Archive for January, 2014

  • Morning News: January 14, 2014
    , January 14th, 2014 at 6:39 am

    Eurozone Industrial Output Surges in November

    Japanese Stocks Suffer Worst Day in Five Months After U.S. Jobs Report

    India Considers Lifting Ban on Airbus Superjumbos

    ECB’s Nowotny Would Like Better Financing for SMEs

    U.S. Lawmakers Leave IMF Resources Request Out of Spending Bill

    Consumers Vent Frustration and Anger at Target Data Breach

    Time Warner Cable Rejects $61 Billion Bid From Charter

    Suntory Overseas Thirst Drives Higher Beam Deal Value

    Volvo Cars Recorded Profits in 2013, Unlike 2012

    AstraZeneca Sees 2017 Revenue in Line With 2013 Level

    McKesson May Pursue Celesio Joint Venture After Failed Bid

    Ranbaxy Falls on USFDA Concerns; Brokers Downgrade

    Lamborghini Plans SUV in 2017 in Luxury Push Into Segment

    Jeff Carter: Be Like Bill Murray

    Joshua Brown: Technical and Fundamental Arguments Against the Secular Bull Thesis

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  • Ford is the Talk of the Auto Show
    , January 13th, 2014 at 9:43 pm

    I discussed this before, but Ford‘s ($F) new F-150 is making waves at the Detroit Auto Show. The new line’s trucks are made out of alumuninum. They’re more expensive, but they are more fuel efficient.

    From the AP:

    Ford Motor Co. unveiled the 2015 F-150, whose body is 97-percent aluminum, on Monday. The lighter material shaves as much as 700 pounds off the 5,000-pound truck, a revolutionary change for a vehicle known for its heft and an industry still reliant on steel. No other vehicle on the market contains this much aluminum.

    “It’s a landmark moment for the full-size pickup truck,” said Jack Nerad, editorial director for Kelley Blue Book.

    The change is Ford’s response to small-business owners’ desire for a more fuel-efficient and nimble truck — and stricter government requirements on fuel economy. It sprang from a challenge by Ford’s CEO to move beyond the traditional design for a full-size pickup.

    (…)

    Ford is taking a big risk. F-Series trucks — which include the F-150 and heavier duty models like the F-250 — have been the best-selling vehicles in the U.S. for the last 32 years; last year, Ford sold an F-Series every 41 seconds. Ford makes an estimated $10,000 profit on every F-Series truck it sells. Michael Robinet, the managing director of IHS’s automotive group, says the trucks account for about a third of the company’s revenue in North America — $80 billion in 2012.

    “Anytime you make a change with that vehicle, it’s got to be well thought out, because you are really playing with the crown jewels of that company,” Robinet said.

    (…)

    The 2015 F-150 goes on sale late this year. As for cost, Ford wouldn’t reveal prices, but its truck marketing chief Doug Scott says the F-Series will stay within its current price range even though aluminum costs more than steel. F-Series trucks now range from a starting price of $24,445 for a base model to $50,405 for a top-of-the-line Limited.

    Pete Reyes, the F-150’s chief engineer, said Ford expects to make up the premium by reducing its recycling costs, since there will be less metal to recycle, and by slimming down the engine and other components, since they won’t have to move so much weight.

    Aluminum is widely used on sporty, low-volume cars now, like the Tesla Model S electric sedan and the Land Rover Evoque. U.S. Postal Service trucks are also made of aluminum.

    (…)

    Improvements in aluminum are also driving the change. Three years ago, for example, Alcoa Inc. — one of Ford’s suppliers for the F-150 — figured out a way to pretreat aluminum so it would be more durable when parts are bonded together. Carmakers can now use three or four rivets to piece together parts that would have needed 10 rivets before, Alcoa spokesman Kevin Lowery said.

