Tag Archives: over-the-last

True Value Investing Still Works

Value investing is on the ropes. At least, that’s what you’d think reading articles like this one that highlight how “value” has underperformed “growth” in recent years. I put those words in quotes, partly because the distinction between value and growth is somewhat arbitrary , and also because the critics of value investing tend to attack metrics that have no real connection to shareholder value creation. Patrick O’Shaughnessy did a great job of attacking this myth on his blog, The Investor’s Field Guide . He points out that, over the last ten years, investors that have bought the cheapest stocks based on price to accounting book value have significantly underperformed. As we recently pointed out , book value relies upon flawed accounting metrics, diminishing its usefulness for investors. Unfortunately, most of the “value” indexes that people reference, such as the Russell 3000 Value Index, are based primarily off of price to book. As O’Shaughnessy points out, the performance of value strategies varies greatly depending on which metric you use. If you picked the cheapest stocks based on earnings, you did poorly in 2015 but slightly overperformed over the last decade. Stocks with the cheapest price to sale ratios have done very well recently. Despite their superior recent performance, these metrics have their own problems. We’ve pointed out many times how price to earnings ratios are inherently flawed and have almost no relationship with actual value. The sales number is at least less easy for executives to manipulate, but it also ignores structural margin differences and the impact of the balance sheet. What’s The Solution? Investors looking for value need to take a holistic approach that measures a company’s ability to deliver economic earnings to investors and quantifies the expectations for future cash flows embedded in its current stock price. This is what New Constructs aims to do, and while that process is not easy, it can be rewarding, as shown by the long-term outperformance of our strategies . As you can see from Figure 1, over the past decade our Most Attractive Large and Small Cap stocks have outperformed a combination of the S&P 500 and Russell 2000 by 80%. Figure 1: Most Attractive Stocks Outperform Click to enlarge Sources: New Constructs, LLC and company filings. The diligence we do helps us to uncover hidden gems that might not show up in simplistic, traditional value screens, such as computer chip manufacturer NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA ). When we highlighted NVDA as a long idea in September, it had a P/E of 24 and a P/B of 3. Hardly numbers that are going to make your “average” value investor salivate. However, a closer look showed that these numbers were misleading. For one, NVDA’s reported income was artificially depressed by a $60 million write-down hidden in the footnotes . Plus, the company earns a fantastic return on invested capital ( ROIC ) of 34%, demonstrating its competitive advantage and its ability to efficiently allocate capital. After making adjustments to determine the true earnings quality and quantifying the market’s expectations for future cash flows, we saw that NVDA had a price to economic book value ( PEBV ) of just 1.1, implying that the market believed the company would only grow after tax operating profit ( NOPAT ) by 10% for the remainder of its corporate life. For a company that had just doubled its NOPAT the year before, those expectations seemed awfully low. Sure enough, the market has adjusted its expectations for NVDA in the past few months, driving the stock up 25% even as the S&P 500 has fallen by 2%. When the markets get volatile, it’s the real value stocks, the ones with economic profits and low market expectations, that thrive. Meanwhile, the imposters get exposed. Avoiding Value Traps and Imposters Succeeding in a struggling market is as much about avoiding the bad stocks as it is about picking the good ones. Our research helps clients avoid “value traps” that seem like they might be cheap on the surface but are actually significantly overvalued when you look a little closer. One such value trap we warned investors about was Olin Corporation (NYSE: OLN ) back in June of 2014. The stock had a P/E of 13 and a P/B of 2 at the time, but those numbers were highly misleading. Hidden non-operating items boosted its reported earnings by $25 million. Plus, the company was facing obvious headwinds in the form of falling commodity prices for its chemicals division and an unsustainably high level of demand for its Winchester ammunition segment. Despite this fact, the market was expecting that OLN grow NOPAT by 5.5% for 35 years, an unrealistically long timeframe for such a weak and highly commoditized business. OLN was able to coast by on its inflated accounting earnings when the market was strong, but that all changed after the S&P 500 hit its peak in the spring of 2015. Since then, the stock’s been in free fall, and it’s now down 42% from when we made our Danger Zone call. Investors that pick stocks like OLN and ignore ones like NVDA due to simplistic metrics are not truly value investors. In a buyer-beware system like our market, you need to understand how to separate real value-investing research from the imposters. True value investing means performing your due diligence to understand the real economics of the underlying business and the profits it will have to achieve in the future to justify its stock price. Only by doing this hard work can investors uncover value and protect their portfolio. Disclosure: David Trainer and Sam McBride receive no compensation to write about any specific stock, sector, style, or theme. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Don’t Let The SEC Scare You Away From These JPM Funds

