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U.S. Weekly Fund Flows – Investors Shrug Off The Market Rally, Are Net Redeemers Of Fund Assets For The Week

By Tim Roseen The markets rallied during the fund-flows week ended April 20, despite major oil producers’ failure to agree on a production freeze over the weekend. The major U.S. indices hit new 2016 highs during the week as investors cheered a drop in unemployment claims (the lowest since 1973), and banks rallied after oil strengthened and the dollar continued to weaken against its major trading partners. The rally was supported by companies broadly beating lower expectations at the beginning of this quarter’s earnings reporting season and on news that China’s first-quarter GDP growth of 6.7% was in line with expectations. While U.S. industrial output for March declined for the sixth month in seven – supporting fears of weakness in the manufacturing sector, the Empire State Index for April jumped to its highest level in over a year – showing signs of improving business activity in the New York Federal Reserve district. Modest declines in U.S. oil rig counts during the week and a reported labor strike in Kuwait helped prop up crude oil prices, despite a failed freeze agreement during the Doha, Qatar talks over the weekend. During the week, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above the 18,000 mark for the first time in nine months as investors kept their attention on better-than-expected earnings reports, despite the oil price dropping once again below $40/barrel. Investors appeared to be willing to take on more risk, bidding up emerging markets and out-of-favor sectors, with energy, materials, and industrials chalking up strong returns for the year to date. While IBM (NYSE: IBM ), Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX ), and other tech firms’ earnings disappointed the markets at the end of the flows week, weighing on tech issues, a sixth straight week of declines in domestic oil supplies and a strong rebound in March existing home sales helped push U.S. stocks to 2016 closing highs and oil to a $42.63/barrel close. Nonetheless, for the week, fund investors were net redeemers of fund assets (including those of conventional funds and exchange-traded funds [ETFs]), pulling out a net $32.4 billion for the fund-flows week ended Wednesday, April 20. The headline number, however, was slightly misleading. Investors padded the coffers of taxable bond funds (+$3.5 billion) and municipal bond funds (+$0.6 billion) while being net redeemers of money market funds (-$32.0 billion) and equity funds (-$4.5 billion). For the second week in a row, equity ETFs witnessed net outflows, handing back $1.6 billion. Despite the equity rally during the week, authorized participants (APs) were net redeemers of domestic equity ETFs (-$1.2 billion), withdrawing money from the group for the first week in eight. As a result of the impasse between oil-producing nations for an output freeze, APs – for a second consecutive week – were also net redeemers of non-domestic equity ETFs (-$0.4 billion). The Industrial Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSEARCA: XLI ) (+$401 million), SPDR S&P Retail ETF (NYSEARCA: XRT ) (+$400 million), and SPDR MidCap 400 ETF (+$322 million) attracted the largest amounts of net new money of all individual equity ETFs. At the other end of the spectrum, SPDR S&P 500 ETF (NYSEARCA: SPY ) (-$2.9 billion) experienced the largest net redemptions, while PowerShares QQQ Trust 1 (NASDAQ: QQQ ) (-$641 million) suffered the second largest redemptions for the week. For the sixth week running, conventional fund (ex-ETF) investors were net redeemers of equity funds, redeeming $2.9 billion from the group. Domestic equity funds, handing back $2.6 billion, witnessed their eleventh consecutive week of net outflows, while posting a weekly gain of 1.04%. Meanwhile, their non-domestic equity fund counterparts, posting a 1.33% return for the week, also witnessed net outflows (-$290 million) for a third week in four. On the domestic side, investors lightened up on large-cap funds and small-cap funds, redeeming a net $2.0 billion and $440 million, respectively. On the non-domestic side, international equity funds witnessed $264 million of net outflows. For the third week in a row, taxable bond funds (ex-ETFs) witnessed net inflows, taking in a little over $1.7 billion. Corporate investment-grade bond funds witnessed the largest net inflows, taking in $0.7 billion (for their third week in a row of net inflows), while government Treasury and mortgage funds witnessed the second largest net inflows (+$0.4 billion) of the macro-group. Flexible portfolio funds witnessed the only net redemptions of the group, handing back $211 million for the week. For the twenty-ninth week in a row, municipal bond funds (ex-ETFs) witnessed net inflows, taking in $425 million this past week.

UnitedHealth Solid Q1 Earnings Put These ETFs In Focus

The largest U.S. health insurer, UnitedHealth Group (NYSE: UNH ), reported solid first-quarter 2016 results. The company continued its long streak of earnings beats. Earnings per share came in at $1.81, surpassing the Zacks Consensus Estimate by 9 cents and the year-ago earnings by 17%. Revenues rose 25% year over year to $44.5 billion, broadly in line with the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $44.7 billion. The company reported medical care ratio of 81.7%, up 30 basis points year over year, thanks to the extra calendar day of service in the quarter. Growth was broad based, with a 54% increase in revenues for Optum, the health services business (see all the Healthcare ETFs here ). Based on solid first-quarter results and business trends, UnitedHealth raised its earnings guidance to $7.75-7.90 per share for 2016 from $7.60-7.80 per share projected earlier. The Zacks Consensus Estimate of $7.85 per share is within the guided range. The company expects revenues to be approximately $182 billion in 2016, which is in line with the current Zacks Consensus Estimate. As a result, the stock jumped 4.8% in the last two trading days (as of April 20, 2016), following the earnings announcement. The stock currently has a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy) with a Value Style Score of “A”. This underscores its potential to outperform in the weeks ahead. In its conference call, UnitedHealth stated that it would pull out of the majority of public exchanges owing to smaller overall market size and a higher risk profile within this market segment. Next year, the company plans to remain in only a few of the states and will not carry any financial exposure from the exchanges into 2017. ETFs in Focus Investors may want to take a closer look at the ETFs having the largest allocation to this health insurance giant, as UNH has shown encouraging trading following its earnings. For those, the iShares U.S. Healthcare Providers ETF (NYSEARCA: IHF ) could especially be on their radar, as UNH takes the top spot in the fund’s portfolio at 12.9% share. IHF This ETF provides exposure to 49 companies offering health insurance, diagnostics and specialized treatment by tracking the Dow Jones U.S. Select Healthcare Providers Index. About 45% of the portfolio is dominated by managed care firms, while healthcare services (26.5%) and healthcare facilities (23.3%) round off the top three. The fund has amassed $709.6 million in its asset base, while volume is good at about 112,000 shares per day, on average. It charges 44 bps in annual fees and expenses, and added 1.9% in the last two trading days following the UNH earnings release (as of April 20, 2016). The product has a Zacks ETF Rank of 1 or “Strong Buy” rating with a Medium risk outlook. Other ETFs Other healthcare ETFs, like the Health Care Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSEARCA: XLV ) – 4.6%, the iShares U.S. Healthcare ETF (NYSEARCA: IYH ) – 4.3%, the PowerShares DWA Healthcare Momentum Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PTH ) – 3.8%, the Fidelity MSCI Health Care Index ETF (NYSEARCA: FHLC ) – 3.9% and the Vanguard Health Care ETF (NYSEARCA: VHT ) – 4.1%, also have a decent exposure to UnitedHealth. Apart from the healthcare space, UNH is among the top 10 holdings in some large cap ETFs, such as the SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF (NYSEARCA: DIA ) and the PowerShares Dynamic Large Cap Growth Portfolio ETF (NYSEARCA: PWB ), with exposure of 4.9% and 3.4%, respectively. However, these products will be less impacted by the movement of UNH share price. Original Post

The Power Of Quantifying Market Expectations For McDonald’s And Williams Companies

