Wells Fargo Remains an Inefficient Bank Despite Regulatory Overhang

Wells has been forced to do a lot of hiring related to remediating its problems with regulators, but the problem is simply larger than that. This is an inefficient bank, which is very odd considering the massive scale that it benefits from. By Matthew Warren Well Fargo (WFC) reported terrible fourth-quarter results January 14. The company earned 60 cents per share, down from $1.21 in the same quarter last year, missing analyst consensus estimates for both the top and bottom line. While it is a messy quarter with a large litigation write down related to previous scandals and other “one time” items, the main theme is that expenses are simply too high and going in the wrong direction at Wells … Read more

Valuentum Exclusive Success Rates Trump Even the Best Quant Hedge Funds

Image: President of Investment Research Brian Nelson, CFA By Brian Nelson, CFA A new book, “The Man Who Solved the Market,” hit bookshelves last year, and thus far it has been a hit. The text goes into the story of quant hedge fund Renaissance Technologies and its hedge fund, the Medallion Fund, which has put up mammoth returns since inception. Though the book focuses more on the life and times of founder Jim Simons and dedicated only a page or two to the fall of Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM), another quant fund that went belly-up during the late 1990s, it was nonetheless a thoroughly interesting and enjoyable read. But why I am bringing up one of the most successful quant … Read more

Wells Fargo’s 4%+ Dividend Yield Offers Support to Shares

Image Source: Mike Mozart By Matthew Warren On October 15, Wells Fargo (WFC) reported third-quarter results that showed revenue up 0.3% to $22.01 billion, which beat consensus estimates by $690 million. Earnings came up short with non-GAAP EPS of $1.07 missing by $0.11 and GAAP EPS of $0.92 missing by $0.31. The adjusted figure excludes a $1.6 billion (0.35/share) discrete litigation accrual (related to previously disclosed retail sales practices matters) and a $1.1 billion (0.20/share) gain from its previously-announced sale of its Institutional Retirement and Trust Business. Net interest margin compressed from 2.94% in last year’s quarter to 2.66% in this year’s quarter, due to the lower interest rate environment and assets repricing lower more quickly than deposits. Deposits grew only … Read more

ICYMI: Interview with Valuentum’s President Brian M. Nelson, CFA

Catch up with Valuentum’s President Brian M. Nelson, CFA in a recent interview with dividend growth investor Arne Magnus Lorentzen Ulland of the blog stockles. By Brian Nelson, CFA Recently, I was interviewed by Arne Magnus Lorentzen Ulland of the blog stockles. Arne is a dividend growth investor like many of you, and I sincerely hope you enjoy the interview he put together. I’m very grateful for his interest. His questions were fantastic. We discuss why and how I incorporate independence and integrity into the service at Valuentum. We go into detail regarding why Valuentum views stocks the way it does, and how Valuentum combines enterprise valuation and the information contained in prices in its stock-selection process. I discuss the pitfalls … Read more

Join the Conversation on the Market Plunge

The Valuentum team shares its thoughts on the recent surge in volatility and collapse in interest rates amid a trade and currency war between two of the largest economies in the world, the US and China. No changes to the newsletter portfolios at this time. During the past few days, the US (SPY, DIA) and China (FXI, MCHI) have escalated a trade war, turning it into a currency war, the latter allowing its yuan to drop to lower levels against the U.S. dollar. The US has now labeled China a “currency manipulator,” and China has responded by suspending U.S. agricultural purchases. China is one of the largest buyers of U.S. agricultural goods. The Valuentum team builds on its previous conversation … Read more

In the News: Second-Quarter Earnings Season Marches On

We like what we saw out of a few industrial names, including Honeywell, Danaher and Dover. We thought Taiwan Semi’s report was okay, and Philip Morris continues to navigate declining cigarette volumes. We include our thoughts on some of the mid-size banks. By Brian Nelson, CFA For those just catching up, please have a read of our introductory second-quarter earnings season piece here. We saw some nice reports from J&J (JNJ) and Abbott (ABT), and while we had some concerns about the core industrial economy in light of Fastenal’s (FAST) and CSX’s (CSX) reports, news from Honeywell (HON), Danaher (DHR), and Dover (DOV) suggest that industrial activity is more likely mixed than outright deteriorating. Honeywell’s second-quarter results, released July 18, … Read more

Wells Fargo Showing Damage from Scandals

Image Source: Mike Mozart Wells might be leaking core deposits as compared to peers and paying up for interest earning deposits. By Matthew Warren Wells Fargo (WFC) reported second-quarter 2019 earnings July 16, with revenue flat at $21.6 billion and diluted EPS of $1.30 as compared to $1.16 Wall Street consensus and $0.98 earned in the same period last year. Cost control improved marginally with noninterest expense down $533 million to $13.4B in the quarter, but at an improved 62.3% (versus 64.9% last year) the bank’s efficiency ratio is still meaningfully worse than peers. Since the beginning of 2018, Wells has reduced 18,000 full time employees via cost cutting efforts, but then had to add back the same amount in … Read more

Excerpt: Big Six Banks as a Yield Play?

An article excerpt from our monthly High Yield Dividend Newsletter. Order the High Yield Dividend Newsletter here. To continue reading… become a member of the High Yield Dividend Newsletter today! —– Banks – Regional and Asset Management: AB, AINV, AMP, ARCC, BCH, BEN, BGCP, BKU, BLK, BMO, BNS, CM, FSIC, ISBC, KKR, LAZ, LM, MAIN, MTB, NABZY, NYB, OCN, PBCT, PFG, PSEC, RY, SBNY, SBSI, STT, TD, VLY, WBK  Banks & Money Centers: AXP, BAC, BBT, BK, C, DFS, FITB, GS, HBC, JPM, KEY, MS, NTRS, PNC, RF, STI, TCF, USB, WFC Related: XLF, KBE, KRE —– Valuentum members have access to our 16-page stock reports, Valuentum Buying Index ratings, Dividend Cushion ratios, fair value estimates and ranges, dividend reports and more. … Read more

Markets Swooning, Expect Extreme Volatility, Finger on Put-Option Trigger

Image shown: We notified members December 26 that we had  moved  the Best Ideas Newsletter portfolio and Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio to a “fully invested” position, from a 30% and 20% cash “weighting” at the high end of the range, respectively.  — No change to simulated newsletter portfolios…at this time.  — Hi everyone, — Hope you’re navigating these tumultuous markets well.   — If you recall, during the holiday season last year, we had moved the Best Ideas Newsletter portfolio and Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio to “fully invested.” See image above (point of the arrow). Because many members were traveling and out of the office, not all were able to read the notification until a week or two after. They were … Read more

Taking a Fresh Look at Goldman Sachs

After taking a fresh look at our valuation assumptions in the context that Goldman hasn’t really proven that it can earn above the cost of capital through the economic cycle, we have lowered our fair value estimate to $200 per share. By Matthew Warren Goldman Sachs (GS) reported first-quarter 2019 results April 15 with revenue down 13%, to $8.8 billion, and diluted earnings per share down 18%, to $5.71. Return on equity was a middling 11.1% and return on tangible common equity was 11.7%. The bank’s standardized common equity Tier 1 ratio is 13.7%, well above large bank peers. This makes sense as Goldman holds substantial investment positions such as private equity holdings on its balance sheet, which have the … Read more