SMART INVESTING NEWSLETTER
Smart Investing Weekly Recap 2/3-2/7/2020
1. If you are concerned about the coronavirus hurting the GDP this quarter, it would take a lot for it to move just .1%. For that to happen it would be a loss of economic activity of $22 billion. And to break that down further, as an example, Starbucks closures would hurt revenue by about $25 million each week they are closed. To hit that $22 billion, they would have to be closed for 880 weeks. I hope that puts things into perspective for you. At this time, we are not concerned with the coronavirus having a major impact on our economy.
2.The Coronavirus continues to dominate headlines and as of yesterday, it had infected close to 17,400 people and killed 362. Most of the infections and deaths have occurred in China. While this is not positive, it does not concern me as much as the headlines would indicate. For a comparison, the flu season has sickened over 19 million people in the U.S. this year. While the death rate is lower, the flu has led to 10,000 deaths in the U.S. alone. While the Coronavirus has spread quickly, I believe the world has the right steps in place to prevent this from becoming a global epidemic and believe that its effect on the stock market and businesses is just short-term noise.
3.It was interesting to see refiners like Valero, Phillips 66, and Marathon Petroleum take such a big hit will oil prices falling. Oil is an input cost for refiners and they make their money on the spreads between oil and gas. Also, I would think that as oil and gas prices fall, consumers may consume more causing the need for more refined gasoline. I think as oil fell people were selling all energy companies which could create some good opportunities in these refiners. For the most part these refiners offer good yield, decent balance sheets, and opportunity for growth.
4. Alphabet shares (GOOG, GOOGL) were seen falling more than 3% in morning trading after beating earnings estimates. While EPS of $15.35/share beat estimates of $12.53, sales of $46.08 billion fell below estimates of $46.94 billion. I was happy to see the company is now breaking out info on YouTube and the cloud, but analysts believe the company missed the mark on growth for these businesses as well. YouTube has become a large business with $15 billion in ad revenue for the year , but analysts believed this business was as high as $25 billion. While Google’s cloud services had quarterly revenue growth of 53%, it is still behind both AWS and Microsoft Azure. Microsoft’s cloud business saw growth of 62% in its recent quarter, giving it an even larger lead. Alphabet still trades at a forward P/E multiple over 23x, which makes it expensive and priced for high growth. With potential antitrust regulation and an expensive multiple, I would like to see this stock price fall a lot more before becoming interested in a buying opportunity.
5.How transparent is the State of California when it comes to its spending measures? The answer apparently is not transparent! Openthebooks.com is a nonprofit dedicated to government transparency and it has requested itemized accounts for taxpayer funds from all 50 states. CA is the only state that has not replied with this request. The state makes 49 million individual payments each year and says it is unable to track and document these activities. Is the state hiding something or do we just have the worst accounting system in the country? Openthebooks.com has now launched a lawsuit against the state.
6. I have been wrong about Tesla over the past few months, but it reminds me an awful lot of other bubbles. I did not get in on Bitcoin and watched it climb to 20,000 only to see it fall 65% the next month. Qualcomm was another bubble I missed as I watched it climb to glory in 1999 just to fall 47% in just 3 weeks. The general population gets excited about the momentum and gets involved during periods of insanity. As Tesla has climbed to 3x the market value of GM, it has been yo ung, inexperienced investors jumping on board the hype. Over the past 3 days Robinhood, which is generally a millennial based platform, has seen 22,000 first time buyers of Tesla. These are generally the people that get hurt the most as bubbles burst. I continue to stick by our investing philosophy which has worked for over 100 years. And while I miss the bubbles, I also avoid the crazy busts. I’d rather be wrong for the right reasons, than right for the wrong reasons. This leads to a dangerous path for long term investing.
7.While I believe finishing a complete deal with China will take years, I believe the progress the 2 countries have made signal the willingness from both sides to work towards a fair agreement that would benefit the global economy. Yesterday China announced it would halve retaliatory tariffs on hundreds of U.S. goods worth nearly $75 billion. China made a statement that the action was meant to “advance the healthy and stable development of China-U.S. trade.” I believe this comes as a partial stimulus with the Coronavirus denting business in China. The country said this was not the case, but I believe it had some effect on the announcement. Continuing to advance talks between the two largest economies will likely have its bumps, but I believe we are on the right track.
8. Investing in bed maker Casper would not allow me to sleep well at night. The company had its IPO today at a price of $12/share. The stock then opened at $14.50 on the public market. It is important to understand that this was the first trade on Wall Street and what most of the public had access to, not the IPO price of $12. Heading into the IPO the company has struggled as it was at one point valued at $1.1 billion in the private market, but at the IPO price its market value is now estimated to be approximately $500 million. As a young company the business has grown sales, but losses have also widened. In 2018 the company saw sales grow to $357.9 million from $250.9 million in 2017, but losses grew from $73.4 million in 2017 to $92.1 million in 2018. The business has its fair share of competition with companies like Purple, Tuft & Needle, and Sleep Number. In an effort to grow, the company has also shifted towards brick-and-mortar stores and selling through 3rd parties which hurts margins. For me there is too much competition, a heavy spend to acquire customers, and an unclear path to strong profits. I’ll stay away from this new publicly traded company.
9.With all the excitement around Beyond Meat and the Impossible Burger, people believe this is new to the market, but that is not true. How many of you remember the Boca Veggie Burger introduced 15 years ago by Kraft Foods? It came before its time and it is a great alternative to the new options. If Kraft Foods hits the accelerator and markets this hard, it could wipe out the smaller players!
10. The first Jobs report of 2020 started with a boom! January nonfarm payrolls of 225,000 easily exceeded expectations of 158,000 and the prior 2 months were revised upward by a total of 7,000. Many areas were strong in this report with education and health services leading the way with 72,000 jobs created, construction added 44,000, and leisure and hospitality saw growth of 36,000. Manufacturing remained challenged as this area saw a loss of 12,000 jobs, but I am optimistic tha t manufacturing can turn things around with more certainty around trade as the USMCA and phase one with China have been completed. Average hourly earnings were also positive as wage growth of 3.1% was above the estimate of 3.0%. December was also revised upwards to 3% which means we have now seen 18 consecutive months with wage growth over 3%. I continue to believe the economy remains in a good spot, led by this amazing job market!
This newsletter is for informational purposes only and should not be used as investment advice. If you would like to discuss more in detail your investment needs or have other investment questions, feel free to call me at 858-546-4306 or visit our website at Smartinvesting2000.com.