Showing posts with label Good quality stocks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Good quality stocks. Show all posts

Friday 19 March 2010

Searching for good quality stocks in the Consumer Sector

Let us have a look at some consumer stocks.  I have selected these stocks based on their doubling in their earnings over the 10 year period of 1999 to 2009.

Here are these stocks:

Ajinomoto
BAT
Bonia
DLady
F&N
Mamee
Nestle
Padini
PPB
QL
UMW

Subjecting the above to a further screening criteria (that is, no decline of >5% in earnings in 2 out of these 10 years), the following stocks are discarded from this list:

Ajinomoto
Mamee
UMW

Also, BAT is also discarded as the earnings growth the last 5 years had been negligible or anaemic at best.

This leaves the following stocks, with history of durable competitive advantage, in this list for further analysis.

Ajinomoto
BAT
Bonia
DLady
F&N
Mamee
Nestle
Padini
PPB
QL
UMW
Which 1 or 2 of the above stocks would you wish to own for the long term?

Time for QVM analysis when time permits..




Wednesday 17 March 2010

Some thoughts on Analysing Stocks (Keep It Simple and Safe).



Ideally a stock you plan to purchase should have all of the following charateristics:

• A rising trend of earningsdividends and book value per share.

• A balance sheet with less debt than other companies in its particular industry.

• A P/E ratio no higher than average.

• A dividend yield that suits your particular needs.

• A below-average dividend pay-out ratio.

• A history of earnings and dividends not pockmarked by erratic ups and downs.

• Companies whose ROE is 15 or better.

• A ratio of price to cash flow (P/CF) that is not too high when compared to other stocks in the same industry.

Friday 12 March 2010

But how do you know if a stock is "quality"?

Go for dividends.

It's a no-brainer that quality matters in a market like this. But how do you know if a stock is "quality"?



Dividends are one indicator. That's because dividend income--which is essentially a portion of company profits paid out to shareholders--helps offset fluctuations in a stock's share price, creating a cushion during turbulent markets. 


"During trying times, dividend-paying stocks tend to do well," says Paul Alan Davis, portfolio manager of the Schwab Dividend Equity Fund. Davis also looks for companies on solid footing, which have plenty of cash and aren't in "financial straits."  During the first 11 months of year, Davis says, the S&P's dividend-paying stocks fell by roughly 36 percent; meanwhile, nondividend payers were down about 45 percent. 


You'll find those dividend payers in more developed industries such as consumer staples, utilities, and healthcare. Examples include Philip Morris, Coca-Cola, General Mills, Bristol-Myers Squibb, and Pfizer.

Thursday 25 February 2010

Quality is king

Quality is king, says Oak Value's Coats

While last year's recovery lifted low-quality stocks, this year's market will reward companies with strong balance sheets

By Jeff Benjamin
February 24, 2010

Stock picking in the current market requires a renewed focus on corporate economics and balance sheets, said Larry Coats, manager of the Oak Value Fund (OAKVX).

“After a low-quality recovery last year, now quality matters, and it's time for serious stock selection,” he said.

Mr. Coats has been part of the fund's management team since it was launched in 1993 by Oak Value Capital Management Inc.

As a portfolio manager, he describes himself as an “opportunistic buyer of advantaged businesses.” The strategy goes beyond the “implicit biases” of a traditional value investing approach, he said.

“By concentrating on price-to-earnings and price-to-book ratios, money managers are spending all their time looking at the cheapest stocks, but they're missing some valuable opportunities,” he said. “When we look at all the companies in the S&P 500, we start by looking at the businesses themselves, not the valuations.”

The highly concentrated portfolio of just 27 names has an average operating profit margin of 25%, which is about 10 percentage points higher than the S&P 500.

The fund's 30% average return on equity is almost double that of the index.

Mr. Coats said by focusing on a company's balance sheet, he has been able to build a portfolio of truly profitable businesses that aren't hampered by excess leverage.

The fund, which has a four-star rating from Morningstar Inc. and has $76 million in assets, is categorized as large-cap blend.

