Looking for a Curve Ball
by Scott Krisiloff, Avondale Asset Management
Each week we read dozens of transcripts from earnings calls and presentations as part of our investment process. Below is a weekly post which contains some of the most important quotes about the economy and industry trends from those transcripts. Click here to receive these posts weekly via email.
This Weekâs Post: Looking for a Curveball
Most CEOs donât see signs of an imminent downturn, but the environment still feels a little fragile. It seems that almost everyone is on high alert for a macro curve-ball. There are some green shoots that capital markets are opening back up, but there are also signs of sluggishness. Overall the economy appears to be ok, not deteriorating, but not robust either.
The Macro Outlook:
Even though things have gotten better, people are still waiting for a curveball
âIâm a superstitious person and I think the minute I think this is starting to go well, for some reason weâre going to get smacked down with some change in the marketâŠCall it the curve ball discount there, Iâm just waiting to see another quarter. And right now, Iâd say all indicators are looking favorable for improvement as the year goes on. I actually want to see some of that improvement sustained; meaning, economic conditions and exchange.â âAbbott Labs CEO Miles White (Healthcare)
The environment still feels a little fragile
âmany of the factors that were impacting the market in the first quarterâŠseem to have abated and although the market feels a little fragile from all that, it feels like â for the most part, thatâs behind us. But weâll see how the year progresses.â âGoldman Sachs CFO Harvey Schwartz (Investment Bank)
But while many are uneasy, few see signs of a downturn
âWe believe that the global economy will continue to be uneasyâŠat this time we donât see any signs of a broad-based global downturn. In fact, many companies expressed difficulty finding the right talent as evidenced by the findings of our 2015 talent shortage survey published late last yearâ âManpower CEO Jonas Prising (Temp Staffing)
âthe economy. It is what I would call good but not great. Itâs okayâŠWe see no practical possibilities of recession, notwithstanding the fact thereâs been a lot of conversation about that. And the reason is because we think there is a very, very strong solid pent-up need for continuing investment. When I talk to business peopleâŠtheyâre not excited enough about the future to go out and make major expansions and so forth. But theyâre driving trucks that have 250,000 miles on it. They got ten-year old equipment, and so stuff just wears out. And so, thatâs why you have to keep investing.â âBB&T CEO Kelly King (Regional Bank)
Most agree that the economy isnât great, but it hasnât deteriorated
âthings havenât deteriorated, but things havenât improvedâ âVisa CEO Charles Scharf (Credit Cards)
There are some green shoots
âThe M&A pipeline is strong and some green shoots suggest the equity underwriting calendar may open up. The S&P level at the end of the first quarter will help with asset pricing in our Wealth Management businessâ âMorgan Stanley CEO James Gorman (Investment Bank)
The second quarter is feeling robust for loan growth
âwe already know what quarter two is starting to look like, and itâs feeling pretty robustâŠwe are on all cylinders on loans. Mortgages particularly are growing nicely as they â they didnât a year agoâ âUS Bank CEO Richard Davis (Regional Bank)
But there are also a lot of areas that just feel sluggish
Intel projected a greater than expected decline in PC markets
âWe now expect the PC markets to decline in the high single digits in 2016 versus our prior forecast of mid-single-digit decline. Our projection of the PC market remains more cautions than third-party estimates.â âIntel CFO Stacy Smith (Semiconductors)
Qualcomm lowered its expectations for mobile phone growth
âWe are adjusting our estimate of calendar 2016 global 3G/4G device shipments to 1.625 billion to 1.725 billion devices, with year-over-year unit growth of approximately 8% at the midpoint, down from our previous midpoint estimate of approximately 10% growth.â âQualcomm President Derek Aberle (Semiconductors)
Steel industry capacity utilization is only 71%
âFor the steel platform as a whole, driven by the our flat roll operations, our production utilization rate for the first quarter 2016 increased to 88% as compared to overall industry utilization of approximately 71%.â âSteel Dynamics CEO Mark Millett (Steel)
Union Pacific expressed some doubt about whether the auto industry could meet sales expectations
âTurning to autos, light vehicle sales are forecasted at 17.8 million vehicles, a 2% increase above the 2015 seasonally adjustable annual rate of 17.5 million vehiclesâŠWhile we expect low gasoline prices will continue to sustain demand, we remain cautious with respect to auto sales supporting these levels.â âUnion Pacific EVP Eric Butler (Railroad)
Venture lenders are focusing a little more on credit quality
âThereâs been a lot of discussions about things actually pulling back a little bit in [Technology & Life Sciences]âŠToday, weâre probably focusing more on credit quality, more on granularity.â âComerica CEO Ralph Babb & EVP Patrick Faubion (Regional Bank)
The market for IT jobs may be slightly softer
âI would describe the demand for IT skills to still be healthy, maybe slightly softer.â âManpower CEO Jonas Prising (Temp Staffing)
The market may be a little slower to open all the way back up
âI think after a tough first quarter like the whole market has experienced, I think that there may be a slow reaction function in terms of how various market participants engage the marketplace. But it feels like, as I said before, the most significant factors impacting the first quarter seem to have abated, at least for now.â âGoldman Sachs CFO Harvey Schwartz (Investment Bank)
