Wednesday, December 30, 2015

TSX long-term value investor ideas for 2016

For the long-term value investor, here are some compelling stories to think about in 2016. Metro Inc.
Canada’s third-largest grocery retailer is also its most profitable. The Montreal-based Metro operates in Quebec and Ontario, gaining clout in the latter with its 2005 purchase of the Dominion and A&P banners (since rebranded Metro). With cost efficiencies and a comparatively lean workforce, Metro boasts a net profit margin of 4.3 per cent, while that of rivals Loblaw Cos. Ltd. and Sobey’s owner Empire Co. Ltd. are each less than 2 per cent. Even long-term, it’s difficult to identify significant risk potential at Metro given the recession-resistant character of grocery and drug retailing, and the sheer heft of Metro’s market coverage with its 800 or so supermarkets, drugstores and specialty food chains. The latter include corner store operator Marché Richelieu and Marché Adonis, a top Quebec ethnic food purveyor. What makes the value investor’s eyes pop is the Metro’s low stock-market valuation relative to its competitors. Metro stock trades at a price-earnings multiple of just 15.4 times its estimated 2016 profit per share, far below the industry average p/e of 27.2. Linamar Corp. Few companies in today’s market offer Linamar’s growth potential, with a stock affordably priced at less than 10 times’ forecast 2015 earnings. The Guelph-based auto-parts maker has the markings of a longterm outperformer, having emerged unscathed from the Great Recession’s collapse in vehicle sales, and posting a near quadrupling in profits since 2011. Linamar has mastered geographic expansion (48 plants on four continents), new product development (more than 150 product launches in 2014 alone), and fiscal discipline (revenues were up 45 per cent between 2011 and 2014, while costs increased just 35 per cent). Skilled balance-sheet management enables Linamar to finance continued expansion, including its recent $1.2-billion friendly bid for France’s Montupet S.A., a specialist in aluminum castings that will reinforce Linamar’s own prowess in aluminum components and further expand its global reach. Much larger peer Magna International Inc. is more diversified in products and capabilities, but the yawning revenue gap between the two firms (Linamar’s $4.2 billion to Magna’s $48.9 billion) suggests a great deal of room for Guelph-based growth. That goes for Linamar’s dividend yield, as well, which is currently just 0.59 per cent. Procter & Gamble Co.
P&G is in one of its periodic swoons, its stock having slipped by 26 per cent from its all-time peak just 12 months ago. P&G has been here before. Its stock plummeted 48 per cent in the late 1990s, and fell 38 per cent in the late 2000s, only to recover each time to set new all-time highs. Now as then, there are panicky calls on the Street to break up the company. Fair enough: P&G is a $102 billion (in sales) behemoth whose products are used about 4.6 billion times a day worldwide. But P&G is already shedding two-thirds of its brands. In the past year, oncecherished P&G brands like Cover Girl, Max Factor, Wella and Duracell have been shed at handsome prices in P&G’s largely completed campaign to downsize a product portfolio that had become bloated. That still leaves P&G with market-leading brands collectively worth about $120 a share in earnings power. And that’s before a leaner P&G boosts profits now that it’s able to focus on its highest-margin products, including Tide, Gillette, Olay, Pantene and Pampers. The stock also boasts an industry-leading dividend yield of close to 4 per cent. Honeywell International Inc.
Honeywell is not a contrarian play, its stock having outperformed the S&P 500 by a factor of three in the past decade. The company is best known for its thermostats and other control systems, though its monitoring systems actually control everything from household furnaces to liquefied natural gas (LNG) plants.
The New Jersey firm’s mastery of controls gives Honeywell a head start in its bid to become a dominant player in the emerging “Internet of Things” market. Honeywell is hedging its bets by establishing itself in dozens of IOT sectors, many still nascent. The $54 billion (2014 sales) Honeywell has the R&D heft to devise machine-tomachine IOT systems for building contractors, commercial property managers, factory and mining operators, and municipal supervisors aiming to create “smart” cities. Growth in IOT revenues will be measured in the tens of billions of dollars per decade, giving Honeywell stock unusually big upside potential for such a large and stable company.
The stock also yields a generous 2 per cent yield, above average for this sector.

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