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Broker Talk: The Dollar Is Destined for a Decline

The U.S. dollar may hold up in the short term, but experts say that it’s headed for decline – and investors should plan their investments accordingly.

Who’s Talking: Jeffrey Saut, Chief Investment Strategist at Raymond James.

The Gist: Saut still believes in his recent predictions about the future of the U.S. equity market: U.S. stocks will follow the pattern of the 2003 recovery, when the market “flopped and chopped” until the fall, but “never gave up much ground.” For that trend to hold, says Saut, the market will need to believe that a recovery is on its way. And that means believing that President Obama’s economic agenda—spending trillions of dollars to overcome the bear market recession—is going to work.

For the most part, Saut thinks that’s true. Obama’s plan, he explains, is to spend like crazy on the recovery while inadvertently devaluing the dollar against other world currencies long term. Once the dollar is cheaper, our massive government debts will be easier to finance. In the meantime, Obama is “talking” a strong dollar politically (at home and abroad) to keep up short-term confidence in the dollar’s strength during the recovery.

This is a similar tactic to the one used by Franklin D. Roosevelt during the Depression, explains Saut. Following the Gold Reserve Act of 1934, the U.S. dollar was devalued by 41%, which allowed the government to pay off debt more easily. The Dow was at 110 at the time of the devaluation and by March 1937 it had risen to 194.

Saut says the short-term strength of the dollar gives investors an opportunity to develop a long-term plan for preserving their wealth once the dollar gets weaker. In his opinion, there are two roads to choose from: Buy gold, or buy growth stocks whose growth will compensate for the “long-term dollar demise.” Saut recommends the latter. The Chinese, for example, are buying fewer U.S. Treasurys and more corporations, commodities, metals, mines, gold and crude oil. To follow the Chinese strategy, Saut recommends buying stocks like Harsco (HSC) and NII Holdings (NIHD) at cheaper prices if the market continues to decline over the summer.

Who’s Talking: Richard Berner, Chief U.S. Economist at Morgan Stanley

The Gist: Berner agrees with Saut that the U.S.’s rising deficits will expand our debt to sky-high levels, requiring either higher interest rates or a “big enough decline in the dollar to make it look cheap” to global investors.

As for the consequences for the U.S. equity market, Berner isn’t as optimistic. He compares U.S. spending to the case of Japan, where steep government deficits sent its debt up to 160 percent of GDP, but had no effect on interest rates. In Japan’s case, the massive spending worked out alright in the end, says Berner, because Japan had a current account surplus and didn’t have to rely on foreign savings. By contrast, the U.S. budget deficits have worsened our savings situation, he says. Despite changes in consumer savings, local governments are still “awash in red ink” and spending beyond their means. As a result, says Berner, “we still need sizable inflows of saving from abroad to finance federal deficits.”

Overall, Berner thinks “reckless” government spending will bring about a downgrade of the U.S.’s debt rating and make financing our deficits harder, not easier.

Despite his generally gloomy outlook, Berner ends with one positive takeaway: He agrees with Saut that the dollar will continue to serve as the world’s reserve currency – at least, “for now.”

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5 Companies to Short Now

SHORT-SELLERS ARE THE PERENNIAL UN-AMERICANS, vampires intent on driving down the prices of shares, destroying companies and greedily sucking the blood out of innocent investors.

That’s the mistaken image that many people have of shorts. In reality, there’s nothing unfair or devious about betting against a stock that you think will decline, just as there’s nothing wrong about betting against the NFL team that you believe will lose the Super Bowl. And over the past decade, investors who shorted some stocks probably would have done much better than the vast majority of individuals, who go only long — buying shares in the hope of eventually selling them at a higher price. Shorts reverse the process. They borrow stocks and then sell them, hoping that their prices tumble, which would let them replace the borrowed shares for less than what they paid for them.

Why don’t more individuals short stocks? Short sellers’ unwarranted slimy image repulses some of them. In addition, many people consider bull markets to be the long-term norm — a belief that recent events have sorely tested. Lastly, shorting is considered to be very risky, even though it needn’t be more volatile than using a long strategy. There is, however, one big danger. Whereas the most a long can lose is the price he paid for a stock, the price of a shorted stock theoretically can rise infinitely, making it immensely expensive to buy shares to cover a short position and creating losses far in excess of the original investment.

But, done intelligently, shorting can be enormously lucrative. Just consider the trading record of Short Alert, a small North Carolina-based research firm that has been producing reports recommending stocks to short since 1998. In the 10½ years ended June 30 of this year, about 75% of the 86 recommendations it made would have turned a profit, even if they were judged based on the conservative criteria used by Barron’s in examining Short Alert’s record. In other words, the firm offers an excellent window on how to pick stocks to sell short.

Barron’s found that the firm, led by managing partners Nat Guild and the ironically named Michael Long, produced annual returns averaging 18.3% from 1999 through 2008. If the period studied is stretched through the end of June, the annual returns jump to 20.3%. But beware: Short selling isn’t always a route to easy money: 2004 would have produced a terrible loss of 37%, followed by three years in a row of 13% losses.

In judging Short Alert, Barron’s tracked the short positions for a year after they were implemented. Thus, the most recent of the 86 reports we reviewed is dated June 19, 2008.

