Sitting here on a beautiful Friday afternoon in CT. Still early spring here, about 64 and partly cloudy. The flowers are starting to blossom, I am chilling out, listening to my iTunes Radio with the seed artist Diana Krall. S'wonderful.
My May 6th 2013 portfolio has had a nice spurt down the stretch. It is up a very satisfactory 32.7%, versus a bit under 20%. That will make it my third straight winner (November 2012 won 43.7% to 36.7% and February 2013 won 78.3% to 21.1% - that one was a bit one sided). The other three open portfolios are up an average of 20.6%, besting the R3K by almost 12 points. Needless to say, I would love to keep those types of margins and absolute gains.
So in that vein, I have been giving a lot of consideration to the next five stocks. Maybe ten days ago, I was leaning towards AAPL, MSFT, NOC, CSCO and LO. But AAPL and LO have moved up pretty nicely since then and are not quite as desirable now. I may re visit them in August should they pull back. MSFT had good earnings, but then I remembered that they have bought the phone business from Nokia. Given that NOK is up from about $4 to $7.40 since that was announced and GOOG divested themselves of Motorola, I do not expect this to be a crown jewel for MSFT.
So I have a new five stocks I am leaning towards, although I am known to change my mind the last day (the worst one was IQNT, which I actually bought, then sold when I changed my mind. It is up about 96% since then).
AVG - this is a stock in my November tranche that provides security for computers. They had a blow out earnings in February, but have given most of that back. SYMC is one of their big competitors and is in complete disarray. They are a billion $ company.
NSR - this is your classic out of favor company. There are strong rumors they may be losing a contract that provides a big chunk of their revenues and profits. But that seems (to me) to be entirely priced in and I do not expect it to be as bad as people think. This is a bit of a "risky" play, but to me seems to be a calculated risk. They are 1.6b in size.
RCII - this is a stock I have not discussed here before. They do not come up on the traditional MFI screens, but they show up in my top 200 list. They are "Rent A Center", which I personally find to be a bit of a distasteful business. But it is also a relatively successful business model, and to me is one of the more attractive options out there. They pay a 3.5% dividend, they are $1.5 b in market cap, they are relatively cheap and they are growing modestly.
CSCO - I know I sold all my shares a quarter ago. I may have been a little hasty. Not much to say here, not a sexy company, but still a blue chip. Over a hundred billion in market cap and a 3.3% dividend.
CA - good old Computer Associates from my February 2012 tranche. They were very solid for me the first time, up 32%. They have sold off over 6% since then. They also have a 3.3% dividend and a $13 b market cap.
Other stocks still on the close watch list include: AGX, SNDK, NTES, COH, ATVI and ORCL. So if something material happens to either the stocks on close watch or in top five, I could change my mind.
Friday, May 02, 2014
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Marshall I am sure you already know this but found this on SA today.
What names are being turned up by Greenblatt's Magic Formula?
01:34 PM ET · MSFT
Joel Greenblatt's screen looks to find stocks with high "earnings yield" - a high ratio of profits to enterprise value. Companies are further screened for a strong return on capital. When a stock scores well with both criteria, it's usually a good company being undervalued by investors.
For picking individual stocks, there are probably better methods, but as a group, Magic Formula names have vastly outperformed the broad market.
Although defense names have done well over the past couple of years, the Magic Formula continues to identify Northrop Grumman (NOC +0.2%), General Dynamics (GD +1.4%), and Raytheon (RTN +0.6%) as attractive. Firearm names Smith & Wesson (SWHC +0.8%) and Sturm Ruger (RGR +0.3%) also make the cut.
A number of videogame makers show up as well: Take-Two (TTWO +0.3%), Activision Blizzard (ATVI +0.2%), GameStop (GME +2.8%), and the struggling recent IPO King Digital (KING -0.3%).
Not too surprisingly, the Magic Formula also continues to like plenty of big-cap tech names: Cisco (CSCO -0.2%), CA, Inc. (CA -0.5%), Microsoft (MSFT -0.5%), Hewlett-Packard (HPQ -0.5%), and Apple (AAPL +0.1%).
Hardly market laggards, media names like Time Warner (TWX -0.8%), Viacom (VIA +1.4%), Omnicom Group (OMC), and Starz (STRZA +2.3%) also show up on the list, as do struggling multi-level marketers and for-profit education stocks: HLF, NUS, APOL, ESI, CPLA.
Punished by investors for not being as hot as they once were, Coach (COH +0.2%), Francesca' Holdings (FRAN +0.1%), and Gap (GPS -1.3%) are Magic Formula picks today.
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