1Q 2023 Earnings Coming in Better Than Feared Thus Far

By Brian Nelson, CFA We’ve been receiving questions about the companies that we are looking to add to the Best Ideas Newsletter to replace the ones we recently removed, and I can say that we’re strongly considering adding Booking Holding (BKNG) and adding to the existing “position” in Chipotle (CMG) following their first-quarter 2023 results. We recently raised our fair value estimate for Booking Holding significantly (now $3,091; was $2,147 per share), and we expect a huge fair value increase at Chipotle in the coming weeks. Booking Holding will report its first-quarter 2023 earnings in early May, while Chipotle will report first-quarter 2023 results on April 25. We have several other ideas in mind to add to the Best Ideas … Read more

Markets Bounce Off Technical Support But Not Out of the Woods

Image: The market-cap weighted S&P 500 (SPY) bounced off technical support last week, both the 200-day moving average as well as the breakout of the downtrend line, but while this may push off any leg down in the near term, we won’t hesitate to “raise cash” on a few newsletter portfolio names if a breakthrough of support to the downside happens. Image Source: TradingView By Brian Nelson, CFA The 200-day moving average remains a key technical level for the market-cap weighted S&P 500. The risks that the market may break through both the 200-day moving average and the breakout of the technical downtrend line remain elevated, but the past week showed a successful test of technical support levels, in our … Read more

This Remains a Technically-Driven Stock Market

Image: We expect the S&P 500 (SPY) to test support at both its technical uptrend and the 200-day moving average. In the event the SPY breaks through technical support, we’d be looking to “raise cash” across the newsletter portfolios. By Brian Nelson, CFA S&P 500 companies will end 2022 with roughly a 4%-5% decline in fourth-quarter 2022 earnings, according to a February 17 report from FactSet. The Communications Services (XLC), Materials (XLB), Consumer Discretionary (XLY) were the three weakest sectors showing year-over-year earnings declines in the fourth quarter. The two biggest earnings misses during the quarter, in our view, were Goldman Sachs’ (GS) nightmare report and Intel’s (INTC) huge miss and terrible outlook. However, for the most part, fourth-quarter earnings … Read more

Follow Up on Intel’s Dividend Cut: We Will Strive to Do a Better Job Communicating

The Dividend Cushion ratio is one of the most powerful financial tools an income or dividend growth investor can use in conjunction with qualitative dividend analysis. The ratio is one-of-a-kind in that it is both free-cash-flow based and forward looking. Since its creation in 2012, the Dividend Cushion ratio has forewarned readers of approximately 50 dividend cuts. We estimate its efficacy at ~90%. By Brian Nelson, CFA As noted in our brief note on Intel this morning, “Intel Cuts Dividend, As Expected,” we have now refreshed the company’s reports on the website, with updated Dividend Safety and Dividend Growth Potential ratings, both as VERY POOR. After factoring in Intel’s updated outlook to our valuation model from its fourth-quarter release, our … Read more

Intel Cuts Dividend, As Expected

  Image Source: Aaron Fulkerson By Brian Nelson, CFA The Dividend Cushion ratio caught another dividend cut. This time it was Intel’s (INTC). With a Dividend Cushion ratio of 0.4, Intel announced February 22 that it has slashed its dividend by nearly two thirds, to $0.125 on a quarterly basis, down from its prior quarterly dividend of $0.365. The company’s estimated forward yield now stands at ~1.9%, and we can’t say that the dividend cut was unexpected given its massive net debt position and significantly weakened free cash flow generation–the two most important components behind an assessment of its cash-based intrinsic value and dividend health. Intel’s fourth-quarter results and outlook for 2023, released January 26, were atrocious. Here’s what we … Read more

Meta’s Free Cash Flow Generation Has Returned, But TikTok Has Permanently Changed the Competitive Landscape

Image: Meta Platforms’ free cash flow has bounced back a bit, but the firm’s top-line growth remains challenged as it transitions away from a secular growth powerhouse into a cyclical story with encroaching competition. Image Source: Meta Platforms By Brian Nelson, CFA As we outlined in our introductory note in the February edition of the Dividend Growth Newsletter (pdf), the Federal Reserve is slowing its pace of benchmark rate increases as signs of inflation start to slow. Though there may still be pockets of input cost pressures, particularly with respect to prices at the pump and food-at-home expenses, for the most part, the negative wealth effect from falling asset prices around the globe is successfully working itself through the system. … Read more

We Don’t Think Intel Will Spoil the Tech Rally

Image Shown: The Invesco QQQ ETF (QQQ) has broken through its technical downtrend, and we don’t think Intel’s poor outlook will derail this tech rally. Image Source: TradingView By Brian Nelson, CFA The Invesco QQQ ETF (QQQ) has rallied more than 12% to start 2023, and we don’t think much will derail the advance. The pace of inflation looks like it peaked in June 2022 and save for a few big quarterly earnings misses from Goldman Sachs (GS) and Intel (INTC), fourth-quarter 2022 earnings season is shaping up better than feared for a lot of companies. The labor market is easing a bit, and a breakout of both the equal-weight S&P 500 (RSP) and the market-cap weight S&P 500 (SPY) … Read more

Is It Time To Turn Bullish? Inflation Tamed?

To download the January 2023 edition of the Best Ideas Newsletter, please click here (pdf). ——————————————— About Our Name But how, you will ask, does one decide what [stocks are] “attractive”? Most analysts feel they must choose between two approaches customarily thought to be in opposition: “value” and “growth,”…We view that as fuzzy thinking…Growth is always a component of value [and] the very term “value investing” is redundant.                          — Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway annual report, 1992   At Valuentum, we take Buffett’s thoughts one step further. We think the best opportunities arise from an understanding of a variety of investing disciplines in order to identify the most attractive stocks at any given time. Valuentum therefore analyzes each stock across a wide spectrum of philosophies, … Read more

Don’t Let “Them” Spin the Narrative

By Brian Nelson, CFA Let’s call it how it is: 2022 was an absolute nightmare for the 60/40 stock/bond portfolio. During the year, the 60/40 stock/bond portfolio was down 16.9%, according to data from the Vanguard Balanced Index Fund Shares (VBIAX). During 2022, the S&P 500 (SPY) index was down 18.2%, meaning that the 60/40 stock/bond portfolio, despite allocating to 40% bonds, captured over 90% of the downside risk. Modern portfolio theory is dead: Stocks have done far better than bonds during upswings, and only slightly worse during downturns. The risk/reward for the 60/40 stock/bond portfolio just doesn’t add up anymore. Bond prices did not move inversely to stock prices during the COVID-19 meltdown, and they did not move inversely … Read more

These Things Sometimes Take Time

Image: The QQQ, which tracks the Nasdaq-100 Index, including Apple, Alphabet, and Microsoft has been a tremendous generator of wealth. Image Source: TradingView By Brian Nelson, CFA After the huge collapse in the markets in 2020, and the huge rebound in 2021, followed by a large retracement in 2022, we think things are going to be boring in 2023. They are likely going to be so boring that many investors will lose interest at the exact time that they should be most interested–when markets are well off their highs and uncertainty is near its peak.  Dollar Cost Averaging Dollar cost averaging is among the most powerful drivers behind long-term returns. Measuring returns from prior peak to prior peak is often … Read more