Good article:
I subscribe to Fred Hager and for the second time in a year, I got a good article from his newsletter. I don't usually post paid newsletter material out of respect to the services, but given the current market conditions I believe we should all help each other in this time. Fred is a long term buy and hold guy who claims to have made a few million doing just that.
I've taken care to remove his picks from this article, since it's the jist that counts. It is noteworthy that many of Fred's fiberoptic picks are GG's picks . Hope it helps put this difficult time into perspective.
On The Current State Of Fiber Optics By Scott Shaw
I heard the news today, oh boy. Unconfirmed rumors have it that Lucent's debt may be downgraded, possibly to junk and Nortel announces the lay-off of 5000 more employees. CNBC even ran a special called "Saving the Economy." (Note: Kind of funny how the markets started a recovery the next day; and further irony, the CNBC "NASDAQ 5000" special was aired a day or two before the beginning of the current market crash.)
So what is going on? There is no doubt that the fiber-optic sector is getting killed, and justifiably so it would seem. Business growth seems to have stalled and the leading stocks in this industry have fallen farther than the market as a whole. Some have fallen nearly as far as many of the no-business model dot coms. Amongst the stocks taking some of the worse clobbering are the Fred Hager recommended stocks of **** **** **** ****. Not surprisingly there is much confusion, discontent, anger, frustration and you name it in regards to the emotions of holders of these stocks. We have no doubt that most of the people reading this column are amongst those holders, and are most likely experiencing the same feelings in regard. The news for these stocks is not getting any better at the moment. Estimates for this year's revenues and earnings are slowly coming down, the stocks all look weak technically, and there is no near-term catalyst in sight. So the question becomes: WHY THE HECK AM I HOLDING THESE STOCKS FOR CRYING OUTLOUD! Or for those not holding but looking to buy the question is, is now a good time to buy?
As many subscribers know, we don't practice technical analysis, and we certainly don't try to call bottoms. I for one am not arrogant enough to say it'll hit $10 and then bounce to the moon. It is not market technicals that are holding these stocks down. Instead, it is economic conditions. These economic conditions are likely to last at least until the middle of the year, and perhaps longer. Some experts are predicting that these sectors won't recover until sometime next year, if then, if ever.
This article is not for the purpose of challenging, or to debate these "experts", but instead to put the current situation into perspective. I know I've lost a lot of money in this sector (at least on paper) and I know a lot of our readers have as well. But does that mean we should sell now, take what is left and buy savings bonds? At Fredhager.com, we certainly don't plan to. Stocks are the one commodity people seem to be happier (or at least more eager) buying at higher prices and then happier (or at least more eager) to sell at lower prices. And although we do not know how low some of these names will go, we are confident, that over the ensuing two to three years, these stocks will indeed go higher, some of them much higher.
What I would prefer to do here is put the fiber-optic crash into perspective and explain why we still have confidence in the sector, and why we think it is a mistake to sell out at these prices. That is, unless you need a capital loss or unless you can find a more undervalued stock with greater long-term potential. We believe it will be very difficult to do so, no matter where the bottom hits on these stocks. The first example I want to use is Ciena.
In 1998 the price of Ciena's stock fell 76%, bottoming out in October of 1998. Investors in Ciena were outraged, confused, depressed, and in a state of total disarray. The stock was trading for as low as $5 and change in October of 1998 and did not improve much throughout the rest of the year. However, during the following 12 months a funny thing happened: the stock slowly and subtly began to rise. The Street had originally thrown it away, after all, what future did "optical" have? It was a fantasy, or at least too far away to do anyone any good. And, besides, who will ever need all that bandwidth? By the end of 1999 Ciena quietly rebounded and was trading at nearly $30 per share. As of today, from the middle of November 1998 to today (even following this historic market crash) Ciena is up 529% for an annual compounded return of approximately 94%. It was a case of recognizing leading technologies, having confidence in your company since the fundamental outlook for the company had not changed, and being happy to buy at lower prices when market sentiment turned against it.
Sure, sure, you say, that was Ciena. There is no guarantee * or * will do the same. To which I say, you are correct. There is no guarantee. But let me cite another example: Intel in 1985.
