Tag Archives: management

VUIAX: This Utility Mutual Fund Is Keeping The Lights On

Summary VUIAX has a respectably low correlation to SPY, but the correlation and relative volatility have changed materially over time. The expense ratio is great for an investor wanting some cheap diversification throughout the utility sector. I expect the Federal Reserve to push hard for raising rates in December, but I don’t think rate increases can be sustained. Utilities are sensitive to interest rates, so an increase in rates would trigger lower prices and a buying opportunity. In my past analysis on other utility mutual funds and ETFs I have found they can offer some nice benefits to the portfolio from lower levels of volatility and lower levels of correlation to the S&P 500. However, finding a good utility mutual fund can be a problem because a high expense ratio can destroy a fund that would otherwise be very attractive. Since the Vanguard Utilities Index Fund (MUTF: VUIAX ) has an expense ratio of only .12%, I’m feeling pretty optimistic going into this one. Does VUIAX provide diversification benefits to a portfolio? Each investor may hold a different portfolio, but I use the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ) as the basis for my analysis. When I ran a regression on SPY and VUIAX, I found a correlation of 78%. That isn’t very low, but it is not high enough to be problematic. I found the annualized volatility for VUIAX was 18% since February of 2004, which was slightly lower than the overall market at 19.4% during that time span. However, if an investor focuses only on the last couple of years the resulting volatility levels are significantly less favorable for VUIAX. Over the last 24 months the annualized volatility on VUIAX was 14.8% and it was only 13.1% on SPY. On the other hand, during those 24 months the correlation was only around 53% rather than the longer term average of 78%. Expense Ratio The mutual fund is posting .12% for an expense ratio. What else is there to say? That is a solid expense ratio. Largest Holdings The diversification within the mutual fund is pretty weak. For a very long term holder it might make sense to replicate the mutual fund by just buying the underlying securities and taking higher trading costs to eliminate the expense ratio. However, an expense ratio of only .12% would be difficult to beat without a fairly long time horizon or a large volume of commission free trades in the account. (click to enlarge) The major holdings here are the same ones I would expect to see. Duke Energy Corporation (NYSE: DUK ) is a fairly huge utility company and frequently at the top of the list for utility mutual funds. All around this appears to be a reasonable portfolio for an investor that wants to get more utility companies into their portfolio without having to buy the companies individually. Why Utilities Investors may be wondering why they should look to raise the utility allocation when the Federal Reserve is talking about raising rates. Since utilities tend to have some material correlation to corporate bond funds, it would seem like an allocation to utilities would be dangerous. When it comes to the Federal Reserve, my stance is that they can’t raise rates as rapidly as they would like to raise them. Because I expect them to substantially underperform their projected trajectory, I see the December meeting as potentially providing a great entry point for equity REITs, utilities, and bonds. I see the potential for weaker prices as being indicative of solid entry points, it simply requires having the conviction to pull the trigger right when everyone else is bracing for higher rates. Conclusion Utility companies can act as a form of income investment because of their strong dividend yields. Unlike buying into a bond portfolio investors can expect that the level of dividends will be increasing over time which makes up for the portfolio having more risk than a simple bond portfolio. When it comes down to designing an ideal portfolio, I think there is a viable argument for running a higher allocation to the utility sector as a way to improve diversification throughout the portfolio. The biggest weakness for using utility companies as a way to diversify the portfolio is that the diversification benefits of the utility allocation are not as strong as the benefits from simply using a diversified bond portfolio since bonds have historically shown materially lower correlations with the S&P 500. If an investor already has a large allocation to bonds, the benefits of adding VUIAX will not be as strong. On the other hand, if an investor places a high value on getting qualified dividends as a source of income, it would materially increase the relative attractiveness of VUIAX. In those cases, it would make sense to use a stronger allocation to VUIAX to reduce portfolio risk.

