Author Archives: Chris Versace, Chief Investment Officer

About Chris Versace, Chief Investment Officer

I'm the Chief Investment Officer of Tematica Research and editor of Tematica Investing newsletter. All of that capitalizes on my near 20 years in the investment industry, nearly all of it breaking down industries and recommending stocks. In that time, I've been ranked an All Star Analyst by Zacks Investment Research and my efforts in analyzing industries, companies and equities have been recognized by both Institutional Investor and Thomson Reuters’ StarMine Monitor. In my travels, I've covered cyclicals, tech and more, which gives me a different vantage point, one that uses not only an ecosystem or food chain perspective, but one that also examines demographics, economics, psychographics and more when formulating my investment views. The question I most often get is "Are you related to…."
When it comes to Fitbit (FIT), is now the right time to jump in?

When it comes to Fitbit (FIT), is now the right time to jump in?

If you saw a great product on sale at the store, you would be excited, maybe even ecstatic, if it was one you had been looking at for some time. The same is true with stocks!

We all tend to get caught up in the emotional response of the market moving lower, which usually is viewed as a bad thing, rather than an OPPORTUNITY to buy shares at an even better price. When viewed through that lens, who doesn’t love it when stocks go on sale… so long as the fundamentals and business drivers remain intact.

Here’s a great example — at the Consumer Electronics Show held earlier this month, Fitbit ([stock_quote symbol=”FIT”]) announced its first smart watch, dubbed the Blaze  . . .

Set a Protective Stop on a Winning Position to Lock in a Gain of More than 20%

Set a Protective Stop on a Winning Position to Lock in a Gain of More than 20%

Actions from this post

Ratings changes included in this dated post

  • Changing our rating on USA Technologies (USAT) to “Sell”, booking a near 30% return since our “Buy” rating was issued.
  • Updating Kraft Heinz (KHC) to a “Sell” rating, marking a hefty double-digit percentage return.
  • Closing out Disney (DIS), Under Armour (UA), Netflix (NFLX), LifeLock (LOCK), American Airlines (AAL) and Fitbit (FIT) — updated all with a “Sell” rating.
  • That leaves Physicians Reality Trust (DOC), Philip Morris (PM), American Capital Agency (AGNC), AT&T (T) and Regal Cinemas (RGC) in the Tematica Select List — all of which have dividend yields between 4.6% (Philip Morris) and 14% (American Capital Agency). Given the nature of their businesses as well as those dividend yields, those shares are apt to drum up investor interest as people look for safe havens.Let’s continue to hold these shares and “clip our dividend coupons” along the way.
  • Also, we recommend investors add some protection in the form of the ProShares Short S&P 500 ETF (SH), which trades in the opposite direction of the S&P 500.

What began as a bad start to 2016 only has gotten worse over the last few days. There are a number of reasons behind this move lower as II see the stock market, at best, moving sideways through earnings season, but more likely to come under additional pressure as expectations are scaled back. When I say expectations, I mean those for global growth, oil prices, corporate earnings and so on. You’ve seen me write more than a few times about the aggressive earnings expectations for the S&P 500 this year and the revisions lower that I’ve been expecting have only just begun.

In an environment like this, it tends to be shoot first and ask questions later, particularly as growth expectations get reset. While it is tempting to weather the storm, my preference is to lock in existing gains, limit losses and, above all, preserve capital at times such as this one. I know times like now, when the market seemingly goes down day after day, can be frustrating, if not confusing. I would not be surprised if you were having flashbacks to March 2008, wondering if we are heading for a repeat of what happened from May 2008 to March 2009, a period of intense pain for the stock market.

The famous phrase, “better safe than sorry,” comes to mind. For us, that means exiting the following positons:

  • Changing our rating on USA Technologies (USAT) to “Sell”, booking a near 30% return since our “Buy” rating was issued.
  • Updating Kraft Heinz (KHC) to a “Sell” rating, marking a hefty double-digit percentage return.
  • Closing out Disney (DIS), Under Armour (UA), Netflix (NFLX), LifeLock (LOCK), American Airlines (AAL) and Fitbit (FIT) — updated all with a “Sell” rating. 
  • That leaves Physicians Reality Trust (DOC), Philip Morris (PM), American Capital Agency (AGNC), AT&T (T) and Regal Cinemas (RGC) in the Tematica Select List — all of which have dividend yields between 4.6% (Philip Morris) and 14% (American Capital Agency). Given the nature of their businesses as well as those dividend yields, those shares are apt to drum up investor interest as people look for safe havens.Let’s continue to hold these shares and “clip our dividend coupons” along the way.
  • Also, we recommend investors add some protection in the form of the ProShares Short S&P 500 ETF (SH), which trades in the opposite direction of the S&P 500.

