Saturday, September 20, 2008

The Closing Bell

The Closing Bell

9/20/08


Statistical Summary


Current Economic Forecast


2007

Real Growth in Gross Domestic Product: 2.0- 2.5%

Inflation: 2 - 2.5 %

Growth in Corporate Profits: 6-8%


2008 (revised-again)

Real Growth in Gross Domestic Product (GDP): -1.0 - +1.05%

Inflation: 2-3%

Growth in Corporate Profits: 0-5%

Current Market Forecast

Dow Jones Industrial Average

2008

Current Trend:

Short Term Trading Range 10809-11866

Short Term Downtrend 10090-11477

Medium Term Downtrend 10658-12605

Long Term Trading Range 7100-14203

Year End Fair Value (revised): 13450-13850


2009 Year End Fair Value (revised): 13850-14250


Standard & Poor’s 500

2008

Current Trend:

Short Term Trading Range 1198-1311

Short Term Downtrend 1122-1273

Medium Term Downtrend 1155-1374

Long Term Trading Range 750-1527

Long term Up Trend 1317-1797

Year End Fair Value (revised): 1533-1577


Percentage Cash in Our Portfolios


Dividend Growth Portfolio 19%

High Yield Portfolio 21%

Aggressive Growth Portfolio 24%


Economics


I am still rating the economy as a neutral for Your Money; but the destruction of credit in our financial system will have a negative impact on the economy’s ability to prevent weakness in the consumer and industrial sectors and finance future growth. I am not sure that the macroeconomic affects will show up in the final stats for 2008; but it will almost certainly influence economic activity in 2009. I haven’t finished my forecast for that year but it appears that it will likely be another year of slightly negative to slightly positive growth.


I have suggested in comments over the last two weeks that we could probably take inflation off the table for the moment; and this week’s August consumer price index report supports that notion. However, the events of the last week (the Federal government pumping billions of dollars into the financial system) argue for leaving inflation as a major risk. To be sure, these funds will have an inflationary effect if the banking system lends that money. However, at the moment the problem is the opposite--banks and other lending institutions are hoarding cash. Once this credit crisis starts to correct itself, we will have to start paying close attention to how quickly the Fed withdraws the liquidity that it is now supplying.


This week (1) the housing numbers contained more bad news though paradoxically that may be good news. August housing starts and building permits declined precipitously while weekly mortgage applications rose 2.4%. The more building (supply) slows and applications (demand) rise, the faster inventories are reduced and construction activity can start to recover; (2) retail sales and jobless claims continued to disappoint, (3) as did the industrial sector--August industrial production fell more than expected while two secondary indicators were mixed: the September Empire State Manufacturing survey index reading was more negative than expected while the September Philadelphia Fed manufacturing index came in above forecasts. (4) finally, August leading economic indicators fell more than estimates; while the one good bit of news this week, the August consumer price index, was reported down .1%.


The real news this week was the Treasury and Fed actions. I covered those in the Morning Calls; but bottom line, Bernanke and Paulson, in my opinion, did what they had to do and for that they get above average marks. The SEC is another story.


The Economic Risks:

(1) the economy is weaker than expected.

(2) Fed policy (reading the data correctly).

(3) a disruption in global oil supplies (It is not the price of oil but its availability that will cause severe economic dislocation.).

(4) protectionism (Free trade is a major positive for world and US economic growth.).

(5) fiscal profligacy (Government spending as a percent of GDP is too high and the looming explosion in entitlement expenditures will make it worse. There is no good solution save spending discipline.).

(6) a rising tax and regulatory burden (Government has never proven that it could solve economic problems efficiently or satisfactorily.)


Politics


Both the domestic and international political environments are a negative for Your Money.

Some thoughts of foreign policy expertise of the candidates:

htt

p://article.nationalreview.co/?q=OTFkZTJmODA0MjNmYTQ5MTlkNjE2OTczNjM4N2JhNWM=


The Market-Disciplined Investing


Technical


With the Thursday/Friday price spike:


(1) the DJIA (11388) closed above the upper boundary of the short term May/August 2008 downtrend (circa 9997-11364)--a very promising sign; while the S&P (1255) remained within this downtrend (circa 1116-1261). Both closed within the medium term down trend extending back to October 2007 whose boundaries are DJIA circa 10672-12599 and S&P circa 1152-1374.


