Earnings Insight – Visa

Image source: Visa Let’s cover some ground on Visa’s (V) calendar third-quarter report, its fiscal fourth-quarter release. What management said: “We continue to deliver healthy earnings growth in the face of continued, but abating headwinds. We have begun to see the benefits from our acquisition of Visa Europe and strong cost discipline helped our results. At the same time, we are unwavering in our commitment to invest in client partnership opportunities and the further build out of our digital payments capabilities,” said Charlie Scharf, Chief Executive Officer of Visa Inc. “As we enter fiscal 2017, we are positioned well as revenue headwinds will continue to ease, we will continue to see the benefits from Visa Europe in our results, and … Read more

Breaking the Bank…

Image Source: Tony Webster By Brian Nelson, CFA Financial institutions (XLF, KBE) are unique entities. In good times, the growth of pre-tax pre-provision earnings and return on equity often have more influence over banking entities’ stock prices than anything else, but in bad times, the health of their loan/derivative books and the strength of their capital bases are the most important factors when it comes to buying and selling activity. Throw in outsize leverage, huge derivatives books, and market psychology, and you have, in my opinion, still one of the riskiest sectors out there. As followers know, we don’t like firm-specific exposure to the banking sector. We perform valuation exercises on banks in a rather straightforward way, using a residual … Read more

Frozen Capital: What Nobody Is Talking About…Anymore

Image Source: Janet Ramsden UK property funds have frozen redemptions. What happens when they finally allow investors to flee the country? The US equity markets continue to set new highs, but many risks remain, not the least of which is the fallout to come from Brexit. In some respects, we’re surprised nobody is really talking about it much anymore, but UK property funds have suspended redemptions, even beyond the previous three we reported on, “The Next Banking Crisis? No… Well, Not Yet (July 2016).” This is a big deal because it is just the beginning of the capital-flight process. We think it is wise that such funds are limiting redemptions to avoid an all-out collapse in property prices across the … Read more

Understanding the Market Melt Up

Image Source: Martin Thomas A previous version of this article appeared on our website April 15, 2016, “The Bubble Is Still Inflating.” No – things are not getting better. The discount rate is shrinking – and that means rising equity values. The laws of finance continue to be bent. NIRP (negative interest rate policy) has changed everything. The world is upside down, and it seems as though every week, we hear of another country or yet another long-er duration bond that has breached below the 0% threshold, “Japan’s 20-Year Government Bond Yield Goes Negative for First Time (July 2016).” The 10-year Treasury yield hit all-time lows just last week. We wrote extensively on the NIRP topic in the February 1, … Read more

Sharp Curves Ahead for US Auto Market?

“Auto is clearly a little stretched, in my opinion…Someone is going to get hurt…We don’t do much of that.” — JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon, Yahoo Finance, June 2016  The month of May saw many major automakers report significant declines in sales in the US. Could the effect of pent-up demand for autos finally be slowing? An overheated loan market is adding concern to the situation. By Kris Rosemann Major automakers will be forced to make some important decisions in coming months. The US auto market is clearly slowing from the breakneck pace it set last year, particularly late last year, as total US auto sales fell 6% in May 2016 from May 2015. The strength of the rally in recent … Read more

Brexit: Secession Bells Are Ringing!

First Baptist Church in Columbia, S.C., where the first secession convention in the United States opened on Dec. 17, 1860. Source: Library of Congress, Washington, DC. Photo. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Web. 24 Jun. 2016. Global markets are plunging, and the implosion may still be in the early innings. Market valuations remain stretched among stagnant global economic growth, and “Brexit” may be the catalyst for a correction. In the paraphrased words of the well-known The Day of the Jackal author, Frederick Forsyth: the peasants have spoken. On June 23, the UK (EWU) held a referendum, in which anyone of voting age could take part, to decide whether the country should leave the European Union. The turnout was incredible at nearly 72%, and … Read more

2,350-2,750 on the S&P? Could the Coronavirus Catalyze a Financial Crisis?

Image: We think a rather modest sell-off in the market to the target range of 2,350-2,750 on the S&P 500 is rather reasonable in the wake of one of the biggest economic shocks since the Global Financial Crisis. The chart above shows how far markets have advanced since 2011, and an adjustment lower to the target range of 2,350-2,750 is rather modest in such a context and would only bring markets to late 2018 levels (note red box as the target range). The range reflects ~16x S&P 500 12-month forward earnings estimates, as of February 14, adjusted down 10% due to COVID-19. When companies like Visa talk about a couple percentage points taken off of growth rates, one knows that … Read more

LINK –> Massive Unrest In Europe, Energy Crisis Could Be the Catalyst to Topple the Global Markets

Image Shown: The SSGA ETFS Europe II PLC SPDR MSCI Europe Industrials UCITS ETF, listed in the UK, tracks large and mid-sized European industrial firms. Shares of the ETF have fallen sharply year-to-date as recessionary fears across Europe have grown substantially in the wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and the related European energy crisis. “Surging energy prices in Europe are decimating consumer spending power and forcing industrial companies to sharply scale back production. It is estimated that six in 10 British factories could fold as a result of the crisis, according to reports from Bloomberg.” — The Valuentum Team By Callum Turcan The European energy crisis continues to unfold, and we’ve been keeping our members … Read more

ICYMI — Podcast: 2nd Annual Nelson Exclusive Yearly Round Up Call

Tune in to President of Investment Research Brian Nelson’s Exclusive Yearly Roundup Call. Ladies and gentlemen, Thank you for joining us on our second annual Nelson Exclusive roundup call. I appreciate your interest very much, and I appreciate your attention even more. Just an important reminder, Valuentum is an information provider, not a broker or financial advisor, and we do not issue recommendations of any kind. With that said, let’s get started. These are the best of times. We have now surpassed the 9-year mark since the March 2009 panic bottom that sent shudders through the global financial system, and the US economy is as strong as it has ever been. US gross domestic product is now approaching $20 trillion … Read more