Showing posts with label STX. Show all posts
Showing posts with label STX. Show all posts

Saturday, June 21, 2014

Going a little defensive.

The market's seem a little, well odd at the moment. For the past several years no bit of bad news has shaken equities out of their bull market. Not Crimea, NSA, China slowdown, quantitative easing, Iraq, Turkey, nothing. Every bear case has been ignored and pushed onwards. We are starting to get into high valuations of the market. Note I am not saying we prices. High prices mean NOTHING. Its all about the valuations of price to the fundamentals of an asset and market.

Money seems to be coming back everywhere AFTER a 5 year equity bull market with S&P 500 +7%. Emerging markets are rising with EEM +8.4%. Other assets too are rising, GLD +7%, TLT +9.4%. Normally something should be dropping as money is coming from one asset class to another. All this money seems to be cash that has been idle on the sidelines for years. That's concerning to me as its so late in the game this could be "dumb money" chasing profits and jumping in at the wrong time as its oft to do.

The VIX measures volatility of the S&P500. How fast and how far is it moving. Its at record lows and could dip below 10. During 2008 and 2009 it was in the 60-80 range. Things are quiet out there. Perhaps too quiet.

At this time of year we have "Sell in May and go away" where the volume in the markets drops off for the summer until fall picks up again.

All this can breed complacency which I have come to learn is right when something goes wrong with the markets and people's portfolios. I'm not wanting to flat out sell my positions. Many of them are income that I want to keep for years. However where I will differ from most of my dividend investing brothern is that I don't want to completely ignore my capital gains. I am also seeing things way overvalued in my portfolio that looks like its running out of steam. I'm not ready to put on some SPY puts for defensiveness. I see no reason for the market to go down. All I am acknowledging is that we are in an environment where we have an increased chance of something stupid happening.

I have stop losses on the following positions so that in the case of a general market reversal, drop, crash, freak out, whatever you want to call it, I am ready.

Cemig (CIG) @ $7.99: I am looking at a 45% gain on this one. As you can see from fastgraphs, their EPS is dropping. I'm not worried about that but I am worried about Brazil and their inflation and economic problems. Brazil (EWZ) is up 25% since March. Maybe its on fire and will continue, maybe its going to need a break. CIG has announced their entire yearly dividend will be paid soon vs installments. The exchanges are terrible at recording CIG ex-div dates. I already qualify for the 5% payment but the price has not dropped down. I can get the dividend and the full share price. I'm debating selling it first thing Monday as this is one of my more complex positions and I don't fully understand it.
Not knowing your position, in a foreign market, when you know a 5% price drop is coming with all the above oddities in the markets I am seeing? I don't know if I am willing to risk 45% gains on all that uncertainty.


Coca-Cola (KO) @ $39.59: Every time it rises this far above its P/E it pulls back. 22 P/E.

Potash (POT) @ $33.40 (below the 200 day SMA): Their earnings are a mess due to the breaking up of the potash cartel and I bought after that crash in 2013. I added in later as it looked like the cartel would recombine. Now with Russian potash deals with China and problems in the Ukraine, I don't know anymore. Fastgraphs is showing some big valuation problems. Where it once was undervalued its not getting over its historic P/E range.


Seagate (STX) @ $48.90 (below its recent low): I've enjoyed a beautiful multi-year run with them and have 120% return. But I see its tired and failed 3 times to break and hold $60 range this year. I got into them because of their share buyback program which ends this year. As we can see with fastgraphs, It never really gets to its valuation potential. Most tech companies do not so I am seeing how far it is above its historic P/E range (blue line) and thinking overvalued.


Prospect Capital (PSEC) @ $8.83: PSEC recently had some SEC concerns that they were not reporting earnings correctly. It had to do with how they were reporting their subsidiary profits. PSEC appealed and the SEC withdrew their complaint. There is some concerns that PSEC cannot maintain the dividend and for business development companies? The dividend is everything and I would expect a massive drop to equal the dividend cut.
Note: Fastgraphs doesn't do BDCs because fastgraphs does not report NII, they only do EPS and FFO for reits.

ConocoPhillips (COP) @ $77.90. I'm looking at 50% capital gains and then I look at their valuation on fastgraphs and its looking dangerous.