Currently, Short Alert has five short recommendations. Two of them — j2 Global Communications (JCOM) and Middleby (MIDD) — are companies that it successfully recommended shorting last year but that it contends still have room to fall. The others are Compass Minerals (CMP), K12 (LRN), and Pactiv (PTV).

Specifics on these stocks are given later, but obviously, these aren’t household names. In fact, the companies targeted by Short Alert tend to be small, with stock-market values around $1 billion. Small stocks are especially prone to becoming overpriced, says Baruch Lev, a New York University finance professor. “There is a great deal of information on large companies,” he observes, “which makes it very difficult to hide protracted overvaluation. In comparison, very few people watch the prices of the billion-dollar companies, so most of the earnings manipulation takes place on that level.”

THE “MANIPULATION” HE REFERS to can simply mean taking unwise steps to boost earnings to justify a lofty stock price. Adds Lev: “The main reason for firing managers is bad stock-market performance, so the greater the overpricing, the greater the risk to managers. The managers know this, but unfortunately their typical response is to try desperate things to justify the price — ultimately a self-defeating strategy. The short sellers can make a positive contribution by trading against these subterfuges.”

An unpublished study co-authored by Southern Methodist University business professor Hemang Desai argues that Short Alert does make such a contribution. Desai and two collaborators examined the research firm’s recommendations from 1998 through 2005, to discover traits common to them. One was unsustainable financials, produced by, say, increasingly booking sales that haven’t yet been paid in cash, or by taking lower depreciation to pad reported earnings. Others include huge growth in overhead, low book-to-market ratios and big price increases over 12 months.

APPLYING THESE MEASURES, the researchers sifted through the stock-market histories of a broad list of companies from 1990 through 1996. Their key finding: The traits drawn from Short Alert’s picks reliably identify underperformers. But that’s only a start. While such stocks generally will fall during bear or sideways markets, that’s not necessarily true in a bull market, which tends to push up even unworthy companies. What Short Alert brings to the party is an ability to find those with a particularly “leaky business model,” as managing partner Guild puts it, and the leakier the better.

Indeed, Short Alert’s returns were quite healthy in the bull market of the late ’90s. For positions initiated in 1998, returns in 1999 averaged 58%; for those initiated in 1999, returns in 2000 averaged 43%. And its 46% return in the bear year of 2008 meant that its picks fell by more than the overall market.

The four losing years from 2004 through 2007 were due partly to the fact that, under Barron’s assumptions, losses and gains were allowed to run without being capped by stop orders. (Such orders mandate that a position be covered at a certain price.) Instead, we imposed a trading protocol based strictly on time. For each short-sale recommendation, a profit was allowed after one year if one existed. If it didn’t, the position was held another year before being covered at a profit or loss. (A full explanation of our methodology is available here.)

The lack of stop orders might be unrealistic; a professional short seller would probably use them, or options, to stem losses. But because Short Alert leaves it up to its readers to determine if, and at what levels, any stops should be put in, we felt it would be misleading and arbitrary for us to assume that they had been used. This removes the possibility of using 20-20 hindsight to improve results.

In any case, the absence of stop orders occasionally resulted in a short seller’s worst nightmare — open positions held, and at times closed out, at more than a 100% loss. What made all the difference was diversification, with other positions often showing a profit. And patience at times proved to be a valuable virtue. For example, Terayon Communications Systems, a short recommendation initiated on Aug. 3, 1999, had more than tripled in price a year later, which would have resulted in more than a 200% loss. The method dictated by Barron’s required that the stock be held another year — by which point it was 63% below the initial sale price.

The truth is that it’s much easier to determine that a stock is overpriced than to accurately predict when it will fall. That can lead to stomach-churning uncertainty that can last for weeks, or even months. The shorting game is clearly not for everyone.

THE FIVE TO SHORT

The five stocks that Short Alert currently identifies as ripe for shorting are a varied lot.

COMPASS MINERALS, says Guild (pronounced “guyld”) is a “one-off [success] that Wall Street treats as a continuing story.” The company is North America’s largest producer of de-icing salt, which accounts for 55% of its operating profit. The rest comes from potash, used in fertilizers.

While the price of every other fertilizer component has collapsed by 70%, potash remains at bubble levels, Guild says, even through demand has collapsed and North American inventories are at record levels. Farmers don’t need to apply potash every year for a healthy crop and, even if they did, buying much now would be a problem, since credit is tough to obtain.

As for the salt business, long-term demand grows if new roads are built, and road-miles have been rising only 0.2% a year in the U.S. In the short run, demand is driven by winters, which were among the worst on record in the Midwest and parts of New England over the past two years. But unless the coming winter is especially severe, high prices and state and local budget woes could crimp demand.

A Compass spokesperson notes that, of the six analysts that cover the stock, one rates it a Strong Buy, another as a Buy and three as Hold. Only one of the six agrees with Short Alert that it’s a Sell. But Guild contends that, based on normal prices and sales volume for salt and potash, the stock is worth 12, far below its current level in the mid 50s.

J2 GLOBAL COMMUNICATIONS, the subject of a June 19, 2008, report by Short Alert, was down 14% a year later, but Guild sees far more downside.

