Forget Writedowns, Bank of America Gets $16B Writeup!

From the Financial Times:

BofA set to gain $30bn on CCB stake

Tuesday Nov 13 2007

Bank of America (BAC) on Tuesday said it was sitting on a potential gain of more than $30bn on its investment in China Construction Bank, highlighting the paper profits some western banks have made on holdings in their Chinese counterparts.

BofA paid $3bn two years ago for an 8.5 per cent stake in CCB and an option to increase to 19.9 per cent at a very low price. The bank plans to record a gain of about $16bn on its existing stake in the fourth quarter.

"On paper we have a potential gain in excess of $30bn," said Joe Price, BofA's chief financial officer, adding that it would be able to cash in some of its holding over the next 2 to 3 years.

Not only does BofA have less subprime mortgage and MBS CDO exposure than other big banks, but they also have done some smart things which will certainly help them weather the storm.

Full Disclosure: Long shares of Bank of America at the time of writing

As Usual, Bill Miller's Letter is a Good Read

I've been a follower of Legg Mason's Bill Miller for a long time. Having grown up in Baltimore, where Legg Mason is based, I was able to learn a lot about him and his investment strategy before most others did so via the publicity surrounding his stunning 15 straight years of beating the S&P 500 index. Miller is a contrarian, value investor, just as I am. And although I don't always agree with his stock picks, his insights into the market and long term investing are particularly well written. I even quote him on Peridot Capital's web site, because he is far more articulate that I am when addressing many important investment concepts. You can usually learn something by reading an article about him, or his actual letters to investors, which are published every 3 months.

Last week, Miller's third quarter commentary was especially insightful, as it addressed many of the turbulent events of the recent past and explained how he views the current marketplace. I've provided a link to Miller's third quarter letter to investors for those of you who are interested. I suggest that long term contrarian investors add the letters to their personal reading list on a quarterly basis.

Crocs Stopped Dead In Its Tracks

If you've ever owned a momentum stock, you know that things are a lot of fun, until the company misses a quarter. Investors' love affair with trendy footwear maker Crocs (CROX) ended last week, as the company's third quarter earnings release left much to be desired for the momentum traders hoping for yet another blowout quarter. The stock has been crushed to the tune of 45% in just 3 trading days and now fetches $41 per share, down from its high of $75.

CROX.png

After such a move, it appears that there might be an investment opportunity here if you have a good understanding and expertise of trendy fashions. For such opinions, I am not your guy, as I have no idea what the future for Crocs will look like and won't even fathom an uneducated guess. Lots of people surely think the company's shoes are merely a fad. However, if you disagree with that, you might want to take a look at the shares as an investment.

Here's why. Last week Crocs issued 2008 guidance of 35-40% sales and earnings growth but that was not enough to keep the stock from tanking. If you believe in the Crocs story (that the company can continue to grow from here), the stock is only trading at 15 times the $2.70 earnings guidance the company has issued for next year. If 2008 will indeed bring investors 35-40% earnings growth as predicted, and the company can grow (at all) in the years after that, buying Crocs today around 40 bucks will actually prove to be a wise decision. I don't know enough about shoes to feel confident in that view, but I bet some people do. If so, the stock might finally be reasonably priced.

Full Disclosure: No position in CROX at the time of writing

Alright Bernanke, Enough with the Rate Cuts

Do you get the feeling that FOMC Chairman Ben Bernanke is lowering interest rates more because that is what the markets want, and less because it is actually helping the problems we have in the housing and credit markets? The debate has long been whether or not the mortgage crisis will be contained or spread into the rest of the economy and cause a recession. With third quarter GDP growth coming in at 3.9%, the highest rate since early 2006, it is clear that the economy is a lot more than just the housing market.

While GDP growth should slow meaningfully in Q4, it does appear the mortgage problems are contained. Unless rate cuts will help stabilize the housing market, which is not a likely result, I don't see the need to go ahead with them just for the market's sake. After all, commodities like gold, oil, wheat, corn, etc are soaring. The result will be higher prices for consumers, which we have already begun to see as companies like FedEx, Colgate, and Procter & Gamble are all raising prices to maintain their profit margins and stock prices.

