While the S&P/ASX 200 is only around 3.5% shy of its all-time high back in August 2021, the last 18 months have been a bumpy ride for most investors. The effects of tighter monetary policy (including a 10th consecutive interest rate rise by the RBA), waning of the pandemic-induced boom in retail trading, and a weaker macroeconomic environment have taken their toll.
The full impact hasn’t necessarily shown up in the overall Australian indices, mostly because of the high proportion of materials and energy (24% and 6% of the ASX 200, respectively) that have benefited from the inflationary environment and war in Ukraine. The U.S.-based S&P 500, however, still sits nearly 16% below its all-time high despite a strong rebound in early 2023.
High-flying technology stocks and ‘pandemic winners’ have been particularly hard-hit, best seen by the dramatic fall of nearly 75% in Cathie Wood’s Ark Innovation ETF (NYSE:ARKK). Locally, the S&P/ASX All Technology index remains nearly a third lower (~32%) than its all-time high in November 2021, and many individual technology names have experienced significantly greater drawdowns. Retailers, too, have come under pressure as interest rate rises have begun to pressure household budgets and the effects of booming lockdown conditions have abated and certain retailers have struggled with inventory management.
So for those interested in buying individual stocks, how can you avoid these huge share price declines?
One argument presented in the book The Intelligent Quality Investor: How To Invest in the World’s Best Companies is to look for companies with “linearity.” The author looks at the best-performing stocks over the last 40 years, and in somewhat of an anti-climax, the more the long-term stock chart trends up and to the right, the better. Author Long Equity notes that these companies with highly linear stock charts tend to be consistently profitable, reinvest their profits, and are not as severely impacted by economic downturns.
So how can we find these investments before it’s too late (and the chart goes too far up and to the right)? While there’s no comprehensive checklist, below are a few starting points.
1. Recurring Revenue with Inflation Protection
One of the challenges with businesses in certain industries is the need to keep the customer coming back. In construction, engineering services and many types of retail, for example, once the transaction is complete, the company no longer generates any revenue from the customer. Compare this to industries such as banking (where a home loan is paid off consistently over 25-30 years), utilities (mobile phone or internet bill paid monthly), or infrastructure companies. APA Group (ASX: APA) is one such example, generating revenue consistently from the transfer of gas through its pipelines along the east coast of Australia.
While demand does fluctuate due to economic activity and the weather, there is a consistent ‘flow’ each day, week, month and year. On top of this stable demand, APA’s contracts are largely indexed to inflation indices (such as the Consumer Price Index, or CPI), ensuring that its revenue keeps up with any rising expenses (and protecting the value of an investor’s money over time).
2. Strong Cash Generation and Negative Working Capital
The financial community focuses heavily on earnings according to the accrual accounting method, with press releases typically emphasising metrics such as “Operating Profit,” “Net Profit After Tax” and “Earnings Per Share.” The accrual method involves matching expenses against income, which is sometimes different from when the money is spent. It includes the likes of Depreciation and Amortisation (which averages a large cash capital expense over its useful life, such as for a new office building) and cost of goods sold, which includes the price of inventory.
In some instances though, accrual earnings can be a lot different from cash earnings (often called “free cash flow”). A retail company that is growing quickly, for example, will need to continuously buy more and more inventory to fill its growing store base and satisfy new customer orders. While this is great for future profits, it does mean that actual cash earnings will be lower than reported profits in the short term (cost of goods sold in the income statement will be lower than the inventory purchased using cash in the period. There will be an even bigger difference when inflation is high).
On the other hand, some companies get paid in advance by their customers: think of your monthly internet bill, a streaming service subscription, or an insurance bill. Australia’s leading insurance broker Steadfast (ASX: SDF) is one such example, generating a fee for providing small and medium-sized businesses with various types of insurance products. Importantly, the faster these companies with a ‘negative working capital cycle’ grow, the more cash they generate – their growth rate will not be constrained by the amount of cash they have available at any given time.