Over the next few weeks, we could get a bounce in the market here and there, but I would feel much better putting capital to work with a strong conviction that the storm has passed. As such, I will keep one eye on the market (the indicator of price) and the other on our investing themes as I look for data points that show companies whose businesses will continue to perform regardless of what’s happened in the stock market over the last month or will happen in the next month or next few months. If you were with me while I write this update, you would hear me muttering questions like some of these:

  • Has the drop in the stock market changed the outlook for cyber attacks and related threats in 2016? Safety & Security
  • Despite the unseasonably warm temperatures in the eastern United States thanks to El Niño, has the California drought situation been eradicated? Scarce Resources
  • Has the shift toward streaming and other digital content consumption slowed because the stock market has lost close to $1 trillion in value, lessening the demand for content? Connected Society
  • By some strange hocus-pocus, have people been “de-aged” so that less than 15% of the population is over 65 years old? Aging of the Population
  • As if by magic, did all of those people with little to no retirement savings suddenly land on firm financial footing? Aging of the Population
  • Over the last few days, has the costly and deadly impact of obesity and the prevalent condition of so many people being overweight been reversed? Fattening of the Consumer
  • Have retailers, both brick & mortar as well as online, shifted to only taking cash and checks as payment for goods and services? Cashless Consumption
  • Are people all of a sudden smoking less in the last few days? If anything, I would argue those who do indulge in this guilty pleasure are probably smoking more and having an extra drink or two along with it. Guilty Pleasure/Affordable Luxury
  • Has the domestic middle class started to expand dramatically in January? Rise and Fall of the Middle Class

And so on… Foods with Integrity… Asset-Lite Business Models… Economic Acceleration/Deceleration… Tooling & Retooling

The bottom line is these investing themes of ours continue to benefit from the shifting and evolving landscape that is the intersection of the global economy, changing demographics, disruptive technologies, regulatory mandates and other tailwind drivers.

As I said earlier, the stock market is simply the indicator of price.

If you saw a great product on sale at the store, you would be excited, maybe even ecstatic, if it was one you had been looking at for some time. The same is true with stocks!

We tend to get caught up in the emotional response of the market moving lower, which usually is viewed as a bad thing, rather than an OPPORTUNITY to buy shares at an even better price. When viewed through that lens, who doesn’t love it when stocks go on sale… so long as the fundamentals and business drivers remain intact. To me, this says we’ll be able to buy back a number of the growth positions at the same or lower prices when the current market storm has cleared and things have settled down. Let’s be prudent and patient together.

Throwing in the towel on AAPL and SWKS

Throwing in the towel on AAPL and SWKS

We are throwing in the towel on both Apple ([stock_quote symbol=”AAPL”]) and Skyworks Solutions ([stock_quote symbol=”SWKS”]), given respective supplier and competitor warnings that point to a very rocky road ahead in the first half of 2016.

Following Thursday’s market close, both Cirrus Logic ([stock_quote symbol=”CRUS”]) and Qorvo ([stock_quote symbol=”QRVO”]) pre-announced weaker-than-expected December-quarter results, which they attribute to “customer demand.” I see that wording as code for demand from Apple (AAPL). Cirrus derives more than half of its revenue from Apple and Qorvo counts the smartphone company as a key supplier. There has been growing concern over iPhone production levels, which I’ve discussed at length — including Nikkei’s recent re-hash of a Morgan Stanley forecast predicting an iPhone production cut for the March quarter. However, Cirrus’s comments give me reason to think this will persist past the next few months. The company announced, “This weakness escalated over the last few weeks of December and is expected to continue to significantly impact our revenue in the March quarter.” To me, this suggests a weak outlook not only for the March quarter, but for the June quarter as well.

For Apple, the iPhone is its largest product business and sharp production cuts past the next few months mean the shares are likely to be dead money until perhaps its next iPhone refresh cycle. If history holds, that will not likely happen until the back half of 2016.

While I continue to like the rising dollar content and growth opportunities outside the smartphone market that is a key part of the Skyworks story, given the growing uncertainty of the overall market and potential for smartphone-related weakness to persist longer than previously expected, we would rather err on the cautious side, preserve capital and limit losses.

For those reasons, even though the shares have entered oversold territory, we are changing our rating on SWKS to “Sell” and dropping it from the Tematica Select List, as I suspect they will be in the “show me” camp for the next several months. We would look to revisit SWKS shares later in 2016 as smartphone industry expectations reset and non-smartphone growth opportunities that Skyworks has ahead of it mature further.

Apple plus Facebook plus Google equals death to sector investing

Apple plus Facebook plus Google equals death to sector investing

It seems that at least once or twice per week we are asked, in some form or another, one of the following questions:

• What sectors do you rate as a buy right now?
• Do you like Financials? What about Technology?
• What is going to be the next big sector?
• What sectors do you think are best in bull markets? And which ones are best for sheltering gains in bear markets?