    And Ford is able to take more risks. When the F-150 was last redesigned, in the mid-2000s, Ford was losing billions each year and resources were spread thin. But by 2010, when the company gave the green light to an all-aluminum truck, Ford was making money again. Mulally, a former Boeing Co. executive who joined Ford in 2006, encouraged his team to think bigger. After all, it was Mulally who led early development of Boeing’s Dreamliner, which replaced aluminum with even lighter-weight plastics to be more efficient and fly further.

    (…)

    Ford is convinced truck buyers will accept the change. The company says the new truck will tow more and haul more. The frame — which does most of that work — is still made of high-strength steel, and the engine doesn’t have to account for so much weight. It can also accelerate and stop more quickly. Aluminum doesn’t rust, Ford says, and it’s more resistant to dents.

    Reyes says the company planted prototype F-150s with three companies — in mining, construction and power — for two years without revealing they were aluminum. The companies didn’t notice a difference.

  • The S&P 500 Drops -1.26%
    , January 13th, 2014 at 4:35 pm

    Ugly day today. At noon, the market was mostly unchanged, but then Dennis Lockhart, the president of the Atlanta Fed, said he supports more tapering (he’s not a voting member this year). The market started to head south. By the closing bell, the S&P 500 had dropped down to 1,819.20 which is its lowest close since December 20th. For the day, the index lost -1.26%.

    big.chart01132014

    My take: I don’t think there’s any real news here. The Fed will most likely continue with tapering this year but hold off on any rate increases.

    Breaking down the market, the biggest damage today came among cyclical stocks. The energy, consumer discretionary, and financials got hit the most while utes, healthcare and staples were down least. Bonds were up, but not by much. The 10-year yield fell to 2.83% which is 21 points below its peak from December 31.

    Our Buy List had a rough day. We lost 1.27% on the day which was almost the same as the S&P 500. Eighteen of our 20 stocks lost ground; only Ford ($F) and eBay (EBAY) made money. Ford made a lot of headlines with the unveiling of its new F-150 at the Detroit Auto Show. The new pickups are made out of aluminum. Although they cost more, they’re more fuel efficient.

    Our worst performers today were Microsoft ($MSFT), Bed Bath & Beyond ($BBBY) and Cognizant ($CTSH). Next up, we get the earnings report from Wells Fargo ($WFC).

  • CADY
    , January 13th, 2014 at 12:40 pm

    There’s been a lot written lately on the Cyclically Adjusted Price/Earnings Ratio (or CAPE). I highly recommend what Josh and Jesse have written.

    CAPE is the Price/Earnings Ratio but based on the last 10 years of earnings instead of the last one year. I’ve never been much of a fan of CAPE. My reasoning is pretty basic — valuations are cyclical so there’s no need to adjust the earnings side of the P/E Ratio.

    I went to look at the data on Prof. Shiller’s website, but I made one small adjustment. I changed the earnings input to dividends.** So instead of the trailing 10 years of earnings, this is what the trailing 10 years of dividends looks like, or as I’m calling it, CADY (Cyclically Adjusted Dividend Yield):

    image1380

    We see much the same as the CAPE graph, the current market is vastly overpriced. In fact, with CADY it’s even more so. But this underscores the point Josh makes—it’s not different this time, it’s different every time. According to CADY, the market has been priced above its long-term average every month over the last 28 years. The current stock market would have to drop 64% before CADY reached its long-term average.

    Sounds crazy? I would argue that CADY has a major advantage over CAPE in that we don’t have to dig through all the accounting issues (Jesse does a great jobs on this). A dividend payment, after all, is a dividend payment.

    Some of you might object to CADY by noting that dividend payout ratios have fallen so the yield should be less. But that’s my point exactly. The nature of stock ownership has changed over the decades, so the valuations metrics have also changed. By looking at CADY, I hope it highlights the problems of looking at CAPE. I love looking at old stock data, but be leery of drawing too many conclusions when looking at stock data before 1960.

