Tag Archives: consumer

Valuation Dashboard: Financials – Update

Summary 4 key factors are reported across industries in the Financial sector. They give a valuation status of industries relative to their history. They give a reference for picking stocks in each industry. This is part of a monthly series of articles giving a valuation dashboard in sectors and industries. The idea is to follow up a certain number of fundamental factors for every sector, to compare them to historical averages. This article covers Financials. The choice of the fundamental ratios used in this study has been justified here and here . You can find in this article numbers that may be useful in a top-down approach. There is no analysis of individual stocks. You can refine your research reading articles by industry experts here . A link to a list of stocks to consider is provided in the conclusion. Methodology Four industry factors calculated by portfolio123 are extracted from the database: Price/Earnings (P/E), Price to sales (P/S), Price to free cash flow (P/FCF), Return on Equity (ROE). They are compared with their own historical averages “Avg”. The difference is measured in percentage for valuation ratios and in absolute for ROE, and named “D-xxx” if xxx is the factor’s name. For example, D-P/E = (AvgP/E – P/E)/AvgP/E. It can be interpreted as a percentage in under-pricing relative to a historical baseline: the higher, the better. It points to over-pricing when negative. ROE is already a percentage. A relative variation makes little sense. That’s why we take the simple difference: D-ROE = ROE – AvgROE. The industry factors are proprietary data from the platform. The calculation aims at eliminating extreme values and limiting the influence of the largest companies. These factors are not representative of capital-weighted indices. They are useful as reference values for picking stocks in an industry, not for ETF investors. Industry valuation table on 12/3/2015 The next table reports the 4 industry factors. For each factor, the next “Avg” column gives its average between January 1999 and October 2015, taken as an arbitrary reference of fair valuation. The next “D-xxx” column is the difference as explained above. So there are 3 columns for each ratio. P/E Avg D- P/E P/S Avg D- P/S P/FCF Avg D- P/FCF ROE Avg D-ROE Commercial Banks 15.85 15.24 -4.00% 3.02 2.06 -46.60% 18.45 13.44 -37.28% 8.79 8.89 -0.1 Thrifts & Mortgage Finance* 19.29 20.66 6.63% 2.92 2.03 -43.84% 21.57 14.75 -46.24% 6.08 5.02 1.06 Diversified Financial Services 23.8 17.85 -33.33% 4.41 2.94 -50.00% 18.4 16.13 -14.07% 4.78 6.38 -1.6 Consumer Finance* 10.62 13.15 19.24% 1.4 1.47 4.76% 7.11 8.22 13.50% 11.13 11.83 -0.7 Capital Markets* 16.22 18.07 10.24% 3.57 3.06 -16.67% 17.55 19.62 10.55% 8.2 7.89 0.31 Insurance 14.46 13.7 -5.55% 1.3 1.07 -21.50% 11.67 8.99 -29.81% 9.05 8.71 0.34 REITs** 34.38 35.42 2.94% 5.19 4.56 -13.82% 45.45 38.74 -17.32% 4.97 4.07 0.9 Real Estate Management** 35.72 31.19 -14.52% 3.44 3.06 -12.42% 22.08 25.55 13.58% 4.01 -1.33 5.34 * Averages since 2003 – ** Averages since 2006 Valuation The following charts give an idea of the current status of industries relative to their historical average. In all cases, the higher the better. Price/Earnings: Price/Sales: Price/Free Cash Flow: Quality (ROE) Relative Momentum The next chart compares the price action of the SPDR Select Sector ETF ( XLF ) with the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ) (chart from freestockcharts.com). (click to enlarge) Conclusion The financial ETF has the same return as SPY in the last 3 months. On this period, the 5 best performing S&P 500 financial stocks are Blackrock Inc (NYSE: BLK ), Cincinnati Financial Corp (NASDAQ: CINF ), Equinix (NASDAQ: EQIX ), Plum Creek Timber Co (NYSE: PCL ) and Public Storage (NYSE: PSA ). CINF, PCL and PSA hit an all-time high this week. Some financial industries look overpriced, but all of them are above or close to their baseline in quality, with ROE in a [-1.6,+5.4] interval from the historical average. REITs have improved since last month in valuation and are stable in quality. Consumer Finance is the only industry with 3 valuation factors pointing to underpricing. For Capital Markets, 2 out of 3 are pointing to underpricing. Commercial Banks, Diversified Financial Services and Insurance are overpriced for the 3 valuation ratios. Diversified Financial Services look the less attractive industry, with all metrics in negative territory. However, there may be quality stocks at a reasonable price in any industry. To check them out, you can compare individual fundamental factors to the industry factors provided in the table. As an example, a list of stocks in Financials beating their industry factors is provided on this page . If you want to stay informed of my updates on this topic and other articles, click the “Follow” tab at the top of this article.

