Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Value Investor
Wealth Building Opportunites for the Active Value Investor
Issues
Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor. We hope you enjoy reading the April 2023 issue.

We comment on the price of gold and what we see as its primary drivers. Gold is now trading above $2,000/ounce. We also provide updates on our recommended stocks.

Please feel free to send me your questions and comments. This newsletter is written for you and the best way to get more out of the letter is to let me know what you are looking for.
Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor. We hope you enjoy reading the March 2023 issue.

We discuss how the post-Cold War peace dividend is shifting to a war tax.

We provide updates on earnings and change our rating on Organon (OGN) from Buy to Sell. The company is spending more to generate sales growth even as that growth is becoming more difficult. Our thesis is broken, but fortunately, we exit with only a small (~6%) loss.

Please feel free to send me your questions and comments. This newsletter is written for you and the best way to get more out of the letter is to let me know what you are looking for.
Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor. We hope you enjoy reading the February 7, 2023, issue.

We continue our mini-series on the Tech Hype Cycle and Value Investing with a look at what happens to companies after they tumble into the “Trough of Disillusionment.” We also include our perspective on the favorable earnings update from Sensata Technologies (ST).

This week, we changed our rating on State Street Corp. (STT) from Hold to Sell, and our rating on Dow (DOW) from Buy to Sell. Both are quality companies, but their shares have reached our price targets and we see no compelling reason to raise these targets.

Please feel free to send me your questions and comments. This newsletter is written for you and the best way to get more out of the letter is to let me know what you are looking for.
Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor. We hope you enjoy reading the January 2023 issue.

Our letter describes our view that 2022 was a bridge year and that we may need some or all of 2023 to complete the bridge-crossing. We also provide our outlook for the stock market, the economy and the geopolitical environment, with some caveats about forecasting and model use provided by Yogi Berra and George Box.

All-in, we see 2023 as a year with many changes but also a year in which consumers, companies and countries – amazing sources of ingenuity and resolve – work their magic to adapt to whatever curve balls are thrown at them. Our optimism is undaunted.

We also have moved our rating for Arcos Dorados (ARCO) from Hold to Sell.

Please feel free to send me your questions and comments. This newsletter is written for you and the best way to get more out of the letter is to let me know what you are looking for.
Starting next week, you will receive your Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor issues and updates on Tuesdays instead of Wednesdays. So look for next week’s update in your email inbox a day earlier, on Tuesday, December 13.

Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor. We hope you enjoy reading the December 2022 issue.

While we are not market or economic forecasters, we try to make sense of what is going on. As we’ve commented on in earlier notes, we may be seeing the return of the long-forgotten inventory cycle. If we’re right, this is the time to buy over-discounted and reasonably healthy cyclicals like the ones on our recommended list.

Our letter comments on Big Lots (BIG) earnings, our price target reduction to 25, and why it remains a Hold rather than a Sell.
Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor. We hope you enjoy reading the November 2022 issue.

While sharp declines in hyper-growth tech stocks to below their pre-pandemic prices may seem like the proverbial “end of days” has arrived, the fall-off is more a return to normal following a period of vast excesses.

Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor. We hope you enjoy reading the October 2022 issue.

Following the sharp drop in stocks due to fears of a major policy error, we see an opportunity for subscribers to add to their existing positions in many of our recommended names at very attractive prices.

Is a deep recession likely? Perhaps we are instead experiencing an old-fashioned inventory cycle.

Please feel free to send me your questions and comments. This newsletter is written for you and the best way to get more out of the letter is to let me know what you are looking for.

I’m best reachable at Bruce@CabotWealth.com. I’ll do my best to respond as quickly as possible.
Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor. We hope you enjoy reading the September 2022 issue.

We’re not in the predictions business, so we have little use for predictions or forecasts. Our commentary includes perspectives from Warren Buffett and Yogi Berra.



This past month we covered a complicated earnings season and added two new stocks (State Street Corporation and Gates Industrial Corporation) while selling our position in The Coca-Cola Company.



Please feel free to send me your questions and comments. This newsletter is written for you and the best way to get more out of the letter is to let me know what you are looking for.



I’m best reachable at Bruce@CabotWealth.com. I’ll do my best to respond as quickly as possible.

Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor. We hope you enjoy reading the August 2022 issue.

Ernest Hemingway’s quote about “… gradually then suddenly…” could apply to the escalating geopolitical tensions.



It has been a quiet month for new recommendations and ratings changes as we patiently wait for attractive opportunities in a difficult investing climate.



Please feel free to send me your questions and comments. This newsletter is written for you and the best way to get more out of the letter is to let me know what you are looking for.



I’m best reachable at Bruce@CabotWealth.com. I’ll do my best to respond as quickly as possible.



