Saturday, August 31, 2013

How to evaluate taxes, net profit, appropriation of cos

Top 5 Growth Stocks To Invest In 2014

Taxes: There are different types of taxes that companies are charged. The common ones include current income tax, fringe benefit tax, wealth tax, minimum alternative tax and deferred income tax.

Corporate income tax is the tax which a company pays on the profits it makes. Currently, the domestic corporate income tax rate stands at 30% (A surcharge of 10% of the income tax is levied, if the taxable income exceeds Rs 1 m). It may be noted that the tax structure for foreign companies operating in India is different.

After adding other income and deducting the interest and depreciation charges from the operating profits, we arrive at a figure known as the profit before tax (PBT). On dividing the current income tax (for the particular year) by the PBT (also known as the net taxable income), we get a figure called the 'effective tax rate'.

Fringe benefit tax is the tax which a company pays on certain benefits which its employees get. This includes items such as employee stock options (ESOPs), expenses on travel, entertainment, amongst others. It may be noted that the employer needs to cover the cost of these items for them to be accounted as a fringe benefits. While this tax is no longer applicable in India, it could be reinstated in the future, which is why it is important to know about it.

Wealth tax is levied on the benefits derived from ownership of certain non-productive assets that a company owns. As such, assets like shares, debentures, bank deposits and investments in mutual funds, being productive assets, are exempt from wealth tax. Non-productive assets include jewellery, bullion, motorcars, aircraft and urban land, amongst others.

The need for deferred tax accounting arises because companies often postpone or pre-pay taxes on profits pertaining to a particular period. It may be noted that when a company reports its profits/losses, it is not necessary that they match the profits the taxman lays claim to. As such, if a company prepays taxes relating to the future years, it will show up as deferred tax assets in the profit and loss account. Similarly, if a company creates a provision for deferred tax liability, it shows that it has postponed part of the tax of that period's transactions to the future.

Minimum alternative tax arises when a company pays a fixed percentage of the book profit as tax on the condition that the tax payable is less than the prescribed limit. This is after taking into account the many deductions and exemptions available for companies, allowing them to avoid paying corporate taxes even when they show book profits. In the latest budget, the Finance Minister increased this limit to 18.5% of profits as against 18% during the previous year. It was 15% prior to that.

Net profits: After deducting the taxes from the PBT, we arrive at the profit after tax, which is also called the net profit. One can say that the net profit is probably one of the most sought after figures in the investor community as it is a key indicator of the fundamental strength of the company. Hence an important input for equity analysis . It is the figure that each analyst tries to derive using all the knowledge he or she possesses. After all, the earning per share or the EPS is attained by dividing the net profits by the shares outstanding.

Net profit margin is a measurement of what proportion of a company's revenue is leftover after paying for costs of production / services and costs such as depreciation on assets and finances its takes to run or expand the company. A higher net profit margin allows the company to pay out higher amounts of dividends or plough back higher amount of money back into the business. Net profit margin is calculated by dividing the net profits (for a particular period) by the net sales of that respective period.

Net profit margins = (Profit before tax- Tax)/ Net sales * 100

Appropriation: A company can do two things with the profits that it earns. It can either invest it back into the company (into reserves and surplus) and/or pay out the amount as dividend. In addition, the tax on dividends is also included here. To get a better understanding of how this functions, we can take a look at the image below.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Britannia FY11 annual report.

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Sunday, August 25, 2013

Europe Stocks Rise for Third Week as Growth Tops Forecast

European stocks advanced for a third straight week as data showing the euro area emerged from the longest recession on record outweighed speculation the Federal Reserve will trim monetary stimulus.

Italian banks led gains as Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena SpA and Unione di Banche Italiane SCPA rallied at least 12 percent. GAM Holding AG jumped the most in almost four years as the asset manager said first-half profit more than tripled. Fresnillo Plc and Randgold Resources Ltd. increased at least 9 percent as prices for gold and silver rallied.

The benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 Index increased 0.1 percent to 306.36 this past week, extending its 2013 advance to 9.5 percent. The Euro Stoxx 50 Index added 1 percent for a sixth week of gains. Gross domestic product in the 17-nation euro area expanded 0.3 percent in the second quarter after a six straight periods of contraction, according a report on Aug. 14. That exceeded the median estimate of 0.2 percent growth in a Bloomberg survey of economists.

"The global economy is improving, which means company profitability will improve, which means equity as an asset class should attract new money," Kevin Lilley, head of European Equities at Old Mutual Global Investors, which manages about $17 billion, said by phone. "For the first time in two years, with a continuation of positive news flows, the man on the street might go out and purchase that car he's been thinking about, the new television or remodel his house."

Fed Tapering

The Stoxx 600 slid 1.1 percent on Aug. 15, the most in five weeks, as a U.S. Labor Department report showed initial jobless-benefit claims unexpectedly dropped to the lowest level in almost six years. The better-than-forecast data fueled speculation the Fed will pare the pace of bond buying and pushed 10-year Treasury yields to a two-year high.

The Fed will probably reduce its $85 billion in monthly debt purchases at its meeting on Sept. 17-18, according to 65 percent of economists surveyed by Bloomberg from Aug. 9 to Aug. 13. In a survey last month, half of economists predicted a reduction at next month's meeting.

National benchmark indexes advanced in 13 of the 18 western European markets this week. France's CAC 40 Index climbed 1.2 percent and Germany's DAX Index increased 0.6 percent. The U.K.'s FTSE 100 Index sank 1.3 percent, while the Swiss Market Index (SMI) retreated 0.2 percent.

Italian banks posted the biggest gains in the Stoxx 600, as the extra yield investors demand to hold the nation's 10-year bonds over benchmark German bunds shrank to the lowest level in two years. Monte Paschi, the third-largest bank in Italy, surged 14 percent and UBI rallied 12 percent.

GAM Gains

GAM jumped 15 percent, the most since October 2009. The asset manager that split from Julius Baer Group Ltd. almost four years ago said first-half profit more than tripled after fee and commission income increased.

Fresnillo (FRES), the world's largest primary silver producer, surged 13 percent and Randgold, a producer of the precious metal in Africa, jumped 9.1 percent. Gold climbed to the highest price in almost two months and silver rose to the highest since May.

A measure of travel and leisure companies posted the biggest decline of 19 industry groups in the Stoxx 600, retreating 2.3 percent. In Egypt, at least 600 people died following Aug. 14 police assaults on two squares in Cairo and Giza where Muslim Brotherhood supporters were camped out to demand the return of ousted President Mohamed Mursi, according to the official death toll.

Thomas Cook

Thomas Cook Group Plc (TCG) tumbled 9.9 percent for the biggest drop in five months. UBS AG removed the 172-year-old U.K. tour operator from its list of preferred stocks, citing the "high-profile media coverage" of the violence in Egypt.

TUI Travel Plc, Europe's largest tour operator, retreated 4.6 percent, the most in four months.

Airlines fell as crude oil advanced. EasyJet plunged 8.7 percent and International Consolidated Airlines Group SA fell 4.4 percent. Ryanair Holdings Plc lost 8.3 percent for the biggest drop in 2 1/2 years.

Ophir Energy Plc tumbled 12 percent as the explorer and BG Group Plc delayed plans to start deepwater drilling off Tanzania in September. Ophir also postponed exploration plans in Gabon and Equatorial Guinea, and is studying its options in Ghana following unsuccessful drilling there.

Geberit AG fell 11 percent, the most since August 2011. The maker of toilets and bathroom piping said there's been "a clear fall in demand" in most European markets since the fourth quarter of 2012 and a continued downturn in public construction in North America.

U.K. homebuilders declined as increasing bond yields spurred concern rising interest rates may hinder the housing recovery. Barratt Developments Plc (BDEV) sank 7.4 percent, Persimmon Plc fell 3.6 percent and Taylor Wimpey Plc lost 3.7 percent.

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Morgan Stanley Nabs Wells, UBS Reps

Morgan Stanley (MS) said Tuesday that it recruited three advisors from rival wirehouse firms with a total of $3.7 million in yearly fees and commissions, while Janney Montgomery Scott announced early Tuesday that its advisors have been joined by a team formerly with Stephens.

Arthur Levine moved to Morgan Stanley Wealth Management’s office in Ridgewood, N.J., from Wells Fargo Advisors (WFC). Levine, who has had 12-month production of more than $2.4 million, now reports to branch manager Peter Christou.

T. Samuel Coleman Sr. and T. Samuel Coleman Jr. joined Morgan Stanley in Pasadena, Calif., and Seattle, respectively, on June 7 from UBS (UBS).

The senior Coleman now reports to Cynthia Newman, the complex manager in Pasadena, and Coleman Jr. is reporting to Seattle complex manager Alex Burlingame. The father-son team has combined production of more than $1.3 million and prior client assets of $161 million.

Philadelphia-based Janney said 34-year industry veteran W.G. Simms Oliphant Jr., and 17-year industry veteran Christopher Smith are now part of its Columbia, S.C., branch office. The two advisors, who were previously with Little Rock, Ark.-based Stephens, collectively oversee about $155 million in client assets.

They are being joined by assistant Julie Boulware to form the S.C. Asset Advisors.

“Simms and Chris make a great addition to our Columbia office, as their success through the years has been defined by the way they serve their clients and the community,” said Jerry Lombard, president of the firm’s Private Client Group, in a press release.

“Like many senior advisors who have joined Janney, Simms and Chris had many choices but, after conducting their due diligence, the team was drawn to our financial strength, our client-centric support, our advanced technology and our ability to deliver all the resources needed to serve their clients,” added Lombard.