SCHX: Low Fees Just Got Lower And The Portfolio Is Still Great

Summary SCHX is a leader among low fee ETFs. This balanced portfolio works great as a core holding. The fund holds most of the major companies in the domestic market, so diversification should focus on bonds, international exposure, and REITs. One of my favorite funds that is not currently in my portfolio is the U.S. Large-Cap ETF (NYSEARCA: SCHX ). This fund offers investors exposure to the domestic equity market and has a rock bottom exposure of .04%. Or at least, I used to think .04% was the lowest investors would find on domestic equity. It turns out Schwab is in a pricing battle with BlackRock’s (NYSE: BLK ) iShares products and will be lowering the expense ratio from .04% to .03%. What does SCHX do? SCHX attempts to track the total return of the Dow Jones U.S. Large-Cap Total Stock Market Index. At least 90% of funds are invested in companies that are part of the index. SCHX falls under the category of “Large Blend.” Largest Holdings The portfolio has solid diversification. The SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF ( SPY) is holding a very similar portfolio but with a slightly larger allocation to the top companies, such as 3.55% in Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL ). However, the additional diversification for SCHX can be partially set off by some of the companies near the top being less volatile or by the ETF having less trading volume. (click to enlarge) Perhaps the question should be why investors would choose options with higher expense ratios when the holdings in SCHX make so much sense. The huge holdings here are established dividend growth champions, which the exception of AAPL and Facebook (NASDAQ: FB ), however I suspect that within 10 years those companies will have a very solid history of raising their dividends. Sector The one thing that concerns me about the way the fund is set up is the relatively light weights given to utilities and to consumer staples. I feel that makes this portfolio a little more aggressive than I prefer to be with the core of my portfolio. (click to enlarge) The reason these sectors are so appealing to me has everything to do with where we are in the macroeconomic sector. We’ve been in a prolonged bull market for quite a while and the valuations have started to get fairly rich. The Federal Reserve has given clear signs that they are desperate to raise rates, but I don’t foresee them being able to raise rates more than once or twice because the international rates are so low. If the Federal Reserve does manage to raise rates, I would be concerned about it creating headwinds for the domestic equity market and the possibility of establishing a new recession. To guard against that risk without having to sell out of the market, I prefer to increase the allocation to the more defensive sectors. Utilities benefit from functioning as regulated monopolies which allows them to expect to earn a fairly steady rate of return. Their prices do move up and down with bonds which would make higher bond yields suggest that utility prices might go down, but the utilities also offer dividend yields that are often superior to the bond yields and they benefit from increasing dividends in most years. That creates a very compelling risk/reward proposition and gives investors a solid reason to favor adding a utility allocation to their portfolio when using SCHX as the core. Consumer staples benefits from having established positions and selling products that consumers buy in good times and bad times. For instance, the tobacco industry has been a great source of returns for the consumer staples sector and continues to create sales regardless of what is happening in the market. My estimates on reasonable allocations for consumer staples and utilities for a highly risk-averse investor would be running as high as 40% of the domestic equity position. Since these sectors only give us 9.1% and 3.0%, that would require investors to specifically add exposure to the portfolio. Meanwhile they could use a fund like SCHX for another 40% of the domestic equity allocation. I would want the remaining 20% of the domestic position for REITs. Investors looking for an easy way to invest in the consumer staples sector may want to consider the Vanguard Consumer Staples ETF (NYSEARCA: VDC ) as a solid partner for working with SCHX in a portfolio. For utilities, I would suggest the Vanguard Utilities ETF (NYSEARCA: VPU ). Conclusion SCHX is a very strong contender to be a core holding in the new portfolio. I wanted a replacement for SPY that I would be able to trade without commissions. Of course, I also wanted to see a lower expense ratio, and SCHX delivered that. I like the idea of combining a large cap fund like this with domestic positions in consumer staples and utilities to create a more defensive weighting since the market has been in a prolonged bull period and the price/earnings ratios have become fairly rich. Prices have dipped back down since late summer, but now investors are facing the possibility of weaker earnings in 2016 which could offset the reduction in price.

