Tag Archives: Birinyi Associates

8 Fascinating Reads

By Morgan Housel, The Motley Fool

Never gets old
Barry Ritholtz

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Happy Friday! There are more good news articles, commentaries, and analyst reports on the Web every week than anyone could read in a month. Here are eight fascinating ones I read this week.

Welcome back
Companies are now buying back a record amount of their own stock, writes Birinyi Associates. This is typically a bad sign, as companies have an abysmal history of timing buybacks. Enjoy it while it lasts:

We recorded $117.8 billion in buyback authorizations during the month of February, representing a 103% gain over the same period in 2012 ($118 bln vs. $68 bln). February was the largest month, in dollar terms, on record.

We are currently on a run-rate to log $827 bln of authorizations in 2013 vs $477 bln in 2012. 2007 was the only year in our database where we recorded more ($863 bln).

Good news if you’re worried about the budget
The decline in health care cost growth appears to be alive and well, writes The Wall Street Journal:

The latest numbers from St. Louis-based Express Scripts Holdings show that the pharmacy-benefit company saw spending on traditional drugs among commercially insured members slip 1.5% last year — the first-ever decline in two decades of tracking data.

The U.S. will continue to dominate oil
As a result of America’s ongoing oil boom, the U.S. overtook Saudi Arabia as the world’s largest oil-producer in November. The International Energy Agency predicts that this will be true on an annual basis within a decade (via the American Enterprise Institute):

The new normal of retail
Financial blogger Josh Brown shares a chart from The Atlantic showing the decline in brick-and-mortar retail jobs since 2001:

Never gets old
Barry Ritholtz dug up a BusinessWeek story from February 2000. We now know that this was the prevailing view about a month before stocks and the economy peaked:

Time to celebrate. This month, the current economic expansion became the longest in U.S. history. The boom has done more than create millions of new jobholders and stock owners. It has also restored the public’s confidence and given more people than ever a shot at the American Dream. We tell the story.

Wisdom
Greenbackd found an old speech by Dean Williams of Batterymarch Financial Management packed with timeless insight:

Prediction: Most of us spend a lot of our time doing something that human beings just don’t do very well. Predicting things.

Forecasting: Confidence in a forecast rises with the amount of information that goes into it. But the accuracy of the forecast stays the same. 

The importance of mean reversion: If there is a reliable and helpful principle at works in our markets, my choice would be the ones the statisticians call “regression to the mean”. The tendency toward average profitability is a fundamental, if not the fundamental principle of competitive markets.

How to win at investing
Bankers Anonymous shares the wisdom of the book Simple Wealth, Inevitable Wealth by Nick Murray:

Timing the market …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

U.S. Companies' Contrary Indicator for Stocks

By Alex Dumortier, CFA, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

After setting a

new all-time nominal high

on the Dow, stocks added to their gains today as the
S&P 500
and the price-weighted
Dow Jones Industrial Average
advanced 0.1% and 0.3%, respectively.

Despite a new high on the Dow, the VIX Index, Wall Street‘s fear gauge, was slightly higher on the day, closing at 13.53. (The VIX is calculated from S&P 500 option prices and reflects investor expectations for stock market volatility over the coming 30 days.)

Buy ’em
Research firm Birinyi Associates published a note this morning, with some data that is consistent with the buoyant mood of a stock market that is close to setting new all-time nominal highs (I say “close to” because I’m waiting for the S&P 500 to confirm the Dow’s milestone):

We recorded $117.8 billion in buyback authorizations during the month of February, representing a 103% gain over the same period in 2012 ($118 bln vs. $68 bln). February was the largest month, in dollar terms, on record.

We know individual investors are still not much for equities right now, but companies, apparently, are. However, while stock buybacks may continue to contribute momentum to this bull market, it’s not a reassuring indicator as far as value and long-term returns are concerned, as Birinyi’s next observation suggests:  

We are currently on a run-rate to log $827 bln of authorizations in 2013 vs $477 bln in 2012. 2007 was the only year in our database where we recorded more ($863 bln).

Unfortunately, due to a combination of bad incentives and ignorance, treasurers, company finance executives, and executive boards do a spectacularly bad job when it comes to implementing share repurchases. The following graph, which spans the fourth quarter of 2002 through the third quarter of 2010, illustrates the problem. The blue bars represent the quarterly share buybacks of S&P 500 companies (in billions of dollars, left axis) and the black line represents the quarterly average value of the S&P 500 index (right axis):

To summarize: As long as share prices are going up, companies are happy to buy them in increasing amounts; when shares get cheaper, they prefer to buy them in smaller sums. That makes no sense from the perspective of a value investor. Which are some of the names to scrutinize right now? According to Birinyi Associates, of the top five largest repurchase authorizations through the end of February, three are members of the Dow: Home Depot , General Electric and 3M . That doesn’t mean the shares are necessarily overvalued, but it certainly invites scrutiny.

For …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance