by Lance Roberts, RIA
Over the last quarter, the āDeath of Fundamentalsā has become apparent as investors ignore earnings to chase market momentum. However, throughout history, such large divergences between fundamentals and price have resulted in low future returns.
This time is unlikely to be different.
Biggest Decline In Earningsā¦Ever
āDuring the second quarter, analysts lowered earnings estimates for companies in the S&P 500 for the quarter. The Q2 bottom-up EPS estimate (which is an aggregation of the median Q2 EPS estimates for all the companies in the index,) declined by 37.0% (to $23.25 from $36.93) during this period. How significant is a 37.0% decrease in the bottom-up EPS estimate during a quarter? How does this decrease compare to recent quarters?
During the past five years (20 quarters), the average decline in the bottom-up EPS estimate has been 3.2%. Over the past ten years, (40 quarters), the average decline in the bottom-up EPS estimate has been 3.4%. During the past fifteen years, (60 quarters), the average decline in the bottom-up EPS estimate has been 4.6%. Thus, the decline in the bottom-up EPS estimate recorded during the second quarter was much larger than the 5-year average, the 10-year average, and the 15-year average.Ā
In fact, this marked the largest decline in the quarterly EPS estimate during a quarter since FactSet began tracking this data in Q1 2002. The previous record was -34.3%, which occurred in Q4 2008.ā ā FactSet
Wishing For A Hockey Stick
The chart above is telling. Investors continue to bet on aĀ āhockey stickāĀ recovery in earnings to justify overpaying for stocks with the highest price momentum. AsĀ discussed in āThe Bullish Test Comes:āĀ
āSuch makes the mantra of using 24-month estimates to justify paying exceedingly high valuations today, even riskier.ā
Importantly, earnings estimates did not decline due to just the onset of the āpandemic.ā Earnings began to decline in earnest in late 2018 as economic growth had started to weaken.
As we warned in mid-2019, the inversion of the yield curve had also set the stage for an economic contraction:
āDespite commentary to the contrary, the yield curve is a āleading indicatorā of what is happening in the economy currently, as opposed to economic data, which is ālaggingā and subject to massive revisions.ā
All that was needed was an unexpected, exogenous catalyst to trigger the actual event.
The important point is that investors have been overpaying for earnings by more than 2.5x since the peak in earnings in 2018. Slower economic and wage growth and a widening of theĀ āwealth gap,āĀ has stalled revenue growth. Such has forced companies to engage in a wide variety of accountingĀ āgimmickryāĀ to manufacture earnings to support higher asset prices.
Overpaying For Value
Since 2009, investors have bid up stock prices by more than 368%. Yet, cumulative operating earnings and revenue have only grown by 93% and 50%, respectively.
Even if the expectedĀ āhockey stick recoveryā in earnings occurs, earnings will only return to the same level as they were in 2018.
If we assume analysts are correct, and historically they overly estimate by 33%, investors have vastly overpaid for earnings. Such has historically guaranteed investors disappointing investment outcomes.
However, as we enterĀ āearnings season,āĀ we are again seeing analysts and companies adjusting their numbers to win the ābeat the estimateā game. Such is why I call itĀ āMillennial Soccer.ā Earnings season is now aĀ āgameāĀ where no one keeps score, the media cheers, and everyone gets aĀ āparticipation trophyāĀ just to show up.
Wall Street Analysis Isnāt For You
When it comes to earnings season, the media will be complicit in pushing Wall Streetās recommendations. However, thoseĀ ābuy, sell and holdāĀ recommendations arenāt for you. Those recommendations are theĀ ābaitāĀ to camouflage theĀ āhook.ā
I will let you in on aĀ ādirty little secret.āĀ
Wall Street doesnāt care about you or your money. Such is because their profits donāt come from servicingĀ āMom and PopāĀ retail clients trying to save their way into retirement.Ā Wall Street is notĀ āinvestedāĀ along with you, butĀ āuses youāĀ to generate income for theirĀ ārealāĀ clients.
Such is whyĀ ābuy and holdāĀ investment strategies are so widely promoted.Ā As long as your dollars are invested, the mutual funds, stocks, ETFās, etc, the Wall Street firms collect their fees.Ā These strategies are certainly in their best interest ā just not necessarily yours.
However, those retail management fees are aĀ ārounding errorāĀ compared to the really big money.
Wall Streetās real clients are multi-million and billion-dollar investment banking transactions. These deals include public offerings, mergers, acquisitions, and debt offerings, which generate hundreds of millions to billions of dollars in fees for Wall Street each year.