Before his seven years with Stephens, Oliphant worked for Legg Mason from 2001 until 2005, when the firm transferred its business to Citigroup (C). He was with Wachovia for seven years before transitioning to Legg Mason.

“Along with moving Southeast Regional Manager Andy Kistler to our Charlotte, N.C., office, we have made efforts to share our story with like-minded advisors throughout the Southeast region and look forward to welcoming more top-tier advisors in the coming months,” Lombard explained.

Janney currently has 735 advisors and some $58 billion in client assets under management.

----

Read Recruiting Roundup: Morgan Stanley, Janney Lure Reps on AdvisorOne.

Why Can't Advisors Tell the Difference Between Alternative Assets and Strategies?

If top managers have trouble recognizing the difference between alternative assets and alternative strategies, what hope do the rest of us have?

Gabriel Burstein of Curian Capital.“I was at a conference recently and asked a keynote speaker about the future of alternative strategies,” Curian Capital’s Gabriel Burstein, Ph. D. (left), told ThinkAdvisor during a discussion with colleagues on Thursday. “He answered by describing assets like commodities and real estate, and not a word about strategies, so even legendary managers get confused, and that confusion is spreading.”

It’s an ongoing and widely observed problem. Although Dorothy Weaver, CEO of Collins Capital, recently said advisors are on “the cusp of really understanding the difference between alternative strategies and assets,” they’re not quite there, and it remains a frustration for all involved.

“An advisor in Texas with whom I was recently speaking said whenever he talks to his clients about alternative strategies, they don’t want to hear it because they might have lost so much recently on commodities or real estate,” added Burstein, head of investment strategy in asset management at the Denver-based firm. “They don’t realize that the assets might have a volatility of 20%, say, annualized over a 10-year period, but the strategies might have 5% to 8% volatility.”

Disentangling strategies from assets with advisors and clients is the challenge the industry faces, he said.

Jim Gilmore, a VP and portfolio manager at Curian, noted the number of people with institutional experience at the firm that are “getting used to common terms on the retail side,” but are seeing abuse in how they’re used and implemented.

Jim Gilmore of Curian Capital.“Institutional plan sponsors use no more than 10% in their portfolios to combat inflation, and in periods of low inflation those allocations may be dead weight,” Gilmore (left) said. “Look at gold; everyone on the retail side has been told it’s where they have to be. Well, if they started the year with $1 they ended with $0.75. We’re trying to recognize the risk/return characteristics of each strategy and weight them appropriately.”

He added that the retail side is looking for one strategy that is a “panacea” for managing volatility, and it’s usually something that “isn’t a very substantive return driver.

“What is needed is a wide range of strategies that have a wide range of volatilities and return drivers,” he argued. “If you add in 10, 12 or 15 of these strategies, individually they might have 8% to 12% volatility, but acting in concert they might have 5% volatility.”

One of the biggest challenges to effective portfolio construction on the '40 Act retail side is manager selection, and that's where Brian Hargreaves comes in. The firm’s VP of alternative investments and manager research uses a top-down approach that looks at strategy and allocation, combined with a bottom-up approach of manager selection.

“When evaluating a manager, its critical to ensure returns are alpha driven and not deviating from stated objectives,” Hargreaves noted. “Particularly, look to ensure managers avoid style drift by employing a repeatable and sustainable process. Managers should also avoid chasing the flavor of the month or the hot, new thing.”

Brian Hargreaves of Curian Capital.As for the sources of alpha, it must be “pure or real alpha,” says Hargreaves (left), not a passive strategy that might happen to be doing well during a given period of time.

“We then look at performance and the idiosyncrasies of the manager’s firm,” Hargreaves added. “The standard due diligence process is also performed to review the investment thesis as well as legal, compliance and operations.” He pointed to multi-strategy funds as growing in popularity, as are long/short credit strategies, among others.

Gilmore moved to a description of what Curian means by its conservative, moderate and growth allocations. “'Conservative' has 5% target volatility, plus or minus one. With one-third the volatility of the S&P 500, it can really have an impact on the portfolio. And it can be used as a replacement for fixed-income allocations.”

Moderate, he continued, adds in a bit of equity beta through some private equity, real estate and infrastructure and has volatility on the order of a 7% target. “The growth portfolio increases equity beta to maintain a target of 9%.”

Top 10 Companies To Watch In Right Now

The key, Gilmore concluded, is to start with the investor’s purpose in mind. “Too often, I see the allocation as the last item for consideration, and it doesn’t get the attention it deserves. How do advisors get it matched right for the investors’ needs? Advisors are thirsty for that kind of knowledge.”

Monday, August 19, 2013

Top 10 Undervalued Stocks To Buy For 2014

After the impressive performance of Bank of America's (NYSE: BAC  ) stock last year -- it was the top-performing component of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI  ) -- it'd be tempting to conclude that the nation's second-largest lender didn't have much juice left in the proverbial tank. But according to a number of high-profile analysts, that simply isn't the case.

Roughly halfway through today's trading session, shares of Bank of America are higher by nearly 1.5%. This comes, moreover, on the heels of an impressive performance yesterday, when its shares were up by 1.3%.

There's no question that a growing number of analysts are becoming bullish on Bank of America stock. In the middle of last month, Meredith Whitney -- who famously foretold Citigroup's fall five years ago -- reiterated her view that Bank of America was one of the most undervalued bank stocks in the market. "Very rarely do these big banks have both value catalysts and momentum," Whitney noted. "Bank of America had all of that."

Top 10 Undervalued Stocks To Buy For 2014: Dollar Tree Inc.(DLTR)

Dollar Tree, Inc. operates discount variety stores in the United States and Canada. Its stores offer merchandise primarily at the fixed price of $1.00. The company operates its stores under the names of Dollar Tree, Deal$, Dollar Tree Deal$, Dollar Giant, and Dollar Bills. Its stores offer consumable merchandise, including candy and food, and health and beauty care, as well as household consumables, such as paper, plastics, household chemicals, in select stores, and frozen and refrigerated food; variety merchandise, which includes toys, durable housewares, gifts, party goods, greeting cards, softlines, and other items; and seasonal goods, such as Easter, Halloween, and Christmas merchandise. As of April 30, 2011, it operated 4,089 stores in 48 states and the District of Columbia, as well as 88 stores in Canada. The company was founded in 1986 and is based in Chesapeake, Virginia.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Sam Collins]

    Dollar Tree (NASDAQ:DLTR) is a leading operator of discount variety stores. The stock has hugged its 50-day moving average since mid-February. But a recent minor revision of earnings for this year by several analysts and the recent market sell-off have resulted in a fall from its high of the year at over $70 to under $66. However, Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) increased its price target to $73 from $69.

    Technically DLTR is oversold, according to MACD. A break below its 50-day moving average could result in a pullback to $64, but positions could be taken at the current market price. The trading target for DLTR is $72.

Top 10 Undervalued Stocks To Buy For 2014: Caterpillar Inc.(CAT)

Caterpillar Inc. manufactures and sells construction and mining equipment, diesel and natural gas engines, industrial gas turbines, and diesel-electric locomotives worldwide. It operates through three lines of businesses: Machinery, Engines, and Financial Products. The Machinery business offers construction, mining, and forestry machinery, including track and wheel tractors, track and wheel loaders, pipelayers, motor graders, wheel tractor-scrapers, track and wheel excavators, backhoe loaders, log skidders, log loaders, off-highway trucks, articulated trucks, paving products, skid steer loaders, underground mining equipment, tunnel boring equipment, and related parts. It also manufactures diesel-electric locomotives; and manufactures and services rail-related products and logistics services for other companies. The Engines business provides diesel, heavy fuel, and natural gas reciprocating engines for Caterpillar machinery, electric power generation systems, marine, petrol eum, construction, industrial, agricultural, and other applications. It offers industrial turbines and turbine-related services for oil and gas, and power generation applications. This business also remanufactures Caterpillar engines, machines, and engine components; and offers remanufacturing services for other companies. The Financial Products business provides retail and wholesale financing alternatives for Caterpillar machinery and engines, solar gas turbines, and other equipment and marine vessels, as well as offers loans and various forms of insurance to customers and dealers. It also offers financing for vehicles, power generation facilities, and marine vessels. The company markets its products directly, as well as through its distribution centers, dealers, and distributors. It was formerly known as Caterpillar Tractor Co. and changed its name to Caterpillar Inc. in 1986. Caterpillar Inc. was founded in 1925 and is headquartered in Peoria, Illinois.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Ben Levisohn]

    For one day at least, this CAT is not a dog.

    Caterpillar (CAT) has gained 2% to $86.22 today, its largest gain since in a month and the largest gain among the Dow components. The machinery manufacturer has dropped 11% during the past six months, however, as a slowdown in China and cost-cutting at mining companies have hit its shares.

    Bloomberg

    Susquehanna’s Ted Grace offers reasons for optimism, even as he lowers his 12-month price target to $97 from $104:

    CAT remains Positive rated with 15% upside to our $97 price target and upside-downside of 1.2-to-1 (which, like most of our machinery names, is admittedly shy of the 2-to-1 or better ratio we prefer). Despite our 2014-15 EPS being ~6% below consensus, we view our updated estimates as closer to buyside expectations while noting that consensus appears to embed a low tax rate that explains over half of the variance. While there remains plenty of uncertainty on 2014/15, particularly in mining, we believe CAT shares currently discount reasonable top-line expectations while recent meetings with mgmt suggest potential for structural cost savings that could drive better than expected margins/ incrementals. While difficult to identify discernible catalysts, if CAT’s framework for flat-to-better RI revenue growth in 2014 proves correct (admittedly not assumed in our estimates), this would almost certainly debunk the core of the bear thesis and be meaningfully positive for shares.