3. Solid Balance Sheet
This is probably the most often-quoted criteria, but just like eating enough vegetables and exercising regularly can help keep you healthy, it can’t be overstated (a point we’re happy for once to disagree on with investing legend Charlie Munger). While it does depend on the business, a general rule of thumb for most industrial businesses is for net debt (that is, total debt minus cash) to be less than three times EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation).
This is usually the maximum that banks and fixed income investors typically like to lend, and any more often causes a company to lose its coveted ‘investment grade’ credit rating from the ratings agencies (Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s, Fitch). Cyclical and highly competitive businesses, those with less recurring revenue, and industries that change more rapidly (e.g., technology and pharmaceuticals) would typically have less debt, while businesses with more stable operations such as utilities and infrastructure (e.g., toll roads, airports) can often tolerate higher amounts. Maintaining low levels of debt is not only important to ride out times of economic distress (when earnings and cash flow may decline), but to provide opportunities for increased investment, timely acquisitions or greater capital return to shareholders. Software provider Technology One (ASX: TNE) is a standout here, boasting nearly $176 million in cash and no debt at its most recent full-year results in September 2022, allowing the company to pay an ordinary dividend 8% higher than the prior year, alongside a special dividend.
4. Long Investment Horizon
One of the biggest negatives of being a public company is the constant scrutiny on performance, and the pressure from shareholders to keep the share price high. This can encourage management to emphasise a company’s short-term performance, cutting costs too aggressively or foregoing good investment opportunities to maximise current profits. A key differentiator for companies with extremely consistent long-term performance is their ability to extend their horizon. Often, this will mean investing more during a downturn as competitors retreat. Washington H. Soul Pattinson and Co. (ASX: SOL) is one of the more obvious ASX examples, having outperformed the ASX All Ordinaries by an average of 3.4% per year over the past 20 years (for a total return of +945% vs +461%). Having just clocked up their 120th AGM, long-term planning is obviously a priority!
5. Like-Minded Shareholder Base
It’s often quoted that companies ‘get the shareholders they deserve.’ Those that maintain a strong balance sheet, have quality financial reporting and a long-term investment horizon will inevitably attract shareholders who value those characteristics and are more inclined to stay invested during economic downturns, operational challenges, or periods of increased investment. Technology One is again the prime example here. Despite a high valuation multiple (currently an eye-watering 54x its last twelve months earnings), the quality of the company’s recurring revenue (software-as-a-service business model), fortress balance sheet (net cash position of $176 million, no debt), and long-term investment mindset (ability to reinvest in the U.K. despite several years of startup losses) have allowed the share price to not just hold up during the recent market turmoil, but it actually increase more than 43% over the past year.
A quality shareholder base can reduce the short-term pressure on management teams and allow them to pursue those investments most valuable to a company over the long-term. This is a key reason why Warren Buffett paid specific homage to Berkshire Hathaway’s shareholder base in his 2022 shareholder letter, and why Markel (NYSE: MKL) CEO Tom Gayner began courting Berkshire Hathaway shareholders at an early stage in Omaha.
Recipe for Long-Term Success
The last 18 months has been a challenging period for many investors, and may have proved a steep learning curve – particularly for the huge new cohort of investors that joined since the onset of the pandemic. While there are many ways to make money in the markets, the concept of linearity and quality investing might provide investors with a logical process for how to survive a downturn and grow wealth in a tax-efficient way over the long-term. Focusing on attributes such as recurring revenue, strong cash generation, a solid balance sheet, long investment horizon and a like-minded shareholder base has shown to generate some of the market’s biggest and most consistent long-term winners. Profitable growth, while passé the last few years, turns out to be timeless…like aviators.
While the past year has seen stock price corrections across the electric vehicle (EV) sector, 2023 looks to be a transition year for the underlying businesses themselves. EVs are going mainstream as manufacturers across the globe are ramping up production. For the keen growth investor, the sector is made up of more than just manufacturers: microchips, artificial intelligence and autonomous vehicle systems can also be considered part of the EV industry.
The last twelve months continued to see growth for the EV market, not only in key markets, but also in the rest of the world, including Australia, New Zealand and South Korea. EVs made up 10% of all new cars sold globally in 2022. Europe and China are leading the way, with fully electric vehicles accounting for 11% and 19% of all new vehicles sold, respectively.
