Crash II, Preview
Breaking news at youngsworldmoneyforecast.com will post next week!
You will learn exactly why investors today are being misled by both the Dow 30 and the S&P 500.
You will find out why I expect historically poor performance for most investor portfolios over the next five years.
You will read the complete details of an easy-to-deploy strategy that will help you ride out the coming storm with a positive total return.
You will understand exactly why I use this strategy myself and at my investment management company.
You will not want to miss the boat here.
The Dow’s Most Dependable Dividend Payers Part II
Continuing with Young Research’s dividend dependability rankings, the group of stocks listed below rank in the middle of the pack among all 30 Dow stocks on Young Research’s dividend dependability score. In this group you will find a nice balance between yield and dividend dependability.
I have again listed the stocks in alphabetical order and provided the indicated dividend yield, projections for dividend growth in 2018, and commentary on why the stock scored where it did in terms of dividend dependability.
wdt_ID | Company | Indicated Yield | CY 2018 Proj. Div. Growth | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | CATERPILLAR INC | 2.13 | 1.94 | Average dividend coverage and decent earnings growth help CAT overcome one of the highest earnings variability rankings in the Dow |
2 | WALT DISNEY CO/THE | 1.52 | 7.69 | Above average dividend coverage along with average growth, financial strength, and earnings variability push Disney into group two. |
3 | MCDONALD'S CORP | 2.32 | 6.79 | Low dividend coverage and below average financial strength keep McDonalds out of the top 10. |
4 | INTEL CORP | 2.51 | 6.03 | Low scores on qualitative factors along with average scores on the quantitative factors put Intel in the middle of the pack group. |
5 | VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS | 4.49 | 2.05 | Low dividend coverage, below average financial strength, and below average growth prospects put Verizon in group two. |
6 | PFIZER INC | 3.50 | 6.25 | Below average dividend coverage, high earnings variability, and a strong balance sheet result in a tier two ranking for Pfizer. |
7 | TRAVELERS COS INC/THE | 2.17 | 3.89 | Average across the board rankings place Travelers in second grouping for dividend dependability. |
8 | UNITED TECHNOLOGIES CORP | 2.25 | 5.88 | Average ratings for growth, dividend coverage, and financial strength keep UTX in the middle tier. |
9 | COCA-COLA CO/THE | 3.22 | 5.41 | Coke's low dividend coverage and low earnings growth keep the company out of the Top 10 for dividend dependability. |
10 | APPLE INC | 1.46 | 9.76 | Solid earnings growth, strong dividend coverage, and a strong balance sheet help Apple, while low qualitative factors drag it down. |
You can read part I here.
Crash!
I have been investing since the spring of 1964, and I do not remember being as uncomfortable with the health of the financial markets as I am today. Given that unpleasant prelude, I also want to advise all investors that my own investing position has not changed since I began investing 53 years ago.
I do not market time, i.e., moving in and out of the markets. I pay zero attention to daily, weekly or monthly price movements and have never made an earnings projection in my life.
I do not keep tabs on the exact value of my own account. My assets are spread around with custodial friends whom I have known for decades. Not a lot changes for me year to year. Dust continues to gather on old portfolio friends, some of which I often forget I own because they have been with me so long. I tend not to break off long associations with old friends, whether individuals or portfolio proxies. More important, I never lose a minute’s sleep or worry about tomorrow.
You may find the Dick Young method of investing boring. If you had any idea of exactly how little money I started with and how much I have today—strictly as a result of interest, dividends and compound interest—you might, for a second, gasp. I do not rate highly in terms of exciting returns. Quite the opposite. Boring pretty well sums up the Dick Young lifetime investment ideology.
I have accomplished what I have with only Debbie’s help. I have never had any partners or any debt. And I don’t listen to the views of many, except perhaps those of Dave Hammer, my longest friend in the investment industry.
I am a long way from an investment genius and could probably name countless investment industry folk who are a whole lot smarter than am I. I loved Shaker Heights High School, but rarely studied. Eventually I did graduate, much to my own as well as my MIT-alum father’s great surprise.