    Investors waiting for the stock to actually, you know, rise can take comfort in Caterpillar’s $2.40 dividend per share and its more than $3 per share in buybacks in 2013, Grace says.

    Caterpillar’s 2% gain has trumped the Dow Jones Industrial Average’s 0.04% rise, and United Technology’s (UTX) 0.1% drop, while competitor Deere (DE) has gained 1.9% to $83.22.

  • [By Jim Cramer,TheStreet]

    Caterpillar (CAT) could be a monster in 2011, especially with the integration of Bucyrus International (BUCY), which I think will turn out to be a fantastic acquisition.

    Current earnings-per-share estimates of about $6 are, I think, way too low. I see this stock going to $120 in the next year. Too gutsy? Ask yourself what happens if the United States comes back as a growth nation? Right now almost all of the growth is overseas.

    Still a fantastic mineral play and a terrific call on world growth.

  • [By Roberto Pedone]

    Caterpillar (CAT) is staging a textbook breakout in May. Shares of heavy equipment maker haven't exactly been kind to investors year-to-date; CAT has barely broken even during a time when the broad market has been in a historic rally. But a textbook breakout should change that.

    CAT started forming an inverse head and shoulders pattern back in early April. The inverse head and shoulders is formed by two swing lows that bottom out around the same level (the shoulders), separated by a lower low called the head; the buy signal comes on the breakout above the pattern's "neckline" level, which was just below $86 for CAT. That puts this stock's upside target right around $92.

    Even though CAT has nearly hit its upside target already (the post-breakout buying has been very quick), the longer-term implication for investors is a break of the downtrend that had been haranguing shares this year. Now, with that downtrend broken, CAT should have more room to move higher. I'd just expect some consolidation first.

Top 10 Heal Care Companies To Buy Right Now: Schlumberger N.V.(SLB)

Schlumberger Limited, together with its subsidiaries, supplies technology, integrated project management, and information solutions to the oil and gas exploration and production industries worldwide. The company?s Oilfield Services segment provides exploration and production services; wireline technology that offers open-hole and cased-hole services; supplies engineering support, directional-drilling, measurement-while-drilling, and logging-while-drilling services; and testing services. This segment also offers well services; supplies well completion services and equipment; artificial lift; data and consulting services; geo services; and information solutions, such as consulting, software, information management system, and IT infrastructure services that support oil and gas industry. Its WesternGeco segment provides reservoir imaging, monitoring, and development services; and operates data processing centers and multiclient seismic library. This segment also offers variou s services include 3D and time-lapse (4D) seismic surveys to multi-component surveys for delineating prospects and reservoir management. The company?s M-I SWACO segment supplies drilling fluid systems to improve drilling performance; fluid systems and specialty tools to optimize wellbore productivity; production technology solutions to maximize production rates; and environmental solutions that manages waste volumes generated in drilling and production operations. Its Smith Oilfield segment designs, manufactures, and markets drill bits and borehole enlargement tools; and supplies drilling tools and services, tubular, completion services, and other related downhole solutions. The company?s Distribution segment markets pipes, valves, and fittings, as well as mill, safety, and other maintenance products. This segment also provides warehouse management, vendor integration, and inventory management services. Schlumberger Limited was founded in 1927 and is based in Houston, Texas.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Rebecca Lipman]

     Together with its subsidiaries, supplies technology, integrated project management, and information solutions to the oil and gas exploration and production industries worldwide. Market cap of $91.49B. EPS growth (5-year CAGR) at 24%. According to Morgan Stanley: "Thanks to an estimated $1 billion investment per year in R&D, Schlumberger has what we consider the most advanced technology portfolio in the industry."

  • [By Brian Stoffel]

    This company has been a pick of both Jordan DiPietro and Bryan White. And both analysts have pointed to the company's opportunity for oil exploration abroad -- which is where much of the demand will soon be coming from as well.

    Bryan points out that three-fourths of the company's revenue comes from abroad, with "Brazil, the Middle East, and Africa [as] key regions where activity is expected to be robust and growing."

    Jordan adds, "[Schlumberger] has an important presence in high-growth regions of the world such as Iraq, Mexico, and Russia, and has the competitive advantage to be able to offer full services, from managing entire oil fields to drilling wells."

  • [By Kathy Kristof]

    Headquarters: Houston

    52-Week High: $79.38

    52-Week Low: $56.86 

    Annual Sales: $39.5 bill.

    Projected Earnings Growth: 18% annually over the next five years 


    Energy-services giant Schlumberger is the prototypical multinational. The company derives roughly 85% of its revenues from overseas, including developing markets in Africa, Brazil and Asia. 

    With particular expertise in deep-water drilling, Schlumberger is well-positioned to compete in a world where oil is harder to find, says Argus Research analyst Philip Weiss. Admittedly, oil exploration is a cyclical business, driven largely by crude prices. And weak prices for natural gas have hit the company’s stock, Weiss says. But the price of natural gas has little to do with Schlumberger’s profits, so Weiss just sees this as an opportunity to get the shares at a more reasonable price.

Top 10 Undervalued Stocks To Buy For 2014: Tupperware Corporation(TUP)

Tupperware Brands Corporation operates as a direct seller of various products across a range of brands and categories through an independent sales force. The company engages in the manufacture and sale of kitchen and home products, and beauty and personal care products. It offers preparation, storage, and serving solutions for the kitchen and home, as well as kitchen cookware and tools, children?s educational toys, microwave products, and gifts under the Tupperware brand name primarily in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, the Asia Pacific, and North America. The company provides beauty and personal care products, which include skin care products, cosmetics, bath and body care, toiletries, fragrances, nutritional products, apparel, and related products principally in Mexico, South Africa, the Philippines, Australia, and Uruguay. It offers beauty and personal care products under the Armand Dupree, Avroy Shlain, BeautiControl, Fuller, NaturCare, Nutrimetics, Nuvo, and Swissgar de brand names. The company sells its Tupperware products directly to distributors, directors, managers, and dealers; and beauty products primarily through consultants and directors. As of December 26, 2009, the Tupperware distribution system had approximately 1,800 distributors, 61,300 managers, and 1.3 million dealers; and the sales force representing the Beauty businesses approximately 1.1 million. The company was formerly known as Tupperware Corporation and changed its name to Tupperware Brands Corporation in December 2005. The company was founded in 1996 and is headquartered in Orlando, Florida.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Sam Collins]

    Household name Tupperware Brands Corp. (NYSE:TUP) is a global direct seller of products with multiple brands through an independent sales force of 2.4 million people. Its product line focuses on kitchen storage and serving solutions, as well as personal-care products. Over 60% of sales in 2011 are expected to come from Europe and Asia, and the stock has appeal as an emerging markets story.

    S&P estimates that 2011 earnings will increase to $4.54 versus $3.53 in 2010, and it increased its rating to a “five-star strong buy” with a recently revised 12-month target of $81, up from $73. The 2005 purchase of Sara Lee’s (NYSE:SLE) direct-sales business, which has a high growth rate, should be a long-term benefit. TUP’s annual dividend yield is 1.92%.

    Technically TUP had a pullback following a new high at over $70 and is currently oversold. Buy TUP at the current market price with a trading target of $70, but longer term a much higher target will likely be attained.

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Regis Reaffirmed at Neutral - Analyst Blog

On July 9, we maintained our Neutral recommendation on Regis Corp. (RGS) despite its impressive strategic initiatives as we await a more sustained improvement in top line.

Why the Reiteration?

With a strong network of 10,000 beauty stores, Regis is one of the largest hair salon chains in the world. In order to improve its top line, the company is investing heavily on several strategic initiatives such as installing third-party SuperSalon point-of-sale (POS) software system, improving its staffing levels and aggressive marketing to drive its top line, going ahead.

The company has also taken an initiative to stretch its normal salon hours in its SmartStyle and Supercuts salons to give a boost to traffic growth. Positive comps posted in both the salons during the past two quarters reflect that the effort has started to pay off.

Asset sales remain another bright spot for Regis. The company's divestment of one of its subsidiaries, Hair Club for Men and Women, in Apr 2013, can be seen as a positive as it provided Regis an immediate cash value and an option to sell one of its underperforming assets. Apart from this, Regis' cost effective measures to augment profitability is also noteworthy.

However, the hair salon chain's poor quarterly performance and increasing cost level keep us on the sidelines at the current level.

The company's top line has been sluggish for quite some time. Owing to the continuous fall in guest count, the company has witnessed negative comps for the past 19 quarters and the trend is expected to continue until the customer-visit patterns completely rebound. In the ensuing quarters, the company's profit will remain under pressure due to the stretching of the company's normal working hours leading to higher labor costs. Additionally, changing fashion trends remains a major cause of concern.

Other Stocks to Consider

Regis carries a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold). Some other stocks in the retail industry that have a bright outloo! k include Big 5 Sporting Goods Corp. (BGFV), Five Below, Inc. (FIVE) and Ulta Salon, Cosmetics & Fragrance, Inc. (ULTA). All these companies carry a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy).

Saturday, August 17, 2013

7 Things Investors Should Know Now

Earlier this month when I provided a quick halftime look at my 2013 calls, I promised I'd provide more details on my updated mid-year outlook now that the second half has begun.

