Video: An Overview of Our 16-page Stock Research Reports

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Understanding the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) Designation

“Among the countless finance degrees around the world, the Chartered Financial Analyst qualification has become the gold standard.” – Financial Times, 13 August 2010 “[The] qualification is roughly equivalent to a specialized postgraduate finance degree, including a mixture of economics, ethics, law, and accountancy… Whereas there are tens of thousands of finance degrees available around the world, ranging from the excellent to the worthless, there is only one CFA, managed and examined by an American association of financial professionals, the CFA Institute.” – the Economist From the CFA Institute: “The Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) charter is an investment credential that, for more than 60 years, has been the global standard for embodying the integrity, dedication, and advanced skills needed to … Read more

Industrial Bellwethers Hit by Global Economic Growth Concerns

By Kris Rosemann Shares of newsletter portfolios holding General Electric (GE) and its rival Honeywell (HON) took a hit early July 22 after both conglomerates indicated a more difficult operating environment in their second quarter reports. First, let’s address GE. The company has kept the momentum going in its GE Capital exit plan as it has now signed $181 billion in asset sales, completed its de-designation as a significantly important financial institution (SIFI), and closed GE Asset Management. In addition, the firm unloaded its GE Appliances business to Haier for $5.4 billion in the second quarter, a streamlining-oriented removal of a somewhat immaterial portion of GE’s overall business. We like what the progress in its exit plan and de-designation as … Read more

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

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

Video: Are Economic Moats Priced Into Stock Prices? — You Bet They Are

President of Equity Research Brian Nelson debunks the myth that the economic moat is not included in stock prices. Length: ~8 minutes. Tickerized for firms in the Morningstar Wide Moat ETF (MOAT), as of October 14, 2015. Brian Nelson, CFA: This is Brian Nelson from Valuentum Securities. I wanted to talk about an important concept and answer an important question. Is Warren Buffet’s economic moat priced into stock prices? Before I answer that question, I think we need to define a couple things. Return on invested capital is a measure of a business’ performance. It’s calculated as earnings before interest divided by net new investment, which is a measure of return on new invested capital. So what is the return the … 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

Alcoa Kicks Off Fourth Quarter Earnings Season

Would we ever considering owning Alcoa (AA) near a cyclical peak in economic demand, roughly 5-7 years into one of the strongest stock-market recoveries in history, or said differently, in the current environment? The short answer is: No. Market veterans know that the time to consider buying Alcoa is at a cyclical trough, not at peaks, and only then if there is no tangible risk of default. Alcoa may not be as much of an economic bellwether as it once was when the US was a much larger manufacturer of goods, but the aluminum giant is still relevant in assessing underlying demand trends in various end markets across the globe. The lightweight metal producer finds its way into just about … Read more

The Dividend Dilemma

One of the core tenets of the Valuentum process not only rests in the all-important price vs. value consideration (see Valuentum’s Brian Nelson talk about that here), but also in “letting winners run.” At first read, these two items appear to be at odds with each other. For example, we preach about getting stocks at a bargain, but yet, we don’t sell holdings when they start to move beyond our estimate of their fair value. What gives? At the Valuentum core, we prefer an entry point that corresponds to the time when shares have substantial valuation and pricing support (i.e. they have high Valuentum Buying Index ratings), and we prefer an exit point when shares have little valuation and pricing … Read more