The CEO of Fisher Investments Ken Fisher had recently said that there was a trend from large-cap stocks. Fisher noted some of the recent trends in the bull market in a recent interview for the CNBC.
Kenneth Fisher was born November 29, 1950 in San Francisco, California. He is founder, chairman, and CEO of Fisher Investments, a money management firm headquartered in Woodside, California.
Friday, October 19, 2012
Monday, September 24, 2012
A victory for Ken Fisher?
The
stock picks of the billionaire hedge fund manager Ken Fisher have a tendency to outperform the market. During Q2, Fisher Asset Management increased its
stake in NIKE, Inc. to a total of
3.7 million shares. At the beginning of the quarter, the hedge fund owned only
50k shares of Nike, so it could be said that Fisher’s team has made quite the
confident stock pick.
Renaissance
Technologies was also interested in Nike during Q2. It owned 1.6 million shares
for the end of June 2012. The success of RT gave its founder Jim Simons the
opportunity to build a net worth of 11 billion dollars.
Nike’s
revenue was up 16 per cent over the last fiscal year and it has grown a GAGR of
7 per cent. The company’s net income was also up with its posting a 4 per cent
growth rate for May 2011. Earnings per share were up 8 per cent. EPS has grown
at 6 per cent annual rate for the last 4 fiscal years, whereas the net income
has grown at a 4 per cent rate. The board of Nike has recently approved a
repurchasing program of 8 billion dollars which is expected to last about 4
years.
NIKE, Inc.
is able to charge a price premium since it’s an owner of a global brand. It may
be expected that the company is exposed to a poor macro environment, but that
is not the case at all: the stock’s beta is 0.9 and it tends to fall or rise
about in line with the market. It is up 71 per cent over the last 5 years.
Sunday, September 9, 2012
Ken Fisher’s shares in Starbucks
Billionaire
Ken Fisher’s stock picks have outperformed the stock market. The positions of
his Fisher Asset Management have not
changed in size over the second quarter. Comparing the hedge fund’s 13F from Q2 with its Q1’s, we can see that a few stock
positions have increased by 2 per cent or decreased by 1 per cent and so
on, until we get a peek of Starbucks.
The holdings of Fisher Asset Management
of the coffee shops rose to 10m shares (for the end of June) from 550k (for the
beginning of April). The stock of
Starbucks rose with additional 8 per cent in 2012. It is also up 77 per
cent in comparison to 5 years ago and it has more than doubled in price for the
past 2 years. Another large position in Starbucks
is of Columbus Circle Investors with 3.6 m shares.
The third fiscal
quarter of Starbucks was characterized by
13 per cent increase in revenue in comparison with the third fiscal quarter in
2011. Marco watchers are worried about the American consumers and a common
debate is that whether American should spend 5 dollars for a cup of coffee.
Nevertheless, the segment of America reported 7 per cent same-store sales
growth. Moreover, the same-store sales have risen with 12 percent in
China/Asia-Pacific. Since many fixed costs were held in check, the net income
has increased with 19 per cent.
The revenue of
Starbucks has grown with 15 per cent and the
company’s net income has risen to 16 per cent in comparison to 2011.
Starbucks
is a growing business but the catch is that it carries a premium valuation. 27
is the number of the trailing price-to-earnings, and the estimation of forward
earnings is 20 per cent EPS growth
for 2013.
Starbucks
could be compared to other companies which share the same problems – Green
Mountain Coffee Roasters, which like Starbucks depends on the demand for
coffee, Dunkin Brands, McDonalds and Panera Bread.
Being
lampooned as a company which have locations that are within spitting distance
of one another, it has still managed to get down to serious business. Moreover,
it trumps both McDonalds and Dunkin in terms of recent growth.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Kenneth Fisher joins Warren Buffet
Warren Buffet
has been interested in American Express
Company, which for a long time has been rendering travel management along
with providing charge and credit cards.
This
Q2 Fisher Asset Management joined Warren
Buffet in the stock and the position for Q2 was 6.6 m shares. In Q2
American Express’ revenue increased by 3 per cent as a contrast to last
year’s. The company’s earnings increased from 1.10 to 1.15 dollars per share
due to a decrease in share count, whilst net income remained unchanged. The
numbers of the company have been more or less good for the first few months of 2011
with EPS being 2.07 dollars and 2.22 dollars for 2012. That is 7 per cent
growth rate which is not enough to classify AE as a growth rate stock but it is
enough to show that the company manages to get down to business.