I have little use for today’s Marxist-centric, ridiculously priced college tuition structure or academia in general. Given that, I remain loyal to Babson College, which I loved and where I did study. I actually managed to escape with a great degree due 100% to a newly gained ability to concentrate when I actually cared about the material I was given.
So, as you can see, I have been on a well-worn course for a long time, and, yes, I have learned a lot along the way. You may even conclude that I just might be able to offer you and your family a small bit of intelligence, comfort and support as you proceed along your own investing career. By this time, you probably clearly understand that there are areas where you cannot expect me or my investment management company to be of any help whatsoever.
I started off my warning letter to you with the word crash because without a number of prescient moves our much maligned (due in no small measure to his own shoot-from-the-hip tweets) president has made, my projected crash undoubtedly would have already set upon us.
We all have to play the hand we’re dealt and, for each of us, the hope is that our individual intuition can carry the day. I wish all of you a Happy New Year—one that benefits you and makes you comfortable given your individual goals and responsibilities.
My best advice to you is to start the New Year off with a brand new resolution:
Do not do stupid things and you will greatly improve your odds of concluding 2018 with a smile on your face.
Warm regards,
Dick
The Dow’s Most Dependable Dividend Payers
Which companies are the most dependable dividend payers in the Dow? That may seem like an odd question to ask considering the Dow is comprised of some of America’s most successful blue-chip companies. But while Dow stocks may have more reliable dividends than your average company, dividend dependability should not be taken for granted. General Electric, once considered America’s most venerable blue-chip industrial, slashed its dividend last month. Citigroup, Bank of America, (both former Dow members), and JP Morgan were once among America’s most respected banks, but all three cut their dividends during the financial crisis.
Young Research developed a dividend dependability ranking to provide you with a snapshot of the Dow stocks that have the most secure dividends today. If you are a retired investor who relies on quarterly dividend checks to fund a portion of your retirement spending, Young Research’s rankings can help you minimize the chances of a cash flow shortfall.
The rankings are based on a variety of quantitative and qualitative factors including dividend coverage, earnings variability, financial strength, and growth prospects.
Over the coming weeks, I will provide you with insight and commentary on all 30 Dow stocks. This week I focus on the ten stocks that rank lowest in terms of dividend dependability.
The Dow’s Least Dependable Dividend Payers
The ten stocks below, listed in alphabetical order, are ranked lowest for dividend dependability by Young Research. For each stock I have provided the indicated dividend yield, projections for dividend growth in 2018, and commentary on why the stock scored where it did in terms of dividend dependability. Note that a low dividend dependability ranking does not signal an imminent dividend cut. A low ranking does indicate that the risk of a dividend cut is greater than it is for the average Dow company, especially in the event of adverse economic, business, or market conditions.
wdt_ID | Company | Indicated Yield | CY 2018 Proj. Div. Growth | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | MERCK & CO. INC. | 3.49 | 2.10 | Above average earnings variability and below average growth projections drag down ranking. |
2 | JPMORGAN CHASE & CO | 2.14 | 7.70 | Lower than average financial strength and qualitative factors bring down ranking. |
3 | INTL BUSINESS MACHINES CORP | 3.89 | 6.70 | IBM barely missed the second grouping. Qualitative factors and low earnings growth projections dragged it down. |
4 | GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC | 1.21 | 8.60 | Above average earnings variability, lower than average financial strength, and qualitative factors bring down ranking. |
5 | GENERAL ELECTRIC CO | 2.71 | -50.00 | One of highest earnings variability ratings kept GE, even with a reduced dividend, in the lowest grouping. |
6 | EXXON MOBIL CORP | 3.73 | 2.60 | A high payout ratio, high earnings variability, and qualitative factors pushed Exxon into the bottom grouping. |
7 | DOWDUPONT INC | 2.13 | 0.00 | High earnings variability, below average growth projections, and lower than average financial strength bring down ranking. |
8 | CISCO SYSTEMS INC | 3.09 | 10.60 | Lower earnings growth projections and qualitative factors drag Cisco down. |
9 | CHEVRON CORP | 3.61 | 1.80 | High payout ratio, high earnings variability, and qualitative factors drag down ranking. |
10 | AMERICAN EXPRESS CO | 1.42 | 9.00 | Above average earnings variability, lower than average financial strength, and qualitative factors bring down ranking. |
As you may have noticed, a number of the least dependable dividend payers offer above average yields. Dividend dependability and dividend yield are inversely related. You will find as I run through all 30 Dow stocks, that the companies with the most dependable dividends have below average yields. How you choose to successfully balance dividend dependability and yield in your portfolio will depend on your own investment objectives and risk tolerance. Dividend dependability isn’t the only factor that should be used to craft dividend portfolios, but it is an important factor.