In the face of apparent inflation pressures, interest rates could ultimately be headed higher, which would make the recent cuts even more baffling. It's true that the government's inflation data doesn't seem to jive with reality, and maybe that will reduce the likelihood that rate increases are in our future, but when press release after press release announce price increases from major manufacturers due to record commodity prices, it's hard to deny inflation is real.

So what will cure the housing market's woes if rates cuts won't do the trick? Honestly, just the laws of supply and demand. The housing market is still falling with no signs of stability in sight. As long as delinquency and foreclosure rates continue to rise, and home prices continue to fall, the credit market issues (loan losses and asset backed securities writedowns) will continue. The value of loans won't stop falling until the performance of such loans improves, or at least stop deteriorating.

Rate cuts won't help because they have no direct impact on home prices or mortgage delinquency rates. This will be apparent when we see fourth quarter loan performance continue to get worse, not better. As home inventories are worked off and more home owners refinance into fixed rate loans, the markets will eventually stabilize. It will take time though. I don't know when, nobody does, but hopefully we can get there by the end of 2008.

As for whether the housing market weakness has spread to other areas, this debate obviously will continue. From third quarter earnings season we see that the weakness has really been contained to home builders, mortgage lenders, banks and investment firms that own securities backed by mortgage loans, and companies that provide insurance for mortgages and mortgage backed securities. It is my belief, and many will certainly disagree, that consumer spending is not as bad as some would have you think, and the fact that growth in spending is lackluster has much more to do with the face that real wages have been stagnant for years, and not because of the housing market. In addition, the fact that consumers are staying current on all their other monthly bills, even when they are delinquent on their mortgages, shows that the housing market's issues really are fairly well contained.

As for policy moves, I think actions should be focused exclusively on stabilizing the housing market. While pleasing to the markets, I don't see any direct impact on housing from rate cuts. Just imagine how great it would be if we could get back to a "normal" housing market. People would have to get used to not making much money on their homes (real estate returns historically don't outpace inflation), but the credit markets would stabilize and corporate earnings could resume their growth trend. Even a flat housing market would be welcomed by investors, to say the least.

Full Disclosure: No positions in the companies mentioned

The Implications of Negative Earnings Growth

Undoubtedly, the underlying driver of the U.S. stock market in recent years could be summed up in two words; earnings growth. Equities now face a hurdle, however, as third quarter profits for the S&P 500 could very well decline year over year for the first time in five years. The implications for the market are pretty important.

At the outset of the year, market forecasters were calling for low to mid double digit returns for the market, supported by rising earnings and slight multiple expansion. It was my view that multiple expansion was unlikely (due to a lack of low P/E ratios to begin with, coupled with decelerating economic and earnings growth rates), so market returns would more likely track earnings advances, which would put us up in the mid to high single digits for the year. The S&P 500 is slightly above that pace right now, but it will likely be an uphill battle from here.

The reason is that without multiple expansion or earnings growth, there is no way for the market to advance meaningfully, by definition. The end result is likely to be a range-bound market as judged by the major indices. In fact, as the chart below shows, we have already begun to see this scenario take shape.

S&P 500 Index - Last 6 Months

From an investor perspective, this infers that stock picking will be all that more crucial to achieve investment gains. Not surprisingly, I would suggest focusing on individual situations where either multiple expansion or earnings growth are largely assured. The ideal investment candidate would be set up nicely for both, which would allow for solid gains regardless of whether or not the overall market advances meaningfully in coming months.

Countrywide Predicts Trough, Shares Soar 24%

Gauging the outlook for pure mortgage lenders like Countrywide (CFC) is a tough game and one that I am choosing not to play. The company is predicting that the third quarter was the trough and profits will return in Q4 and 2008, but nobody really knows for sure. Delinquency rates are still rising at CFC, standing at 7.1% as of September 30th, up from 5.7% three months before.

Until there are signs of stability and that stability hangs around for a while, I'm not going to bottom fish in mortgage-related companies like pure lenders or mortgage insurers. Honestly, those stocks are down so much, trading far below even recently slashed book values, that I think eventually there will be plenty of upside without even needing to time the bottom of the cycle.

