking at charts, you’re leaving a lot of free information on the table. Energy master limited partnerships, … Read more

Kinder Morgan, MLPs, and the Risk of $0

Valuentum’s Brian Nelson shares his analytical secrets and tips in an open seminar with Q&A. He’ll outline what he saw in the financials of Kinder Morgan that shocked him in June and what continues to worry him about MLPs today that prompted him to make such a controversial call to help investors avoid the collapse that has subsequently happened. There’s more, but we can’t give it all away in the teaser. Recordings Available — Order today! Select the ‘Buy Now’ button to purchase today.     You will receive a confirmation email with additional details following your registration. ————————- Webinar Background On June 11, Valuentum’s President Brian Nelson wrote ‘5 Reasons Why We Think Kinder Morgan’s Shares Will Collapse,” removing … Read more

Alerts: A Long-Time Favorite from the Bullpen and An Interest Rate Risk Hedge

We’ve long appreciated the stand-out dividend strength characteristics of Cracker Barrel (CBRL) among the full-service restaurant space, and we see an opportunity to add the company to the Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio today (see page 5). We’ve outlined our case for Cracker Barrel in the past, “Free Cash Flow Feeds Cracker Barrel’s Dividend Growth,” and while we haven’t quite gotten our price just yet, we’re going to inch forward a bit with a small 1.5% position in the Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio at this time. The company yields a very nice ~3.4%, and its Dividend Cushion is solid for that high of a payout. One of the areas we’re expecting Cracker Barrel to surprise to the upside is the positive … Read more

Giddy Up – It’s Earnings Season!

By Brian Nelson, CFA During the trading session January 27, Apple (AAPL) failed to turn the tide of a disappointing fiscal 2016 first-quarter report (calendar fourth-quarter), “Apple Will Go Lower…And It Will Be ‘Forced’ Into Acquisitions,” and coupled with a Fed statement, where the Committee left interest rates unchanged, as expected, many market observers read between the lines and hit the sell button. On the basis of some of the concerns we’ve outlined, “Not Doom and Gloom – But Just Cautious,” we can completely understand the hesitancy by participants to stay fully exposed to this tumultuous equity market. In many ways, that the Fed has hit the brakes just a few weeks after the long-anticipated rate hike means the global … Read more

Not Doom and Gloom – But Just Cautious…

You wouldn’t know it on the basis of the strong US market action January 26, but it wasn’t all quiet in overnight trading. Local markets in China (FXI) took another hit, with Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges experiencing declines to the magnitude of 6%-7%+ on the session. Though some optimistically dismiss the local China markets as irrelevant, the implications on weakened Chinese banks, other Asian nations via trade, and interconnected financial institutions from Standard Charted to HSBC (HSBC) and even Citigroup (C) are material, in our view, and we’re paying close attention. Some may even say that China stocks represent less than 15% of household financial assets in the country — certainly not enough to cause a global calamity… Or is … Read more

What’s Working in Today’s Market?

By Brian Nelson, CFA As emerging markets around the world suffer from commodity-price-led economic weakness, capital continues to find a safe-haven in US government bonds (TLT, TBT), but for those equity-oriented funds that mandate a fully-invested status, not something we’re particularly advocates of, assets within US equities have favored “lower-beta” utilities (XLU) and consumer staples (XLP) sectors while cyclically-dependent and credit-levered sectors such as the financials (XLF) and materials (XLB) have suffered thus far in 2016. The industrials (XLI) and energy (XLE) sectors have also encountered higher-than-normal selling pressure in the first few weeks of the New Year, as investors evaluate the global economic landscape and what a prolonged period of low energy prices may mean for the lowest quality … Read more

Moody’s Puts Oil & Gas and Mining Sectors on Review

By Kris Rosemann On January 22, Moody’s placed 120 oil and gas companies (XLE) from across the globe on review for a credit rating downgrade. The list ranges from massive global producers such as Royal Dutch Shell (RDS.A, RDS.B) and Total (TOT) to nearly 70 US exploration and production and services (“E&P”) companies. It also includes 55 mining companies (XLB) that have been punished by the recent rout in commodity prices. Alcoa (AA), Rio Tinto (RIO) and Vale (VALE) are a few notables that made the list for a potential downgrade. The news is not completely unexpected, however, and may likely be a response to several executive teams pointing to legacy (outdated) counterparty/customer ratings as reasons to not be concerned … Read more

Breaking: Markets in Free Fall

By Brian Nelson, CFA I was up late last night watching the 10-year Treasury fall below 2%, crude oil drop below $28 (and now below $27) per barrel, and the Dow futures collapse more than 500 points. Asset correlations are going to 1 — so much for modern portfolio theory, right? The benefits of diversification are sometimes absent at the very time you need them the most. If market observers didn’t learn this during the Great Depression, certainly they must have learned it during the Financial Crisis of 2008-2009. That’s why we like cash so much at times. We have a 35%+ cash weighting in both newsletter portfolios. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DIA) is now down ~400 points (-2.5%), … Read more