Tag Archives: health

Demographics Will Drive Future Investment Decisions

Summary Society is getting older and will need more healthcare. Fewer younger people and they have different tastes. The wise investor should pay attention to these changing demographics. Bob Dylan sang “the times they are a-changin'” in 1964, and he couldn’t have been more right. Things are indeed changing. Society is aging, every day 10,000 more people turn 65, and fewer babies are being born, the average fertility rate is now less than 1.9, almost a 50% drop off from the peak in 1959. More older, and retired, people means more spending on healthcare and leisure activities and fewer younger people means less spending on homes, cars, and other big ticket items. And the young crowd has different tastes and are more health conscious regarding food than their parents or grandparents. Demographers are saying that these trends probably will be with us for a long time, likely out to the year 2050. How will this turn of events affect investors going forward? Hint: those holding shares of companies such as Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ ), McDonald’s (NYSE: MCD ), and Universal Health Realty Income Trust (NYSE: UHT ) should pay attention. Older and wiser Pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson supplies prescription drugs, consumer health items, and medical devices, which all should be in great demand for the foreseeable future. A well-performing management team has steered the company through both good and bad times by employing a successful acquisition strategy and top-notch R&D effort that has helped keep the drug pipeline stocked with a seemingly never ending supply. As of April, there were 15 different drugs in the late stage U.S. and E.U. approval phase. As soon as those patent-protected products head to market, investors can expect to start reaping the benefits, which will probably include more dividend hikes. The company, one of the few with a pristine AAA credit rating, has raised the dividend payout every year since 1963 and has been growing it at a 6.5% annual rate over the last half-decade. Shares currently yield about 2.9%, well above the rate on 5- and 10-year Treasury notes. There is plenty of room to keep the dividend flowing and growing. The payout ratio of less than 50% is modest. Johnson & Johnson will probably continue to generate consistent cash flow from operations, it was $14B last year alone, and has a low (0.2) long-term debt to equity ratio. Analysts project that earnings and cash flow will continue to increase. EPS has averaged a double-digit growth rate over the past three years, a time when many companies have struggled. Universal Health Realty Income Trust is a REIT that owns medical office buildings, urgent care facilities, and other healthcare-related properties. The company has been increasing revenue at a double-digit pace for the past half decade. Over the past year, UHT has assumed a minority interest in several other real estate firms and added four new buildings to its portfolio which should help continue the trend. Universal Health pays a quarterly dividend of $0.64 per share and the stock currently yields about 5.0%, double that of the average Dividend Aristocrat and well above what you can find in most investment-grade bonds. The company has traditionally generated adequate “funds from operations,” or FFO, a metric commonly used in the REIT industry, over the years. A recent quarterly filing indicated that adjusted FFO increased 3% to $0.72 per diluted share. The stock is not without risk. The current price/sales ratio of about 10.6 could mean that shares are a bit pricey right now. Changing tastes With fewer younger people around, companies that previously catered to this segment of the population probably will be impacted. Shareholders of retail outlets, home builders, and even auto manufacturers could see a lot of red over the next few decades. And the younger crowd has different tastes than the generations that came before them. For one thing, they want a healthier brand of fast food. This could impact old school companies, such as McDonald’s. The Oak Brook, IL-based burger giant has reported less foot traffic and lower same-store sales over the past few years. In a bid to reverse this trend, the company had to make radical changes to both its menu (for example, adding all-day breakfast and reducing the number of items) and to management (earlier this year a new CEO took over). I recently wrote an article that concluded that so far the improvements have helped stabilize things at least but will the company be able to withstand three decades of demographic headwinds? Conclusion Demographic trends indicate that up to the middle of the century things could be dicey for some companies like McDonald’s, as a smaller number of younger people spend their money in different ways than before. However, the aging of society might be a boon to the healthcare industry, which would make investors of Johnson & Johnson and Universal Healthcare Realty Trust happy.

Are The Tailwinds For Stocks Turning Into Tornadoes?

