Seeking to De-risk the Newsletter Portfolios

There’s never a good reason to panic in investing, but the 276-point slide in the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DIA) January 4, the worst start to a year since the credit crisis in 2008, reminded us why we hold more than a 30% cash position in both newsletter portfolios at the moment: with a US stock market still near all-time highs, we like having ample capital available to scoop up bargains as stocks inevitably give back some of their gains. The question for us is not whether the broader US stock market will decline from here but whether such a decline will be 10%, 20% or more. After all, the S&P 500 (SPY) has essentially tripled from the March 2009 … Read more

Is the Worst Behind Us? Not Likely

By Brian Nelson, CFA US natural gas prices (NGAS) recently dropped to the lowest level in nearly 14 years. Unseasonably warm weather may be to blame for the near-term drop, but we point to more structural concerns that may keep natural gas prices low for some time. Including both unconventional and conventional global natural gas resources, for example, there are more than 200+ years’ of supply based on the current trajectory of demand, and that doesn’t account for technology advances that will inevitably be made in the coming decades. Can you believe it? The situation with crude oil prices is not much better. West Texas crude oil prices (USO) dipped below $35 per barrel recently, still the high end of … Read more

Dividends Not Safe as Energy Markets Swoon

We’ve been cautious on the oil and gas markets (XLE, AMLP) for some time, and that includes our October move closer to market neutral on the sector, but we’re still underweight the group. We’ve been saying that crude oil prices are more likely to hit the $20 per barrel level than move significantly higher, and we maintain our view that they may never again return to the $100 per barrel, a level many have grown accustomed to. After all, why should they? Unfortunately, the fallout continues to punish traditional “buy and hold” investors who have been trained to ignore most “news” and may still be holding on the belief of the fallacy of mean reversion, something that we believe cannot … Read more

Transaction Alerts: Moving Closer to Market Neutral on Energy

The Best Ideas Newsletter portfolio has generated significant outperformance in part from avoiding many of the landmines across the energy sector during the past many months. We’ve done equally well in our calls in the Dividend Growth Newsletter portfolio, and we’re very proud of raising the issue of the importance of looking at non-GAAP free cash flow across pipeline entities. We believe that such a measure is the best one to assess the timing of free cash flows as they are generated, an important consideration for investors of all types, and not properly addressed in measures of distributable cash flow or a company’s dividend or distribution. Why are we now inching ever so slightly back into energy? 1. The market … Read more

Standard & Poor’s Notes Heightened Default Risks

Not all is well in Big Oil, or at least, not all is what it once was. The upstream oil and gas arena continues to face significant pressure from falling energy resource pricing, runaway capital spending projections and conditions that may not subside anytime soon. At the heart of the problem is OPEC’s strategy to maintain market share, apparently at all costs, which is different than the cartel’s efforts in previous cycles to support the price. Though upstream industry constituents have announced capital spending reductions and some have idled rigs, commercial inventories of crude oil remain at decade highs, and risks to the global economy, not the least of which from China (FXI), Brazil (EWZ), and Australia (EWA), threaten the … Read more

Speculative Stocks Sinking

“The world economy is in its worst shape since the Great Recession. And medium- to low-grade corporate credits will not escape the drag of global malaise.” – Moody’s, September 25, 2015 All is not well in the “medium-to-low grade corporate credit market, and if a warning from Moody’s wasn’t enough, famed activist investor Carl Icahn (IEP) applied more pressure with his controversial and headline-grabbing 15-minute video, “Danger Ahead.” We think it makes sense to be cautious in today’s gyrating market environment, which continues to face a number of tangible headwinds, not the least of which are stretched equity valuations, “broken” technicals, and worsening sentiment. The collapse in China’s stock market, its potential knock-on effects across the global banking system, the … Read more

Setting the Record Straight on Kinder Morgan

Most, if not all, MLPs report distributable cash flow (DCF), which does not in the calculation consider growth capex, an important driver behind the generation of increased cash flow from operations in the future. When MLPs report distribution coverage ratios, this particular calculation also backs out growth capex from the equation, instead using only ‘sustaining capital expenditures.’ There are a number of contractual reasons why the data is presented in such a way, but from a valuation standpoint, we’ve always taken an issue with the MLP universe being implicitly valued on a future distributable cash flow stream that “covers” the distribution than on future free operating cash flow, which is a better measure of the free operating cash flow that … Read more

As the World Turns

Our growing concern over market participants’ lackadaisical approach to what will inevitably become a contractionary monetary cycle has been evident for months. The US market crash of August 24 has disrupted the comfort levels of many investors, however, but it has not derailed the confidence of long-term planners, nor has it interrupted the conviction of optimists that believe the sky is the eventual limit for equity prices in their lifetimes. We take a more measured and cautious view of risky assets at Valuentum, and we’ll never tell investors to ignore the information contained in market prices. The risk of a recession in the US beginning this year is remote, but concerns are mounting for 2016. US gross domestic product continues … Read more

Batten Down the Hatches – Another US Market Crash Probable

A global financial contagion like that of the Financial Crisis just six short years ago cannot be ruled out. The magnitude of wealth lost in China’s (FXI) equity market is simply staggering, and we’re already witnessing bad loans soar across China’s Big 4 banks. We’re hearing that property, used as collateral for stock margin trading in China, is often being sold for 90 cents on the dollar as speculators look to cover losses. We expect the fallout from the collapse in Chinese equity markets to eventually reverberate through their property markets, impacting loan-to-values in the commercial and residential arenas, sparking significant loss rates and asset write-downs across the Chinese financial system. We continue to assess the tangible evidence of an … Read more

3 Observations

Bulls raged back in a big way during the week of trading ending August 28 to erase some of the massive losses experienced from the May 2015 highs of 2,013 on the S&P 500. Though no longer staring down at 1,800, the S&P 500 still closed comfortably shy of 2,000. No matter what next week will bring, almost everybody is expecting more volatility. Could this then mean that we’re back to normal? The market has a very interesting way of disappointing the majority of investors the majority of the time. Here are 3 observations that are worth noting. 1. The Fed Doesn’t Have the Right Data…Yet The stark reality is one of two things: a) either the Fed knows exactly what’s going on … Read more