Why Some Investors Fail — Worms!


Image Source: crabchick

When you read our research, we’re not just providing financial metrics — Valuentum is striving to provide an answer to the most important question in investing: what is a company worth? Though there are varying opinions about which underlying factor is the most important investment consideration, at the end of the day, the process of valuation collects every investment consideration to provide a conclusion. It is the answer after all other considerations, the final outcome of analysis. It is why we say that investors that don’t pay attention to valuation may be doomed to fail…eventually. Not seeking valuation is not seeking the answer.

Alcoa Continues Swoon, Revises Aerospace 2016 Outlook to 6%-8% Expansion

Image Source: Boeing; image source: Alcoa Alcoa (AA) kicked off first-quarter 2016 earnings season April 12, but nobody reading our work should have much interest in shares. Our $10 fair value estimate for the company explains the lack of opportunity, and we laid in out in no uncertain terms in April 2015 that we thought, “The Time to Consider Owning Alcoa Has Passed.” Even a few months before that write-up, we said the aluminum giant was trading at a peak multiple on peak earnings, a classic valuation “no-no,” and since that time, shares of Alcoa have fallen more than 40%, “Alcoa Kicks Off Fourth Quarter (2014) Earnings Season:” From our Jan 13, 2015 article: Would we ever considering owning Alcoa … Read more

Giddy Up – It’s Earnings Season!

By Brian Nelson, CFA During the trading session January 27, Apple (AAPL) failed to turn the tide of a disappointing fiscal 2016 first-quarter report (calendar fourth-quarter), “Apple Will Go Lower…And It Will Be ‘Forced’ Into Acquisitions,” and coupled with a Fed statement, where the Committee left interest rates unchanged, as expected, many market observers read between the lines and hit the sell button. On the basis of some of the concerns we’ve outlined, “Not Doom and Gloom – But Just Cautious,” we can completely understand the hesitancy by participants to stay fully exposed to this tumultuous equity market. In many ways, that the Fed has hit the brakes just a few weeks after the long-anticipated rate hike means the global … Read more

The 20 Something’s Stock Portfolio

A version of this article appeared on our website March 31, 2015. <Our best ideas at any time are included in the Best Ideas Newsletter portfolio and Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio.> The “20 Something’s Stock Portfolio” is the first in a series of articles where we get to the core of what many brand new investors want to do when they are first introduced to the stock market: find exciting companies that they are familiar with that will help compound their wealth over time. Other portfolios that we will share in this series include “The Ultra High Income Portfolio,” “The Economic Castle Portfolio,” “The Dividend Cushion Portfolio,” and “The Intelligent ETF Investor’s Portfolio,” among others. The series of portfolios will … Read more

Surveying the Aerospace Arena

The reasons for liking commercial aerospace, or constituents involved in the production of commercial aircraft, are many and varied. The liberalization of air travel between global point-to-point markets has facilitated expansion in not only leisure travel but also business travel between countries. The advent of the low-cost-carrier model in the likes of Southwest (LUV) and others just like it around the globe has made air travel affordable to those that it once had “priced out.” The growing middle class in developing countries has paved the foundation for continued passenger growth, something that should be expected for decades to come. The collapse in jet fuel costs has made the global airline industry, or those involved in the transporting of people from … Read more

Bellwether Snapshot: Walmart, Boeing, CSX

Alcoa (AA) kicked off third-quarter earnings season with a wimper, which had been preceded by Yum! Brands’ (YUM) doozy of a showing. Incremental news impacting the expected performance of Walmart (WMT), Boeing (BA), and CSX (CSX) hasn’t been great either. Investors continue to write off weakness as “normal,” even “macroeconomic” as if it doesn’t matter, pointing to the transient nature of a struggling global economy suffering from a slowdown in the pace of growth in China and weakness in export-dependent countries, not the least of which is Brazil, as somehow a “good thing,” but it may not matter. The trajectory of expectations of future free cash flow generation is being impacted, and so are fair value estimates as a result, … Read more

Alcoa Disappoints in Third Quarter, China Weakness Prevalent

Alcoa (AA) no longer is the industrial bellwether it once was as the global economy migrates more toward a service orientation, but the aluminum giant still has its hands in a lot of end markets. The company’s third-quarter results, released October 8, showed revenue falling 11% on a year-over-year basis, and modest net income of $0.07 per share, excluding special items. Acquisition and divestitures muddied the waters, but the general take was a negative one. The company is doing the best it can to migrate away from the volatility of its lower-margin operations, focusing its efforts on value-add operations, and while it is making progress, the company remains tied to the broader economic environment and the pricing pressures that inevitably … Read more

The “Fully Invested” Argument May Only Make Sense…

…if stock market indices always go up over the long haul. Speaking the obvious… We often receive questions from new members about why we have such large (30%+) cash positions in both newsletter portfolios. Some believe it to be a mistake because they have been taught that “timing the market” and/or assessing overall market valuations is a fool’s errand. For most all investors, it is generally accepted that staying “fully-invested” is a good idea. But let’s take the recent example of Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) buying Precision Castparts (PCP). The latter is certainly not a new company, having been around since the late 1940s, and Buffett has admittedly known about the metal bender for some time. So, then, why … Read more

Buffett Planning to Scoop Up a Valuentum Favorite

We’re hearing that Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A, BRK.B) is nearing a deal to buy one of our favorite commercial aerospace suppliers and former Best Ideas Newsletter holding Precision Castparts (PCP). We’ve always been fans of Precision Castparts and believe its management team is one of the best in all of the industrial sector. This was likely something that convinced the Oracle that Precision Castparts was right for the Berkshire portfolio. As we’ve yet to hear specific deal terms, we believe Berkshire can pay up to $34 billion in equity value, or ~$240 per share and still make this deal work from an economic-value standpoint. Precision Castparts’ shares closed at ~$194 each Friday. We expect aerospace suppliers to catch a … Read more

Aerospace and Automotive Demand Powering Most Industrials

Air travel growth and pent-up demand from delayed auto sales due to the Great Recession have provided a boom in spending within the commercial aerospace and automotive industries in recent years, respectively. The ever-increasing global population continues to be a driving force behind the expansion and adaptation of power end markets, and innovative solutions to meet growing global energy demand will continue to be a source of growth for industrials despite fluctuations in the energy-price markets. Such drivers in part have propelled the underlying performance of industrial giants GE (GE) and Honeywell (HON), among others. Winners and Losers Are Developing in Commercial Aerospace We expect commercial aircraft production and deliveries to continue to increase for at least the next three … Read more