Need to Know: Beaten-up value stocks are offering opportunities of a generation, fund manager says

This post was originally published on this site

To say value stocks have had a rough time of it is an understatement.

They were out of favor during the bull market that preceded the coronavirus pandemic. During the coronavirus crash, value stocks were the worst performing of the major styles, and they also were the worst in the current recovery. Value stocks relative to growth stocks have fallen to 20-year lows, according to Deutsche Bank data. (Tuesday’s session was a rare exception, with economically sensitive cyclicals and value stocks advancing as health and tech stocks fell.)

“The fact that value underperformed for the longest period of time in history I think makes people believe that value is never going to come back. I believe that will be proven wrong,” says Dave Iben, the founder and chief investment officer of Kopernik Global Investors.

“The idea that earnings can be plunging and some of these stocks hitting new all time highs, it’s just not going to be sustainable. But even better than that, and who cares if I’m wrong on that — value stocks are at generational sort of cheap values and so that the bifurcation between some stocks being very loved and some stocks being sold for prices that are a lot lower than they were back 10 or 12 years ago, is what we think is very interesting.” He says he could envision a situation like the dot-com bubble bursting, when value stocks in 2000 and 2001 advanced even as the broader market declined.

Iben is mostly looking outside the U.S. for stocks — the firm’s global all-cap fund had just 5.5% of its portfolio in U.S. companies at the end of March. While still owning Gazprom OGZPY, -0.20% and Sberbank SBER, +3.79%, Iben says he has increasingly taken profits from Russian stocks and invested in South Korean companies.

Telecom KT Corp. KT, +0.20% is a big holding, as Iben says the firm is trading at less than book value, at a single-digit price-to-earnings ratio, and at roughly 6 times less per customer than Verizon Communications.

He’s also a big fan of gold miners including Australia’s Newcrest Mining NCMGY, +0.38% and Canada’s Centerra Gold CG, -2.70%, noting that the price of gold GC00, -0.27% has gone up 2½ times over the last 12 years, but the mining index has fallen in half.

“Gold underground is so cheap that we can buy these companies, pay all the money it takes to build the mines, extract the gold, sell it, and liquidation value is well above the stock prices in some cases,” he says.

In fact, he finds a number of commodities undervalued, including copper, natural gas and uranium. “We like Cameco CCJ, +1.49%, we like a lot of the uranium stocks, and we’re once again interested in the gas and oil stocks as prices turn negative.”

General Electric GE, +5.75% isn’t a company he would have imagined owning back when the conglomerate sported the world’s largest market cap and was an investor darling. After years of shrinking, dealing with debt, management turnover and write-downs, GE still has a premier jet-engine business and a premier health-care company, he says. Iben says investors now are punishing GE for its exposure to aviation and energy.

“Price is everything,” he says. “We think that at $7 we have a lot more upside than we do downside, and so we’re happy to own a company like that, that was once very loved and is now very hated.”

GE on Wednesday missed first-quarter adjusted profit and free cash flow expectations but topped revenue forecasts.

The buzz

The Federal Reserve’s latest decision is due at 2 p.m. Eastern. With rates nearly at zero, attention will turn to the waves of new programs the central bank has set up to boost lending and its assessment of the economy.

First-quarter GDP slumped 4.8%, even worse than economists had forecast.

Google’s profits were damaged even more than expected as the COVID-19 pandemic caused “a significant slowdown in ad revenues,” parent company Alphabet GOOG, -3.30% revealed, as it nonetheless beat estimates on sales.

Plane maker Boeing BA, +2.03% reported stronger-than-expected cash flow, with Facebook FB, -2.44% , Microsoft MSFT, -2.43% and Tesla figures coming after the close.

The market

U.S. stock futures ES00, +1.53% were pointing to an upbeat start, with the Dow industrials contract YM00, +1.60% up 359 points, extending gains as Gilead Sciences reported a positive drug trial of its coronavirus treatment.

Oil CL.1, +19.53% futures surged, climbing back above $14 a barrel.

The yield on the Italian 10-year government bond rose nearly 5 basis points, after Fitch Ratings downgraded the country’s credit rating to BBB, which is one notch above junk.

The chart

The Wells Fargo Investment Institute overlaid the current downturn, and recovery, against 2008. The obvious difference between now and the global financial crisis is the quick upturn, and the firm says it has unfavorable view on developed and emerging market equities.

The tweet

Tesla TSLA, -3.71% Chief Executive Elon Musk is itchy for the U.S., and in particular, California lockdown restrictions to end. Tesla, according to Bloomberg News, asked some employees at its California factory to return to work before the end of a lockdown order.

Random reads

Rep. Justin Amash is forming an exploratory committee to run for president as the Libertarian Party candidate.

Scientists have created a beer using the yeast from wasps.

Need to Know starts early and is updated until the opening bell, but sign up here to get it delivered once to your email box. Be sure to check the Need to Know item. The emailed version will be sent out at about 7:30 a.m. Eastern.