About 80% of the company’s sales come from transmitting electronic faxes, a business that’s in decline. Its growth in subscribers has come from acquiring other companies, he says. And 50% of its paid subscriber list turns over every year. Its stock is now hovering above 20 but could easily plunge below 10, asserts Guild, if it were hit with the one-two punch of no significant acquisitions and fewer paid subscribers. J2 President Scott Turicchi counters that “our short position has fallen to 1.7 million shares, less than 4% of outstanding shares of j2 Global and near an all-time low.”

K12 is viewed by Guild as a “limited-market” story. “When Wall Street gets excited by a new product,” he remarks, “it overestimates the size of the market.” K12′s product is an online educational package for home-based students from kindergarten through high school. The company can also provide live teachers for students who really need help.

Guild cites research showing that on-line learning has clear benefits for a very limited number of students, and he adds that state and local budget cuts threaten to reduce per-student support. K12 Chief Financial Officer John Baule notes that the company’s market is now quite small and has lots of room to grow. The key question, however, is whether the stock deserves a price/earnings multiple of 50. If its earning growth slows and its P/E shrinks to, say, 25, the stock, recently in the low 20s, could fall sharply.

The fourth stock, Middleby, was the subject of a Jan. 18, 2008, report by Short Alert. A year later, it was off 58%, but it has since retraced two-thirds of its loss.

Guild calls Middleby, which makes commercial-kitchen equipment, a “classic roll-up,” with acquisitions hiding the slipping growth in the core business. The Short Alert analyst says “research shows that most acquisitions reduce shareholder value,” an assertion seconded by finance professor Lev. Middleby has been buying some of its rivals. But the recession has led to a decline in new restaurants and, by extension, in orders for equipment. Middleby CFO Tim Fitzgerald readily concedes that there’s “softness in the restaurant industry,” but adds that the company is “strategically well-positioned when the market returns.” But, Guild would argue, at a price much lower than the recent 44.68. The Barron’s protocol would have required that profits be taken on MIDD early this year, at 23.81 a share.

The fifth company, Pactiv, makes egg cartons, plastic cups, take-out containers and Hefty bags. The subject of a critical June 17 online feature by Barron’s Daily Stock Alert (“Pension Problems Could Put a Hefty Hurt on this Stock”), Pactiv is what Guild terms a “misleading earnings story,” stemming from certain accounting rules.

Although Pactiv has massive, unfunded pension liabilities, all of its earnings for 2008 came from a nonexistent return on pension assets. Similar legerdemain, says Guild, is bloating earnings in 2009. Pactiv CEO Richard Wambold and CFO Ed Walters counter that their handling of pension income is quite proper and merely applies generally accepted accounting standards. Guild agrees, but maintains that GAAP sometimes distorts a company’s financials. According to his calculations, Pactiv could be worth as little as $6.40 a share. It recently traded above 20.

IN ADDITION TO RECOMMENDING outright shorts, Short Alert also publishes a “Most Dangerous” list of stocks that rate further scrutiny. That list, available in greater detail on www.squareoneanalytics.com, now includes:

Imax (IMAX): Short Alert argues that Imax’s 3-D systems are at the end of their growth cycle and face new competition, and that the company is bleeding cash, with all of its debt due next year.

Hanesbrands (HBI): This is an apparel maker whose brands are in decline and that gets 40% of its earnings from pension “profits.”

Lancaster Colony (LANC): It sells caviar and candles — items that consumers can easily do without in a recession and that face growing competition.

Scholastic (SCHL): Short Alert views this famed outfit as a fading monopoly on elementary-school book clubs.

Pentair (PNR): This maker of pool pumps and equipment is overleveraged and faces a declining market.

Sally Beauty Holdings (SBH): This outfit, which has grown by acquiring beauty salons, could run into trouble if recession-plagued consumers cut back on buying high-priced salon grooming products.

Yes, there are dangers in shorting stocks. But there are dangers in going long, too. Vilify short sellers if you must. But remember, the smart shorts cried all the way to the bank last year and for much of 2009; other investors simply cried.


——————————————————————————–

BRAD DAVIS contributed to this article.

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Stock Picks: TGT Up, ELX Down

Target Affirms Guidance Despite Slowing Sales

A little affirmation went a long way with Target (TGT) investors Thursday morning. Even though the discount retailer reported that sales have been falling, it maintained its quarterly earnings guidance — enough good news to send the stock as much as 4.5% higher in early trading.

The Minneapolis-based company reported that same-store sales slid 6.2% for the five weeks ended July 5. Retail analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected a drop of 5.6%. Target said the average transaction size declined along with sales volume.

Despite the slide, Chairman, President and CEO Greg Steinhafel said the company would meet or exceed analysts’ consensus 64 cents a share earnings estimate when the fiscal second quarter closes at the end of the month.

“Sales for the month of June continued to reflect a very challenging economic environment,” he said on a Thursday conference call. To combat slowing sales, he said the company would continue to cut costs and bolster its operating margins.

