SMART INVESTING NEWSLETTER
Santa Claus Rally, Cryptocurrencies, Banks, Magnificent Seven, Apple, Artificial Intelligence, Self-Service Checkouts & Financial Planning - Understanding Tax Lots
Santa Claus Rally
If you felt disappointed in your gifts from Santa this year, there is still hope he brings your investments some nice returns. We are currently in the middle of the Santa Claus rally which is the period of time that includes the last five trading days of the current year and the first two trading days of the new year. Historically these seven days have had higher stock prices 79.2% of the time and since 1950 the average gain was about 1.4
Cryptocurrencies
Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies have been rising in 2023. We all know that criminals use cryptocurrencies for kidnapping, drugs and ransom. I was surprised to learn since 2017 hackers have used $2.7 billion for ransom payments. Over the last couple of years, it has approached a half billion dollars per year for crypto payments, perhaps helping push up the price of bitcoin. This has been a major problem considering the ease for the cyber gangs to transfer bitcoin and remain anonymous. Think about this, if you enjoy buying and trading bitcoin, you’re helping the gangs that do these ransom attacks make money off their illegal activities that are crushing companies such as Clorox, MGM Resorts, Caesars entertainment, and even the U.S. Marshals Service just to name a few. And guess who’s paying, yes you the consumer. I have hated cryptocurrencies since their invention because I said they have no real use. I guess unfortunately I was wrong, the criminals seem to love cryptocurrencies. Other than that, they really have no other use and I do believe one day they will be worthless. In the meantime, people continue to help out criminals by buying and holding cryptocurrencies.
Banks
We have had some good returns on our banks in our portfolio this year as some banks have returned over 20%. This is in-spite of the fact that a couple times this year we were in the negative column for returns on these big banks. We believed that since the fundamentals were very strong these banks were worth holding onto. Now with 2023 coming to a close, the big question is what to do in 2024 as interest rates decline as this could be a problem for the big banks. A mistake that small investors make is to not understand the full business of the bank. While loans produce big profits for banks there are other ways a bank can profit than just loans. If rates decline as we think they will, that could accelerate banks operations on the equity side, with more companies paying them to do initial public offerings. Another thing that people probably have no idea about is as rates become lower the banks unrealized paper loss on the bank security portfolio will boost the value of fixed rate securities that they bought when rates were much lower. If this paper loss drops back down, that can help a bank with capital levels and the banks could be open to bigger stock buybacks in 2024. So if you have the right banks in your portfolio at the end of 2023, it looks like next year could be another winner for the big banks. As always at Wilsey Asset Management, we will continue to do our Monday numbers on these companies, along with digging through the quarterly conference calls and financial statements. If things were to change, we could end up selling out of the big banks.
Magnificent Seven
I’m looking for a good return in the right stocks next year. I believe the market will broaden out considering much of the gain this year came from the Magnificent Seven (Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, Tesla, & Nvidia). One reason I am optimistic is there is still a lot of money held in money-market funds that I believe will be redeployed next year as the rates on cash become less attractive. Total assets held in money-market funds is near record levels at about $6.1 trillion. This is about 29% higher than just before Covid. The pros may even have excess cash to deploy next year. According to a Bank of America survey, the average portfolio manager holds about 4.5% in cash which is down from a multidecade peak of over 6% last year but still substantially higher than the lows of just over 3%. With interest rates likely to fall next year cash will be less attractive which should be a major benefit to stocks.