Our short answer to any sector questions is simple: we like NONE of them. But, at the same time, we also can say we like ALL sectors. Or more specifically, we like certain aspects of every sector, while we also dislike aspects of all sectors.

Confused? Guess it’s not so simple of an answer.

In this special edition of Tematica Insights we explain why thinking of investments from a sector perspective is out-dated at best, and fatally flawed at worst. Thinking of investments from a sector perspective is out-dated at best, and fatally flawed at worst. It’s over simplifying to identify any one or two sectors as having the most potential. In any sector, there will be some companies that seize on a new opportunity faster than others as new trends or themes emerge in today’s world.

Click the link below to share this free special report on a smarter approach over sector-based investing:

Download Monday Morning Kickoff

 

 

Companies Mentioned
  • Alphabet (GOOGL)
  • Amazon Prime (AMZN)
  • American Water Works (AWK)
  • Apple (AAPL)
  • Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG)
  • Etsy (ETSY)
  • Exxon (XOM)
  • Facebook (FB)
  • InterDigital (IDCC)
  • McDonald’s (MCD)
  • Netflix (NFLX)
  • Qualcomm (QCOM)
  • Royal Dutch Shell (RSH.A)
  • Shopify (SHOP)
  • Tesla Motors (TSLA)
Turn off the music, close up the bar and call it a night

Turn off the music, close up the bar and call it a night

While the “bad news is good news” move in the market over the last few days is decidedly more enjoyable than those gut-wrenching market falls of late, it’s like a party that goes on for too long; at some point someone has to turn off the music, close up the bar and call it a night.
We’ve already seen some warning signs that it might be time to head out before things get awkward in the form of negative earnings pre-announcements for several companies.

 

In this week’s issue of Tematica Insights:

  • With the September ISM Manufacturing Survey out, what does it mean for inflation and any potential Fed action on rates later this year.
  • Is this a good time to jump on buying opportunities with all the negative earnings pre-announcements coming out?
  • China’s adoption of Western diet demonstrates how thematics can play-out in society.
  • Tematica Select List company Skyworks ([stock_quote symbol=”SWKS”]) makes a move, which has adds an interesting wrinkle to our Connected Society thematic.

Download Monday Morning Kickoff

 

 

Companies Mentioned
  • Alcoa (AA)
  • Amazon.com (AMZN)
  • American Airlines (AAL)
  • Apple Inc. (AAPL)
  • Bank of America (BAC)
  • Caterpillar (CAT)
  • Chegg Inc. (CHGG)
  • ConAgra (CAG)
  • Corning Inc. (GLW)
  • Dunkin’ Brands (DNKN)
  • DuPont (DD)
  • FedEx (FDX)
  • Hewlett Packard (HPQ)
  • Illumina (ILMN)
  • Immersion Corp. (IMMR)
  • Kimco Realty (KIM)
  • Lifelock (LOCK)
  • Merk & Co. (MRK)
  • Netflix (NFLX)
  • Nu Skin (NUS)
  • Palo Alto Networks (PANW)
  • PayPal (PYPL)
  • PMC-Sierra (PMCS)
  • Skyworks Solutions (SWKS)
  • Starbucks Inc. (SBUX)
  • Swift Transportation (SWFT)
  • Synaptics Inc. (SYNA)
  • Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM)
  • The Container Store (TCS)
  • U.S. Global Jets ETF (JETS)
  • United Natural Foods (UNFI)
  • Verizon Communications (VZ)
  • Wal-Mart (WMT)
  • Walt Disney (DIS)
  • Whole Foods Market (WFM) Xylem, Inc (XYL)
  • Yum! Brands (YUM)
Recent data is fanning the flames of uncertainty

Recent data is fanning the flames of uncertainty

3Q15 was a blow to consumer confidence, and fanned the flames of uncertainty – one thing the stock market does not like.

Earlier this week we closed the books on September, and we all know the market ended the month on a weak note.

Taking a step back, the September quarter was mired with issues — the Greek Crisis, the devaluation of the Chinese Yuan, the accelerated decline of the Chinese economy, the back and forth of the “hike, no-hike” by the Fed, and more — all of which pointed toward a slowing domestic economy. The third quarter was a blow to consumer confidence, and fanned the flames of uncertainty, and we all know uncertainty is one thing the stock market does not like. Neither do we, and we suspect you and your clients don’t either.

In this week’s issue of Tematica Insights:

  • A look at PMI Manufacturing data, a miss on the Employment Report, and what else is to come on the missed earnings front.
  • Why we are not “buying the dip” this time.
  • iPhone shipment numbers: a good things for more than just Apple ({stock_quote symbol=”AAPL”]).
  • The Force is with Disney {stock_quote symbol=”DIS”]).

