When you get time (!) could you elaborate on why you don't average down on growth stocks? I've heard two "experts" in the last two days saying to average down on good stocks.—D.B. 6/3/10
Tim Lutts: This is a great question, because it gets to the heart of the reason we own particular stocks. And the key is right there in the question, in which D.B. refers to "growth stocks" and "good stocks," phrases that are not always interchangeable.
In Cabot Top Ten Weekly, which recommends 10 strong stocks every Monday, a "good stock" is one with a strong chart and a great growth story, like Netflix (NFLX) today.
Netflix, which revolutionized the home video-watching industry once and is now doing it again streaming content online, saw revenues grow 26% in the latest quarter, saw earnings jump 63%, and has analysts projecting earnings growth of 32% (which is probably conservative) in 2011. The company's after-tax profit margin typically runs around 7%.
So NFLX trades at a typical growth stock valuation. Its price/earnings ratio is 45 and its price/sales ratio is 3.2; to buy this business, which had revenues of $1.77 billion in the past 12 months, the market says you've got to pay $5.62 billion (3.2 times sales)! Some analysts call this markup the "growth premium."
And Netflix is not unusual; the best growth stocks always seem expensive.
Meanwhile, in Cabot Benjamin Graham Value Letter, a "good stock" is one with a proven business model and experienced management that is selling at unusually low valuations, like Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) today.
Archer Daniels Midland is one of the biggest food and grain companies in the world, and it pays a reassuring 2.4% dividend (the company has raised its dividend for the past 34 years). But revenues grew just 3% in the first quarter, and analysts are projecting earnings growth of only 1% in 2011, and the company's after-tax profit margin typically runs around 3%.
So ADM trades at a typical value stock valuation. Its price/earnings ratio is 10 and its price/sales ratio is just 0.26; to buy this business, which had revenues of $62.5 billion in the past twelve months, the market says you've got to pay "only" $16.3 billion!
And ADM is not unusual; the best value stocks always look cheap.
So, to recap, to a growth investor, NFLX is a "good stock" because it's strong and because the company has great prospects for growth of both revenues and earnings.
And to a value investor, ADM is a "good stock" because the company has a proven business model and experienced management and the stock is cheap today.
But what about D. B.'s question about averaging down, meaning buying more stock at a price lower than where you previously bought it?
Averaging down makes perfect sense in a value stock like ADM, given that there's confidence the stock will be higher eventually, if not immediately. Most recently, in fact, ADM has been trending down. It was trading at 33 back in November, and now it's down to 25. Cabot Benjamin Graham Value Letter editor Roy Ward says the stock is a good buy anywhere under 28.11, so it makes sense that you'll get an even better bargain if you can buy more (average down) at 24 or 23 or 22. Value stocks, in that sense, are like bananas. Cheaper is better. And unlike bananas, stocks don't go bad a week later.
But good growth stocks can seldom be bought cheap, and as long as their prospects for growth are intact, a high valuation is no reason to avoid investing. NFLX, to return to our example, was an expensive stock six months ago when it was trading at 55, when it earned a spot in Cabot Top Ten Report; it's been expensive in the three occasions it's appeared there since (trading at 59, 65 and 98); and it's even more expensive today trading above 110.
The right way to play NFLX, and the right way to play all the best growth stocks, is to buy more stock at higher and higher prices (averaging up) as the months go by, holding on tight until you decide the uptrend has ended.
By contrast, consider Research in Motion (RIMM), the maker of the Blackberry. RIMM used to be a great growth stock ... before Apple came out with the iPhone. And by the numbers, Research in Motion is still a decent growth company; revenues were up 18% in the first quarter, and earnings grew 42%. But that alone is not enough to make it a good growth stock. The main problem, as I see it, is that RIMM was once well-loved, but growth is now slowing. In fact, analysts are projecting earnings growth of 24% in 2011 and only 9% in 2012.
So investors have been reacting to the expectations that Research in Motion will be a slower grower by slowly and steadily moving elsewhere, to stocks like AAPL and NFLX. As a result, RIMM has underperformed the market for the past two years; it was trading near 150 two years ago; it was at 86 one year ago, and now it's near 60. And as a result of that, the stock's growth premium has shrunk. RIMM's price/earnings ratio is now down to 13, and you can buy the company for $34 billion ... or 2.3 times sales.
So if you had been averaging down in RIMM over the past two years, you might not be very happy today.
Bottom line, averaging down is fine for investors in value stocks, but dead wrong for investors in growth stocks.
Note: Eventually, if RIMM's downward trend continues, it could be a good value stock, but the transition period from one phase to the other is usually too long (many years) for most mortals to tolerate.
Timothy Lutts
President, Chief Investment Strategist, Editor of Cabot Stock of the Month
Timothy Lutts heads one of America’s most respected independent investment advisory services, publishing eight newsletters to more than 200,000 subscribers around the world. Tim leads a dedicated team of professionals who serve individual investors with high-quality investment advice based on time-tested Cabot systems. Under his leadership, Cabot has been honored numerous times by both Timer Digest and the Hulbert Financial Digest as among the top investment newsletters in the industry. Tim also edits Cabot Stock of the Month.
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