    ** For the excel file, I changed the J’s in column K to I’s, and divided by the H cell factor instead of vice versa.

  • GoodBrokas
    , January 13th, 2014 at 11:59 am

    Over the weekend, I saw “The Wolf of Wall Street.” I thought it was an entertaining albeit flawed movie. It’s disappointing to see a movie by one of your favorite directors about a subject you’re familiar with fall short of what you had hoped for. (I should mention that in the early 1990s, I was a cold-caller for a shady brokerage outfit in Boston, but rest assured gentle reader, it was a far cry from the buffoonish culture of Stratton Oakmont.)

    I’m not in the habit of reviewing movies, so take my comments as the views of an amateur. For one, I though the movie was far too long. There’s nothing wrong with a movie going on for three hours, but so much of the “The Wolf of Wall Street” was redundant. We see similar scenes over and over again.

    For example, Martin Scorsese’s attempt to capture the over-the-top lifestyle of Stratton Oakmont was itself over-the-top. We get it—there were drugs, prostitutes and debauchery, but does that has to be shown repeatedly?

    But what troubled me most was that once you peel away the drug-coated layers of Jordan Belfort, there’s nothing particularly interesting about him, his character or his crimes. He’s just a petty thief, but on a larger scale. The guys at Stratton Oakmont aren’t smart or interesting.

    I can’t help but think what a movie about the Great Salad Oil Swindle of 50 years ago would be like. Now those guys were smart.

    I’ve never seen a movie where another movie, in this case, Goodfellas, ghostly floats through each scene. From Belfort’s rise and fall to his tempestuous marriage, so much of the Wolf of Wall Street strives to catch Goodfellas. Leonardo DiCaprio even sounds like Ray Liotta. But there’s a critical difference. We see behind the worldview, character and motivations of Henry Hill and his gangster associates. Consider this famous line:

    Hundreds of guys depended on Paulie and he got a piece of everything they made. And it was tribute, just like in the old country, except they were doing it here in America. And all they got from Paulie was protection from other guys looking to rip them off. And that’s what it’s all about. That’s what the FBI could never understand. That what Paulie and the organization does is offer protection for people who can’t go to the cops. That’s it. That’s all it is. They’re like the police department for wiseguys.

    That’s a brilliant line and it tells us so much. There’s nothing in the Wolf of Wall Street that comes close to that one line. Jordan Belfort? He’s just a dumb crook. He even distorts the famous 1991 Forbes article. For one, no one ever called him the Wolf of Wall Street. Belfort made up his own nickname. The Forbes article is one of disdain and it was clear that he was going to be caught eventually.

    Even the oleaginous Gordon Gekko in “Wall Street” has a larger (but damaged) worldview. Remember that he closes his famous “greed is good” speech by saying that greed will save “that other malfunctioning corporation called the USA.” It’s that movie’s flaw that Gekko is finally done in by breaking the law instead of the consequences of how he sees the world. Chalk that up to Oliver Stone’s heavy-handedness.

    A movie covering the misdeeds of Wall Street could be fascinating. But despite Mr. Belfort’s self-given nickname, Stratton Oakmont has little to do with the real Wall Street. The workings of Goldman Sachs or Morgan Stanley might as well be in another universe as some bucket shop on Long Island.

    Last year, Leonardo DiCaprio played another Long Island-based fraudster who threw big parties:

    If personality is an unbroken series of successful gestures, then there was something gorgeous about him, some heightened sensitivity to the promises of life, as if he were related to one of those intricate machines that register earthquakes ten thousand miles away.

    There’s nothing gorgeous about Jordan Belfort. Instead of Jay Gatsby, the Wolf of Wall Street gives us a bunch of drug-addled bros.

