ETE Down 70%; IBM Poor Quality, Netflix Begins to Implode

Shown above: Energy Transfer Equity’s recent share price performance. A lot of investors depend on us for our energy research. We’ve been busy publishing on the website, and we can’t possibly send out all of our research via email, so please come visit. Many are aware of our take in any case: the energy master limited partnership (AMLP, AMZ) isn’t going away tomorrow, but it may not last over the long haul. This is nothing new. We’ve been saying this since the peak in energy MLP share prices, which just so happened to coincide with Energy Transfer Equity’s (ETE) heights in the mid-$30s. Our readers understand that we’re taking the long view with MLPs when we talk about business models … Read more

GE Pulls Back From 8-Year High, Russia Still Pumping

By Brian Nelson, CFA The last week of each calendar quarter is often a busy one for the Valuentum team. Not only did we release the Dividend Growth Newsletter on the first of the month (download ), but we also released the financial advisor publications as well (see here). If you haven’t received them, please be sure to let our team know, and we’ll forward those along to you. These documents just scratch the surface of our research and analysis offering. Please don’t forget to RSVP for an upcoming orientation webinar here. We also wanted to make you aware of the update cycle for our ETF analysis. We’ve now released the 2016 versions for the Consumer Staples (), Consumer Discretionary … Read more

Crude Oil Prices Now Near $40 Per Barrel

Image: Top holdings of the Energy Select Sector SPDR; source: State Street. Call it luck. Call it good timing. Call it what you will, but we’re calling it tactical prudence within a portfolio management context. The newsletter portfolios have been on the “long side” of energy equities now for the better part of the past few months, after having negligible exposure to the energy-sector bust for most of the past few years. We continue to target achieving the goals of the newsletter portfolios, and we think tactical exposure makes sense at this time. West Texas Intermediate crude oil prices (USO) have now advanced to ~$40 per barrel from the depths of the mid-$20s just a few months ago, and while … Read more

The Corporate Buyback Conundrum

The above is a trailing 15-month chart of the broad market index, the S&P 500 (SPY). As you can see, the markets have gone nowhere fast. The fallout in the energy complex coupled with emerging market uncertainty and political unrest in the US is making for quite the choppy market environment. Interestingly, however, since the middle of last year, the Best Ideas Newsletter portfolio has quietly been distancing itself from this broad market benchmark, as strong performance from constituents coupled with a larger cash position in a generally weaker market have paid off. Where indexers focus on controlling costs instead of focusing on generating strong returns with relatively low turnover (and commission and tax implications), the strategy powering the Best … Read more

We Like the News! Buffett Scoops Up Kinder Morgan; FVE: $20

It looks like crude oil (USO) overproduction will continue. Dashing hopes that any rational behavior would prevail in the energy resource markets, member nations of OPEC February 16 said not that they would cut output but that they would not increase crude-oil output any further, as if the current pace of production isn’t already drowning the world in the black liquid. It turns out the rumor from last week had some basis to it, “Your Hard-Earned Money,” but it didn’t have much substance, in our view, especially since the deal hinges on cooperation from Iran, which remains dedicated to increased production to reach pre-sanction levels. We’re not reading much into the news, as Saudi Arabia, while included in the parties … Read more

The Bounce in Energy and Potash’s “Surprising” Dividend Cut

Nothing like Valuentum’s optimistic article last week, January 21, in Barron’s to get the energy markets popping, “Is Kinder Morgan on Road to Recovery,” would you say? Of course, we say that in jest. The equity markets January 28 were defined by optimism that two of the globe’s major energy resource producers, the cartel OPEC and Russia (RSX), would finally come together to alleviate the pain that has been exerted on the price of the black liquid the past 12-24 months with a “meeting.” What we found to be peculiar, however, is that instead of OPEC letting what turned into a “rumor” run, helping to further drive crude oil prices higher, OPEC delegates quickly denied the talk of a potential … Read more

What’s Working in Today’s Market?

By Brian Nelson, CFA As emerging markets around the world suffer from commodity-price-led economic weakness, capital continues to find a safe-haven in US government bonds (TLT, TBT), but for those equity-oriented funds that mandate a fully-invested status, not something we’re particularly advocates of, assets within US equities have favored “lower-beta” utilities (XLU) and consumer staples (XLP) sectors while cyclically-dependent and credit-levered sectors such as the financials (XLF) and materials (XLB) have suffered thus far in 2016. The industrials (XLI) and energy (XLE) sectors have also encountered higher-than-normal selling pressure in the first few weeks of the New Year, as investors evaluate the global economic landscape and what a prolonged period of low energy prices may mean for the lowest quality … Read more

Moody’s Puts Oil & Gas and Mining Sectors on Review

By Kris Rosemann On January 22, Moody’s placed 120 oil and gas companies (XLE) from across the globe on review for a credit rating downgrade. The list ranges from massive global producers such as Royal Dutch Shell (RDS.A, RDS.B) and Total (TOT) to nearly 70 US exploration and production and services (“E&P”) companies. It also includes 55 mining companies (XLB) that have been punished by the recent rout in commodity prices. Alcoa (AA), Rio Tinto (RIO) and Vale (VALE) are a few notables that made the list for a potential downgrade. The news is not completely unexpected, however, and may likely be a response to several executive teams pointing to legacy (outdated) counterparty/customer ratings as reasons to not be concerned … Read more

Excited About Putting Cash to Work…Eventually

Investors are fretting over a lot of things as of late. China (FXI) announced January 19 that fourth-quarter GDP fell to 6.8%, with many noting that the measure was a 25-year low. Even if you believe that number, which may be a stretch in light of collapsing local stock markets in Shanghai and Shenzhen, the outlook can’t be much better. Steel mills across the country are reeling, and while published housing numbers don’t look that bad, we have a difficult time believing the Chinese banks are in good shape. HSBC (HSBC), Standard Chartered, and Citigroup (C) remain most exposed to what we would describe to be the growing likelihood of a contagion from weakening commodity-dependent sectors in the country. Intel … Read more

Bye Bye Energy MLPs

West Texas crude oil prices (USO) just broke through $32 per barrel to the downside for the first time since 2003. Share prices of those in the energy complex (XLE) continue to reel, and we maintain our view that the tremendous fallout in energy master limited partnerships (AMLP, AMZ) may not be over. From our perspective, the MLP business model may not survive in its present state, as equity markets continue to “wise up” to the artificial equity pricing paradigm that has centered on the group’s financially-engineered payouts. Without an artificial pricing paradigm to “prop up” their equity prices, for example, the incentive to perpetuate such a business model is substantially reduced. Distribution cuts would then inevitably ensue as a … Read more