Download Monday Morning Kickoff

 

COMPANIES MENTIONED
  • American Airlines (AAL)
  • Apple (AAPL)
  • Bank of America (BAC)
  • Caterpillar (CAT)
  • ConAgra (CAG)
  • Dunkin Brands (DNKN)
  • FedEx (FDX)
  • Hewlett-Packard (HPQ)
  • Skyworks Solutions (SWKS)
  • Swift Transportation (SWFT)
  • Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM)
  • The Walt Disney Company (DIS)
  • Whole Foods Market (WFM)
A return of the market roller coaster ride we experienced in August

A return of the market roller coaster ride we experienced in August

The calendar has officially turned to Fall here in the United States. Of course, on the East Coast, where Tematica is based, we’ve had days that haven’t felt much different than the dog days of summer. But the level of pumpkin-spice “everything” in the stores is what we call a “confirming data-point” for the changing season, even if the weather still feels like Summer.

And while the calendar never stops, so too does the drumbeat of the market and the flow of economic data.  In this week’s edition of Tematica Insights, we provide subscribers with:

  • A first look at the trifecta of flash PMI data from China, the Eurozone and the U.S. — what it means for industrials such as Ingersoll-Rand (IR), Honeywell (HON), General Electric (GE), Crane (CR) and Caterpillar (CAT)
  • As we head into the quiet period, we take a look at the impact of global manufacturing data and other economic data can have on third quarter earnings for U.S. Securities.
  • We take a look at confirming data points on several thematics, including Cashless Consumption, Safety and Security and the Connected Society.
  • Adding a couple of new names to our shopping list as we look for opportunities in the near-term market.

Download Monday Morning Kickoff

 

 

 

 

COMPANIES MENTIONED

  • Amazon.com (AMZN)
  • American Airlines (AAL)
  • Apple (AAPL)
  • Caterpillar (CAT)
  • Chegg Inc. (CHGG)
  • ComScore (SCOR)
  • Corning Inc. (GLW)
  • Crane (CR)
  • Facebook (FB)
  • First Trust NASDAQ CEA Cybersecurity ETF (CIBR)
  • General Electric (GE)
  • Google (GOOGL)
  • Honeywell (HON)
  • Immersion Corp. (IMMR)
  • Ingersoll-Rand (IR)
  • Intel (INTC)
  • Kimco Realty (KIM)
  • Lifelock (LOCK)
  • Merk & Co. (MRK)
  • Microsoft (MSFT)
  • Netflix (NFLX)
  • Palo Alto Networks (PANW)
  • PayPal (PYPL)
  • PureFunds ISE Cyber Security ETF (HACK)
  • Skyworks Solutions (SWKS) Starbucks (SBUX)
  • Synaptics Inc. (SYNA)
  • U.S. Global Jets ETF (JETS)
  • United Natural Foods (UNFI)
  • Verizon Communications (VZ)
  • Walt Disney (DIS)
  • Xylem, Inc. (XYL)

APPLE (AAPL): Still the Epicenter of the Connected Society?

The odds are pretty high that your home or office has at least one Apple device if not more. A new report from the digital media analytics company comScore suggests that Apple’s iPhone has continued to grow its lead in the U.S. smartphone market, with just over 44 percent share of all American smartphone users in July 2015, an increase from the 43.1 percent share it held in April of this year.

We’ve long seen Apple sitting in the pole position of our ever increasing Connected Society, with its iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV, Apple Watch, iTunes and App Store platforms, as well as iOS and HealthKit, CarPlay and HomeKit solutions. As we see it, Apple has strong assets across the smartphone and computing spaces, but a position that is far less commanding in the living room compared to Microsoft’s ([stock_quote symbol=”MSFT”]) or Sony’s ([stock_quote symbol=”SNE”]) PlayStation, and a presence that is just burgeoning in the Connected Car and Connected Home markets. Don’t get us wrong, we’ve loved our Apple TV as a video portal for iTunes videos and other streaming apps like Netflix, Hulu, Vimeo and others. But to be fair, it contributed to the console clutter sitting next to the cable set top box, DVD player, and gaming system.

That was until this past week when Apple took the wraps off several new products at what’s become its annual showcase for announcing what will be hitting the shelves in the coming weeks, in preparation for the upcoming holiday shopping season (yes folks, the holidays are not too far away). This week, there were new iPhone 6S and 6S Plus models, a new enterprise and small to medium size geared iPad Pro complete with the new Apple Pencil and detachable smart keyboard; some new features for the Apple Watch along with some new watch bands and colors; and an upgraded Apple TV complete with voice interface, an improved OS (dubbed tvOS), and it’s own Apple TV App Store.  Let’s dig into the details:

Apple Watch. Things started off with the Apple Watch, and we have to be honest: we still want-to-want one, but don’t feel compelled to buy one, simply because we’re not sure we need one. In talking with folks who have taken the plunge, they praise the ability to pay with their wrist and see messages; however more than a few quickly shoehorned into the conversation that “well, it was a gift.”