Mr. Coats admitted that the strategy could fit into a few different boxes.

“Some people would argue that what we’re doing is [growth at a reasonable price], but in our mind, it’s value with a quality bias, or growth with a pricing discipline” he said. “Our discipline is blend, and our portfolio is built with a growth bent.”

The strategy got high marks from Morningstar analyst Greg Wolper for the way it beat its benchmark during both the 2008 market decline and the rebound last year. The fund gained 33% last year, while the S&P 500 returned 26%. And during the meltdown of 2008, the fund lost 33%, while the index fell by 38%.

The average annual turnover of around 37% is reflective of a strategy that is based on an extremely deliberate research process. “We identify the best companies from the index, follow them, research them and then wait for the right time to buy them,” Mr. Coats said.

One stock added to the portfolio late last year is Intuit Inc. (INTU), a company best known for its TurboTax software. But Mr. Coats said the stock price was pushed down by investor concerns that an economic slowdown would hurt Intuit's broader software sales to smaller businesses.

“The stock got cheap because people were concerned about a slowdown in new business starts,” he said.

Through Tuesday's market close, Intuit shares were up 3.7% this year, which compares with a 1.8% decline by the S&P 500 over the same period.

Portfolio Manager Perspectives are regular interviews with some of the most respected and influential fund managers in the investment industry. For more information, please visit InvestmentNews.com/pmperspectives .

Tuesday 9 February 2010

Good time to get higher quality stocks at reasonable prices.

When it comes to buying value stock picks there are some things to be aware of. Now is the time to take advantage of getting higher quality stocks at reasonable prices.


http://www.howmuchyouwill.com/stocks-picks-in-value-stocks

Friday 13 November 2009

''We don't buy the cheapest stocks or the fastest-growing businesses. We buy the highest-quality companies.''

INVESTING WITH/Robert A. Schwarzkopf And Sandi L. Gleason; Kayne Anderson Rudnick Small-Mid Cap Fund
By CAROLE GOULD
Published: Sunday, June 17, 2001


AMERICA'S biggest blue-chip companies were once small businesses -- the kind that Robert A. Schwarzkopf and Sandi L. Gleason want for their $69.2 million Kayne Anderson Rudnick Small-Mid Cap fund.

''In an industry where most people classify themselves as growth or value investors, we decided to take another road,'' Mr. Schwarzkopf said from their offices in Century City in Los Angeles. ''We don't buy the cheapest stocks or the fastest-growing businesses. We buy the highest-quality companies in America.''

The companies' returns have been substantial. The fund rose 30.4 percent in the 12 months ended Thursday, compared with a 15.4 percent loss for the small-cap growth group and a 16.1 percent loss for the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index. For the three years ended Thursday, the fund gained 14.8 percent a year, on average, versus 10.4 percent for its group and 4.9 percent for the S.& P.

Mr. Schwarzkopf, 52, and Ms. Gleason, 36, also manage $2 billion for institutions and individuals for Kayne Anderson Rudnick Investment Management, the fund's adviser.

To find businesses with sustainable competitive advantages, the managers screen 8,000 United States companies for consistent earnings and revenue growth. They look for growth rates that have exceeded the industry average over 10 years.

The portfolio companies have a weighted average market capitalization of $2 billion, comparable to that of the benchmark Russell 2500 index.

The analysts look for rising free cash flow and low debt levels. ''Companies that have lots of cash and little debt are less financially risky,'' Mr. Schwarzkopf said, ''and they can take advantage of opportunities during difficult times, when other companies are struggling.''

The managers trim the pool to 250 companies by eliminating those whose management does not seem focused on building shareholder value, and those that do not dominate their markets. Further research helps them choose the 25 to 35 stocks in the fund. ''We want to find the best businesses, understand what makes them great so we can assess how long they will stay great companies, and determine how much we should pay for them,'' Mr. Schwarzkopf said.

