Author Archives: Scalper1

Riding The Petchem Boom With A Utility

Summary Entergy Corp. is a utility operating in the heart of America’s petrochemical boom. Entergy plans to steadily grow both earnings and dividends through 2018 at least. Shares are undervalued and I believe Entergy is a buy. The ‘shale boom’ just might be turning into the ‘shale bust’ as we speak, but the petrochemical boom is alive, well and durable. That’s because natural gas and natural gas liquids, inputs for the petrochemical industry, are now cheaper in America than anywhere else. This gives the U.S. a major advantage over other countries. The American petrochemical industry is really focused on the eastern Texas-Louisiana Gulf Coast. Not surprisingly, petrochemical plants and LNG export facilities are springing up all over the area. This boom is driven by demand, not supply, and so lower gas prices only help this growth trend. Investing in end-use chemical producers or LNG exporters is one way to participate in this trend, but utilities are also a low-risk way to be involved in this. Entergy Corporation (NYSE: ETR ) is the perfect company for this, in my opinion. Entergy generates power in New England from a handful of nuclear power plants, but the bulk of Entergy’s business is in generation and transmission of power in Mississippi, Arkansas, eastern Texas, and Louisiana. Louisiana is the largest piece of Entergy’s business, and, importantly, Entergy supplies much of the petrochemical industry along the Gulf Coast. Best of all, Entergy now yields over 5%, and has recently begun increasing its dividend as a result of the economic growth in its service areas. Solid growth and reliable income Some of Entergy’s industrial customers use as much power as a small city, and currently there are several plants being built along the Gulf Coast. This includes Cameron LNG in Louisiana, a Sasol cracker/chemical complex, two methanol plants under construction in Texas and Louisiana, and one steel mill under construction in Arkansas. (click to enlarge) Courtesy of Entergy Corp Investor Relations. The key ingredient to the industrial boom in this region is cheap, reliable energy. Louisiana and Arkansas have no renewable energy mandate. Texas does have one, but it’s not very big. Therefore, it’s no surprise that there’s three states have among the lowest electricity costs in the country. Low electricity prices entice these big industrial customers into this region and, as we will see, this in turn brings more residents and more efficient power distribution. It’s a virtuous cycle not often seen in the U.S. anymore. What does that mean for us? Well, it means 2% load growth for residentials and 4% growth for industrials, each year, through 2018 at least. (click to enlarge) Courtesy of Entergy Corp Investor Relations. Currently Entergy’s dividend is 57% of earnings, on a per-share basis. Over the last twelve months, Entergy has generated only $509 in free cash flow, but has paid $617 million in dividends. That, however, is because Entergy is building up its generation capacity with several power plants. Once the first new plant is up, St. Charles power station, Entergy will have much more financial flexibility. I fully expect Entergy to continue raising its dividend by low single digits through 2018, and perhaps even more in the following years. Valuation and conclusion (click to enlarge) Courtesy of Entergy Corp Investor Relations Is Entergy a good value right now? I believe it is. According to FAST Graphs, Entergy trades at 11.3 times earnings, which is quite a bit lower than the stock’s ten-year average valuation of 13.4 times earnings. That’s a 15.6% discount to its full-cycle average valuation, and there’s no reason Entergy shouldn’t achieve at least that average valuation. When you add a 5.1% dividend onto that, there’s a lot to like about this utility. Here’s what you’ll get with Entergy: A steady-growth utility in an economically strong area. As a utility, the barriers to entry in this industry are very high, which puts a lot of safety into this name. For these reasons, I believe Entergy is a buy right here.

Market Lab Report – Premarket Pulse 12/9/15

Major averages fell on mixed volume, marking the third time the S&P 500 has bounced off its 10-week moving average. After an initial drop, the majors bounced then spent the rest of the day in a trading range, closing mid-bar on the S&P 500 and in the upper range on the NASDAQ Composite. The S&P 500 now sits just under its 200-day moving average and is 0.6% away from its 10-week moving average. If it retests again, it will be its fourth retest. With each retest, the odds of a breakdown through support grow. Yesterday’s action also showed something of a “stealth shakeout” in big-cap NASDAQ leaders, many of which rebounded off of logical support or which are simply moving sideways in relatively tight bases, including names like AMZN, NFLX, PANW, CRM, FB, GOOGL, and MSFT. Even AAPL, which we have viewed as a short but which could easily rally from its current chart position IF the general market stages the proverbial Santa Claus Rally into year-end, as it has been holding tight and may be basing for just such a move.

Netflix, Amazon Prime Accelerating Cord Cutting Trend

The fate of traditional media is being tested like never before, with subscribers to pay-TV services canceling or reducing their subscriptions at an increasing rate. Many TV viewers are opting instead for on-demand streaming from services like Netflix (NFLX) and Amazon (AMZN) Prime, says a report from PricewaterhouseCoopers. Based on an online survey of 1,200 U.S. consumers, PwC said that 16% had unsubscribed to cable, satellite and other pay-TV