Bare Escentuals, Inc. Part Three

Rating 3.00 out of 5

Bare Chart Click to enlarge

Rich Smith over at the Fool concludes this article on Bare Escentuals, Inc. (BARE) with good advice

Let’s see whether the company’s free cash flow story looks similarly attractive — once management gets around to releasing its cash flow statement, that is. Seems to me, Bare just might bear closer examination.

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Ten of My Top Investment Sites - Featuring BARE

Rating 3.50 out of 5

Free Stuff

For Investing Research

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Bare Escentuals, Inc. (BARE)

Rating 3.50 out of 5

bare starter kitAccording to this pitch at Motley Fool CAPS Bare Essentials, Inc. (BARE) is a TMFSarahGen favourite. I’ve known Sarah for a while know and have always admired her openness to investing styles and willingness to combine both fundamental and technical analysis. Sarah also freely combines short term trading with long term investing. Those traits are pure Fusion Investing.

Sarah recently became a fully fledged Rule Breaker analyst. Her CAPS pitch on BARE highlights 

Strong repeat business from the most loyal customers in cosmetics combined with growing international sales, accelerating door openings (at Ulta, Sephora, Nordstroms) through end of year, mean that today’s price is a gift.

At first blush BARE appears to be in the bargain bins, so let’s take a closer look. Continue reading →

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FI Fund Update

Rating 3.00 out of 5


The fund continues to be perform strongly. Five out of six positions are outperforming the ASX200 index with only the ANZ marginally underperforming. The fund is currently in the green and I am looking at investment possibilities. If I do not make the time to invest in individual assets over the coming week I will invest some of the cash into an index fund.

Investing is a time consuming activity. If you don’t have both the time and considerable interest to analyse individual investments then index funds should be your vehicle of choice.

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Back in the Saddle

Rating 3.00 out of 5

I just returned from ten days holiday in New Zealand. Before leaving I placed a trailing stop order on the 1,000 ANZ shares the Fund bought in mid July. The stop was set at 5% below the recent high of $19.52. Continue reading →

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Fusion Portfolio Update

Rating 3.00 out of 5

I’ve updated the Fusion Fund spreadsheet with the ANZ purchase.

OK looking picture after three months. The out-performance will slow, but with the power of fusion the gap will widen over time. Past performance is said to be not indicative of future performance. Disclaimer rant, you know the drill.

Fusion Investing Fund Update

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Does Consenus Makes Sense?

Rating 4.00 out of 5

Do I think we’ll see 4,000? Nope. Do I think we’ll see the equivalent of 4,000 corrected for long-term market growth? I don’t know, but it seems likely that we will eventually see the equivalent of such a low point. John TwinDeltaTandem

Wow…so clear when someone like John lays it out. Kaboom the path is clear. Investing at low points is an easy path to market out-performance. Using margin at low points is the accelerant.

This thread on the BMW Method Board at TMF shows a remarkable dire consensus. I feel compelled to remark that on the few occasions predictions come true they are usually short lived.

I am slightly in cash. Around 10%. The FI portfolio is 79% cash and buying. If you’re finding reasons not to buy in the current market and though bought confidently in the last two years then you are taking a difficult path to investment success.
^AXJO vs ^IXIC

If we wash dramatically lower from here then I’ll start to use margin. That is the time to use margin safely. Unfortunately most people us margin in bull markets. To some extent they are right, you want to be in margin and looking to pare back that margin during the early phases of a bull market. You just don’t want to get caught on margin any were in sight of a market peak.

If you are in cash now, well down! You’ve done better than me on this ride down, my cash got to around 20%. I did choose cash instead of an index fund when starting the portfolio as that was clearly the best position to be in. All it takes is a few right calls down the years while keeping the mis-steps as small as possible.

Beware the negative consensus.

Buy on Fear.

Tune out the noise, what do you know is right.

I wonder what the rest of the thread offers. I like most of the suggestions thus far:

  1. Be a cheap and recoverable lesson that he will never forget. qazulight
  2. Most of what Dan said was probably true, but hey smell the roses the entire world stinks of power and greed. The pigs are at the troths.
  3. “When I was a boy of fourteen, my father was so ignorant I could hardly stand to have the old man around. But when I got to be twenty-one, I was astonished by how much he’d learned in seven years.” Mark Twain lptj suggestions on the mechanics of how to deal with SS18 was good
  4. I like Wendy’s suggestion
    Tell him to put half into an online savings account at Countrywide, which yields 3.35%.
    Tell him to put the other half into BAC, which currently yields 11.8%.

Interesting re-reading the first part the consensus is not so dire after all. Only a couple gloomy posts. Most seem balanced and wise.

The FI Fund is 18.68% up on the ASX200.

Asset

Shares

Basis

Cost

Current

Value

Return

AU:GTPGA

1500

$75.00

112,520

$59.50

89,250

-20.7%

HLIT

2500

$8.49

21,229

$9.66

24,150

13.8%

PFE

1000

$17.68

17,684

$18.39

18,390

4.0%

FDX

500

$86.00

43,003

$79.05

39,525

-8.1%

GE

1000

$28.42

28,424

$28.00

28,000

-1.5%

AU:ANZ

1000

$17.16

17,180

$18.21

18,210

6.0%

Cheers
Dean

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Fusion Investing Fund Buys ANZ Bank

Rating 4.00 out of 5

Now is one of the times you need to be a net buyer of stocks.

