Market/trading update: October 7th, 2012 – S&P 500 earnings at a record; the index is still 7% below March, 2000 highs

* Alcoa (AA), Costco (COST), JP  Morgan (JPM) and Wells Fargo (WFC) report this week, with Alcoa reporting after the bell on Tuesday, Costco reports before the bell on Wednesday, and JPM Morgan and Wells Fargo report before the bell on Friday morning.

Alcoa/’s report will kickoff the 3rd quarter earnings season for the S&P 500. http://seekingalpha.com/article/902651-alcoa-earnings-preview-trading-below-tangible-book-for-a-reason. The attached is our preview of AA’s 3rd quarter. Alcoa’s valuation is compelling, but there are significant headwinds being faced. Still the stock looks to be bottoming for the last year. A trade above $11.75 or the 200-week moving average has not been seen since August, 2008. A note out of Trefis late last week, notes that the London Metal Excahnge’s price of aluminum started at $1,900 in early Q3, and ended at $2,100 with a lot of volatility in between. (We remain long AA in tax deferred accounts.) The amount of aluminum in inventory is still substantial from what I read. Most investors looking for Basic Materials exposure have gravitated towards Freeport-McMoran (FCX), which is tied to the price of copper rather than AA and aluminum.

JP Morgan and Wells Fargo will be important 3rd quarter reports on Friday. With the capital markets strong in q3, including record corporate bond issuance, can JP Morgan report an upside surprise ? JPM’s tailwinds began late July, but was it enough to drive healthy earnings upside for q3 ’12 ? Hard to believe Wells Fargo will have a tough quarter with mortgage rates so low and still gravitating towards all-time lows.  WFC is now thought to total about 1/3rd of all new mortgage originations. We’ll have earnings preview for both over on Seeking Alpha early this week. Financial stocks started moving in early August – we have not seen relative outperformance in Financials for a while, with the exception of V, and MA and a few select others. (Long JPM, WFC, V.)

* The Investment Company Institute continues to pound on the relative mix of equity mutual fund outflows versus bond fund inflows. Is this a contrarian sentiment indicator ? Here is a great article from Schaeffer’s Investment Research (SIR) on the dynamic between fund flows and investor sentiment http://www.schaeffersresearch.com/commentary/content/marketobs/more+proof+that+this+is+one+hated+rally/observations.aspx?id=113158. $150 million have left domestic equity funds per SIR, while $275 billion has flowed into bond funds. My guess is this wont end well.

* Here is another Schaffer’s piece about short-interest that also seems to bode well for higher equity prices: ttp://www.schaeffersresearch.com/commentary/content/marketobs/short+interest+data+suggests+considerable+upside+potential/observations.aspx?id=113150. Note how the author concludes that the last time we saw this short-interest configuration, the S&P 500 rallied 30%. (Thanks to Gary Morrow of Yosemite Asset Management in San Luis Obispo, Ca for pointing this out to us.)

* Mega-cap retail – Home Depot (HD) and Walmart (WMT) continue to trade well. We bought more of both this week, although in small amounts as both stocks remain overbought. Home Depot hit a series of all-time highs in Dec ’99, Jan ’00 and March ’00 near $69 and hasnt been back there since. The stock is now closing in on this key technical resistance level. Walmart (WMT) took out its $70 high from the late 1990’s in late July, 2012. Both retailers are not that expensively-valued, but more importantly, with HD’s market cap of $95 bl and WMT’s $252 bl, I like to see this part of the market (large and mega-cap) trading better. Both companies do not report again until November ’12. (Long HD and WMT.)

* Large-cap pharma had another good week. Pfizer (PFE), Merck (MRK) and Amgen (AMGN) were added to again this past week. We like JNJ too, but we need to see an earnings catalyst. (Long PFE, MRK, AMGN and JNJ)

* Listened to a strategist on CNBC this past week -one of the many paraded on throughout the week – and this person has a $140 eps estimate for the S&P 500 in 2017, at which point he predicted that the earnings cycle will peak. Not one CNBC anchor or interviewer challenged the strategist on the prediction, in terms of how accurate he had been up till now, which sectors would lead, or which stocks would perform the best. With a $140 eps estimate, the S&P 500 is now trading at 10(x) ’17 earnings. Does it matter ? Not really. As of this weekend, ThomsonReuters is looking for 11.7% earnings growth for the S&P 500 for 2013, which would result in a $112 eps estimate for 2013 or about consistent with the current “forward 4-quarter” estimate. An $140 eps estimate off the expected $102 projected at the end of 2012 is almost a 50% increase in 6 years. A straight arithmetic average return – in terms of earnings growth – is 8% per year.

Maybe the quiet bull market this year has a basis in fundamentals after all.

* JP Morgan puts out their “Guide to the Markets” at the end of every quarter. This week was no exception. It is great information if you are a JP Morgan client as we are. As of 9/30/12, there was no significant style difference between growth and value, and even small, mid and large cap for year-t0-date or quarterly returns. While there are still big performance differences from the ’07 peak and off the ’09 low, in terms of large-cap, small-cap, the returns are very close this year, between 14% – 16%. There is no big advantage being invested one way or the other at present, and large-cap seems to be narrowing the long-term gap.

In terms of valuation for the S&P 500, here are the valuation metrics as of 9/30/12, per JP Morgan’s “Guide to the Markets” (check our post yesterday for a quick preview):

P/E – 12.9(x)

P/B – 2.3(x)

P/CF – 9(x) (although cash-flow data on the S&P 500 is tough to find, seek and you shall find, and sure enough the S&P 500’s cash flow valuation is actually lower than I thought when we posted yesterday.)

P/Sales – 1.3(x)

PEG – 1.7(x)

Div Yield 2.3%

Although the stock market could use a 3% – 5% correction given its overbought status, the market’s fundamentals / valuation remain attractive, the technicals flash green, and the sentiment (as detailed by Schaeffer’s Investment Research) also suggests continued higher stock prices.

We look for q3 ’12 earnings to be better than expected, in the mid-single-digit growth range, and S&P 500 revenues to be slightly positive, possibly up 2%.

q3 ’12 will be the nadir for S&P 500 earnings in our opinion. One of our earnings tracking metrics has turned decidely green, in that regard, since August 1, and we’ll be out with it next week.

Be sure to check out Jeff Miller’s blog, http://oldprof.typepad.com/, A Dash of Insight when you get a chance. Jeff is one of the best bloggers in our business.

Thanks for stopping by:

Trinity Asset Management, Inc. by:

Brian Gilmartin, CFA

Portfolio manager

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.