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The Two Sides Of Total Investment Return

By Quan Hoang I spend about 10-15% of my time crunching data. That sounds tedious but I actually enjoy this task. It forces me to pay attention to details, checking any irregularity I see in the numbers and trying to tell a story out of the numbers. My recent work on Commerce Bancshares (NASDAQ: CBSH ) led me to ponder the relationship between ROIC and long-term return. Over the last 25 years, Commerce Bancshares averaged about a 13-14% after-tax ROE, and grew deposits by about 5.6% annually. Over the period, share count declined by about 1.9% annually, and dividend yield was about 2-2.5%. Assuming no change in multiple, a shareholder who bought and held Commerce throughout the period would receive a total return of about 9.5-10%, which is lower than its ROE. Why is that? Chuck Akre once talked about this topic: ” Mr. Akre: What I’ve concluded is that a good investment is an investment in a company who can grow the real economic value per unit. I looked at (what) the average return on all classes of assets are and then I (discovered) that over 75-100 years that the average return on common stock is around 10%. Of course this is not the case for the past decade but over the past 75-100 years, 10% has been the average return of common stocks. But why is that? Audience A: Reinvestment of earnings. Audience B: GDP plus inflation. Audience C: Growing population. Audience D: GDP plus inflation plus dividend yield. Audience E: Wealth creation. Audience F: Continuity of business. Akre: …what I concluded many years ago, which I still believe today, is that it correlates to the real return on owner’s capital. The average return on businesses has been around low double digits or high single digits. This is why common stocks have been returning around 10% because it relates to the return on owner’s capital. My conclusion is that (the) return on common stocks will be close to the ROE of the business, absent any distributions and given a constant valuation. Let’s work through an example. Say a company’s stock is selling at $10 per share, book value is $5 per share, ROE is 20%, which means earnings will be a dollar and P/E is 10 and P/B of 2. If we add the $1 earning to book value, the new book value per share is $6, keeping the valuation constant and assuming no distributions, with 20% ROE, new earnings are $1.2 per share, stock at $12, up 20% from $10, which is consistent with the 20% ROE. This calculation is simple and not perfect, but it has been helpful in terms of thinking about returns on investment. So we spend our time trying to identify businesses which have above average returns on owner’s capital.” The restriction in Akre’s explanation is ” absent any distributions. ” In general, there are two sides of total return: the management side, and the investor side. Management can affect total return through ROIC, reinvestment, and acquisitions. Investors can affect total return through the price they pay and the return they can achieve on cash distributions. The Problem of Free Cash Flow Reinvestment into the business usually has the highest return (this post discusses only high quality businesses that have high ROIC). Problems arise when there’s free cash flow. Management must choose either to return cash to shareholders or to invest the cash themselves. Both options tend to have lower return than ROIC. Cash distributions don’t seem to give investors a great return. Stocks often trade above 10x earnings so distributions give lower than 10% yield. In my example, Commerce Bancshares wasn’t able to reinvest all of its earnings. It retained about 40% of earnings to support 5.6% growth and returned 60% of earnings in the form of dividends and share buyback. The stock usually trades at about a 15x P/E, which is equivalent to a 6.67% yield. The retained earnings had good return, but the cash distributions had low underlying yield. The average return was just about 10%. Unfortunately, many times returning cash to shareholders is the best choice. Hoarding cash without a true plan on using it destroys value. Expanding into an unrelated business for the sake of fully reinvesting doesn’t make sense. Similarly, acquisitions often don’t create a good return. The problem with acquisitions is that they’re usually made at a premium so the underlying yield is likely lower than the yield that would result from share buybacks. The lower underlying yield can be offset by either sales growth or cost synergies. Studies show that assumptions about cost synergies are quite reliable while sales growth usually fails to justify the acquisition premium. To illustrate this point,let’s take a look at 3 of the biggest marketing services providers: WPP, Omnicom, and Publicis. Omnicom is a cautious acquirer. It spends less and makes smaller acquisitions than peers. Its average acquisition size is about $25 million. Over the last 10 years, Omnicom spent only 16% of its cash flow in