With stock prices down and sales continuing to rise, let’s take a look at some key players that investors could consider in 2023.
Tesla: still fascinating the world
Source: Electrek.com
Even after a fast share price recovery to start 2023, Tesla stock is still down almost 33% over the past 12 months. The company is out to prove it remains the EV industry leader and is making moves to swallow up more market share.
Tesla’s latest earnings report capped off a tremendous year, posting record profits and cash flow, despite numerous challenges from global supply chain kinks, to shutdowns at its Shanghai production facility due to rampant COVID-19 cases in China, to CEO Elon Musk’s high profile takeover of Twitter.
In the Q4 2022, Tesla recorded year-over-year revenue growth of 37% to US$24.3 billion, translating to net income of US$3.7 billion. Whilst free cash flow for the quarter declined against the corresponding period in 2021, this was mainly due to a step-up in inventory between the third and fourth quarter of 2022. The US$7.6 billion of free cash flow for full-year 2022 represented a 51% jump from 2021, in which Tesla generated just over US$5 billion in free cash flow.
It’s clear that Tesla’s operating performance is strengthening. Maybe not as much as some analysts and investors hoped, but that’s why the shares have become less egregiously priced. Some feared Tesla’s recent vehicle price cuts across its sales regions indicated a drop in demand that signals a slowing business. But investors should look at results, and not just what prior expectations from analysts have been.
According to Musk during the company’s earnings call, demand continues to outstrip the supply, and Tesla is focused on ramping up volume while decreasing manufacturing costs.
Musk said:
“Thus far in January, we’ve seen the strongest orders year-to-date than ever in our history. We currently are seeing orders at almost twice the rate of production.”
The company’s strategy is to attempt to hold market share and deliver high volumes of vehicles. Even as its margins slide somewhat, Tesla will have those customers and potentially be able to upgrade those units with higher-margin automation in the future. It’s still a long-term growth story to be played out over many years to come.
Nio: China’s answer to Tesla
Source: Nio.com
Chinese electric car maker Nio (NYSE: NIO) was one of the hardest-hit EV stocks in 2022. The company has been publicly traded since 2018 and is not shy about battling Tesla for market share in the biggest global markets.
Similar to Tesla, the company is more than a simple car manufacturer. The company designs and manufactures premium EVs with a focus on battery technology, connectivity, and autonomous driving. It also offers EV charging solutions and other services, including insurance, maintenance, roadside assistance, and an enhanced data package.
Nio has built its customer base partially by offering its Chinese customers more than just smart EVs. Its SUV and sedan models are sold with an option to use a subscription for swapping drained batteries for fresh ones in just minutes (Batteries as a Service, or BaaS). The strategy lowers the initial cost to customers and differentiates Nio from its competitors. It also has aimed to build a loyal following with Nio Houses and other gathering spaces many Chinese consumers have embraced.
The company is now building out that model across Europe. To date, Nio has more than 35 service centers in the EU along with several Nio Houses, battery swap stations, and other charging infrastructure.
In lieu of these exciting concepts, Nio continues to be a loss making company. Nio recently reported a quarterly record of 40,052 units delivered, generating revenue worth US$2.3 billion but this growth is yet to translate to a profitable bottom line.
Gross margin compression and a muted outlook for the next 6 months attracted several analyst downgrades. However, investors wouldn’t want to write off the stock just yet.
Nio is transitioning its EV models to a second-generation technology platform, NT2.0. This means that the company was busy selling down older inventory in the last quarter and reportedly also offered incentives to customers, which added to its costs. Additionally, Nio is still preparing its manufacturing lines to produce the new models, which is a major reason why it sees lower production and fewer deliveries in the first quarter.
