MorningWord 1/04/13: Payrolls Yawn, $EMC Price Action Pointing To Continued Weak Enterprise Spending?

by Dan January 4, 2013 9:19 am • Commentary

MorningWord 1/04/13: The all important and much anticipated December Jobs report is out and……its basically in line to expectations and the unemployment rate remains unchanged, phewwww.  The S&P futures don’t really know what to do (down 3 pts then up 3 pts) after the parabolic move earlier this week, but with the SPX less than 1.5% from the multi-year highs,  I would be surprised if this data alone would be enough to cause a breakout today. I am still in the camp that we will need to see a bit of consolidation above 1450 before we will see a sustainable break-out, but for the moment, the path of least resistance appears to be higher.  Today’s data is a continued sign of the “less bad” economic data that we have been witnessing for the last couple months, but we will quickly get a sense in the coming weeks if corporate earnings and forward guidance reflect some of this economic optimism despite the side show that was the “fiscal cliff”.

On the single stock front, with the Nasdaq Composite up 2.68% out of the gates in 2013, it is hard to find too many large cap tech stocks that are actually down on the year.   EMC’s weak performance ytd (down 3.68%) is in fairly stark contrast to IBM, ORCL, MSFT & CSCO’s gains of anywhere btwn 2% & 4%.  One cause for the under-performance is likely the result of a couple cautious analyst calls on the storage supplier suggesting that the company will miss Q4 estimates as a result of “fiscal uncertainty” and that 2013 guidance could be in jeopardy.  What I find so interesting about the weak price action is that EMC is a stock that is fairly well loved among Wall Street analysts with 39 Buy ratings, only 6 Holds and NO Sells, and there appears to be a fairly large disconnect btwn the analyst community and that of investors with the stock only about 12%   off of the 52 week lows from last January.  

EMC has been on my short list of large cap tech stocks that trade with a PEG (PE to expected Growth Rate) of about 1 or lower (EMC has a forward PE of ~12.7 and expected earnings growth of 13% in 2013).  I don’t use this metric to soley make investment/trading decisions but merely as an input, and a way to identify quality companies that may screen as cheap on other metrics.  It is hard to come by too many stocks in large cap tech that have expected eps growth of 10% plus that trade at that multiple (which also happens to be at a market multiple ~13x for 2013), IBM is also one of them but IBM is only expected to grow sales at about 2% a year for the next 2 years, while analysts expect EMC to grow sales at 9% and 12% respectively   The company has about $2.5b of cash per share on its balance sheet, but does not pay a dividend, could this be a catalyst for the stock or will they continue to buy back stock and use the cash for acquisitions?  EMC’s large stake in faster-growing VMW is also looked at as an under appreciated asset, but both companies are highly susceptible to slowdowns in enterprise tech spending…..currently it appears that EMC investors are expecting a continued slowdown.  We will be doing more work on the name as we head into their Q4 report on Jan 29th.

 

 

 

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MorningWord 1/03/13:  Just as most traders earlier in the week were eyeing the 1400 level in the SPX and the 200 day moving average on the downside at ~1390 as support, the market catapulted nearly 5% in a straight-line to ~1460  which has served as some fairly healthy resistance since the Sept multi-year highs.  While the move was largely predicated on investors positioning in front of the fiscal cliff deadline, and the resulting compromise, seasonal factors were also likely in play. Remember that the first trading day of the year in 2012 saw the SPX rally ~1.5%.   Just as we had been discussing mutual fund rebalancing since late Oct (out of winners and into some losers), some of this action continues into the new year as investors look for laggards.

Take the price action AAPL yesterday, while the stock was up 3.17%, largely in line with the Nasdaq Comp, the gains were eclipsed by the likes of FB (+5.19%), HPQ (+5.40%) & DELL (+5.28%).  I think there are very few folks on the planet that would argue that the fundamentals of FB, HPQ & DELL are remotely in the same stratosphere as AAPL, but maybe given AAPL’s long term out-performance and its recent fall from grace this signals better investment opportunities elsewhere.

Another name that caught my eye as an under-performer on yesterday’s massive rally was JPM, which was up only 1.57%, vs the XLF which was up nearly 3%.  Again this could have been investors favoring recent under-performers, or beta in the case of C and BAC respectively.

I am not going to make the same mistake that I made last year, by fading the strong equity performance right out of the gate, but I will look for opportunities to get short exposure where I feel the fundamentals don’t match the price action, and where I can identify catalysts.  My short biased trade in XLY yesterday is just one of these ideas where I think we will start to see some kinks in the consumer discretionary armor as we get into the meat of Q4 earnings later this month.  I would also argue that while the VIX move above 22 was likely a near term overshoot earlier the week, yesterday’s close below 15 might have been the same on the downside.  Given the potential for uncertainty around corporate earnings in the weeks to come, a trade similar to the one that we detailed on December 19th (here) could make sense at current depressed levels.

At this point in the rally, as most major equity indices approach long term resistance I would lean a tad cautious, especially as it relates to chasing longs here, the healthiest thing for the market to do here would be to consolidate some of the recent gains near highs and gather some steam for a break-out.

 

 

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MorningWord 1/02/13:  The shenanigans in Washington over the last few months remind me a bit of my second semester senior year in college that started off with me doing a whole lot of nothing (good that is) the last couple months.  When the eventual year end deadline was looming, and not until the realization that to get my degree on time there would either need to be a “grand bargain” with my French teacher (who barely knew me) to get a “Proficiency” stamp to graduate, meaning I had to learn a foreign language to the standards of an Ivy League institution in a matter of weeks. Well, let’s just say my professor was less than impressed with my politicking and the compromise was between me and my desire to partake in senior week.  I passed my proficiency exam with hours to spare prior to graduation, although it wasn’t pretty, and I can still barely make out the items on French menu and I certainly can’t order them aloud!  

Our elected officials had to bite the bullet and forgo most of their Holiday break and do what their constituents elected them to do.  We have been squarely in the camp that a compromise would get done, but one that would more likely cause further deadlines on some of the most pressing issues, which this one does.  This likely means continued volatility in equities, due to continued uncertainty as a result of further self imposed deadlines.  Maybe investors have become accustomed to this sort of price action since the 2011 Debt Ceiling debacle to the most recent. I doubt it though. But I would suggest that the post election sell-off in Nov, and last week’s were both fairly orderly, and it wasn’t until volumes got very light last week that the VIX actually breached 20 on the upside.  My sense is that investors were not all that bothered, and very few expected the “worst case” scenario, as Enis so aptly discussed in his MacroWrap this morning.

Just as it so happens, investors who have been “cliff dwelling” and had moved to the sidelines are quickly trying to play a little catch-up in the last few days.  I can’t blame them, especially with the new year upon us, but very quickly the conversation will turn to corporate earnings and what sectors will see a drag from increased tax rates on close to 80% of Americans.

We are clearly a bit more cautious than most in the near term, and will be very inclined to get fairly short above 1450 prior to Q3 earnings.  But as we have also been saying, the Q4 earnings set up may be a bit dicey as we expect to hear the words Fiscal Cliff and Hurricane Sandy as frequently as we hear the words cautiously optimistic.

As we get back in the saddle for 2013, we will be most focused on single stock stories in the near term attempting to separate the forrest from the trees, that’s where we think we can add the most value to our readers, not forecasting fiscal outcomes in Washington.

We wish all of our readers a healthy, happy and prosperous 2013, and we thank you for your interest in RiskReversal and your continued support.

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