Joe and Jim, did you guys see Money's article on the steel stocks tonight? Joe, I remember you were interested in AS and Jim has a steel stock that he likes.
> For an enhanced HTML version of the Money Daily, > visit moneydaily.com. > > Tuesday, June 16, 1998 > > Steel stocks may be a bargain > > But many analysts caution that price increases needed > to make them shine may not materialize. > > Michael Brush > > Even before the current panic over Asia and earnings > tanked the stock markets, just about any stock > connected with basic materials had been severely > punished. > > That's because as the prices of commodities have > collapsed, investors have figured that companies > producing things like wood, paper and steel don't > stand much of a chance of increasing revenue and > profits. > > But by now, the steel stocks have been driven down to > their lowest levels in 20 years, and it is time to > start buying them, says Kenneth Hoffman, a steel > analyst with Prudential Securities. Valuations are so > cheap that some steel companies are thinking about > simply taking themselves private. > > Hoffman, who likes to go out on a limb when making > forecasts about the sector, believes several factors > are coming together to turn steel prices around. And > that, he says, will boost the stocks soon. > > He says that declining imports, soaring construction > demand and solid orders from the auto sector are > starting to make the markets for steel tight enough > that some producers will begin raising prices this > summer. > > His reasoning: Japan and Korea have cut back on > production, which has caused their inventories to > drop. Russia is closing down production. And growth in > Latin America and Europe has been so strong that > producers there -- which are behind about 70 percent > of the foreign shipments to the U.S. -- are selling > more domestically and sending less here. On top of > that, a strong U.S. economy is adding to demand for > steel. > > All this means that prices for flat rolled steel -- > used in things like cars and appliances and makes up > 75 percent of demand -- will increase 3 percent to 5 > percent in July or August, Hoffman says. Structural > steel used in construction and stainless steel account > for most of the rest of demand. > > "What you are seeing is really good earnings, but > these companies are getting less and less respect," > says Hoffman. "The group is terrific, but many people > don't want to believe it." > > Indeed, many of Hoffman's fellow analysts don't see a > steel price hike in the cards. > > Merrill Lynch steel analyst Robert Schenosky, for > example, is not convinced that production cuts in the > Pacific Rim have been big enough to sustain world > prices. He is still recommending some steel stocks, so > his outlook is not entirely bleak. But he thinks Asian > imports and U.S. domestic mini-mills will add enough > supply to put downward pressure on prices for flat- > rolled and structural steel later this year. > > "The group is very cheap but it won't outperform > without prices going up, and I don't see that > happening for the rest of the year," agrees Scott > Morrison, a Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette steel analyst > who downgraded several stocks in the sector last week. > He thinks prices may start to improve in 1999, which > may cause steel stocks to start turning around in the > fourth quarter. > > In case you think Hoffman's reasoning is right, we > came up with a couple of promising steel companies. To > do so, we turned to IBES International, a company that > analyzes earnings estimates. We wanted to find cheap > steel companies that also have strong upward earnings > revisions, a sign that analysts think good things are > on the way. > > To do so, we first screened out any steel producer for > which an analyst had cut estimates in the last month. From that group, we > took companies that had a forward price earnings ratio less than their > long term growth > rate, a measure often used by analysts to find > undervalued stocks. Next, we looked for companies that > had a good history of meeting or beating earnings > estimates -- meaning they may be less likely than > other firms to turn in bad surprises in the future. > > We came up with two companies: Bethlehem Steel (NYSE: > BS) and Armco Inc. (NYSE: AS). By the numbers, > Bethlehem Steel looks stronger. In the last month, the > company's 1998 estimates have been moved up nearly 9 > percent, and estimates for 1999 are up about 6 > percent. What's more, the company has beaten > estimates by anywhere between 15 percent and 110 > percent in the past five quarters. > > Estimates for Armco are up 1.7 percent for 1998 and > about 5 percent for 1999. And if you take out the last > quarter of 1997, when the company missed estimates by > 12 percent, it has beaten estimates by 14 percent to > 47 percent in the past year. > > Another good thing about these companies is that each > one is expected to have better earnings for reasons > that have little to do with price increases. At Armco, > which makes stainless steel, major spending on new > equipment is finally starting to pay off. Bethlehem > Steel has been improving earnings by closing divisions > that were losing money. > > Because these two companies already look strong, the > steel price increase expected by Hoffman, if they pan > out, would be icing on the cake.
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