The risk of hold-n-hope at a time when valuation levels are extreme and market internals are sketchy is a recipe for disaster. In contrast, tactical shifts designed to reduce risk when valuations are extreme and market internals are weakening can lessen the adverse impact of bearish catastrophes. A breakdown in market breadth accompanied by highly overvalued equity prices should be met with a decision to reduce one’s risk exposure. Recently, I was speaking with one of the co-founders of the popular exchange-traded fund web site, ETF Database . He wanted to get my thoughts about the problems with “buy-n-hold.” I did not hesitate to give him an earful. Rather than chronicle my conversation in its entirety, or reiterate my commentary from dozens of previous articles on the topic, readers may wish to contemplate the risk of holding onto a permanent portfolio at this moment. Indeed, the risk of hold-n-hope at a time when valuation levels are extreme and market internals are sketchy is a recipe for disaster. For instance, assume that your approach to investing is to hold 80%, 90% or 100% in U.S. stocks for the next 30 years. Your reasoning? Stocks are extremely unlikely to lose value over a 10-year span, let alone a 30-year period. Unfortunately, at this particular juncture in the bull market cycle, current stock valuations suggest that it is quite possible, if not probable, that the asset class will lose HALF of its value in the next bear market. Why is it worth considering 50% depreciation in stock prices? It happened in 2000. It happened in 2007. And the recent extremes in the median price-earnings ratios (P/E) and median price-sales ratios (P/S) actually went beyond the peaks hit in 2000 and in 2007. What happens, then, if your portfolio is worth HALF of what it was worth at the bull market top. If you are fortunate enough to witness an 8-year bull market compounding at 9% from the bearish bottom, you will only find yourself back at the starting gate. Even Steven. And that’s after realizing a remarkable 9% compounded for eight years! Keep in mind, the break-even scenario described above also implies that one never wavered on the hold-n-hope approach. You never once panicked. You never once sold. You never came to the conclusion at any point that the return of your principal was more important to you than the return on your principal. Eight years. Same dollars in your accounts, though they would have less purchasing power due to inflation. Heck, at that time, people will be thinking about who they might like to replace President Hillary Clinton as she is rounding the bases of her second term. (That’s not a prediction… just an effort at some humor.) In contrast, tactical shifts designed to reduce risk when valuations are extreme and market internals are weakening can lessen the adverse impact of bearish catastrophes. An individual who loses HALF of his/her account value needs 100% to recover. The individual who only loses 20% requires 25% to be made whole. If that takes a year or two or even three, the individual would have 60 more months in the hypothetical 8-year bull cycle to grow his/her account value substantially. Hold-n-hope advocates disparage the notion that one can reduce exposure to riskier assets (or raise them) in a manner that might prove successful. Doing so, they claim, amounts to little more than sporadic market timing. That is incorrect. Had one simply used extreme valuations alongside deteriorating market internals to reduce exposure to U.S. stocks in 2000 and 2007, they’d have preserved more of their account values for enhanced long-term compounded growth. Consider valuations at the start of the year 2000. The trailing twelve month P/E (34.0) and trailing 10 year P/E (44.2) for the S&P 500 had been hitting never-before-seen extremes in history. In the same vein, the New York Stock Exchange Advance Decline (A/D) line was buckling at an increasingly rapid pace; the downward slope of its 200-day moving average indicated fewer and fewer participants in the “New Economy” bull. The deterioration in market breadth coupled with extreme overvaluation prior to the March 2000 bearish beginnings provided ample opportunity for investors to lower risk exposure. What’s more, since the improvement that occurred for the NYSE A/D line in the broader stock market in 2001 as well as 2002 was not accompanied by improvement in the NASDAQ A/D Line – and since there was little improvement in fundamental value – maintaining a lower risk profile for longer was warranted. Now let’s turn our focus to the year 2007. By the middle of that year, the trailing twelve month P/E (20.0) and trailing 10 year P/E (27.3) had been signaling caution. A wide variety of other valuation methodologies were also indicating a severely overpriced backdrop. As if that weren’t enough, the NYSE A/D Line began showing significant and persistence weakness as 2008 had been getting underway. Not paying attention to the breakdown resulted in unnecessary pain for investors. Again, a breakdown in market breadth accompanied by highly overvalued equity prices should be met with a decision to reduce one’s risk exposure. One does not have to short the market or seek to eliminate risk entirely. However, it is sensible to insure against the possibility of monstrous loss. What’s more, when improving market internals occur in conjunction with more favorable stock valuations – as they did in 2002 and 2009 – one can rebalance back to a target allocation. So what are the circumstances for today’s valuations and today’s market internals? Not so hot. As I mentioned earlier, the median price-earnings ratios (P/E) and price-sales ratios (P/S) actually surmounted the peaks at the end of the last two bull market cycles – the metrics went beyond the valuation peaks hit in 2000 and in 2007. Corporate earnings have now fallen from a height of $106 in 2014 to current levels of $95.4 on the S&P 500 for a 10% decline. They’ve fallen for two consecutive quarters and they are expected to fall in Q4 in what has been dubbed an “earnings recession.” The trailing 12-month P/E Ratio is 22.7, while the average since 1870 is 16.6. Meanwhile, the PE10 at 26 sits in highest quintile, implying that equities are severely overpriced. What about forward 12 month P/Es? Aren’t they still attractive? Although this “guestimate” methodology did little to help folks avoid the staggering losses of 2000 and 2007, the forward P/E of 17.2 right now is higher than it was in 2007 and it is well above the Goldman Sachs 35-year average (13.0). Naturally, perma-bulls and buy-n-hold advocates alike have endeavored to paint a prettier picture. Just exclude energy from earnings per share. For that matter, exclude corporations with 50% or more of their profits coming from overseas, and the earnings picture brightens considerably. Now how silly is the mistake of “Ex energy” or “Ex foreign exposure?” That’s akin to tossing the double-digit earnings expansion of the health care sector because the results are too wonderful. That’s about as sensible as removing the positive contributions from the consumer discretionary sector, since the savings at the pump have presumably gone into spending online or eating at restaurants or purchases at the auto mall. Conjuring up “Ex energy” is like putting lipstick on an elderly pig or providing a face lift for an aging dog. (Yes… those politically incorrect references.) Remember, “Ex-tech” discussions were floating around in 2000. “Ex-financials” were popular with analysts in 2007. If you’re going to argue “Ex energy” earnings per share today, then you should have ran with this line of thinking when crude traded north of $105 per barrel. Bottom line? It is true that valuations only carry weight when stock tailwinds turn to stock tornadoes; it is accurate than decidedly overpriced equities could thrive until they become insanely priced. Nevertheless, booms become busts and the current bull cycle is no different. It follows that preparing for a bust involves monitoring the forces that drive valuations as well as monitoring market internals. For instance, we know that ultra-low borrowing costs over the last seven years have fueled everything from consumer purchasing activity to mortgage refinancing to real estate speculation to corporate share buybacks. The question an astute investor may wish to pursue is whether or not corporations will even be positioned to take on more debt to buy back their shares going forward. Total corporate debt has more than DOUBLED since pre-crisis levels of 2007, while the average interest paid on debt for corporations has jumped from 3.5% in 2007 to 4.5%. That’s right. Corporations are paying more and more of the money they make/borrow to service TWICE as much debt at HIGHER interest rates than they were paying in 2007. Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve’s upcoming directional shift will make it more expensive to borrow new money in the bond market, hampering stock buybacks as cash flow from sales continues to decline. For the time being, an allocation to S&P 500 proxies like the SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ) is holding up admirably. If you are over-allocated to riskier segments of the equity markets or higher-yielding bond markets, take your small gain or “tax-loss harvest” the small loss. Valuations for small caps in the iShares Russell 2000 ETF (NYSEARCA: IWM ) are even more troubling than their larger-cap brethren. The rising price ratio for the iShares 7-10 Year Treasury Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: IEF ): iShares iBoxx $ High Yield Corporate Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: HYG ) also indicates investor preference for perceived safety. 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.

DWX: High Yield International Allocations With Falling Share Prices

Summary The dividend of 5.69% looks incredible until investors take a look at the total return. The individual holdings have fairly high weights which suggest higher volatility. The sector allocations for utilities look great, but the lack of other defensive sectors is fairly strange. Looking at historical performance confirms the higher volatility of the fund and a negative total return over a long time period. The SPDR S&P International Dividend ETF (NYSEARCA: DWX ) is a weird fund that doesn’t quite seem to go together for me. I’ve seen quite a few good dividend ETFs lately and started to wonder if my standards were simply slipping. It seems I was just due for finding one that didn’t work for me. Expenses The expense ratio is a .45%. This is quite a bit too high for my tastes. Dividend Yield The dividend yield is currently running 5.69% according to Yahoo Finance. This is just a beastly dividend yield and looks very attractive, though investors should expect weak trailing returns for most international ETFs. Over the last several years the domestic market has substantially outperformed the international markets. Holdings I put grabbed the following chart to demonstrate the weight of the top 10 holdings: The first thing to notice about the international allocations here is that the weightings are fairly heavy near the top of the chart. Around 25 to 30% of the portfolio is allocated to the top 10 holdings. This isn’t what I would consider extreme, but it is a little heavy for investors hoping for substantial international diversification to lower their risk since international stocks can be especially volatile. Sectors It’s fairly normal to see the financial sector receive a heavy allocation in dividend ETFs and I’ve found international allocations are also prone to placing a higher weight on the financial sector. With both factors in place here, it is no surprise that the financial sector is receiving such a heavy weight. On the other hand the heavy allocation to utilities is what I would consider fairly attractive since utilities have a great position in negotiating on price. The sector is generally going to be less competitive and investors can expect the companies to be fairly stable in being able to generate some profits. It is interesting to see that the health care sector and the consumer staples sector, which are the other two defensive sectors, have received very low weights after the heavy weight given to utilities. That’s a little strange and dampens my excitement about the fund. Geography I put together the following chart to demonstrate the allocations by country: (click to enlarge) The majority of these allocations are to developed countries, but there is a mix of emerging markets being included. I don’t mind using a mix like this as part of an international allocation, but it is interesting to see Japan being entirely absent from the country allocations when they have a fairly heavy weighting in many international portfolios. Volatility I ran a regression on the returns for DWX compared to the S&P 500 going all the way back to February of 2008. The annualized volatility for DWX was materially higher at 27.8% compared to 22.3% for the S&P 500. On top of much higher values for annualized volatility, the total return was a negative 21.0% compared to the S&P 500 being up 82%. I expect international allocations to have suffered quite materially relative to domestic equity, but the this is a long period in for a total return of negative 21%. Conclusion The allocations looked a little interesting as we got into the sector allocations, but the weaker allocations to two of the three defensive sectors was enough to give me cause for concern. The country allocation seemed interesting, but I didn’t see any problems that couldn’t be rectified by combining the fund with other funds that put heavier allocations into the missing markets such as Japan. The real problem came when I decided to look at the returns since 2008 and saw that despite a strong yield the fund has been struggling on total returns. International funds have generally had a rough go since the last recession but that is remarkably weak over a prolonged period.