InvestorsFriend Inc. Newsletter
March 21, 2010
Don't Be Fooled By Attractive Dividend Yields
Not all Dividend or bond yields are as good as they seem.
Especially tricky are preferred shares that trade on the
stock exchanges. In
many cases these are trading above the price at which they will be
redeemed. (Not all preferred shares will be redeemed, that is bought back
from investors by the company, but some will be). The cash yield that you see in a stock quote will not
in that case reflect the
true yield or return to maturity. In this case the true return will be lower
than the cash yield due to the fact that a capital loss will occur if the
preferred shares are held until "maturity".
I recently sold some bank preferred shares that had an annual cash yield
of 6.6%. I would not have sold if I could have expected to actually earn
6.6%. But these shares were trading at $27.61 and the company has the right
to redeem them (buy them back from investors) at $25 in four years. So that means
if held to maturity, the 6.6% annual yield is reduced by a 9.5% capital loss
that will occur. If the capital loss occurs evenly over the next four years
then that is a loss of about 2.4% per year. That brings the true expected
return or yield to maturity down to about 4.2% which is quite a bit lower
than the 6.6%. Investors buying these shares on the basis of the 6.6%
nominal or cash yield are likely to be disappointed.
The only time the cash yield on a preferred share or bond will actually
match the true expected return on that share or bond is when all three of
the following conditions are met. 1. There is a definite maturity date on
which the company will redeem the preferred share or bond at a known price.
(This is almost always the case with bonds but only sometimes the case with
preferred shares). 2. The preferred share or bond is currently trading at
its maturity price so that there will be no capital or gain or loss if held
to maturity, and 3.There is little or no chance that the company will run
into financial difficulties and default on the dividends, interest or
maturity value. Even if all of these conditions apply, the actual return on
a preferred share or a bond that is not held all the way to its maturity
date is uncertain.
Note that longer-term preferred shares and bonds expose investors to the
risk of capital losses if interest rates rise. It will often be possible to
avoid the capital loss by holding until maturity, but if interest rise then
it is likely that inflation will reduce the real return that investor makes.
Common shares and some preferred shares have no maturity date. In this
case the cash yield is equal to the expected return assuming that market interest
rates do not change and assuming that the dividend amount does not change.
If interest rates go up the share price will likely drop, lowering the
return.
This is not to suggest in any way that investors should avoid fixed
income securities. The point is though that the return you can expect on
a dividend paying stock may be less than the current cash yield in some
cases. And the actual return over your holding period could be vastly
different than both the cash yield that exists now or the return that is
expected at this time.
Is the Stock Market Over Valued at this
time?
We have just updated our very popular article
on the valuation of the U.S.
stock market. (As represented by 500 of the largest U.S. companies, the
S&P 500 index).
We conclude that if an investor requires about an 8% return, then buying
the U.S. S&P 500 index at this time is unlikely to return that 8% if held
for the long term. (Our analysis is based on a ten-year holding period).
Even if an investor requires only a 7% return, our analysis suggests that
the U.S. stock market is priced too high for that to be a reasonable
expectation. (This assumes a U.S. investor so that currency
fluctuations are not involved)
The analysis math that we use is one we learned partly from Warren
Buffett's articles in Fortune magazine in late 1999 and updated in late
2001, where Buffett calculated stocks were over-valued at that time. Which
has turned out to be very much the case. (Surprise, Buffett was right,
again...).
Our analysis is very much dependent on assumptions about the growth of corporate
earnings and the long-run Price / Earnings ratio that can be expected to
apply at the end of a ten year holding period. Our article includes scenarios
around our assumptions so that readers can see if the market is fairly
valued based on more aggressive assumptions for earnings growth or the ending P/E
ratio.
Our article is available at the following link:
http://www.investorsfriend.com/S%20and%20P%20500%20index%20valuation.htm
Canada's High Dollar emergency?
When Canada's dollar soared above the U.S. dollar in the fall of 2007, I
explained in detail why it was a national
emergency. Luckily the Canadian dollar then fell as low as 77 cents and
spent a lot of months in the 80 to 90 cent range.
Now, the dollar emergency is back. The alarming things that I pointed out
in the 2007 article are still valid except now the unemployment rate is
already higher heading into this round of the emergency.
The type of company that will be absolutely crushed by the high dollar is
a company that makes a product in Canada with its costs in Canadian dollars
but sells most of its product into the U.S. In the worse case,
virtually all its costs are in Canadian dollars (wages, property taxes,
utilities, interest on loans, land costs, building costs..).
For this exporting
manufacturer (or an exporting producer such as a hog farm) , a rise in the
Canadian dollar simply lowers
its revenues in Canadian dollars while its costs in Canadian dollars are
unchanged. These type of companies face a situation where formerly a product
that sold for $1.00 in the U.S. translated to say $1.30 Canadian (and it was
closer to $1.42 for a number of years when the Canadian dollar hovered at
the 70 cent level). Now that same U.S. dollar translates into just $1.00 in
Canada, a 23% drop from when our dollar was 77 cents and a 30% drop from the
days of the 70 U.S. cent Canadian dollar. For these type of companies this
is clearly an emergency. A 23% drop in revenue with costs unchanged can
easily take a company from profitability to insolvency.
Some analysts have commented that Canadian manufacturers have basically
benefited from a low dollar for many years. The "charge" is that
Canadian manufacturers were basically subsidized by our low dollar. They had
an easy time selling into the U.S. They got fat and lazy and failed to
innovate and become more productive. Those are the "charges".
