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

Europe and China

Europe and China are on high alert. European Central Bank President Mario Draghi made it known that the ECB will do everything in its power to “expand its asset purchase programs if inflation fails to show signs of quickly returning to the ECB’s target.” Just a few weeks ago, Draghi had sent shudders through the global equity markets with his view that “without reform, there can be no recovery.” It appears that significant and aggressive monetary action may be the only option for a European continent that could once again be headed into recession and/or deflation. This announcement won’t be the last that we hear regarding moves to aid the European economy. Iron ore prices have been in free fall … Read more

Yum! Brands, McDonald’s: ‘Big Trouble in Little China’

Source: Dragon TV 00:27 / 08:28 Source: Dragon TV 00:35 / 08:28 Source: Dragon TV 01:19 / 08:28 The pictures above are allegedly from a Chinese plant of Shanghai Husi Food, owned by OSI Group, which is based in Aurora, Illinois. This link source will take you directly to the actual news footage from local Dragon TV (it is not translated to English, but the video is of high quality). Shanghai Husi Food is a key local meat supplier in China to KFC, owned by Yum! Brands (YUM), and McDonald’s (MCD)—as well as Starbucks (SBUX), but to a lesser extent. All three US-based restaurants have since halted buying meat products from the company. What makes this story worse is that … Read more

Iron Ore Prices Plunge

Worries about the pace of China’s economic expansion are hurting prices for iron ore. According to data from the Steel Index Ltd, benchmark iron ore dropped more than 8% to $104.70 a dry ton March 10, falling the most since August 2009. Over the weekend, news revealed that Chinese exports dropped a surprisingly 18.1% in February, relative to expectations calling for a 7.5% increase. According to customs data released March 8, China’s imports of iron ore were 61.24 million metric tons in February, significantly below the 86.83 million tons registered in January. The news, while not shocking, wasn’t very pleasant. Still, we’re taking the recently-released February numbers with a grain of salt. Scares regarding the pace of China’s economic growth … Read more

Is the Worst Behind China?

Summer was not very kind to the Chinese economy. We’ve seen the country hit by concerns of credit overexpansion, as well as negative manufacturing data and declining exports. On top of macro issues, companies that usually prosper in China like Nike (click ticker for report: ) and Yum! Brands (click ticker for report: ) posted weak results. However, after bottoming out at 47.7 during July, the HSBC China Manufacturing PMI compiled by Markit turned modestly positive at 50.1 during the month of August (anything above 50 represents expansion). Industry destocking appears to be mostly completed, and manufacturers are receiving more new orders. HSBC’s lead Asian economist Hongbin Qu implied the economy had bottomed, saying in the press release: “The final … Read more

Rio Tinto Improves Cash Flow in Weak Mining Environment

Key Takeaways ·         Cost cuts helped Rio Tinto stomach weak commodity end markets. ·         Production increases buffered weak iron ore prices. ·         China remains a key driver of growth. Country data flow continues to contradict. ·         We continue to hold Rio Tinto in our Best Ideas Newsletter portfolio…but we think it could be a wild ride. Best Ideas Newsletter portfolio holding Rio Tinto (click ticker for report: ) announced weak, but better-than-expected, financial performance for the first half of 2013 Thursday. Earnings per share declined 71% year-over-year to $0.93, though revenue declined only 3% year-over-year to $24.5 billion as production increases were able to partially offset commodity price weakness. Underlying earnings per share, which is adjusted for one-time charges, exchange rates, and write-downs, … Read more

Valuentum’s Economic Roundtable: Trade War, Factors and Beyond

Tickerized for holdings in the DIA. The markets rallied hard September 5 on relief that the US and China (FXI, MCHI) will go back to the negotiations table next month. This back-and-forth news cycle is enough to give any investor whiplash. Let’s catch up with the Valuentum Team on the latest developments, not only with the trade war but also with respect to factor investing, possible bubbles and beyond. Let’s kick things off with the following prompt from ForeignPolicy.com, released August 2: Trump Hired Robert Lighthizer to Win a Trade War. He Lost. Robert Lighthizer, the U.S. trade representative, agreed to serve in President Donald Trump’s cabinet in order to test his theory: that if the United States freed itself … 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

Valuentum Exclusive Yearly Round Up

Select the following link to access the Annual Exclusive Call. Select HERE to Access the Exclusive Call Recording ———- Transcript Provided Below. President of Investment Research Brian Nelson: Ladies and Gentlemen, Thank you for your attendance. Today marks three years since we first launched the Exclusive publication. The Exclusive is our premiere offering for sophisticated investors and builds upon our successes of the past, not only in establishing one of the first methodologies that successfully blends enterprise valuation with behavioral valuation and technical and momentum indicators, but also in making such a process available to individuals, financial advisors and institutional investors in full transparency. The Exclusive publication is in many ways an extension of the strong performance of both the … Read more