Tuesday, October 21, 2008

JPMorganChase's buy list


Last Friday,JPMorganChase published a list of sixteen stocks that they feel will outperform the general market in a global recession. The stocks were:

3M Co.
Baxter International Inc.
Colgate-Palmolive Co.
CA Inc.
Devon Energy Corp.
General Mills Inc.
Gilead Sciences Inc.
Google Inc.
Hewlett-Packard Co.
McDonald's Corp.
Merck & Co.
Monsanto Co.
Nucor Corp.
Philip Morris International Inc.
Union Pacific Corp.
Visa Inc

There isn't much surprising about this list. They are all megacap stocks with tons of cash on their balance sheets. It features defensive healthcare and consumer staples companies, some energy plays which will act as an inflation hedge, and commodities stocks that have recently hit 52-week lows.

Do not go out and immediately buy these stocks. They are fine candidates for a watchlist, but don't plunk down your hard-earned cash just yet. It's almost certainly too late for any short-term gain from this list. Besides, this is aimed at institutional investors, many of whom have to be fully invested due to the language in their charters. "outperform" is a relative term and not a guarantee of positive returns.

If you're dollar cost averaging into an index fund or a stock that's already on this list, then buy all means, continue to buy and lower your cost basis. However, please don't feel that you have to open a new position in a stock due to the gravity of this flimsy list.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Buffett writes


In today's New York Times Op-Ed page, Warren Buffett has confessed that he is buying U.S. stocks for his personal account. Again, this is his personal account, not the Berkshire Hathaway portfolio, so he's not getting great deals on preferred shares that pay onerous interest rates. As usual Buffett encourages to take a long-term approach to investing and not be scared by short-term fluctuations. Warning: Buffett is a value investor. He is often early, remember he told people to buy equities back in 1979, three years before the last massive bull market began. Being early can be painful, so don't follow this advice and expect that the bottom is in. Buffett doesn't call bottoms. He doesn't call tops. He just buys when he thinks he's getting a deal and sells when people start getting greedy. The economy is still functioning. The rapture is not on the horizon. Don't let yourself be scared out of stocks. Now is a great time to rebalance. Make a plan, revisit your asset allocation, and stay the course.

Friday, October 10, 2008

Nothing lasts forever even cold November rain


September was awful and October is looking worse. Everywhere I look I see stories about the financial crisis and people wondering if we're going to see another Great Depression. I keep hearing people on CNBC talking about defensive sectors and stocks. This is a totally academic exercise when all equities are getting punished.

There is enough pessimism in the market to choke a horse. So have we reached a point of capitulation? I don't know. I don't care. I'm not a trader.

I've been preach for the last year or so that cash, gold, and Treasuries are fine, so I won't repeat those screeds. Today's post is going to be about psychology. The way to survive this market is change your attitude towards it. Start looking for bargains. Goldman Sachs is trading in the low 80s at slightly under book value. When do you think that will happen again? They are not going down. The Fed and the Treasury have decided that they will "bear any burden, pay any price" to keep the remaining big banks alive. Could it go down further from here? Certainly, maybe even probably, but I'll snap up more shares and wait for the storm to pass.

Another name that I'm looking at is Altria. MO is selling at 4x earnings and under a 1 PEG. This is one of the greatest stocks of all time just being given away. It's also got a 7.1% yield. That's a nice chunk of change while you wait for the market to rebound.

GE is selling at single-digit multiples with a 6% yield. SunTrust Bank is selling under book value. In fact, right now, the cash on the balance sheet exceeds the market cap! It's yielding 7.4%. XOM is in the low 60s. FCX has a forward P/E of 3 and has PEG, P/S, and P/B all under 1. I could go on and on.

I can't guarantee that these stocks won't get cheaper or that ten years from now they will have fully recovered. Anyone who bought GM in the 80s when things really started to look bad has been spent twenty years watching things get worse. So there's always risk, but the risk reward ratio is in your favor when you buy blue chips like these that (unlike GM in the 80s) and hold them until the market comes to its senses.

This financial system is battered right now, but we aren't going back to bartering.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Jim Cramer's dramatic statement



These are the times that try men's souls--Thomas Paine

Amy Winehouse is turning to Scientology. Previously unknown Jim Petruzelli TKOs Kimbo Slice. The most shocking event of all though: Jim Cramer is dissing the stock market.

Jim Cramer went on the Today Show yesterday and advised people to take any money out of the stock market that they will need in the next five years. Why? He sees the possibility of a 20% decline in the Dow and wants to help the little guy get out of the way of a runaway train. I admire his sense of noblesse oblige. It is also refreshing to see a money manager that it's okay to raise cash.

Some will see this as a sign of capitulation, not unlike that famously contrarian indicator "The Death of Equities" BusinessWeek cover from August 13th, 1979. Still, I don't think that Cramer is consistent enough to serve as a contrary indicator. He is of the school of whatever's working. Cramer throwing in the towel is him saying, "If I can't figure this out, I doubt if you can." He's just being honest in his exaggerated manner. Most people should not be trying to time the market. They should ride out the markets short-term fluctuations. He just made a compelling case for investing in low-cost index funds, much better than Buffett did with his bet against Protégé Partners LLC.