The 20 Something’s Stock Portfolio

A version of this article appeared on our website March 31, 2015. <Our best ideas at any time are included in the Best Ideas Newsletter portfolio and Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio.> The “20 Something’s Stock Portfolio” is the first in a series of articles where we get to the core of what many brand new investors want to do when they are first introduced to the stock market: find exciting companies that they are familiar with that will help compound their wealth over time. Other portfolios that we will share in this series include “The Ultra High Income Portfolio,” “The Economic Castle Portfolio,” “The Dividend Cushion Portfolio,” and “The Intelligent ETF Investor’s Portfolio,” among others. The series of portfolios will … Read more

Chipotle Fourth Quarter Comps Suffer Greatly; Could Qdoba Be the One to Eat Chipotle’s Lunch?

Chipotle’s (CMG) operating performance has come under tremendous pressure in recent months due to a number of reports linking illness in customers to its restaurants. At first, we thought the situation would be relatively contained to just a few dozen instances of sickened customers, but more concerns have come to light since we last commented on the topic. The media is having a field day. Can a company that prides itself on “Food with Integrity” endure, and why so many different causes of illness, from E. coli to salmonella to the norovirus? Could these events mark the beginning of the end of the burrito-making giant’s growth prospects, or is the bad press just a hiccup of indigestion, soon to be … Read more

Seeking to De-risk the Newsletter Portfolios

There’s never a good reason to panic in investing, but the 276-point slide in the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DIA) January 4, the worst start to a year since the credit crisis in 2008, reminded us why we hold more than a 30% cash position in both newsletter portfolios at the moment: with a US stock market still near all-time highs, we like having ample capital available to scoop up bargains as stocks inevitably give back some of their gains. The question for us is not whether the broader US stock market will decline from here but whether such a decline will be 10%, 20% or more. After all, the S&P 500 (SPY) has essentially tripled from the March 2009 … Read more

Getting Excited About Potentially Adding Chipotle

Sometimes some of the best franchises never really go on sale, so when they get hit with an exogenous, temporary shock such as what is currently happening with Chipotle (CMG), we pay very close attention. In our view, the market is over-reacting to transient E. coli scares that are helping to mark down the company’s equity to more palatable prices for interested “new money.” Chipotle’s shares still aren’t terribly cheap on the basis of our discounted cash-flow process, but we simply can’t ignore the price fall, which has sent the burrito-making giant’s shares under $500, breaching through our fair value estimate to the downside – remember, the Valuentum process first requires a firm’s equity to bottom, form a base and … Read more

Alibaba Pops; Kinder Morgan Drops; Chipotle Flops

A discounted cash-flow process is your best friend. Not only does it allow you to identify the substance of a company’s balance sheet, what it owns (similar to what you have in your own savings account less all debt), but it also encourages a focus on the future free cash flow stream of the entity (much like your salary after expenses, for example). Intrinsic value estimation provides the backbone behind the conviction that an investor gains in either sticking with an idea or throwing in the cards. You can perform discounted cash flow analysis, too.   Let’s walk through a few examples to help explain this concept. In mid-September, shares of Alibaba (BABA) had been in a tailspin, with investors … Read more

Restaurants: Pulling Out All the Stops?

Yum! Brands’ (YUM) second annual earnings-per-share guidance revision for 2015 in a matter of a couple weeks–as late in the year as the month of October–must be a new record for an executive suite. Credibility now shot, management is pulling out all the stops and going full-steam ahead with separating its China operations from the rest of its business. Yum! Brands is simply shell-shocked, in our view, and is acquiescing to activist investor demands that may not be beneficial to the interest of long-term shareholders. We think the move by the executive suite is being pursued solely to preserve their jobs.   Though some estimates suggest that a separation of Yum! Brands’ China Division from the rest of its operations … Read more

The Continued Rise of Pizza and How to Play It

Image Source: Blaze The pizza industry is flat-out sizzling! Or is it stuffed? Call it how you want, but pizza is hot! Literally, and well, figuratively. There are some pretty interesting statistics about pizza. Here are a few from the latest Pizza Industry Analysis at Franchise Help: Americans eat on average 100 acres of pizza daily or 350 slices per second. In addition, 93 percent of Americans eat at least one pizza per month, easily making pizza the number one dinner choice in the United States. With such mass appeal, it is no surprise that this $40 billion industry (measured by sales per year) makes up approximately 17 percent of all restaurants in the nation…there are approximately 65,000 pizzerias in … Read more

Here’s A Quick Proof of Why We Think the Way We Do

Let’s walk through a very basic proof of why we think the way we do. 1) Stocks have an intrinsic value per share that is based on the underlying firm’s future free cash flows and net balance sheet (among other adjustments). Why? Because an investor can buy the whole company outright, pay off the debtholders, and reap the rewards of the future free cash flow stream. 2) Stock prices trade around the firm’s intrinsic value per share, sometimes above it, sometimes below it. Why? Because stock prices are unpredictable in the near term, and purchases and sales can be for a variety of reasons that are unrelated to the fundamentals. 3) Stock prices that are converging to intrinsic value have a greater … Read more

10 Bucks per Hour; What It Really Means

Source: US Department of Labor, Walmart Walmart (WMT) is quite savvy. The big box retailer announced February 19 it would raise the minimum wage for all of its US workers to $9 per hour in April of this year and at least $10 per hour by next February. The move comes amid ongoing public scrutiny of its labor practices, elevated worker turnover, and general malaise among the ranks on social media platforms. At face value, the news headlines show Walmart caving to public pressure, and a win for big labor, but in reality, the retailing giant is merely doing what good businesses do – pleasing customers (which are its workers, too) and widening its economic moat. Hiking wages accomplishes both. … Read more

Yum! Brands’ Fourth-Quarter Earnings Preview

Yum! Brands reports after the bell today. Watch Valuentum’s President Brian Nelson on CNBCAsia at 5:40CT. If 16%+ comparable-store sales growth during any given period can ever be described as such, Chipotle (CMG) dropped the ball during its calendar fourth quarter. The fast-casual burrito maker’s shares are facing pressure as a result of management’s overly conservative comp guidance of low-to-mid-single digit growth for 2015, as if we haven’t seen this before. Chipotle sets the bar low and then hurdles over it like an Olympic high-jumper. McDonald’s (MCD), on the other hand, is in a world of hurt, and with CEO Don Thompson’s retirement, the brand has been shaken to the core as it struggles to connect with millennials. Investors in … Read more