Dan Binder, an analyst at Jefferies & Co., says Target can’t do much about declining retail traffic. “That’s not a Target issue. That’s a broader issue,” he says. “But I think we will start to see some improvement from them and other [retailers] in the fall. The consumer is going to have – I wouldn’t call it a recovery yet – but maybe a less tough time.”

Another positive trend, according to CEO Steinhafel, is that store credit card defaults showed “modestly improving risk trends.”

William Blair & Co. analyst Mark Miller noted on June 23 that Target’s account balances that are delinquent by 30 days or more (two or more late payments), stood at 8.33% of the company’s receivables in May versus 8.55% in April and nearly 9.0% at the end of 2008.

Bottom Line: Hold

Less bad doesn’t mean good, and real growth will come from increased sales, not holding the line on expenses and gradually decreasing defaults.

Once Again, Emulex Rejects Broadcom Bid

Investors cast a decidedly negative vote on the decision by Emulex‘s (ELX) board to reject a $11 a share buyout offer from Broadcom (BRCM). Shares of the network equipment maker slid 8% in midday trading on news of the $912 million deal’s implosion.

The Costa Mesa, Calif.-based maker of fiber channel networking equipment yet again rejected chip maker Broadcom’s all cash offer, which was valued at a 66% premium to Emulex’s shares in April, when the original takeover was proposed. In a statement, management said the board, “determined that the offer significantly undervalues Emulex’s long-term prospects, is inadequate, and is not in the best interests of Emulex and its stockholders.”

Broadcom President and CEO Scott McGregor said the time for talking was done. “We believe it is in the interest of each company’s stakeholders to complete a transaction expeditiously or to move on,” he said in a statement. Broadcom initially offered $9.25 a share in an unsolicited April takeover bid and then boosted its offer at the end of last month. Leaks to the press about the negotiations made it clear that they had become confrontational.

“This negotiation took a pretty nasty tone pretty much from the start,” Morningstar analyst Brian Colello says.

In a June 30 report, BMO Capital Markets analyst Keith Bachmann wrote that Broadcom made it fairly clear $11 was as far as it would go.

“The raising of the purchase offer is not surprising, but BRCM’s language around the terms of the offer is suggesting that BRCM will not move higher,” he wrote. “ELX’s response continues to make it very clear that it has no interest in this transaction, and management and the Board seem to share a common view.”

Colello says that while the meshing of Broadcom’s Ethernet chips and Emulex’s networking equipment made sense, there’s little chance this deal will get done.

Bottom Line: Sell

Emulex faces tough competition in a difficult environment, and investors should take whatever added speculative value remains in the aftermath of a busted deal.

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How 24 Fund Categories Fared in H1

The first half of 2009 has been a whirlwind of events: Unprecedented government efforts to rescue a financial system on the brink, skyrocketing unemployment, dismal corporate earnings and a housing market plagued by defaults and foreclosures. Oh, and then there was that whole $50 billion Ponzi scheme.

Yet, even as all those detrimental factors played out, in March, the market quietly started staging a comeback. According to Lipper, the average S&P 500 index fund gained 15.7% during the second quarter and has now increased 3% year to date. Meanwhile, the average domestic equity fund has climbed 6.5% over the last six months and the average world equity fund has jumped 14.7%. That still doesn’t make up for a dismal 2008, but the performance does seem to indicate that investors are putting some of the bad news in the rearview mirror and are once again comfortable investing in stocks.

“It was a wild six months to try to lump together,” says Stacey Schreft, director of investment strategy at The Mutual Fund Store, headquartered in Overland Park, Kan. “As dramatic as things fell they turned around.”

Adds Ron Rowland, president of Capital Cities Asset Management in Austin, Texas: “Year to date, it looks like nothing ever happened.”

This week, the SmartMoney.com fund screen takes a break from its normal routine to focus on overall fund performance during the first half of 2009. Instead of looking at individual funds with good track records in their respective categories and low fees, we simply list the six-month performance of 24 key fund groups tracked by Lipper. Consider it a first-half report card for your portfolio. We do this screen for an important reason: By staying aware of fund returns, investors can hopefully spot burgeoning trends.

Indeed, one of the emerging themes of the first half of 2009 was the thumping growth funds gave their value counterparts. As you can see from the table below, growth funds easily outpaced value funds up and down the market capitalization spectrum. That trend had been playing out before the market took a nosedive last year — at that point, value briefly trumped growth — but now the gap is widening and many market experts think it will continue to do so since growth stocks historically tend to lead the market out of its doldrums.

“I have been in favor of growth since the middle of ‘07” says Rowland, who hung onto his growth fund holdings even as investors fled to safety.

Now, there were some fund categories that didn’t do all that well. Financial services funds gained 27.4% during the second quarter after most big banks passed the government’s “stress tests” and were able to raise capital to repay federal loans. However, the category is still down 3.4% in 2009. Real estate funds dropped 9.5% the last six months and equity income offerings, the funds that focus on dividend-paying stocks, managed to eke out a mere 1.2% gain.

But at the same time there were also some eye-popping returns. Technology funds soared 24.6% thanks to some M&A deals and opportunistic buying after tech stocks got hammered in 2008. Investors also became more willing to take on risk after fleeing to safe havens last year. The average emerging markets fund gained 34.2%. Latin America offerings, a subset of emerging markets, increased 44.5%. That was the single biggest increase in the first half of any of the 68 equity categories tracked by Lipper.