In a quarterly document filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM ) provided updates on its previously disclosed investigations as well as new probes. The company disclosed a new inquiry from the SEC and other government authorities over the sale and use of proprietary products such as JPMorgan mutual funds in the company’s wealth management businesses. JPM has received subpoenas and inquiries from the SEC and other regulators investigating how the banking behemoth sells its own mutual funds and other products. The company stated in the filing that it is cooperating with the concerned authorities. The SEC Investigation The SEC’s enforcement division is investigating if JPMorgan and brokerages offered bonuses and incentives to financial advisers to convince clients to buy in-house funds, structured notes and other investments which earned the bank fees. Bloomberg had reported this in March. “The SEC is scrutinizing, among other things, how the largest U.S. bank by assets managed pensions and other accounts that hold it to a so-called fiduciary standard, which obligates it to put clients’ financial interests ahead of its own,” reported Bloomberg in March. Reportedly, the SEC is looking into if JPMorgan had breached the bank’s duties to clients and if the bank adequately disclosed its compensation and other practices to the clients. The probe into a possible conflict of interest has been running for two years, but has become active now. According to sources, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is assisting the probe. Wendel Investissement Investigation Separately, JPMorgan provided an update about the Wendel Investissement ( OTC:WNDLF ) investigation, which has been underway since 2012. The company stated that it received a notification last month about the initiation of a formal probe against it by French authorities. Senior managers of Wendel restructured their shareholdings during the period from 2004 through 2007, with financing for certain transactions provided by the Paris branch of JPMorgan. The French criminal authorities have been investigating this case. White House Warns of Backdoor Payments This comes at a time when the Obama administration is serious about cracking down on the unfair practices that many Wall Street firms are engaged in when they advise retirement investors. The Wall Street firms are accused of deriving benefits via backdoor payments and hidden fees. The Labor Department has announced a proposal, which would require brokers to have a legal duty to prioritize clients’ interests. The protection is believed will save $40 billion in fees over 10 years. According to the Bloomberg, “Brokers could earn sales commissions and other fees that create conflicts of interest if they sign a “best-interest” contract with investors,” said Labor Secretary Thomas Perez. JPMorgan’s Stance In a 2015 disclosure statement for endowment and foundation clients, JPMorgan stated: We prefer internally managed strategies because they generally align well with our forward-looking views and our familiarity with the investment process, as well as the risk and compliance philosophy that comes from being part of the same firm…It is important to note that J.P. Morgan receives more overall fees when internally managed strategies are included. JPMorgan’s asset-management unit has expanded though its other major banks face regulatory pressure. JPMorgan enjoyed the best percentage growth in asset inflows in the five years ending 2014. A February presentation to investors noted JPMorgan had $1.7 trillion in assets under management at the end of 2014. The asset-management unit was structured by expanding JPMorgan’s mutual fund operation. On the other hand, major banks like Morgan Stanley, Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp. have trimmed their mutual fund businesses over the last 10 years, notes Bloomberg. 5 Safe JPMorgan Funds to Own Investors need not be jittery right away due to the ongoing investigations. If a JPMorgan fund has been performing well and returning handsome gains then investors may stay invested. Also, funds with low expense ratio and favorable Zacks Mutual Fund Rank should continue to be potential investment instruments. Here we will list 5 mutual funds from the JPMorgan fund family that carry a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #1 (Strong Buy) or Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #2 (Buy) as we expect the funds to outperform its peers in the future. Remember, the goal of the Zacks Mutual Fund Rank is to guide investors to identify potential winners and losers. Unlike most of the fund-rating systems, the Zacks Mutual Fund Rank is not just focused on past performance, but the likely future success of the fund. These funds also have encouraging 1 year and 3-year annualized returns. These funds carry no sales load and have low expense ratios. The management fee for these funds is less than 1%. The management fee is the annual percentage of fund assets paid to the fund’s investment manager as compensation for managing the fund. Often this fee is graded; that is, the percentage fee is reduced in steps on assets in excess of various breakpoints. Generally, the management fee will not exceed 1% of total net assets. JPMorgan Intrepid America R5 (MUTF: JIARX ) seeks capital appreciation over the long term. It invests a majority of its assets plus borrowings in large and mid cap domestic firms. While the mid-cap firms have market capitalization between $1 billion and $10 billion, the market cap for large cap firms are over $10 billion. JPMorgan Intrepid America R5 carries a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #1 (Strong Buy). JIARX has returned 14.8% and 20% over the last 1 and 3-year periods. The annual expense ratio is 0.58%, lower than the category average of 1.08%. The 10-year expense projection for every $10,000 invested is $689, compared to category average of $1,641. JPMorgan Large Cap Value R5 (MUTF: JLVRX ) invests majority of its assets in large-cap companies. JLVRX invests in equities, including common stocks and also debt and preferred stocks that can be converted to common stock. These large-cap firms have market capitalization equal to the ones listed on the Russell 1000 Value Index. JPMorgan Large Cap Value R5 currently carries a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #2 (Buy). JLVRX has returned 12.1% and 19.9% over the last 1 and 3-year periods. The annual expense ratio is 0.57%, lower than the category average of 1.13%. The 10-year expense projection for every $10,000 invested is $726, compared to category average of $1,627. JPMorgan US Equity R5 (MUTF: JUSRX ) aims to provide high total return. JUSRX invests a lion’s share of its assets in domestic companies. JUSRX mostly invests in common stocks of mid to large-cap domestic firms. It may also invest a maximum of 20% of its assets in foreign companies. JPMorgan US Equity R5 currently carries a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #2 (Buy). JUSRX has returned 14.3% and 19.5% over the last 1 and 3-year periods. The annual expense ratio is 0.59%, lower than the category average of 1.08%. The 10-year expense projection for every $10,000 invested is $735, compared to category average of $1,641. JPMorgan Growth Advantage R5 (MUTF: JGVRX ) seeks capital appreciation. JGVRX invests mostly in companies of all market capitalizations. However, at a given time, JPMorgan Growth Advantage R5’s assets may be invested in one particular type of market capitalization. JPMorgan Growth Advantage R5 currently carries a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #2 (Buy). JGVRX has returned 20.3% and 20.6% over the last 1 and 3-year periods. The annual expense ratio is 0.85%, lower than the category average of 1.19%. The 10-year expense projection for every $10,000 invested is $1,014, compared to category average of $1,670. JPMorgan Realty Income R5 (MUTF: JRIRX ) seeks to provide total return, offering both income and capital growth. JRIRX invests heavily in real estate investment trusts (REITs) and may purchase equity securities of small cap REITs. It may invest in equity as well as mortgage REITs. JPMorgan Realty Income R5 currently carries a Zacks Mutual Fund Rank #1 (Strong Buy). JRIRX has returned 11.5% and 9.9% over the last 1 and 3-year periods. The annual expense ratio is 0.78%, lower than the category average of 1.31%. The 10-year expense projection for every $10,000 invested is $1,114, compared to category average of $1,796. Editor’s Note: This article discusses one or more securities that do not trade on a major U.S. exchange. Please be aware of the risks associated with these stocks.

