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3 September 2009
Dear Fellow Investor
What a difference a year makes.
About a year ago the markets were still
fairly expensive, in March this year very inexpensive, and today
about fairly valued.
The following table shows the
price/earnings ratio and dividend yields of the main indices
worldwide.
|
Index |
Country |
Price / Earnings |
Dividend Yield % |
|
FTSE 100 |
UK |
70.72 |
3.95 |
|
FTSE All Share |
UK |
1710.0 |
3.77 |
|
DAX |
German |
46.67 |
3.79 |
|
Dax Mid-Cap |
German |
Negative |
2.63 |
|
DJ Stoxx 50 |
Europe |
20.78 |
3.96 |
|
DJ Stoxx 600 |
Europe |
48.37 |
3.65 |
|
DJ Euro Stoxx 50 |
EU |
32.36 |
4.31 |
|
IBEX 35 |
Spain |
12.86 |
4.94 |
|
CAC 40 Index |
France |
14.48 |
4.23 |
|
Dow Jones Industrial |
USA |
13.71 |
3.02 |
|
S&P 500 |
USA |
18.98 |
2.57 |
|
Nikkei 225 |
Japan |
Negative |
1.81 |
Source:
Bloomberg on 31 Aug 2009 For method of calculation see end of
newsletter.
As can be seen on a price earnings
basis the indices are quite expensive.
You can argue that the earnings used to
calculate the ratio is below normal but my question is what is a
normal level of earnings in the current macro economic environment?
Even if you assume earnings will
increase 30% in the next year the markets are still not cheap.
Dividend yields in comparison look
attractive especially in Europe.
However as a large number of companies
pay dividends annually dividend yields may be overstated as the
numbers refer to last years dividend payments. Decreasing dividends
may already be reflected in US indices as a lot of companies paying
quarterly dividend.
Also with an uncertain earnings climate
companies may choose to lower dividends further this year to
strengthen their balance sheets.
The idea that markets are fairly valued
was also the topic of, the highly respected fund manager, Jeremy
Grantham's second quarter letter titled Boring
Fair Price! (pdf):
“A year ago, it was very easy to know
what to be: a risk avoider. It was not so easy reinvesting when
terrified, but most of us knew that we should have been doing more.
But today? It’s difficult to be inspired at fair value.”
So who is buying and pushing markets
steadily upwards on unusually low volumes, even for summer holiday
months in the northern hemisphere?
It is definitely not insiders or share
buybacks supporting share prices. According to Charles Biderman, CEO
of investment-flow research firm Trimtabs “Insider
buying is non-existent”.
He also mentioned that with no
corporate buying in the form of of buybacks to acquisitions
“I have no idea where the money is
coming to keep prices from plunging”.
A survey by Bank of America Merrill
Lynch reveals that the level of cash balances of the 204 equity fund
managers polled plunged to 3.5 per cent in the second week of August,
hitting their lowest level since July 2007.
“This is the strongest
market sentiment in two years and it represents a big turnaround from
the apocalyptic bearishness of March,”
wrote the survey’s authors
Gary Baker and Michael Hartnett.
All I know is that the world economy
looked a lot better in July 2007 compared to today.
I do not want to be fully invested with
the market fairly valued and an uncertain economic outlook.
Looking at markets overall is one thing
but are there any segments that are still attractively priced?
Jeremy Grantham, in the letter
mentioned above, thinks so:
“The easy winner of the cheapest
equity sub-category contest is still high quality U.S. blue chips.
They were really trashed on a relative basis by
the second quarter rally in junk. I understand a rally in junk after
the record decline, but this was excessive and based apparently on
unrealistic hopes for a strong, sustained economic recovery.
Such a recovery seems most unlikely,
whereas a temporary, weaker recovery appeared very likely three
months ago as the substantial size of the stimulus package was
revealed. The latter scenario still seems probable.”
This is also what I found. There are still attractively priced good quality companies not only in the US
but also in Europe.
Telecommunication companies in Europe
for example hardly moved up in the rally and only started moving up
in the last month. The Financial Times shows that Vivendi the French
Telecom and computer gaming company currently trades on a price to
earnings ratio of 9.8 and has a dividend yield of 7%. Deutsche
Telekom has a dividend yield of 8.6%.
So even with fairly priced markets if
you look on a individual company level there are still attractive
opportunities left.
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Policy
It looks like summer is starting to
leave us here in Hamburg as the days are getting shorter. For my
first six years in Germany the winter never really influenced me.
However last year I started to not look forward to it at all, and
this year is no different.
Hamburg is a beautiful city with a huge
lake in the middle of the city. But the winters are dark with a rainy
wet cold. As the city is very far north, north of New Foundland, when
compared to North America daylight hours in winter are from about
9:00am to 4 pm. Not something to look forward to.
Your enjoying the last days of summer
analyst
Disclosure: I do not have a position in any of the securities mentioned in the article
Table Method of calculation
The price to earnings ratio, which equals the current
security's price divided by the earnings per share. Indices use an
aggregate P/E ratio weighted to reflect the P/E multiples of the
underlying index members so that the index level P/E calculation is
consistent with the index level calculation.
The index P/E calculation multiplies the trailing 12 month
earnings for each stock by the stock's weight in the index. To obtain
the index P/E, the value of the index is divided by the total of
these weighted earnings for all the stocks in the index. Equities use
12 month EPS before extraordinary items.
The annual dividends of the component shares during the past 12
months divided by the index value, expressed as a percentage.
The trailing 12 month dividend per share is multiplied by the
current number of shares outstanding, then divided by an index
divisor. The sum of these shares is divided by the current price of
the index.
P.S. A media company in the wrong country at the wrong time...

This month the company I found for subscribers is located in France.
In terms of the size of companies I look at its quite large with a market value of €1,72 billion.
The company owns the most popular television channel in one of the largest European countries but is also very active in new media channels including the internet, tablets and smart phones.
In spite of this, the market views it as an old media company that is soon going the way of the dinosaurs. However, when you look at its financial statements you will see what a great business it is.
Its balance sheet is solid with no debt, and it generates a high amount of free cash flow and profits. This enables it to pay a dividend of just under 7% that can easily be maintained and has room to increase.
When I recommended the company it was trading at 7 times free cash flow, 7,7 times 2010 earnings and 5,6 times EBIT to enterprise value.
I am sure you will agree this is undervalued.
To immediately get your hands on this value investment idea (for as little as €39) click here. |