(2) I am again operating on the assumption that July 2008 low marked the bottom of this cycle (DJIA 10809; S&P 1198)--so these are the most important downside numbers for me at the moment. [I should note that even if we get a down day Monday, which seems likely, and the DJIA trades back below the upper boundary of that May/August downtrend, it wouldn’t change my view that the July lows are the bottom.] If we assume that stocks are now in a trading range then the first identifiable resistance level is the August 2008 trading high (DJIA 11866: S&P 1311). Bottom line: The Thursday/Friday rally rekindled my belief that the July intraday lows will mark the bottom to this Market cycle and that the dominant trend is now a trading range tentatively being defined by the July 2008 lows and the August 2008 highs (DJIA 10809-11866; S&P 1198-1311) [that range should widen later].


Thoughts on the wisdom on the new SEC edict banning short selling:

http://www.informationarbitrage.com/2008/09/from-capitalism.html


Fundamental-A Dividend Growth Investment Strategy


The DJIA (11388) finished this week about 15.9% below Fair Value (13549) while the S&P closed (1255) around 18.8% undervalued (1547).


I have covered all the fundamental developments this week in the Morning Calls. My bottom line (quoting from Friday’s Morning Call): ‘.....as the outline of the Treasury’s RTC-redux plan becomes clear, it will at the least allow equities to find a valuation level absent the fear of financial collapse but commensurate with an economy with a crippled but in tact financial system that is likely to grow at a below average pace for some time. Hence, it doesn’t solve all our economic problems nor does it bring any clarity to the long term issue of the impact of a potential shift in the political landscape and what that shift might mean economically. But based on our Valuation Model, those problems were in the price of stocks at higher levels.’


Our short term strategy has returned to focusing on the management of our cash balances between 15-20% as a way of dealing with risk in what I believe will be a weak economy and a volatile political season. On Thursday our Portfolios took their cash position from about 34% to circa 20% (see above for their cash value at the close Friday).


Questions Paulson needs to answer about his government bailout plan:

http://www.forbes.com/home/2008/09/19/banking-bailout-paulson-biz-wall-cx_lm_0919questions.html


One final note. I said in yesterday’s Morning Call that our Portfolios would likely move a further step towards a 17% cash position that day. They didn’t because (1) I was expecting more Market weakness than we got, plus (2) the volatility index never got below 30, which is too high to suggest a further sustained rally from these levels. I think that we will get a better opportunity to Buy next week--so our Portfolios did nothing.

Our investment strategy includes:



(a) defense is still important--protect profits and avoid losses,

(b) use price weakness as an opportunity to buy the stocks of attractive companies at attractive prices; use price strength to take profits when a stock’s price moves into its Sell Half Range or to move out of those stocks that traded below their Buy Value Range in the recent decline but can not recover to within that Range,

(c) on a longer term basis, recognize that there remain fundamental factors that argue for caution and therefore to proceed carefully with our Buying, keeping a larger than normal cash position in anticipation of valuation and strategy changes that could result from a potentially new domestic economic agenda.


DJIA S&P

Current 2008 Year End Fair Value 13650 1555

Fair Value as of 9/30//08 13549 1547

Close this week 11388 1255

Over Valuation vs. 9/30 Close

5% overvalued 14226 1626

10% overvalued 14904 1701

Under Valuation vs. 9/30 Close

5% undervalued 12872 1469

10%undervalued 12194 1392

15%undervalued 11516 1315

20%undervalued 10839 1238


The Portfolios and Buy Lists are up to date.


Company Highlight:


Walgreen’s (WAG) is the second largest drugstore operator in the US. The company has grown earnings and dividends 14-16% annually over the past five years, earning a 16-17% return on capital. WAG should be able to sustain an above average earnings growth rate because:

(1) the +60 year old population, which is the largest user of drugs, is growing faster than any other segment of the population,

(2) it recently introduced a pharmacy benefits manager for Medicare prescription drug plans which should accelerate revenue growth, and

(3) not only does WAG operate an aggressive new store introduction campaign, its strategy focuses on convenient locations and many are 24/7 stores,

(4) the company also is expanding via acquisition into pharmacy and health services [seven in the last three years]. This year WAG created a new division which will manage health centers and pharmacies at large company worksites.