The managers work with sector analysts and visit the companies. ''We want to understand how a company differentiates itself from competition,'' Ms. Gleason said, ''how it creates value for customers, and how it does that in a way that excludes competition.''

To reduce risk, they aim for a diversified portfolio that roughly replicates the Russell 2500 index.

They call their strategy ''quality at a reasonable price.'' The managers prefer companies with above-average return on equity and profit margins, but with below-average valuations based on price-to-sales and price-to-book ratios. Those correlations ''give you a good sense of how your company is valued relative to its industry,'' Ms. Gleason said.

They also review ranges of price-to-earnings multiples over 5 or 10 years. ''You get a P/E band range around which the stock trades,'' Ms. Gleason said. ''You can apply the high and low multiple to target earnings for each of five years to get a target price.''

They trim positions in stocks that reach their target price, and companies whose market capitalization grows too large or that cannot sustain their target growth rates.

IN March, the managers bought shares of the Black Box Corporation of Lawrence, Pa., at $43.42. Black Box, a global marketer of cable, networking and other communications equipment, has carved out a market niche by basing its selling primarily on service, not price, Mr. Schwarzkopf said. It offers technical service 365 days a year in 132 countries. In its last fiscal year, 99.2 percent of calls were answered within 20 seconds, according to the company.

The strategy has let Black Box generate double-digit net profit margins, he said, adding that it avoids economic cycles because it concentrates on the aftermarket, not infrastructure building. He expects 20 percent annual growth in earnings over the next three years.

On Friday, the stock closed at $62.94, compared with their 12-month target price of $75.

Another favorite is the Catalina Marketing Corporation of St. Petersburg, Fla., a leader in customized electronic coupons generated at checkout counters. The company's systems are used in about 15,000 supermarkets, she added, and it has annual and multiyear contracts with major consumer goods companies. It is also expanding into health care advertising linked to drug purchases. She expects earnings per share to grow 22 percent in each of the next three years.

The fund bought shares in March 2000 at a split-adjusted price of $30.14; they now trade at $31.68, compared with the managers' price target of $49.

The managers also like C. H. Robinson Worldwide, a transportation company based in Eden Prairie, Minn. The company dominates a domestic market, Mr. Schwarzkopf said, by using its data processing systems to match small local trucking companies with the needs of large packaged-goods companies.

''They serve as a marketing and information technology department for thousands of small truckers,'' he said.

Unlike most companies in the transportation industry, he added, it carries no debt on its balance sheet. And because it specializes in the food industry, he said, the company can continue growing during bad economic times. He projects annual earnings growth of 20 percent over the next three years.

The managers first bought shares in January 2000 at a split-adjusted price of $19.70. The stock closed at $28.26 on Friday; their price target is $34 within 12 months.

Photo: For their fund, Sandi L. Gleason and Robert A. Schwarzkopf buy small stocks that he calls ''the highest-quality companies in America.'' (Kim Kulish/Saba, for The New York Times) Chart: ''Kayne Anderson Rudnick Small-Mid Cap'' Category: Small growth Net assets: $69 million Inception: October 1996 Managers: Robert A. Schwarzkopf and Sandi L. Gleason Minimum purchase: $2,000 ($1,000 I.R.A.) Portfolio turnover: 50% 3-year annualized return through Thursday: 14.8% Category average: 10.4% SECTOR BREAKDOWN Financial services: 11% Other: 57% Banks: 10% Computers: 9% Medical information systems: 7% Drugs/hospital supplies: 6% FEES Front-end load: None Deferred load: None 12b-1 fee: None Expense ratio: 1.29% (Sources: Morningstar Inc.; company reports)

http://www.nytimes.com/2001/06/17/business/investing-with-robert-schwarzkopf-sandi-l-gleason-kayne-anderson-rudnick-small.html

Tuesday 20 October 2009

Carefully examine the possible alternatives when you invest

Buy Quality Stocks, Sell Treasuries, Says Mauboussin
Author of Think Twice offers advice on investors and investments.