  • Morning News: January 13, 2014
    , January 13th, 2014 at 6:44 am

    HSBC Sees Ruble Offering 6% Drop to Growth Effort

    $51 Billion and Change: Sochi Most Expensive Olympics Ever

    Cost of Cool in India? An iPhone

    Chew Marks on $4 Million Has U.S. Seeing Shaggy Dog Story

    Total Becomes Largest Oil Producer to Acquire U.K. Shale

    With Data Vulnerable, Retailers Look For Tougher Security>

    Amec Agrees to Buy Swiss Rival for $3.2 BIllion

    Sanofi Pays $700 Million for Alnylam Drugs and Stake

    Airbus Posts Record Orders, Ponders Higher Production

    New CEO Barra A ‘Lifer’ Bent on Tearing Down Walls

    BMW Aims For Another Gain in Vehicle Sales After 2013 Record

    Etihad CEO Says Will Not Be Rushed on Alitalia Decision

    Dollar Stores Are Now Getting Too Expensive for Many Americans

    Cullen Roche: The Biggest Myths in Economics

    Jeff Miller: Weighing the Week Ahead: Can Earnings Growth Propel Stocks Higher?

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  • With 7 Trading Days In….
    , January 10th, 2014 at 4:42 pm

    Now that the 2014 investing year is seven days old, I’m happy to report that our Buy List has a very, very, very tiny lead over the S&P 500.

    Or to be more accurate, we’re down a smidgen less than they are. Through Friday, our Buy List has lost -0.29% compared with the S&P 500’s loss of -0.32%.

    I do have a serious point here. I really don’t care about trading results over such a short time horizon. I believe we’ll do well over the long haul. But the important lesson here is that our Buy List is beating the market despite yesterday’s big plunge in Bed Bath & Beyond ($BBBY). That stock dropped more than 12% on Thursday.

    That’s why having a well-diversified portfolio is so important. I specifically design our Buy List to be diversified so the overall portfolio is rather conservative. You’d be surprised how many investors think diversification means owning both Facebook AND Twitter. Think of portfolio diversity as a tool, not an obligation. It really does work.

  • How to Succeed with Brunettes
    , January 10th, 2014 at 4:12 pm

    The trading week is over, but we don’t stop bringing you valuable information. From the U.S. Navy in 1966, here’s “How to Succeed with Brunettes.”

  • December NFP = 74,000
    , January 10th, 2014 at 10:34 am

    The government released the jobs report for December, and the economy created only 74,000 net new jobs last month. The consensus was for 200,000 jobs. That’s the smallest gain in more than three years.

    The odd part is that because of a smaller workforce, the unemployment rate dropped down to 6.7%. That’s the lowest in more than four years. The labor force participation rate fell to 62.8% for December. It hasn’t been this low since 1978.

    fredgraph01102014

    I think this jobs report will cause the Fed to change its unemployment rate threshold for raising short-term interest rates. Right now, that threshold is 6.5%, and we’ll probably pass below it soon. I think the Fed will lower their threshold to 6% sometime this year.

  • CWS Market Review – January 10, 2014
    , January 10th, 2014 at 7:18 am

    “It amazes me how people are often more willing to act based on little or
    no data than to use data that is a challenge to assemble.” – Robert J. Shiller

    There’s a weird new feeling on Wall Street these days. For the first time in a long while, folks are actually optimistic about the economy. How about that? In fact, it’s now conventional wisdom that 2014 will be the best year for the economy since the recession.

    Unfortunately, that’s a rather low bar to clear. Still, the signs keep coming in positive. This week, we learned that thanks to rising exports, the U.S. trade deficit fell to a four-year low. Another key indicator is that freight rail traffic is at an all-time high. The housing market is also doing well, and construction spending is the highest it’s been since March 2009.

    The GDP report for the third quarter had the second-best growth rate in the last 30 quarters (again, low bar). Lately, firms up and down Wall Street have been revising their estimates for Q4 higher. Merrill Lynch now says they see Q4 GDP coming in at 3%, and they project real consumer spending to rise by 4%.