Lies, Damned Lies, Corporate ‘Earnings’ And Up Markets

Summary Corporate earnings aren’t always what they seem. The loudest headlines often give the wrong impression. We prefer to stick with oversold value, like those we suggest below…. ” The stock market is never obvious, It is designed to fool most of the people, most of the time.” – Famed market trader Jesse Livermore One thing the market volatility of 2015 has done is decimate some of our best-laid plans, like owning hedges like QID into monster earnings from the QQQ stalwarts like Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN ), Google (NASDAQ: GOOG ) (NASDAQ: GOOGL ), Facebook (NASDAQ: FB ), Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT ) and Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL ). But on the good side it has also opened up some amazing opportunities, punishing brilliantly-run companies with great revenue and earnings potential just because they were in the wrong sector at a time when the markets’ primary participants wanted something other than what they offer. For the year thus far, for instance, that means New Tech / Social Media and Consumer Discretionary. So while Amazon, Google, Apple, Microsoft, Facebook et al have been on a tear, financials, utilities, most health care (particularly the high-tech biotechnology subset,) industrials, materials, consumer staples, utilities and energy are down for the year. That’s six of the original nine S&P sectors of our economy! (S&P just added two new sectors this month.) The V-shaped rally of October lifted health care to a 1.7% gain for the year, but the others are all still in the red. It’s important to recognize this because, in this too-much-data world we live in, people tend to be swayed by the biggest headlines, like the one recently on Marketwatch.com, proclaiming “Stock indexes enjoy best month since 2011” and think, “Wow, the market must really be up this year!” Not exactly. Even after October’s 8.8% rally, the S&P 500 is down 1.7% as of Friday, November 13th. For those who prefer the Blue Chips, alas, you are still down even more. I would rather see it up 2000 but, regrettably, facts are facts. This same “recency versus primacy” bias prevails in looking at individual companies’ shares, abetted by Wall Street’s desire to paint a rosy picture on the most ugly of earnings reports. They do this in two ways; first, by constantly lowering their “estimates” of earnings growth until they are certain that most companies will easily surpass expectations, and second, by ignoring massive losses as long as they are “non-recurring.” As to the first, suffice it to say that, if at the beginning of the quarter, success is measured as a 6-foot high-jump, but that is consistently lowered to a 5, then, a 4, then a 2-foot high jump, it is hardly exceptional to call it a high-jump when it requires only a simple step-over. The less transparent but equally deceptive practice is to say, “After non-recurring items, the company made a profit of x .” If the company, say, sells a money-losing division or abandons a major project, the losses incurred in so doing are considered “non-recurring” and therefore not germane to future earnings flow. Two brief examples: Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ ) is a longtime favorite of ours (we currently own it via our Tekla Healthcare fund.) The company released earnings for the 3rd quarter that most analysts gushed were a continuation of JNJ’s 4 consecutive quarters of “positive earnings surprises.” I have a problem with considering this the end-point of analyzing JNJ’s numbers. First, they once again showed less revenue this quarter. Earnings can easily be manipulated; revenue not so much. A company is either selling more of its products and services or they are not. One of the more popular ways to manipulate earnings is to buy back shares of your own stock rather than invest in R&D or customer acquisition. JNJ just announced another stock buyback going forward of up to $10 billion. This when its share price is within 10% of the highest it has ever been since the company’s founding in 1886. Second, JNJ only cleared the earnings hurdle after divesting itself of a smaller division at a loss, or as the WSJ put it, “Excluding special items, the company said it earned…” This “”excluding special items” clause also helped us decide to keep only a token amount in our family accounts of our once and future favorite, Royal Dutch Shell (NYSE: RDS.B ), which, every quarter it seems, takes a “one time” non-recurring action like $2.6 billion this past quarter to abandon its Arctic drilling exploration and another $2 billion to abandon its oil sands project in western Canada. The bottom line on these “one time” write-offs that companies take is: who knows how many other skeletons lurk in their closet for the next quarter and the quarter after that? More importantly, does it matter where the loss comes from? A loss is a loss is a loss. It means there is less money available to grow