International:
The weakened dollar is turning into a slight tailwind for companies
âLast year, we had a lot of headwinds, especially on the international revenue lineâŠThis year, weâre seeing the reverse of that with the weakening of the dollarâŠInternational contribution margin is benefiting from that.â âNetflix CFO David Wells (Movie Studio)
The dollar is still high in any relative sense though
âIâm not a central banker, but I would say the dollar is still very high in any relative sense. It has dropped a little from the peak, but it still is very highâŠThe dollar is still a headwind. The strong dollar is still a headwind to U.S. exports.â âUnion Pacific EVP Eric Butler (Railroad)
Pepsi is incrementally less optimistic about South America and Eastern Europe
âI think the two places where weâre probably incrementally less optimistic, number one is South AmericaâŠAnd then number two is Eastern Europe.â âPepsi CFO Hugh Johnston (Sugar Water)
Canadian Pacific said that it feels like the Canadian economy is bottoming
âSo that said the Canadian economy though on a positive note appears to be stabilizing and recessionary fears seem to be subsiding. So we do feel that the second-quarter is going to be the bottom. Q3, Q4 obviously are going to be stronger on a demand standpoint.â âCanadian Pacific Railway COO Keith Creel (Railroad)
March was a disappointing month for Las Vegas Sands in Macau
âMarch was obviously disappointing. We had a really great January, February. March certainly softened up. Worldwide, I think Chinese tourism and consumer numbers are pretty depressing across the globe. And certainly, it was a little bit soft than we hoped in Macao. That was not the case in Singapore, but in Macao, we saw a downturn.â âLas Vegas Sands CEO Sheldon Adelson (Casino)
Low cost labor will continue to struggle vs. automation
âAs you know, call centers are a very high turnover rate for employees. And with our decrease in calls coming in from our Wireless customers because of more online, more chat, more self-service, we will not hire as many customer call centersâŠSo thereâs opportunity to reduce force just through the attrition rate.â âVerizon CFO Fran Shammo (Telecom)
Financials:
Itâs not easy being a bank these days
âBefore getting into our quarterly results, Iâd like to directly address the recent discussions of our fundamental performance. Iâve talked to many of our shareholders over the past several monthsâŠI want to make sure everyone recognizes thatâŠ[we] hear and understand the desire for improved returnsâŠI know that we must earn our right to remain independent every day, and our management team and board are committed to doing what is in the best interest of our shareholders.â âComerica CEO Ralph Babb (Regional Bank)
BB&T had been strategically acquiring banks, but is now applying the brakes
âIâm not trying to say that we wouldnât dare do any tiny little bitty something. But as a practical matter, we are just not focusing on M&A now in insurance or bankâŠthereâs a time to buy, and thereâs time to run. And the last 24 months was a time to buy, because the times were rightâŠnow is the time to take time and to adjustâ âBB&T CEO Kelly King (Regional Bank)
The flattening yield curve negated the benefit of higher short term rates
âmake sure you guys are watching the slope of the curve tooâŠthe moment â the short end came up, the long end came down. And that has the same kind of impact on interest income that you would see on lack of rate movement.â âUS Bank CEO Richard Davis (Regional Bank)
Itâs not easy being an asset manager either
âthe asset management industry in its current form is no longer a growth industry for a majority of traditional active asset managers. Overcapacity, chronically poor investment performance, high fees, competition from passive strategies, growing barriers to entry for access to distribution and the rapidly growing cost of regulatory compliance, taken together will challenge future growth and profitability for most legacy investment managers.â âCoen and Steers CEO Bob Steers (Real Estate Investment Management)
Consumer:
We have now lapped the sharp declines in gas prices, which should impact retail sales comps
âWe have now lapped the sharp gas declines from last yearâŠwe had hoped that this would provide a tailwind for U.S. domestic volumes in the second half of fiscal 2016. This has not happened, as gas prices remain below the lows of last year.â âVisa CFO Vasant Prabhu (Payments)
Technology:
Technology startups have done a great job of marketing, but are still working on proving their business models
âthe technology companies that Iâm aware of, they have done a good job of sizzle in terms of the marketing but I donât think that they have done as well a job in the execution of the plan where they are able to make money over a period of time.â âBrown and Brown CEO Powell Brown (Insurance Broker)
Googleâs CEO says that theyâve only scratched the surface of whatâs possible
âGoogleâs mission is to organize the worldâs information and make it universally accessible and useful. And after 17 years, we have just scratched the surface of whatâs possible.â âGoogle CEOÂ Sundar Pichai (Internet)
Data is the new oil
âdata is the new oil. Like those who have the data, those who have the understanding of the consumer, we believe are the ones that are going to win.â âUnder Armour CEO Kevin Plank (Apparel)
Reed Hastings thinks that VR will probably be primarily a gaming format for at least a couple of years
âI think itâs mostly going to be an intense gaming format for a couple of yearsâŠSo think of it like the PlayStation 5 or the XBox 2 or somethingâŠI think the center point for VR will be other sorts of things than watching a TV show in a VR headset. I donât think thatâll be very popularâ âNetflix CEO Reed Hastings (Movie Studio)