Investors shouldn’t get overly excited about those rosy returns. “We clearly see people chasing returns,” says Schreft. And many market watchers think another event — rising unemployment, a failed bank, inflation — could cause the rally to quickly cool off. “I think it’s probably safe to say the complete meltdown and disruption of big financial institutions that was scaring everybody months ago is not going to happen,” says Rowland. “The worst case scenario is now off the table. However, the next worst case is still a possibility.”

Leaders of the Pack
Fund Category Year-to-Date Return (%)
Source: Lipper
Note: Data is for date range between Dec. 31, 2008 and June 30, 2009
Latin America 44.5
China Region 37.2
Pacific Ex Japan 34.6
Emerging Markets 34.2
Science & Technology 24.6
Basic Materials 22.9
Int’l Small/Mid Cap Growth 21.0
Gold 18.0
Pacific Region 16.0
Global Multicap Growth 15.7
Natural Resources 13.8
Midcap Growth 13.0
Consumer Services 11.9
Small-Cap Growth 11.4
Multicap Growth 11.2
Large-Cap Growth 10.9
Global Financial Services 10.6
Midcap Core 9.2
Midcap Value 7.8
Multicap Core 7.3
Small-Cap Core 6.3
Large-Cap Core 4.8
Small-Cap Value 4.7
S&P 500 Index 3.0

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5 Bargain Growth Stocks

Growth is scarce at the moment. The average of America’s 500 largest companies saw its sales shrink 8% in its last reported quarter. Yet investors seem willing to pay high prices for shares. The S&P 500 trades at 16 times forecast 2009 earnings (a projection which assumes earnings will rise 12% this year). How that compares with the long history of stocks, we can’t say, since consensus estimates and forward price/earnings ratios weren’t always available, but the index has for more than a century traded at an average of less than 15 times trailing earnings. Forward price/earnings ratios should be lower than trailing ones.

I recently searched this full-price market with mostly sliding sales for companies that are cheap and growing. Few turned up. I started with 1,500 stocks: those in the large-company S&P 500 index along with smaller companies in the MidCap 400 and SmallCap 600 indexes. After looking for 10% increases in both sales and earnings in companies’ most recent quarters — by no means torrid growth — I was left with barely 130 stocks. Just over 50 of these had forward P/Es below 15. From these, I selecting five with strong balance sheets, listed below.

Advance Auto Parts (AAP) is benefiting from the misery of car makers, who in June sold 28% fewer cars than a year ago. Poor sales of new cars means more repairs on older ones, and Advance Auto is seeing brisk customer traffic and strong demand from garages in its more than 3,000 retail shops. Sales at longstanding stores surged 8.2% in the company’s most recent quarter, with commercial sales at those stores up 17.5%. Free cash flow swelled 34%. The stock’s dividend is a pitiful 0.6%, with less than 10% of profits paid out to stockholders, but management has spent aggressively to pay down debt. If the pace holds, the company might owe nothing by year’s end. Shares sell for 14 times earnings.

Home-health-care agencies have scrawny stock valuations at the moment. Investors fear a government health-care overhaul might lead to slashed Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement for visiting nurses. Almost Family (AFAM), a small but prosperous agency, is growing its sales and profits by greater than 20% apiece and has more cash than debt, yet its shares fetch just eight times forecast 2009 earnings. According to analysis by Jefferies & Company, an investment bank, a worst-case scenario would trim the company’s profit to $1.81 per share by 2011, while a more likely path would lead to a profit of $2.51 a share. That works out to either 13 or nine times earnings — a fair deal or an excellent one.

For thoughts on the remaining companies in the table below, have a look at some other SmartMoney stories. James B. Stewart recently made a case for investing in Buckle (BKE), a Nebraska-based seller of hip (which is to say, $80) jeans. Sales are expected to grow 15% this year and the company is debt-free with $4 a share in cash. I mentionedITT Educational Services (ESI) last month in a screen for companies producing “organic” sales growth — that is, higher sales from operations, not acquisitions. Schools are finding plenty of new customers among the jobless, and government loan programs are providing the financing. Finally, The J.M. Smucker Company (SJM) is growing at a pace that’s almost indecent for a peanut butter and jam specialist. Sales are forecast to rise more than 20% this year. I’ll focus on Smuckers and some of its pantry kin later this week with a look at why stock investors might want to cash in recent gains in banks and tech in favor of consumer staples.

Screen Survivors
Company Ticker Industry Share
Price
Price
Change
YTD
(%)
Forward
P/E
Sales
Growth
Last
Quarter
(%)
Advance Auto Parts AAP Car Parts Stores $42.24 25.53 14.18 10.32
Almost Family AFAM Home Health care 23.46 -47.84 8.57 77.30
ITT Educational Services ESI Schools 95.00 0.02 13.24 22.65
Buckle BKE Clothing Stores 30.35 39.09 11.37 24.58
The J.M. Smucker Company SJM Packaged Food 48.21 11.19 12.92 81.11

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5 Promising Stocks From Your Pantry

Investors have returned to stocks in brave fashion. But while they’re placing pricey bets on struggling sectors, they may be ignoring some prosperous and cheap companies whose products fill their kitchen pantry.

