Interesting comments about SLB and HAL ____________________________ What Stock Boom, You Ask? By James K. Glassman Sunday, March 21, 1999; Page H01
"My clients just don't get it!" a broker friend of mine was grousing the other day, reflecting the frustration of many of his colleagues.
"They hear about the market being way up, but their stocks aren't. They want to know what's going on. But the truth is, only a piece of the market is way up."
He's right. A remarkable study by Salomon Smith Barney Inc. found that, over the past 12 months, three-quarters of all U.S. stocks were trailing the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index by at least 15 percentage points. In other words, if your own portfolio is up just 10 percent in the past year, you have done better than the vast majority of investors.
Of course, that's little solace for my broker friend, whose clients have watched America Online Inc. (symbol: AOL) soar in a year from $15.13 to $119.25. The Nasdaq 100 index, which is dominated by large-cap high-tech companies such as Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), is up an incredible 76 percent in the past 12 months.
The S&P 500, the benchmark for most money managers, is also heavily weighted toward the large-cap growth stocks that are now so much in favor. Last year, as a result, it returned twice as much as the average mutual fund.
This year, the trend is continuing. Wiesenberger, the Rockville-based research firm, found that, while the S&P had produced positive returns for the first two months of the year, the average mutual fund was in negative territory. Only 605 of the 2,374 diversified U.S. equity funds had beaten the index.
Part of the problem is poor management, but most of the problem is the divergence that my broker pal was complaining about. High-visibility stocks--and indexes--are doing great, but the stocks that most people actually own aren't.
While I sympathize with the brokers, advisers and fund managers, they are paid well to handle criticism. I worry much more about the clients--the small investors who are now sorely tempted to "abandon diversification and target their portfolios toward an ever narrowing slice of the equity market," as Jeffrey Warantz and John Manley put it in a recent report for Salomon Smith Barney. "This course of action is imprudent, and clearly dangerous."
In other words, it's fine to own tasty Internet and telecommunications stocks, but consume them in moderation. To lead a healthy investing life, you need a balanced diet.
A portfolio that is loaded with hot stocks from only one or two sectors is a portfolio that will have wild volatility over the long term--both up and down. In the meantime, if you're a typical investor, you won't be able to handle the risk. You will undoubtedly bail out when the going gets tough--just when you should be buying.
But won't those hot sectors do better than the market as a whole? No one knows. You might make a lucky guess, but then again, maybe not. The best stocks to buy for the long term are the best businesses, not the hottest industries. As Warren Buffett, the most successful investor of our time, has written, "The market may ignore business success for a while, but eventually will confirm it."
Buffett's mentor, the late Benjamin Graham, put it this way: "In the short run, the market is a voting machine, but in the long run it is a weighing machine."
The votes these days are going to large-caps--or, more precisely, to mega-caps. Timothy Dalton Jr., chairman of Dalton, Greiner, Hartman, Maher & Co., a firm specializing in small-caps, points out that the average price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of the 50 largest U.S. stocks (by market cap) is 10 points above the average P/E of the next 1,450 stocks. That spread, he writes, "has never been higher."
Dalton adds: "There is no question that Microsoft, Intel, Dell, Cisco, Pfizer and the like are great companies. . . . However, the odds of companies remaining true growth stocks for more than five years are very low, and beyond 10 years it seldom happens. Perhaps the current group of large-cap growth stocks are exceptions. We'll see."
The most stunning statistics come from what Salomon Smith Barney calls its Laggards Indicator, concocted by the firm to show the percentage of stocks that have trailed the S&P by a wide margin.
On March 9, the indicator, which was established in 1971, hit an all-time high. "In simple terms," wrote Warantz and Manley, "although the S&P rose 21.6 percent over this 12-month period, more than three out of four stocks in the U.S. common equity universe had a price performance of 3.4 percent or lower."
