Category Archives: stocks

Cash-To-Debt Ratio Demonstrates Why Riskier Assets Have Limited Upside Potential

Cash on corporate balance sheets grew at a 1% pace to $1.84 billion in 2015. That’s a record level of dollars on the books. On the other hand, debt grew at a clip of nearly 14.8% to $6.6 trillion from $5.75 trillion. That’s a 15% surge in debt obligations. In fact, American companies have grown their debt load at a double-digit annualized rate since the economic recovery began in 2009. Doing so has put corporations in a precarious situation – circumstances where cash as a percentage of debt is lower than at any time since the Great Recession. Obviously, the data points themselves are unnerving. Yet, the trend for cash as a percentage of total debt over time may be even more alarming. Consider what transpired between 2006 and 2008. Cash growth began to slow. Debt began to skyrocket. And cash as a percentage of debt steadily declined until, eventually, stocks of corporations found themselves losing HALF of their value. Are stocks set to log -50% bearish losses going forward? Perhaps. Perhaps not. Yet the notion that debt can perpetually grow at a double-digit rate without adverse consequences is about as inane as the idea that the U.S. government’s debt troubles are irrelevant to the country’s well-being. At least in the U.S. government’s case, its leadership can print currency and/or manipulate borrowing costs. (Note: That is not an endorsement of policy; rather, it is an acknowledgement of government power.) Companies? They’re at the mercy of the corporate bond market such that, when existing obligations are retired, new debt may need to be issued at much higher yields to entice investors. Think about it. Ratings companies like S&P may find themselves downgrading scores of corporate bonds to junk status due to ungodly cash-to-debt ratios. What’s more, yield-seeking investors might squeamishly back away from speculation if spreads between corporates and treasuries widen further. Additionally, Fed efforts to raise overnight lending rates may push junk yields further out on the ledge where the combination of widening spreads, rating agency downgrades and Fed policy direction collectively reinforce a negative feedback loop. By many accounts, low-rated bonds have been struggling for quite some time. Get a gander at the three-year chart of the SPDR Barclays Capital High Yield Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: JNK ) below. Granted, the bounce off of the February lows is astonishing. (Channel your gratitude toward a 70%-plus recovery in crude oil prices.) Nevertheless, the total return for JNK is a scant 1.4% over the three-year period. That is negligible reward for a huge amount of risk . In contrast, the iShares 7-10 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: IEF ) offered a total return of 9.2% over the same period. That is low risk for reasonable reward. The problem may only get worse. At present, junk status (‘BB’) is the average rating for companies issuing bonds. How bad is that historically? It’s worse than before, during or after the financial collapse in 2008-2009. Indeed, you have to travel back to the 2001 recession to find an average rating as anemic as the one that exists right now. It is certainly true that when the European Central Bank (ECB) announced its quantitative easing (“QE”) intentions in the first quarter, the reality that they’d be acquiring corporate bonds as well as sovereign debt provided a fresh round of speculative yield seeking. Income producing assets that had been struggling under the worry of multiple Fed rate hikes in 2016 – emerging market sovereigns via the PowerShares Emerging Markets Sovereign Debt Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PCY ), the SPDR Barclays International Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: BWX ), high yield via the iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: HYG ), crossover corporates via the iShares Baa-Ba Rated Corporate Bond ETF (BATS: QLTB ) as well as the iShares Intermediate Credit Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: CIU ) – rocketed higher. On the flip side, the belief that yield-seeking and risk-seeking behavior will occur as long as central banks keep borrowing costs subdued is flawed. In the bond world, bad ratings eventually override yield-seeking speculation. In the stock world, stretched valuations eventually cap upside potential . It is worth noting, in fact, that the S&P 500 has been flat for 18 long months, which roughly corresponds to when corporate earnings peaked back on 9/30/2014 . Disclosure: Gary Gordon, MS, CFP is the president of Pacific Park Financial, Inc., a Registered Investment Adviser with the SEC. Gary Gordon, Pacific Park Financial, Inc, and/or its clients may hold positions in the ETFs, mutual funds, and/or any investment asset mentioned above. The commentary does not constitute individualized investment advice. The opinions offered herein are not personalized recommendations to buy, sell or hold securities. At times, issuers of exchange-traded products compensate Pacific Park Financial, Inc. or its subsidiaries for advertising at the ETF Expert web site. ETF Expert content is created independently of any advertising relationships.