Since the S&P 500 index closed at a humble 676 on March 9 it has rebounded 30%. Within the index, financials and “consumer discretionary” companies — the latter sell things we want but don’t need, like toys and restaurant meals — have soared 83% and 37%, respectively. Both sectors suffered steep earnings declines over the past year. Both now trade well above 20 times forecast 2009 earnings, vs. 16 times earnings for the index. Investors seem to be counting on a quick return to the borrowing and spending that powers profits for both sectors.

Packaged food makers seem a safer bet — and a cheaper one. While the average S&P 500 company saw its sales shrink 8% last quarter vs. a year earlier, the index’s pantry companies increased sales as consumers ate more meals at home. There’s no earnings rebound needed to justify food stock’s prices: They trade at a reasonable 14 times 2009 earnings and they offer hearty dividend yields. The average is 3.4%, about a percentage point more than the S&P 500 index provides.

Below are five S&P 500 food stocks that look especially promising.

J.M . Smucker (SJM), which makes its namesake jams, Pillsbury rolls and Hungry Jack pancake mix, bought Procter & Gamble’s (PG) Folgers coffee business last year. The purchase has fueled giant sales increases of late, but even without it, sales would have increased 3% in the company’s most recent quarter. Profits beat Wall Street’s expectations in every quarter of the company’s fiscal 2009 ended April 30.

ConAgra Foods (CAG) owns an eclectic mix of businesses including Chef Boyardee canned pasta, Orville Redenbacher’s popcorn and Slim Jim meat . . . things. The company recently sold its commodity trading unit. Adjusted for the change, sales and profits are growing nicely. The stock is the cheapest on the list at less than 12 times earnings and it comes with a 4.1% dividend yield.

H.J. Heinz (HNZ) sells plenty of ketchup to restaurants, so it’s not seeing quite the same benefit as other food companies from consumers eating at home. Also, some shoppers are trading down to store-brand ketchup. Sales in the company’s most recent quarter slid 6%. Management says it plans to trim costs and spend some of the savings on more marketing, while avoiding price cuts, in an effort to regain market share while keeping profits plump. If the plan works quickly, the stock price will surely benefit, and if it doesn’t investors still collect the biggest yield on the list: 4.7%.

Have a look if you like at details on these three and two more companies on the list below.

Screen Survivors
Company Ticker Share
Price
Sales Growth
Most Recent
Quarter (%)
2009
P/E
Dividend
Yield
(%)
Data as of July 7, 2009
Source: Thomson Reuters
H.J. Heinz HNZ $35.83 -5.60 13.4 4.7
McCormick & Company MKC 32.59 -0.89 14.1 2.9
General Mills GIS 59.89 3.87 14.0 3.1
Conagra Foods CAG 18.98 7.55 11.5 4.0
The J.M. Smucker Company SJM 48.23 81.11 13.0 2.9

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5 Stocks Priced for Disappointment

Ten days from now, Sioux City, Iowa, will reach a high of 83 degrees Fahrenheit. At least, that’s what I’m estimating. I’m not a trained meteorologist. But then, according to accuracy-tracker ForecastWatch, predictions for more than nine days out tend to be less reliable than simply assuming that date’s weather will match its 30-year average, as I’ve done for Sioux City.

Still, weather forecasters are vastly more reliable than Wall Street analysts when the latter are announcing price targets on stocks. I’m referring to when an analyst says a stock that’s trading at, say, $12 should hit $16 within a year. Mark Bradshaw and Lawrence Brown, professors at Harvard Business School and Georgia State University, respectively, studied the matter and reported in a 2006 paper that analysts “do not exhibit persistent differential abilities to forecast target prices.” That’s a bummer, since most recommendations we see on whether to buy or hold (or rarely, sell) are based on the difference between today’s price and the target price.

Julian Koski and Armen Arus, former analysts, say they can make Wall Street’s predictions more accurate. Financial forecasters should work backward, they believe.

Most of the price targets come from something called discounted cash flow (DCF) analysis. The idea is to predict how much cash a company will generate for investors in coming years, and then calculate how much investors ought to pay today for that string of future profits, based on factors like prevailing interest rates and risk. DCF is a centerpiece of business school curricula, perhaps because it’s math-y enough to seem worthy of the attention of bright minds. It’s not terribly reliable for most companies, though. The snag: The part where analysts predict cash flows years in advance, even though they have difficulty estimating next quarter’s earnings. No matter how much fine math you build atop a foundation of guessing, it’s still only a guess. If only more of the inputs could be known ahead of time.

Koski and Arus think analysts ignore the most important input of all: today’s price. Since we already know it, we can use the reverse of DCF analysis to calculate how much income companies will have to produce in coming years to make today’s price worthwhile. Then all we have to do is determine the probability of companies producing that income, based on their current trajectory. Koski and Arus call that the Required Business Performance (RBP) approach, and six years ago launched a firm called Transparent Value to market it.

