SMART INVESTING NEWSLETTER
Jobs Report, Facebook/Meta, Facebook Market Value, Apple, Chip Sales, Oil, Single Payer Healthcare System, Pension Debt, Netflix & Amazon Earnings
Jobs Report
The jobs report blew past the estimate of 150,000 today as nonfarm payrolls grew 467,000 in January. Also, November and December saw a huge revision upward as it totaled 709,000. While I was surprised by the magnitude of the beat, I wasn't surprised to see a good report. We can't forget that employers are still desperate for workers as the job openings in December totaled nearly 11 million which was 4.6 million above the total unemployment level. It's also important to remember that we are continuing to regain jobs that were lost due to the Covid lockdowns. Currently, total employment is still about 1.7 million below where it was in February 2020. I still anticipate a strong job market this year as we continue to recoup those losses. It's in 2023 when I start to get a little more concerned with both the economy and the job market.
Facebook/Meta
Facebook/Meta lost over $200 billion of market cap this morning because earnings did not please growth investors. Shares were down more than 26% today because the company earned $3.67/share when the estimate was $3.83/share, a large miss. Also, daily active users were 1.93 billion only a 5% increase from a year ago and below the estimate of 1.95 billion users. It was also the first ever quarterly decline in daily active users for the company. On top of all this the guidance going forward is disappointing for a growth company with revenue for the first quarter expected to be $27-$29 billion which is a growth rate of just 3 to 11% and below the estimate of $30.3 billion. The company has a forward price-earnings ratio of 22.6 if the growth continues to slide the stock could have more pullback this quarter and even this year. This drop in the stock wipes out the entire year of gains and then some.
Facebook Market Value
If you’re thinking about stepping in to buy shares of Meta, also known as Facebook, after the $230 billion drop market value yesterday, you may want to consider the following. Apple‘s new ad privacy policy is expected to cost about $10 billion in lost sales for 2022 for Facebook. That is about 8% of the total yearly revenue. This is one of the many headwinds that Facebook faces going forward.
Apple
Last week Apple reported record numbers and investors cheered the results and pushed the stock up a little more. That enthusiasm may temper going forward as the details of the numbers have come out showing that greater China revenue increased 21% to a record $25.8 billion during the quarter and accounts for approximately 21% of the $124 billion in sales. After the Olympics we could see more pressure from Russia on Ukraine and talks of military action. Remember Russia and China have become friends over the years. The Biden administration has talked about economic sanctions on Russia if it attacks Ukraine. That leaves open the possibility that China could back Russia and could turn a cold shoulder to the United States hurting Apple sales. The estimated Apple earnings for the year 2023 currently stands at $6.20. If China were to react it could definitely hurt Apple earnings for 2023. Just a drop of 10% to $5.58 even with a very forgiving price to earnings multiple of 24 would give us a stock price of $133. This could cause more fear and could send the price to earnings multiple to 20. That would then bring the stock all the way down to $112 per share. Apple is a great company but be prepared for what could be on the horizon
Chip Sales
Currently worldwide chip sales are about $500 billion a year which is expected to double to $1 trillion by the end of the decade. Cheers to Intel for investing at least $20 billion in Ohio after announcing they will be spending $20 billion in Arizona and are also making investments in New Mexico. In eight years, the US has dropped from about 58% of the world manufacturing capacity of chips to just over 40%. One can imagine what trouble the United States would be in if we don’t reverse this trend and control the chip manufacturing. Also, this produces many more jobs here in the United States and will continue to stimulate our economy long-term.
Oil
Unfortunately, the headlines for the US economic sanctions on Russia appear to be stronger than the reality. The sanctions will be on the banks, state companies and key exports however Russia’s biggest revenue generator oil and gas will not be part of any sanctions. In 2014 the Obama administration had similar sanctions which had little affect and unfortunately now Russia is in better shape. Russia now has deeper foreign currency reserves, less reliance on foreign debt and better economic growth from rising oil prices. A suggestion for Mr. Biden to hurt Russia would be open all the oil and gas spickets here in the US and drive down the price of oil. I doubt he will do that, but it would be the best thing the administration could do to hurt Russia. It would also help greatly with inflation and put more money in US consumers' pockets.
Single Payer Healthcare System
Politicians in Sacramento seem hell bent on running our businesses and high-income earners out of California. I’m talking about the single payer healthcare system that failed in Vermont back in 2014 and would've been very expensive in California. It would've covered every single breathing living person in California no matter what. It would've been very expensive because there would've been no deductibles or copayments and would not have used what is known as step therapy which is trying to treat one less expensive treatment before a more expensive option to contain cost. Who did they say would pay for this plan you may ask? They planned to hit businesses with a new 2.3% gross receipt tax hitting every business struggling or not. Also, to help pay for this expensive system they planned to have a surcharge per household with a tax on income of more than approximately $150,000. Keep in mind that’s not per person but two spouses earning $80,000 each or any combination you want to come up with would've been hit with new taxes. I love California, I love running my business here, but doesn’t Sacramento see what it takes to keep this state a great state? It will not remain a great state if they continue to force out businesses and high-income net worth individuals, who do they think will remain? I'm glad to see this did not pass but seeing bills like this concerns me about what they will suggest next.
Pension Debt
I don’t give Governor Newsom much credit at all, and I disagree with many things he does. But I did see one good thing that he is doing with the large surplus of California. $9 billion of the surplus will be going to budget reserves and paying down pension debt and it will direct $5.5 billion to restore tax breaks for businesses that were suspended in the early days of the pandemic. I know it could be more but at least it is something positive for a change.
Netflix
Netflix is now 25 years old and can no longer be considered a startup when it’s OK not to have earnings or cash flow. They had a banner year in 2020 but that’s because studio production was shut down but yet subscribers poured in because of Covid-19. The big spending on content has now caught up with Netflix because in the past subscriptions grew so quickly that the margins expanded. That is no longer happening, and content costs are up, and subscription growth is down, margins went from healthy growth to a decline. This is not the Netflix of years past.
Amazon Earnings
Wall Street was excited by Amazon's earnings this morning with the stock up around 15% in morning trading. Optimism came from the cloud which saw revenue climb approximately 40% to $17.8 billion, ad revenue which climbed 32% to $9.7 billion, and EPS which came in at $27.75 which blew past the estimate of $3.54. It may be an unpopular opinion, but I was not that impressed by their numbers. To start the EPS is extremely misleading as the valuation gain on Rivian accounted for $11.8 billion of the total net income of $14.3 billion. If you exclude the nonrecurring events, Amazon posted EPS of just $5.80 which compares to last year's EPS of $14.09. The ecommerce business also struggled in the quarter as the US business had an operating loss of $206 million and the international business had an operating loss of $1.63 billion. Sales also missed and grew just 9.4% in Q4. Guidance was also weak as the company is looking for sales of between $112.0 billion and $117.0 billion, which is growth of just 3 - 8% compared with first quarter 2021 and below the estimate of $120.59 billion. Operating income also looks weak in Q1 as the company guided for $3 - $6 billion, which compares to $8.9 billion in the first quarter of 2021. Overall, I would say that's unimpressive for a company that trades at 42 times 2023 EPS.