Eventually, this kind of wild divergence has to end. But what if something fundamental has changed? One argument in favor of large-caps is that, in a global economy with lots of capacity, companies that have dominant market shares also have more power to raise prices--and thus profits. Another is that strong brands, recognized worldwide, have a big edge.
Also, contrary to what you might think, large companies seem more flexible than small. They have more products in development, so if one fails, they can get another to market--wherever the market might be.
But at this point, betting exclusively on mega-caps is taking a big risk. The smart play, always, is sensible diversification. Warantz and Manley suggest broadening your portfolio, not by loading up on mid-caps and small-caps, but by owning large-caps that are out of favor.
They started by asking their computer to find stocks in the S&P 500 with a market cap greater than $5 billion that were down more than 10 percent from their 12-month peaks and that were not in one of the four top-performing sectors (communications equipment and services, technology, consumer cyclicals, and health care).
Only 34 of the 500 stocks passed those screens. Then they selected only stocks that were at least 20 percent below their average long-term P/E and price-to-sales ratios. That left just 10 stocks--from six different sectors.
They were:
* Alcoa Inc. (AA), the aluminum company. With an excellent record for growth (the dividend payout has doubled in the past five years), the company's stock trades at a modest P/E of 15--or about half the average for the S&P--based on projected earnings for this year.
* Haliburton Co. (HAL), a diversified company with interests in energy services, engineering, maintenance and construction. Hurt by falling oil prices, the stock has bounced back 27 percent this year, but it's still off more than one-third from its 1998 high.
* Honeywell Inc. (HON), which manufactures automation systems such as thermostats and aircraft guidance controls. Earnings, says Bloomberg News, are increasing at a rate of 13 percent a year, but the P/E is only 15. The share price is down by about one-fourth since last May.
* PPG Industries Inc. (PPG), which makes glass products used in construction and automobiles. The stock, with a yield of 3 percent and a P/E of 11 (despite long-term earnings growth of 10 percent annually), has tumbled by more than one-third since last May.
* Philip Morris Cos. Inc. (MO), maker of cigarettes (Marlboro), beer (Miller), coffee (Maxwell House) and dairy products (Kraft). Tobacco, of course, raises financial, legal and moral questions, and the stock has plummeted 28 percent since the start of the year. But the company, growing at 14 percent annually and carrying a dividend yield of 4.6 percent, trades at a P/E (based on year-ahead estimates) of just 12.
* RJR Nabisco Holdings Corp. (RN), another cigarette and consumer products company. RJR has announced a spinoff of its tobacco business, and the future is unclear. Still, this may be an interesting buying opportunity. The stock carries a dividend yield of 6.8 percent, and that payout has been growing 9 percent annually. The stock, while near its high, trades at a P/E of just 14.
* Raytheon Co. (RTN/B), maker of electronics, especially for air-defense missiles and radar systems. The stock has lost 7 percent over the past 12 months and now trades at a P/E (based on 1999 estimated earnings) of 15, even though historic growth has been in double digits.
* Rohm & Haas Co. (ROH), manufacturer of specialty chemicals used in everything from laundry detergents to cellular phones. The stock pays a 2.2 percent dividend, which, like RJR's, has been growing at a nice clip. It carries a P/E of 13.
* SLM Holding Corp. (SLM), better known as Sallie Mae, a provider of financing for students in private schools and universities. Earnings are rising at 14 percent annually, but the stock's P/E is only 14.
* Schlumberger Ltd. (SLB), provider of services to the oil and gas industries. A fast grower with a market cap of $33 billion, the firm has been hurt by the fall in energy prices. Its stock fell by more than half between May and November, has since bounced back but is still 30 percent below its peak.
Despite all the talk about this market being "overbought," stocks like these abound: large-cap growth companies that are being ignored by the market. No, you don't have to be a flaming contrarian to take advantage of today's unprecedented divergence.
Glassman's e-mail address is jkglassman@aol.com; he welcomes comments but cannot answer all queries. |