Tag Archives: latin-america

Monitoring Your Portfolio’s Dollar Sensitivity

By Tripp Zimmerman At WisdomTree, we continue to believe one of the most important themes impacting the global markets has been the strengthening U.S. dollar-and this is a trend we expect to continue for some time. As a result of the recent dollar strength, many U.S. multinationals with global revenue streams have reported currency headwinds as part of their earnings statements over the past year. This has hurt their performance compared to European and Japanese exporters, who have benefited from the weakening of the yen and the euro, respectively, against the U.S. dollar. This relative performance advantage is no surprise to us, because our research shows that these foreign markets actually performed better when their home currencies depreciated than when they appreciated. 1 Given this historical relationship and relative valuations, we continue to advocate for Japanese and eurozone exporters. But how should investors position their U.S. allocations? U.S. Corporations Continue to Warn about Dollar Strength “Sales by U.S. companies were $26.4 billion in the fiscal nine months of 2015, which represented an increase of 0.8% as compared to the prior year,” Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ ) reported. “Sales by international companies were $25.9 billion, a decline of 13.5%, including operational growth of 1.1%, offset by a negative currency impact of 14.6% as compared to the fiscal nine months sales of 2014.” 2 The Coca-Cola Company (NYSE: KO ) reported that over the most recent three months “fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates decreased our consolidated net operating revenues by 8 percent. This unfavorable impact was primarily due to a stronger U.S. dollar compared to certain foreign currencies, including the South African rand, euro, U.K. pound sterling, Brazilian real, Mexican peso, Australian dollar and Japanese yen, which had an unfavorable impact on our Eurasia and Africa, Europe, Latin America, Asia Pacific and Bottling Investments operating segments.” 3 Determining Your Dollar Sensitivity WisdomTree believes currency sensitivity is an important factor that will continue to impact returns going forward, so to monitor the performance of this new factor, WisdomTree has created two new rules-based Indexes: The WisdomTree Strong Dollar U.S. Equity Index (WTUSSD) – This Index selects companies that generate more than 80% of their revenue from within the U.S. and then tilts its weight toward stocks whose returns have a higher correlation to the returns of the U.S. dollar. The WisdomTree Weak Dollar U.S. Equity Index (WTUSWD) – This Index selects companies that generate more than 40% of their revenue from outside the U.S. and then tilts its weight toward stocks whose returns have a lower correlation to the returns of the U.S. dollar. Since the inception of these Indexes, the U.S. dollar has strengthened 2.95% against a diversified basket of developed and emerging market currencies, leading to a performance advantage of 1.72% for WTUSSD compared to WTUSWD. 4 To try to understand what is behind this performance difference, we chart the median earnings and sales growth for the most recent quarter compared to the same reporting quarter one year ago, for both Indexes and the median for the entire universe. Year-over-Year Median Earnings and Sales Growth (click to enlarge) Strong Dollar Companies Displayed Higher Growth- The median earnings and sales growth for constituents of WTUSSD was more than 6% and 7% higher, respectively, compared to constituents of WTUSWD. We believe constituents of WTUSSD, or companies that generate more than 80% of their revenue domestically, tend to be less impacted by a strong-dollar environment-they aren’t focused on selling their goods and services abroad, and their import costs decrease with the rising purchasing power of the dollar. How Long Can This Persist? We have recently published a research paper, What a Rising U.S. Dollar Means for U.S. Equities White Paper , in which we illustrated the declining competitiveness of U.S. exports by graphing a ratio of exports of the U.S. economy over imports. As the U.S. dollar strengthened, the ratio of exports over imports weakened. Historically, we found that the impact can have a lag of around 36 months, so if history is any guide, we may not have seen the worst impact on exporters yet. At WisdomTree, our base case is still for a strengthening U.S. dollar, which may provide a continued headwind to U.S. multinationals with global revenue, but, depending on investors’ views, they can use the above Indexes to track the performance of either basket. Sources WisdomTree, Bloomberg. Johnson & Johnson quarterly earnings report, 10/30/15. Johnson & Johnson had a 1.21% weight in the WisdomTree Weak Dollar U.S. Equity Index as of 11/13/15. The Coca-Cola Company quarterly earnings report, 10/28/15. The Coca-Cola Company had a 0.71% weight in the WisdomTree Weak Dollar U.S. Equity Index as of 11/13/15. WisdomTree, Bloomberg, 5/29/15-11/13/15. U.S. dollar performance against a diversified basket of developed and emerging currencies is represented by the Bloomberg Dollar Total Return Index. Important Risks Related to this Article Investments in currency involve additional special risks, such as credit risk and interest rate fluctuations. Tripp Zimmerman, Research Analyst Tripp Zimmerman began at WisdomTree as a Research Analyst in February 2013. He is involved in creating and communicating WisdomTree’s thoughts on the markets, as well as analyzing existing strategies and developing new approaches. Prior to joining WisdomTree, Tripp worked for TD Ameritrade as a fixed income specialist. Tripp also worked for Wells Fargo Advisors, TIAA-CREF and Evergreen Investments in various investment related roles. Tripp graduated from The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a dual degree in Economics and Philosophy. Tripp is a holder of the Chartered Financial Analyst designation.