Amazon’s Push Into Business E-Commerce An $18 Billion Opportunity?

Amazon ( AMZN ) is pushing deeper into business-to-business e-commerce, which one analyst estimates could add $18 billion in company revenue by 2020. The B2B unit, Amazon Business , began as Amazon Supply in 2012. The initiative was rebranded in April 2015 and Amazon — which posted 2015 revenue of $107 billion — recently indicated it reached more than $1 billion in annual sales, with 300,000 customers. Bank of America Merrill Lynch analyst Justin Post estimates Amazon Business will reach gross merchandise volume of $3.5 billion this year, resulting in revenue of $3 billion. He anticipates GMV of $8 billion next year and revenue of $6.4 billion. By 2020, estimates Post, Amazon will hit GMV of $25 billion and $18.6 billion in revenue. “Based on recent management comments, Amazon Business appears to be ready for prime time, and we wouldn’t be surprised if Amazon invests in marketing to raise awareness as Amazon’s procurement systems improve,” said Post in a research note. According to market research firm Frost & Sullivan, the U.S. B2B market is expected to reach $1 trillion in sales by 2020, and $6.7 trillion globally. “We think B2B provides significant runway for growth, which could help Amazon sustain its growth rates and premium valuation for many years,” wrote Post. He has a buy rating on Amazon stock, and a price target of 840. Amazon stock was near 705, up more than 1%, in afternoon trading in the stock market today , after touching a record high above 722 on May 12. It’s an IBD Leaderboard stock. Amazon Business sells a broad line of goods, such as office supplies, tools, industrial equipment, tractor equipment and office products. Competitors in the B2B e-commerce sector include Staples ( SPLS ), HD Supply Holdings ( HDS ), Office Depot ( ODP ), Grainger ( GWW ) and Fastenal ( FAST ).

Western Digital Gets Upgrade, As New Era With SanDisk Begins

Western Digital ( WDC ) on Tuesday received a price-target hike to 50 from 45 and an upgrade to outperform from market perform by Cowen analyst Karl Ackerman. The moves comes two days before Western Digital is slated to give new guidance that will include its $16 billion acquisition of SanDisk. Western Digital announced the completion of its SanDisk acquisition last week, creating a big competitor in both disk drives and flash-chip storage. The company has said it would update its guidance after the market close Thursday for its fiscal fourth quarter ending July 1. Ackerman says while he expects the SanDisk acquisition to dilute earnings through 2017, “We think the stock should start to work higher from here, as Western Digital’s updated guidance should act as a positive catalyst and help eliminate uncertainty.” Western Digital stock was above 42, up more than 4%, in afternoon trading in the stock market today . However, the stock is down 47% since the acquisition was announced in October. Shares hit a four-year low of 34.99 on May 16 but are up 20% since then. Western Digital and SanDisk had combined revenue of about $20 billion in 2015, with $14.5 billion from Western Digital. It’s the largest provider of disk drives, ahead of Seagate Technology ( STX ). SanDisk is a leading provider of chips used for data storage in a wide variety of devices, including smartphones, tablets and PCs. The deal will help SanDisk, which has a strong retail business, move up the ladder to make bigger sales to businesses and other enterprise customers — the market where Western Digital is strongest. Western Digital gets the ability to offer chip-based storage in areas where its disk drive technology is losing ground. Western Digital’s year-over-year revenue has fallen for six straight quarters. That’s largely due to lower disk drive sales in the slumping PC market and the migration of disk storage to chip-based storage in many products. Seagate’s revenue has fallen for five straight quarters. “Now that SanDisk is subsumed into Western Digital’s operations, Western Digital now morphs from an enterprise highly exposed to the cannibalization of next-generation storage into a media agnostic, vertically integrated data storage provider capable of generating mid-single-digit revenue growth and low-double-digit EPS growth,” Ackerman wrote. He said the top 10 customers shared between Western Digital and SanDisk include Best Buy ( BBY ), Apple ( AAPL ), Hewlett Packard Enterprise ( HPE ) and HP Inc. ( HPQ ) “With SandDisk, Western Digital can now more effectively service both enterprise and hyper-scale customers and capitalize on the explosion of data creation that should double every two to three years by 2020,” Ackerman wrote.