Thanks!


Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor . We hope you enjoy reading the July 2022 issue.

Investors are facing two forecasts that wouldn’t seem to be possible at the same time: pending recession and stable/rising earnings estimates. We look at how our cyclical stocks have been beaten down even as their earnings estimates remain largely steady.



It has been a quiet month for new recommendations and ratings changes as we patiently wait for great opportunities.



Please feel free to send me your questions and comments. This newsletter is written for you and the best way to get more out of the letter is to let me know what you are looking for.



I’m best reachable at Bruce@CabotWealth.com. I’ll do my best to respond as quickly as possible.



Thanks!


As investors are broadly satisfied with the current outlook, it seems that we have arrived at the end of the beginning of the post-pandemic era. However, there remains immense uncertainly about how the middle-game will play out.



This week, we took advantage of the strong performance of some of our stocks to reduce our ratings. And, as not every stock works right out of the gates, we are moving Big Lots (BIG) from Buy to Hold as we want to rethink our outlook and valuation given its dismal recent earnings report.


Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor. We hope you enjoy reading the May 2022 issue.

We’re back in the States after an unplanned but superb extended stay in London. It seems that most of the pandemic-driven adrenaline rush in speculative stocks has burned off, leaving a tremendous amount of losses in the wake, while stocks of companies with more enduring business models that trade at prosaic valuations continue to hold their ground or advance.



In the letter, we review earnings reports of several Recommended companies as well as provide updates on all of the others.



Please feel free to send me your questions and comments. This newsletter is written for you and the best way to get more out of the letter is to let me know what you are looking for.


Updates
The success of headliners Walmart and Target in the last week has helped drive consumer staples stocks as a group up nearly 5% in August. No other S&P 500 sector has performed better this month. And yet, consumer staples are “only” up 14% year to date, trailing the gains in the S&P 500 (17.3%).

Thus, the sector as a whole is still undervalued. That spells opportunity.
Inflation is dead.

OK, it’s not “dead.” But at 2.9% in July, as reported Wednesday morning, it has now (narrowly) reentered the Federal Reserve’s magical 2% realm for the first time in nearly three and a half years – since March 2021. For all the inflation angst during those past three and a half years, the market has fared pretty well overall – the S&P 500 is up 30% since the first CPI print north of 3% was reported in mid-May of 2021. On a per-year basis, that only slightly trails the average annual return in the large-cap index of 9.9% since its inception in 1928.
This is the 13th bull market in the S&P 500 since 1950. If it ended today, it would tie for the shortest – just over 21 months – with the last bull market, the post-Covid-crash rally that began in March 2020 and tidily peaked at the end of 2021. The average bull market, according to statistics from Ryan Detrick of Carson Investment Research, lasts 65 months.

Does that mean this one can’t up and fizzle right now, taken down by a “carry trade” in Japanese equities, one bad U.S. jobs report, and a whole lot of political (presidential election) and social (war in the Middle East possibly spreading) uncertainty? Of course not. We know a bull market can last only 21 months because we just saw it happen.
Value stocks are starting to gain traction.

No, they’re still not outperforming growth stocks. But the 10.5% year-to-date gain in the Vanguard Value Index Fund (VTV) puts it on track for its best year since 2021, and potentially its third-best year in the last decade. That’s progress. And much of the progress has come this month, as the previously thin bull market rally has spread to the myriad unloved non-tech sectors. Value stocks are up more than 3% this month, outperforming growth stocks (as measured by the QQQ ETF), which are flat in July.
Stock market trends last longer than anyone expects.

That was the oft-repeated adage of my former boss, Cabot legend Tim Lutts. And he was right. For all the tsk-tsking about the current bull market being long in the tooth, it’s actually tied for the shortest bull market (21 months) in history at the moment, according to data from Ryan Detrick of Carson Research Group. The average bull market lasts 61 months – nearly three times the length of the current one!
If it feels like value stocks are missing the bull market party this year, take comfort in knowing they’re not alone.

Thanks to the Magnificent Seven and a few other mega-cap tech stocks and red-hot artificial intelligence plays, the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq have posted very strong returns through the first half of 2024, up 17.6% and 24.8%, respectively. But most other indexes and funds have had very average years. The Dow is up a mere 4.2%. The Russell 2000 (small-cap stocks) is up 0.8%. And the Equal Weight S&P 500 index is up 3.7% and is well off its late-March peak.
Editor’s Note: Due to the Fourth of July holiday next Thursday, your July issue of Cabot Value Investor will come out next Friday, July 5. Happy 4th!

Leveraging cyclicality is a good way to squeeze more profits out of value stocks.