    Of course, there are still lots of weak spots in the economy, and the jobs market is a major concern. I’m writing this to you early on Friday, and the big January jobs report comes out later today. The consensus on Wall Street is that the economy created 200,000 net new jobs last month. I won’t try to predict if that’s right or wrong but I’ll note that ADP’s report, that’s the private payroll firm, came in at 238,000 net new jobs. For us, the important thing is to see if the promising trend remains in place. More jobs mean more consumers and that means more profits. It’s just that simple.

    Fourth-quarter earnings season has finally arrived. Over the next five weeks, 16 of our 20 Buy List stocks will report earnings. In this week’s CWS Market Review, I’ll highlight Wells Fargo ($WFC) which will be our first earnings report for this earnings season. I’ll also take a closer look at what the Fed has in store for us this year. Later on, I’ll discuss the terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day Bed Bath & Beyond ($BBBY) had on Thursday. The shares plunged 12.5% after they lowered their Q4 guidance (Spoiler alert: I still like BBBY). On the plus side, Ford Motor ($F) raised its quarterly dividend by 25%. But first, let’s look at what last year’s broad-based rally means for us.

    History Says “Let Your Winners Run”

    One interesting aspect about the market’s rally is how broad-based it’s been. Previous big rallies have often been uneven and skewed to certain sectors like tech or emerging markets. But last year, 460 of the S&P 500 stocks gained ground. That’s the most since at least 1990. We can also see the broad participation by looking at the equally-weighted version of the S&P 500 (the standard version is weighted by value). The equally-weighted S&P 500 jumped 34% last year and it’s up an amazing 248% from the March 2009 low (below is a chart of an equally weighted S&P 500 ETF).

    big.chart01102014

    A broad-based rally has historically been an omen for more good things to come. When more than 400 stocks in the S&P 500 rally, the market averages a 14% return the following year. Also, some folks are worried about rising valuations, but history is again on the side of the bulls. Since 1936, there have been 156 quarters in which the S&P 500’s P/E Ratio has expanded. The index climbed 108 times in the following quarter (or 69% of the time). In other words, letting your winners run has been a good strategy.

    I should also note that firms are starting to invest their massive cash hordes. The companies in the S&P 500 are sitting on a total of $3.8 trillion. Between you and me, that’s a lot of money. This is what some folks are calling “the capex recovery,” and I think it’s for real. Don’t get me wrong. I love me some dividends, but companies are beginning to realize they need to invest in order to grow. Getting next to nothing for your cash may have been fine in 2009 or 2010, but that won’t cut it in 2014. Ford and Microsoft are two such companies that have ambitious business investment plans for this year. Now let’s look at what the Federal Reserve may have up its sleeve.

    Will the Fed Alter the Evans Rule?

    On Monday, Janet Yellen was confirmed as the next Chairman of the Federal Reserve. She’ll take over from Bernanke on February 1, but that may not be the only big change at the Fed. I think there’s a small but growing chance that the Fed may alter the “Evans Rule.”

    Let me explain. A little over a year ago, the Federal Reserve introduced a new policy: The Fed said it wouldn’t raise short-term interest rates until the unemployment rate reached 6.5%. Ben Bernanke was careful to say that this was a threshold and not a trigger. He’s repeated that many times since.

    The use of this specific economic metric has been referred to as the Evans Rule in honor of Chicago Fed President Charles Evans, who has advocating using such a strategy. One of the odd parts of monetary policy is that it’s much more effective if it’s seen as credible. A central bank can yammer all they want, but if no one believes them, the implementation of policy becomes that much harder. Credibility is the watchword for any modern central banker.

    While the Fed is still seen as an opaque and secretive institution, Ben Bernanke has probably pulled back the curtain more than any other Fed chair. As such, the Bernanke Fed has also been careful in telegraphing their intentions to market participants. That’s also why last year’s Taper Tantrum was so bizarre.

    I think the commitment to credibility is why the Evans Rule may not live much longer-or more specifically, the 6.5% threshold. The fact is that the unemployment rate has fallen a good deal, and there’s a good chance we could hit 6.5% by the middle of this year.

