Apple iPhone Supply Disruptions Not Likely to Hurt Markets with Overall Holiday Sales Reportedly Strong

Image: Holiday sales are expected to expand ~2.5% in 2022 over very strong growth in 2021 and 2020. Image Source: Adobe By Brian Nelson, CFA Tesla (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk and Apple (AAPL) CEO Tim Cook seemingly have worked out a plan for Apple to keep advertising on the Twitter platform after what looked to be a temporary pause by the iPhone maker. Though the news is immaterial to our thesis on Apple in any respect, it was good to see the two tech giants work whatever differences they had out. Certainly, a fallout between Musk and Cook would not be a good thing for the tech sector and innovation, more broadly, as the two wield large influences across Silicon … Read more

Oil Prices Collapse, Reiterating 2,350-2,750 S&P 500 Target Range; Credit Crunch Looming?

Image Source: Value Trap: Theory of Universal Valuation From Value Trap: “The banking sector was not the only sector that faced considerable selling pressure during the Financial Crisis of the late 2000s, of course. Other companies that required funding to maintain their business operations faced severe liquidity risk, or a situation where refinancing, or rolling over debt, might be difficult to do on fair terms, making such financing prohibitive in some cases. Those that faced outsize debt maturities during the most severe months of the credit crunch faced a real threat of Chapter 11 restructuring had the lending environment completely seized. In thinking about share prices as a range of probable fair value outcomes, equity prices tend to face pressure as … Read more

Coronavirus May Trigger Long-Anticipated Global Recession

Image: Wuhan New Coronavirus This was the catalyst that nobody was expecting, a novel coronavirus that nobody had in their economic models. We think global economic activity is slowing as we speak, and the spread of the virus may only accelerate in mainland China and elsewhere. Investors should keep a level head and perhaps think about adding protection to their portfolios before it becomes too expensive. By Brian Nelson, CFA How to Use Valuentum’s Investment Research Services >> We’ve walked through a number of scenarios that could trip the global economy into recession–global deflation that tips over the weakest European banks and causes contagion, global military conflict with North Korea or Iran that disrupts economic activity, increased volatility driven by … Read more

ICYMI: Interview with Valuentum’s Callum Turcan

Callum Turcan helps head up Valuentum’s research product and is co-editor of the company’s newsletters. We sat down with Callum to get his thoughts on new developments in the market and economy. Let’s kick things off with his thoughts on Brexit. Callum Turcan: Looks like the Brexit debate is coming to a close with a large Tory majority coming into the UK Parliament (EWU) after the December 12 general election, a large enough majority to provide Prime Minister Boris Johnson with more than enough room to maneuver the likely political obstacles ahead (over the next couple of months). By early 2020, it seems the UK will no longer be a member of the EU given that the incoming Parliament, in … Read more

No Recession At Walmart; Estee Lauder Not Cheap

Image Source: Mike Mozart Walmart’s results were quite reassuring regarding the health of the economy. There are also pockets of significant strength, with prestige beauty being catapulted by a “selfie generation.”  By Brian Nelson, CFA No Recession At Walmart Following what can best be described as “carnage” across the retail sector when Macy’s reported August 14, Walmart (WMT) eased some of the concerns in the retail sector when the bellwether reported August 15. Although Amazon (AMZN) seems to get most of the attention when it comes to assessing the health of the consumer, Walmart remains twice as large, as measured by revenue. Walmart generated ~$514 billion in revenue during its last fiscal year, while Amazon hauled in ~$233 billion. If the … Read more

Opinion: China-US Trade Augmented, Not Paralyzed Under Trump

Image Source: Fuzzy Gerdes By Brian Nelson, CFA “(Trump’s) tough rhetoric may just be setting the negotiations table with China (and Mexico, too), and Negotiations 101 says you start far away from the middle, and then you compromise to get what you truly want.” Nobody wins from a trade war, and business tycoon and President-elect Donald Trump knows this. It’s Business 101. Many believe, including us, that imposing steep tariffs on imports from China (MCHI, EWH, FXI) had been merely campaign rhetoric to win over votes, but many market participants are still positioning themselves for some degree of fallout nonetheless. China itself is not taking chances either. The country’s state-backed newspaper Global Times fired a shot across the bow November … Read more

China

Image Source: Mike Behnken Our concerns about China are not new, and neither are your concerns. The potential Treasury Secretary-to-be, Carl Icahn, that is one in a world of a Donald Trump presidency, which has become all-the-more likely now that Ted Cruz and John Kasich have stepped aside, recently brought to light the differences between a capitalist society such as that of the US and a communist nation such as that of China (FXI). Unlike the US government which isn’t necessarily anti-business, even if it isn’t pro-business if existing corporate tax rates are any measure, the Chinese government can make things awfully hard on any company doing business within its borders, if it wants to. What Icahn has been referring … Read more

The Chinese Market Is Rigged

The Chinese equity markets do not reflect reality. The government has made it so. Trading on hundreds of  Chinese-listed stocks has been halted or suspended during the past few weeks, short selling (or even selling by large shareholders) has been banned, and as much as 10% of GDP has been pledged to prop up Chinese shares, and the list of government intervention goes on and on. The Chinese equity markets are “rigged,” and the government holds all the cards. Even so, share prices won’t stop falling. There may be nothing left to stop them. The writing has been on the wall for years that a bubble had been forming in China. As when everyone was on margin and “playing” the … Read more

Alibaba Shares Disappoint

No need for boo-hooing BABA just yet. We’re aware of the poor performance of Alibaba’s shares, and we’re as disappointed as any. But we haven’t gone sour on the firm.  Chinese stocks (FXI) recently entered a bear market as the Shanghai Composite Index has dropped over 20% from its June 12 peak. The market is now in the midst of what most call a “self-correction,” as Chinese equity valuations have become out of touch with underlying fundamentals, though we maintain our view that both Alibaba and Baidu (BIDU) remain significantly undervalued. The People’s Bank of China, in an attempt to halt the recent slide in share prices, cut both its one-year lending and deposit rates by 0.25%. In addition, the … Read more

Yikes! Investor Expectations

A few days ago, I received an email from a valued member of ours. He said that our call on Ford (F) was wrong because we removed shares from the Best Ideas portfolio too early. Another member mentioned a couple months ago that we removed Baidu (BIDU) from the Best Ideas portfolio too early, and he was extremely disappointed for this reason. One of our most valued financial advisor clients, whom said that our call on a certain industry had saved him millions in client assets, decided to cancel his subscription due to a structural shift in his business to ETFs. The puzzling part of all of this, however, is that our call on Ford reaped a ~35% gain, the … Read more