acquisitions while WPP and Publicis spent about 44% of their cash flow in acquisitions. Publicis is a stupid acquirer. It makes big acquisitions and usually pays 14-17x EBITDA. WPP is a smart acquirer. Like Omnicom, it prefers small acquisitions. When it did make big acquisitions, it paid a low P/S and took advantage of cost synergies. For example, it paid $1.75 billion or a 1.2x P/S ratio for Grey Global in 2005. That was a fair price as WPP was able to integrate Grey and achieve WPP’s normal EBIT margin of about 14%. To compare value creation of these companies over the last 15 years, I looked at return on retained earnings, a measure of how much intrinsic value per share growth created by each percent of retained earnings. As these advertising companies have stable margins, sales per share is a good measure of intrinsic value. Retained earnings in this case is cash used for acquisitions and share buyback, but not for dividends. As expected, Publicis created the least value: It’s interesting that the smart acquirer WPP didn’t create more value than Omnicom. That’s understandable because acquisitions aren’t always available at good prices. So, it’s very difficult for management to generate a great return on free cash flow. Therefore, the value of a high-ROIC business is limited by the capacity to reinvest organically. Free cash flow tends to drag down total return to low double-digit or single-digit return. The Investor Side of Total Return It’s very difficult to make a high-teen return by simply relying on management. The capacity to reinvest will dissipate over time and free cash flow will drag total return down to single digit. However, there are two ways investors can improve total return. First, investors can shrewdly invest cash distributions. When looking at capital allocation, I usually calculate the weighted average return. For example, if a company invests 1/3 of earnings in organic growth with 20% ROIC and 1/3 in acquisitions with 7% return on investment, and returns 1/3 to shareholders, how much is the total return? It depends on how well shareholders reinvest the money. If we shareholders can reinvest our dividends for a 15% return, the weighted average return is 20% * 1/3 + 7% * 1/3 + 15% * 1/3 = 14%. This number approximates the rate at which we and the management “together” can grow earnings (actually if payout rate is high, combined earnings growth will over time converge to our investment return on cash distributions.) Second, an investor can buy stocks at a low multiple. The benefit of buying at a low multiple is two-fold. It can help improve yield of earnings on the initial purchase price. It also creates chance of capital gains from selling at a higher multiple in the future. Warren Buffett managed to make 20% annual return for decades because he was able to buy great businesses at great prices and then profitably reinvest cash flow of these businesses. Small investors can mimic Buffett’s strategy as long as the stock they buy distributes all excess cash. They can reinvest dividends for a great return. In the case of share buybacks, they can take and reinvest the cash distribution by selling their shares proportionately to their ownership. That’s how Artal Group monetizes Weight Watchers (NYSE: WTW ). Share Repurchase at Whatever Price This discussion leads us to the topic of share repurchases. I think many investors overestimate the importance of share buyback timing. It’s nice if management buys back shares at 10x P/E instead of 20x P/E. But what if share prices are high for several years? Would investors want management to wait for years – effectively hoarding cash – to buy back stock at a low price? Good share buyback timing can help build a good record of EPS growth but EPS growth doesn’t tell everything about value creation. It’s just one side of total return. What investors do with cash distributions is as important. So, I think management should focus more on running and making wise investments in the business and care less about how to return excess cash. I would prefer them to repurchase shares at whatever price. By doing so, management effectively shares with investors some of the responsibilities to maximize total return. Share buyback gives investors more options. Investors must automatically pay tax on dividends but they can delay paying tax by not selling any shares at all. If they want to get some dividends, they can sell some shares and pay tax only on the capital gain from selling these shares instead of on the whole amount of dividends. Or they can simply sell all their shares and put all the proceeds into better investments if they think the stock is expensive. Conclusion I do not believe in buying a good business at a fair price. If the management does the right things, holding a good business at a fair price can give us 10% long-term return. But great investment returns require a good job of capital allocation on the investor’s part: buying at good prices and reinvesting cash distributions wisely.