Transparent Value assigns high RBP percentages to companies that look likely to do enough business in coming years to justify their prices and low RBP percentages to companies that seem priced for unrealistic expectations. Earlier this year, Dow Jones Indexes (on the corporate family tree, a third cousin twice removed to SmartMoney.com) launched indexes based on RBP. On Monday, Transparent Value filed a request with the Securities and Exchange Commission for permission to launch three mutual funds based on the indexes.

Evidence on RBP returns is theoretical for now, based on back-testing rather than real world performance. The numbers are promising, though.  Over 10 years ended 2008, the main RBP index returned an average 8.6% a year, while the S&P 500 index lost an average of 1.4%.

Since this column generally focuses on stocks to buy, and readers sometimes ask for ideas on ones to sell, I recently asked Transparent Value to send over a list of companies with low RBP probabilities — ones that seem priced for disappointment. It included title insurer First American (FAF), property and casualty insurer Progressive (PGR), pharmacy plan manager Express Scripts (ESRX), for-profit school Career Education (CECO) and Darden Restaurants (DRI), owner of Olive Garden and Red Lobster. Find details on each on the table below.

Screen Survivors
Company Ticker Industry Share
Price
RBP
Probability
Data as of July 8, 2009
Source: Thomson Reuters, Transparent Value
First American FAF Title Insurance $25.55 0.39%
Progressive PGR Property & Casualty Insurance 14.37 0.01%
Express Scripts ESRX Pharmacy Benefits Management 66.66 4.71%
Career Education CECO Education 21.49 4.47%
Darden Restaurants DRI Restaurants 32.36 4.02%

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Earnings Season Start Offers Little Direction

News at a Glance

  • Major Indexes: Stocks stay mixed after weak retail numbers.
  • Earnings Season: Alcoa results do little to move market.
  • Oil Roils: Futures circle $60 mark.
  • Carbon Impasse: No agreement from G-8 leaders.

The Lowdown

Weak retail sales and a tired start to earnings season kept major stock indexes flat in midday trading.

Stocks rose slightly Thursday, after Alcoa (AA) posted a lower than expected loss. As of 12:10 P.M., the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 4 to 8182, while the Nasdaq rose 10 to 1757 and the S&P 500 was up 4 at 884.

Earnings season got underway after the bell Wednesday when Alcoa surprised traders and analysts. Excluding one-time items, the aluminum giant lost 26 cents a share during the second quarter, compared to a gain of 66 cents a share in the same period a year ago. Analysts had expected a loss of 38 cents a share. As the first Dow component to report, Alcoa is traditionally seen as an economic bellwether and an indicator for second-quarter releases to come.

Retailers reported same-store sales for June, and the results were disappointing but unsurprising, with most reporting sdeclines from a year ago. From Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF) to Zumiez (ZUMZ), sales hit double-digit drops. Wal-Mart (WMT) stopped offering monthly sales figures, leaving Target (TGT) as the largest retailer to report. It posted a 6.2% same-store sales drop.

Oil prices wavered after data released by the Energy Department Wednesday suggested weak demand. By 12:15 p.m. crude futures traded on the Nymex dropped 30 cents to $59.84 a barrel.

Corporate News

  • Alcoa (AA) posted its third consecutive quarterly loss. Excluding special items, the aluminum maker lost 26 cents a share in the second quarter, compared to a gain of 66 cents a share during the same period a year ago. Analysts had expected a loss of 38 cents a share.
  • AIG (AIG) has restarted talks to sell its American Life Insurance unit to MetLife (MET), a deal which could help the insurer raise more than $15 billion, the Financial Times reported Thursday. Talks between the two companies fell apart earlier this year because of a disagreement about the sale price.
  • Costco (COST) reported that June same-store sales fell 6% as customers held off on pricier items like cameras and cell phones. The warehouse retailer saw sales slip 6% in the U.S. and 3% internationally. The declines were in line with analysts’ expectations.

The Economy

  • The initial jobless claims for the week ending July 4 were 565,000,  down from the revised 617,000 for the previous week, the Labor Department said Thursday. Forecasters expected the number of first-time filings for state unemployment benefits to come in at 603,000.  REPORT
  • The Commerce Department reported better than expected figures on wholesale inventories for May, which declined 0.8%, less than the 1.0% estimated decline. They declined 1.4% in the previous month. REPORT

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Jobs Number Indicates a Slow Recovery Ahead

Last week’s disappointing unemployment report made one thing perfectly clear: Any glimmers of hope that the economy is going to recover soon will have to remain mere glimmers for now. Even our most optimistic pundits don’t expect robust improvements in employment or the economy anytime soon.

Employers cut 467,000 jobs in June, a steep increase from 345,000 jobs in May, according to the Labor Department’s report on Thursday. That boosted the June unemployment rate to 9.5% from 9.4% the previous month. A small silver lining: Unemployment was expected to hit 9.6% for the month. But to market experts, that’s little consolation.

“The patient is improving, but remains on massive life support,” says Morgan Keegan economist Donald Ratajczak. “How anyone can say the recovery has begun when job losses per month remain higher than the highest monthly job losses in each of the two previous recessions is beyond me,” he wrote in a June 29 research report.