Apple did announce more fashion-related items, bands and colors, but in our view that doesn’t really move the needle like the way the new iPad Pro did. The bottom line on the watch is, at least from our perspective, there is much more to go, and companies like FitBit (FIT) and others are way ahead of them, much the way Amazon’s ([stock_quote symbol=”AMZN”]) Kindle hardware continues to have a place in the e-reader space.

Apple TV.   Long positioned within Apple as a “hobby”, Apple TV gets a much-needed upgrade. Much the way the original App Store transformed the iPhone into a digital Swiss Army knife — allowing you to play games, shop, check your finances, post to Facebook or tweet on Twitter and over the ensuing years do almost anything — we see the new Apple TV app store having a similarly transformative effect on how people use their TV. Pulling up sports stats as you watch a game, shop online via Gilt or other apps that will soon be available, downloading games to play such as “Galaxy on Fire” and Walt Disney Co.’s new Star Wars game, “Disney Infinity,” would come to Apple TV. Popular real estate sites like AirBnB and Zillow also are developing apps that would allow big-screen house hunting.

Of all the improved features, it’s the gaming potential that could be the most disruptive long-term.  Over the last few years Apple’s iPods, iPhones and iPads have demolished the handheld gaming market, much the way iTunes and iPod completely eviscerated the rest of the MP3 player market. In the console gaming market, Apple is going head to head with Amazon and Sony. But with a $149 price point, the Apple TV is well below the $250 or so sticker price of Microsoft’s current Xbox. Granted, the initial slug of games will be found wanting relative to Xbox and even Sony’s ([stock_quote symbol=”SNE”]) PlayStation, but we know Apple will continue to pack more memory and improve the chip speed in the device over time.  Let’s not forget the content leverage Apple has with the developer community — a quiet competitive advantage it has enjoyed with its tablets and smartphones and is now extending into Apple TV. We anticipate now that Apple has “figured out” Apple TV, the product will be on the annual model upgrade path that we’ve seen with iPhone and iPad. More processing power, more storage, better graphics…. Apple TV.

As part of the Apple TV unveiling, Apple CEO Tim Cook made what we found to be an interesting comment:

“We believe the future of TV is apps.” 

He probably saw the same report we did from research company Millward Brown Digital that showed 22 percent of cable subscribers also subscribe to an over-the top service, such as Netflix, Hulu and others. As consumers of content through Netflix, HBO Go, Amazon Prime and other apps, we are believers in the time shifted approach (yes you can call it binging if you want) or the app-ification of TV. Combined with its expanding global footprint (more on that on page 14), this was one of the core reasons why we used the recent market pullback to add Netflix ([stock_quote symbol=”NFLX”]) shares to our Tematica Select List.

iPad Goes Pro.  Over the last few quarters, the iPad has been one of the sore spots in Apple’s quarterly reports. Even so, Apple CEO Tim Cook has remained upbeat about the tablet category. Apple recently announced a new partnership with Cisco Systems ([stock_quote symbol=”CSCO”]) that builds on the enterprise-focused relationship with IBM (IBM). We suspect that Apple has used these and other partnerships to determine the needs and wants of the enterprise market to develop the much talked about iPad Pro.

We’ve tried several times to use the iPad in place of our MacBook products and found it to be relegated to the realm of pinch-hitting when it comes to getting any substantive work done. Editing documents and toggling back and forth between apps for example was more than cumbersome…it was downright painful compared to the notebook or desktop experience.

With the debut of the iPad Pro it looks like we now have a serious productivity tool in tablet form. Hand in hand is iOS 9, which brings split screen, drag and drop, and other multitasking productivity features to Apple’s iPad — no more toggling with the home button. You can tell we’re excited about this. With Apple Pencil, Apple’s also addressed some of the annoyances with editing and marking up documents, but we’ll need to see what bells and whistles the developer community brings forth with this accessory to make its $99 price point palatable.

In our view, the new iPad Pro targets the enterprise customer segment from a tablet and app perspective rather than a stripped own notebook computer, which is pretty much what we think of the Microsoft Surface. Before we get all “boo-hoo” for Microsoft, let’s remember that outside the Xbox, hardware is a relatively small contributor to Microsoft, which has increasingly become an enterprise software play.

One announcement that Apple slipped in during all of this comes as mobile operators like Verizon ([stock_quote symbol=”VZ”]) and AT&T ([stock_quote symbol=”T”]) are moving away from the long-standing practice of signing customers up for long-term service contracts and offering subsidies to blunt the high cost of smartphones. Seeing the potential dilemma for its smartphone business, Apple introduced its own installment and leasing programs.

By buying directly from Apple, a consumer can pay $27 to $31 a month for 24 months for the iPhone 6S and 6S Plus. At the end of those two years, the consumer would own the phone outright. Cell phone service fees, of course, come on top of that.