In a new piece, "What's Next: The Critical Answers", I do just that. In this outlook update, my fellow authors – Jeff Rosenberg, BlackRock's chief fixed income investment strategist, and Peter Hayes, head of the firm's municipal bonds group – and I answer common questions we're hearing from investors at the mid-year mark. Here's a short Q&A inspired by the new piece .

Q: Will global stocks go higher this year?

A: Stocks should continue to advance for the next six to 12 months, though the gains will likely be muted and accompanied by volatility. I covered the four reasons why stocks can move higher in a recent post.

Q: When will the Fed begin changing policy and what impact will that have?

A: I foresee the Federal Reserve (Fed) beginning to gradually wind down its asset purchase programs as early as this fall. But though nominal rates may continue to overshoot to the upside in the near term and the long-term direction of rates is higher, I believe the 10-year Treasury yield will hover around 2.5% for the foreseeable future given the many factors keeping a lid on rates .

Q: What is the state of the global economy? Are risks from Europe receding?

A: The global economy remains in slow growth mode, with less risk of widespread recession than in the recent past. Japan is a bright spot, but Europe remains a source of risk.

Q: Where are the best opportunities in stocks?

A: The energy and technology sectors are attractive. Underperforming emerging markets also offer value, and I see good long-term value in select markets such as Brazil, China and Korea. You can read more about which sectors and countries I like in my monthly Investment Directions commentary .

Q: Will emerging markets' underperformance continue?

A: Wh! ile I wouldn't be surprised to see continued near-term challenges for emerging markets, I continue to like emerging market stocks over the long term. Although the stellar economic growth we saw in China and India in 2010 is not likely to be repeated, emerging markets growth should continue to outpace that of developed markets and current valuations provide some potentially attractive entry points.

Q: What are the opportunities now in fixed income?

A: In light of potential Fed tapering, I continue to prefer credit sectors over those more sensitive to interest rates (like Treasuries and TIPS). I also continue to like municipal bonds and believe that high yield still provides a better yield-to-risk payoff than many other fixed income alternatives .

Q: What is the outlook for gold?

A: While I still believe that investor portfolios should contain a strategic allocation to gold, changing monetary conditions provide for a less accommodating environment. All else being equal, gold returns are likely to be lower and more volatile than has been the case over the past four or five years.



Russ Koesterich, CFA, is the iShares Global Chief Investment Strategist and a regular contributor to theiShares Blog.  You can find more of his posts here.

Source: BlackRock commentary

Bonds and bond funds will decrease in value as interest rates rise and are subject to credit risk, which refers to the possibility that the debt issuers may not be able to make principal and interest payments or may have their debt downgraded by ratings agencies.  A portion of a municipal bond fund's income may be subject to federal or state income taxes or the alternative minimum tax. Capital gains, if any, are subject to capital gains tax.

In addition to the normal risks associated with investing, international investments may involve risk of capital loss from unfavorable fluctuation in currency values, from differences in generally accepted accounting principles or fro! m economi! c or political instability in other nations.  Emerging markets involve heightened risks related to the same factors as well as increased volatility and lower trading volume. Securities focusing on a single country may be subject to higher volatility.

Narrowly focused investments typically exhibit higher volatility. The energy sector is cyclical and highly dependent on commodities prices. Companies in this sector may face civil liability from accidents and a risk of loss from terrorism and natural disasters. Technology companies may be subject to severe competition and product obsolescence.



Friday, August 16, 2013

Ensure returns are higher than inflation while investing

"In any long term investment, it is not the absolute amount of money that you make but the percentage that is important. Adjust your corpus amount for inflation and make sure that whatever investment that you do gives you a return much better than inflation," he said.

Below is the verbatim transcript of the interview

Q: We understand that investors often don't calculate returns on the real value of money. How is the percentage return different from the absolute return and how can investors calculate it?

A: We can just use an example. Suppose Rs 3 lakh is invested today turns into Rs 90 lakh in 30 years. On the face of it, most investors would calculate that you made Rs 87 lakhs on an investment of Rs 3 lakh, and that is an excellent investment. The key point is to calculate the percentage return. Compare it with inflation or with any other form of investment, we will realize that the return is only 12%. In any long term investment, it is not the absolute amount of money that you make but the percentage that is important.

Most frequent examples are long term investment products. If you invest Rs 1 lakh for 5 years, wait for another 15 years and then after 20 years, every year you will get Rs 1 lakh back for 20 years. That is a return of Rs 20 lakh on an investment of Rs 5 lakh again looks great but when you do the calculation that is just about 5-5.5%.

Q: When you are calculating this 12% in the previous example of Rs 3 lakh becoming Rs 90 lakh or the current example of Rs 5 lakh becoming Rs 20 lakhs, are you only taking the interest rate projection or are you adjusting it to inflation?

A: I have just taken what is presented to a client. This is what you will get.

Q: Are you saying if it is adjusted to inflation, it is lesser?

A: If you take the second example, it is 5%. When inflation is running at 8% this is a negative investment essentially.

Q: In the previous example of 12%, was that only an interest rate calculation or wait it adjusted to inflation?

A: It is an interest rate calculation but unless you do the interest rate calculation, you cannot really find out whether it beats inflation or not.

Q: I wanted to plan for my six-month-old daughter's education. An insurance company agent suggested a  scheme where I would have to pay about Rs 30,000 per month and I would get Rs 16 lakh over a period of 20 years, this would be in three payouts. Basically, there will be Rs 2 lakh after 16 years, Rs 2 lakh after 18 years and Rs 12 lakh after 20 years. Is it better to opt for an investment plan that is tailor made for educational purposes but offers low return or to go with a traditional portfolio of equity, gold and mutual funds?

A: I am just curious why would you even weigh the two options? What is making you weigh the option where you would accept a lower return? My point is that there is no earthly reason for you to accept lower returns just for getting a tailor made plan. Insurance is extremely important; you can't argue obviously if something were to happen to you, you would want to ensure that your six-month-old child, her educational plans are not at all compromised. But for that, buying a term insurance is the easiest and the cheapest way out.

Once you have that out of the way, there is no earthly reason for you to accept lower returns and since you have given such a long horizon, you can choose mutual funds or PPF, if you don't really want to take risk. In all cases, you will find that whatever plan that has been told to you, will hardly return you 5-6% and even that is not guaranteed. In the same way, if you invest in a mutual fund, your return is not guaranteed but then the return that you get would be much higher.

If you don't really want to take risks then maybe you can look at PPF. I think you have to get an investment instrument that beats inflation. Incidentally, I think in the amount itself, this Rs 16 lakh that you are planning for might look okay today but 18 years from now, when your daughter really needs it, if inflation is running at 8%, you probably need 4 times that amount for it to be equivalent to Rs 16 lakh today. Adjust your corpus amount for inflation and make sure that whatever investment that you do gives you a return much better than inflation.

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Don’t See Stocks Through Mr. Market’s Eyes

Top Clean Energy Stocks To Own Right Now

Someone who reads my articles sent me this comment about yesterday's article called "What Ben Graham's Mr. Market Metaphor Really Means": I fully agree that an investor needs to make an independent assessment of the value of a company before investing, any investment decision needs to be driven by a comparison between price and value and nothing else.

However...

I do believe that it makes sense to try and understand market psychology and motivations of other market participants. How can you intelligently take advantage of market psychology if you don't understand what is causing market fluctuations?

From the way you describe the 2000 examples for J&J and Village, it's clear that you have a rough idea why the market is overly pessimistic, giving you a decent opportunity to take advantage, yes, the basic condition to invest is to establish that there is a comfortable margin of safety between price and value, but I think it definitely helps if you can understand why a security is mispriced by the market. If you can't figure out a reasonable explanation, it might even be better to pass and not take an unintelligent risk because 9 out of 10 times the market is not stupid and there is a very valid reason why a security is priced the way it is..."

I understand the point. But I think having a reasonable explanation for why a stock is mispriced works better in theory than in actual practice. In fact, the best stocks I've ever bought were stocks where it was hardest for me to find a reasonable explanation.

The category of stocks that tends to give you really good returns is what I'll call "perfectly decent" companies selling for absurd prices. You notice the absurd price right away. Then you check out the company to see if it's a fraud, has a single product that's some fad, is about to lose a customer that makes up 40% ! of sales, etc. You check the long-term record. And then you notice – hey, this company really doesn't have a history of doing worse than American business generally. Why is it so cheap?

Now, at this point I can come up with plausible reasons. We all can. We humans have story minds. I tell you a stock is cheap and you start spinning reasons for why it might be cheap. We don't like facts to just sit there. We want to justify them. Connect them.

If you're watching a movie and one character obviously hates another and this goes on for even 10 seconds – you're already looking for a back story. That's just the way we are.

And we're creative. So we can do it. We can always imagine a back story. We can even make it sound plausible.

But stocks aren't stories. We don't get paid for telling the most coherent and reasonable explanation of the facts. We get paid when we see the facts, understand their meaning in terms of a buy/sell choice, and act on that choice.

Where I think understanding why a stock is mispriced – and worrying about it – doesn't work very well is in the kinds of situations Warren Buffett mentioned to the University of Kansas students (and others) when discussing how he could make 50% a year:

"You have to turn over a lot of rocks to find those little anomalies. You have to find the companies that are off the map - way off the map. You may find local companies that have nothing wrong with them at all. A company that I found, Western Insurance Securities, was trading for $3/share when it was earning $20/share!! I tried to buy up as much of it as possible. No one will tell you about these businesses. You have to find them."