By Russel Kinnel | 10-19-09 | 06:00 AM |

Michael Mauboussin thinks about where you should invest and how you should invest. As chief investment strategist at Legg Mason Capital Management, Mauboussin focuses on the economy, markets, and investor behavior. Mauboussin is also an adjunct professor at Columbia.

About the Author
Russel Kinnel is Morningstar's director of mutual fund research. He is also the editor of Morningstar FundInvestor, a monthly newsletter dedicated to helping investors pick great mutual funds, build winning portfolios, and monitor their funds for greater gains. Kinnel would like to hear from readers, but no financial-planning questions, please. Contact Author | Meet other investing specialists

His new book, Think Twice, examines why investors make mistakes if they leap to judgment and how they can correct that by carefully examining the possible alternatives and learning from their mistakes. I asked him about where the economy and markets are headed as well as lessons we can learn about how we make decisions. Check out his outlook for inflation, U.S. equities, and Treasuries as well as his advice on how we can all make better investors.


Q. It seems like a company's debt level has been all that mattered the past two years. Have the markets corrected for that enough that they'll be moving on to something else and if so what will that be?


A. If you take a step back, stock prices have two basic drivers: future cash flows and a discount rate that brings future values to the present. If you look back on 2007, we had good levels of cash flow--corporate America was near peaks in historical operating profit margin and return on invested capital--and the perceived levels of risk were very low.


All of that changed in 2008. First, the perception of risk skyrocketed, especially after the failure of Lehman Brothers in September. As a rough proxy for perceived risk in the equity market you can look at the VIX (more formally, the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index), which measures the implied volatility of S&P 500 Index options. Realized volatility in the past 80 or so years had been roughly 20 percent, but the VIX shot into the 80s. When the perception of risk rises, stock prices go down.


The second shoe to drop was earnings. Also in the fourth quarter of 2008, earnings estimates dropped rapidly. The one-two combination of lower anticipated cash flows and higher risk punished the market--probably to an excessive degree. When investors fear risk, of course, credit spreads--a measure of the interest rate companies have to pay to borrow--also rise and that makes people worry about companies with debt going bankrupt.


Since the March lows, we've seen some retrenchment of the concerns about cash flow and risk. As perceived risk levels drifted back toward more normal levels--the VIX today is in the low 20s--the riskier assets performed very well--the so-called "junk trade." The market got a second lift in the summer on the heels of second-quarter earnings, which on balance came in better than what was expected. Most of the positive surprise came as the result of cost cutting. Companies have aggressively managed their cost structures--which has left the residual of a sluggish labor market--and have been super diligent with working capital as well. But earnings through cost savings cannot go on forever.


If the markets are to continue to generate attractive returns, we will need to see good old-fashioned sales growth. In my opinion, the evidence is clearly pointing to a recovery, but naturally the data will show fits and starts.


Q. Investors have been buying up huge sums of bond funds and with it inflation risk. All of the different inflation hedges have their own flaws and strengths, so what's the best way to hedge some of that inflation risk?


A. My sense is that at least some of the appetite for bond funds represents less a love of bonds than a distaste for stocks. The poor 10-year results for the stock market have left a lot of equity investors with a bad taste in their mouths--even though history suggests that poor past market returns are a decent predictor of future returns (and vice versa).


Inflation does not appear to be an imminent threat--there is too much slack in the labor market and unused capacity. But how the government's stimulative steps, which were necessary in my view, ultimately influence inflation is anyone's guess. While I don't think it's a worry for the short-to-intermediate term, I would keep it on the radar screen.


So if you are worried about inflation risk, how might you play that in the stock market? The goal would be to find companies that have sustainable competitive advantages--moats around their businesses--that will allow them to increase the price of their good or service at a rate consistent with inflation. So a portfolio of high-quality stocks with this attribute, purchased at attractive prices, is a very sensible way to address this concern.