WAG is rated A+ by Value Line, has no debt, is in the midst of a $1 billion stock buy back program and its stock yield 1%

http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=WAG

9/08

Make money by accessing all our Portfolios, the supporting research and Price Disciplines at www.strategic-stock-investments.com. Our work is focused on making money for our Portfolios not as some academic exercise in Internet investing. Check our performance (audited)--our Dividend Growth Portfolio has beaten the S&P 500 basis points per year for the last seven years but with a beta of only .62. (Mandatory Disclaimer: past performance is not a guarantee of future results.) We give you everything you need to duplicate our results, in particular, a strict price discipline for both Buying and Selling.




Steve Cook received his education in investments from Harvard, where he earned an MBA, New York University, where he did post graduate work in economics and financial analysis and the CFA Institute, where he earned the Chartered Financial Analysts designation in 1973. His 38 years of investment experience includes institutional portfolio management at Scudder. Stevens and Clark and Bear Stearns, managing a risk arbitrage hedge fund and an investment banking boutique specializing in funding second stage private companies. Through his involvement with Strategic Stock Investments, Steve hopes that his experience can help other investors build their wealth while avoiding tough lessons that he learned the hard way.

Friday, September 19, 2008

9/19/08

Economics

Recent Data

August leading economic indicators fell .5% versus expectations of a .2% decline and -.7% reported in July.

The September Philadelphia Fed manufacturing index came in at 3.8 versus estimates of -10.7 and the August report of -12.7. Even though this is a secondary indicator, it is first good news out of the industrial sector in a couple of weeks.

Other

AIG and ‘mark to market’ accounting:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122169320421449849.html

Politics

Domestic

More on the mischief currently going on in the Senate:

http://www.cato.org/people/jeff-patch

International War Against Radical Islam

The Market

Technical

Chart porn on yesterday’s turnaround:

http://traderfeed.blogspot.com/2008/09/anatomy-of-market-turnaround-tracking.html

*****************************************

Well, it looks like yesterday was the day for me to be wrong for being too defensive. Both the DJIA and S&P bounced hard yesterday afternoon following the news that the Treasury was presenting a plan to Congress (last night) for the creation of a Resolution Trust type entity. Both indices closed above their July 2008 lows. As you know I am not a strict technician and I believe that trading one day below a support level no matter dramatic (Wednesday) followed by a bounce back above it (Thursday) doesn’t count as a break below it. This kind of pin action looks an awful lot like a selling climax. In addition, both volume and the volatility index spiked, providing additional evidence that Wednesday and Thursday marked a selling climax.

I hasten to add that doesn’t mean that we are in bull market, Indeed both indices are still well within the two downtrends about which I constantly talk. At the moment, I am assuming the stocks have made the technical bottom but will still struggle to establish a simple trading range. As I note below, maintaining a healthy cash position (15-20%) still seems reasonable; but our Portfolios posture are less defensive.

Fundamental

I begin with a quote from yesterday’s Morning Call: But necessity is the mother of invention; and just like we saw no way out of an AIG bankruptcy on Tuesday, it took a day for a solution to arrive--the point being that there are a lot of very smart people working on solving the problems we are facing.’

It looks like there are several plans in the works involving a comprehensive solution to the credit crisis, the most talked about being a Treasury plan to revive a Resolution Trust type entity. While it is not clear how depressed assets on financial firms balances sheets will be transferred to the proposed government entity or how they will be valued, the objective here is to have the government implement a sweeping plan to re-instill confidence and liquidity in the financial system. Clearly, at this point, without knowing details of the plan, it is impossible to know whether or not it will work. But, not to be repetitious, there are a lot of smart people working to try and make it work.

Two other steps were taken: (1) the Treasury will provide FDIC type protection to money market funds If they meet certain conditions and (2) the SEC is suspending short sales of financial companies temporarily [I know that I have railed against the naked short sale {selling stock that you can’t deliver}; but short selling provide a useful function to the Market. So I think that this step is one too far.]

Are happy days here again? No. But as the outline of the Treasury’s RTC-redux plan becomes clear, it will at the least allow equities to find a valuation level absent the fear of financial collapse but commensurate with an economy with a crippled but in tact financial system that is likely to grow at a below average pace for some time. Hence, it doesn’t solve all our economic problems nor does it bring any clarity to the long term issue of the impact of a potential shift in the political landscape and what that shift might mean economically. But based on our Valuation Model, those problems were in the price of stocks at higher levels.

Bottom line: I am going to move back toward the strategy of managing our Portfolios’ cash position between 15--20%. Going into the game changing development, our Portfolios were approximately 34% in cash. In the Subscriber Alert yesterday, I noted that our Portfolios, as a first step, were moving toward a 17% cash position. The purchases yesterday took cash from about 34% to about 20%. It is clear that the Market is going to open up big. Before moving further towards a 17% cash position, I am going to wait for stocks to take a breathe and settle a bit.

News on Stocks in Our Portfolios

More Cash in Investors’ Hands

Thursday, September 18, 2008

9/18/08

Economics


Recent Data


Weekly jobless claims rose 10,000 versus expectations of a 5,000 decline. Another disappointing number.


Other


More fiscal mischief from our elected representatives (this time it’s the Senate):

http://www.pajamasmedia.com/instapundit/archives2/024400.php


The receding risk of inflation:

http://mjperry.blogspot.com/2008/09/dont-worry-about-inflation.html


The SEC’s role in the collapse of the major investment banking houses (must read):

http://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2008/09/regulatory-exem.html


Comparing today’s crisis with those of the past:

http://mjperry.blogspot.com/2008/09/crisis-as-bad-as-great-depression-or.html


Speculators and the price of oil:

http://mjperry.blogspot.com/2008/09/study-shows-speculators-helped-lower.html


Politics


Domestic


McCain on Fannie/Freddie:

http://corner.nationalreview.com/post/?q=YTBiMjNlZjQzNTM4OGIwMTE3YTU5MjM2ZGVhYzY4NWU=


International War Against Radical Islam


The Market


Technical/ Fundamental


So much for the July 2008 lows and the hope of a rolling bottom. Both indices busted through their July intraday lows and remain firmly within the October 2007 to present downtrend (DJIA 10659-12579; S&P 1154-1375) and the shorter term May to August down trend (DJIA 9985-11296; S&P 1112-1263). Barring a big rally tomorrow, we need to be focused on lower support levels: the DJIA 2006 double bottom (10663--note its proximity to the lower boundary of the October 2007 to present down trend) and the S&P 2004 bottom (1062).

Two other factors to note: (1) the volume yesterday was lower than the prior two days, suggesting that the panicky puking out of stocks may have more to go, (2) the volatility index spiked to near 35, suggesting the opposite of (1) (see below).


I said in yesterday’s Morning Call that I thought that (1) given the Market’s performance on Tuesday, the likelihood that the worst of this Market cycle was behind us and (2) the reason being that the Fed’s action in the AIG crisis cleared the decks of the last of the major problems in the financial system. Wrong and wrong. If there is anything redeemable from that Morning Call is that (1) I felt uneasy enough with Market’s pin action that our Portfolios held off committing any cash and (2) the sales that we made last week which I thought were going to look really stupid now look like sheer genius [our Portfolios cash positions are now: Dividend Growth Portfolio 27%, High Yield Portfolio 29%, Aggressive Growth Portfolio 26%].


Yesterday’s Market really began to have the feel of the panics of 1970, 1974, 1987 and 2002. CNBC aired one depressing analysis after another. Worries about the collapse of the financial system are pervasive. Bad news is bad news and good news is bad news. The price of gold is spiking; Treasury bills are spiking--the 30 day cash management bills sold at a yield of .1%; the volatility index is spiking--now over 30; but be aware that it hit 55+ in the 2002 plunge.


A chart of volatility index:

http://bespokeinvest.typepad.com/bespoke/2008/09/vix-spikes-to-3.html


To be fair and balanced there are some positive things happening: (1) Morgan Stanley is reviewing merger alternative with several partners. (2) Washington Mutual has hired Goldman Sachs to find a buyer. (3) yesterday the SEC changed the naked short sale rule, which as you know from past comments, I think was a necessity. Here’s the new rule: [ http://www.sec.gov/news/press/2008/2008-204.htm]. (4) The Fed is making another massive injection of liquidity into financial system. [http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=080918083207.wh5hl7iv&show_article=1], (5) Voices are growing louder for the suspension or reform of the ‘mark to market’ rule. More : [http://www.thestreet.com/p/_htmlrmm/rmoney/investing/10437857.html]. (6) In addition, talks are gathering steam for the revival of the Resolution Trust.


Cramer on what can go right:

http://www.thestreet.com/p/_htmlrmd/rmoney/jimcramerblog/10437993.html


Traderfeed sees some technical positives:

http://traderfeed.blogspot.com/2008/09/quick-note-on-weak-market.html


Granted, I have no idea if any or all these will take place. But necessity is the mother of invention; and just like we saw no way out of an AIG bankruptcy on Tuesday, it took a day for a solution to arrive--the point being that there are a lot of very smart people working on solving the problems we are facing.

To be sure, I am not saying everything is fine. Indeed, our Sell Discipline is telling us to Sell stocks at the open this morning. Given what looks to be a positive opening, I am going to use it to lighten up on a few holdings.


Remember a couple of things: (1) many of these sales are to preserve profits, (2) sooner or later, the philosophy of that ‘I’d rather sell and buy back 5% higher than not sell and lose another 10-20%’ is by definition going to be the wrong move; I know that I have been saying that for the last 1500 DJIA points, but one day unless I get blind lucky, it will happen. If that is unacceptable to you, don’t sell. (3) our Price Disciplines will continue to protect us on the downside, (4) we have 25%+ in cash and the stocks we own raise their dividends [the cash return to you] on a consistent basis [meaning your cash flow is going up every year no matter what the Market does]; and even more important, the companies that they represent have the financial wherewithal to continue to pay those dividends, barring the end of the world, (5) the world is not coming to an end; but if it is, you have bigger concerns than what stock prices do today.


Subscriber Alert


Each of these sales will reduce the indicated holding to stipulated size:


Dividend Growth Portfolio: (1) to one half of normal: Manulife Financial (MFC-$32), Ingersoll Rand (IR-$32), Automatic Data Processing (ADP-$42); (2) to a three quarter of normal: Emerson Electric (EMR-$41), T Rowe Price (TROW-$53), VF Corp (VFC-$53). In addition, Northern Trust (NTRS-$70) is being Added to the Dividend Growth Buy List but no shares will be purchased at this time.


High Yield Portfolio: (1) to one half of normal: Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS-$40), (2) to a one quarter position: Plains All American Pipeline (PPA-$36) and Penn Virginia Resource Ptrs (PVR-$18). In addition, WP Carey & Co (WPC-$26) and Reynolds American (RAI-$47) are being Added to the High Yield Buy List but no shares will be purchased at this time.


Aggressive Growth Portfolio: (1) to a one half of normal position: SEI Investments (SEIC-$21); (2) to a three quarter of normal: Franklin Resources (BEN-$89), Avon Products (AVP-$40), Stryker (SYK-$62), Sun Hydraulics (SNHY-$29) and Accenture (ACN-$36). In addition, CME Group (CME-$321) is being Added to the Aggressive Growth Buy List but no shares will be purchased at this time.


Company Highlight


Philip Morris International is a recent spin off from Altria. It manufacturers, sells and distributes a wide range of tobacco products in markets outside the US. Operating profits from this segment of the old Altria business grew at an 11% annual rate. PM expects earnings to grow at a 10-11% rate in the future; given its commitment to payout 65% of profits, the dividend growth should match growth of earnings. The company is expected to earn a return on equity in the 50-60% range. Management believes earnings will advance based on:

(1) strengthening its brand through product innovations such as smoother taste, new tobacco blends and innovative packaging which provides pricing power,

(2) acquisitions [8 in the last three years] in particular into Asian markets [China, India, Bangladesh and Vietnam] where it had little exposure,