Other examples: Genesee Valley Gas, public utility trading at a P/E of 2, GEICO, Union Street Railway of New Bedford selling at $30 when $100/share is sitting in cash, high yield position in 2002. No one will tell you about these ideas, you have to find them."

Now, you could argue that ! when Warr! en Buffett explains a situation like Sanborn Map, Commonwealth Trust, American Express, etc., this includes an explanation of why the stock is disliked. For example, American Express had a big potential liability due to the Salad Oil Scandal. Technically, they were a joint stock company. Therefore, mutual funds did not want to be exposed to unlimited liability. Sanborn Map was valued on an earnings basis rather than a cash and earnings basis. Commonwealth Trust was a bank that didn't pay a dividend. Union Street Railway was disliked as a permanently declining business.

The problem is that Union Street Railway really did have 3 times as much in investments per share as their stock price. And this was quite public. The Moody's Manual entry for the company included a specific note pointing out Union Street Railway's special fund.

If we think that being a declining business is explanation enough for other investors neglecting a stock – yes, we're offering an explanation. But our explanation seems to be that investors sometimes lack the reading and math skills of a six year old. It was one sentence. With one math problem.

I don't believe that. What I believe is that investors never really paid attention to Union Street Railway as a stock or to the fact it had $100 in investments. They either saw Union Street Railway (oddly, a bus company) and said: "Eww, bus company. Gross." Or they saw the balance sheet note in Moody's and thought: "Yeah. But what good is cash. I want earnings. Earnings are what makes a stock go up."

I don't have a better explanation for why investors let a stock trade at one-third of its cash value. And I don't think those two explanations tell me anything the $100 in cash didn't already tell me. The stock is cheap. That's all I need to know.

I suppose I could lay out the same sorts of iffy arguments for stocks I've bought. Omnicom (OMC) and IMS Health were bought during a stock market panic. And a panic can explain anyth! ing. Adve! rtising was going to be weak for a couple years in a global recession. People thought this wasn't the time to buy an advertising company. IMS Health was a healthcare company while healthcare reform was being discussed. Some Senators brought up things they didn't like about IMS Health in regards to patient privacy. And one state actually passed legislation that could've harmed IMS Health. But none of this seemed all that material to the stock. And it's kind of hard to see how people would actually believe it was material to the company's business. It's not like they were debating the fees IMS Health could charge (the way credit card companies, banks, etc., were being discussed).

Honestly, I think a lot of people stopped paying attention to the stock. In the middle of a panic, in the middle of hating healthcare stocks generally, in the middle of all that – a lot of people who might normally appreciate a business with that kind of wide moat trading at that kind of P/E didn't even take a moment to notice the stock.

I actually think my "not paying attention" explanation makes more sense than thinking that people carefully considered the prospects for legislative changes, spending cuts by big drug companies, etc., and decided the stock's low P/E was justified by its gloomy prospects.

At least I hope so. Because when I bought shares of IMS Health, I felt pretty sure the guy on the other side of that trade had to know more about the future of the pharmaceutical industry – because it's hard to imagine a topic I know less about than the future of pharmaceuticals.

I could go down the list for each company that I thought was an especially oddly valued stock. For Birner Dental (BDMS), it's possible people were paying more attention to earnings per share and dividends than EBITDA and share buybacks. For Bancinsurance, the company's top management was under SEC investigation. For George Risk (RSKIA), it was a combination of not really cheap on a P/E basis and! just bar! ely cheap on a cash basis – and it was connected to homebuilding.

I could go on like that. But I'm not sure I understand why knowing anything about the perceptions of others actually helps my own investment decisions. I'm also not sure the reasons I've offered for the cheapness of those stocks are actually the reasons anybody else had for selling the stock, not buying it, etc. In fact, I think those are just plausible reasons I made up.

But that's not the problem with wanting to know why a stock is cheap. The problem is how that knowledge – or the quest for it – directs your attention. And attention is the scarcest resource an investor has.

Once you know what somebody else's perception is, you try to either prove or disprove that perception. In essence, I see the problem of thinking about market sentiment – of worrying about the Keynesian beauty contest – as being like one of those optical illusions. Like the duck-rabbit illusion. In fact, this concern of mine is one of the reasons why I've suggested investors read Kuhn.

They often talk about some past period – like the 1920s or 1950s – with a total misunderstanding of what people were looking for in a stock back then. Of how they thought about stocks. Of what they thought stocks were. This isn't a misanalysis of the facts. It's a misclassification.

When Ben Graham started on Wall Street there was none of this "Stocks for the Long Run" stuff. There was no talk of asset classes. There were investments called bonds. And there were speculations called stocks. And it was heresy when Ben Graham basically said a cheap stock is a better investment than an expensive bond.

You become a bad financial historian when you confuse your own perceptions – your own way of classifying stocks and noting the aspects of a stock – with how people really thought about stocks back then.

In the same way, I think you become a bad investor when you let Mr. Market see stocks for you. You limi! t yoursel! f to agreeing or disagreeing with the arguments out there. Instead, the best answer may not be to agree or disagree with specific points about a stock. It may be to have a totally different concept – to see the stock in an entirely different way than they do.

This is why I keep telling people to read "Hidden Champions." I keep pushing that book on people, because whenever someone talks to me about a great business – it's a big business. There are hundreds of great, little public companies out there. But most value investors approach a big company thinking "moat." And a small company thinking "price" or "growth." They get focused on one way of seeing a company and can't force themselves to see there is an alternative pattern in there.

My problem with paying attention to other people's feelings about a stock – to think about how they see it – is that you then try to analyze the stock in those terms. It's like if someone shows you the duck-rabbit illusion and talks about what an ugly duck it is. Now, maybe it is a very ugly duck. But maybe it is also a very pretty rabbit. Yet because you are now thinking in terms of a duck – analyzing a duck, using the language you would use when discussing a duck – your entire perspective on the image has been directed toward this idea of assessing the beauty or ugliness of the duck. Not the rabbit. The rabbitness of the drawing will not even enter into your analysis. And so while debating the ugliness of the duck – staking out your well reasoned position either pro or con – you are in fact making yourself blind to the rabbit.

You are patting yourself on the back for your incisive analysis of that ugly duck without once realizing you missed the opportunity to buy a beautiful rabbit.

There is never just one way to see a stock. There is not one model to use when looking at all businesses. It is not merely a matter of assessing a pattern as we see it. Rather, we must first look for the pattern and then see the ! extent to! which the case we are looking at fits our idea of that pattern.

So, the great danger in participating in a debate with the market is that you have let the market choose the topic of that debate. If the market thinks that George Risk is a lousy net-net that isn't worth the cash it is holding, then I'm likely – if I take market sentiment as one of my starting points – to analyze George Risk in those terms.

That would be a mistake. If you actually look at George Risk – it's a good business. So, if you go into the situation using the toolkit you normally bring to analyzing net-nets, you are really gouging out one of your analytical eyes. You are blinding yourself to an obvious reality because you started by letting the market tell you whether it was a rabbit or a duck. You said: "Oh, this is a net-net." And you didn't ask if something can be a net-net and something else at the same time.

And this is not just some theoretical issue I raise. I see it all the time. The way in which someone finds a stock – the "class" of investment opportunity they first put it in – determines their first impression of the stock, the tools they use to analyze the stock, the checklists, models, examples, etc., they first think of. In a very real way, they are defining the stock before they've really even met the stock. They are saying, "Fine, the market wants to talk about this stock as a turnaround, a busted growth stock, a possible fraud, etc. I will engage the market on those terms."

Which is idiotic. Because while you can think of a stock as a bet on some future event's probability and the payoff should that event occur – you don't have to. That's the whole Mr. Market idea. It's optional. You have the right but not the obligation to buy or sell a stock at the market price. That's the one advantage a public company has over a private company. A public company is a private company with buy/sell options attached.

Well, you also have analytic options. ! The whole! point of having a pantheon of models up there in your brain is so you can see a lot of different stocks a lot of different ways. But if you start thinking about what other investors think about a stock you're analyzing – now you've got a limited vocabulary.

I mean, when I talk about stocks I talk about pixie dust businesses and demon dust businesses and moats and reliability and compartments of defense. I'm bringing in stuff I've read in books like "Hidden Champions" which isn't even technically an investment book. Can I really believe other investors use the same words and see the same business patterns I see?

If you and I have different models in our heads, I can always apply my models to my thinking about anything in the world. But I can't apply my models to your thinking. This isn't meant to be a brain teaser.

I'm seriously saying there will be times when I see a stock a certain way and really can't say whether others are capable of seeing the stock that way.

So, I think we really exaggerate this idea of a buyer and a seller taking opposite sides in some discourse. There's nothing that says buyers and sellers aren't usually talking past each other.

There is nothing that says that a buyer and seller of a stock must be taking opposite sides of a bet on some event. In fact, there is nothing required of the buyer and seller except disagreement on the issue of whether or not to hold the stock.

But that is a complex issue. It is like if we say that you and I both love some movie or both hate some movie. There is no need for us to necessarily agree on even a single aspect of the movie – we need only agree that the whole package is good or bad. Unless we break down the movie point by point, we will never know that we have totally different views of the same movie. We'll think we're in agreement.

That's the problem I see with taking the approach that there is a definite issue or a dozen definite issues to be decided with a! stock. I! think that goes against the kind of work that has been successful for folks like Buffett and Munger. The real issue in stock analysis is usually not better understanding the probability of some outcome, the magnitude of the gain or loss that will occur, the timing, the causal chain, etc. The real issue is seeing the same stock in a different way.