ECB To Be More Dovish? Watch These ETFs

The European Central Bank (ECB) president Mario Draghi surprised the global market yesterday by giving cues of further policy easing in its March meeting. This came on the heels of Draghi’s repeated assurance of a more intensified and protracted policy easing, if need be. With the Euro zone growth picture still dull and the inflationary environment slackening considerably, prospects of further rate cuts and a likely raise in ECB’s ongoing QE measure have high chances of manifestation. Draghi reaffirmed that the ECB will evaluate and ‘possibly reconsider’ the monetary policy in the March meeting. The reason behind this dovish stance was a 12-year low Brent crude which ruined the possibility of any improvement in inflation in 2016. The ECB economists had projected the annual inflation rate to inch up ‘from 0.2% recorded in December 2015 and average 1% this year, rising further in 2017’. But with oil prices sliding 40% more than the time when the projections were made, Draghi is now skeptical of inflation in 2016, as per the Wall Street Journal. At present, ECB expects 2016 inflation to be 0.7% (down from 1% projected earlier) while inflation for 2017 is expected to be 1.4% (down from 1.5% guided previously) (read: Dovish Draghi Drives Up These European ETFs ). The ECB took several meaningful steps in last two years to bolster the common currency bloc. It launched an asset buying program at the start of 2015 and extended the program by six more months to March 2017 at the end of the year. The bank also cut its deposit rate by 10 bps, shoving it deeper into the negative territory to -0.3% (read: 4 European ETFs to Buy on Cheaper Valuations, QE Launch ). While the markets did not appreciate ECB’s year-end stimulus measure as they expected an outsized expansion in the QE policy and steeper cuts in interest rates, global stocks liked ECB’s statement this time around. Market Impact Several Euro zone ETFs rallied on January 21 post Draghi’s comment. Among the toppers were the iShares MSCI Italy Capped ETF (NYSEARCA: EWI ) , the Barclays ETN + FI Enhanced Europe 50 ETN (NYSEARCA: FEEU ) , the Credit Suisse FI Enhanced Europe 50 ETN (NYSEARCA: FIEU ) , the iShares MSCI United Kingdom ETF (NYSEARCA: EWU ) and the iShares Currency Hedged MSCI EMU ETF (NYSEARCA: HEZU ) with gains of about 2.9%, 1.8%, 1.5%, 1.4% and 1.3%, respectively. Euro also shed gains as evident by 0.03% losses incurred by the CurrencyShares Euro Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: FXE ) . The fund shed more gains of about 0.1% after hours. ETFs to Play Investors may take advantage of this euphoria in the European market. The first option is to bet on our top-ranked European ETFs. Below we highlight two options. Deutsche X-trackers MSCI Germany Hedged Equity ETF (NYSEARCA: DBGR ) DBGR is a hedged German equity ETF providing exposure to 56 firms. The fund focuses on Consumer Discretionary, Financials and Health Care sectors. Expense ratio comes in at 0.45%. DBGR has a Zacks ETF Rank #1 (Strong Buy) with a Medium risk outlook. DRGR was up 1.3% on January 21, 2016. Deutsche X-trackers MSCI United Kingdom Hedged Equity ETF (NYSEARCA: DBUK ) This hedged UK ETF has amassed about $4 million in assets. The fund holds114 stocks presently and charges 45 bps in fees. Financials, Consumer Staples, Energy, Consumer Discretionary and Health Care have a double-digit weight in the fund. The fund was up 1.4% on January 21 and carries a Zacks ETF Rank #2 (Buy). Investors can also play this move by shorting the euro ETFs. Below, we highlight a few choices in the inverse euro ETF space. These ETFs profit when the euro declines and may be suitable for hedging purposes against the fall in the currency. ProShares Ultra Short Euro ETF (NYSEARCA: EUO ) This leveraged ETF looks to provide twice the inverse exposure to the performance of euro versus the U.S. dollar on a daily basis. The ETF charges a hefty annual expense ratio of 95 basis points. The product was up 0.04% on January 21. Investors could book more profits off this fund, should the euro continue to struggle. Market Vectors Double Short Euro ETN (NYSEARCA: DRR ) This is an exchange-traded note issued by Morgan Stanley. The product seeks to track the performance of the Double Short Euro Index. For every 1% weakening of the euro relative to the greenback, the index normally gains 2%. The product charges an expense ratio of 0.65% a year and advanced about 1% (as of January 21, 2016). Link to the original on Zacks.com

Industrial ETFs In Focus On GE Mixed Q4 Results

