SMART INVESTING NEWSLETTER
Commercial Real Estate, Should You Buy Nvidia Now, Chinese Car Makers, Investment Return of Annuities, Tech Layoffs, Prescriptions, Funnies, Fast Food and Long-Term Plan
Commercial Real Estate
We hear that commercial real estate properties are having problems, but how bad are those problems? After the 2008/2009 financial crisis, by the second quarter of 2010 commercial property had a record $194.8 billion properties in distress. Compare that to the end of 2023, when commercial properties in distress totaled $86 billion. Also, think about how much commercial real estate has appreciated since 2010. Another point to consider, after the financial crisis there were not many funds on the sidelines and today real estate private equity firms are sitting on $544 billion in cash, which is a record level up from $457 billion in cash at the end of 2022. With that much cash, they will be interested in doing some deals and give a floor to many commercial properties across the country.
Should You Buy Nvidia Now?
We all know that Nvidia has done very well, and after the most recent report the stock is at a new high. I heard the dumbest thing from a money manager on CNBC, who didn’t own Nvidia and said you need to buy one percent of the stock in your portfolio. The reason I say it is dumb is because even if the stock doubles from here that would only increase your investment return by one percent. In other words, if your return was 10% over the next year, with the addition of Nvidia your return would be 11% if the stock doubles from here. This also assumes that had you invested one percent somewhere else it would’ve made no return at all. When it comes to investing, discipline is very important and yes, we all want to invest in investments that will increase in value, but an investor must understand their objective and their discipline, stay the course, and realize that one will not always own all the hot stocks and should not chase returns.
Chinese Car Makers
A Chinese electric auto maker, BYD, is sending chills across the auto makers in the US. Elon Musk said “If there are not trade barriers established, they will pretty much demolish most other car companies in the world. “In a memo from executives at Toyota, they stated Chinese companies have a 25 to 30% advantage over global competitors when manufacturing EVs. If not protected against, Chinese EV companies could storm the US market. In 2018, the Trump administration applied an additional 25% tariff on Chinese cars on top of the regular 2.5% tariff on all cars coming to the US. To get around this, BYD is looking at building a factory right across the border in Mexico. They have not purchased any land yet and this is a few years down the road, but it could be devastating to all car makers 3 to 5 years from now. I looked to see what the BYD cars look like and some of them are not that bad looking. Whoever becomes president in November 2024, I hope they look seriously at this situation to prevent BYD or any other Chinese carmaker from flooding our car market.
Financial Planning: Investment Return of Annuities
An annuity is exchanging your assets for income, you’re essentially buying a pension. It’s funny that pensions have such a positive connotation but annuities aren’t as popular, even though they’re pretty much the same thing. We don’t sell annuities and we don’t ever recommend annuities because when you look at the numbers, they aren’t that appealing for an investor. To illustrate this, I got a quote for a 65-year-old purchasing a $500k immediate annuity. In exchange for the $500k, they will receive monthly income of $3,000 for the rest of their life, which is a 7.2% yield. Keep in mind, the $500k is now gone, so they can’t decide down the road to do something else with their money. Statistically someone who is 65 has a life expectancy of about 83, or more 18 years. With this information we can calculate the expected return of the $500k investment and it comes out to 2.88% per year. In other words, if you were to invest $500k and then withdraw $3,000 per month for the next 18 years, you would need that $500k to return 2.88% per year to last the full 18 years. From an investment standpoint, most people wouldn’t be happy with an annualized return of less than 3% over almost 2 decades, but that’s what people agree to when they purchase an annuity. Don’t get confused by the 7.2% yield, which is misleading since those payments stop when you die. Instead, calculate the actual return to see if it still seems like a good idea. Keep in mind, the insurance company and the agent selling the annuity will not break down the actual return for you.
Tech Company Layoffs
Layoffs in the tech industry appear to be picking up in 2024 based on the first six weeks of the year. Layoffs at 120 tech companies stood at 32,000 compared to 2023 when for the entire year it hit 260,000. It probably is too early to make comparisons, but I do believe tech companies are trying to cut costs to keep their earnings as high as possible to justify their lofty price to earnings ratios.
Funnies Re-Runs
Last week for some reason, the delivery person who delivers my Wall Street Journal also included the daily edition of the Union Tribune. I thought OK I’ll skim through it and see what is in there. I was shocked to see that the paper still has two pages of the funnies. I remember being a kid and reading the funnies every night. Still in there were cartoons like Blondie, Beetle Bailey and Peanuts classics. I was wondering are these repeats that they keep using, or is someone writing new ones? I did notice for the Peanuts classic it says by Charles M Schultz, who has passed away. So, my guess is the paper is showing repeats of funnies from years ago?
Prescription Pick-Up
In an industry report from the Drug Channels Institute and the National Association of Chain Drugstores, they showed that Americans still prefer to pick up their prescriptions in person. In 2022, mail order pharmacies filled just 9% of US prescriptions compared with 47% filled by chain pharmacies. 12 years ago, the numbers were not much different with mail order pharmacies filling 7% of prescriptions and chain pharmacies filling 48%. The study didn’t list the reason, I’m curious why people feel they need to pick up their prescriptions in person. What is your preference?
Fast Food Market Share
What is your favorite fast food burger restaurant? I ask because three major burger companies, McDonald’s, Burger King, and Wendy’s are competing once again for market share. McDonald’s with the largest number of restaurants in the US at 13,530 saw sales increase just 3.4% per store over the past year, but their stock was up close to 10%. Burger King, which is owned by Restaurant Brands International (They also own Tim Hortons, Popeyes and Firehouse subs) has seen sales at Burger King restaurants climb by 7.4% which has helped drive their stock up close to 12%. A side-note, McDonald’s has most restaurants in the state of California, while you’ll find more Burger King restaurants in the state of Texas. Bringing up the rear in the fast-food burger wars is Wendy’s. They just never seem to be able to get out of their own way. It has been taken over by an activist investor named Nelson Peltz and the stock is down around 20% over the past year. Nationwide, it does have more restaurants than Burger King checking in at 7166. I’m not a big fast-food guy, but I’m thinking about going to Wendy’s for a burger and a shake. I just remember them being pretty darn good.
Long-Term Investment Plan
I always try to compare my investment performance to the smart guys in the industry and I’m not talking about some analyst or some investor that got lucky picking Nvidia a couple years ago. I’m talking about guys that manage portfolios, more specifically the endowments of the top-rated universities around the country like Harvard and Cornell. I figure these universities produce top students who are producing some very smart people. I feel comfortable saying they hire the smartest investment people they can find. I’m not sure why it takes so long to get this data, perhaps because the endowments of the universities don’t like to release it too soon, but the most recent data for the period ending June 30, 2023 was just released and showed an average return of 2.8% over the last 12 months. The Harvard University endowment fund with $50.7 billion in assets was up 2.9%. I release this information because it always seems like there’s some fund or someone out there that just did far better than your own portfolio, but realize the smartest guys in the room don’t always have the best short-term returns as they are more concerned about the long-term outcome. Be sure when you look at your portfolio, if you’re disappointed with the short-term return, understand was the objective a short-term gain (which is speculation) or a long-term investment plan that will grow well overtime like the endowment funds of the universities.