Semiconductor stocks had crashed. I mean, they were taken out. The future of the semiconductor industry looked bleak at best. The United States just could not compete. As George Gilder referenced, even Intel, like Chrysler before it, was asking for Federal government intervention to save the United State's semiconductor industry. Funny thing happened from there to now, however. Intel, even following the current historic market crash, has seen its share price appreciate by 6624% from December of 1985 when the industry looked as if it might go under until today when it looks as if PC growth is at an end. Currently, like the semiconductor industry in 1985, the fiber-optic industry looks equally as likely to go under or at least remain in a general funk. Perhaps, following a moment of glory, the optical industry will from here on in remain a stagnant industry, much like the railroad industry is today. Nah, I don't believe that either.
To place what is happening in more perspective it is interesting to note that it is not just technology companies that exhibit this boom or bust volatility. Nike is a great example of this. During its hey day (when Nike was really dominant through the Jordan years), Nike's stock fell 40% or greater not once, not twice, not even three times, but believe it or not 7 times. Nike's stock recovered each and every time. Although somewhat less volatile than Nike, technology stalwart Cisco, in 1994, experienced a greater than 40% crash in its stock price. Nevertheless, even taking into account the aftermath on Cisco's stock during the current market crash, Cisco is still up 1300% (59% annual return) from the 1994 stock price crash. Even if you had bought Cisco at the pre-1994 crash top, you would still be up 743% as of today or a 43% annual return. (Incidentally, prior to this year, the last time Cisco missed earnings and warned was in 1994. Warnings and missing earnings are not necessarily the death knell for a leading company or its industry.)
The point here is not that every stock that crashes recovers and moves on to new, and much higher highs. The point is not that every stock we showcase at Fredhager.com will necessarily succeed brilliantly and experience a similar recovery. The point is, is that sometimes great businesses suffer stock market crashes. Great businesses suffer through poor economic conditions. But it is also true that great businesses eventually recover and their stocks will rebound strongly when they do recover. It is quite often a mistake to sell such companies at or near the bottoms of such crashes.
It is a simple fact that the best growth stocks are extremely volatile and subject to extreme market sentiments, ranging from exuberance to out-right dread. The best companies bounce between the extremes, keep executing, dust themselves off and get back on their feet stronger than ever. The Fred Hager portfolio companies are chosen with this in mind. Our stock picks are not made with the short-term in mind. They are long-term picks of companies which we feel will be future dominant players in the most dynamic and world changing industry in the world: disruptive technologies in the communications sector.
To lay it out flat: THE OPTICAL BUILD OUT IS NOT DEAD. It may seem so at present, but this is not the case. The optical build-out is still in its infancy and will be a decade or two decade long process. The world's entire communication system will be re-built and revolutionized, perhaps more than once, within a time frame of 10-20 years. Compare this to the build-out of the phone system. This took place over most of a century. The build-out of the new optical networks will create an enormous amount of wealth and it will do so in a compressed period of time taking no longer than one to two decades. This build out of the new communication infrastructure is expected to be 20x more valuable than the initial build out of the enterprise networks that propelled Cisco to prominence, and at one point to the position of the most valuable company in the world. It will be those companies, the companies that have the leading and most disruptive technologies that enable this new network, which will disproportionally capture a large chunk of this wealth.
In contrast to this bright future, doom and gloom is upon us. Newsletters predicting a decade long depression (not recession, but depression) are making their way around the Web. Believe them if you want. It is always easier to believe the conventional wisdom, to see the remains of a forest fire without seeing the inevitable and stronger recovery of the forest from the ashes. At Fredhager.com, we prefer to look forward and keep our investment dollars in the companies shaping tomorrow. We are working hard at following the best investment opportunities of the coming decade, where the greatest amount of wealth will be created. It has been and still is our current belief that companies such as **** will be among the most likely benefactors of this network build-out. We are not letting a short-term shakeout amongst telecommunication companies cloud the big picture. The big picture has not changed. Neither have the long-term fundamentals of any of these companies changed. What has changed is the short-term momentum, and we are not blind, make no mistake about it. This is a market crash of historic proportions. But it changes nothing other than make these stocks even more attractive than they previously were for the long-term holder. |