On Friday, General Electric (NYSE: GE ), the industrial conglomerate giant, reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter 2015 earnings but missed on the top line. Earnings per share came in 52 cents, a couple of cents ahead of the Zacks Consensus Estimate and up 27% from the year-ago quarter. Revenues rose 1.4% year over year to $33.89 billion but were well below our estimated $35.92 billion. The revenue miss were credited to a weak global economy and an oil price slide that hurt revenues in the renewable, and oil and gas segments (read: Oil Hits 12-Year Low: Short Energy Stocks with ETFs ). In order to withstand the fall oil prices and slow global growth, General Electric doubled its restructuring spending for this year to $3.4 billion and increased its cost-cutting target by two times for the struggling oil and gas business to as much as $800 million. Further, the company is transforming itself into a digital-industrial company and plans to shift its headquarters from Connecticut to Boston by 2018. Notably, digital business revenue climbed 22% to $5 billion last year and is on track to reach $20 billion by 2020. For fiscal 2016, the company reaffirmed its earnings per share guidance of $1.45-$1.55, the midpoint of which is a penny below the Zacks Consensus Estimate. Organic revenue is expected to grow 2-4% while cash generation is estimated at $30-$32 billion. General Electric also intends to return $26 billion to its shareholders this year, including $8 billion in dividends and $18 billion in share repurchases. Market Impact Following mixed Q4 results, shares of GE dropped as much as 3.1% in Friday’s trading session and the industrial ETFs having double-digit allocation to this industrial conglomerate giant are in focus for the days ahead. All the funds stated below have a Zacks ETF Rank of 3 or ‘Hold’ rating with a Medium risk outlook. Fidelity MSCI Industrials Index ETF (NYSEARCA: FIDU ) This fund tracks the MSCI USA IMI Industrials Index, holding 345 stocks in its basket. General Electric takes the top spot at 13.3% share with the aerospace and defense industry making up for one-fourth of the portfolio, followed by industrial conglomerates at 21.3%. The product has amassed $100.5 million in its asset base while trades in moderate volume of nearly 102,000 share a day on average. It is one of the low cost choices in the space charging 12 bps in annual fees from investors. The fund gained 0.8% following GE results. Industrial Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSEARCA: XLI ) This is the largest and most popular ETF in the space with AUM of $5.3 billion and average daily volume of 13.7 million shares. It follows the Industrial Select Sector Index and charges 14 bps in fees per year. Holding a small basket of 68 securities, GE takes the top spot with 11.9% allocation. Form a sector look, aerospace and defense occupy the top position at 28.3% followed by industrial conglomerates (21.5%), and machinery (12.8%). The fund added 0.9% on the day. Vanguard Industrials ETF (NYSEARCA: VIS ) This fund follows the MSCI US IMI Industrials 25/50 index and holds about 346 securities in its basket. Of these firms, GE occupies the top position with 12.6% allocation. Here again, aerospace and defense takes the top spot at 23.8% followed by industrial conglomerates at 20.2%. The fund manages $1.8 billion in its asset base and charges 10 bps in annual fees. Volume is moderate as it exchanges 121,000 shares a day on average. The product gained 1.1% on the day (read: Beat U.S. Manufacturing Woes with These Industrial ETFs ). iShares U.S. Industrials ETF (NYSEARCA: IYJ ) This product provides exposure to 212 industrial stocks by tracking the Dow Jones U.S. Industrials Index. It is heavily concentrated on GE – the top firm – with 11.5% of assets while others make up for less than 4% share. Further, the ETF is tilted toward capital goods’ companies at 59.4% while transportation and software services round off the next two spots with double-digit exposure. The fund has an AUM of $507 million and average daily volume of 68,000 shares. Expense ratio came in at 0.44%. The product has gained nearly 1.2% following GE results. Bottom Line Investors should note that the decline in the GE share price has not affected these ETFs despite its largest allocation to the company. This is because the funds have a spread out exposure to a number of firms in various types of industries suggesting that the space can easily counter small declines from some of the industry’s biggest components. Further, the gains in these industrial ETFs are the result of a broad stock market rally buoyed by the sudden spike in oil price, and stimulus hopes in Europe and Japan. Link to the original post on Zacks.com