Some Wiggle Room, Please

Let’s go around the horn. Staples (SPLS) and Office Depot (ODP) will, in fact, join forces. The duo announced February 4th that Staples will pay $6.3 billion for its rival, valuing Office Depot at $11 per share, a nice premium to its previous day close and relative to our fair value estimate. Management expects to generate at least $1 billion in annualized cost savings. Removing redundant overhead, streamlining distribution and carving out other efficiencies will be par for the course. We also think pricing will ease up a bit, though competition from Walmart (WMT) and Amazon (AMZN) will always be present. We wouldn’t expect Office Depot’s equity to converge to the take-out price until the regulatory review is completed, likely … Read more

Turn Off the TV

By Brian Nelson, CFA Intrinsic value represents the conclusion to any and all stock research: What is the company worth? DCF valuation captures the expectations of a firm’s competitive advantages, growth prospects, strategic endeavors, and any other qualitative factor. No other process does this. Putting to numbers a plethora of advanced fundamental items in arriving at a fair value estimate is the cornerstone–and the most critical component–of any stock research analysis. Without an in-depth intrinsic-value assessment, research is but a story that has no ending.  — Brian Nelson, President, Valuentum Securities, 2011 Having worked on the buyside for a top-performing small-capitalization fund and on the independent/sell-side for a number of years in methodology development and optimization, I can tell you … Read more

Valuentum Economic Castleâ„¢ Rating Update

Read: Keeping the Horse Before the Cart: Valuentum’s Economic Castle™ Rating The Economic Castle Focuses on the Magnitude of Economic Value Creation The Valuentum Economic Castle™ rating is an enhancement of the competitive advantage framework (commonly known as economic moat analysis) that has become widespread and ubiquitous within the investing world. Whereas an economic moat framework evaluates a firm on the basis of the sustainability and durability of its competitive advantages, Valuentum’s Economic Castle™ rating evaluates a firm on the basis of the firm’s future economic profit spread (return on invested capital less its weighted average cost of capital). The companies with the strongest Valuentum Economic Castle™ ratings are poised to generate the most economic value for shareholders in the … Read more

Earnings from 8 Interesting Ideas

By Brian Nelson, CFA “’I believe you have to be willing to be misunderstood if you’re going to innovate.’ You can’t outperform the market if you are the market. Similarly, you must adopt a non-consensus view and be right about that view to beat competitors.” CEO of Amazon Jeff Bezos with ‘Source: 25iq’ commentary Many members have expressed to me that they just can’t believe investors select stocks in a different way than the Valuentum style (absent dividend growth investors, which have carved out a unique niche in their own right). Some of our new members think the Valuentum process is the principal and dominant framework for investing – or how the majority of investors look at things. This view … Read more

Buffett Doubles Down on USG; Teva Expected to Appoint New CEO; Crude by Rail Transportation Comes under Scrutiny

The day after the New Year holiday was light with news, as expected, but there were three developments that we thought you should be aware of. We recently highlighted the third-quarter performance of USG (USG), the maker of wallboard under the SHEETROCK name, as it scored one of the highest ratings of a 9 on the Valuentum Buying Index in late October. Warren Buffett on Thursday announced that he has increased his stake in the firm, to 30.5% (more than double previously-reported figures). According to a recently-filed Schedule 13D/A, he now owns 43.4 million shares of the firm. USG continues to be significantly undervalued on the basis of our discounted cash-flow process, and we peg its fair value estimate north … Read more

The Tale of Three Valuentum Buying Index Ratings of 9

Just like a sell-side analyst isn’t required to reiterate his or her buy/sell/hold recommendations every day (despite immaterial week-to-week pricing changes), we don’t reiterate our Valuentum Buying Index ratings every day either. However, as with sell-side recommendations, our Valuentum Buying Index ratings still represent our current opinion. It should be assumed that, if a firm’s report (one that’s dated September 2013, for example) states that the firm’s VBI rating is a 9, the company’s current VBI rating is a 9. Just like in the case of when a sell-side analyst issues a ‘Buy’ recommendation in September 2013, the sell-side analyst would still have a ‘Buy’ recommendation on the stock today (until the recommendation is changed). This dynamic is the only way that our system is … Read more

Nelson: The 16 Most Important Steps To Understand The Stock Market

A previous version of this article appeared on our website July 21, 2013. Refreshed and updated throughout, as of July 2018. By Brian Nelson, CFA After earning my MBA at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business and training stock and credit analysts from large organizations over the past decade or so, I have heard just about every question (though I admit I am still surprised by many things and remain a very humble student of the markets). I’ve also spent years perfecting the discounted cash flow process for large research organizations such as Morningstar and studied under one of the most famed aggressive growth investors of all time, Richard Driehaus. My knowledge runs the gamut from value through … Read more

The Impact of the US Housing Recovery Cannot Be Underestimated

Valuentum reveals the far-reaching implications of a strengthening US housing market.

How to Think About Corporate Tax Reform

There Is Milk At The Store

This article first appeared in the September edition of the High Yield Dividend Newsletter. For more information about this publication, please see here. “Now this is not the end. It is not even the beginning of the end. But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning.” — Winston Churchill By Brian Nelson, CFA Very few of us could have imagined that we’d witness the bull market that began on that fateful day in March 2009 that might very well mark a generational low. In 2009, major investment banks around the globe were struggling to survive, and the fallout in the mortgage markets left the banks holding paper that nobody wanted to own, let alone buy. The global financial system … Read more