Economic Policy Institute economist Heidi Shierholz put it more starkly: “This is the only recession since the Great Depression to wipe out all jobs growth from the previous business cycle, a devastating benchmark for the workers of this country and a testament to both the enormity of the current crisis and to the extreme weakness of jobs growth from 2000-07,” she wrote in a report Thursday.

Normally bullish economist Ed Yardeni, founder of Yardeni Research, said that even though global consumption could well pick up, the U.S. is heading toward a jobless recovery. “It’s really hard to see any sector where the prospects for employment aren’t either grim or dim,” he wrote June 29. “I certainly can’t make a compelling argument for positive employment surprises in manufacturing, construction, retailing, and finance. Even government isn’t likely to be the employer of last resort given the sorry state of state and local finances.”

However, many pundits believe that the worst of the worst is past. Stuart Hoffman, chief economist at PNC, said the recent barrage of economic indicators and data “paint a picture of a gradually healing economy that is in the loosening grip of a major recession.” In his July 1 report, he pointed to a pickup in manufacturing last month, the sixth consecutive boost to the ISM Manufacturing Index.

Those positive gains in manufacturing bode well, but it may take a while for it to have a real impact on the economy, says Barry Knapp, head of U.S. equity portfolio strategy at Barclays Capital. “The sector likely to show the most momentum, manufacturing, is in a lull between the end of inventory liquidation and the production ramp-up,” he wrote in a June 29 note. “So, while we continue to believe the recession ended in May, we may have to wait until later in 3Q09 before the macro indicators begin providing positive surprises once again, thereby driving stock prices higher.”

Real quarterly profit growth remains a critical indicator. But the highly anticipated second quarter earnings reports, which kick off when Alcoa (AA) reports on Wednesday, won’t provide much clarity, says Doug Roberts, chief investment strategist at Channel Capital Research. The absence of fundamental growth and easy year-to-year comparisons to the woeful figures from last year will likely make the coming crop of earnings a less reliable way to diagnose a recovery, he says in his July Market Commentary.

“Understand that this is no ordinary bear market,” says Roberts. “I continue to recommend being prepared for the worst with the possibility of being pleasantly surprised. It is far better than the reverse scenario.”

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Roller-Coaster Day Ends on a Flat Note

Market Wrap-Up

Wall Street embarked on a wild ride Monday, after stocks opened sharply lower and traders braced for what’s predicted to be another weak earnings season. An afternoon rebound faded near the end of the session, then perked up again after 3 p.m. for a low-volume, seesaw day. Yet despite the early morning plunge, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed 44 points higher at 8325. The Nasdaq dropped 9 points to close at 1787, and the S&P 500 gained 2 to close at 899.

Crude dipped below $64 a barrel amid concerns that the global recession won’t end anytime soon. And energy prices across the board declined, with natural gas ebbing 10 cents to $3.51 per cubic foot. Smaller exploration and production companies such as Anadarko Petroleum (APC) and Devon Energy (DVN) also took hits.

for the full rundown of Monday’s trading session see our market story.

Winners

A positive preannouncement from electronics giant Samsung boosted the iShares MSCI South Korea Index (EWY) fund by 3.6%. The Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR fund (XLP) held out against the broader slide and rose 1.9% after a strong showing from major holding Colgate Palmolive (CP).

Losers

The SPDR S&P Metals & Mining fund (XME) took a 5.3% hit as energy and mining names like Massey Energy (MEE) and Cliffs Natural Resources (CLF) took big hits. The Market Vectors Gold Miners (GDX) slipped 5.3% as gold closed below $923.

Monday’s Industry Headlines

Launching Pad

It used to be independent, and now it may get its own exchange-traded fund. Oklahoma City-based TXF Funds Inc. filed a request with the Securities and Exchange Commission to allow it to launch an ETF focused on the largest public companies in Texas. The TXF Large Companies ETF would track the SPADE Texas Large Companies Index. The fund would carry annual expenses of 0.85%. Another SPADE index for Oklahoma would be a tracking benchmark for a proposed Oklahoma ETF, with a tentative ticker of OOK. That fund is still in the planning stage.

Tuesday’s Notebook

Earnings and Conference Calls

A. Schulman, Aeon, Greenbrier, International Speedway, Ruby Tuesday

Economic Data

7:45 a.m. ICSC Chain Store Sales Index for July 4
8:55 a.m. Redbook Retail Sales Index for July 4
5:00 p.m. ABC/Wash Post Consumer Conf for July 4

A look at how the industry’s most popular ETFs did on Monday:

10 Largest ETFs
Symbol Net Assets Price 52 Week High 52 Week Low Volume
SPY 63,692 89.8 130.7 68.13 170,281,073
EFA 30,201 45.29 67.84 32.16 17,299,109
EEM 30,793 31.85 43.75 19.12 52,110,244
GLD NA 90.76 97.24 70.14 6,281,740
IVV 17,692 90.1 130.92 68.24 5,611,044
QQQQ 13,357 35.41 48.32 25.51 106,207,740
IWF 9,442 40.1 55.45 30.49 3,406,876
SHY 7,059 83.8 85 82.52 474,353
VTI 10,157 45.15 65.56 33.75 1,876,054
IWD 7,122 45.82 70.64 34.22 2,890,994

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