Dick Young’s Research Key: Anecdotal Evidence Gathering
Originally posted September 5, 2017.
After a nearly 40-year sabbatical, I am pleased to announce that a newly reconfigured Young’s World Money Forecast is set for its revival. Investors will have a cutting-edge, unique global investment tool that they can draw upon daily.
If your life savings, your business pension fund, or your company IRA program is based on the historical research, writing and advice from Dick Young, you will be off and running with Young’s World Money Forecast (YWMF) back on your side.
YWMF is aimed at investors like you who hold dividends, interest, and compounding front and center in the investing process. I will continue to be on your side as I have been for so many international and domestic investors since my initial YWMF days in 1978. I want you to feel like you are part of an exclusive investment club.
My research and writing for the past 50 years has been built on the twin powerhouse, high-octane engine of inference reading and boots-on-the-ground anecdotal evidence gathering. In 1992, when Debbie and I bought our first legendary Big Twin Harley Davidsons, much of my anecdotal evidence gathering was conducted on two wheels. After 120,000+ miles and more than 25 years on the roadways and byways of North America, we have put the kickstands down on our Harleys for the last time. (They will be auctioned off sometime this fall for a charity event that supports Wounded Warriors.)
Since 2010, Debbie and I have moved much of our anecdotal evidence gathering to Europe, centering on twice-annual research trips in Paris. We just returned from a two-week sweep through France, the Baltics, Scandinavia, and St. Petersburg, Russia. Talk about a shocker of a trip, which I’ll get into in my upcoming e-missives. It ain’t what you read.
To receive an instant announcement of the eagerly awaited return of Young’s World Money Forecast, sign up here. And, of course, you are under no obligation or risk. We do not release our roster of names of club members to anyone—ever. After all, that’s the advantage of a private investment club—integrity and privacy.
Membership in Dick Young’s unique club for serious international investors will cost nothing—not today or ever. Why is that? Because there’s nothing I love more than researching and analyzing for our investment management company on the ramifications global affairs and politics have on safe, sensible investing. What I hate more than anything is the hype, unethical advice, and pie-in-the-sky greed foisted on investors.
You have been with me for many years, if not decades, and I appreciate the thoughtful notes I’ve received over the course of our time together, especially recently with my retiring from writing Richard C. Young’s Intelligence Report. I thank each of you.
I am inviting you to join my exciting new investment project. After 40 years, it’s liberating not to be tied down to a monthly deadline with its archaic snail-mail delivery system and resulting delay. From the time I finished writing and the publisher fact checked, formatted, and sent the issue to the printer, it took nearly two weeks before subscribers received IR.
With YWMF, you’ll get the latest in my thoughts on world affairs/investments as they happen. It’s just that easy. And I nearly forgot to mention, in this escalating age of social media and Internet intrusion, you’ll never see an outsider’s annoying pop-up ad/video/jiggling whatever on my new YWMF website. No outsiders allowed!
Welcome aboard.
Warm regards,
Bull and Bear Portfolio Update 11.29.2017
Model Guidance: I want you to close out both the long and short positions on the Short-term Bull & Bear Portfolio at the open today. Based on yesterday’s close if you initially invested $90,000 in the nine long positions in the model you have made close to $9,000 in only two months. A $30,000 investment in the three short positions has lost only about $2,200. The net gain on my Short-term Bull & Bear Portfolio is $6,742, or a 7.5% gain assuming $90,000 in starting capital. You’ve done better than the Dow with less stock market risk.
The Short-term Bull & Bear Portfolio was the first feature of my new digital-only Young’s World Money Forecast. There will be much more to come in 2018.
