Monday, January 31, 2011

Fundamentals - What to Screen For

New screeners present you with a wealth of numbers - all the price ratios you can digest, earnings numbers, cash flows, and so on. It is becoming impossible to sort out though the ocean of information that companies release every quarter now. In addition, can you rely on analysts anymore? Apparently, bloggers do a better job of rating companies than street analysts!


Therefore it is becoming important to try to concentrate on the numbers that will have the most impact on future stock prices. I have picked up 2 books to help me screen the screener input:


Your Next Great Stock - Jack Hough
Jack Hough writes the screening analysis in Smart Money and SmartMoney.com. In this books, he outlines 11 different strategies using fundamental information.


Beat the Market - Invest by Knowing What Stocks to Buy and What Stocks to Sell - Charles D. Kirkpatrick II
Charles Kirkpatrick has written books on Technical Analysis and has perfected some screens described in the book. You can get more information at http://www.charleskirkpatrick.com/.


Out of these 2 books, a couple of numbers have risen to the top. Here is a quick list:


Price-to-Sales
Both books rely on the price/sales ratio in some of their screens. It is used by Kirkpatrick in his most successful screen (the Bargain list) which is up 95% since December 30, 2005 to date. His Bargain portfolio is up 161% in the same period - Kirkpatrick advocates going to cash gradually during market downturns which he measure with MA crossings (a little complicated for this posting). In any case, not too shabby since the S&P500 is up only around 7% in the same period. In this screener, Kirkpatrick uses relative values for the price-to-sales ratio, comparing the ratio from one company to all others. He ran a lot of testing to arrive at the best range of relative values. Not that easy to screen for although one software contains custom screen created to match Kirkpatrick specifications - High Growth Stock Investor. Not cheap, but there is a trial period. Jack Hough keeps it simpler, screen for a Price-to-Sales ratio below 1.5. Easy enough! His screen contains other criteria (like Kirkpatrick's), but the Price/Sales ratio is the cornerstone. Both Hough and Kirkpatrick cite the work of O'Shaughnessy who ran some simulations and found that $10,000 invested in high Price/Sales ratio stocks would be worth $19,000 in 2003 while the same amount invested in low Price/Sales ration stocks would be worth $22 millions! Low Price/Sales stocks returned on average 16% a year. By adding requirements for earnings growth and price momentum, the simulation returns more than $53 millions by 2003. Pretty strong evidence I would say. The advantage of the Price/Sales ratio over say, the P/E ratio or any cash flow ratio is that it is difficult to manipulate - accountants can adjust earnings almost every quarters. Sales are sales...


Price Momentum
This seems like a natural, but too often, it feels wrong to invest in a company that has a great run! What if you caught a top. In his book, Hough cites some studies that have been done to show that investing in stocks that are within 5% of their 52 week high and selling stocks within 5% of their lows have beaten the market by an average of 7.8% per year. Compound that over 20 years and you can start planning for a nice retirement. Obviously, other factors should be used to weed out hyped up stocks, but the evidence is pretty strong. Kirkpatrick uses a relative strength percentile factor in his Bargain List portfolio, looking for stocks with a percentile greater than 97. He uses his own calculation to arrives at this number, but the thesis is similar. Better to buy stocks performing better than the average!


Earning Growth
There, the 2 books diverge - they both stress the importance of earning growth but Hough is forward looking while Kirkpatrick looks to the past. Kirkpatrick seems to have little faith in projected earnings (and who can blame him there) so he relies on his own relative calculations, using operating earnings over 4 quarters as compared to the 4 quarter total one quarter earlier. He uses operating earnings to get around adjustments and special charges that make it impossible to make accurate comparisons. He uses 4 quarters to get around the seasonality that could affect some businesses. The calculated ratio is then used to rank companies between 0 to 99. Interestingly enough, Kirkpatrick does not use this criteria in his best screen, relying solely on relative performance and Price/Sales. Hough in his book shows a little more faith in the system and describes a screen using the PEG ratio. He advocates a PEG ratio between 0.2 and 1.5. The cutoff at 0.2 is to weed out any special earning report such as settlement that would distort the earning picture. In his screen, Hough combines the PEG ratio with some price momentum criteria (see above).  Obviously, the PEG ratio is only as good as the analysts predictions so it is important to use this criteria on companies that have wide enough coverage to get reliable figures. But he cites a screen from the AAII who has beaten the market pretty handily based on screening stocks for a PEG between 0.2 and 1. 


Price-to-Book
This criteria does not appear in the Kirkpatrick book, but Hough makes a good argument for inclusion in his book. He cites the work of Joseph Piotrosky from the U. of Chicago who found that low P/B ratio stock beat the market by an average of 6% per year (which is confirmed by other studies). However, he also found that only 1/2 the stocks returned by the screen contributed to all the gains so he needed more criterias to weed out potential winners. He came out with 9 of them. I will not list them in this article (you can read the book) but the P/B ratio is the cornerstone of the screen. Hough advocates screening for companies whose P/B ratio is in the bottom 25% of the stock universe you are screening against. This is also one ratio that can vary greatly from one industry to another so this has to be taken into consideration.


In my opinion (as well as the 2 writers above), these criteria are amongst the most important ones to screen for. Hough uses others in other screens, but this will be the topic for another article. Good hunting!

Futures This Morning - 1/31/2011

Apparently, there is some political risk in Egypt! At least, based on Moody's who downgraded the Egyptian debt by one notch! Our AAA rating in the USA is safe though...

Dollar

After running up a bit this weekend (nothing like a revolution to put some value in the US Armed Forces - who need higher interest rates when you have 12 carriers), the dollar is down below the 78 support line!