3 Economic Headwinds That Matter More Than You Think

It is not surprising to see central bank authorities describe current economic circumstances in glowing terms. Unfortunately, the U.S. economy may not be in the greatest shape. The jobs picture is not as rosy as the Fed would have us believe. Neither is household spending. Manufacturing is a mess, while the global economy is under serious pressure. Is the U.S. economy on solid footing? Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen seems to think so. In particular, Yellen expressed confidence in household spending as well as job growth during prepared testimony before Congress on Thursday. It is not surprising to see central bank authorities describe current economic circumstances in glowing terms. Later this month, members of the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee (FOMC) hope to hike borrowing costs for the first time in nine years. Unfortunately, the U.S. economy may not be in the greatest shape for the Fed to act. For example, while the headline unemployment rate is only 5% – a condition that Yellen describes as close to full employment – the percentage of working-aged Americans (25-54) with a job has not been this low in more than three decades. (Back then, Michael Jackson was thrilling music fans with “Thriller” and Prince was going insane with “Let’s Go Crazy.”) Let’s examine the chart above in detail. The 25-54 year old demographic is the prime working-aged sector of the American population. Grammy and grandpa are not the ones who have stopped working entirely; rather, millions upon millions of 25-54 year olds are no longer counted as participants in the workforce. Indeed, when you strip out millions upon millions of working-aged individuals, your headline unemployment rate is going to move lower. Yet that’s not full employment. How can we be close to full employment when 19.3% of 25-54 year old Americans don’t hold a job? If you want to see genuine job growth, look no further than 1985-1989 and 1995-1999. During those periods, you see the percentage of 25-54 year olds with employment catapulting higher. During a five-year span (1989-1994) that encompassed the early 1990s recession? Jobs were hard to come by. That’s why one can see the flattening of the 25-54 year old demographic at that time. Similarly, one of the reasons that the mainstream media called the 2002-2007 economic expansion a “jobless recovery” was due to the flattening of the labor force participation rate in the 5-year run. How, then, can Fed committee members express so much confidence about labor market gains? At best, the chart might be showing signs of a bottoming process, where the new normal is a 19% rate of unemployed Americans (25-54). The rate of decline does appear to have slowed over the last few years. At worst? The pace of declines in the percentage of working-aged individuals who have left the workforce re-accelerates. Of course, Yellen did not merely point to labor gains in Thursday’s testimony. She described vibrant household spending in a nod to a service-oriented economy. What are the problems here? For one thing, families are planning to spend less in the coming year. According to the New York Fed Survey of Consumer Expectations, the median household expects its spending to grow a mere 3.47% as of mid-October, which happens to be near its lowest level in the survey’s two year history. Similarly, the Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index fell to 90.4. Not only did the reading on consumer confidence severely miss consensus estimates of 99.5, it was the lowest reading since September 2014. It gets worse. The personal savings rate hit 5.6% in October – the highest level since December of 2012. The combination of higher savings, lower confidence and plans to curtail spending habits hardly supports Yellen’s contention that household spending will be a bright spot. Of course, sometimes what Fed committee members don’t say about the economy is telling as well. Yellen seems entirely unperturbed by the manufacturing sector’s flirtation with recession. That was not the case in 2012 when the Federal Reserve unleashed its boldest stimulus measure to date – a third iteration of quantitative easing affectionately dubbed “QE3.” Then, the prospect of a manufacturing recession mattered. Now it’s irrelevant? From my vantage point, the manufacturing slide is very relevant. First of all, the more important service-oriented sector will have to demonstrate impressive acceleration to offset the drag of a shrinking manufacturing sector. (The personal savings rate, household spending plans and consumer confidence are not particularly supportive of such an offset.) Second, manufacturer struggles forewarn additional layoffs in high-paying jobs as well as ongoing corporate revenue declines at U.S. multinationals. Demand by foreign countries continues to wane. Granted, Yellen tried to boost morale when she explained that downside risks from abroad have lessened. Unfortunately, this one does not pass the sniff test. At least one financial institution, Citi (NYSE: C ), expects China to become the first major emerging market to slash interest rates to zero, precisely because of economic deceleration. Meanwhile, Brazil’s economy shrank by a monumental 4.5% in its most recent reading. The fact that Brazil’s gross domestic product fell by a record 4.5 per cent in its third quarter tells you that Latin America’s largest country is staring down the barrel of one of its worst recessions ever. Okay, then. The jobs picture is not as rosy as the Fed would have us believe. Neither is household spending. Manufacturing is a mess, while the global economy is under serious pressure. What does it all mean for stock investors? Well, if you believe perma-bull hype, stocks are in phenomenal shape. On the other hand, if you look beyond the S&P 500 – if you examine broader market indices like the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) Index – you have reservations about overexposure to stock risk. Consider the admonition of billionaire hedge fund manager, David Tepper, in May of 2014. “Don’t be too frickin’ long.” That was 18 months ago. For those who insist that the stock market keeps grinding higher, broader stock market indices suggest otherwise. The commentary herein, and the caution that I have been expressing since early 2014, has focused on how one should position himself/herself in late-stage bull markets. Long-time readers understand that the majority of my clients still own long-time positions such as the Vanguard High Yield Dividend ETF (NYSEARCA: VYM ), the Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSEARCA: XLK ), the iShares USA Minimum Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA: USMV ) and the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ). What I have largely proposed over the last 18-21 months is that investors reduce their overall exposure to risk, lightening up on the asset class canaries – small caps, high yield bonds, commodity-related companies and emerging markets. In other words, don’t be too freakin’ long. 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.

Momentum, Quality And Low Volatility: Continuing The Quest For Smarter Beta

Summary In November I introduced a smart beta portfolio based on MSCI’s indexes for quality, momentum and low volatility. The semi-annual rebalancing of those indexes is complete. I review the previous six-month performance and determine the components of the rebalanced MQLV portfolio. In early November I proposed the idea of using the iShares smart beta ETF portfolios as a filter for building one’s own risk-premia portfolio ( A Quest for the Smartest Beta ). I started from three ETFs, each indexed to a single factor: Low Volatility, Momentum and Quality. iShares MSCI USA Minimum Volatility ETF (NYSEARCA: USMV ) iShares MSCI USA Momentum Factor ETF (NYSEARCA: MTUM ) iShares MSCI USA Quality Factor ETF (NYSEARCA: QUAL ) Taken together, these three ETFs make a solid holding as seen in this table showing results of an equal weighted portfolio of the three ETFs vs. the S&P 500 since the inception of QUAL, the youngest of the three, in August 2013. (click to enlarge) Starting from the premise that each of the ETFs is selecting for a single “smart-beta” factor I wanted to look at the intersection of the three funds. I asked if there were overlapping positions in all three ETFs. I compared their full sets of holdings looking for that overlap. There were 14 funds shared by all three. I reasoned that since each of the 14 passed the MSCI filters for low-volatility, momentum and quality, it could be worth looking at a portfolio comprising all 14, in effect, a portfolio located at the intersection of Quality, Momentum and Low Volatility. June through November Results The 14 stocks from the end of May rebalance are: Arch Capital Group Ltd (NASDAQ: ACGL ) Accenture PLC (NYSE: ACN ) Axis Capital Holdings Ltd (NYSE: AXS ) Chubb Corp (NYSE: CB ) Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. (NYSE: CMG ) Home Depot Inc. (NYSE: HD ) Eli Lilly (NYSE: LLY ) Nike Inc. Class B (NYSE: NKE ) O’Reilly Automotive Inc. (NASDAQ: ORLY ) Reynolds American Inc. (NYSE: RAI ) Starbucks Corp (NASDAQ: SBUX ) Sigma Aldrich Corp (NASDAQ: SIAL ) Visa Inc. Class A (NYSE: V ) W.R. Berkley Corp (NYSE: WRB ) Each of the ETFs is rebalanced to a revised index twice annually, on the last business days of May and November. So, when I looked at the portfolio, let’s call it MQLV , it had a five-month record from its “inception” on the last business day of May. It had performed well. For the five months from June 1 to Nov 1, it turned in a CAGR of 41.0% vs SPY’s -1.30%. Now that the full cycle is complete we can update performance at the close of the six-month holding period. It performed thusly: (click to enlarge) That is a quite impressive performance record. In a market environment where the S&P 500 index could only muster a 1.74% total return, MQLV chalked up nearly 19%. Sharpe (2.21) and Sortino (7.29) ratios are at rarely seen levels. Pretty good evidence that there may well be something to this idea. Not in any way definitive, of course; it is, after all, a single cycle. But those results are surely saying “Hey, look over here.” Rebalancing for December through May Now that MSCI has rebalanced the indexes, I let’s have a look at the changes. The current overlap for the three funds has moved from 14 to 18 stocks. Eleven remain from the previous list. There are seven new entries, and three have dropped off. The additions are: Costco Wholesale Corp (NASDAQ: COST ) Henry Schein Inc (NASDAQ: HSIC ) Lockheed Martin Corp (NYSE: LMT ) Mcdonalds Corp (NYSE: MCD ) Public Storage REIT (NYSE: PSA ) Travelers Companies Inc (NYSE: TRV ) Ulta Salon Cosmetics & Fragrance I (NASDAQ: ULTA ) And the deletions: Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. Reynolds American Inc. Sigma Aldrich Corp CMG is no longer included in MTUM’s holdings but remains in USMV and QUAL. RAI was dropped from QUAL; it remains in USMV and MTUM. SIAL was acquired. The sector mix is dominated by Consumer Discretionary and Financials which account for 12 of the 18 positions. (click to enlarge) If we combine these 18 positions into an equal-weighted portfolio, the portfolio metrics are as follows: (click to enlarge) (from investspy.com based on one-year’s data) One-year performance for these 18 is outstanding, having beaten SPY 27.7% to 3.5% for the year. This is, of course, no indication of what the portfolio will do over the next six months between now and the next rebalance, but it does auger well for success. And, let’s not forget, 11 of these holdings were included in the previous iteration which trounced SPY handily. Here is a correlation matrix for the holdings. (click to enlarge) Running the portfolio through Portfolio Visualizer’s four-factor analysis produces the following regressions. Once again, it’s based on one-year’s data. (click to enlarge) As commenters pointed out in discussing the November article, there is little exposure here to size, all but three of the size exposures are negative. Several suggested that I should include the value factor. I argued that value was inherent in some of the selection criteria used by USMV and QUAL, so adding an ETF like the iShares MSCI USA Value Factor ETF (NYSEARCA: VLUE ) would be redundant. That point of view was confirmed to a large extent by including the VLUE and the iShares MSCI USA Size Factor ETF (NYSEARCA: SIZE ) portfolios in the analysis as a follow-up ( Expanding the Smart Beta Filter: Does It Help? ). Now, from the results of this regression analysis of the Fama-French factors, we can see that value exposure is, in fact, fairly high. This result confirms my sense that value was being addressed at least partially, even though it is not a specific factor for any of the three source ETFs. HSIC, LLY, LMT, SBUX are negative for value, but the rest are positive or neutral. Unsurprisingly, momentum exposure–the only factor specifically selected for by a source ETF–is high; only LLY is negative here. Given the extraordinary success of the June through November record I am excited to see how the rebalanced portfolio performs. At 18 positions this is a fairly large commitment for an outright investment, but it could well be worth some serious thought. To me, the concept appears sound and the track record, limited though it may be, is supportive. Is it actionable? I’d like to think so, but the hard evidence, however impressive, is sketchy. So any action taken would be largely based on an appreciation for the conceptual basis of the strategy. I’ll be keeping this updated as we move forward.