McDonald's (MCD) sold @ $99.90. This stop got triggered and I am out. I have been with MCD for several years and enjoyed a nice gain. They are having problems breaking through and holding $110. Yes their valuation are rising but I have other places for money then things going sideways.



I don't like trying to time the markets. Nobody can do that consistently and it causes missed opportunities and drag on your portfolio from transaction fees and taxes. However given the environment we are in, the time of the year, and the valuations of the above positions I am comfortable with becoming "defensive".

Disclaimer: The investments and trades discussed are not recommendations for others. I am not a financial planner, financial adviser, accountant, or tax adviser. The financial actions I talk about are for my own portfolio and money and only suited for my own risk tolerance, strategy, and ideas. Copying another person's financial moves can lead to large losses. Each person needs to do their due diligence in researching and planning their own actions in the financial markets.

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Company Review: Seagate Technology (STX)

Earning season is marching on and I am knee deep in research and reports. However I fine some more enjoyable then others to review and Seagate is one of my favorites because I love reading about companies throwing money at shareholders. Their goal is 70% of operating cash flow returned to shareholders through dividens or share buybacks. This quarter alone they bought back 10% of their existing common shares. They are on track with their goal of reducing the company by 40% in 3 years.


SEAGATE (STX)
Last Updated: Q3-2013
(Fiscal Q1-2014)


Description: Seagate Technology plc (Seagate) is the provider of electronic data storage products. The Company’s principal products are hard disk drives, commonly referred to as disk drives, hard drives or HDDs. The Company produces a range of disk drive products addressing enterprise applications, where its products are designed for enterprise servers, mainframes and workstations; client computer applications, desktop and notebook computers, and client non-compute applications, for a range of end user devices, such as digital video recorders (DVRs), personal data backup systems, portable external storage systems and digital media systems.


How do they make money: STX manufactures and sells a range of data storage devices.


Key Brands: Seagate, Samsung hard drives (Samsung sold their HDD division to Seagate. Other Samsung products are still made by Samsung).




Company Organization
No specific organization described by the company. They don't give specific department numbers and are tight lipped even when asked in Q&A section of con calls.


Plans and Strategy
Focus on shifting to SSD drives and cloud storage.
60% of storage will be in the cloud by year 2020 (Q3-2013)


Shareholder value: 70% of operating cash flow to shareholders in share repurchase or dividends.
Not free cash flow, operating.
Started aggressive share repurchase program when stock was at $19.
Will look for most effective return. (hint @ repurchases slowing down at some point)
Back in Q2 2012 they announced their plans for share repurchases and their share count by end of each year.
2012: 425 million
2013: 350 million (they are currently at 320 million)
2014: 250 million
40% of the company bought back.

Risks
HDD technology is becoming outdated and inefficient: HDD technology is becoming outdated and replaced by faster and smaller memory types, primarily flash technology. This will hurt STX which is predominantly HDD.
Mitigation: STX isn’t run by idiots. They see the trend from HDD PCs to flash memory storage cellphones and tablets. STX is working on different types and buying flash memory companies.


Consumer shift from PC to mobile devices means shift to cloud storage: PC sales and thusly the HDD sales will drop as more users go to mobile devices away from PCs.
Mitigation: Non-issue. Data has to be stored somewhere. The cloud does not magically remove storage needs. When a person takes a photo and then shares it with their friends its stored on their camera (1) backed by Apple and Google with cloud storage (2) stored on Instagram (3) posted to your wall on Facebook (4) then everyone who sees it has it locally stored in the cache of the device that views it (5-100+). Thats for 1 photo. Flash memory is still expensive and cloud server farms will need massive amounts of storage. Sales will be to server cloud companies instead of individuals but the need is still there.


Section 382 limitations: Companies can only buy back shares so quickly before fines, penalties, and other problems come up. While this may seem like a benefit vs risk, I want to know if the company cares and what their plan is.
Mitigation: The 10% ownership Samsung shares bought back are not subject to 382 limitations.
Also, IRS has recently relaxed and amended this rule so its no longer an issue.
This issue is brought up each and every con call as a question. STX is aware and on top of it.

