Category Valuations

Apple: Ready to Take Another Bite?

Apple is ~15% off its all time high as it lags its large cap peers. Concerns of iPhone growth and China have rattled investors. However, it's not unusual for this stock to pull back. Since 2107, we have seen 11 retraces - offering patient investors buying opportunity. From my lens, Apple is a reasonable long-term buy around $165. And if you can get it cheaper - add to it. Over the next 3 years - I think it will be well over $200 as earnings top $8.00 per share.

Three Cheers for 5,000!

This week the S&P 500 closed above 5,000 for the first time. Another milestone as we climb the 'wall of worry'. Over the past 100+ years the S&P 500 has averaged capital gains of ~8.5% per year plus dividends of ~2.0%. That's a total return of close to 10.5% (on average). If you compound 10.5% per year over 20 years (i.e., 'CAGR') - that's a 637% increase. But as we know, the pathway is rarely smooth. Some years the market may "add 20%" and others it could give back a similar margin (or worse). And we saw this happen recently. However over the long run - markets will rise more often than they fall.

2023 – The Year in Review

2023 has come to a close... and what a year it was. For many, it will go down as one of the more challenging. For others, they will have banked some very attractive gains. In short, the S&P 500 recovered from its worst year in over a decade - finishing the year 24.2% higher. As for myself, my portfolio returned 19.63%. I made some errors this year (which I will discuss) but also had a couple of wins. Net-net - it was a solid year given the unchartered waters we were navigating.

People Choose What They Want to Hear

Markets continue their ascent after a blistering November. The Dow and S&P 500 each gained ~9% for the month - in what is typically a seasonally strong time of year. From a year-to-date perspective, the Dow is up 8.5%, the S&P 500 is up ~19% and the Nasdaq up over 35%. The anomaly? 493 of the 500 stocks on the S&P 500 are barely positive for the year (i.e., the equal weighted index). So what's driving the optimism? Simple: the expectation of lower yields and the Fed hitting its terminal rate. This post looks at potential blind spots for the market.

Not Just Equities Trading ‘Per the Script’

A little over 2 months ago - I described the market as "euphoric". For example, valuations were in excess of 20x forward earnings - despite what we saw in bond markets. Something was horribly wrong. My simple advice was do not add to positions at those levels. The downside risks were just too high. My thesis was whilst stocks could easily rally to ~4500 -- any further meaningful upside felt 'limited' . Turns out we didn't go too much higher. Now stocks could easily catch a bid in the 4200 zone - that's what I expect. However, the risk/reward still doesn't look that favourable...

The Battle-lines are Drawn

Here's today's question: do you think 18.3x forward earnings is a good risk/reward bet? For me, the answer is no. And I say this because investors have a very compelling alternative. We don't need to look any further than bond yields. For example, the 12-month US treasury yield offers investors 5.45%

Stocks Treading Water for a Good Reason

Stocks cannot get out of neutral. If anything, they appear to be going into reverse. Makes sense... they ripped~ 30% higher in 9 short months. But the risks are increasing as prices rise. This post looks at "equity risk premium". In short, investors are not being adequately compensated for the risk being taken in stocks (at current valuations) against the risk free return from Treasuries.

Buffett is Buying Bonds

Warren Buffett is pouring tens of billions of Berkshire money into short and longer-term bonds. And I'm not surprised... For e.g., Jul 9th I offered this post "Think About Adding Bonds". Shorter-term bills were offering investors ~5.50% and the longer-date 10-year bond above 4.0%. That's attractive for a number of reasons... this post explains why.

Apple: An Incredible Business – But Don’t Overpay

This week the final two mega-cap tech names reported Q2 earnings. Amazon handily exceeded what were very low expectations. AWS (Cloud) sales rose 12% year over year - much better than feared - given the soft results reported from Microsoft's Azure. This sent the Cloud and eCommerce giant higher by ~11% . On the other hand, investors had a very different reaction to Apple's earnings. The iPhone maker's results were mostly inline. But "inline" is not good enough when it's trading ~30x to 31x forward earnings. So what is the right multiple to pay for Apple? And can it reignite growth looking ahead?

Half Way Through Earnings: 81% Beat on EPS

This week was the busiest week of earnings on the calendar. Half of all S&P 500 companies have now reported for Q2. So far so good! 81% of companies have beaten earnings per share (EPS) expectations - by an average of about 6.4%. By way of comparison - prior to COVID - the average EPS beat was in the realm of ~3%. What's more, about 64% of all companies have also beaten top line expectations. The question is will this continue in the second half?