    Yet there seems to be no demand for short-term interest rates to rise anytime soon. The one-year Treasury is still around 0.13%. At this point, most FOMC members don’t expect a Fed rate increase until 2015—and a good majority of them don’t expect much of an increase next year.

    This week, we got the minutes from the Fed’s December meeting. This was the one where the Fed finally decided to taper their bond purchases. I thought it was interesting that the minutes indicated that some members felt the FOMC needed to lower the unemployment threshold. While this view wasn’t adopted by the committee, it’s clearly on their radar.

    It could hurt the Fed’s credibility with the market if unemployment drops and the Fed does nothing month after month. I suppose that Bernanke’s threshold-not-trigger statement grants them some leeway, but I’m not sure how much. I expect to see more tapering in 2014, but I doubt we’ll see any interest rate increases. There’s just no inflation pressure-at least, not yet.

    When the Fed adopted the Evans Rule in December 2012, it was a cost-free commitment. The rule told traders what to expect and when, and it helped remove a lot of worry from the markets. But now that promise is coming due.

    Frankly, I rate altering the Evans Rule as an event with a low probability but one with a large potential impact. At some point this year, the Fed may alter the Evans Rule and lower the threshold to 6%. In my view, that would be very good for the market.

    Bed Bath & Beyond Drops 12.5%

    After the closing bell on Wednesday, Bed Bath & Beyond ($BBBY) released a disappointing earnings report. For the third quarter (Sep-Oct-Nov), the home furnishings company earned $1.12 per share. That was three cents below Wall Street’s forecast.

    Previously, the company had said they expected Q3 to range between $1.11 and $1.16 per share. So technically, BBBY hit their own guidance, but the Street was expecting more (and so was I). Net sales rose 6% from last year’s third quarter. Comparable store sales, which is a key metric for retailers, rose by 1.3%. Honestly, that’s not that great. So far this year, BBBY has earned $3.20 per share for the first three quarters, and that’s a nice increase over the $2.89 per share from the same period last year.

    But the bad news is that BBBY cut their Q4 guidance. I was afraid this might happen. The previous range was $1.70 – $1.77 per share. Now it’s $1.60 – $1.67 per share, so 10 cents at both ends. That lowers their full-year range from $4.88 – $5.01 per share to $4.79 – $4.86 per share. I had been expecting the company to clear $5 per share for the year. For some context, last year, BBBY earned $4.56 per share.

    Yesterday was ugly. The stock got crushed for a 12.5% loss. I know this is painful and I apologize for the volatility, but traders aren’t always so rational. In fact, this kind of thing has happened to BBBY before. Eighteen months ago, BBBY got hammered for a one-day loss of 17%. What happened? They had actually beaten expectations but lowered their quarterly and full-year guidance.

    The odd thing is that once those results were known, many months later, they really weren’t that far off from Wall Street’s original estimate. Before the June 2012 plunge, Wall Street had expected full-year earnings of $4.63 per share, and as I had mentioned before, they earned $4.56 per share last year. So the market panicked with a 17% drop in response to (what turned out to be) an earnings adjustment of less than 2%. Not surprisingly, the aftermath of the sell-off was a great buying opportunity. This is exactly why we like high-quality stocks.

    Now let’s break down some of the numbers. For Q3, Bed Bath & Beyond’s EPS grew by 8.7% while their sales rose by 6%. Of that sales increase, 78% came from comp store sales and 2% came from new stores. BBBY’s gross margins fell a bit due to inventory acquisition costs, shoppers using more and larger coupons and a shift towards lower margin goods. Expenses for selling, general and administrative dropped a bit partially thanks to lower payroll costs.

    There are also a few technical points. Bed Bath & Beyond doesn’t use three-month quarters; they use 13-week quarters. Since one year isn’t exactly 52 weeks, every so often, they have to use a 14-week quarter. Last year’s fourth quarter was a 14-weeker so the comparisons aren’t quite apples to apples. Also, the date range isn’t the same either (this is important because it covers the important holiday shopping season).