the firm going forward. In the first quarter of this year, my firm’s biggest and longest-served client died and his children have now effectively frozen the portfolio squabbling in court over who gets what. Did I say, “Oh, well, it was a non-recurring event so our real earnings to pay salaries, pay for research, etc. is untouched?” Of course not! And if you live in an older home in California and don’t have earthquake insurance and The Big One moves the remaining pieces of your home a quarter mile from its foundation, do you tell your family, “Wow! Aren’t we lucky that was a non-recurring loss?” As a result of financial chicanery I have become less trusting of corporate “earnings” over the years. The whole stock buyback house of cards may bolster earnings per share by reducing the shares outstanding – and will also keep the stock price high (a boon to the few executives in the inner circle whose bonuses are tied partly to the price of the shares) but what really matters in securities analysis? If you are looking for growth, to me that means two things: growth in top line revenues and growth in bottom line earnings, unadjusted for “impairments, special items, divestitures, the high price of the US dollar” or any other thing. Just because a company makes less money because the dollar is strong – it still makes less money . This leaves us with a conundrum. Of the companies out there that are growing real revenues and real earnings, AMZN sells for nearly 3 times sales and 894 times what are likely real earnings, GOOG at 6.5 times sales and 40 times earnings, and FB at 19 times sales and 104 times earnings. Fortunately, AAPL and MSFT are still possibilities and we have indeed begun to nibble at AAPL. But at this point, it simply doesn’t make sense to chase the high tech darlings in social media, online sales or cloud computing — with one against the grain exception. We are nibbling at stodgy old IBM, which has reinvented itself so many times over the past century that, especially at these prices, we aren’t going to count it out! If you can maintain a long-term viewpoint and avoid the emotion that inevitably accompanies volatile markets such as this one, I believe you will enjoy remarkable gains from these overlooked gems. We don’t need to chase the few already high-priced tech darlings to find hi-tech. Every sector and industry uses technology to increase its productivity and revenue. It is these innovators that use technology wisely that we are buying today – for profits tomorrow. There is high tech in industrials, materials, energy, health care and every other sector; it is seen in the ways in which productivity is enhanced and costs reduced. If we can buy stellar companies performing well in their business (but not seeing it reflected in their stock prices) at well below our assessment of their fair value, over any reasonable time frame we will do much better than we would by chasing the currently-highest-momentum Wall Street darlings that need just one mis-step to drop 31.8% in a week. [See: Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX ) chart Aug 17 to 24…] Energy High Tech Last month I advised we were moving out of most of our RDS.B and BP (NYSE: BP ) positions to begin initial positions instead in Chevron (NYSE: CVX ), Range Resources (NYSE: RRC ) and Antero Resources (NYSE: AR ). Chevron is cutting-edge in LNG production and Range and Antero use technologies that didn’t exist a year ago to extract natural gas at lower cost than most of their peers. Yet all are held back by yet another decline in the price paid for their product. The reason? Projections are for a mild early part of winter. Somebody isn’t thinking very far ahead. We bought these 3 because we like their long term growth. Here at Lake Tahoe, we’ve just had our first snow (it’s so beautiful!) but for most of the nation, early winter temps are expected to be pretty mild – see chart below. But then… (click to enlarge) …look out below! Like I said, somebody isn’t thinking very far ahead. While we are early in our projection for the long-term recovery for natural gas, I think prices will rise short term as utilities start getting their contracts in place for January to March. You and I aren’t the only ones studying the meteorological soothsayers’ reports right about now. Buy your straw hats in the fall and, if you are a Southern, Midwest or Northern US utility, get your natural gas lined up while you can. If these projections for winter are accurate and the rig counts and drilling continue to decline, our 3 natural gas favorites will be ideal for both a short-term blip and, better still, long term profits. Materials High Tech As of last week, the Materials sector was down 8.6% for the year. We’re talking iron and steel, aluminum, chemicals, copper, and other basics of manufacturing and industrial processes. With manufacturing moribund of late, we might expect these sorts of firms to be dead in the water. But all things regress to the mean at some point. I think great