Apple also introduced, and is displaying prominently on the Apple.com store, a new iPhone Upgrade program. You can purchase the iPhone 6S on a monthly payment plan starting at $32.41 for the 16GB model or $36.58 for the 16GB 6S Plus (going up by a little over $4 a month if you want more storage). The pricier plan includes the ability to upgrade to a new iPhone after 12 months. You would continue to pay the installments on the new phone and would just be “restarting the clock,” having to pay the monthly fee for another two years before you would own the newer phone. In this way, the customer is essentially leasing the phone from Apple.

Taking a step back and viewing Apple’s upgrade program alongside its recently introduced Apple Music, we see Apple is quietly shifting its business towards a subscription-based revenue stream. From a business perspective, subscription-based business models have great visibility, planning and consistent cash-flow attributes. From an investor perspective, those recurring payments and cash flow offer predictability and reliability, which tends to be rewarded when valuing the shares, assuming the subscriber-rate continues on an upward trajectory. Past examples include the subscription businesses of AOL dial-up service, Weight Watchers ([stock_quote symbol=”WTW”]), NutriSystem ([stock_quote symbol=”NTRI”]) and Netflix ([stock_quote symbol=”NFLX”]). We’ll need to see evidence of consumers getting onboard with this subscription approach from Apple — remember, Apple Music is still in it’s three month free trial mode, with the first automatic payments kicking in over the next month for those that were first to sign-up with the offering was released. If consumers do go for it, this could all turn Apples’ valuation on its head, and we mean that in a good way.

Does all of this make Apple shares attractive at current levels? 

With the launch of its iPhone 4s model in 2011, Apple shifted to a fall release for its smartphone business.  With each new release, Apple shares have tended to march significantly higher over the following six month period, reflecting the staged nature of launches around the globe and this impact on Apple’s earnings.

What’s different this year is, with the exception of its Mac line of products and to some extent Apple Watch, Apple is launching several new products ahead of the all important year-end holiday gift giving season and Chinese New Year, one of the biggest gift giving holidays.

Current expectations have Apple growing its earnings to $9.75 per share over the coming twelve months, up from $9.13 per share the company is expected to deliver for the twelve months ending September 2015. Given the timing of these new product announcements, expectations for revenue, profits and earnings in the coming quarters have yet to be revised.

We suspect Wall Street will wait until these new products hit the shelves so they can gauge the initial reception before adjusting their models and forecasts. With a strongly invigorated Apple TV and iPad Pro as well as the inherent iPhone upgrade cycle for those still using an iPhone 5s or earlier model we find the odds of Apple euphoria returning to be rather high.

From a stock valuation perspective, over the last few years Apple shares have peaked at an average multiple just shy of 16x earnings. Even in 2013, a year in which Apple’s earnings fell 11 percent, the shares still peaked at 14.2x earnings. Applying those two figures to the consensus expectation of $9.75 per share in earnings over the coming year derives a price target of $140-$150, or an upside of 29 percent at the midpoint.

Let’s remember, Apple is on a path to return cash to shareholders, in part with its quarterly $0.52 per share dividend payment as well as share repurchase program. While the current dividend yield is just below 2 percent, added to the $145 price target, the shares offer 30 percent upside from current levels.

On the downside, Apple shares have bottomed at 10.5x forward earnings on average over the last four-year, period which implies potential downside to $103 (which is close to where shares bounced on August 24) or roughly 8 percent from current levels. In more absolute terms, Apple shares bottomed at less than 10x earnings in 2012 and 2013, but counter balancing that today is Apple’s massive share repurchase plan. Apple has committed to returning $200 billion of cash through dividends and share repurchases over the August 2012- March 2017.  As of its June 2015 quarter, the company had more than $100 billion remaining under its current authorization. That’s a lot of dry powder to back stop the shares, and we’d note that since Apple embarked on its capital return program its share have bottomed closer to 11x earnings on average.

The Bottom Line on Apple

From several perspectives, the risk-to-reward ratio in Apple shares is compelling at a time when the company has one of its most pronounced new product cycles hitting, which will likely result in ratings upgrades and boosted earnings expectations. Ahead of that —and because of its now at the epicenter in our Connected Society thematic, we are adding Apple shares to our Tematica Select List. 


Playing Apple through an ETF

With our recent PayPal ([stock_quote symbol=”PYPL”]) recommendation, we included an ETF alternative for those that would prefer a more diversified approach. With Apple and it’s halo effect that touches many companies, including the Tematica Select List Skyworks Solutions ([stock_quote symbol=”SWKS”]), there are many ETFs involved. As we see it however, an ETF play would need to have meaningful exposure to Apple as well as several of its key suppliers in order to pack a meaningful punch.

Two such ETFs are the Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF ([stock_quote symbol=”XLK”]), which hold roughly 16 percent of its assets in Apple shares, and the other is iShares U.S. Technology ETF ([stock_quote symbol=”IYW”]) that holds more than 19% of its assets in Apple shares. Between the two we would favor XLK shares given the larger market capitalization as well as far greater average daily trading volume and higher dividend yield.