Nvidia: on the way up
Source: Nvidia.com
Only a decade ago, Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) had a solid albeit unspectacular business,
making best-in-class semiconductors for PC and console gaming. But calling Nvidia just a graphics chip maker would be like calling Tesla just a car company. Sure, it’s an accurate description, but it doesn’t really do the business justice.The software Nvidia engineers developed to render light and physics for game graphics became the foundation for a new computing model based on artificial intelligence. Nvidia made the AI platform open source to entice academics and developers to buy-in. The strategy was a huge success, moving Nvidia hardware beyond gaming into super computers and data centers.
While data chip centres and gaming contribute the majority of company revenue, Nvidia’s researchers have built algorithmic models capable of solving complex problems, like autonomous vehicles. CEO Jensen Huang unveiled an autonomous vehicle (AV) computer in 2017 that was no bigger than a lunchbox but still capable of processing 320 trillion instructions per second, enough horsepower to process data from real time sensor streams, and then push everything up to the cloud for further analysis.
Fast forward to today and the technology has resulted in hundreds of development partnerships. Today Nvidia has engineers working on AV technology with Volkswagen, Audi, Toyota, Hyundai, Volvo and Mercedes-Benz.
Even in the wake of a strong rebound in recent months, shares in Nvidia remain well below their all-time high. Nvidia’s chips have a plethora of potential uses in things like metaverse technology, AI, and autonomous vehicles. Revenue from the professional visualisation and automotive segments grew by 65% and 86%, respectively, year over year in the latest quarter
Nvidia is a hardware company that made the transition to AI software. It is an opportunity to invest in the “picks and shovels” of the new automotive economy as its software/hardware solutions become the brains of many of the world’s best brands.
Australia’s big four banks recently released their financial results for the first half of the 2023 financial year (second half of the 2022 calendar year). While the share prices of ANZ, NAB and Westpac are largely unchanged from a few years ago (and CBA has shown a healthy increase), operationally it’s been a tumultuous period given the effects of the pandemic and dramatic changes in the housing market.
Overall, the banks’ profits were significantly higher than the prior corresponding period (the first half of FY22), mostly due to lower impairment charges (the banks took ‘provisions’ for expected loan losses during the early part of the pandemic, and because the economy has recovered more quickly and strongly than expected, they were able to reverse most of these provisions in later periods). Banking is a cyclical business though, and banks generally ‘over-earn’ in good economic times (their profits are higher than their average earnings through the economic cycle) and ‘under-earn’ in a weaker economy (profits are lower than their cycle average). The recent healthy profits are therefore a bit ‘old news,’ and the outlook for future earnings doesn’t look quite so rosy for the nation’s big four.
Early Warning Signs
One of the most startling revelations came from Westpac, the nation’s second-biggest mortgage lender, which detailed that approximately half (45% or $212 billion) of its $471 billion in housing loans are “at risk of exceeding risk buffers.” This means that customers haven’t been assessed as able to repay their loans at mortgage rates that are expected to occur in the near future. This is partly because the previous 7% minimum “floor” mortgage rate was removed as a requirement early in the pandemic when the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) slashed the cash rate to a record low 0.1 per cent. With a generous 3-year ‘term funding scheme’ that meant the banks could lend at low rates and still be profitable, and a buffer that was only required to be 3% above the bank’s mortgage rate, a lot of borrowers were assessed based on rates much lower than 7%. Now though, with the overnight cash rate (OCR) already at 3.35%, many borrowers will have to make repayments that are higher than the maximum that was assumed on their loan applications.
Lowe-r for Longer, no Longer
Although the RBA has increased the OCR at 9 consecutive meetings (the fastest pace in history), Governor Phillip Lowe sees further increases as necessary over the coming months (officially dispelling his pseudonym ‘Lowe-r for longer’). This is the RBA’s attempt to reduce the highest inflation the country has experienced since 1990, which clocked in at 7.8% for the full year 2022. While there are some indications inflation may be easing (the unemployment rate rose slightly in January to 3.7%, for example), this does not appear to be dissuading the RBA. Market expectations are now for 3 further increases in the coming months, taking the OCR to an 11-year high of 4.1%.