If you look at a stock like Bancinsurance, the entire extent to which I "disagreed" with the market – to the extent there even was a market – was with the idea that the stock was worth less than book value. I knew it was an insurance stock. I knew that many insurers do trade below book value. The market and I were in total agreement on those points. Where we differed was that I believed that an insurer that had posted a combined ratio below 100 in 28 of the last 30 years, that had averaged a combined ratio in the mid to low 90s over almost any period you could pick, and that had earned a 10% or better return on statutory surplus even in a decade with a giant loss in an unrelated line, was a stock that could earn the same return on its equity that many other non-financial companies would earn.

So I actually don't think there would be many points of disagreement between me and other folks who looked at the stock. If there was a key disagreement it was simply that they saw a duck while I saw a rabbit. That they saw an insurance company. While I saw a company that could reliably earn 10% on its equity. For me, once a company can reliably earn 10% on its equity, it should be worth book value as long as its financial condition is adequate. If that 10% return on equity is going to be reliably earned and it is going to be done without taking on unusual risks – then that is a stock that is worth book value. Because what determines a stock's value relative to book value is the return the company can get on its book value not the industry it belongs to.

I think this is a very important point. But it's one that's very, very hard t! o talk ab! out. People will see Warren Buffett – after knowing about a stock for so long and having it sometimes trade at even lower prices – suddenly buy that stock. And this will baffle them. And so they will go hunting for what has changed. What makes this the right moment to buy that stock? Why didn't he buy it before but he is buying it now? Certainly, there has been an objective change in the situation.

Very often the answer is no.

He says this. He says it's an accumulation of knowledge over time. But people want to see some explanation for a changed belief on some specific issue instead of a bigger shift of perspective – a different way of seeing a stock.

You can't explain a lot of good stock purchases based on some belief change. Buy decisions aren't just some reaction to something out there in the real world environment. They are a reaction to something in your own subjective mental environment. They are a reaction to a new way of seeing a stock. Where once you saw a duck now you see a rabbit. This is such a common phenomenon in investing specifically and analysis generally that we all know what it feels like to have an analytical epiphany.

Yet we still talk about stocks as if we are engaged in simple, rational choice. As if the issue to be debated is settled and we are either "pro" or "con", believers or disbelievers in the ability of management to turn some company around, or the fate of brick and mortar retailing in an online world, or what will become of Blackberry.

But very often that is not the real battleground. It's not like we are just sitting there struggling with probabilities. What we are struggling with is understanding. We are struggling with the need to shuffle through our pack of known patterns and find something that is at least congruous with what we are seeing. We are looking for a way to see a stock as much as we are looking at whether what we see is good or bad.

One of the biggest mistakes people make with their best ! ideas is ! failing to realize exactly what they have.

I just read a really good example of this from Nate over at Oddball Stocks:

Adams Golf Gets a Buyout and Other Net-Net Thoughts

Adams Golf (ADGF) was a net-net. It got bought out by Adidas. By the way, it's not the only net-net to get bought out this year. Swank (SNKI) was also a net-net that looks like it's going to be bought out. Last I heard, they received an alternative proposal during their "go shop" period and haven't acted on it. The Ben Graham: Net-Net Newsletter's model portfolio doesn't own either stock. Though we do own another net-net where a company in the same industry bought a block of shares. Who knows what that means. But clearly net-nets sometimes attract control buyers.

Actually, in my own experience, it's not as common as people think for a net-net just to rise to NCAV over time and for you to get paid that way. That's always what people imagine. That there's this magical number called NCAV pulling the stock toward it. And why net-net investors buy net-nets. Because we believe in the solidity of those receivables, inventory, etc. I really don't. Actually, I like to think of NCAV as being a marker of cheapness – not a source of value. No one expects the company to actually liquidate at NCAV. People ask me about doing liquidation value estimates and I usually tell them don't bother. Unless you think the company is actually going to liquidate – why do you need to know what inventory would be worth in a fire sale? All you need to know is that NCAV is an absurd price for a company. It's a price a 100% buyer would never be offered. So, if the company survives, and strings together a good year or two the CEO or a competitor or whoever will make a buyout offer. Or the stock will actually start posting good earnings and will trade based on its P/E ratio (which is often much, much higher than NCAV).

My point is that the first critical decision you make when analyzing a net-net is how yo! u classif! y the stock. Personally, I think it's important to try to analyze the business as best as possible apart from its net current asset value. Remember, the cheapness of a net-net is not in doubt. You know the stock is cheap the second you see the price is below net current assets. So, I think it's a mistake to obsess over the exact cheapness of a clearly cheap stock. A net-net is cheaper than something like 95% of all public companies. That's cheap enough. In fact, while the Ben Graham Net-Net Newsletter does show the obligatory chart of current assets and book value – that's not what I think about when I look at a net-net. I think about the business and the cash. And that's really it. A lousy business with all the receivables and inventory in the world is not something I'd be interested in – because that's usually the last thing a buyer wants.

But that's how a lot of net-net analysis begins. The author actually shows you the receivables, the inventory, etc. in painstaking detail. The problem with that is the possibility that you are seeing the duck so clearly you are missing the rabbit.

The most exciting opportunity in the world is to be offered a good business at a bad business price. But I don't know many people who just sit down with a list of net-nets and try to sort them from the highest quality business to the lowest quality business. I think that's because they are locked into seeing net-nets as net-nets.

But a net-net is just a stock selling for a certain price.

To the extent the market prices stocks right, there will be a tendency for the business quality of net-nets to be very poor. But to the extent the market prices stocks right, you'll tend to not make any money picking stocks. So, I think it's kind of a weird decision to defer to the market on how you classify a stock.

That's the real risk with worrying about what the market thinks is wrong with a stock. It can end up being a form of self-induced misdirection. Sometimes cert! ain aspec! ts of an investment are so obvious they can only be hidden by directing your attention to a separate aspect of the stock.

It's very important what you pay attention to. In fact, how you divide and direct your attention is one of the most important parts of investing.

And I think it's a huge mistake to let the debate other people are having about a stock be the reason why you focus in on some particular aspect of a stock.

It's best to come to a stock clean. The ideal situation is one where you can analyze the business before you even know the price of the stock. In the modern world, that's extremely rare outside of spin-offs. We are bombarded with stock quotes that we can't just forget when we pick up the 10-K.

I know what price people out there are buying and selling their shares of Wal-Mart at. And I know that knowing that is biasing me. And I can turn off the computer and sit down with the 10-K – but I can't erase that number in my head. I can't scrub that bias from my brain. It's going to rub off on my estimate of what Wal-Mart is worth.

And that's without me worrying about why people are selling shares of Wal-Mart at that price. It's bad enough I have to know there are willing sellers at that price. If I knew their reasoning too – I'm not sure I'd be able tell which thoughts rattling around in my head were my own and which I plucked from the echo chamber.

It's bad enough that we can't quite insulate ourselves as well as Ben Graham's Mr. Market metaphor recommends we do.

We don't need to look deeper into market clues. Those clues already pose the greatest risk of biasing our analysis.

Thinking about what other investors are thinking is as far as you can go in the opposite direction of Ben Graham's Mr. Market metaphor.

It's using the market to instruct you. Which is one of the biggest investment mistakes you can make.

Ask Geoff a Question about Mr. Market
Check out the Ben Graham: Net-Net! Newslett! er
Check out the Buffett/Munger Bargain Newsletter

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Best Growth Companies To Own In Right Now

LONDON -- A popular way to dig out reasonably priced stocks with robust growth potential is through the "Growth at a Reasonable Price", or�GARP, strategy. This theory uses the price-to-earnings-to-growth, or PEG, ratio to show how a share's price weighs up in relation to its near-term growth prospects -- a reading below one is generally considered decent value for money.

Today I am looking at�SSE� (LSE: SSE  ) to see how it measures up.

What are�SSE's earnings expected to do?

2014

2015

EPS Growth

(1)%

6%

P/E Ratio

13.3

Best Growth Companies To Own In Right Now: Thoratec Corporation(THOR)

Thoratec Corporation engages in the development, manufacture, and marketing of proprietary medical devices used for circulatory support. The company?s primary product lines include ventricular assist devices, such as HeartMate II, an implantable left ventricular assist device consisting of a rotary blood pump to provide intermediate and long-term mechanical circulatory support (MCS); and HeartMate XVE, an implantable and pulsatile left ventricular assist device for intermediate and longer-term MCS. Its ventricular assist devices also comprise Paracorporeal Ventricular Assist Device, an external pulsatile ventricular assist device, which provides left, right, and biventricular MCS approved for bridge-to-transplantation (BTT), including home discharge, and post-cardiotomy myocardial recovery; and Implantable Ventricular Assist Device, an implantable and pulsatile ventricular assist device designed to provide left, right, and biventricular MCS approved for BTT comprising hom e discharge, and post-cardiotomy myocardial recovery. The company also provides CentriMag, an extracorporeal full-flow acute surgical support platform that offers support up to 30 days for cardiac and respiratory failure. In addition, it offers PediMag and PediVAS extracorporeal full-flow acute surgical support platforms designed to provide acute surgical support to pediatric patients. The company sells its products through direct sales force in the United States, as well as through a network of distributors internationally. Thoratec Corporation was founded in 1976 and is headquartered in Pleasanton, California.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By McWillams]

    Wall Street is expecting Thoratec’s (THOR: 30.70 0.00%) growth rate to accelerate to 15% next year with earnings growth of over 20%. That type of growth has Wall Street analysts bullish on the medical device stock. The stock has a consensus price target of $38 and some analysts think THOR could go to $50.