But there are many problems with these charges.
The "charges" implicitly assume that the
Canadian dollar was in fact "low" when it was at 70 cents or 80 cents U.S. Such an
assumption fails to recognize that the Canadian dollar (despite the similar
name) really is a separate currency from the U.S. dollar. There is simply no
reason to think that the Canadian dollar should be at par with the U.S.
dollar.
The Canadian dollar was last at about par
some 35 years ago during the 1970's. It then
moved relatively slowly down all the way down to about 63 cents in 2002 and
then climbed quite steadily to 90 cents in 2006. Then it fairly rocketed briefly
above par and as high as $1.10 in late 2007.
http://finance.yahoo.com/echarts?s=CADUSD=X#chart2:symbol=cadusd=x;
range=my;indicator=volume;charttype
=line;crosshair=on;ohlcvalues=0;logscale=on;source=undefined
The "charges" that Canadian manufacturers had an easy time at a 70 to 80
cent dollar implicitly assume that they faced the same costs as their U.S.
competitors. I don't have figures to compare the costs. But neither do those
who makes these charges. My impression is certainly that many costs in Canada
were and still are higher than in the U.S. I believe factory workers in Canada
often earn more in Canadian dollars per hour than the U.S. workers do
in U.S. dollars per hour. Certainly gasoline and vehicle prices were
notoriously higher
in Canada. Personal income taxes were and still are higher in Canada. The point is that
those who assume that Canadian manufacturers had it easy at a 75 cent
dollar, have generally not offered any proof of that.
The irrefutable fact is that unless the type of Company
I described above
facing revenue in U.S. dollars and costs in Canadian dollars was making very
high profits at a 75 cent dollar, it is almost certainly losing money with
the Canadian dollar now rather suddenly at about U.S. $1.00. Unless it could cut its costs
how could it not be losing money? And how easy would it be to cut wage costs?
How about fuel and rent and property taxes and utilities and bank interest
costs?
With the exception of fuel, most of those do not budge at all when the Canadian
dollar rises.
Well you ask, why don't they just hedge the currency risk. Firstly it is
too late now, the hedge would have had to been done when the dollar was much
lower. Secondly in many cases it is impossible to hedge for more than a year
or two. Hedging costs money. It also requires a strong balance sheet. The
other side of a hedge contract is going to worry about whether our Canadian manufacturer would honor the contract if in fact the
Canadian dollar fell
instead of rising. So the counter-party is taking a risk if he agrees to
hedge with a Canadian manufacturer. What if the Canadian dollar had fallen
back to
62 cents as it did in 2002? Now how profitable will our hedged Canadian manufacture
be who locked in (hedged) at say a 90 cent U.S. dollars (where a U.S. dollar of sales
is worth Canadian $1.11) while his competitors are enjoying the 62 cent which
translates to a U.S. dollar being worth $1.61. Hedging quite simply has its
own risks, its own costs and may simply be financially unavailable especially
for periods beyond a year or two.
Should the Canadian Government try to get the dollar back down?
I really don't know the answer to that. I would lean towards saying, yes
it should. My understanding is that the government is not trying to push the
Canadian dollar lower. I attended a Bank
of Canada speech in which we were told that the bank targets about 2% inflation.
Period. The Bank of Canada speech indicated that managing the Canadian dollar
would contradict the goal of about 2% inflation. The Bank said it cannot serve two
masters and therefore it sticks to managing the inflation level and not the
level of the dollar.
The finance minister seems to have bought into the idea that
Canadian manufactures can adjust to the high dollar. Well, there have been some
offsets that have helped like much lower borrowing costs (will that last?),
and much reduced corporate income taxes. The costs of importing machines to
improve productivity is also lower with the high dollar (but replacing
workers with machines hurts employment in the short term). Maybe over time
with wage freezes or lower wages for new hires the Canadian manufacturer can
get their wage costs back down as a percent of revenue. But generally
speaking for a company that faces costs in Canadian dollars and revenue sin
U.S. dollars that are suddenly worth about 20 to 30% less than they were a
few years ago, there is simply no way to adequately adjust to that. These
companies are simply and very suddenly extremely less competitive compared
to their U.S. based competitors. The only possible adjustment may be to move
to the U.S.
What is Going to Happen?
Market forces may also push the
dollar back down. If Canadian exports
become uncompetitive and if Tourists stop coming due to the high dollar,
and if U.S. investors reduce foreign direct investments in Canadian companies
(because of Canadian companies losing money) then the demand for Canadian dollars in
currency markets goes down and the Canadian dollar should go down. The
problem is though that if oil prices rise, those exports continue to
generate a big demand for Canadian dollars and foreign investment in the
energy industry continues and grows and that could prevent the dollar from
correcting to a level that allows profitability for a Canadian manufacturers
that sell into the U.S.
I can't predict where the Canadian dollar is headed. I think it has a
least as good a chance of falling in the next 12 months as it does of
rising. If the Canadian dollar remains around par, I think it is an extremely
safe prediction that we will hear about thousands of job losses because of
it. It is a simple fact that the ability to make a profit for any
Canadian business that faces costs largely in Canadian dollars and revenues
in U.S. dollars has been decimated by this rapid rise in the Canadian
dollar. And there is almost nothing that those companies can do in the short
term. Therefore it seems certain that layoffs and bankruptcies will occur if
the Canadian dollar stays much above even the 90 cent level.
And I consider that to be a national emergency.
END
Shawn Allen, President
InvestorsFriend Inc.
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