$20 Oil Prices…For Real? Investors Drinking Too Much Coke?

I had to do a double take. Citigroup’s commodities research department issued a warning that crude oil prices (USO) could plunge to $20 per barrel “for a while.” They believe this time is different. Pointing to an oversupplied market and full storage tanks, the research outfit believes shale-oil in the US has changed the game and may sound the death knell for the cartel. We haven’t seen $20 crude oil prices since the 1990s, and even then, only for a short period of time. This is a big call. Our view, however, is that OPEC remains as powerful as ever. The fact that crude oil prices have reacted so negatively to the cartel’s commitment to producing regardless of the price … Read more

Gearing Up for 2015 Outlooks

Though the firms below aren’t included in the newsletter portfolios, we keep a close eye on them should an opportunity ever present itself. Not only are they fantastic companies with strong business models, but they also provide insight into the broad industries in which they operate. With only a couple weeks left in 2014, management teams are actively preparing their budgets for 2015. Let’s have a look at what a few bellwethers have been saying about their outlooks for next year. Industrial Bellwether 3M (MMM)  The maker of Post-it notes has become the poster child of aggressive dividend growth policy as of late. Having traditionally raised its dividend a penny or two per year in the past, 3M upped the … Read more

$45 Oil Prices!?!? There Is Never a Sense of Urgency When One Is Prepared

Image Source: Macrotrends The bull market in energy (XLE) has lasted for the better part of a decade. Ever since the turn of the new century, energy perma-bulls have made the case that “black gold” (USO) should continue its ever-upward price advance thanks to ongoing demand from emerging and developing economies coupled with reduced inventories and areas of supply. We’re seeing this thesis challenged right at this moment. In deciding not to cut crude oil output in the face of oversupply and falling prices, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), for the lack of a better phrase, is now essentially engaged in a price war with producers in the US that are using breakthrough technology to produce oil … Read more

We’re At New Highs Again

The taper came and went, and the markets don’t seem to care. The S&P 500 notched yet another high this week. The correction that we warned about came and went as well, almost as if market forces created such an event just to move higher. From my experience, the market, at the present moment, is trading almost purely on technicals. For example, once we touched the 10% official mark of a correction, we started to move higher, and once the markets started to move higher, the move accelerated. Consecutive gap ups following pull-backs have become the norm. This market has become almost a pure technical market, where traders and moving averages are taking precedent over fundamentals. This won’t last forever. The … Read more

This Just Feels Different…Mr. Brown

We think the correction is coming. Here are 7 reasons why we plan to reduce exposure to cyclicals and add some protection to the portfolios. By Brian Nelson, CFA I hope you don’t mind my using baseball analogies. Baseball and investing are perhaps the only two endeavors where if you get more than half right, you’re at the top of the list. In any case, you don’t have to be a big baseball fan to appreciate the similarities. I used an example with Ted Williams in this piece about fat pitch investing, but there’s another analogy that is worth sharing. I’ve been to the Louisville Slugger Museum and Factory Tour a few times in the past couple years. My little … Read more

The Dividend Dilemma

One of the core tenets of the Valuentum process not only rests in the all-important price vs. value consideration (see Valuentum’s Brian Nelson talk about that here), but also in “letting winners run.” At first read, these two items appear to be at odds with each other. For example, we preach about getting stocks at a bargain, but yet, we don’t sell holdings when they start to move beyond our estimate of their fair value. What gives? At the Valuentum core, we prefer an entry point that corresponds to the time when shares have substantial valuation and pricing support (i.e. they have high Valuentum Buying Index ratings), and we prefer an exit point when shares have little valuation and pricing … Read more

Peltz’s Reasons for Breaking up Pepsi Do Not Hold Water

Our team took a read of Barron’s cover story over the weekend on Pepsi (PEP) that goes into activist investor Nelson Peltz’s thesis for breaking up the firm into two pieces: a soda group and a snacks group. Nelson Peltz’s Trian Partners holds ~$1.2 billion of Pepsi’s shares, so he has a relatively large voice on the future direction of the company. Barron’s seemed to take the opinion that a break-up makes sense, but after reading the article, we were left with little economic reason to believe that a split should be pursued. For background, the thesis on breaking up Pepsi goes something like this: “a split would allow both beverages and snacks to operate more entrepreneurially. ‘The goal is … Read more

Coca-Cola Expanding Its Dominance; SodaStream in Play

Coca-Cola (KO) has recently become a savvy asset manager, and we think recent moves speak volumes about the company’s strategy to retain dominance in the non-alcoholic beverage space for decades to come. Coca-Cola’s management is capitalizing on what we’d describe to be the ‘Hidden Advantage‘—something more commonly witnessed in activist dealings in which small initial stakes turn into large gains once news is made public. In February, for example, Coca-Cola scooped up 10% of Green Mountain at $74.98 per share (it subsequently increased its stake to 16%). With shares of Green Mountain (GMCR) now trading at ~$115 each, the deal for just a small portion of Green Mountain looks incredibly savvy—especially in the event Coca-Cola ends up buying Green Mountain … Read more