” It’s difficult to make predictions, especially about the future. ” This quote has been repeated so many times that no one quite knows who said it first. Perhaps it was baseball player Yogi Berra. Or humorist Mark Twain. Or Danish physicist Niels Bohr. The point is, this quote has become a part of our cultural fabric, and it has done so because it expresses a simple and fundamental truth. Accurately forecasting what’s going to happen in the future is incredibly difficult, almost impossible. Few areas illustrate this difficulty more profoundly than financial markets, where analyst projections of earnings are regularly off by 10+% . Sometimes, even the most well recognized experts make shockingly bad predictions . No one truly knows (legally) what the market is going to do next, and the risk involved in that uncertainty is what creates the potential for significant returns. The Alternative To Making Predictions Of course, those returns are only available to those that participate in the stock market, and participating in the market implies some sort of prediction about the future. Even if you just buy a broad-based index fund, you’re predicting the broader market will go up. Otherwise, why make that (or any) investment? However, there’s a better way to invest. Instead of making your own prediction about the future, you can analyze the market’s prediction by quantifying the cash flow expectations baked into the market’s valuation of a stock. Then, you can make a more objective judgment about whether or not those expectations are realistic. This method, termed ” Expectations Investing ” by Alfred Rappaport and Michael Mauboussin in their book of the same name, can be incredibly effective. It’s effective because it removes the need to make precise predictions about the future. By quantifying market expectations across thousands of stock as we do, it’s easy to find pockets of irrationality and identify companies that are over or undervalued. How To Quantify Market Expectations There are a couple of methods we use to quantify market expectations. One of the simplest is to calculate a company’s economic book value , or the no-growth value of the business based on the perpetuity value of its current cash flows. This value can be calculated by dividing a company’s LTM after-tax profit ( NOPAT ) by its weighted average cost of capital ( WACC ), and then adjusting for non-operating assets and liabilities. Figure 1: Why We Recommended McDonald’s Click to enlarge Sources: New Constructs, LLC and company filings. The ratio of a company’s stock price to its economic book value per share (PEBV) sends a clear message about market expectations for the stock and can be a very powerful tool for investors. Figure 1 shows how PEBV influenced our decision to recommend McDonald’s (NYSE: MCD ) shares to investors in late 2012. Shares at that time were trading at a PEBV of 0.82, an unprecedented discount for a company with MCD’s track record of growth and profitability. The market’s valuation suggested that MCD’s NOPAT would permanently decline 18% and never recover. Those expectations seemed overly pessimistic to us. As it turned out, MCD did end up struggling significantly after our call. Increased competition from fast casual restaurants like Chipotle (NYSE: CMG ) and Panera (NASDAQ: PNRA ) that appealed to health-conscious diners compressed MCD’s margins and sent its sales slumping. Despite its struggles, however, things never got quite as bad for MCD as the market predicted. Between 2012 and 2015, NOPAT fell by only 16%, not the 18% projected by the stock price, and recent signs of a recovery have sent shares soaring to all-time highs. Figure 2 shows how MCD has delivered significant returns to investors since we made our prediction despite lackluster financial results. Figure 2: Disappointing Profits No Obstacle To Shareholder Returns Click to enlarge Sources: New Constructs, LLC and company filings. Though MCD’s poor results caused it to miss out on the bull run of 2013-2014, its surge over the past twelve months has it at a 51% gain since our initial call, outperforming the S&P 500 (NYSEARCA: SPY ) on a capital gains basis while also yielding a higher dividend. We didn’t know exactly how McDonald’s was going to perform when we made the prediction in 2012. We simply knew that the expectations baked into the market’s valuation were so pessimistic that even if the company’s profits significantly declined, as they did, investors could still earn healthy returns. Delayed Gratification As Figure 2 shows, basing investment decisions off a quantification of market expectations doesn’t always deliver immediate results. In the case of MCD, it took nearly three years for our call to come to fruition. Short-term sector trends and market forces can allow a company to stay valued at irrational levels for quite some time especially when we know that very few people practice Expectations Investing these days. Roughly three years ago, we warned investors to stay away from Williams Companies (NYSE: WMB ), calling it an example of the “sector trap.” Analysts excited about the company’s exposure to the rapidly growing natural gas sector were pumping up the stock, ignoring its low and declining return on invested capital ( ROIC ), significant write-downs indicating poor capital allocation, and the high expectations implied by its stock price. Specifically, our discounted cash flow model showed that the company would need to grow NOPAT by 13% compounded annually for 15 years to justify its price at the time of ~$37/share. Those expectations seemed to be clearly unrealistic given the company’s 7% compounded annual NOPAT growth over the previous decade and a half. For a time, WMB continued to gain in value despite the disconnect between its current cash flows and the cash flows implied by the stock’s valuation. As recently as mid-2015, the stock was up nearly 60% from our original call. However, as Figure 3 shows, WMB crashed hard when the market turned more volatile. It now has fallen nearly 60% from our original call, and it has significantly underperformed the S&P 500, the S&P Energy ETF (XEP), and peers Spectra Energy (NYSE: SEP ) and Enterprise Products Partners (NYSE: EPD ). Figure 3: Short-Term Gains, Long-Term Declines Click to enlarge Source: Google Finance Stocks with overly high expectations embedded in their prices can still perform well in the short-term, but they tend to face a reckoning eventually. Stocks Due For A Correction Roughly a year ago, we put engine manufacturer Briggs & Stratton (NYSE: BGG ) in the Danger Zone . Back then we argued that BGG’s history of value-destroying acquisitions, significant write-downs, and declining profits made it unlikely that the company would hit the high expectations set by the market. Specifically, our model showed that the company needed to grow NOPAT by 10% compounded annually for 17 years to justify its price at the time of ~$20/share. BGG actually did manage to meet this goal in year 1, growing NOPAT by 14% in 2015. However, we think this growth rate is unsustainable, as the company’s ROIC remains mired below 5%. Moreover, the company keeps spending money it doesn’t have on acquisitions, dividends, and buybacks, so it now sits with almost no excess cash and $660 million (68% of market cap) in combined debt and underfunded pension liabilities. Despite the balance sheet concerns, the market only seemed to pay attention to the GAAP earnings growth, and BGG is up 13.8% since our call. At its new price of ~$23/share, the market expects 10% compounded annual NOPAT growth for the next 11 years . Despite one good year in 2015, there’s no reason to suspect that level of growth is sustainable for BGG. High market expectations mean this stock should drop hard the moment growth slows down. On the other side of the coin, we still believe last year’s long pick Fluor Corporation (NYSE: FLR ) has significant upside. Despite slumping commodities prices affecting its oil, gas, and mining businesses, FLR still managed a 21% ROIC in 2015 and finished the year with a larger backlog than it had at the end of 2014. Investors only saw the downside though, and they sent FLR down 11% Due to this decline, the market continues to assign FLR a low PEBV of 0.9, just as it did last March when we made our original call. Given the recent rebound in commodities, we don’t think a permanent 10% decline in NOPAT from these already low levels seems likely. Strong profitability and low market expectations lead us to believe an investment in FLR will pay off sooner or later. Disclosure: David Trainer and Sam McBride receive no compensation to write about any specific stock, sector, style, or theme. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.