Bull and Bear Portfolio Update 11.22.2017
About two months in, how is my Short-term bull-bear model performing?
I couldn’t be happier. The bull-bear model has made almost 8.8% on the longs and lost only 6.4% on the shorts.
If you started with $90,000 in capital and invested $10,000 in each of the long positions and sold short $10,000 of the three short positions, you are sitting on a gain of 6.4% in only two months. The Dow is up 5.6% over the same time-period.
So six of one, half dozen of the other, right?
Not exactly, a 6.4% return in the bull-bear portfolio was achieved with only two-thirds of the stock market exposure of a long-only portfolio. You are making more by taking less stock market risk. If the long portfolio and the short portfolio would have matched the performance of the Dow, the bull-bear model would have been up 3.83% or two-thirds of the Dow’s 5.6% return. See the correlation? Two-thirds market exposure would have resulted in about two-thirds of the return.
But the bull-bear model is doing much better than that. What’s driving the performance? Caterpillar, Microsoft, and Intel are all big winners. All three are up double digits on the back of stronger than expected earnings. Intel is the standout with a return of more than 21%.
Model Guidance: No Changes for the Week
My short-term Bull & Bear Portfolio consists of 9 equally-weighted long positions and 3 equally-weighted short positions. Both the long and short stocks are selected from the Dow Jones Industrial Average. If the Dow advances over the period in which my 12-Dow stock portfolio is open, the model will make money with the stocks that advance and will lose money with the stocks that decline. And the opposite will prevail for the short stocks. Each week, I will review the model portfolio for potential changes. If no changes are required, I’ll simply post no changes for the week. You can read more about my Bull & Bear Portfolio here.
Featured Company: Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC)
In 1968, the year 2001: A Space Odyssey was released, mankind was looking to the stars and the future of technology. The Apollo space program was heating up in preparation for the moon landing the year after. Computers were being made smaller and more powerful in order to the meet the demands of the space program and other advanced technological undertakings.
That same year, two men named Bob Noyce and Gordon Moore founded Intel. The company’s first product would be produced in 1969. It was the 3101 Schottky bipolar random access memory (RAM). The team would also break ground by introducing the world’s first metal oxide semiconductor static RAM, the 1101. By 1970 Intel had upended the entire industry by introducing the 1103 DRAM, a new standard in computer memory technology.
Intel’s hits would keep on coming. In 1974 the company introduced the first general-purpose microprocessor. In 1975 Intel processors were shipped on one of the first PCs, the Altair 8800. In 1981, computing giant IBM would select Intel’s processors for its line of PCs. In 1992 Intel became the world’s largest semiconductor supplier. Through the 1990s Intel would introduce and continuously improve its Pentium line of processors. In 2006 Intel introduced the world to the first quad-core processor for desktop computers.
Today Intel is transforming its business from a focus on PCs to a focus on the cloud and smart devices. Intel is pushing forward cloud technology with its innovations like the Intel Optane. The product is the first to combine memory and storage, making the cloud faster and more efficient.
Bull and Bear Portfolio Update 11.17.2017
Model Guidance: No Changes for the Week
My short-term Bull & Bear Portfolio consists of 9 equally-weighted long positions and 3 equally-weighted short positions. Both the long and short stocks are selected from the Dow Jones Industrial Average. If the Dow advances over the period in which my 12-Dow stock portfolio is open, the model will make money with the stocks that advance and will lose money with the stocks that decline. And the opposite will prevail for the short stocks. Each week, I will review the model portfolio for potential changes. If no changes are required, I’ll simply post no changes for the week. You can read more about my Bull & Bear Portfolio here.
Featured Company: General Electric (NYSE:GE)
America’s Most Venerable Blue-Chip No Longer
GE, America’s most venerable blue-chip industrial company, and the Dow’s oldest constituent, had what may be the company’s worst week on record this week. For only the second time since the Great Depression, GE announced a dividend cut. The 50% dividend cut was announced in conjunction with a restructuring program delivered by new CEO Jim Flannery on Monday.
