Investors don't believe that Ford can sustain today's high
profits. I think they're wrong.
Here's my annual list of ten stocks for the year ahead,
chosen from the selections of experts I admire. Although I have done pretty
well over the long term, beating Standard & Poor's 500-stock index (.SPX)
by an average of three percentage points per year over the past nine years,
2012 was the second straight year I lagged. My ten picks gained 12.7%, on
average, while the S&P 500 returned 16.8% (returns and share prices are
through November 2).
Still, for the third straight year, and in keeping with my
recent penchant for minimizing risk, no single stock got crushed. My worst
performer was Shire (SHPG), an Irish biotech firm, which lost 9.4%. I had two
big winners. SAP (SAP) acquired one, SuccessFactors, a software company that
helps businesses manage and assess employees, at a 48% premium to the price at
which I recommended it. The other, Bolt Technology (BOLT) , whose main business
is gathering seismic data for energy exploration, soared 54%.
Micro-cap maven. Bolt was the choice of Daniel Abramowitz,
of Hillson Financial Management, in Rockville, Md., making his debut as one of
my stock selectors. For 2013, he has chosen another tiny outfit, Cenveo (CVO),
a printing company with a $2 share price and a price-earnings ratio, based on
estimated 2013 earnings, of just 4. Cenveo has a lot of debt, and the stock is
speculative, says Abramowitz: "But the downside at these levels is
limited, and the upside is pretty substantial."
In my recent column on top-performing mutual funds, I
highlighted Donald Yacktman as that rare manager who has consistently produced
strong returns. Yacktman Focused Fund (YAFFX | Get Prospectus) has beaten the
S&P 500 by an average of 4.5 points per year over the past decade. One of
Yacktman's favorite stocks is Stryker (SYK), a large, skillfully managed maker
of medical devices, including hip and knee implants. Currently trading at 12
times projected 2013 earnings, Stryker is one of those companies you can stash
in your IRA for a few decades and profit from as the world ages.
The managers of the superb Matthews China Fund (MCHFX | Get
Prospectus), which has clobbered its benchmark over the past decade, were
responsible for one of my best picks in recent years: New Oriental Education
& Technology Group (EDU). On my 2010 list, the stock gained a lovely 48%
over the following 12 months. For the past year, however, New Oriental -- which
dominates the market for private educational services in China (55 schools and
726 learning centers) -- has taken a dive, as have many Chinese stocks. It's
now close to its early-2010 price, even though revenues have doubled. Let's try
to ride it up again.
When it comes to ratings from the Value Line Investment
Survey, my financial bible, you can't do better than a stock that's rated
"1" for timeliness, "1" for safety and "A++" for
financial strength. Kimberly-Clark (KMB), maker of Kleenex, Huggies and other
consumer products, is one of the few stocks that rings every bell. It yields
3.6%, trades at a reasonable 15 times estimated 2013 earnings and is much less
volatile than the overall market. Plus, Value Line's analysts expect earnings to rise 16% in 2013.
Who says you can't have it all?
The venerable investment firm Brown Brothers Harriman, which
has catered to wealthy families since 1818, has launched some excellent mutual
funds in recent years. The managers of BBH Core Select (BBTEX | Get Prospectus)
look for stocks that sell for a "meaningful discount" from their
judgment of a firm's intrinsic, or true, value, thus providing what financial
scholar Benjamin Graham called a "margin of safety." A prime holding
for the past eight years has been Minneapolis-based U.S. Bancorp (USB), one of
the best-run banks in the world. Its stock has risen 35% in the past year, but
the P/E is still reasonable at 11, and the 2.3% dividend yield gives you more
income than a ten-year Treasury bond.
Money manager James Roumell gained fame with his victories
in the Wall Street Journal's late, lamented, dartboard-versus-stock-pickers
contests. Two years ago, he launched a mutual fund, Roumell Opportunistic Value
(RAMVX | Get Prospectus). He is a regular on this list, and he's got a real
contrarian choice: Dell (DELL). These are tough times for makers of personal
computers but, in a letter to his investors, Roumell notes that Dell today
derives two-thirds of its earnings from software, servers and services. And the
stock is cheap! It has lost half of its value in eight months and trades at
just 5 times estimated earnings for the year that ends in January 2014. Writes
Roumell: "We are exercising our greed gene while others are locked in
fear."
The annual ten-best list would be incomplete without a stock
from Will Danoff, the manager of my favorite mutual fund of all time, Fidelity
Contrafund (FCNTX | Get Prospectus), a member of the Kiplinger 25. During the
first nine months of 2012, Danoff added only one new stock to his 25 largest
holdings: Comcast (CMCSA), the nation's biggest cable operator and the owner of
NBCUniversal and its TV, movie and theme-park businesses. As the number of
broadband Internet subscribers increases, Comcast is emerging as one of the
most adept players on the changing telecom scene. Earnings are expected to rise
16% in 2013; for that kind of growth, the stock's P/E of 17 is modest.
Terry Tillman, who analyzes software stocks for the Raymond
James investment firm, chose SuccessFactors for 2012. Now he's enthusiastic
about Tangoe (TNGO), which makes software that helps manage the telecom
services that large and midsize companies use. Revenues in the July-September
quarter were up 39% from the same period in 2011. When you consider Tangoe's
fast growth, its P/E of 20, based on 2013 earnings estimates, seems attractive.
But I'm mainly drawn by the firm's similarity to SuccessFactors. Two in a row?
Among funds that invest in large foreign stocks with a blend
of growth and value attributes, Artisan International Value (ARTKX | Get
Prospectus) has delivered the best return over the past ten years -- an amazing
14.3% annualized, according to Morningstar. Near the top of its portfolio is
Reed Elsevier (RUK), a London-based firm that offers professional information
services, including scientific journals and the LexisNexis legal database. Getting
my attention are a sterling balance sheet, a P/E of 12, a dividend yield of
1.9% and a business with a broad moat -- in this case, brand names that deter
inroads by competitors.
Two years ago, I started a new tradition: picking a stock
myself. In both years, it was iShares MSCI Brazil Index (EWZ), an
exchange-traded fund that tracks the Brazilian stock market. It bombed twice,
and I am not going to that well again. I'm picking Ford Motor (F), whose heroic
CEO, Alan Mulally, turned down bailout money and guided the business through
tough times to 13 straight quarters of pretax profitability, including
surprisingly strong earnings of $1.6 billion in the third quarter of 2012. Ford
still has room to grow. Despite the firm's achievements, the stock has dropped
40% since early 2011, and the P/E is 8. The P/E is low because investors
apparently don't believe that Ford can sustain those high profits. I think
they're wrong and believe that Ford deserves a higher valuation.
I'll conclude with my annual warnings: I expect these stocks
to beat the market over the next 12 months, but I am not a believer in
short-term investing, and you should consider these long-term holdings. The
companies vary by sector, geography and size, but they aren't meant to
represent a truly diversified portfolio. Finally, these are just suggestions.
Ultimately, the decisions are yours.
By James K. Glassman
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Posted By BUBUIOC INC. to
BUBUIOC INC. at 12/27/2012 02:49:00 PM