SMART INVESTING NEWSLETTER
Smart Investing Weekly Recap 5/11/20 - 5/15/20
May 11, 2020
KUSI News – When is it a safe time to be in the market?
Watch Segment: https://youtu.be/nMCbpAOg6hI
Nasdaq
We just talked last week about how expensive and concentrated the S&P 500 is. You may be thinking the NASDAQ is okay since according to Barron's they have 2700 companies in their index. Sorry, the NASDAQ looks even worse with the top 10 companies (yes, they are the names you know Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, etc.) accounting for 44% of all the value of that 2700 company index. And those top 10 companies have sky high valuations trading at an average 47 times estimated 2020 earnings.
May 12, 2020
Retirement Plans
Too often employer sponsored retirement plans, such as 401(k)s and 403(b)s, are comprised of poor or limited investment options and high fees. Some plans allow “In-Service Distributions” where a participant can rollover their plan balance while still employed; however, not all plans allow this and the ones that do usually have an age requirement. Under the CARES ACT, another option is available. With a Coronavirus-Related Distribution, a retirement plan owner may withdraw 100% of their account up to $100k at any age in 2020 and avoid the usual 10% penalty. If those funds are returned to any eligible retirement account within 3 years, the withdrawal is not taxable. To be eligible for this rollover, an individual’s health or finances must have been impacted by Covid-19. With this provision, someone could rollover up to $100k from their poor performing 401(k) into an IRA for more efficient investment opportunities.
Gilead – Covid-19 Treatments
There has been a lot of talk about Gilead over the last month because of their drug, Remdesivir now being used as a treatment drug for Covid-19. Many people are buying the stock thinking it will skyrocket because of all the money that Gilead will bring in from this drug. I have been saying that vaccine and treatment drugs related to a worldwide pandemic likely will not make much money for the company selling the drug. Gilead also said it would donate 140,000 treatment courses and after that they will start charging to try to recuperate some of the production costs. No one knows for sure what they will charge but there is a big range starting with a low of $10 which is nothing more than a cost recovery model based on production costs. This is because the institute for clinical and economic review has pointed out this drug was developed through a hepatitis C program and therefore the R&D costs have already been accounted for. On the other side the charge could be as high as $4,460 which is using a cost of an effectiveness model which is trying to establish a market value so to speak of what the drug is worth. My expectation is probably somewhere not much higher than the $10 because that would be very bad PR for the company, if they were trying to make huge sums of money off of this current pandemic. And after the opioid crisis drug companies are trying to regain they’re good name with consumers and overcharging for a drug would not be a good way to do that.
One America News Network – The Daily Ledger: The Economy, PPP Loan for Small Businesses and The Surge of Online Sales.
Watch Segment: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qli8iNXSIBU
May 13, 2020
Life Insurance
The extremely low interest rate environment has really damaged the life insurance industry. Life insurance companies generally hold about 70% of bonds in their general investment account. Based on mortality rates and guaranteed income from these bonds is how the companies generate a profit. Some major insurance companies in the industry such as Nationwide Mutual insurance company, Principal financial group and Prudential are looking at increasing their rates 8 to 12% on life insurance policies and some are going to stop selling life insurance all together. You may also experience simply smaller policies with reduced benefits. Look closely at these life insurance contracts as they are often oversold with benefits you do not need.
Fox 5 – Managing Retirement Plans
If someone was considering retirement within the next few months, even years...is it a good idea to still move ahead with your plans? Chase Wilsey and Raoul Martinez discuss 3 ways to manage your retirement plan.
Watch Segment: https://youtu.be/giFH63u9GgU
May 14, 2020
Unemployment Insurance Claims
New claims for unemployment insurance were 2.981 million for the week ending May 9th. The rolling total during the Coronavirus now stands at 36.5 million. While the headline numbers continue to be negative, I did see some positive signs in the report. Continuing claims which looks at people that are continuing to collect unemployment insurance stood at 22.83 million and produced its smallest gain since March after the prior week’s report was revised to 22.38 million. The exciting part is continuing claims lag new claims by one week, which means the data is for the week ended May 2nd. This was before many states began limited reopening’s, which means I believe the data will get even better from here and I would not be surprised to see declines as we move forward and more states progress in the reopening process. Other positive news showed that 39 states saw a decline of 10% or more in new claims and 28 states saw a decline of 20% or more.
Georgia Coronavirus Cases
Georgia took some heat when it announced its plans to reopen as it was viewed by many as too aggressive, but so far, the numbers from the state are actually quite positive. In the presented picture from CNBC, you can see the 5-day moving average for new cases has declined from peak levels even after the reopening began on April 24th. Also, according to the Department of Public Health there have been 6,308 total patients hospitalized in Georgia during the pandemic. During the last 14 days, new patients in hospitals have averaged 80.14 per day. This compares favorably to the prior 14-day period which saw new patients in hospitals averaging 140.29 per day. As of May 13th, there were a total of 1,091 hospitalizations in the entire state which was down from 1,500 hospitalizations on May 1st. We will continue to see what these reports look like, but I’d say overall these numbers are strong and it looks like there may be ways to get our economy up and going again.
May 15, 2020
Uber Wants To Buy Grubhub – Using Their Shares
You may have seen the big numbers that Uber has valued GrubHub at $6 billion, wow. But you may not know that Uber wants to buy GrubHub using their shares. Based on the value of GrubHub it would take between 1.9 to 2.15 Uber shares to buy one share of GrubHub. Doing some quick math, it would take approximately 360 million shares of Uber stock to buy GrubHub. Uber currently has 1.7 billion shares outstanding. This purchase would increase the share account to over 2 billion shares for Uber, about a 21% increase in shares. That is quite the dilution once the company begins to make money. If an investor reads deeper into the food delivery business, you will find that just because they are busy doesn’t mean they are making money. Also, restaurants are getting tired of paying the higher fees to deliver their food costing about 30% on top of running the restaurant. Food delivering services like GrubHub are also seeing an increase in cost to fund promotions, invest in safety equipment and they are getting pressured to reduce their commissions from strapped restaurants. At this time, they are increasing their advertising spend on the business. On the surface one would look at the transaction and say why would Uber pay $6 billion for GrubHub? Then you realize it really doesn’t cost Uber anything, it is just an exchange of paper shares for other paper shares. Who loses out? Investors paying for the stock that may never see a profit.
Tesla & Elon Musk Reopens Plant In California
Tesla and Elon Musk have opened their plant in defiance of California officials. Part of the reason is Mr. Musk realizes that General Motors, Ford Motors and Fiat Chrysler are back to work and production will resume on May 18. Also, Diamler Mercedes-Benz factory in Alabama returned to work on April 27 along with BMW, Hyundai Motors and Kia plants in South Carolina. This would put Tesla behind the eight ball and not prepared to sell cars and compete with the other car makers as consumers rush to dealers to buys cars. We will see day by day if California backs up their threat or will Elon Musk hold true to his threat and pull the factory out of California. Sounds a little bit like a soap opera.
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.