Sadly, the dividend cut wasn’t the worst of the news. The restructuring program that Flannery hyped up for months fell flat with Wall Street. GE shares plunged during the presentation. After months of buildup, investors were looking for something spectacular, but Flannery delivered a plan for basic blocking and tackling that he could have announced the first week he took over as CEO.
He told shareholders, GE will focus on three primary areas moving forward, Power (in need of help), Aviation (today’s crown jewel), and Health. GE will look to exit its remaining businesses.
Young Research has followed GE for decades and advised it on and off in Intelligence Report. GE has most often been a reliable dividend payer, with a rock-solid balance sheet, and a solid record of making regular annual dividend increases. The company did cut its dividend during the financial crisis as its finance arm had to tap government liquidity programs, but that looked like a one-off. Dividend growth resumed soon after the crisis passed.
GE has always had strong franchises, and it has been a market leader in the industries it has participated in. The company was one of Fortune’s most admired companies for years and it was once viewed as America’s best run big company. GEs managers were sought after to fill CEO roles, its management training program was the envy of corporate America, and it received high marks for efficiency and profitability.
GE still has strong franchises, but under the leadership of former CEO Jeff Immelt, GE’s reputation has suffered immensely and so has its stock price. Immelt was a disaster. He waited too long to exit the financial business, then sold near the bottom and entered the oil business near the industry’s top, only to participate in the oil downturn. You couldn’t have done worse if you tried. Immelt also allowed expenses to inflate, and cash flow to dwindle, which led to the mess GE finds itself in today.
Flannery’s promise to maintain the dividend and his hype of the analyst meeting were obviously mistakes, but his back to basics plan for the company is a move in the right direction. GE needs to get simpler and more profitable. Unfortunately, that doesn’t happen overnight and Flannery’s plan isn’t without risk.
Turnarounds take time and often don’t go as smoothly as management or shareholders would like. For conservative investors and those in or nearing retirement, GE’s dividend cut and now significant execution risk are disqualifying. Predictability, reliability, dividend growth, and low-risk are what we look for in dividend stocks, and GE offers none of the above today.
Bull and Bear Portfolio Update 11.9.2017
Model Guidance: No Changes for the Week
My short-term Bull & Bear Portfolio consists of 9 equally-weighted long positions and 3 equally-weighted short positions. Both the long and short stocks are selected from the Dow Jones Industrial Average. If the Dow advances over the period in which my 12-Dow stock portfolio is open, the model will make money with the stocks that advance and will lose money with the stocks that decline. And the opposite will prevail for the short stocks. Each week, I will review the model portfolio for potential changes. If no changes are required, I’ll simply post no changes for the week. You can read more about my Bull & Bear Portfolio here.
Featured Company: UnitedHealth Group (NYSE:UNH)
In 1974 a group of doctors and health professionals founded Charter Med to provide health coverage. In 1977 United Healthcare Corporation was born to reorganize Charter Med. Its founder, Richard Burke started the business with the goal of helping people live healthier lives. Burke was assisted by Dr. Paul Ellwood, a “health policy guru” who coined the term “health maintenance organization.” UnitedHealthcare would go on to introduce the first network-based health plans for seniors, and to create EverCare, a care coordination program for people in nursing homes. Later the company would develop modern pharmacy benefits management and develop many other innovations in the industry.
Each year in over 125 countries, UnitedHealth processes over 750 billion digital transactions. In the United States alone UnitedHealth provides its customers access to over 1 million healthcare professionals, at about 6,000 hospitals and healthcare facilities. That includes 4 out of every 5 hospitals in America. UnitedHealth’s millions of customers have access to more than 67,000 pharmacies.
According to the U.N., “The global share of older people (aged 60 years or over) increased from 9.2 per cent in 1990 to 11.7 per cent in 2013 and will continue to grow as a proportion of the world population, reaching 21.1 per cent by 2050. Globally, the number of older persons is expected to more than double from 841 million people in 2013 to more than 2 billion in 2050.”
As the world ages, it demands more medical care and UnitedHealth Group provides access to that care. The company has paid dividends since 1990 and shares yield 1.42% today.
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 21
- 22
- 23
- 24
- 25
- 26
- Next Page »