Meta Platforms Surges Back to Fair Value Estimate

Image: Meta Platforms’ shares continue to recover from its massive fallout in 2022. We’re sticking with our $225 fair value estimate following the company’s first-quarter 2023 earnings report. By Brian Nelson, CFA Meta Platforms (META), formerly Facebook, has surged back to our discounted cash-flow-derived fair value estimate. Year-to-date in 2023, the social media behemoth’s shares have almost doubled, and while we are pleased with the company’s share-price comeback, we don’t envision making any material changes to our $225 per-share fair value estimate following the company’s first-quarter 2023 report, which we thought was just okay. Meta Platforms’ shares remain significantly below the $380+ highs that were reached in August 2021. We’re happy to see the pop in Meta’s stock during the … Read more

We Woke Up on the Wrong Side of the Bed

By Brian Nelson, CFA Large Cap Growth Still Dominating Small Cap Value After the ‘value factor’ put up its worst performance in history during 2020, some retracement should have been expected in the subsequent 12-18 months, but large cap growth – our favorite stylistic area – continues to outperform. Since the publishing of the first edition of Value Trap: Theory of Universal Valuation in December 19, 2018, an ETF that tracks large cap growth (SCHG) has outperformed an ETF that tracks small cap value (IWN) by more than 45 percentage points. Using data that goes back to before the invention of the computer and television, researchers will tell you that there’s something called a small cap value premium. However, in … 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

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

The Fed ‘Can’t Stop, Won’t Stop’ Until Labor Market Feels More Pain

  Image: Prices for private label brands at Aldi are considerably lower than those of branded products. The consumer staples sector, however, remains fully-priced with a 21+ forward earnings multiple, and many constituents hold large net debt positions. We believe the sticking point for the Fed is not groceries or gasoline prices, but rather the labor markets, which remain very strong, despite layoffs. Image Source: Valuentum By Brian Nelson, CFA We’ve yet to see the worst of job cuts, in our view. The rapid shift in the global economy mid-2022 was profound, as many companies were still building in anticipation of increased demand during the first half of the year to the point where demand growth started to dry up, … Read more

ICYMI: Things Have Changed Fast; Inflation and the Fed Have Damaged the Economy

This article was originally published October 5.   Image Source: EpicTop10.com By Brian Nelson, CFA The year 2022 started out with the popping of the bubble in the alternative investments arena–namely in the cryptocurrency (BITO), non-fungible token (NFT), and the collectibles markets–coupled with worries about the Fed raising interest rates to combat inflation and weakness in the most speculative equity areas, namely disruptive innovation stocks (ARKK). It’s important to note that the consumer price index (CPI) started to edge meaningfully higher in early 2021 (not this year). Though the writing was on the wall with respect to impending Fed tightening, as investors, we have to assess what the Fed will do and the impact on the markets, not necessarily what … Read more

Things Are Bad Out There

“I don’t like this market one bit, but we have to endure. Markets will rise again, but there will be a lot more pain to come in the near term. We think the base case is that we get a very bad recession in 2023. We’ve yet to pull the trigger on put option ideas in the simulated newsletter portfolios, but we expect things to get worse before they get better. For readers seeking ongoing option ideas each month, please consider subscribing to our options commentary here.” – Brian Nelson, CFA By Brian Nelson, CFA Things are bad out there, and there’s probably no better way to say it. On September 28, Bloomberg reported that Apple Inc. (AAPL) is now … Read more

Fed Raises 75 Basis Points; Food Price Inflation Continues to Wreak Havoc on Consumer Budgets

Image Source: Federal Reserve The Fed upped its key benchmark rate to the range of 3%-3.25% on September 21, but it may not be enough to stem the rise in inflation. We think the market has further room to fall. By Brian Nelson, CFA We think the Fed is looking to crush the economy and break the will of businesses to raise prices. Unfortunately, there is only so much that hiking the federal funds rate can do, and much of the inflation that is hurting the consumer is coming in the form of food prices, and this doesn’t look like it will abate anytime soon. I had warned about a coming market “flush” in a late August video, in part … Read more

Update on Newsletter Portfolio Idea Apple

Image Shown: Shares of Apple Inc have rebounded strongly from their recent lows as of late August 2022. By Callum Turcan Apple Inc (AAPL) reported third-quarter results for fiscal 2022 (period ended June 25, 2022) that beat both consensus top- and bottom-line estimates. Management also noted during Apple’s latest earnings update that supply chain constraints were beginning to ease a bit and that Apple’s near-term growth outlook was improving. We continue to like Apple as an idea in the newsletter portfolios. Shares of AAPL yield ~0.6% as of this writing, and there is an enormous amount of room for Apple to aggressively grow its per-share payout going forward given its financial strength. Earnings Update Apple’s GAAP revenues rose 2% year-over-year … Read more

Stocks Surge: Strong S&P 500 Earnings Growth Expected, Headline Scares With Inflation Tamed, Interest Rates Still Low

Image Source: BLS. The pace of inflation looks like it may slow down considerably in 2023 as sequential monthly increases pause their advance. The Consumer Price Index (CPI-U), seasonally adjusted, paused its advance during the month of July, and the markets have generally reacted positively to the news. We’re reiterating our view that inflation is not necessarily bad for the markets over the long haul, and while it may take some time for companies to sort out higher prices across their input bases, inflation is not a new challenge for the markets at all, and the best way for investors to combat inflationary tendencies, by and large, is via stocks, which generate nominal earnings, whose equity prices are quoted nominally, … Read more