Until then, I continue to like the bigger diversified banks with fat dividend yields. With these stocks yielding more than treasury bonds, I think you can justify buying low and being patient, knowing that calling a bottom is essentially impossible. I would, however, start making a list of the kinds of stocks you might want to target when things start to rebound. You won't be able to time a purchase perfectly, but there is no way that most of the home builders, mortgage insurers, and big lenders won't survive and be consistently profitable when the markets get back to some sort of more typical environment.

There will be money to be made, but I'm not comfortable jumping into pure plays just yet. Hopefully by sometime in 2008 things will stabilize and we'll have a better idea of what "normal" conditions look like. At that point, making bets will be much more prudent.

Full Disclosure: No position in Countrywide at the time of writing

Google Shows Restraint, Fails to Outbid Microsoft for Facebook Ad Deal

With a flurry of deals in recent months, Google (GOOG) has seemed willing to pay handsomely for attractive companies and contracts. The online ad leader has received mixed reviews for acquisitions of Doubleclick, Feedburner, and YouTube, as well as their exclusive ad deal with MySpace. With news that Facebook was negotiating with both Google and Microsoft (MSFT) on an international ad deal and a minority investment, it would not have been surprising, given their cash hoard and past deal history, to see Google outbid Gates & Company for the deal, even though Microsoft currently runs ads on Facebook's domestic site.

In a shift for Google, reports are hitting the wires that Facebook has secured a $240 million investment from Microsoft, in exchange for an expanded ad deal that covers Facebook's foray into the international market. MSFT is getting a 1.6% stake, which values Facebook at a whopping $15 billion. All this for a company that supposedly is on track for 2007 revenue and profits of $150 million and $30 million, respectively. That's right, Microsoft is paying 100 times 2007 sales and 500 times 2007 earnings!

There is no doubt that adding Facebook to its arsenal of web advertising properties would have been a boon for Google, but given that Microsoft already has a relationship with them, it is not too shocking that they would expand their existing deal. While prices of less than $2 billion for YouTube and $100 million for Feedburner will likely turn out to be bargains, it was likely tougher to justify a $15 billion valuation for Facebook. Many Google shareholders are probably happy to see the company show some sort of financial restraint, even though Facebook is clearly a hot property in the social networking space.

As for Google stock, the shares have soared to $675 on the heels of another strong quarterly earnings report from the company. I still believe the stock will continue its rise, but future gains will likely be far more limited. I will likely want to sell stock when the forward P/E approaches 35 times, which right now would equate to about $718 per share.

For the bears who continue to point to the fact that Google's market cap has irrationally matched or exceeded that of blue chip companies like Citigroup (C) and Wal-Mart (WMT), I would caution people against such comparisons. Lining up a software company side by side with a retailer or a bank really is comparing apples to oranges. Instead, I would suggest you compare Google's valuation with other software companies.

With a low 30's forward P/E ratio, given Google earnings growth projections over the next 3 to 5 years, I think investors will conclude that Google's share price is not only quite reasonable, but will continue to rise if the company can deliver earnings growth rates in the 20 to 30 percent range annually for the next several years. Even if you factor in decelerating profit growth as well as continued P/E contraction, you can still project a stock price meaningfully higher than current levels over the longer term.

Full Disclosure: Long shares of Google at the time of writing

A Trade Idea As Another Bank of America Entry Point Presents Itself

On July 30th I mentioned how I thought Bank of America (BAC) stock at $47 was attractive with a 5.4% dividend yield. The shares moved above $52 since that post, but today are falling back sharply, to $48 each, after the company posted poor third quarter results, just like every other bank has thus far. The dividend now stands at 5.3%, and I think it is very safe.

If you want to generate even more income on this trade, you could buy the stock to collect the dividend and any capital appreciation, while simultaneously selling out of the money call options on the shares to collect more cash. For example, the May 2008 52.5 calls are selling for about $1.75 each right now. Buying the stock and selling those calls would result in a breakeven point of ~$45 per share over the next 7 months or so. Conversely, your upside would be up to $52.50 on BAC stock, plus dividends and option premiums of around $3 per share (up to 15% in total gains).

If you think the stock will trade within the recent range of the high 40's to low 50's, this trade would be a great way to make a double digit percentage profit if BAC can make up the few points of recent losses in coming months.

Full Disclosure: Long Bank of America at the time of writing