âCan You Hear Me Now?â
September 6, 2011
by Jeffrey Saut, Chief Investment Strategist, Raymond James
âAs I have emphasized on previous occasions, without significant policy changes, the finances of the federal government will inevitably spiral out of control, risking severe economic and financial damage.â
So said Chairman Ben Bernanke a fortnight ago. He went on to state:
âThe negotiations that took place over the summer disrupted financial markets and probably the economy as well, and similar events in the future could, over time, seriously jeopardize the willingness of investors around the world to hold U.S. financial assets or to make direct investments in job-creating U.S. businesses.â
On the surface I think the esteemed Chairman is sending a message to our elected leaders that the Federal Reserve has done all it can do to resuscitate the economy. The implication, it is now up to those leaders to put forth market-based programs to solve our nationâs woes. Surprisingly, President Obama stated he actually wanted âmarket-basedâ solutions for the housing debacle before he left on holiday. In past missives I have written about one such program in Puerto Rico. Said program has sent sales of new homes surging by some 80%, while sales of existing homes have risen 24%, over the past 10 months. The story was in The Wall Street Journal on 8/13/11. We should find out if the President will adopt such practical, market-based solutions this Thursday when he addresses a joint session of Congress. Still, I have to admit suing the nationâs banks, and supporting the NLRBâs decision to send jobs to Mexico rather than South Carolina, are NOT practical market-based solutions. Accordingly, this Thursdayâs address becomes increasingly important for the economy, as well equity prices.
However, if the stock marketâs action is any indication, it is going to be more of the same political finger-pointing and blame game shenanigans inside the D.C. Beltway since the D-J Industrial Average (INDU/11240.26) has lost ground in five out of the past six weeks. The result has left the Doleful Dow down 11.8% from its 7/22/11 intraday high into last Fridayâs close. The quid pro quo is that the senior index is up ~6% from its âselling climax lowsâ of 8/9/11. The resulting four-week range-bound chart formation continues to look eerily similar to the bottoming sequences of October 1978/1979 so often referenced in these reports (see chart on page 3). Studying those bottoming patterns shows at least three retests of the selling climax âlows,â and in both cases, those âlowsâ were actually marginally broken in the retests. Therefore, unless the âlowsâ of 8/9/11 are decisively violated, I am sticking with the October 1978/1979 bottoming themes. That said, while I am hopeful the 8/8/11 Dow Theory âsell signalâ will prove false, like the one of May 6, 2010 (flash crash), I have learned the hard way to be respectful of ANY Dow Theory signal! Hence, if I am to err, it is going to be by being too conservative, which is why most of the investment recommendations noted in these comments recently have been fundamentally sound, statistically undervalued, dividend-paying situations that our fundamental analysts think have already made their âlows,â even if the Dow takes more time to complete its bottoming process.
So how do investors determine whatâs undervalued? Well, one can begin by eliminating overvalued asset classes like sovereign debt, the Swiss Franc, the Japanese Yen, Hong Kong real estate, in the near-term precious metals, etc. and diversify among the asset classes that reside on the left side of the bell-shaped curve (read: undervalued). For years I have opined that water is the most undervalued asset I know, but water has become increasingly difficult in which to invest because âsmart moneyâ has been acquiring water-centric companies for more than 30 years. Another way to determine an undervalued asset is to observe what smart people are buying and try to understand why. Recently, however, individual investing titans have not been buying much despite the fact that as of last week Lowryâs Buying Power Index rose above its Selling Pressure Index. Yet another way of seeking undervalued investments is to watch what smart companies are buying; recently smart companies are buying intellectual property (IP) ... aka, knowledge. As the brainy folks at the GaveKal organization, whose mutual funds are worth your consideration, write:
âThe reason âknowledgeâ is such an undervalued quantity is that our accounting systems are completely obsolete in establishing where the value lies in a company. Indeed, as companies exit capital intensive manufacturing processes and concentrate more on design and distribution functions, they invest less money on capital expenditure and more on research and development. And, as companies go through this transformation, relying on GAAP-based accounting for information falls way short of painting an accurate picture. ... So basically, we live in a world where R&D spending gets a terrible deal: an investment in a tangible asset (e.g., a machine tool) is counted as a productive asset for years while, in accounting terms, the in-house development of a distribution network (e.g., Dell) loses the entirety of its value within a year. How does this make sense? Obviously it does not, which is why the market may start to move towards new valuation metrics. Remember the old âprice per eye-ballsâ or âprice per clicksâ of the old late 1990s TMT boom? Who is to say that these will not be replaced by a âprice per patentâ on which Google, or IBM, may no longer appear so expensive?â
We love the sagacious GaveKal folks for such âout of the boxâ thoughts, which is what drives superior investment results. Using the R&D prism (research and development) as a guide, I screened Raymond Jamesâ research universe for stocks of companies that spend more than 15% of their revenues on R&D and are rated Strong Buy. The list includes: Amyris (AMRS/$18.89); Ciena (CIEN/$13.78); LSI (LSI/$6.59); NVIDIA (NVDA/$12.92); SuccessFactors (SFSF/$20.83); Analog Devices (ADI/$32.01); Medidata Solutions (MDSO/$15.75); Semtech (SMTC/$21.07); and Adtran (ADTN/$28.89). While most of these names possess no dividend yield, if you âbuy intoâ the knowledge theme, these companiesâ metrics are worth consideration.