Here is the picture in a the daily chart. That 78 level has pretty much held all of last week!



Euro

If the dollar is down, then the euro must be up! And it is... Because there is not risks in the Euro zone. At least this morning!


On a daily chart, we can see the euro bouncing between support at 1.36 and resistance a 1.37! 


Gold

Gold is down this morning. Maybe the market is expecting a flood of gold from the Egyptian museum looting. But the shiny metal is once again flirting with support around 1326!


Oil

Apparently, unrest in Egypt are not enough to inspire a run on oil. The Suez canal is still open so nothing to worry.... for now! Between 30 and 40% of oil transits through the Suez canal so this could bring some changes if anything were to happen.


S&P500


Futures are up this morning after the shellacking on Friday. Because everything got so much better during the weekend!

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Tom DeMark Predicts an 11% Correction

Tom DeMark was just on CNBC predicting an 11% correction in the market so I wanted to draw a quick chart of SPY to see where that would take us!


The blue circle point to resistance and support points over the last 12 months or so. I have superimposed a Fibonacci retracement on the move since October. Interestingly enough, some of these lines almost match. There is a good area for support around 117 or so where we have a 50% retracement and support for the last "breather" the market took in November. That would make it a 10% correction. There is another good line around 114 and that would be a 12% move. Close enough I think. In any case, it would be a healthy move...

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

A Quick Look at CSX

CSX just reported earnings this morning and I wanted to take a look at this important transport company. First here is a chart of the last 6 months.




The stock has had a pretty incredible run of over 40% since September. But this does not mean that it is overvalued yet! How about the technical situation?




I give the stock a 9.71 grade as of today. Anything over 5 is bullish and over 8 very bullish!


Let's see if the fundamentals can support the current valuation:


P/E - The current P/E is 18.94 which is right around the 10 year average. That average is somewhat skewed by bad results in 2003, so the stock is a bit expensive by historical standard and has probably run a bit ahead this year. But the forward P/E is a very reasonable 12.87 which is below average historically.


Price-to-sales - Stand currently at 2.38. This is below industry average which is good, but it is also very high historically which is bad! I like the Price-to-Sales ratio because it is the hardest one to manipulate. It is tough to compare between industries, but a historical comparison is a good reference. P/E ratios are good, but a good accountant can adjust earnings up and down as needed!


Price-to-Book - Stands at 2.91. Historically speaking, this is also high. It is also higher than the industry average.


Debt/Equity - Is a moderate 0.92. It has been going down over the last 10 years, but railroad is a capital intensive industry!


Net margins are around 12% which is in line with the last 4 years, but much better than earlier this decade. 


Earnings - Estimates for earnings over the next couple of quarters and FY12 have gone up over the last 90 days. This is positive. In addition, in its earnings release, the company management was very optimistic for the next fiscal year. They see the economy recovering and also export of grain and coals having a positive on future earnings. The next quarter's earnings could be skewed because of the situation in Australia which is driving for more coal exports from the US. The company plans to hire or rehire 2900 employees which is a positive sign that it sees improving conditions overall. Earnings are projected to grow around 15% for the next 5 years - lower than the industry average, but supportive of a 15 P/E! And the company pays a 1.54% dividend. Not great, but a positive nonetheless. The company surprised to the upside the last 4 quarters so they have tendency to be conservative in their estimates.


Overall, mostly positive indications.


Average recommendation is a Moderate Buy with still 18 analysts rating it a Strong Buy! 


MSN Stock Scouter gives it a 9 (Strong Buy) and Zack ranks it a 3 (Hold). 


Looking at the charts, we can see area of support around Fibonacci retracements - the closest ones is between $64 and $65. The next one is around $60 and $61 and the last one at around $56. These look like pretty strong consolidation area.  Going back to 2008, there is strong resistance around $70 and the stock was unable to break through then! We would need to have the technical indicators take a dip below 8 (like in early October and mid-November), indicating a consolidation period before taking a position! 

Futures This Morning - 1/25/2011

Wheeeee! Dollar is bouncing back, everything else if off a cliff!


Oil


Here is last night's action.




I was mentioning in a post yesterday that oil was in channel between $88 and $92 but that has been broken to the downside last night with oil closer to $86 now! A new daily chart.




Gold


Gold has also breached a support level. The next one is really close and after that, a long way down! Last night's move.




And a daily chart.




Dollar


Not surprisingly, the dollar was up last night, bouncing off that stubborn 78 line. 




 And here is the daily chart.




British Pound


Dive, dive.... The Pound lost more than $0.02 last night which is an incredible move in the Forex market!




Euro


The Euro is also weaker, going back to the $1.36 line which should provide some support now.




S&P 500


The S&P futures are also down this morning, pointing to a lower open.





Monday, January 24, 2011

Where to for the Euro?

Big move by the euro this morning. So where are we going?



The $1.34 line had been resistance for over 1 month, but the euro sliced through it last week and has been up since then. The next target is $1.37. It is the last significant resistance line going back to November.


However, the dollar is a support around 78 now. Something has to give!

Talk About Momentum!

There are plenty of momentum stocks like NFLX, CMG, PCLN, but many have been correcting in the last couple of weeks. Not Nvidia! An 11% move today means that have doubled since early November. Now that's momentum!


The have released a new roadmap with new dual-core chips (Tegra 2) that are meant to boost performances of tablets and smartphones running the amongst others the Android OS. There are apparently some 3D codes in there as well. Add rumors of a quad-core Tegra 3 and there you have it... parabolic move.