Tag Archives: seeking-alpha

When To Deploy Capital

One of my clients asked me what I think is a hard question: When should I deploy capital? I’ll try to answer that here. There are three main things to consider in using cash to buy or sell assets: What is your time horizon? When will you likely need the money for spending purposes? How promising is the asset in question? What do you think it might return versus alternatives, including holding cash? How safe is the asset in question? Will it survive to the end of your time horizon under almost all circumstances, and at least preserve value while you wait? Other questions like “Should I dollar cost average, or invest the lump?” are lesser questions, because what will make the most difference in ultimate returns comes from the above three questions. Putting it another way, the results of dollar cost averaging depend on returns after you put in the last dollar of the lump, as does investing the lump sum all at once. Thinking about price momentum and mean reversion are also lesser matters, because if your time horizon is a long one, the initial results will have a modest effect on the ultimate results. Now, if you care about price momentum, you may as well ignore the rest of the piece and start trading in and out with the waves of the market – assuming you can do it. If you care about mean reversion, you can wait in cash until we get “the mother of all sell-offs” and then invest. That has its problems as well: What’s a big enough sell-off? There are a lot of bears waiting for rock-bottom valuations, but the promised bargain valuations don’t materialize, because others invest at higher prices than you would, and the prices never get as low as you would like. Ask John Hussman . Investing has to be done on a “good enough” basis. The optimal return in hindsight is never achieved. Thus, at least for value investors like me, we focus on what we can figure out: How long can I set aside this capital? Is this a promising investment at a relatively attractive price? Do I have a margin of safety buying this? Those are the same questions as the first three, just phrased differently. Now, I’m not saying that there is never a time to sit on cash, but decisions like that are typically limited to times where valuations are utterly nuts, like 1964-65, 1968, 1972, 1999-2000 – basically, parts of the go-go years and the dot-com bubble. Those situations don’t last more than a decade, and are typically much shorter. Beyond that, if you have the capital to spare, and the opportunity is safe and cheap, then deploy the capital. You’ll never get it perfect. The price may fall after you buy. Those are the breaks. If that really bothers you, then maybe do half of what you would ultimately do, but set a time limit for investment of the other half. Remember, the opposite can happen, and the price could run away from you. A better idea might show up later. If there is enough liquidity, trade into the new idea. Since perfection is not achievable, if you have something good enough, I recommend that you execute and deploy the capital. Over the long haul, given relative peace, the advantage belongs to the one who is invested. If you still wonder about this question you can read the following two articles: In the end, there is no perfect answer, so if the situation is good enough, give it your best shot. Disclosure: None.

Dominion Resources: A Little Patience May Go A Long Way

Summary Dominion Resources has been discussed for its strong fundamentals and various initiatives underway to drive future growth. The data supports that view: book value, earnings, cash and revenue have all grown slowly but steadily in the past and likely will continue growth going forward. However, shares are currently at a premium; investors might be well-advised to wait for a more favorable entry point. There were opportunities before – there likely will be again. Introduction An insightful contributor to SA recently wrote about the strong business fundamentals and growth prospects of Dominion Resources, Inc. (NYSE: D ). The author did a thorough job describing the various initiatives which may drive growth in the future and offered the opinion that the current premium pricing is justified. While the growth initiatives have been well documented, it seems appropriate to more fully explore the current price-to-value relationship of this company. At the current price of about $70, are shares fairly valued? If not, are they priced at a premium right now, or a discount? This article seeks to contribute to the Dominion conversation by exploring a valuation methodology for consideration. The analysis is presented in two-steps: 1) A review of company fundamental metric performance, and 2) a PE valuation calculation. The idea is to assess a company’s historical performance as a guideline for possible future results. The assumption is that solid fundamentals lend themselves to relative predictability over longer periods of time. Then, for high-quality companies with strong track records, over time pricing matches valuation. So the question at hand is to assess the pricing-to-valuation situation right now for Dominion. Step 1: Dominion Resources, Inc. – Historical Trends in Fundamental Metrics In order to assess fundamental performance, it is reasonable to review trends in book value per share, earnings per share, cash flow per share and revenue per share. Book Value Per Share Like always, F.A.S.T. Graphs provides a useful visual. As shown on the graphic below, D has delivered slow and steady balance sheet growth over the period studied. (click to enlarge) source: www.fastgraphs.com Earnings Per Share In my opinion, D has delivered fairly modest earnings per share growth over time. Single-digit growth, while growth, is nothing extraordinary. The graph below indicates this trend is solid, but certainly not spectacular. (click to enlarge) source: www.fastgraphs.com Cash Flow Per Share From my perspective, the data suggests that Dominion management has done an effective job managing cash successfully over long periods of time. Substantial capital investments have increased the earnings capabilities of the company as evidenced by the data. (click to enlarge) source: www.fastgraphs.com Revenue Per Share IMHO, the data again suggests modest revenue growth over periods of time. This seems to suggest a solid position in the market place, but nothing exceptionally over and above the peer group to suggest premium pricing. (click to enlarge) source: fastgraphs.com Based on a review of the data, in my opinion Dominion is a quality company with a track record of success and a variety of initiatives to grow earnings going forward. Results are not spectacular; modest would be a better description. The next step is to determine: at current price levels, are D shares fairly valued, at a premium, or a discount? Step 2: A Possible Valuation When valuing a company, I like to compare that company against its own historical valuation. As usual, F.A.S.T. Graphs comes in very handy. In the chart below, the orange line represents earnings history and what could be considered “fair valuation” at a price/earnings multiple of 15X. The blue line represents a historic normalized average P/E. Finally, the black line is the market price of D. Looking carefully at the graphic below, we can observe that the historical normal PE for D is 15.8X earnings. Today D is priced at 19.5X earnings or more. This is portrayed by the black price line currently above the blue and orange line. (click to enlarge) source: fastgraphs.com So it appears that shares are priced at a premium right now. Just how much of a premium? To purchase D today an investor would be paying nearly 20X earnings when the norm is for an investor to pay 15.8X earnings. And it is noticeable that PE multiples have been growing steadily for this company for that past 5+ years. We can also note there were times in 2011, 2012 and 2013 where this company was available for 15-17X earnings if a person was patient and willing to buy at price levels below the average PE. So what might be a reasonable target entry point? If we apply the average PE multiple to 2015 estimated EPS, an entry point around $58 seems to offer a margin of safety. This may be especially important in a skittish market overall. IMHO, even though the company has a number of initiatives underway, there is downside risk when paying at prices above historical valuation norms. Over time the price tends to revert to the average valuations. In this case, buying above the average may present downside risk. Conclusion This article was intended to add to the conversation by looking at trended financial fundamentals and a closer look at valuation. IMHO, Dominion is a quality company with initiatives and investments under way to generate future earnings growth. However, at current price levels shares are priced at a premium. Investors may be well-served to be patient and wait for pullbacks to at least normal PE levels, or perhaps consider selling puts as a way to enter a position at an even better entry point. As always, all of the above opinions offered for your consideration as you make your own investment decisions. Commentary is intended simply as a contribution to the discussion only. Thank you very much for reading. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

When Opportunity Reveals Itself: CMS Energy Corp.

Summary The uncertainty around the Fed’s action in September seems to be the highest driver of volatility. The correction caught up with the Utilities and REITs. Opportunities are popping up. Here is my CMS buy-point. Tuesday ended up in a red territory after being green most of the day. I have written about that couple of days ago: The sell-off will continue. Here is the end of day Tuesday summary. (click to enlarge) This time it was the REITs and Utilities (highlighted in yellow circles) that led the trading’s last hour free fall. This is completely aligned with the thesis that it is all about the interest rate hike. The China slowdown has some effect on the sentiment but the approaching interest rate hike leads to a significant sell off in sectors that are sensitive to the long term interest rate. For the first time in a while the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: TLT ) also suffered from a pullback on Tuesday . This makes sense as the approaching interest rate hike should lead to higher yields, but as fear has a huge psychological impact people still rush back to bonds from time to time as it is considered a safe heaven. (click to enlarge) The drops in REITs and Utilities is probably just the beginning as there is some time until the Fed will announce its decision in September. In the meanwhile some opportunities might pop up. CMS Energy Corporation CMS Energy ( CMS ) was founded in 1987 and operates in the state of Michigan. The company is more of a holding company that integrates energy companies. Its primary business operations in the fields of electric and natural gas utility, natural gas pipeline systems, and independent power generation. CMS Enterprises, through its subsidiaries and equity investments, is engaged primarily independent power production and owns power generation facilities fueled mostly by natural gas and biomass. It has three business segments: electric utility, gas utility and enterprises. In the last seven years CMS has demonstrated EPS growth and a constant dividend growth. The next graph taken from nasdaq.com illustrates the growth seen since 2008. The yearly dividend went up from $0.4 per share to $1.1 per share. This is an average of 19% over a six years period of time. The full year 2015 EPS is expected to be at the range of $1.86-1.89. This is 5-7% higher year over year. The next chart illustrates the EPS walk in 2015. It was taken from CMS Q2 earning report presentation . (click to enlarge) CMS’ dividend payout target is at 62%. This leaves the cash required for the additional capital investments that the company plans to invest over the course of the next decade. (click to enlarge) The DGR: Though CMS demonstrated a strong dividend increase in the past, based on the company’s forecast the dividend growth rate is expected to be more modest as it should be aligned with the 5-7% EPS expected growth. I feel comfortable with 5-7% growth per year but would like to make sure that my entry point is at a relatively high dividend rate. My buy-point: CMS, like the rest of the Utilities sector is going suffer in the coming weeks, until there will be more clarity regarding the Fed’s action. The stock went down below $33 per share, which based on $1.16 is 3.5% dividend rate. I would prefer to buy the stock close to its lows that supported the stock during last summer at $28 per share. This price represents 4.1% dividend yield rate. Though the stock might drop even further afterwards I believe that $28 is a good long term buy for CMS. (click to enlarge) Conclusions: The uncertainties regarding the interest rate hike will continue to take its toll, especially on high dividend rate sectors like Utilities and REITs. Long term investors should take advantage of the correction and arrange their long term investment portfolios to generate more wealth. I plan to initiate a buy in CMS at $28. Happy investing! Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, but may initiate a long position in CMS over the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article. Additional disclosure: The opinions of the author are not recommendations to either buy or sell any security. Please do your own research prior to making any investment decision.