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Published: March 31, 2010
It's no secret that share price
appreciation goes hand-in-hand with earnings growth.
If only it were that simple.
Screening for companies with the strongest outlooks will only
get you so far.
You might know that Chinese search engine Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU)
is expected to deliver +40% compounded annual earnings growth
during the next five years. But so do about 10 million other
people that are watching the stock. That optimism is already
priced into the shares, which trade for about 50 times forward
earnings at this point.
That doesn't necessarily mean Baidu's meteoric ascent is over,
but any future gains are hardly a slam dunk. The surest path is
for the market to rethink (and revise upward) its growth
assumptions, which in this case won't be easy.
The real winners spotted the company's potential back in 2006.
They understood what surging Internet traffic, skyrocketing paid
search revenues and a highly scaleable
business model could do long before it actually played out.
Then they held on tight as the shares went from $50 to $450.
My point here is that it's far more important to focus on the
means than the end.
If the crash of 2008 taught us anything, it's that all those
numbers on a firm's
balance sheet and
income statement can change with the financial weather. So I
prefer to spend less time monitoring sales and profits and more
time evaluating the underlying factors that influence them.
If for no other reason, they can give you a
critical "heads-up" that changes (either positive or negative)
are right around the corner.
A flash-in-the-pan stock rally can come from anywhere. But
virtually all long-term wealth creation stems from durable
competitive advantages. Companies like Baidu have something that
their rivals just can't emulate -- and that's why they've been
so successful.
These advantages form economic moats that help businesses defend
their territory from marauding competitors. The wider the moat,
the longer a company can hold rivals at bay and continue
generating outsized returns for shareholders.
Warren Buffett won't even sniff at a company without a moat
to protect its returns on capital.
One of the most basic rules of stock analysis is that it can be
misleading to compare the profit margins of companies in
different sectors. After all, a grocer pocketing 5% of every
dollar in sales might be best-in-class, while a biotech firm
with margins of 25% could be the group's laggard.
Most experts will tell you that it's best to compare grocers to
other grocers and biotechs to other biotechs. And that may be
true. But they're missing the bigger picture. Instead, ask
yourself this: Why can some industries maintain profit margins
five times greater than others?
The answer lies in the "Five Forces" diagram below, which was
developed by Harvard Business Professor Michael Porter.
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Let's briefly examine each of these forces:
- Competitive Rivalry: This refers to the
competitive intensity of the industry itself. Obviously,
concentrated industries with only a handful of players tend
to be less competitive and more profitable than fragmented
industries (like fast-food) where hundreds of players try to
undercut each other.
- Barriers to Entry: Success always invites
competition. But some industries are harder to crack into than
others. It's usually best to look for industries with high
barriers to entry that shut out would-be competitors. These
barriers can take the form of anything from government
regulation to capital requirements. Anyone can start an online
retail business, but coming up with the billions needed to buy a
fleet of cruise liners is a different story. This is why
barriers to entry can be so valuable -- and why, as I tell my
readers
in this month's issue of Market Advisor, shares of
companies like Stericycle (Nasdaq: SRCL) and Bally
Technologies (NYSE: BYI) have exploded for more than +1,000%
during the past 10 years.
- Threat of Substitutes: Products or services that are
easily replaceable can't command top dollar -- customers will
simply switch to option "B". Therefore, industries with no close
substitutes are preferable. Computer makers, for example, can't
get too far without semiconductors.
- Bargaining Power of Suppliers: The first three
factors were horizontal, but the last two are vertical. If you
are making bicycles, and there's only one tire supplier in your
area, then you have no choice but to buy from them. They hold
all the cards. But if there are a half dozen tire makers, you
can negotiate a better deal -- particularly if you're the
biggest purchaser on the block.
- Bargaining Power of Customers: In a
monopoly, there are many buyers, but just one dominant
seller. The flip-side is a "monopsony," where there are many
sellers, but just one buyer (like specialized defense
equipment sold to the government). In this case, it's the
buyer that calls all the shots.
We've barely scratched the surface here -- but you get the
idea: a company's profitability and stock are both governed by
the competitive framework of its industry.
All of these forces interact to determine whether a specific
industry is highly attractive to investors, or screams, "stay
away!"
We see these forces at work all the time. Sometimes suppliers
must cave to the demands of a powerful buyer like Wal-Mart
(NYSE: WMT). Other times it's the buyers that must yield to
the demands of the seller -- like when BHP Billiton (NYSE:
BHP) dictates iron-ore prices to steelmakers.
There is a symbiosis to any business relationship. The buyer
needs the seller's wares, and the seller needs the buyer's
money. But, the balance of power always favors one party over
the other. If you can determine who has the upper-hand in these
relationships, you'll be a step ahead of the crowd.
-- Nathan Slaughter
Editor
StreetAuthority Market Advisor
P.S. While the five forces above can launch a stock over
the long haul, there's only one force -- the most powerful of
all -- that can send it to the moon in a matter of days. This
driving force is the reason that InterDigital (Nasdaq: IDCC)
shot from $4.50 to $82 in just six weeks... and it's the reason
that 54 out of 62 of our open Market Advisor picks are up
today. What is this "driving force" -- and how can you get on
the next rocket stock before it takes off?
Answers here. |