ICYMI: Valuentum’s Improved Stock and ETF Web Pages

Valuentum has rolled out improved stock and ETF web pages on its website valuentum.com/. Now, subscribers can access key proprietary information on the stock and ETF web pages in addition to the customary stock and ETF reports. Dear reader, We have some exciting news that we can’t wait to share with you! At valuentum.com/, we have rolled out new stock and ETF pages that conveniently include a variety of our proprietary metrics from the Dividend Cushion ratio to the Economic Castle rating and beyond! There’s even mouseover functionality so you can learn about how we define the key metrics across our stock-selection and dividend growth methodologies. You’ll still have access to the stock and dividend reports on the landing pages, … Read more

Trump Targets China with Tariffs

Image: Shanghai, China (December 2016), Andrey Filippov Stock markets in the US are slowly building in the prospect of retaliation (a “trade war”) from China, as a result of President Trump’s new tariffs. We maintain our view that the stock market has been frothy for some time, and the recent volatility may just be the beginning of a reversion to normalized valuations, with or without concerns about global trade. By Brian Nelson, CFA The market may be using concerns about a “trade war” as a reason to sell overpriced stock. According to Factset, as of March 16, the forward 12-month price-to-earnings ratio for the S&P 500 is still over 17 times, one turn more than the 5-year average and nearly … Read more

The “Luck” and “Randomness” of Index Funds

Please select the image below to download the document. Image shown, page 1 of 14. Tickerized for Valuentum’s coverage universe.

Video: Quants! You’re NOT Measuring VALUE and Nelson’s Theory of Universal Value

President of Investment Research Brian Nelson defines the concept of universal value and shows how quantitative statistical methods are inextricably linked to those of fundamental, financial, business-model related analysis. Value does not exist in respective process vacuums! Value is universal. Find out why. Running time: ~10 minutes.  Tickerized for Valuentum’s stock and ETF coverage universe. Transcript Hi this is Brian Nelson from Valuentum Securities, and this is the tenth edition of a series that I call “Off the Cuff,” where I get in front of the camera and I talk for ten minutes. This is what we have to talk about today. We have to talk about this concept: The Theory of Universal Value. Value does not exist in vacuums … Read more

Earnings Roundup: Unilever, Procter & Gamble, Kimberly-Clark

We love the business models of consumer staples, but recent fundamental performance hasn’t been great, and valuations are a bit stretched. Unilever is blaming natural disasters in the US for its underlying sales growth shortfalls, Procter & Gamble has to deliver now that it defeated Nelson Peltz, and Kimberly-Clark’s meager top-line expansion may not support its valuation. A good business does not always make a good stock. By Brian Nelson, CFA Consumer staples stocks (VDC, FSTA, XLP) are fundamentally-sound entities that sell everyday items that consumers need regardless of the ups and downs of the economic cycle. That makes their business models quite resilient through thick and thin, but it also means that many are household companies that everybody knows … Read more

Valuentum’s 3 Breakthroughs in the Field of Finance and More

Valuentum’s President Brian Nelson pauses for a picture before speaking at the CFA Society of Houston in March 2017. By Valuentum Editorial Staff Let’s cover Valuentum’s 3 major breakthroughs in the field of finance. The first one is big and may challenge you to rethink everything you think you know about investing. 1. On a logical framework, Valuentum has debunked John C. Bogle’s landmark syllogism that has paved the way for the concept of index investing. Index investing has been built on a logical shortcoming, whether supported by evidence or not. We think it is important that the investment community know of this. Read (pdf): The “Luck” and “Randomness” of Index Funds (2018), Brian Nelson, CFA See video documentation: /FALLACY_of_Index_Funds To … Read more

Consumer Staples Giants Demonstrate Pricing Strength

The strengthening US dollar continues to muddy quarterly results for multinational corporations. Coca-Cola (KO), Kimberly-Clark (KMB), and Procter & Gamble (PG) were no exception in the calendar third quarter. The consumer staples giants demonstrated the strength of their scale and pricing power in the quarter, though reported results could not overcome the significant pressure of foreign-exchange headwinds in economies around the globe with varying growth levels. Coca-Cola, Kimberly-Clark, and Procter & Gamble hold some of the most well-known consumer staples brands in the world. Coca-Cola, for one, has perhaps the most-recognizable soft-drink portfolio of any company, Kimberly-Clark boasts a wide range of trusted consumer staples brands from Huggies to Kleenex, and Procter & Gamble has one of the most diverse … Read more

Restaurants: Pulling Out All the Stops?

Yum! Brands’ (YUM) second annual earnings-per-share guidance revision for 2015 in a matter of a couple weeks–as late in the year as the month of October–must be a new record for an executive suite. Credibility now shot, management is pulling out all the stops and going full-steam ahead with separating its China operations from the rest of its business. Yum! Brands is simply shell-shocked, in our view, and is acquiescing to activist investor demands that may not be beneficial to the interest of long-term shareholders. We think the move by the executive suite is being pursued solely to preserve their jobs.   Though some estimates suggest that a separation of Yum! Brands’ China Division from the rest of its operations … 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