China is more digitally advanced than one might expect
âIâm constantly amazed at how advanced China is digitally. Itâs got twice the number of cell phones, smartphones, as the U.S. population. And even in our offices, people go up and down the elevator to go to lunch, theyâre looking up where the offers are available and where they can book a table, et cetera.â âYUM! China CEO Micky Pant (Restaurants)
Healthcare:
UnitedHealth is pulling out of a number of public exchanges
âThe smaller overall market size and shorter-term higher risk profile within this market segment continue to suggest we cannot broadly serve it on an effective and sustained basis. Next year we will remain in only a handful of states, and we will not carry financial exposure from exchanges into 2017.â âUnited Health CEO Stephen Hemsley (Health Insurance)
Industrials:
Flat rolled steel prices are rising thanks to positive trade case filings to prevent Chinese dumping
âfor the first time in well over a year, weâve begun to experience rising metal pricing for carbon steel products as well as stainless steel flat-rolled products. This pricing improvement, which accelerated towards the end of first quarter, was mainly result of the recent trade case filings by U.S. steel producers.â âReliance Steel CEO Gregg Mollins (Steel)
Materials, Energy:
Core Labs believes that we will see a V bottom in oil markets
âCore believes crude oil markets rationalize in the second half of 2016âŠour second quarter 2016 results should mark the bottom of our anticipated V-shaped commodity recovery that should lead to increased crude oil prices followed by increased industry activity levels.â âCore Labs CEO David Demshur (Oil Service)
However, overbuilt industries donât alway enjoy V shaped recoveries
âWe have believed since the outset of this housing recovery that it would be more gradual than the V-shaped rebound, typical of most housing cycles. Our thesis is unchanged as we expect an extended recovery will continue to unfold for the next several years.â âPulte Home CEO Richard Dugas (Homebuilder)
Distressed oil companies have been able to sell assets rather than make âdefensive drawsâ on credit lines
âthe vast majority of our borrowers are doing the opposite. Theyâre selling assets. Theyâre raising capital to make sure that they are staying within the confines of what they expect the new borrowing base to be. So weâre really pleased to see that.â âComerica CCO Peter Guilfoile (Regional Bank)
Surprisingly, they are even able to sell assets at significant premiums to where lenders have them marked
âSince really last summer, our borrowers have sold about $1.7 billion of assetsâŠon average the premium has been 93% above what we have those assets valued at in the borrowing base and in 2016 that premium is even higher. Itâs about a 120%. So not only is there a lot of opportunity for our borrowers to sell assets to raise liquidity, but itâs a very accretive process when theyâre doing it.â âComerica CCO Peter Guilfoile (Regional Bank)
Oil companies are eager to turn production back on, but cautious
âI think that theyâre being cautious about their next move. I think they want to see generally they wanted to see some additional recovery and see some stability in that recovery. I also think that as a group theyâve made themselves very, very flexible. I mean they are updating their outlook and updating their decision making. Itâs no longer an annual process. It seems like itâs a biweekly process or something now as theyâre looking at things which suggests that when they do decide to turn things back up, theyâll be able to turn it back up relatively quicklyâ âKinder Morgan CEO Steve Kean (Oil Pipeline)
Miscellaneous Nuggets of Wisdom:
Have the courage to go after the right customers, not just any customer
â[we worked] to have the courage to go out there and get the right customers. I think there might have been a mentality here and maybe perhaps in other companies, where youâre trying to show some number to Wall Street, but at the end of the day it hurts you long term financially.â âDish CEO Charlie Ergen (Satellite Television)
Laziness can help create an effective moat
âOur biggest enemy is inertia. The issue is that most people with a brokerage account do not want to bother with switching it. So therefore, even if they are â even if we succeed in convincing them that they would have a financial advantage, a large financial advantage, by bringing their account to us they still donât want to do it, because of just laziness.â âInteractive Brokers CEO Thomas Petterfly (Retail Brokerage)
There are a finite number of experts in a given field
âif the world created 5,000 cognitive experts, we would hire 5,000 cognitive expertsâŠBut there is a rate at which it doesnât make sense for us to keep putting money into these because the world doesnât create them anymore. Itâs not a problem that can be solved by spending more money. Itâs a problem that is constrained by the kinds of skills the worldâs creating. So we have a global search on for talent.â âIBM CFO Martin Schroeter (Enterprise Tech)
The best organizations have a gravitational pull to attract those experts
âWhat we find is that skills have gravity and highly skilled people want to work with others in their fields who are also highly skilled. So they come here to work with our unique data sets, with our unique technologies, with our unique industry expertise, in order to change the way the world works in order to change the way industries operate, in order to change professions.â âIBM CFO Martin Schroeter (Enterprise Tech)
Full transcripts can be found at www.seekingalpha.com
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