While I don’t have strong conviction that the bottom is in I do see a lot of extremely good value in the market at the moment. I have been focusing on US stocks recently and will continue to do so as I also believe now is a great time for international investors to be buying US assets. From my perspective the Australian dollar is at a 25 year high against the US dollar. While the upward trend is strong and almost everyone is expecting parity, I am happy to be buying US assets now.

I realise I am swimming against two strong currents, the falling US dollar and flailing US stock market, but to catch good waves you sometimes need to get into position early.

I will be continuing to buy over the coming year. With the high level of cash the FI portfolio has I can’t sit around waiting for a mythical bell to ring at the bottom. We may be headed lower. A lot lower is not impossible. However, I am confident enough that in the long run I will be rewarded for buying excellent value in the current market.

Today for something completely different I’m back buying in Australia. Following on from yesterday and buying what you know I am buying my bank, ANZ Banking Group Limited, ANZ. As per above I’m not calling a bottom on ANZ, but I will crawl out on a limb and say we’re closer to a bottom than the top. wink

Quick Fundamentals

The last decade has been a great time to be an Australian company. Earnings and margins have swelled. While earnings may have peaked and Australia may go into a recession if the US leads the world down, I am very confident that in the long run the four major Australian banks will continue to prosper and will have higher earnings. I’m a patient guy. That is a long way to say I don’t think the past ten years growth rates for ANZ are maintainable and I’m not investing based on the past growth.

10yr

5yr

1 Year

2yr Fcst

Sales:

6.8%

8.4%

15.2%

-

Cash Flow:

-204.7%

-214.1%

22.1%

-

Earnings:

12.1%

9.5%

8.6%

2.2%

Dividends:

11.8%

10.9%

8.8%

2.9%

If the consensus 2 year forecast process correct then ANZ is a steal at current prices. I’m not counting on any growth.

Dividend yield quoted at 7.6%

Next Dividend Ex Date 6 Nov 2008

Dividend History Since 1993 (extent of my history) ANZ have never failed to raise their dividend. The last dividends were; interim 62c and final 74c, both 100% fully franked. That represents a 7.9% yield or around 9.1% after tax for the Fund (tax rate 15%).

Credit Ratings of Aa1 and AA from Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s.

For a swathe of fundamental details check out the ANZ Analyst Toolkit This features ten year summary data, historical interactive charts which go back 13 years. For example the 13 year net non performing loan graph below. The site also has financial spreadsheets, presentations and more.

ANZ non-performing loans

Quick Technical View

ANZ 5 year chart

  • Ugly. Falling Knife. Fall accelerating. Many buyers already exhausted at higher levels.
  • Panic setting in.
  • But is it time for a bounce? Looking at the shorter term six month chart I think it’s fair chance.

anz 6 month chart

Quick Behavioural View

  • The early value hounds who bought in first half of March and second half of April may now be feeling the pinch as the shares are down 15-30%.
  • A lot of buyers have already bought. However, thanks to superannuation more money pours into the kitty every month and patient value buyers must be getting interested.
  • When a bounce occurs from these depressed levels many buyers will quickly emerge. Although the next bounce may falter it should have enough momentum for a 20% bounce (based on recent history).
  • The Fund bought ANZ at $17.16. If a bounce occurs soon I’d be looking for $21 as a first target. If ANZ continues lower then I will be averaging down.
  • Funds managers’ TV advertisements currently pushing idea of buy and hold. I don’t even need to look at the fund flows to know they are out.

Summary

This is both an opportunistic buy and a long term buy. If I get a 20% return in a couple months and there is no large fundamental difference to the global economy I will re-evaluate with a eye to taking my profits. As we are close to a fundamental strong buy and long term technical support I see the chances of a bounce as at least 50:50. For the long term I am happy to start buying ANZ at these levels and believe a long term hold will outperform the ASX200.

Even under the worst circumstances of the dividend being cut in the short term, over the long term there is very small risk of losing capital on ANZ and a good probability of market beating returns with a healthy dividend.

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Look around you Nasdaq

Rating 3.00 out of 5

Peter Lynch extolled the virtues of looking around you for investing ideas. One Up On Wall St and Beating The Street and rightly investing classics. A new investor could do no better than turn to their pages for direction.

If you’re investing then no doubt you regularly use Nasdaq products.

Nasdaq, NDAQ, is on sale. Just like tonnes of other stocks! It is a fundamental strong buy with excellent risk to return profile.

But look at this chart. Poowee! It’s stinking it up.

Still, a lot of great stocks have lousy charts now. That is what bear markets do. Nasdaq has made it on to my watchlist.

An investigation is warranted due to the fundamental story and excellent value.

I am looking to buy at least one position this week as now is the a good time for me continue deploying cash.

What one stock would you buy this week?

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What do you Believe?

Rating 3.00 out of 5

Investors beliefsBelief Systems

Why do so many intelligent people not transfer their success to investing success? Think about that for a minute. Got an answer?

Now consider this question. Why has i