Big Buy Backs from Two Dividend Growth Portfolio Holdings

Triple-A rated Microsoft and Hasbro are turning up the gears in buying back stock. Following what can best be described as a difficult quarter, Microsoft (MSFT) is stepping up its game in buying back its own undervalued stock. Before the end of 2016, the software giant plans to put to work the $31 billion remaining on its share repurchase program. To help it do so, the company is selling $7+ billion in debt, and the timing couldn’t be better. Shares of Microsoft are hovering just over $40 each, and with our fair value pegged in the mid-$50s, levering up the company via buying its own underpriced stock makes a lot of sense. The financial team at Microsoft is creating significant … Read more

One Dividend Suspension and Five Other Disappointments

The wreckage in crude oil prices has left many in awe of the range of probable outcomes for the commodity even over a multi-month period, let alone a multi-year period. The precipitous decline has forced high-yielding equities such as Linn Energy (LINE) and Seadrill (SDRL) to slash their income payouts and begin the long road to recovery, as it has pushed the backs of others, including Legacy Reserves (LGCY), against the wall. Investor confidence, once lost, however may never be regained, and management teams know this. A dividend cut will always be the last resort, but crude oil hasn’t been the only commodity falling out of favor. Copper and iron ore have also seen much better days, too. January 26 … Read more

Biggest News of the Day: Hasbro Beats Mattel and Jakks Pacific for Frozen Dolls

Mattel (MAT) could have been thought of as a lock to win a new merchandising agreement with Disney (DIS) to sell the princess dolls of Elsa and Anna from the blockbuster animated movie Frozen. After all, Mattel is widely-known for its dominance in the doll category thanks to its Barbie line-up. If not Mattel, surely it would be Jakks Pacific (JAKK), who currently sells a variety of Disney fairies dolls, playsets, dress-up and accessories. But both of these companies lost out to Habro (HAS), which today landed a new strategic merchandising relationship with Disney Consumer Products and Frozen Properties beginning in 2016. We think this news is huge and further supports our valuation and dividend thesis on the Dividend Growth … Read more

Still Not Worried about Hasbro

It was December 2011, and our team was considering adding either Mattel (MAT) or Hasbro (HAS) to the Dividend Growth portfolio. We could only add one due to diversification considerations (both are consumer discretionary physical toy makers), and both had strong dividends and were undervalued. Hasbro, however, had a slightly better Dividend Cushion score, and we opted to include its shares in the portfolio instead of Mattel’s. Though we discussed a great many different things about both of the companies, we’ve been very pleased with the selection of Hasbro into the portfolio, and we credit the Dividend Cushion methodology for providing the incremental relative insight into the stock-selection process. Since its addition, Hasbro has leapt more than 60%, excluding dividend … Read more

Valuentum Economic Castleâ„¢ Rating Update

Read: Keeping the Horse Before the Cart: Valuentum’s Economic Castle™ Rating The Economic Castle Focuses on the Magnitude of Economic Value Creation The Valuentum Economic Castle™ rating is an enhancement of the competitive advantage framework (commonly known as economic moat analysis) that has become widespread and ubiquitous within the investing world. Whereas an economic moat framework evaluates a firm on the basis of the sustainability and durability of its competitive advantages, Valuentum’s Economic Castle™ rating evaluates a firm on the basis of the firm’s future economic profit spread (return on invested capital less its weighted average cost of capital). The companies with the strongest Valuentum Economic Castle™ ratings are poised to generate the most economic value for shareholders in the … Read more

Patience Almost Always Pays Off

A couple weeks ago, we outlined how patience and perspective are two very valuable qualities when it comes to investing. We used Google (GOOG) in that example, which spanned a longer time period, but we think Hasbro (HAS) is also a firm that fits the mold but over a shorter one. Many times investors use peer or industry performance to ascertain whether a closely-related firm will perform in similar fashion. Though there is undoubtedly an association between end market demand for each firm in a given industry, outside of the commodity-producing spaces, individual firm-specific dynamics can often counteract or mitigate what otherwise could have resulted in poor performance for all, indiscriminately. Mattel (MAT) sent shutters through the toy industry when … Read more

Mattel’s Results Fail to Impress; Awaiting Hasbro’s Earnings in February

On Friday, toy maker Mattel (MAT) reported disappointing fourth-quarter financial results that sent tremors through much of the physical toy industry. The firm noted that worldwide net sales fell 6% from the prior-year quarter, with North American gross sales down 10% and ‘International’ sales roughly flat with the same quarter a year ago. Weakness across its core brand portfolio was startling: Barbie down 13%, Hot Wheels down 8% and Fisher Price down 13%. The only core brand that advanced was American Girl, which nudged just 3% higher. Adjusted earnings per share came in at $1.07 versus the $1.12 mark in last year’s quarter. Though the bottom-line results missed expectations by $0.13, it didn’t stop the board from raising the dividend … Read more

Three Reasons Why Dividend Growth Investors Are Quite Savvy

A version of this article appeared on our website on October 1, 2013. There are many different approaches to investing, but we think dividend growth investors are quite savvy, especially when they combine a rigorous dividend growth process in the form of the Valuentum Dividend Cushion ratio with the valuation rigors behind the Valuentum Buying Index. Let’s examine the three reasons why we think dividend growth investors are a smart group in the age of ultra-low interest rates. #1. Fool Me Once, Shame on You…Fool Me Twice, Shame on Me Today’s dividend growth crowd has seen enough. First, they witnessed the dot-com bubble (1997-2000), a period in stock market history where firms’ stock prices soared in some cases as a result … Read more