Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Becton Dickinson: Another Undervalued Stock on the Move

As I promised last time, I am showing our Dividend Valuation Model for Becton Dickinson (BDX).  BDX is the second highest ranked stock in our universe behind United Technologies (UTX) in a combination of predictability, valuation, and momentum.

The chart at the right shows the actual prices of BDX in red compared to our model's annual predictions over the last 20 years in blue.

BDX is a global medical technology company engaged in the manufacture and sale of a wide range of medical devices and instruments used by many sectors of the health-care industry. 

The Dividend Valuation Chart shows a tight fit between BDX and the valuation bars.  The R-squared is .94. 

BDX has one of the best long-term earnings and dividend growth records of any company we follow.
  1. Dividends have grown by nearly 13% per annum over the last 20 years. 
  2. Earnings have grown by nearly 12% per year.
  3. Over the last three years dividends and earnings have grown at 13.7% and 11.4%, respectively.
  4. Wall Street is estimating that 3-5 year earnings will grow at nearly 10%.
  5. The model is suggesting that based on next years estimates the stock is undervalued by nearly 14%.
A company with such a high R-squared at BDX seldom gives table-pounding buy signals.  The chart clearly shows that BDX's price has pretty much run along the tops of it annual valuation bars, but it is now buried in undervalued territory.

Health-care stocks have underperformed the S&P 500 over the last two years.  In recent weeks, however, they have perked up as investors have moved to a more defensive posture.  We would not be surprised to see BDX move higher in part because it has one of the highest expected dividend and earnings growth profiles of any stock in the health-care sector.  In short it is a standout company in a battered industry.


We own BDX in our Capital Builder investment style. Do not use this blog for investment advice.  Please consult your own investment professional for his or her analysis of the company.

Next time Johnson and Johnson (JNJ).

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Dividend Valuation Model: United Technology Is #1

Dividends play two important roles in our stock selection process.  1) They produce a cash return that has represented nearly 40% of the total return of the S&P 500 Index over the last 80 years. 2)  For select companies, dividend growth and changes in interest rates provide an excellent valuation tool.

Each week we run all the stocks in the Russell 1000 through our Dividend Valuation model.   The model does two important things for us.  Statistically, it tells us how good it has been in predicting movements in each stock over the last 20 years, and it provides us with a single formula that has produced the best fit of prices versus dividends and interest rates.

At this point in the process, we can easily identify which stocks are most "predictable."  Next we make a projection of the dividend growth for each company and estimate changes in interest rates for the coming year.  With this information, the model can now tell us which stocks are most undervalued.  Finally, we run all stocks through a multi-period momentum filter.  This tells us which stocks have what we call "sponsorship," meaning which companies are performing at least as well as the average stock over four different time frames..

This may sound complex, and the process is, but the result is very simple.  We have identified the companies that are most predictable, most undervalued, and have the best sponsorship, or momentum.

We then assign a rank between 1 and 100 for each of the three metrics for each company.  Summing the ranks for predictability, valuation, and sponsorship, we can identify the company with the highest overall total rank in  the Russell 1000 and the also among the companies we own.

Using this process, of calculating predictability, valuation, and sponsorship, we can determine those stocks with the best prospect for the year ahead

 A look at the model as of Friday reveals that the stock we own with the best overall score is United Technology (UTX).  As shown above, the model (blue line) for UTX has been very tightly associated with UTX's actual price (red line) over the last 20 years.  The R-squared is .94.  The models suggests that UTX is undervalued by about 12%, including dividend. UTX's sponsorship or momentum score is 67, which means that it has outperformed 67% of all stocks over four time frames, from 12 months to one month.  Importantly it is outperforming 74% of all stocks over the last three months.  UTX recently hiked it dividend 13%, which is about in line with the company's dividend actions over the last ten years.  Finally, earnings were recently reported as having grown 19% in the first quarter versus a year ago.  That provides a nice cushion for future dividend hikes.

There are a handful of stocks with better scores than UTX.  Our strategists are researching them.  We'll report later if any of them meet our standards.

The stock with the second highest score in our model is Becton Dickinson (BDX).  We will report on it next time.

The investment world has definitely discovered dividends.  We have not seen this kind of attention being paid to dividend investing in our own 20 years of a dividend-centric approach.  Because dividends have become so popular, we are turning our focus to valuation in our blogs for a while.  We have learned the hard way too many times that just because a company pays a dividend, or has increased its dividend for 20 or 30 years in a row does not mean that it is fairly priced.  Indeed, we see many companies with long dividend-paying track records that have already priced in the next two years of dividend growth.

If you have specific dividend-paying companies that you would like for us to review, please add a comment to this blog.  We'll get to as many as we can.    

Monday, May 02, 2011

Sell in May And Go Away . . . . At Your Own Risk

Because stocks have had solid double-digit gains over the last 12 months, we hear many people predicting that they are ready for a fall.  In addition, the "Sell in May and Go Away" crowd is giving us all the statistics of how stocks have fared between May and November historically.

The reasons given for a stock sell off are full of language about momentum, price gains, and too much-too soon. We want to add very quickly that few of the "stocks are too high" crowd today were among the "stocks are too low" crowd  at the market bottom in March of 2009.  Indeed, if you go back to their blogs and read what they were saying around the bottom of the market, you will find many of them were saying "stocks are too high," even then.

In the blizzard of words we see written about the stock market, we seldom see the word valuation.  Valuation, it would seem, has no meaning in a high-octane traders' market, where computers are trading with computers for about 70% of the daily volume.  Individual investors seem to have decided that long-term value investing has gone the way of the Oldsmobile.

Ah, but we beg to differ!   In the long-run, valuation will rule just like it always has.The reason is over the last 80 years, S&P stock prices are highly correlated to both After Tax Profits and Dividends.  The computers and traders will wage their daily battles of betting on zig or zag, but in the long-run, zigs and zags will ultimately be seen as vanity, a chasing after the wind.

From a valuation perspective, stocks are still cheap and could only become expensive if the economy were to fall off a cliff and drag earnings and dividends with it.  The chart below shows index of the S&P 500 (red line) compared to Total U.S. After Tax Profits Index (blue line).  Please note that After Tax Profits reached an all time high in December of 2010 and, based on S&P estimates, will rise by nearly 13% in the second quarter of 2011 versus the same quarter a year ago. Tracking the After Tax Profits Index is our favorite way of measuring earnings, because it measures only earnings that companies actually paid taxes on.  

The graph below vividly shows that while After Tax Profits have reached an all time high, the S&P 500 has not. In fact, the chart suggests that the S&P has a long way to go to reach fair value.


Corroborating the view that stocks are still undervalued is the graph of the S&P 500 Index (red line) compared to Total Corporate Dividends Index (blue line).  Total Corporate Dividends paid is an important indicator of the health of the current turn-around in the stock market, because dividends are paid in cash and not promises.  As the chart shows, dividends took a hit during the sub prime crisis.  Importantly the chart also shows that they have turned higher.  S&P is predicting that dividends will grow nearly 10% on a year over year basis for the first quarter of 2011.  Dividends have not reached a new high, but we believe the old record will be eclipsed over the next 12 months.  This would be good news for continued stock price gains.


These two simple, yet important measures of stock market valuations are still flashing green.  That does not mean that stocks will go straight up from here.  In our judgment, it does mean, however, that saying stocks are too high is nonsense, and "Sell in May and Go Away" is worse.