companies like duPont (NYSE: DD ) and Alcoa (AA,) while some of their products have become commoditized, are always on the cutting edge of new uses for their products. Alcoa has two primary markets: automobiles and aerospace. Lighter cars, using much more aluminum, mean better gas mileage. Defense and commercial air are both in growth mode and both need what Alcoa provides. For its part, duPont is no longer just a chemicals company. Like IBM (NYSE: IBM ), DD has become expert at reinventing itself. It is now a major factor in agriculture, in biosciences and in human and animal nutrition. Not your father’s Oldsmobile, is it? Teflon, Tyvek, Lycra, Kevlar – all advanced-level materials turned into now-familiar products, all invented and/or developed by duPont. Today, while still pursuing R&D in many areas, agriculture takes center stage at DD. With more and more hungry mouths to feed in the world and less and less arable land available, crop yield becomes critical. Providing hybrid seeds that are more pest-resistant or higher-yielding from the same level of water and nutrients will provide outsize profits to those who succeed in this area. Allegheny Technologies (NYSE: ATI ) and Carpenter Technology (NYSE: CRS ) are also in the boring manufacturing and materials sector. ATI is the Big Dog in producing airframes and other components for military and commercial aircraft engines. Their titanium- and nickel-based alloys are the best in the business and offer reduced weight and greater strength for future aerospace products. If you believe, as I do, that commercial aviation and military defense are growth industries, ATI is a great way to play it without worrying about revenue per passenger and all the other “stuff” the airlines deal with. Carpenter sells to the same end customers in aviation and energy production as ATI does, but they specialize in very different components they construct from their high-value alloys and specialty metals. In fact, CRS specializes in products designed to withstand extreme heat, pressure and corrosion. The next time you fly, just imagine the pressure, weight and heat the landing gear of your aircraft must withstand; that is just one product that CRS specializes in. Real Estate High Tech Real estate? What could possibly be high tech about real estate? Glad you asked. We may take for granted that we pull out our mobile phone and are handily connected to family, friends, and business contacts across the street or around the world, but that doesn’t happen because there are mystical forces in the ether that connect our calls. No, that job falls to the nearly 200,000 cell towers that dot the globe’s landscape, without which Verizon (NYSE: VZ ), AT&T (NYSE: T ), T-Mobile (NASDAQ: TMUS ) et al would be dead in the water. You think high tech is merely the latest gee-gaw on a smartphone? I say the stealth play in mobile telephones are the biggest cell tower owners, American Tower (NYSE: AMT ), SBA Comms (NASDAQ: SBAC ) and Crown Castle Intl (NYSE: CCI ) Of these I think CCI stands head and shoulders above the rest. It’s #2 in number of locations but most heavily concentrated in US urban areas, which garner the most traffic. And it pays a 3.7% dividend to go with what I believe is excellent future growth. As long as people continue to use cell phones, the tower operators will profit. Not Forgetting Our Hedges… 2015 has thus far fulfilled our expectation from January that we have entered a more volatile phase in this aging bull market, yet we recently had our head handed to us by owning short ETFs like QID et al. What to do? We have researched a number of long/short mutual funds and ETFs. One is the global version of our highly successful (MUTF: BPRRX ). Boston Partners Global Long/Short (MUTF: BGRSX ) gives us the same quality team in the global area. Burnham Financial Long/Short (MUTF: BURFX ) focuses almost exclusively on financials. This is an area where some companies regularly disappoint and others soar. In short, if the research at BURFX is good, the profits are good. They’ve averaged 9.4% a year for 10 years. We are buying both. Disclaimer: As Registered Investment Advisors, we believe it is essential to advise that we do not know your personal financial situation, so the information contained in this communiqué represents the opinions of the staff of Stanford Wealth Management, and should not be construed as “personalized” investment advice. Past performance is no guarantee of future results, rather an obvious statement but clearly too often unheeded! We encourage you to do your own due diligence on issues we discuss to see if they might be of value in your own investing. We take our responsibility to offer intelligent commentary seriously, but it should not be assumed that investing in any securities we are investing in will always be profitable. We do our best to get it right, and we “eat our own cooking,” but we could be wrong, hence our full disclosure as to whether we own or are buying the investments we write about.