August Jolts Report and NFIB Data Confirms the Tooling and Retooling Thematic.

August Jolts Report and NFIB Data Confirms the Tooling and Retooling Thematic.

As you digest all of the economic data we dumped on your today, you’re likely getting the correct view that we tend to look at things from several different angles, with the Employment Report being one such item.

Seasonally adjusted, in thousands

Seasonally adjusted, in thousands

In addition to all of the third party metrics and the below the headline data we look at, another insightful report is the Job Openings and Labor Turnover (JOLTs) Report. The August JOLTs report, published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed the number of job openings in July rose to 5.8 million (versus expectations for 5.3 million), a record high since the data started to be collected in December 2000. By comparison, data from the National Federation of Independent Business showed that job creation remained flat at small businesses in July.

What we found more interesting inside the NFIB report was 56 percent reported hiring or trying to hire, but 48 percent (or 86 percent of those hiring or trying to hire) reported few or no qualified applicants for the positions they were trying to fill. In case you were wondering, much like the 5.8 million job openings, that 48 percent figure was also a record high.

Screen Shot 2015-09-10 at 4.37.34 PM

Combined what these two reports tell us is that we have plenty of companies with jobs they need to fill, but cannot find qualified applicants.  At the same time, we have a historically high percent of the population having given up looking for work.  This strikes at the heart of the need for workers to “re-tool” as part of our Tooling & Re-tooling investing thematic.

Over the long run this is good news for companies like ITT Educational Service ([stock_quote symbol=”ESI”]) and Capella Education ([stock_quote symbol=”CPLA”]), as well as Strayer Education (STRA), which have been hit hard in recent years by the lack of wage returns on higher education and scrutiny from federal regulators.  A recovering economy coupled with awareness of more and more job openings could push prospective students into taking the plunge.

One player that we’ll be watching on the horizon is McGraw-Hill Education, which has recently filed an S-1 form with the Securities and Exchange Commission for its initial public offering. The company has transformed from publishing “just” textbooks and instructional materials into producing digital learnings content and outcome-focused learning solutions, such as McGraw-Hill Connect, which Tematica Chief Investment Officer Christopher Versace uses as part of his graduate teaching.

Economics & Expectations September 2015

Economics & Expectations September 2015

We recently closed the books on the month of August, and in short, it was one of the worst August months we have seen in some time. In our view, yet to emerge forecasted earnings revisions and second half economic expectations as well as the Fed’s upcoming FOMC meeting on September 16-17 will keep the market range bound in the short-term.

Recapping the last few weeks. 

Looking back since the last edition of Tematica Insights, we’ve received quite a heaping of discouraging data, and the market has reacted accordingly. After the sharp rebound in the market on August 26th and 27th following yet another interest rate cut by China and dovish comments from several Fed officials about the timing of interest rate hikes, the market closed out the last full week of August in the green, with the S&P 500 leaping up 120 points. Still way off the soaring heights we saw back in May, but a nice little rebound from the 1,868 price level we witnessed in the S&P 500 on August 25th, wiping out nearly two years of gains.

But as quick as even this modest glimmer of hope came, renewed concerns over China and Fed interest rate hike timing saw the market finish the month with a whimper as market levels moved downward the last couple of trading days in August. All told, we exited August with all three major US stock market indices — the S&P 500 (our preferred yardstick), the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Nasdaq Composite Index — all in the red on a year-to-date basis.

china_pmiAs we’ve cautioned, the rash of recent stimulative measures by the Chinese central bankers would have little impact in the short-term, which is exactly what was realized with a first look at the dismal China PMI reading for August (see chart).

Per the report:

Chinese manufacturers saw the quickest deterioration in operating conditions for over six years in August, according to latest business survey data. Total new orders and new export business both declined at sharper rates than in July, and contributed to the most marked contraction of output since November 2011.

Mark our words: this unexpectedly worse situation is going to ripple through economic and earnings expectations. 

screen shot 2015-08-21 at 9.49.41 am
Screen Shot 2015-09-10 at 3.47.02 PMCompounding all of this, new orders as well as new export orders continued to fall in the US according to the August PMI data from Markit Economics (see chart).  This provides more confirmation for what we’ve been seeing in recent weeks in data points such as the declining year-over-year weekly railcar loadings  (see Weekly Rail Traffic Data chart) and weak regional Fed reports. Those domestic findings were echoed by a weaker than expected August ISM manufacturing report, which showed declines almost across the board, including greater drops in new orders.

Despite what the talking heads in Washington would say, there is little doubt the US economy is slowing. 

