Regarding really cheap stocks.... (I love big questions.)
First of all, a cheap no-growth company means P/Book below 1.0, P/E in single digits, 5% dividend or better, etc. There have been a few moments when GM would have filled that requirement recently...
But cheap growth companies are harder to define. You have to make a guess of the prospective (i.e. future) growth rate.
First of all, what is the recent growth rate? In my opinion, growth rates should never be calculated in terms of changes in earnings. The reason is that earnings are too easily manipulated. Earnings are bounded by sales and sales are a lot more stable, so use them. More particularly, use sales per share. If you use straight sales to calculate growth rates, you will artificially inflate the growth rate when the company makes an acquisition that dilutes the stock. This is frequently the case with non-dividend paying high-tech stocks. The Value Line charts give historical Sales/share figures. Tech stock investors are currently making this error all over the place. For an example, compare the growth rates in sales per share of GM and NSM over the last 17 years (available in Value Line).
Second, determine what the limits to future growth are. One limit is the niche that the sales are going to is being filled, or worse, being eliminated. For instance, buggy whip makers probably were showing reasonable growth rates in 1900, but their niche had its days numbered. Here is a niche calculation I posted for Altera/Xilinx: Message 2549390 Somewhere on SI I posted a calculation that allowed you to estimate total niche size by the rate of slowdown in sales rowth (i.e. sales deceleration), but I can't find it.
Third, check to see if that growth rate is horribly risky. This is the case with "fad" businesses. A recent example were the micro breweries. Or CLCDF. There has to be some sort of barrier to entry to keep the competition out. Like patents.
Fourth, take a good look at the earnings as a percent of sales. (By the way, I only deal with companies that have positive earnings, and in addition, every few years I get reminded to leave the financial stocks alone. If earnings have been anomalously low or high, ignore some part of that, and look at historical margins. Use the historical margins to compute what current earnings should be from current sales (per share).
Finally, you have a (sustainable) growth rate, and the amount of earnings per share in the trailing 12 month (ttm) period. A cheap stock is one that is cheaper than the growth rate in percent, multiplied by the ttm earnings per share (with historical margins). From there, you can either buy and hold (and be at the mercy of the market, or you can try and steal from the tiger by catching a bounce. I don't like buy and hold, cause it's boring, so I like to try and steal some cash from the market.
When stealing cash from the market, you want an obscure stock (most investors don't know what it does) that has just crashed by 50% in one day. That will bring it up on the radar screens of all the other dead cat resuscitators. Analyze such stocks for safe and cheap, and if it passes, buy immediately with both hands. Don't worry about being too early, with a safe cheap stock it doesn't matter, it won't go down much more. (Or it wasn't safe. :) Instead, worry about being too late.
In order to find such cheap stocks, look for the stocks that manage to tank badly enough to make a new 52-week low at the same time as they make the "dog" hit parade for single day drops. You have to explore for these daily. The more obscure the better. The reason is that big price moves attract attention, and since 98% of all investment is long rather than short, you can faithfully rely on the fact that an increase in awareness is bullish for a stock, even if it's bad news.
Some of my recent favorites:
AAM a bank stock, (Don't do this at home). Note the big gap down in late April: tscn.com CLFY, a software company. Again note the big gap down in mid April (it was a good month for bottom feeders). tscn.com ASPX did the same thing last April: tscn.com CUBE caught it in May: tscn.com
Rules: (1) Don't chase stocks up, instead wait for fresh road kill, there will be more within a year. I promise. (2) Don't chase stocks down, it could be a trap. (3) Don't keep a stock more than two months. This is for two reasons. First, you need your capital free for the next morsel. Second, your analysis could change when new information hits the market. The whole idea here is to extract money from a market swing, not bet on the long-term future of a company or bet on the nature of the next piece of news. (Sort of like dating. Look at all your dates as future spouses, have your fun with the good ones, but don't marry them, they can/will change :) I don't have a good rule for selling, it always seems like I leave the party too early...
Look for a stock that has dropped, say, 75% or more from its 52-week highs. If it shows as a good cheap growth stock, as outlined above, it is reasonably safe, (in my opinion) if you buy it within a few weeks of its big crash, (and the bigger the better) I should mention that investing this way requires a willingness to read the financial reports filed with the SEC and is a lot of work. In addition, this all sounds somewhat better than it works. If it worked really well, I'd be retired already...
Comments?
-- Carl |