This is particularly concerning for borrowers facing a so-called “mortgage cliff,” where their mortgage rates will switch from low fixed rates signed during the pandemic to the substantially higher variable rates of today. These homeowners could be facing a jump from around 2% that they’ve paid for the past 2-3 years to a minimum of 5% (with repayments increasing a staggering $1,800 a month for the average mortgage holder compared to May 2022 when the RBA first began its hiking cycle). This will impact around $96 billion and $92 billion in loans, respectively, at Australia’s two biggest mortgage lenders, CBA and Westpac, over the next year or so.
Westpac CEO Peter King called these interest rate rises a “blunt tool” for reducing inflation, and warned that if the OCR reaches 4%, many borrowers would need either a pay rise or to cut their spending to afford the repayments. CBA chief Matt Comyn already sees signs that households are drawing on their savings buffers, which were built up during the earlier stages of the pandemic.
It’s the Economy, Stupid
The combination of decades-high inflation and rapidly rising interest rates is having a devastating impact on consumer sentiment, which according to Westpac, recently fell back into “deep pessimism.” The Westpac-Melbourne Institute Consumer Sentiment Index tumbled 6.9 per cent in February to 78.5 – a near-record low result (while above the pandemic low of 75.6 in April 2020, it is incredibly below the Global Financial Crisis recording of 79). The survey showed particularly low readings for the nation’s views on family finances, the near-term outlook for the economy, and whether now is a good time for purchasing a major household item. In fact, ‘family finances versus a year ago’ was the lowest reading since the depths of the early 1990s “recession we had to have,” while the recording for consumers with a mortgage was the one of the lowest since the survey began, in the mid-1970s. Companies are already beginning to see the impacts, with retailers like JB Hi-Fi (ASX:JBH) and gambling provider Tabcorp (ASX:TAH) indicating softer trading periods ahead as inflation and higher interest rates take their effect on discretionary spending. Both the RBA and the federal Treasury also expect the economy to “slow considerably this year”, with Treasurer Jim Chalmers expecting a “very difficult time for Australians.”
One Step Forward, Two Steps Back?
Bank stocks generally benefit from a higher/rising interest rate environment, particularly those banks like CBA with such strong deposit franchises. This is because they’re typically able to raise loan rates faster than the rates paid on deposits (much to the ire of the public), as well as how many deposits don’t generate any interest (think of the balance in your main transaction account). It’s easy for this benefit to be more than offset by an economic slowdown though, as loan growth slows and loan losses rise.
Time to Broaden Your Horizons?
For those wanting to maintain their exposure to financial companies, it might be worth taking a more global perspective. In the United States, market leaders Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) and JPMorganChase (NYSE: JPM) have only approximately 10% market share in a much larger market (providing significant opportunity for future growth), benefit more from rising interest rates (they have more commercial lending and mortgages in the U.S. are typically fixed for 30 years), and have much lower leverage (assets/equity) than the Australian banks. They also trade at only 1.6x and 1.9x Tangible Book Value (TBV), respectively, significantly below Australia’s market leader CBA at 2.6x TBV (NAB 1.7x, WBC 1.3x, ANZ 1.2x). In the U.K., leading franchises Lloyds Banking Group (1.0x TBV) and NatWest (1.1x TBV) have finally recovered from the dramatic bailouts of the GFC, and are attractively valued relative to the Australian banks given their strong profitability (as measured by high returns on tangible equity).
Don’t Bank on a Rosy Future
There’s no doubt that the big four Australian banks are solid businesses with a long history of profitability and healthy dividends. That gives them widespread appeal to ASX-focused investors, particularly with the benefit of franking credits (a 30% tax credit on dividends for Australian taxpayers, even if they don’t typically pay any income tax). Excluding CBA, however, the big banks have delivered very modest returns (by equity standards) over the past 5, 10 and 15 year periods. What’s more, the mortgage market has become increasingly competitive, particularly from Macquarie Group (ASX: MQG), and the economic outlook looks to be one of the most challenging in the past 30 years. The combination of high house prices, significant homeowner debt, high inflation, and a rapidly rising interest rate environment could limit the return outlook for years to come.
Australian small-cap shares aren’t normally household names and don’t get the same media attention as the big banks and miners that dominate the ASX 200.