It
is noted that American Express has a
tendency to buy back shares since the share count decrease in 2011. The company has announced that it will return
a half of its return on capital to shareholders through a channel of buybacks
and dividends. In the beginning of 2012 the buybacks consumed 4 times as much
cash as dividend and cash payments. In order for the company to hit analyst
targets, it has to grow very little with having a P/E of 12, which will lead to
the stock price being undervalued.
This
valuation gives away the ownership of 150 m shares by Berkshire Hathaway. Another investor in American Express is Eagle
Investment Management, which has reported 9.9 m shares for June 2012. Adage Capital Management has increased
its position by 53 per cent for Q2
to 1.5 m shares.
Visa
and Mastercard’s P/Es are much above
these of American Express – 18 for Visa and 16 for Mastercard. Moreover, they have a small part in Berkshire’s portfolio. Their growth
rate was better than that of American
Express in Q2 with their revenue
being 10 per cent more than it was in 2011. Discover Financial Services has decreased its earnings for Q2 in contrast to 2011. American Express serves as a medium
between Discover, Visa and Mastercard since its valuation
doesn’t depend on a strong growth rate.
Sunday, August 26, 2012
The Commercial Observer’s interview with Kenneth Fisher
Community
approval is perhaps the hardest thing for a developer to do. Whatever the
developer does, there will always be naysayers. Should these naysayers
intervene when it comes to preventing the bulldozer from moving in? The following interview with Fisher was carried out by The Commercial Observer.
And
here is what the partner at Cozen
O’Connor Kenneth Fisher has to say concerning this matter.The Commercial Observer: It seems that most, if not all, of your work is done outside the courtroom.
Mr. Fisher: A substantial part of my practice is land-use and zoning work, so those usually wind up in litigation only when there is a challenge—and those challenges usually come from some objector in the community.
For me, a recent example would be: I did the entitlements for the Dock Street DUMBO project for Two Trees. There was a litigation, which I handled and won, together with the corporation counsel’s office, obviously. Then there was an appeal for that, and we won the appeal in the Spring. And they’ve started site demolition, and they are going to start construction shortly.
So how essential is land-use litigation for developers, then?
I think the sort of macro observation that I would make is that land-use litigation over the last year or two has been “the dog that didn’t bark.” There have been challenges to most of the major actions, and some minor actions, that have come through City Planning and the City Council. Most of them have failed.
How did the opposition to the Dock Street development fail?
The proposal calls for a 17-story building in close proximity to the Brooklyn Bridge, with a 300-seat public middle school in the base, the core-and-shell of which is being donated by Two Trees. Also some neighborhood retail and parking.
There was some degree of controversy over whether views of and from the Brooklyn Bridge would be impacted. But, you know, I think that the people who were most agitated were the people whose views from their own apartments would be impacted.
While there was active organized opposition, there was also active support—as a result of which, as many people testified for the project has testified against it at the public hearings, and it was ultimately approved not just by the City Council and the Planning Commission, but it was approved by the Community Board.
A lot of the opposition dropped by the wayside when the council gave the go-ahead to the project. But there were a couple of dissidents who brought a lawsuit, and they challenged everything from the rationale of the project to the design solution that we developed with City Planning to the adequacy of the environmental assessment. All of that was dismissed at the trial court level.
If you’re, say, Jamestown Properties, how would you prepare yourself for ongoing community opposition over projects like the proposed Chelsea Market expansion?
I once published a letter in the New York Times; I said I had a dream that the mayor announced an agreement with the Almighty to build a stairway to Heaven. And when they announced the location, half the people said that it would lead to gentrification, the other half said it would bring in the riffraff, and everybody agreed that it would be bad for traffic.
The point of the story is that no matter how benign a project is, it’s going to upset somebody.
What kind of project do you think upsets people the most?
What gets attention are the “baby carriages in front of the bulldozers” projects. NYU is a situation like that, where the people who were opposed to NYU weren’t particularly interested [in] negotiating. They simply wanted to preserve Greenwich Village the way it was [yesterday].
It wasn’t a question [of] putting in a day-care center or making it bigger or smaller for a lot of them. There are others who wanted to engage, and the result was that the council got NYU to make some changes just before they gave the final go-ahead. That’s the give-and-take and the back-and-forth of the process. But it’s not Newtonian, because governments are bodies in motion that don’t always stay in motion, and reactions are never equal and opposite.
Source: The Commercial Observer
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