Company going private: There are fears that STX is buying back shares so much because they will go private and cash out existing shareholders.
Mitgation: Upper management and directors are selling shares. CEO and Chairman Steve Luczo sold $16 million worth in November 2013. If there were plans to take the company private he would not be selling but holding to get a cash out deal later.
Even if it was true that they took the company private, the increase in share price along the way gives great reaturn. STX is +167% since 2012 when they started this program vs +42% for the S&P.

Competitors
Western Digital Corp (WDC)
Toshiba Corp (6502. Listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange)
Hitachi (6501. Listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange)




Company Fundamentals

Fastgraph Review
Even with a +60% share price rise for 2013, STX is still grossly undervalued.




Company Stats
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013e
5y Avg
10y Avg
Share Price
$17.27
$19.99
$26.50
$25.50
$4.43
$18.19
$15.03
$16.40
$30.42
$50.00
$26.01
$22.37
EPS
1.06
1.41
1.6
1.56
2.36
0
3.14
1.09
6.49
4.81
3.106
2.352
EPS Growth
-
33.02%
13.48%
-2.50%
51.28%
-
-
-65.29%
495.41%
-25.89%
134.75%
71.36%
P/E
16.29
14.18
16.56
16.35
1.88
-
4.79
15.05
4.69
10.40
8.73
11.13
P/B
3.9
3.1
3.5
2.7
1.2
3.9
2.5
2.2
3.7
4.2
3.3
3.09


2012 EPS was inflated due to Thailand flooding that impacted Western Digital but not Seagate. I do not see the drop in EPS the following year as a negative sign on management. Even with how erratic it is, the company is growing nicely.

2009 had 0 EPS primarily due to re-organization costs. STX shifted from business unit structure to a functional organization structure. 33% of executive level positions were cut as well as other layoffs and pay reduction. Most companies were doing this in the wake of the Finance and Housing crisis of 2008.
We can see now in 2013 that they were successful.



Dividend Stats
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013e
5y Avg
10y Avg
Dividend
$0.20
$0.26
$0.32
$0.38
$0.42
$0.27
$0.00
$0.18
$0.86
$1.40
$0.54
$0.43
Dividend Yield
1.16%
1.30%
1.21%
1.49%
9.48%
1.48%
0.00%
1.10%
2.83%
2.80%
1.64%
2.28%
Share buyback %
-
-0.80%
-4.20%
-10.73%
9.11%
10.25%
-5.06%
10.06%
5.90%
15.45%
7.32%
3.33%
Div Growth
-
-
23.08%
18.75%
10.53%
-35.71%
-100.00%
-
377.78%
62.79%
76.21%
51.03%
EPS Payout Ratio
18.87%
18.44%
20.00%
24.36%
17.80%
-
0.00%
16.51%
13.25%
29.11%
14.72%
17.59%

The dividend was cut twice in the past 10 years. Normally I see that as a sign that management isn't commited to shareholders. However their EPS went to 0 in 2009 and they couldn't cover it. They then returned to a dividend they could afford.




Earning Report Notes
Q3-2013
EPS: $1.29
$100 million in SSD sales.
$2.5 billion in cash on hand.
Goal of 70% of operating cash flow to shareholders
Bought 32.7 million shares (10%) from Samsung @ $46.87
Raised dividend 13% to $0.43/quarter
Product Margin: 28.5% (27% - 32% target)
Operating Expenses: within the 10% - 14% of revenue.
Foresee 60% of data stored in the cloud by 2020.
Estimate Q4-2013 will be about the same to slightly less revenue.



Company and Industry specific commonly used acronyms and terms
ASP: Average Sellig Price
HDD: Hard Disk Drive. Standard magnetic platter storage device common in PCs and laptops.
Hybrids: Drives that have both HDD and SSD components.
SMR: Shingled Magnetic Recording technology. Improved HDD technology
SSD: Solid state drive. Flash memory. The common storage for mobile phones.
TAM: Total Addressable Market. The estimated amount of storage space needs over a given time.


Resources
Company Website: http://www.seagate.com/
Transcripts: http://seekingalpha.com/symbol/stx

Disclaimer: The investments and trades discussed are not recommendations for others. I am not a financial planner, financial advisor, accountant, or tax adviser. The financial actions I talk about are for my own portfolio and money and only suited for my own risk tolerance, strategy, and ideas. Copying another person's financial moves can lead to large losses. Each person needs to do their due diligence in researching and planning their own actions in the financial markets.