ICYMI — Video: The Question Is If the Economy Can Be Held Together Without Vast Equity Dilution

President of Investment Research at Valuentum and award-winning author of Value Trap: Theory of Universal Valuation Brian Nelson explains how the range of probable fair value outcomes of S&P 500 companies has increased as a result of COVID-19 and possible equity dilution on the downside to long-run inflationary pressures on stocks driven by runaway Fed and Treasury stimulus on the upside. — Editor’s note: Brian emphasizes the importance of “expert analysis” over “backward-looking analysis,” and we would like to clarify that he is not giving personalized advice. 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. Not a member? Subscribe today. The first 14 days are … Read more

Bullets: Recapping the Crash, Where Are We Now?

Image: The S&P 500 has only retraced a small part of its decline since the top in February 2020. By Brian Nelson, CFA In August 2019, Valuentum took a cautious bent on the markets, removing the Financial Select Sector SPDR (XLF) and the Energy Select Sector SPDR (XLE), raising cash at the time. Financials and energy have been material underperformers during the swoon, with the Fed/Treasury launching more stimulus than the Great Financial Crisis and Saudi Arabia/Russia continuing their oil-price war. Here’s what we said in August 2019: August 2019: There are myriad risks as we near the end of this now-decade long bull market: a US-China trade/currency war, slowing global economic growth (Germany’s economic growth turned negative during the … Read more

Attack COVID-19 With Forward-Looking, Expected Data

President of Investment Research at Valuentum Brian Nelson shares his financial wisdom in detailing how the world must attack COVID-19 with forward-looking expected data (not backward-looking, empirical data) as the global economy faces what could become the worst business environment since the Great Depression, irrespective of government fiscal stimulus. — Editor’s note: Brian emphasizes the importance of “expert analysis” over “backward-looking analysis,” and we would like to clarify that he is not giving personalized advice. 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. Not a member? Subscribe today. The first 14 days are free. Brian Nelson owns shares in SPY and SCHG. Some … Read more

Our Reports on Stocks in the Independent Oil & Gas Industry

Images Source: Anadarko Structure of the Independent Oil & Gas Industry The oil and gas business is highly competitive in the exploration, acquisition, and production of reserves. Changes in deepwater drilling laws and other regulatory initiatives can add uncertainty to operations. The trajectory of global economic growth, the actions of OPEC, and political and environmental uncertainty are other key factors. A strong balance sheet to manage through the commodity price cycle is necessary for survival. With the group’s profitability largely driven by the volatile prices of oil, natural-gas and NGLs, we’re generally not that excited about the structure of this commodity-producing space. However, the world’s growing need for energy offers tremendous opportunities for constituents. We’ve reallocated our resources to optimize … Read more

Our Reports on Stocks in the Oil & Gas – Majors Industry

Structure of the Oil & Gas (majors) Industry The global oil and gas industry is dominated by state-owned firms, including member nations of OPEC, which have a large influence on pricing. Public constituents are not small, however, as firms in this group make up a large portion of the energy sector’s market cap. Oil and gas prices are the key profit driver and largely reflect supply/demand dynamics, though it is not uncommon for speculative/geopolitical price premiums to occur. A firm’s estimated reserve life and cost for exploration and development should be monitored closely. We’re neutral on the structure of the majors, given their commoditized product. However, the world’s growing need for energy offers tremendous opportunities for constituents. We’ve reallocated our … Read more

Stress in the Oil & Gas Industry Grows as Major Energy Exporters Hunker Down

Image Shown: WTI is down almost 61% over the past year as raw energy resources prices were decimated by the news that OPEC and non-OPEC members couldn’t reach another production curtailment deal in early-March 2020. By Callum Turcan Raw energy resources pricing has crashed through the floor, so to speak, with WTI (USO) (US oil pricing benchmark), Brent (BNO) (international oil pricing benchmark), Henry Hub (UNG) (US natural gas pricing benchmark), and the LNG Japan/Korea Marker (pricing benchmark for liquefied natural gas [‘LNG’] deliveries to East Asian markets) are all trading at or near multi-decade lows as of this writing. The pricing for natural gas liquids (‘NGLs’), like ethane, propane, and butane, have also come crashing down (seen through Mont … Read more

Fed Cuts 100 Basis Points, Launches More QE

“Now, stocks and other assets are being sold, some indiscriminately. It is truly becoming a stock pickers market as opposed to a quant-led and index-led market. It takes a different kind of bravery to buy on massive down days and one must have conviction in their research that the company will not go away if massive downside scenarios do in fact emerge.” – Matthew Warren. In this piece, we cover our assessment of what the global markets might be facing in a bull-case, base-case, and bear-case scenario. Our base case is a substantial recession in the US and a financial crisis of some unknown magnitude. By Matthew Warren The tremendous (mostly downside) volatility in all asset markets globally during the … Read more

Oil Markets Get Decimated

Image Shown: Oil prices have been decimated year-to-date. By Callum Turcan We are following up on our ‘Oil Prices Collapse, Reiterating 2,350-2,750 S&P 500 Target Range; Credit Crunch Looming?’ note (link here) published Sunday, March 8, to provide additional commentary on what’s going on in the shale patch right now. As of this writing, oil prices (BNO, USO) continue to get hammered. Here’s what we had to say in that recent note: The independent upstream producer space (XOP) is careening off a cliff, and that was before the OPEC+ cartel was unable to reach an agreement during their joint meeting (OPEC and non-OPEC members) on March 6. Due to the inability for the oil cartel to reach a deal, largely because Russia … Read more

S&P 500 Circuit Breakers Tripped, Dow Jones Opens Down 2,000+ Points

Image: The market remains under selling pressure, but the massive sell off the past couple weeks has only amounted to but a blip since the beginning of 2010. There could be more pain ahead. By Brian Nelson, CFA After a pre-market session March 9 that locked futures at “limit down” (futures are limited from dropping more than 5%), most investors were laser-focused on the moves of the S&P 500 ETF (SPY), which pre-market had been hovering around the $276 per-share range, off about 7%. Shortly after market open, circuit breakers were then tripped with the S&P 500 falling 7%, stopping trading for 15 minutes. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell more than 2,000 points. We are maintaining our S&P 500 … Read more

Oil Prices Collapse, Reiterating 2,350-2,750 S&P 500 Target Range; Credit Crunch Looming?

Image Source: Value Trap: Theory of Universal Valuation From Value Trap: “The banking sector was not the only sector that faced considerable selling pressure during the Financial Crisis of the late 2000s, of course. Other companies that required funding to maintain their business operations faced severe liquidity risk, or a situation where refinancing, or rolling over debt, might be difficult to do on fair terms, making such financing prohibitive in some cases. Those that faced outsize debt maturities during the most severe months of the credit crunch faced a real threat of Chapter 11 restructuring had the lending environment completely seized. In thinking about share prices as a range of probable fair value outcomes, equity prices tend to face pressure as … Read more