PM is rated B++ by Value Line, has a debt to equity ratio of about 30%, is in the midst of a $13 billion stock buy back program and its stock yields 3.5%.

http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=PM

9/08


News on Stocks in Our Portfolios


Positive comments on Peabody Energy (Aggressive Growth Portfolio):

http://www.zacks.com/rank/zcommentary/?id=8611


More Cash in Investors’ Hands

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

9/17/08

Economics


Recent Data


The International Council of Shopping Centers reported weekly sales of major retailers fell 1.6% but rose 1.3% on a year over year basis; Redbook Research reported month to date retail chain store sales increase 1.4% versus the comparable period in 2007. These numbers are portraying a weak consumer.


The Federal Open Market Committee met yesterday and left the Fed Funds rate unchanged. In the accompanying statement, it nodded toward economic weakness but left inflation as its primary risk. As you know, I have been concerned about inflation but have also acknowledged that this risk is subsiding rapidly. So I am not sure this emphasis on inflation is the right move. On the other hand, the Fed has pumped about $130 billion of liquidity into the financial system in the last two day and that doesn’t count reserves being injected by foreign central banks--and that is a positive.


Here’s the statement:

http://online.wsj.com/mdcapp/public/page/2_3024-info_fedparse_shell.html


This morning: (1) weekly mortgage applications rose 2.4% largely on the back of lower interest rates, (2) August housing starts fell 6.2% versus expectations of a drop of 1.6%, and (3) August building permits declined 8.9%. Bottom line: no improvement.


Other


Ten little known facts about US trade:

http://www.chamberpost.com/2008/09/top-ten-overloo.html


More optimistic words in a negative environment:

http://www.clubforgrowth.org/2008/09/wise_words_from_brian_wesbury_1.php


Politics


Domestic


Some levity in current situation might help. This is hilarious:

http://www.clubforgrowth.org/2008/09/saturday_night_live.php


Immigration in an Obama versus McCain presidency--from the best Democratic blogger I know:

http://www.slate.com/id/2200209/#ilwmccain


Here is what our elected representatives (the House) have given us as an energy policy:

http://www.cqpolitics.com/wmspage.cfm?docID=news-000002952290


And here is the roll call vote:

http://clerk.house.gov/evs/2008/roll599.xml


International War Against Radical Islam


The Market


Technical/ Fundamental


Not very positive:

http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/did-mondays-stock-plunge-constitute/story.aspx?guid=%7B61C4BD70%2D7D76%2D420D%2D84F2%2D66951B8D9697%7D


The latest chart on credit spreads:

http://bespokeinvest.typepad.com/bespoke/2008/09/high-yield-spre.html


A rally off a Fibonacci support level?

http://bespokeinvest.typepad.com/bespoke/2008/09/big-picture-poi.html


Update on the percentage of stocks above their 50 day moving average:

http://bespokeinvest.typepad.com/bespoke/2008/09/percentage-of-1.html


******************************


On Tuesday the DJIA assaulted its July 2008 low (11809) and bounced, closing above that level. The S&P which had closed Monday below its July 2008 low (1198) also declined further in yesterday’s trading but like the DJIA finished the day above the July low. The good news is that the July lows have held and they did it on decent volume; but yesterday’s stock price advance just wasn’t characteristic of the bounce following an emotional sell off.


The likely reason is that American International Group dominated the headlines all day and its financial future remained unresolved as of the close. I don’t think it a stretch to rationalize that stocks really couldn’t move strongly to the upside in the absence of a solution to this dilemma.


Of course, after the close the Fed announced that it is going to make bridge loan to American International Group ala Fannie/Freddie; that is, it will put up $85 billion to provide capital (and secure the bond ratings) of AIG in exchange for 80% of the company. This, I think, ought to help lift the weight that prevented a stout bounce back in the Averages yesterday.


So now that we have it, what does it mean?


(1) It appears to be a culmination of a major re-ordering of our financial system; and I am not sure there are that many problems left with which to deal. After all, three of the top five investment banks are no longer. It doesn’t seem likely that Goldman and Morgan Stanley are in danger. Plus Fannie/Freddie which were disasters waiting to happen are gone. What’s left? Washington Mutual, Wachovia, maybe Citigroup. They might fail, but their problems are well known and they are much less leveraged than the investment banks. I don’t see their demise, were they to happen, as earthshaking as anything that we have been through this week.