Yes Barrons, Third Avenue Is Going To Do Just Fine

Barrons questions whether Third Avenue can still outperform. Third Avenue has averaged 11.65% since 1990. It has an eclectic portfolio of companies most American investors have never heard of. Barrons recently had a piece entitled ” Can Third Avenue Get Back on Track ?” The answer is Yes. Third Avenue runs a deep value, extremely diversified portfolio that behaves differently from the American financial markets. Third Avenue Value Fund ( TAVFX) was founded in 1990. Over that time frame, it has averaged 11.65% versus 10.45% for the S&P 500. However, over the last ten years, the Value Fund has averaged 4.03% versus 8.01%. TAVFX data by YCharts The Value Fund has names that the average American investor has never heard of: Wheelock (OTCPK: WHLKY ), Pargesa (OTCPK: PRGAF ), Cheung Kong (OTCPK: CHEUF ), Investor AB (OTCPK: IVSBY ), and an eclectic portfolio of other names. There are also bonds, warrants, and other financial instruments. It’s a deep value fund. The goal is to buy stocks that have market caps trading well below net asset value. Third Avenue is looking for what they call a resource conversion. These include spin offs, mergers and acquisitions, special dividends, and leverage buyouts. Here is a link to an article that I wrote two months ago discussing the many investing merits of these companies. This is a style of investing. Like all styles, it has its day. In the late 1990s, deep value was not working. Growth and technology was in vogue. Then the markets crashed in 2001. Over the next few years, Third Avenue was on a roll. Part of this was due to its international holdings. Many of these Asian and Hong Kong based companies beefed up returns and handily outperformed American markets. As the Barrons article notes, there have been some missteps over the last few years. Catalyst Paper and Straits Trading ( OTCPK:STTSY ) were two dogs. What’s working now is everything. Biotech is on a roll. Technology is doing well once again. The NASDAQ has gotten back to where it was trading in the late 1990s. Once again, deep value is lagging. What also is hurting Third Avenue returns is its abundance of foreign holdings. The American dollar has been strong against all currencies and driven down the value of foreign stocks. This won’t last forever. It also has several energy stocks including Devon (NYSE: DVN ), Apache (NYSE: APA ), and Total (NYSE: TOT ). You know how they are performing. Eventually, the global financial markets will pull back, maybe even crash. Third Avenue will go down with it, just like 2001 and 2008/09. Then, it will recover. The question is whether it will recover faster than the S&P 500. Deep value is out of favor. What was hot in the late 1990s is hot now and what is out of favor then is out of favor now. If you want a blue chip portfolio, you should by the Vanguard S&P 500 (MUTF: VSPVX ). If you want something that has stocks that you or your local stock broker can’t find, look at Third Avenue. Disclosure: The author is long TAVFX, APA. (More…) The author wrote this article themselves, and it expresses their own opinions. The author is not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). The author has no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.