However, keen investors can find opportunities in these smaller companies for better returns than blue-chip regulars like BHP (ASX: BHP) and Commonwealth Bank (ASX: CBA).
With reporting season in full swing, we take a look at two holdings from within our diversified TAMIM Fund: Small Cap Income that are maintaining positive guidance for the remainder of 2023.
Helloworld Travel Ltd (ASX: HLO)
Source: Helloworld.com
Helloworld Travel’s share price rebound accelerated this week. After falling in 2022, Helloworld stock has gained 74% since the start of 2023 while the All Ords has risen 6%.
Helloworld Travel is a leading Australian & New Zealand travel distribution company, comprising retail travel networks, corporate travel management services, destination management services (inbound), air ticket consolidation, wholesale travel services, and online operations.
The company released 1H23 results on Monday, detailing three times more transaction volume than the prior comparable period (pcp).
Here are the highlights from the company’s results:
$1.2 billion of total transaction volume (TTV) – up 209% on the pcp
$73 million total revenue from continuing operations – a 151% leap on pcp
$13 million of operating earnings (EBITDA) – rebound from a close to $8 million loss
Net profit after tax (NPAT) of $1.6 million – a flip from a $15.2 million loss from pcp
A strong balance sheet with $83.8 million of cash and no debt.
2 cent per share fully franked interim dividend declared
Travel is back
The entire travel sector has been riding a post-COVID boom, with demand and prices riding high. Visit any airport and you realise how much Australians want to travel, despite the impacts of interest rate rises and inflation.
The demand is surging across Helloworld Travel’s international operations too, with $178 million of TTV from New Zealanders – up 359% while Fijian operations also saw over 22 times more TTV last half.
The company said demand for the services of its network agents has continued to outstrip agent availability.
Helloworld chair Garry Hounsell commented on the results and outlook, writing:
“[TTV growth] reflects the strong demand from the travelling public, domestic and international borders returning to normal, Helloworld’s strong product offering, and the incredible efforts of our agency networks to service their customer base.
Booking volumes are expected to continue to increase as prices normalise and capacity returns with airlines and tour operators continuing to onboard further resources to meet demand.”
As a result of the strong first-half figures, Helloworld has upgraded its earnings (EBITDA) guidance to between $28 million and $32 million for the 2023 financial year.
PeopleIn (ASX: PPE)
Source: Peoplein.com
TAMIM fund manager Ron Shamgar currently thinks highly of PeopleIn because of Australia’s historically low unemployment rate, its reaffirmed FY23 earnings guidance, and relatively low valuation.
The company released 1H23 results on 17 February, highlight by record __ and a strong outlook.
Here are the key takeaways:
$597.3 million in revenue, up 89% on the pcp
$13.8 million of net income, a 223% jump from pcp
Profit margin up to 2.3%, bettering the pcp margin by a further 1%
Earnings per share (EPS) of $0.14, up from $0.045 in 1H22
PeopleIn is in the business of sourcing staff for its clientele, primarily temp staffing through the use of contractors. These include appointing supplementary nurses, labour hire, IT contractors and some niche areas including a focus on the PALM scheme and indigenous placement programs.
The company stands to benefit from positive operating conditions including, continued acute shortage of labour and strong market opportunity. PeopleIn’s share price fell just over 30% in 2022 and has seen choppy trading in 2023 despite the positive results and outlook.
This has led management to conduct a strategic review with the following rationale:
“The PeopleIN Board considers that the recent share price performance does not reflect the record financial results for FY22 or the fundamental strength of the business and has therefore decided to undertake a strategic review to evaluate options available to maximise shareholder value.”
“We are pleased to announce a record result, which was driven by strong organic growth across our core businesses and favourable industry tailwinds, including record low unemployment.
Based on the operating results for the first half and the mid-range forecast for economic conditions to continue, PeopleIN expects this strong momentum to continue into the second half of the financial year.”
With all analyst coverage signalling PeopleIn to be a buy to strong buy, a multiple of only nine times FY23’s estimated earnings and a potential grossed-up dividend yield of 7%, the market might be overlooking the upside potential of this small-cap company.