Q. Should investors do anything about the declining dollar in their portfolios?


A. While it's important to be mindful of the role of a declining--or rising--dollar in evaluating a company, I'm not sure investors should do anything specific about it. If you are convinced the dollar is going lower, you should short the dollar. But forecasting currencies is not an easy game to play, and I know that I have zero edge there. On a company by company basis, it makes some sense to consider various scenarios for the dollar, assess the probability of those scenarios, and judge what those scenarios imply about value.


Probably the best way to manage currency exposure is to have a properly diversified global portfolio. While I'm optimistic about the future of the United States, I'm also a subscriber to what Fareed Zakaria calls the "rise of the rest." In other words, the U.S. should continue to do well but other parts of the globe may do relatively better. So long-term investors should have exposure to various markets around the globe.


Q. Where are the greatest opportunities in investing today?

A. One area that looks interesting in the U.S. market is quality companies. These are businesses that have high returns on invested capital, decent pricing power, good economic moats around their businesses, solid balance sheets, and good operating histories. These companies tended to trade at generous valuations in the late 1990s and have spent most of the 2000s treading water. Even considering the current recession, these businesses have grown sales and profits while sustaining good economic returns.


You can go down the list of the S&P 50 (50 largest by market cap in S&P 500) and find a number of these companies. And if they do well, it'll be harder for active managers to beat the market because the S&P 500 is a market-capitalization-weighted index and many money managers are underexposed to these kinds of businesses.

Q. What are the least attractive areas today?

A. A natural consequence of the high level of risk aversion has been a large move in U.S. Treasury securities. When you look at the 10-year note with a 3.4 percent yield, it's a reasonable case that equity markets will deliver much higher returns in the next decade--even adjusted for risk. So what may appear to be among the least risky assets may be among the riskiest, at least if you take opportunity cost into consideration.

Q. Your new book, Think Twice, suggests that we can avoid many mistakes by reviewing our gut reaction. How can we effectively review a decision so that we make the right call?

A. The main theme of the book is that in certain situations, your mind is going to want to go down one path to a solution when there is a better path. This is not true in all situations. In the book, I identify eight areas where this can occur. So you want to prepare for these decisions by learning about possible mistakes, recognize the mistakes in context, and apply tools to mitigate them.

I also offer some specific advice at the end of the book. Let me share a couple of those ideas. The first is to keep a decision-making journal. When you make a decision, write down what you decided, what you expect to happen, and why. If you're so inclined, you might even take note of how you feel physically and emotionally.

The journal allows you to periodically audit your decisions--effectively giving yourself feedback. It can also help you sidestep hindsight bias, the tendency to think you knew more in the past than you actually did. You can also see instances when you were right for the wrong decisions. Dealing honestly with those decisions is hard work.

Q. What's a common mistake that a fund investor might avoid by properly reviewing a decision?

A. One common mistake is a reliance on the inside view versus using the outside view. With the inside view, you try to solve a problem by gathering information, and using that unique set of input to decide. It's the natural way we do things in any planning task. The outside view, by contrast, looks at a problem as part of a larger reference class. It basically allows you to ask the question: When someone else was in this position, what happened?

A reliance on the inside view generally leads to forecasts that are too optimistic. If you've ever done a renovation to your house you know the feeling: Renovations always seem to come in above budget and behind plan. The outside view provides a better, and more grounded, assessment.

So, for instance, investors can use the outside view when working on their models. We have lots of data about corporate growth rates and return on invested capital patterns. An investor can check their assumptions against the larger reference to see if they make sense.

Q. It sounds like this is a rebuttal to Malcolm Gladwell's Blink, which argues our instant reaction is usually on the money. What did he miss?

A. I believe in the role of intuition in decision making, but I certainly don't glorify it. By and large, I believe that people rely more on their intuition than they should.

Here's how I think about it. Psychologists often distinguish between two mental systems, creatively called System 1 and System 2. System 1 is fast, automatic, and hard to train. When you jump at the sight of a snake, you have System 1 to thank. System 2 is slow, requires input, and can be trained. It's your analytical mind. If you do something repeatedly, some aspects of System 2 thinking slip into System 1. Consider the first time you drove a car; you had to think about each action very deliberately. But after time and experience, you internalized many of the tasks, and driving migrated mostly from System 2 to System 1.

