MLP Debate: Not Over?

I’d like to apologize in advance, but we have to cover some well-traveled ground…again. We know many of you joined “midstream” our call on Kinder Morgan and the MLP space, perhaps in January or February 2016, and some may not have the entire story arc. This article really may be the difference between a life-long customer and someone that cancels today. By Brian Nelson, CFA In June 2015, Valuentum issued a report “5 Reasons Why We Expect Kinder Morgan’s (KMI) Shares to Collapse,” a piece that included our warning about the impending collapse in shares of Kinder Morgan and our major concerns across the MLP spectrum due to their insufficient free cash flow relative to distributions paid in light of … Read more

Part III: Nelson’s Evaluation of Berkshire’s 2015 Annual Report

<< Go back to Part I << Go back to Part II By Brian Nelson, CFA It’s always a wonder to open up on the Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A, BRK.B) annual report for a large variety of different reasons, but every time I do I can’t help but ponder yesteryear through the table on page 2, “Berkshire’s Performance vs. the S&P 500.” I think I have a unique knack for imagining what might have been if today’s standards would have been applied to Berkshire in the 1970s, perhaps in some ways how many baseball fans may think about whether the legends of the past would have put up the type of numbers that they did if presented with today’s dynamics. For … Read more

Soros, Icahn, Nelson Hedge for Market Fall

Pictured: George Soros; source: Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung By The Valuentum Team Following news that Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway’s (BRK.A, BRK.B) took a rather sizable stake in Apple (AAPL), news flow from other large investors continues to be decidedly bearish. As our members are aware, we recently added put options on the S&P 500 (SPY) to protect capital in the Best Ideas Newsletter portfolio, a move that may expire worthless but accurately captures our sentiment toward today’s overheated equity market. As of May 13, the forward 12-month price-to-earnings ratio on S&P 500 companies is 16.6, above both its 5-year average (14.5) and 10-year average (14.3). Reversion to the 10-year average alone means the S&P 500 Sector SPDR ETF (SPY) has downside risk to ~$170 … Read more

Mr. Buffett: Apple and the Potential Yahoo-eBay Tie-Up

Image Source: Fortune Live Media Stocks will be volatile. Remember – they are driven by people, and people act emotionally, irrationally at times. This dynamic has hammered Apple (AAPL) as of late. Though we’ve engaged in risk mitigation in recent months in trimming our position in Apple in both newsletter portfolios, “Valuentum’s Exclusive Weekly Recap (August 2015),” we’ve done all that we can to explain to our membership the tremendous valuation opportunity presented by shares, “Quantifying Apple’s Tremendous Investment Case (September 2015), while acknowledging that market “spirits” could pressure the company in the near term, “Apple Will Go Lower… (January 2016).” The transparency of our writing is enough to make our reader’s heads spin sometimes, perhaps to make them think … Read more

The Market – On Its Head

By Brian Nelson, CFA The sector/theme returns have almost been turned on their head as some of the worst performers in the first few weeks of 2016, namely materials (XLB), energy MLPs (AMLP, AMZ), and energy (XLE), have transformed into leaders through the latest data update, April 21. As we outlined in “Alerts: Adding More High-Quality Exposure, (April 2016)” the dividend “track record” growth craze is on, in our view, and yield-rich exposures from utilities (XLU) to the dividend-growth focus itself (SDY) have rallied more than 9% in the year thus far. The metals gold (GLD) and silver (SLV) have also proved to be good trades out of the gates thus far in 2016, up ~18% and 23%, respectively, though … Read more

Alerts: Adding More High-Quality Exposure

The dividend growth “track record” craze continues to be on in a big way, and we can’t help but feel there are similarities to the outcome of the ‘Nifty Fifty’ craze in the late 1960s and 1970s as there might be to dividend growth investing today. For those that may not be familiar, the ‘Nifty Fifty’ was a group of “buy-and-hold” large cap stocks that were largely credited with driving the market to new heights during the early 1970s. Many called these stocks with stable earnings one-decision stocks — they were to be bought and held forever. We have believed for some time that the proliferation of dividend growth investing may very well have the same effect on today’s market, … Read more

Alcoa Continues Swoon, Revises Aerospace 2016 Outlook to 6%-8% Expansion

Image Source: Boeing; image source: Alcoa Alcoa (AA) kicked off first-quarter 2016 earnings season April 12, but nobody reading our work should have much interest in shares. Our $10 fair value estimate for the company explains the lack of opportunity, and we laid in out in no uncertain terms in April 2015 that we thought, “The Time to Consider Owning Alcoa Has Passed.” Even a few months before that write-up, we said the aluminum giant was trading at a peak multiple on peak earnings, a classic valuation “no-no,” and since that time, shares of Alcoa have fallen more than 40%, “Alcoa Kicks Off Fourth Quarter (2014) Earnings Season:” From our Jan 13, 2015 article: Would we ever considering owning Alcoa … Read more

Part II: Nelson’s Evaluation of Berkshire’s 2015 Annual Report

Warren Buffett’s optimism about the future of America remains unending. Image source: /\\ \\/\\/ /\\ << Go back to Part I By Brian Nelson, CFA “If you want to guarantee yourself a lifetime of misery, be sure to marry someone with the intent of changing their behavior.” – a “Mungerism” explaining the importance of identifying good managers when pursuing a hands-off ownership style. We covered quite a bit of ground in the first part of the evaluation of Berkshire Hathaway’s 2015 annual report here, and we’ll cover even more ground in this second installment. We left off with a good conversation about the insurance business, and how part of Berkshire Hathaway’s business strength emanates from its fortress balance sheet and credit … Read more

Part I: Nelson’s Evaluation of Berkshire’s 2015 Annual Report

Image Source: Fortune Live Media By Brian Nelson, CFA It’s always fun to crack open the Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A, BRK.B) annual report, this year’s 2015. It reminds me of how much times have changed. For one, if Warren Buffett had been starting out in the investment business today, he simply wouldn’t have had a chance. The front page of this year’s Berkshire Hathaway shareholder letter shows that he trailed the market 33% of the time in the first 6 years in business (1965-1970), and the company lost half of its market value in 1974. Very few fund managers today, if any at all, that lose half of their market value in one year, trailing the market by 22 percentage points … Read more

Thinking About Increasing Equity Exposure Modestly in Best Ideas Newsletter Portfolio

  Image Source: Berkshire Hathaway By Brian Nelson, CFA I’m putting together something for you… …an annotated commentary of Berkshire Hathaway’s (BRK.A, BRK.B) recently-released 2015 annual report, and specifically Warren Buffett’s letter to shareholders. Why does my opinion on this topic matter? Well, having trained hundreds of equity and credit analysts on the concept of “economic moats” (or competitive advantages) across continents for one of the largest independent investment research firms and its clients and beyond, I believe that my opinion is at least worth hearing on the topic, if only for thought-generation, conceptual understanding, and debate. Given some of the recent technical strength at Berkshire, we are also considering taking a bite out of shares should markets remain strong, … Read more