Author Archives: Scalper1

Microsoft, Amazon, Google Cloud Growth Lifts Fiber-Optics Firms

You might think the race to the cloud mostly benefits leading cloud services providers, such as  Microsoft ( MSFT ),  Amazon.com ( AMZN ) and  Alphabet ‘s ( GOOGL ) Google. Of all the electronics, communications and digitally inspired IBD industry groups, the Telecom-Fiber Optics industry group ranks the highest. It’s No. 6, up from No. 9 a month ago, No. 95 two months ago and No. 168 three months ago. What’s different from a few months ago? On March 9, Microsoft Azure Chief Technology Officer Mark Russinovich told the Open Compute Project summit that Microsoft will grow from 22 to 28 data centers in 2016. Azure is Microsoft’s cloud business. Also, Google announced March 22 that it would add 12 new data center regions globally by the end of 2017, including two in the U.S., nearly doubling its existing 14 regions. And cloud leader Amazon Web Services, a rising business of Amazon.com, will grow from 12 regional clouds to 17 “in the coming year,” CEO Jeff Bezos said April 6 in his annual letter to shareholders. Fiber-optic developers that create the high-speed lines and connections for data centers will be among those companies benefiting from this expansion. “The first two new data centers (Oregon and Tokyo) will come online later this year, with the others to be launched in 2017,” said Jefferies analyst George Notter, regarding the Google announcement, in a March research note. “Based on our conversations with industry contacts, we think the additional investments are great news for Infinera ( INFN ), Ciena ( CIEN ), and to a much lesser extent, Alcatel-Lucent.” He cited the three as Google’s vendors for wavelength division multiplexing (WDM, an optics technology) and Infinera’s Cloud Xpress as Google’s preferred metro data center interconnect (DCI) platform, “although we wouldn’t be surprised if they (Google) eventually operationalized other vendors as well.” Infinera Down After Analyst Calls Stock ‘Way Too Cheap’ At the time, March 24, Infinera was trading near 15 — “way too cheap,” Notter said. He reiterated Infinera’s buy rating with a 22.50 price target. Since then Infinera stock has fallen, after tumbling 2.7% Tuesday to 14.58, 42% off a nine-year high of 25.24 touched Aug. 18. But it was a tough day for the sector overall. Rival Ciena, however, fell 3% Tuesday, to 17.27, 33% off a 16-month high 25.77 touched July 23. Heading toward its first-quarter earnings release April 27 after the market close, Infinera is expected to report continuing choppy earnings growth on slower sales growth. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expect earnings up 6% to 17 cents per share minus items, on sales up 31% to $246 million. While earnings are expected to top the year-earlier 16 cents per share, it’s a tough comparison to the Q1 2015’s 433% EPS growth. With a market cap of $2.06 billion, Infinera is the second-largest company in the IBD fiber group, following Ciena’s $2.4 billion, but neither is among the healthiest. Ciena carries an IBD Composite Rating of 72, and Infinera has a 67. The healthiest, both with CRs of 97, are Lumentum Holdings ( LITE ) with $1.45 billion in market value, and little Clearfield ( CLFD ), with a $222 million market cap. The third- and fourth-largest among these small caps both carry 87 CRs: Finisar ( FNSR ) with $1.8 billion in market value, and Viavi Solutions ( VIAV ) with a $1.5 billion market cap. Finisar fell 2.9% Tuesday, and Viavi slipped 1.1%. Image provded by Shutterstock .