Intuition works when you have a System 1 that is well trained. Think of a chess master, or a finely trained soldier. But note that for System 1 to work effectively, you need to deal with situations that are linear and consistent. If you're dealing with decisions in a realm where the outcomes are nonlinear or the statistical properties change over time, intuition will fail because your System 1 doesn't know what's going on.

Increasingly, professionals are forced to confront decisions related to complex systems, which are by their very nature nonlinear and have changing statistical properties. This definitely applies to investing and business. So you have to be very careful if you rely on intuition.


http://news.morningstar.com/articlenet/article.aspx?id=311863

Sunday 18 October 2009

Sit on Your Assets, if You Can

While most investors associate Buffett and Munger with finding good stocks cheap, Munger points out that quality can trump price.

"If you buy something because it's undervalued, you have to think about selling it when it approaches your calculation of its intrinsic value," he says. "That's hard. But if you buy a few great companies, then you can sit on your ass. That's a good thing."

Wednesday 6 August 2008

My strategies for buying and selling (KISS version)

Strategies for buying and selling.

For buying (ABC):

A.  Assess Quality, Management and Valuation (QMV)

B.  Buy good quality stocks.

C.  Buy these stocks at a discount (Margin of Safety)

(If you select your stocks carefully, often one can hold them for long periods. The idea is to allow compounding over the long period to work in your favour.)


For selling (1,2,3,4):

1. If you need cash for emergency. (But then, hopefully, you will have separate money for such emergencies. The cash invested into the market should be separate.)

2. You will need to sell URGENTLY (QUICKLY) if there is something wrong with the fundamental of your stock (example: fraudulent accounting, etc). At other instances, you do have the time to SELL at leisure.

3. Your stock has gone up too high. By your assessment, at that price the upside return is less, but the downside risk is more, then you may wish to sell to REINVEST INTO ANOTHER STOCK WITH MORE FAVOURABLE UPSIDE REWARD/DOWNSIDE RISK RATIO.

4. On occasions, you have identified a very good BARGAIN, you may wish to sell some of your stocks to REINVEST into these stocks to capture a higher upside/downside reward risk ratio that these stocks offer.

Defensive Portfolio Management = 2.
This is to prevent harm to the portfolio.
Urgent attention needed.

Offensive Portfolio Management = 3 & 4.
This is to optimise returns of the portfolio.
Have the time to sell at leisure.


BB
"Investing should be fun and not a game."


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QMV
Quality = Points 1 to 6
Management = Point 7
Valuation = Point 8

Nine Steps to Value Investing




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Additional Related Notes:

Why do you Sell and When?

Reducing serious loss

When the fundamentals of a stock have deteriorated, sell to protect your portfolio. This decision should be make quickly based on the facts and situations, in order to keep your losses small.


Taking profit

Profit should be realised from sales of stocks in the following situations:
(I) when the stock is obviously overpriced, or
(II) when the sale of the stock frees the capital to be reinvested into another stock with potentially better return.

Not taking profit in the above situations can harm your portfolio and compromise its returns. In other circumstances, let the winners run.

Underperforming stocks should also be sold early. Hanging onto underperforming stocks is costly too. There is the opportunity cost that the capital can be better employed for higher return. Also, hanging onto these lack-lustre stocks reduces the overall return of your portfolio.
http://myinvestingnotes.blogspot.com/2011/02/why-do-you-sell-and-when.html






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Related:

  • The first is when you need money to make an investment in an even better company at a better price, which occasionally happens. 
  • The second is when the company looks like it is going to lose it durable competitive advantage.  A questionable competitive advantage is not where you want to keep your money long-term. (An example:  Nokia's Cautionary Tale)
  • The third is during bull markets when the stock market, in an insane buying frenzy, sends the prices of these fantastic businesses through the ceiling.