Spinoffs: Looking For Value

Investing in and around spinoffs has been an extremely lucrative endeavor over the past decade, according to the Nov. 30 issue of Value Investor Insight. Indeed, since the end of 2002, Bloomberg has maintained a U.S. Spin-Off Index, which tracks the share prices of newly spun-off companies with market capitalizations of more than $1 billion for three years after they begin trading. Over the near 13-year period tracked, Bloomberg’s U.S. Spin-Off Index has risen 557%, compared to a return of 137% for the S&P 500. Moreover, spinoff activity is close to an all-time high as companies, spurred on by activists, try to unlock value for shareholders by splitting up their businesses. This year’s total number of spinoffs is expected to be 49, the fourth-highest level on record. However, more often than not, due to a number of factors, spinoffs are mispriced by the market, which can lead to some very attractive opportunities for value investors. In this month’s issue of Value Investor Insight , four spinoff experts – Murray Stahl of Horizon Kinetics, Joe Cornell of Spin-Off Advisors, The London Company’s Jeff Markunas and Jim Roumell of Roumell Asset Management – discuss the key factors that lead to spinoff mispricing and where they’re looking for opportunity today. (click to enlarge) Spinoffs: Four key factors There are four key structural factors that can lead to spinoffs being mispriced : Limited information – The documentation filed with the SEC when companies split can be quite complex, and the pro-forma financials can be difficult to analyze. Moreover, analyst coverage tends to be limited, and investors, rather than do the legwork themselves, would rather look elsewhere. Forced selling – A spinoff may see a parent company force a SpinCo onto a shareholder that doesn’t want, or legally can’t hold the shares, which will lead to selling. An S&P 500 Index fund can’t own a spinoff company outside the index, for example. Sandbagging – SpinCo managements usually receive significant financial incentives to underperform and over-deliver. Top managers’ incentive stock plans are typically based on average share prices of the spinoff company for the first 20 or so days of trading after the spinoff, which can lead to sandbagging of the highest order before those prices are locked in. ” Capitalism works ” – According to Value Investors Insight , when a SpinCo leaves its parent, “pent-up entrepreneurial forces are unleashed” as “the combination of accountability, responsibility, and more direct incentives take their natural course.” In other words, without the parent, the newly independent company can take advantage of capitalist forces to improve performance. Spinoffs: Looking for value So what do the experts look for in a good spinoff? According to Murray Stahl of Horizon Kinetics, there are four key characteristics to look for when a company spins off an unwanted subsidiary or division. First, a higher-margin business is spinning off a lower-margin business. Second, CEO movements. If the CEO of the larger company decides the best place to be is with the spinoff it’s, “a message to heed.” There’s also the capital structure of the SpinCo to consider. Too much debt dumped on the SpinCo from the parent can be a burden that haunts the company and strangles growth. That said, if figures show that the debt can be paid down over time, this creates an opportunity, like a publicly-traded leveraged buyout, according to Murray Stahl. And the last spinoff situation that creates an opportunity for profit is the very small spinoff that those engaged in industrial-scale money management are unable or unwilling to own (market cap