Tuesday, September 25, 2012

One Bottom - One Top - The Housing Market

Regular readers will know that I normally write about specific value investing ideas that I'm working on, or have a position in. This post will be about neither. It's about housing, on both sides of the border.



It appears the bottom is in for the U.S. real estate market. Prices are rising, sales of new homes are rising and consumer confidence is improving. Combined with an improving domestic economy ( some would argue the U.S. is circling the drain ) and a liquid mortgage market, housing is back - but in the slow lane. For those that think the U.S. economy is in turmoil, just have a look around. Housing is turning, railroad stocks are at 52 week highs, cardboard companies are passing along price increases ( which they can't do in a recession ) and consumer stocks like Whirlpool are also at 52 week highs. The market thinks the economy is slow but moving in the right direction. I've been tracking the U.S. home building stocks for sometime - but due to naval gazing, I missed jumping in at the maximum point of pessimism ( last fall ). The home builders ( see below, second chart ) like Toll Brothers, DR Horton, Lennar have doubled in the past year. Investors have priced in the housing market's recovery. You can still benefit from the recovery in U.S. housing by owning companies like Mohawk ( carpet ), USG ( drywall ), Berkshire Hathaway ( carpet, mobile homes, bricks and paint ) or Bank of America ( mortgages ).



Chart forToll Brothers Inc. (TOL)

On the other side of ledger is the Canadian housing market. I've been "pounding the table" for the last year or so, suggesting that the bubble is ready to burst ( ok, maybe just deflate a little ). It appears that is starting to happen. Recent reports indicate prices falling 2% across Canada and up to 12% in pricier markets like Vancouver. There's likely more downside. I'm willing to bet 10-15%, then a long period of flattish prices. Why? Well, Canadian home prices have risen at well above average rates for the last decade. The well regarded Yale economist Robert Shiller ( yes the same Shiller from the Case Shiller home index ) concluded that home prices roughly tracked the inflation rate over the past 100 years. The chart below shows just how prices have disconnected from the longer term inflation rate over the past 10 years.

canada house price inflation

Other indicators backup Shiller's argument. House prices as measured by a multiple of household income have also risen well above the "norm". For example, in Vancouver, house prices are currently almost 10X household income (current national average: 5X eek.), compared to a long term average of 2.70-3.0X. Consequently, homeowners have record debt levels and a negative savings rate. When interest rate rise, highly levered homeowners will feel additional pain. If you are in the market for a home, it would be prudent to not to exceed the 3.0X of household income and put as much cash down as possible. Equity is a cushion that you don't appreciate until you need it, and it prevents you from being forced to do something at the precise moment you don't want to ( sell under pressure ). There are opportunities in this housing market. Some Canadian financials have underperformed as the market has punished them ( more than necessary, creating opportunity ) for their exposure to the housing market. Companies like Genworth MI ( MIC.TO) a Canadian mortgage insurer and Home Capital ( HCG.TO ) an alternative mortgage lender both have good management and significant market share in their respective areas of the mortgage world. I don't own them - yet.

Chart forGenworth MI Canada Inc. (MIC.TO)

Remember: the word mortgage is French for " agreement until death ".



Disclosure: I own Berkshire Hathaway, Bank of America and USG shares.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

The New Name

On June 2nd I wrote here about a new holding that I've been adding to my portfolio. Well, the winner is Oracle Corporation (ORCL), a large cap U.S. based technology company. Large cap tech stocks have been out of favour for some time, even though their fundamentals have held up reasonably well during this sluggish economic recovery. Without boring you - I hope - I'll touch on a few key points about ORCL.

Oracle is a giant in database software business. They control roughly 60% of the global dbase market.
What's great about Oracle and others in the business ( like IBM and SAP ) is that when you purchase their database, you generally purchase a long-term service contract with the product. So, as a customer you are tied to their products for the long-pull. As you use their database, and build reams of very important data, you are less likely to want to switch database providers and risk data loss. A major data loss could be devastating to your business. So - Oracle's customers are sticky - that's good. Some 43% of ORCL's revenue comes from software licence updates and product support - all high margin business.

ORCL also sells some hardware (server and storage products), which is generally a low margin commodity business. They are scaling down this side of the business. They are also in the cloud computing business, which is a huge growth area going forward. SaaS, software-as-a-service, is the next platform for large companies.

Here's just a few numbers to outline why ORCL is a good business;

10yr revenue growth 12.5%
10yr earnings growth 18%

Net profit margins ( 5 yr avg ) 31.6%
Return on equity ( 5yr avg ) 28%
Cash per share $3.50/share ( net of debt)
Returning cash to shareholders: dividend: 0.24/share, share buy backs.
CEO: Larry Ellison owns 22.4% of the company - remember this is a $150 Billion company, his eye is on the ball - except for his recent purchase of a whole Hawaiian Island - hmmmm. If he buys England, I will really worry.

Overall, ORCL has a great track record with a good future, with great management, which early in June (@ $26.50), was all available for under 10X earnings. ORCL is conservatively worth $40-$45.





ORCL has moved up sharply, so don't run out and just buy ORCL. For a margin of safety ORCL is a buy in the high 20's.