That was an idea put forth by Matt Warder, the newest addition to the Cabot analyst team and the successor to Bruce Kaser in Cabot Value Investor’s “sister” value investing advisory, Cabot Turnaround Letter, on the latest edition of the Street Check podcast I host with my colleague Brad Simmerman.
The market is at all-time highs. But most stocks are undervalued.

That’s the strange but true reality in today’s Magnificent 7/AI-centric bull market. Yes, if you’ve invested in the seven largest mega-caps or a handful of artificial intelligence-related stocks (Broadcom (AVGO), Palantir (PLTR), Super Micro Computer (SMCI), Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM), etc.), you’ve done quite well. But most other sectors have lagged.
Good enough.

That was the resounding sentiment on Wall Street after Wednesday morning’s inflation print came in slightly better than expectations … but still stubbornly above 3% year over year. The headline CPI number for May, 3.3% year over year, was just below the 3.4% economists anticipated; the month-over-month increase (0.2%) was also a bit lighter than expected (0.3%).
Let’s talk about the elephant in the room: the presidential election.

No, I’m not going to touch the political ramifications of Biden vs. Trump, Round 2 with an 11-foot pole. For investors, that doesn’t matter. What matters is what typically happens to the stock market in election years. In the 20 presidential election years since 1944, the S&P 500 is up an average of 7.2% - not terrible, but well shy of the average 10% annual gain in the benchmark index.
“Markets are never wrong, only opinions are.” – Jesse Livermore

Few quotes related to investing have stuck with me more than that one.

Jesse Livermore, of course, is an investment legend who, in the early 20th century, pioneered day trading and who was the basis of the best-selling Edwin Lefevre book, Reminiscences of a Stock Operator – considered by many to be the investing Bible. Many of his words are relevant to today’s market, nearly 85 years after his death. And I think the above quote is as evergreen as any and is important to remember in bull markets like this one.
The market is at all-time highs, the Chiefs beat the 49ers in the most recent Super Bowl, and so-called meme stocks are headed to the moon. Is it January 2021 all over again? Sure feels like it.

Yes, GameStop (GME), AMC Entertainment (AMC) and the like are back, with those and a few others nearly tripling this week. The last time that happened, things didn’t end so well for the meme stocks. Or the market. Should it be a similar red flag for the bull market this time around?
Alerts
Several portfolio stocks recently reported earnings.
The major theme that I’m noticing during this earnings season is that Wall Street analysts were low-balling their earnings and revenue estimates as they cautiously assessed the potential impact of the COVID-19 virus on business activity.
This portfolio stock reported preliminary first-quarter results after yesterday’s market close. The results are strong enough that they could enhance the share price today.
There are several portfolio changes today
I remain cautious on U.S. stocks in the coming days. I find it disturbing that the stock market barely reacted to the oil price crash, and more importantly, the energy downturn’s broader implications. In contrast to what I consider to be a dire economic forecast, stocks are acting well.
Two portfolio stocks report first quarter results.
Yesterday’s steep drop in oil prices will inevitably take stock prices down, and not just for one day. I’m estimating that we’ll see U.S. stock markets trade back down to their March lows in the coming days.
This is a Bulletin for experienced stock investors who like to trade stocks or options over the short-term: a few days or weeks.
Please expect volatility, and that definitely includes periodic large market pullbacks. I’m not just saying that as a standard disclaimer. There’s a certain amount of irrational exuberance that’s taking place now.
Then yesterday, I sent out some stock trading ideas, and the dam burst. I heard from at least a dozen investors who are clamoring for specific trading ideas. Great!
The quarter’s revenue surged in their Europe and licensing businesses, and lagged in their Americas Retail, Americas Wholesale and Asia businesses.
As you pour over stock websites and ponder which stocks you might like to buy in the coming weeks, think hard about how badly these companies might be harmed by the cessation of public gatherings.
Strategy
I want to point out a problem that I foresee, potentially on the scale of the technology bubble in 2001 and the housing bubble in 2007. I think we’re going to have an “inverse ETF bubble.”
I was talking with an investor recently about the latest stock market downturn. He was puzzled; if General Motors (GM) is supposedly such a great stock and vastly favored among portfolio managers, why would it fall 30% during a market correction?
My stock-picking strategy has been refined over the course of 28 years, and has been quite stable for the last six years. My investment goals are (1) minimize stock market risk, (2) achieve capital gains, with dividends as a welcome addition to total return and (3) outperform the U.S. stock markets.
Our instincts warn us that stocks reaching all-time highs are invariably overdue to fall. Sometimes yes, sometimes no. We examine two common scenarios involving stocks that are about to rise—or fall—from new high prices.
If professional investment companies are not making their decisions based on the price of the stock, neither should you.