You know, companies like Uber, Lyft, Snapchat, Tesla, and Shopify.
Buy, Sell or Hold
For Wall Street firms toĀ āwināĀ that very lucrative business, they must cater to their prospective clients.Ā Not surprisingly, it is difficult for a firm to gain investment banking business from a company with aĀ āsellāĀ rating.Ā
Such is whyĀ ābuyāĀ ratings are so prevalent versusĀ āholdā or āsell,āĀ as it keeps the client happy. I have compiled a chart of 4644 rated stocks ranked by the number of āBuyā,Ā āHoldā or āSellā recommendations.
There are just 2.97% of all stocks with a āsellāĀ rating.
Do you believe that out of 4644 rated companies, only 138 should be āsold?ā
You shouldnāt.
But for Wall Street, aĀ āsellāĀ rating is not good for business.
The conflict doesnāt end just at Wall Streetās pocketbook.Ā Companies depend on their stock prices rising as it is a huge part of executive compensation packages.
Corporations apply pressure on Wall Street firms, and analysts, to ensure positive research reports with the threat they will take their business to aĀ āfriendlierāĀ firm. The goal of boosting share prices for compensation isĀ also why roughlyĀ 40% of corporate earningsĀ reports areĀ āfudgedāĀ to produce better outcomes.
As theĀ Associated Press exposed in āExperts Worry That Phony Numbers Are Misleading Investors:ā
āThose record profits that companies are reporting may not be all theyāre cracked up to be.
As the stock market climbs ever higher, professional investors are warning that companies are presenting misleading versions of their results that ignore a wide variety of normal costs of running a businessĀ to make it seem like theyāre doing better than they really are.
Whatās worse, the financial analysts who are supposed to fight corporate spin are often playing along.Ā Instead of challenging the companies, theyāre largely passing along the rosy numbers in reports recommending stocks to investors.ā
You Have To Do Your Own Homework
So, what can you do?
You have two choices.
You can do your homework using a research tool like āRIAPro.Netā (Try Risk-Free for 30-days) where you can screen for fundamental value.
Or, you can hire anĀ independent, fee-only advisor who knows how to do the work for you.
Let me show you the difference between Wall StreetāsĀ ābuy, sell, holdāĀ analysis versus how we break the universe of stocks we screen atĀ RIA Advisors.
As an independent money manager,Ā I use valuation analysis to determine what equities should be bought, sold or held in clientās portfolios.Ā While there are many valuation measures, two of my favorites are Price-to-Sales and theĀ Piotroski f-score. For this example, I sorted the entire Zacks Research equity universe of 5028 issues. I ranked them by just these two measures.
See the difference. Not surprisingly, there are far fewer ābuyā rated, and far more āsellā rated, companies than what is suggested by Wall Street analysts.
Price-To-Sales Sends A Warning
Here is something even more alarming.
Just after theĀ ādot.comāĀ bust, I wrote a valuation article quoting Scott McNeely. He was the CEO of Sun Microsystems at the time. At its peak, the stock was trading at 10x its sales.Ā (Price-to-Sales ratio)Ā In aĀ BloombergĀ interview, Scott made the following point.
āAt 10 times revenues, to give you a 10-year payback, I have to pay you 100% of revenues for 10 straight years in dividends. That assumes I can get that by my shareholders. It also assumes I have zero cost of goods sold, which is very hard for a computer company.
That assumes zero expenses, which is really hard with 39,000 employees.That assumes I pay no taxes, which is very hard. And that assumes you pay no taxes on your dividends, which is kind of illegal. And that assumes with zero R&D for the next 10-years, I can maintain the current revenue run rate.
Now, having done that, would any of you like to buy my stock at $64? Do you realize how ridiculous those basic assumptions are? You donāt need any transparency. You donāt need any footnotes.
What were you thinking?
Whatās In Your Portfolio
How many of the followingĀ āBuyāĀ rated companiesĀ do you own carrying price-to-sales valuations above 9 or 10 times?
So, what are you thinking?
As an increasing number ofĀ ābaby boomersāĀ head into retirement,Ā the need for independent, organic research and analysis, which is in the clientās best interest, is more critical now, than ever.Ā
Independent advice can help remove thoseĀ emotional biasesĀ from the investing process that lead to poor investment outcomes. There are many great advisors with the right team, tools, and data, who can manage portfolios, monitor trends, adjust allocations, and protect capital through risk management.
The next time someone tells you that you canātĀ ārisk-manageāĀ your portfolio and just have toĀ āride things out,āĀ just remember, you donāt.
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