Best Growth Companies To Own In Right Now: Checkpoint Systms Inc.(CKP)

Checkpoint Systems, Inc. manufactures and markets identification, tracking, security, and merchandising solutions for the retail and apparel industry worldwide. The company operates in three segments: Shrink Management Solutions, Apparel Labeling Solutions, and Retail Merchandising Solutions. The Shrink Management Solutions segment provides shrink management and merchandise visibility solutions. It offers electronic article surveillance systems, such as EVOLVE, a suite of RF and RFID-enabled products that act as a deterrent to prevent merchandise theft in retail stores; and electronic article surveillance consumables, including EAS-RF and EAS-EM labels that work in combination with EAS systems to reduce merchandise theft in retail stores. This segment also provides keepers, spider wraps, bottle security, and hard tags, as well as Showsafe, a line alarm system for protecting display merchandise. In addition, it offers physical and electronic store monitoring solutions, incl uding fire alarms, intrusion alarms, and digital video recording systems for retail environments; and RFID tags and labels. The Apparel Labeling Solutions segment provides apparel labeling solutions to apparel retailers, brand owners, and manufacturers. It has Web-enabled apparel labeling solutions platform and network of 28 service bureaus located in 22 countries that supplies customers with customized apparel tags and labels. The Retail Merchandising Solutions segment offers hand-held label applicators and tags, promotional displays, and queuing systems. The company serves retailers in the supermarket, drug store, hypermarket, and mass merchandiser markets through direct distribution and reseller channels. Checkpoint Systems was founded in 1969 and is based in Thorofare, New Jersey.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Michael]

    OK, so Checkpoint (CKP: 13.80 0.00%) probably isn’t going to see its stock price double in 2011. However, the stock gained 35% in 2010 with earnings expected to climb 13%. Next year, Wall Street sees earnings growth accelerating to 25%. Despite the impressive growth rate, the stock trades at only 16x next year’s earnings estimates and analysts have a $25 price target for CKP.

Top 5 Undervalued Stocks To Invest In 2014: Nordstrom Inc.(JWN)

Nordstrom, Inc., a fashion specialty retailer, offers apparel, shoes, cosmetics, and accessories for women, men, and children in the United States. It offers a selection of brand name and private label merchandise. The company sells its products through various channels, including Nordstrom full-line stores, off-price Nordstrom Rack stores, Jeffrey? boutiques, treasure & bond, and Last Chance clearance stores; and its online store, nordstrom.com, as well as through catalog. Nordstrom also provides a private label card, two Nordstrom VISA credit cards, and a debit card for Nordstrom purchases. The company?s credit and debit cards feature a shopping-based loyalty program. As of September 30, 2011, it operated 222 stores, including 117 full-line stores, 101 Nordstrom Racks, 2 Jeffrey boutiques, 1 treasure & bond store, and 1 clearance store in 30 states. The company was founded in 1901 and is based in Seattle, Washington.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Kevin1977]

    Director of Nordstrom Inc., Felicia D Thornton, bought 1,140 shares on 9/09/2011 at an average price of $47.89. Nordstrom, Inc. is one of the nation's fashion specialty retailers, with stores located in a number of states, including full-line stores, Nordstrom Racks, Faconnable boutiques, and free-standing shoe stores. Nordstrom Inc. has a market cap of $10.44 billion; its shares were traded at around $47.89 with a P/E ratio of 15.7 and P/S ratio of 1.1. The dividend yield of Nordstrom Inc. stocks is 2% Nordstrom Inc. had an annual average earnings growth of 27.3% over the past 10 years. GuruFocus rated Nordstrom Inc. the business predictability rank of 3.5-star.

    On August 11, Nordstrom Inc. reported net earnings of $175 million, or $0.80 per diluted share, for the second quarter ended July 30, 2011. This represented an increase of 20 percent compared with net earnings of $146 million, or $0.66 per diluted share, for the same quarter last year.Second quarter same-store sales increased 7.3 percent compared with the same period in fiscal 2010. Net sales in the second quarter were $2.72 billion, an increase of 12.4 percent compared with net sales of $2.42 billion during the same period in fiscal 2010.

    Last week, Director Felicia D Thornton bought 1,140 shares of JWN stock.

    Executive Vice President Ken Worzel and Director Philip G Satre bought shares in August.

Best Growth Companies To Own In Right Now: Buffalo Wild Wings Inc.(BWLD)

Buffalo Wild Wings, Inc. engages in the ownership, operation, and franchise of restaurants in the United States. The company provides quick casual and casual dining services, as well as serves bottled beers, wines, and liquor. As of July 26, 2011, it had 773 Buffalo Wild Wings locations in 45 states in the United States, as well as in Canada. The company was founded in 1982 and is headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Roberto Pedone]

    Buffalo Wild Wings (BWLD) is an owner, operator and franchiser of restaurants featuring a variety of boldly-flavored, craveable menu items. This stock closed up 6% to $103.58 in Wednesday's trading session.

    Wednesday's Volume: 1.55 million

    Three-Month Average Volume: 402,120

    Volume % Change: 319%

    From a technical perspective, BWLD ripped higher here back above its 50-day moving average of $98.38 with heavy upside volume. This move is quickly pushing shares of BWLD within range of triggering major breakout trade. That trade will hit if BWLD manages to take out its intraday high on Wednesday of $105.32 and then once it clears is 52-week high at $106.03 with high volume.

    Traders should now look for long-biased trades in BWLD as long as it's trending above its 50-day at $98.38 and then once it sustains a move or close above those breakout levels with volume that hits near or above 402,120 shares. If that breakout triggers soon, then BWLD will set up to enter new 52-week-high territory, which is bullish technical price action. Some possible upside targets off that breakout are $110 to $120.

  • [By Fabian]  

    While Chipotle has captured most of the attention among the restaurant stocks, Buffalo Wild Wings (BWLD: 56.62 0.00%) could be 2011’s big winner. Wall Street is expecting 19% earnings growth from Buffalo Wild Wings in 2011 which is only slightly lower than Chipotle’s 20% growth rate. However, BWLD trades at only 18x consensus 2011 estimates while CMG trades at a pricey 40x. On an EBITDA basis, Chipotle trades at over 20x, while Buffalo Wild Wings trades at less than 9x.

Best Growth Companies To Own In Right Now: Intuitive Surgical Inc.(ISRG)

Intuitive Surgical, Inc. designs, manufactures, and markets da Vinci surgical systems for various surgical procedures, including urologic, gynecologic, cardiothoracic, general, and head and neck surgeries. Its da Vinci surgical system consists of a surgeon?s console or consoles, a patient-side cart, a 3-D vision system, and proprietary ?wristed? instruments. The company?s da Vinci surgical system translates the surgeon?s natural hand movements on instrument controls at the console into corresponding micro-movements of instruments positioned inside the patient through small puncture incisions, or ports. It also manufactures a range of EndoWrist instruments, which incorporate wrist joints for natural dexterity for various surgical procedures. Its EndoWrist instruments consist of forceps, scissors, electrocautery, scalpels, and other surgical tools. In addition, it sells various vision and accessory products for use in conjunction with the da Vinci Surgical System as surgical procedures are performed. The company?s accessory products include sterile drapes used to ensure a sterile field during surgery; vision products, such as replacement 3-D stereo endoscopes, camera heads, light guides, and other items. It markets its products through sales representatives in the United States, and through sales representatives and distributors in international markets. The company was founded in 1995 and is headquartered in Sunnyvale, California.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Holly LaFon] Intuitive Surgical is the maker of the da Vinci Surgical System, a breakthrough in robotic-assisted minimally invasive surgery. It provides technology and procedural innovation across cardiac, thoracic, urology, gynecologic, colorectal, pediatric and general surgical disciplines and allows patients to recover in record time.

    In the last year, this fast-growing company�� stock has surged 66% to $529.54. Its revenue over the last ten years has grown at a rate of 38%, and it grew 24.5% last year with 72.5% gross profit and 39.5% operating margin. The company expects fiscal 2012 revenue growth of 17-19%.

    The da Vinci System is new technology first introduced to market in July 2000 after the US FDA approved it for laparoscopic surgery. Its new S model was released in April 2009. Already there are more than 1,933 systems installed in over 1,560 hospitals worldwide.

    Apple Inc. (AAPL)

    Apple Inc. is the maker of popular consumer products such as the Mac, iPod, iPhone and iPad. Its stock has famously increased 569% over the past five years to hit a record of $600 per share last week. Apple has split its stock 2 for 1 three times in the past on June 15, 1987, June 21, 2000 and February 28, 2005. CEO Tim Cook said as recently as this morning that the company saw little reason to that a split would help the stock but if it was in the best interest of shareholder the company would have one. The company also announced this morning that it would initiate a $2.65 per share quarterly dividend and buy back up to $10 billion of its common stock.

    In the last ten years, Apple�� annual growth rate for revenue was 34.5%, EBITDA 112.4% and book value 36.3%. Free cash flow increased 11% in the last five years and 58% in the last year. The rapidly growing company still has a relatively low P/E ratio of 16.68.

    Google Inc. Cl A (GOOG)

    Google Inc. is the search engine company founded in 1998 that has expanded to offer dozens of advertising and web services. Since going public i! n 2004, its stock has increased 485% to $633.98 per share on Monday. It has never had a stock split or paid a dividend.

    Google has also grown rapidly. Its revenue per share over the last 10 years has increased at an annual rate of 52.3%, EBITDA at 51.9%, free cash flow at 64.8% and book value at 74.8%.Its P/E ratio is 20.