Lack Of Earnings Quality And Debt Downgrades Limit S&P 500’s Upside

Four in a row. That’s how many consecutive 3-point baskets Andre Iguodala scored against the Houston Rockets in last night’s playoff game. There has also been a “4 for 4″ in the financial markets. One after another, major banks have lowered their year-end targets for the S&P 500. Most recently, the global equity team at HSBC shaved its year-end target to 2,050 from 2,100. On the surface, HSBC’s cut is less severe than other bank revisions to S&P 500 estimates. That said, J.P Morgan pulled its projection all the way down from 2200 to 2000. Credit Suisse? Down to 2,050 from 2,200. And Morgan Stanley slashed its year-end projection from 2175 to 2050. So what’s going on? We had four influential banks expressing confidence in the popular benchmark a few months earlier. Their analysts originally projected total returns with reinvested dividends between 5%-10% in the present 12-month period. Now, however, with the S&P 500 only expected to finish between 2000-2050, these banks see the index offering a paltry 0%-2%. Another way some have phrased it? Excluding dividends, there is “zero upside.” Here is yet another “4 for 4” that makes a number of analysts uncomfortable. Year-over-year quarterly earnings have fallen four consecutive times. That has not happened since the Great Recession. And revenue? Corporations have put forward year-over-year declines in sales growth for five consecutive quarters. That hasn’t happened since the Great Recession either. The bullish investor case is that the trend is going to start reversing itself in the 2nd half of 2016. However, forward estimates of earnings growth and revenue growth are routinely lowered so that two-thirds or more companies can surpass “expectations.” And it is not unusual for estimates to be lowered by 10%. Take Q1. Shortly before the start of the year, Q1 estimates had been forecast to come in at a mild gain. Today? We’re looking at -9% or worse for Q1. Over the previous five years, Forward P/Es averaged 14.5. They now average 16.5 on earning estimates that will never be realized. In essence, S&P 500 stock prices are sitting a softball’s throw away from an all-time record (2130), while the forward P/E valuations sit at bull market extremes that do not justify additional appreciation in price. And what about earnings quality? Wall Street typically presents two kinds: Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) earnings and non-GAAP earnings that excludes special items, non-recurring expenses and a wide variety on “one-time charges.” The foolishness of non-GAAP presentations notwithstanding, one might disregard the manipulation when non-GAAP and GAAP are within the usual 10% range. This was more or less the case between 2009 and 2013. By 2014, however, the gap between the two different earnings per share reports began to widen. By 2015, “manipulated” pro forma ex-items earnings exceeded actual earnings per share by roughly $250 billion, or 32%. Can you spell c-h-i-c-a-n-e-r-y? Of particular interest, there was a similar disconnect between GAAP and non-GAAP in 2007. Non-GAAP in the year when the last bear market began (10/07) was 24% higher than GAAP earnings per share. It follows that the discrepancy today in earnings quality is even wider than it was prior to the stock market collapse. “But Gary,” you protest. “As long as the Federal Reserve and central banks are exceptionally accommodating, stocks should excel.” In truth, however, the long-term relationship between the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ) and the Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF (NYSEARCA: BND ) demonstrate that the bond component of one’s portfolio has been more productive over the last 12 months than the stock component. Bulls can point to the market’s eventual ability to shake off the euro-zone crisis of 2011. That was the last time that the SPY:BND price ratio struggled for an extended length of time. Back then, however, the Federal Reserve offered two aggressive easing policies – “Operation Twist” and “QE 3.” Today? Stocks are not only extremely overvalued on most historical measures, but the Fed has only lowered its tightening guidance from four hikes down to two hikes. Is that really enough ammunition to power stocks to remarkable new heights? “Okay,” you acknowledge. “But rates are so low, they are even lower than they were in 2013. And that means, going forward, there is no alternative to stocks.” Not only does history dispel the myth that there are no alternatives to stocks , but many corporations that have been buying back their stocks at attractive borrowing costs are now at risk of debt downgrades, higher interest expenses and even default. For example, the moving 12-month sum of Moody’s debt downgrades hopped from 32 a year ago to 61 in March of 2016. Meanwhile, the longer-term trend for the widening of credit spreads between investment grade treasuries in the iShares 7-10 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: IEF ) and high yield bonds in the iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: HYG ) suggest that the corporate debt binge may soon come to an ignominious end. Foreign stocks, emerging market stocks as well as high yield bonds all hit their cyclical tops in mid-2014, when the credit spreads were remarkably narrow. The IEF:HYG price ratio spikes and breakdowns notwithstanding, the general trend for 18-plus months has been less favorable to lower-rated corporate borrowers. The implication? With corporate credit conditions worsening at the fastest pace since the financial crisis , companies may be forced to slow or abandon stock share buybacks. What group of buyers will pick up the slack when valuation extremes meet fewer stock buybacks? Click here for Gary’s latest podcast. Disclosure: Gary Gordon, MS, CFP is the president of Pacific Park Financial, Inc., a Registered Investment Adviser with the SEC. Gary Gordon, Pacific Park Financial, Inc, and/or its clients may hold positions in the ETFs, mutual funds, and/or any investment asset mentioned above. The commentary does not constitute individualized investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities. At times, issuers of exchange-traded products compensate Pacific Park Financial, Inc. or its subsidiaries for advertising at the ETF Expert web site. ETF Expert content is created independently of any advertising relationships.