(2) It raises the probability that the July 2008 lows marked the bottom of this cycle.



(3) I would have thought that it also increases the likelihood that our sale of shares at the open yesterday will turn out to have been wrong. However, as this is being written, stock futures are down. Frankly, I am more than a little surprised by this for the reasons outlined above. Indeed last night I would have bet anything that today we would see the spike in stock prices that would mark the bounce off the bottom. So what do I know? That said, I am making a list of the positions that our Portfolios will start re-building plus Adding some new stocks to our Buy Lists should stocks turnaround.


One final note: there are a lot of positive aspects to this Fed bridge loan to AIG. For one, it quite likely prevented a freeze up in the global financial system. Secondly, it keeps moral hazard (risk takers suffer the consequences for accepting an inappropriate level of risk) in the equation by wiping out most of the shareholder equity. However, as I said yesterday, I am bothered by the lethal combination of mark to market accounting coupled with the naked short sale rule. In AIG’s case, it had plenty of assets to support its liabilities; however, its liquidity was negatively impacted persistently by (1) the necessity of putting up extra capital because of the daily mark down of asset values and (2) the inability to raise that capital because the short sellers were destroying its credibility. I don’t have an answer to this problem; but our financial system is not going to regain long term stability till we solve it.


Subscriber Alert


Here is the list of potential Buy candidates (note that most are add-on shares to replace those that were sold generally at much higher prices to protect profits):


The Dividend Growth Portfolio: Home Depot (HD-$28), MDU Resources (MDU-$29), UGI (UGI-$27), Praxair (PX-$86), Emerson Electric (EMR-$43), General Dynamics (GD-$85), Linear Technologies (LLTC-$30), Automatic Data Processing (ADP-$44), T Rowe Price (TROW-$58), ConocoPhillips (COP-$72), ExxonMobil (XOM-$76), Chevron (CVX-$82) and Marathon Oil (MRO-$42). These will be 100-200 share additions taking these holdings to 2/3 to ¾ of normal size. Wells Fargo (WFC-$35) and Nucor (NUE-$47) are being Added to the Dividend Growth Buy List.


The High Yield Portfolio: Kimco Realty Trust (KIM-$38), Rayonier (RYN-$47), Realty Income Trust (O-$26), BP (BP-$52), Dow Chemical (DOW-$35), Gannett (GCI-$17), Universal Corp (UVV-$51). As with Dividend Growth Portfolio these are all 100-200 share additions. Worthington Industries (WOR-$17) is being Added to the High Yield Buy List.


The Aggressive Growth Portfolio: Franklin Resources (BEN-$95), XTO Energy (XTO-$50), Lowe’s (LOW-$24), Peabody Energy (BTU-$50), Accenture (ACN-$37), Donaldson (DCI-$42), Sun Hydraulics (SNHY-$30),l, Amphenol (APH-$45), Staples (SPLS-$25). Harley Davidson (HOG-$40) is being Added to the Aggressive Growth Buy List.


The Dividend Growth Buy List


Company Close 9/16 Buy Value Range

Aflac $58.44 $55-63

Automatic Data Processing 44.43 41-47

Colgate Palmolive 78.50 64-74

Federated Investors 33.06 30-35

Home Depot 27.58 27-31

Hormel Foods Corp 36.60 31-36

Johnson & Johnson 69.80 63-71

Manulife Financial 33.50 31-36

McDonald’s 64.69 59-68

Paychex 32.58 31-36

T Rowe Price 58.29 55-63

UGI Corp 27.12 24-28


News on Stocks in Our Portfolios


Positive comments on Abbott Labs (Dividend Growth Portfolio):

http://www.zacks.com/newsroom/commentary/index_pdf.php?id=8606


Positive comments on 3M (Dividend Growth Portfolio):

http://seekingalpha.com/article/95884-3m-is-just-the-right-stock-for-today-s-market?source=front_page_long_ideas

More Cash in Investors’ Hands