    The company is also launching its 7-inch Nexus table in May to compete with Apple�� iPad and Amazon�� Kind Fire and is in the process of the biggest revamp of its Internet search formula in company history.

    Google has an expressed long-term focus in its business, rather than quarter-to-quarter goals, as stated in its IPO letter which quotes Warren Buffett. The company�� higher stock price may help discourage frequent trading and encourage high-quality shareholders, as Buffett has mentioned in the past.

    Priceline.com (PCLN)

    Priceline.com Inc. is an online travel booking company that debuted on the Nasdaq in 1999. In the last five years its stock increased 1,248%. Priceline.com�� stock price cratered to under $10 after the dot-com bubble and driven it up to almost $1,000. In 2003 it announced a 1 for 6 reverse stock split.

    "This reverse stock split enhances our position by expanding investor interest, reducing transaction costs for trading our stock, making our results more comparable to peer companies with far fewer outstanding shares, and allowing priceline.com's earnings per share on a post-split basis to more precisely reflect the Company's operating results," said priceline.com President and CEO Jeffery H. Boyd.

    On Monday it had climbed to $696.93 per share and its financial results have been strong and growing once again. Revenue in 2011 was $4.4 billion from $3 billion in 2010, earnings increased to $1.1 billion from $528 billion and free cash flow increased to $1.3 billion from $755 million. The company also has over $2.7 billion in cash, $164 in long-term liabilities and no debt.

    The stock has become expensive ! in the la! st several years and has a P/E of 30.3.

    NVR Inc. (NVR)

    NVR Inc. consists of two operating segments: homebuilding and mortgage banking. The homebuilding unit makes homes under the trade names Ryan Homes, NVHomes and Fox Ridge Homes, and NVR Mortgage primarily focuses on serving NVR homebuyers.

    NVR�� is older than most of the other companies on the over-$500 share-price list, having gone public in 1993. Since then its stock price has increased 7,219% to $741 per share on Monday. It has never split its stock.

    Seaboard Corp. (SEB)

    Seaboard is also an older company founded more than 90 years ago and has focused on grain and agriculturally derived products. In the last 10 years its stock has appreciated 543%, and on Monday one share costs $1,955. It has never split its stock.

    Seaboard is still a growing company. In the last ten years it increased revenue per share at an average rate of 12.5%, EBITDA at 9.8%, and book value at 18.2%. It also has a low P/E of 6.8, its lowest since about 2007.

    Berkshire Hathaway-A (BRK.A)

    Berkshire Hathaway is the multinational conglomerate founded by Warren Buffett and is the eighth largest company in the world. They are the highest priced shares on the New York Stock Exchange, partially due to never splitting their stock or paying a dividend. Rather, they reinvest corporate earnings to continue growth.

    In the last 10 years, Berkshire Hathaway stock has increased 67%. On Monday, one share of BRK.A cost $122,115.

    Berkshire management has grown book value at an annual rate of 20.3% for the last 44 years. Growth has been continuing in recent history. In the last 10 years, revenue per share increased at a rate of 11.4%, EBITDA at 7.5% and free cash flow at 3.3%. Its P/E is 17.1.

    These stocks are not necessarily expensive or not expensive based on how much one share costs but are subject to the same va

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Is Peabody Energy Oversold?

With shares of Peabody Energy (NYSE:BTU) trading around $20, is BTU an OUTPERFORM, WAIT AND SEE or STAY AWAY? Let's analyze the stock with the relevant sections of our CHEAT SHEET investing framework:

T = Trends for a Stock’s Movement

Peabody Energy is a private-sector coal company that owns interests in 28 active coal mining operations located in the United States and Australia. In addition to the company’s mining operations, Peabody Energy markets and brokers coals from its operations and other coal producers, both as principal and agent, and trades coal and freight-related contracts through trading and business offices. It conducts business through four principal segments: Western United States. Mining, Midwestern U.S. Mining, Australian Mining and Trading and Brokerage. Coal prices have been on the decline over the last several years for several reason. Although cheap, consumers and businesses are opting for cleaner and more efficient sources of energy. At this point, the company may need to see a significant rise in coal as a source of energy in order to see gains into the future.

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10 Best Stocks To Watch For 2014

T = Technicals on the Stock Chart are Weak

Peabody Energy stock has seen on the decline for the last couple of years and is now trading at prices not seen since the lows established during the 2008 Financial Crisis. Lower stock prices may be ahead if the stock makes a clear break below these key stock price levels. Analyzing the price trend and its strength can be done using key simple moving averages. What are the key moving averages? The 50-day (pink), 100-day (blue), and 200-day (yellow) simple moving averages. As seen in the daily price chart below, Peabody Energy is trading below its declining key averages which signal neutral to bearish price action in the near-term.

BTU

(Source: Thinkorswim)

Taking a look at the implied volatility (red) and implied volatility skew levels of Peabody Energy options may help determine if investors are bullish, neutral, or bearish.

Implied Volatility (IV)

30-Day IV Percentile

90-Day IV Percentile

Peabody Energy Options

41.72%

0%

0%

What does this mean? This means that investors or traders are buying a very minimal amount of call and put options contracts, as compared to the last 30 and 90 trading days.

Put IV Skew

Call IV Skew

May Options

Flat

Average

June Options

Flat

Average

As of today, there is an average demand from call buyers or sellers and high demand by put buyers or low demand by put sellers, all neutral to bearish over the next two months. To summarize, investors are buying a very minimal amount of call and put option contracts and are leaning neutral to bearish over the next two months.

On the next page, let’s take a look at the earnings and revenue growth rates and the conclusion.

E = Earnings Are Decreasing Quarter-Over-Quarter

Rising stock prices are often strongly correlated with rising earnings and revenue growth rates. Also, the last four quarterly earnings announcement reactions help gauge investor sentiment on Peabody Energy’s stock. What do the last four quarterly earnings and revenue growth (Y-O-Y) figures for Peabody Energy look like and more importantly, how did the markets like these numbers?

2013 Q1

2012 Q4

2012 Q3

2012 Q2

Earnings Growth (Y-O-Y)

-114.29%

-558.02%

-84%

-28.57%

Revenue Growth (Y-O-Y)

-14.27%

-9.55%

3.94%

0.91%

Earnings Reaction

7.57%

5.56%

11.81%

-11.26%

Peabody Energy has seen increasing earnings and revenue figures over the last four quarters. From these figures, the markets have been pleased with Peabody Energy’s recent earnings announcements.

P = Poor Relative Performance Versus Peers and Sector

How has Peabody Energy stock done relative to its peers, Arch Coal (NYSE:ACI), BHP Billiton (NYSE:BHP), Consol Energy (NYSE:CNX), and sector?

Peabody Energy

Arch Coal

BHP Billiton

Consol Energy

Sector

Year-to-Date Return

-23.07%

-31.42%

-12.83%

8.57%

-14.14%

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Peabody Energy has been a relative underperformer, year-to-date.

Conclusion

Peabody Energy provides coal energy products and services to a wide range of companies in various industries worldwide. The stock has been in a steep decline for the last few years but may be stabilizing at these current prices. Earnings and revenue figures have been decreasing, over the last four quarters, but investors have been pleased with what they’ve heard during the earnings reports. Relative to its peers and sector, Peabody Energy has been one of the worst performers, year-to-date. STAY AWAY from Peabody Energy for now.

Friday, August 9, 2013

The Weighing of an Investment

Making the decision to invest in one particular stock can seem daunting, but today, Royston Wild of The Motley Fool UK, weighs the investment options for you.

Today, I am looking at ARM Holdings (LN:ARM) (NASDAQ:ARMH), and considering whether the company knows the passcode to deliver strong returns.

Question marks rumble over future royalties

ARM Holdings announced last month that revenues jumped an impressive 27% in the first six months of 2013, to £341.5m, pushing pre-tax profit 37% higher to £176m. Encouragingly, the company also upped its licensing guidance to $80m from $75m, although it modestly slashed its royalty projections.

However, doubts abound as to whether the firm can maintain the strength which has seen the share price rocket in recent years. Liberum Capital argues that although licensing levels remain high, this may not necessarily translate into juicy royalties for the company.

In particular, dozens of small start-up companies in China have been established recently in the smartphone and tablet PC space. These firms are chasing the same product categories and thus creating market fragmentation, the broker says.

And "while price competition between them could trigger some additional volumes, we do not think the additional volumes so generated would be proportionate to the increased licensing revenues," Liberum notes. High competition and market maturity are also likely to lead to failure amongst many of these companies, and although Asia does not represent the be-all-and-end-all for ARM Holdings, the region represents a big deal to the company in terms of licensing numbers.

Threat of competition also shakes projections

The increasing presence of the likes of Intel in ARM Holdings' space is also casting doubts over future licensing and royalties prospects. Intel—which is ready to launch its 22nm Silvermont architecture in the coming months, and integrated LTE modem solutions in 2014—is steadily growing its customer base by courting both top level and small customers. This is likely to lead to rising doubts over ARM Holdings' ability to guard its market share moving forward.

Still an expensive pick despite recent weakness

Although ARM Holdings' share price has fallen sharply over the past couple of months—the company has fallen almost 21% from May's all-time peak of 1,076p—I believe that the stock still remains vastly overpriced.

The firm currently boasts a prospective P/E rating of 42.3, based on City estimates, vastly above a reading of 22 for the whole technology and hardware sector and the broadly-considered value benchmark of 10. A sharp collapse could be in the offing, should royalties projections come under scrutiny and competition hot up over the next year.

Royston does not own shares in ARM Holdings.

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