Apple
Will Apple investors become wary of the stock in 2024 and begin to sell shares? They have many reasons to begin losing faith such as the last four quarterly reports showed sales declined from the prior year and in January, they’re expecting the same result when they report numbers for the quarter that ends in December. There appears to be no sales growth at all for Apple and the stock is expensive considering it is currently trading around $195 per share, which produces a forward earnings multiple of about 30. That is 50% higher than the S&P 500 which is also expensive at around 20 times. The iPhone still accounts for over 50% of the revenue and it is predicted that global smart phones sales will only grow at 1.4% a year through the year 2027. It’s also important for investors to know that China, Apples most important non-US market, is intensifying their competition with Huawei technologies and other local upstarts. Investors may point to the earnings per share growth as a positive, but if the company stopped their share buybacks earnings per share would not be growing. Apple only has about $51 billion in net cash and it has said it will bring that net cash eventually to zero, which means a potential end to stock buybacks. You may be thinking they’ll do some big acquisition, but keep in mind Apple has not done a big acquisition since 2014 when they paid $3 billion to purchase Beats. There have been many rumors about them making big purchases. For example, Tesla was once a speculated target when there was chatter Apple was getting into the self-driving car arena back around 2015. It was predicted that Apple will be shipping electric vehicles by 2019, but I have not seen an Apple vehicle on the road, nor do I think we’ll see one anytime in the future. Another area of concern is the Justice Department is looking closely at the relationship with Alphabet. The problem here is that on Apple products Google is it the default search option. Alphabet pays Apple billions of dollars in revenue with virtually no cost to Apple for this privilege. A judge will decide on the case in 2024, as always in the court system there can be appeals, but it is estimated that a loss of Google could hit Apple‘s profits by as much as 18% as that revenue pretty much falls directly to the bottom line. Apple has done well for many years and you may be hearing how great it did this year, but when you average the last two years the return is only about 3% for the entire period. Could this be the best time ever to get out of Apple? Based on my experience as a value investor, I would see no reason at all to continue to hold this company. There may be a visionary out there who sees things differently, but I don’t deal in visions I deal in the reality of what a company is worth based on its value of earnings today and in the future.
Artificial Intelligence
With the current structure of ChatGPT and other large language models that use billions of parameters’ worth of information from public web data up until 2021, I was curious if there would be any lawsuits from the makers of that content. It looks like the first one has now been launched as the New York Times is suing Microsoft and OpenAI over copyright infringement. The Times stated that the companies’ AI systems were “used to create multiple reproductions of The Times’s intellectual property for the purpose of creating the GPT models that exploit and, in many cases, retain large portions of the copyrightable expression contained in those works.” While AI has been the buzzword for 2023, this is a point that should be considered. In the current form, AI is not creating anything new and pulling from other sources. If journalism is not protected, how good will the information be for these models to generate good reliable content?
Self-Service Checkouts
I don’t know about you, but sometimes I feel a bit pressured going through the self-service checkout scanning my own items. I feel somethings not going to work right and I might have to call someone over and stand there and wait which holds up the line. Usually, I just like to go through where there is a live person to check the items for me rather than me doing it myself. This could be changing because of a company called Uniqlo. This is a clothing company and they are testing a new way of doing self-checkout. You simply throw your items into a bin and the machine does all the work for you. You may be thinking this is some new exciting technology, but it’s something I remember from years ago called RFID tags, radio frequency identification readers. These have been around for about 10 years and seem to be making a comeback. They cost only about four cents each and are inserted into the paper tags. This could save a lot of time at checkout and not put any pressure on the consumers. Another benefit of not having the employees behind the counters just checking items would be better customer service having them out on the floor helping people shop and answering questions which may even increase the amount of sales for the stores. I think we’ll see this more in the future along with enhancements to the technology.
Financial Planning - Understanding Tax Lots
When you buy shares in a company, you hold what is called a “lot” of shares. If you buy a company multiple times, you will have a lot for each purchase, each with its own holding period and cost basis. This will be important when you sell because you can decide which lots to sell based on how it will impact your tax situation. For example, if you buy 10 shares of XYZ company for $15/share, then the next month buy 10 more shares for $20/share, you now hold 20 shares, but 10 have a cost basis of $15 and 10 have a cost basis of $20. If you decide to sell half of your position when the stock reaches $30, you will have two tax outcomes based on which lot you sell, either a $10 or $15 gain per share. There can be situations where you only want to sell some of your shares, such as pairing back an overconcentrated position, tax loss harvesting, tax gain harvesting, or raising cash, and if you aren’t careful you could end up derailing what you were trying to do. The default setting when selling shares is under a FIFO basis, which stands for “First-In, First-Out” meaning the first shares you purchased are the first to be sold, regardless of the purchase price. It is possible to have a position with an overall loss but to still have some lots with gains. In this case someone could be trying to harvest those losses, but due to FIFO, they end up selling their oldest positions that actually have a gain and end up paying more taxes instead of getting a deduction. So when making a sale, it is important not only to understand the overall gain or loss, but the individual gains and losses of each lot to make sure you don’t hurt yourself from a tax perspective.