As if the rash of PMI data wasn’t enough to make one raise an eyebrow about the near-term velocity of the economy, comments from the recent September Beige Book (a qualitative assessment of the U.S. economy compiling findings from each of the 12 Federal Reserve districts) point to concerns over upcoming minimum wage hike increases, as well as higher costs associated with the Affordable Care Act. Eleven of 12 Fed districts reported only “moderate” to “modest growth”, with the Cleveland district reporting only “slight growth”. This compares with 10 districts that reported “moderate” to “modest” growth in the July Beige Book. Most districts described labor demand as “no more than modest” to “moderate”, while most describe actual job growth as “no better than slight” or “modest”.

Soon after the release of Beige Book, we received the August Employment Report with its 5.1 percent unemployment rate, and that hit the market like too much lighter fluid on a blazing charcoal barbeque. This headline employment figure — the last such report the Fed will view before the FOMC meeting — turned up the flames of uncertainty about what will happen with rates. When we parsed the data, however, we once again see Wall Street over-reacting, much the way it did at the end of August.

To us it’s pretty simple. When we look at more people leaving the work force than the number of jobs being added, it becomes pretty obvious that the drop in the Unemployment Rate was due to “bad math.”

Here’s what we mean: when looking at other indicators — Gallup, and parts of the PMI and ISM data — it all helps to paint a much truer picture of the employment situation, as does payroll-to-population and labor force participation rate data of the jobs market. While politicians in Washington, DC will point to the falling Unemployment Rate as being due to “progress”, the reality couldn’t be further from the truth.  Currently, labor force participation, which includes working-age Americans that are actually working or actively looking for work, stands at 62.6 percent — the lowest it’s been since 1977. That doesn’t speak to a healthy employment situation.

LFP

Despite all the would-be euphoria over the stronger-than-forecasted upward revision to 2Q 2015 gross domestic product (GDP), the data of late points to a greater fall should the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow forecast as of September 3rd of 1.5 percent for the current quarter proves to be correct.

The one bright spot in the all data we’ve consumed over the last few weeks? The Eurozone.

We continue to see Eurozone expansion on the back of improving conditions in Germany, Italy, Spain and other countries. Tempering our enthusiasm, however, we need to be mindful that a contracting China is apt to weigh on the activity in the Eurozone. We’re only now starting to hear about the “China Ripple” — and no, it’s not the latest flavor from Ben & Jerry’s — but the ripple effect from the accelerating China slowdown. Australia’s growth came in at half of expectations, and now German factory orders dropped a larger than expected 1.4 percent in July compared to the previous month, dragged down by flagging foreign demand.

In our opinion, there are too many data points — better known as reasons — that make it hard to see Janet and the Fed’s pulling the rate trigger amid an increasingly uncertain environment. The table on page 5 details our thinking on this.

So, what does all this data point to?

With the unofficial end of summer and back-to-school shopping all rolled into one we find ourselves in “return to work” mode with just three weeks left in the quarter. Soon companies will begin hiding behind the “quiet period” and before too long it will be earnings pre-announcement season. Where did the time go?

As the Labor Day holiday weekend faded away, we see expectations for S&P 500 earnings have seen little change over the last four weeks — that’s in spite of the rash of global economic data we just plowed through, all pointing to slower growth. Let’s go over the numbers, shall we?

On September 3, we saw 2015 earnings expectations at $119.34 per share, down all of just 0.25 percent versus the $119.65 per share forecasts called for as of August 6, according the data from FactSet.

Drilling down a bit deeper into expectations for the current quarter, we see the rising China weakness reported in the July and August PMIs, which also hinted at more to come in September — given new order weakness. The FactSet data also shows third-quarter expectations for the S&P 500 at $29.18 per share. That’s down 0.7 percent from the $29.40 per share forecast on August 6.

Flip it around, and it means the S&P 500 group of companies will need to grow earnings by 7 percent to hit current fourth-quarter expectations of $31.23.

The only times in recent history that the group grew earnings even close to that level was 8.7 percent in 2009 and 5.7 percent in 2013. Both times they managed it without facing the headwinds we now are experiencing.

Color us a tad crazy — and yes we realize that China does not “own” the revenue and profit stream of the S&P 500 — but considering ripple effects, the odds are high that we’ll see a greater impact on the S&P group of companies than just 0.25 percent on the back of China weakness.

Adding to our skepticism is the latest round of “will they-won’t they” Fed coyness over interest rates — this time by John Williams, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. In an interview with the Wall Street Journal just last week, Williams said:

All of the data that we have had up until now has been, I think, encouraging. It …has been about as good, or better, than I was expecting, in terms of the U.S. economy. But there are some pretty significant—and I would say have now grown larger—headwinds that have developed.

Put all this together and it seems, at least to us, that we are waiting for the mythical other shoes to drop. We, like everyone else in America will be watching the Fed and what it will do, or not do, with interest rates next week, which will then be quickly followed by earnings pre-announcements.

All this will provide a glimpse of what we will see in September quarterly earnings. Fasten that seat belt, have your hands on 10 and 2, and make sure your crash helmet is within arms reach!