    For Q4, BBBY sees comp store sales rising by 2% to 4%, instead of the earlier projection of 3.5% to 5.5%. Net sales are expected to fall by -3.9% to -5.7%. Again, that’s with one less week of sales. The company estimates that adjusting for the missing week, Q4 sales growth will range from -0.3% to +1.6%.

    Bed Bath & Beyond didn’t have a lot to say about the coming fiscal year, but they did say they anticipate opening 30 stores next year. They also continue to have a very strong balance sheet. I expect more details in April when the Q4 report comes out.

    Here’s my take: This is where our locked-and-sealed strategy comes to the test. Lots of investors would dump BBBY at the first sign of trouble, but I’m not doing that. This is a very well-run outfit that really had a fairly minor adjustment to their earnings outlook. The shares are going for a bit over 14 times this year’s earnings. Sure, the one-day plunge ain’t a lot of fun, but that’s how the stock market works. The long-run is still in our favor and I’m sticking with BBBY. To reflect the sell-off, I’m lowering the Buy Below to $77 per share.

    Ford Raises Dividend By 25%

    Not all the news was lousy this week. Ford Motor ($F) investors got some pleasant news when CEO Alan Mulally officially withdrew his name from consideration for the top job at Microsoft ($MSFT). From the beginning, I doubted he would jump ship. Mulally and his team have done a commendable job in turning around Ford, but the job is far from done. Their European operations still need a lot of work.

    In the CWS Market Review from November 8, I wrote, “I also expect the company will raise their quarterly dividend in January. The current dividend is 10 cents per share, and I think it can rise to 12 or 13 cents per share.” This week, Ford raised their quarterly dividend by 25% to 12.5 cents per share. So it turns out, they chose the middle-point of my range.

    Ford’s CFO, Bob Shanks, said, “This increase in the dividend provides our shareholders with a regular, growing dividend that we believe is sustainable over an economic or business cycle.” Things continue to move in Ford’s direction. Two years ago, Ford restored its dividend at five cents per share. Last year, they doubled it to ten cents, and now we’re at 12.5 cents. Going by Thursday’s close, the stock yields 3.16%. Ford remains a good buy up to $17 per share.

    Wells Fargo Is a Buy up to $48 Per Share

    The first Buy List stock to report this earnings season will be our favorite big bank, Wells Fargo ($WFC). Wells is due to report on Tuesday morning, January 14. Business at Wells has been going pretty well lately. The bank has beaten its earnings estimates for the last eight quarters in a row. For Q4, the current consensus on Wall Street is for earnings of 98 cents per share.

    If Wells does earn 98 cents for Q4, that would give them $3.87 for all of 2013, which is quite good. That’s a strong improvement over the $3.37 per share they made in 2012. The easy earnings growth may be a bit harder to come by in 2014. On one hand, the improving economy means that more people are paying their bills on time. But the downside is that Wells’s mortgage business has slowed down. If you recall, WFC laid off 5,300 people in their mortgage division last year. That was painful but necessary. Wall Street currently expects Wells to earn $4.01 per share next year, which is probably a bit low. Even if that’s right, it gives the stock a forward P/E of just 11.5. That’s a good value.

    Fortunately, the stock has continued to do well. On Thursday, WFC got as high as $46.20 per share which is another all-time high. Later this spring, I expect to see another dividend increase from Wells. Until the earnings report comes out, I want to keep a tight leash on our Buy Below price. Wells Fargo is a very good buy up to $48 per share.

    That’s all for now. Next week will be the first full week of earnings season. We’ll also get some key economic reports. On Tuesday, we get retail sales. The Fed’s Beige Book is on Wednesday, and the CPI report comes out on Thursday. I’m also curious to see the Industrial Production report which is due on Friday. Be sure to keep checking the blog for daily updates. I’ll have more market analysis for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review!

    – Eddy