Day: May 25, 2013

On Stock Splits

On Stock Splits

Mark Hulbert had a recent piece in the Wall Street Journal called How to Use Stock Splits to Build a Winning Portfolio.? I find it curious, because 31 years ago I wrote my Master’s Thesis called, “Predicting Stock Splits: An Exercise in Market Efficiency.”? As far as I know, aside from the unbound copy sitting next to me, the only other copy is in some obscure part of the Johns Hopkins Library System.? If a number of people are really curious about this, I could try OCR and see if that would adequately read the typewritten text.

But anyway, I find it amusing that some are still trying to use stock splits to try to make money.? Quoting from Hulbert’s piece:

But try telling that to Neil Macneale, editor of an investment-advisory service called “2 for 1,” whose model portfolio contains only those stocks that have recently split their shares, holding them for 30 months. Over the past decade, according to the Hulbert Financial Digest, that portfolio has produced a 14% annualized return, far outpacing the 8% gain of the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index, including dividends.

Mr. Macneale’s track record isn’t a fluke. Several studies have found that the average stock undergoing a split outperforms the overall market by a significant margin over the three years following the company’s announcement of that split. Indeed, Mr. Macneale said in an interview, he got the idea for his advisory service in the 1990s from one of the first such studies, conducted by David Ikenberry, now dean of the Leeds School of Business at the University of Colorado, Boulder.

Research on stock splits goes back to the ’30s.? In the ’50s & ’60s before MPT got into full swing, a few researchers began trying analyze why there were abnormal rises in stock prices two months before a stock split.? Could it be that other factors affecting future value were somehow associated with stock splits?? Many factors pointed toward that, notably prior price increases, prior earnings increases, and increases in the dividend associated with the stock split.? Little did they know that they were anticipating momentum investing.

The consensus by the end of the ’70s was that there was no excess return after the stock split announcement, and few ways if any to capture the pre-announcement excess returns.? If in the present stock splits are providing excess returns for 2.5 years afterward, well, this is something new.

One of the leading stock-split theories?supported by the work of professors Alon Kalay of Columbia University and Mathias Kronlund of the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign?is that companies implicitly have a target range for where they would like their shares to trade.

If a firm’s shares are trading well above that range, and management believes that this high price is more than temporary, it is likely to initiate a split in order to bring its share price back to within that range.

This isn’t a new theory — it goes back to the ’50s, if not earlier.? One of the oldest theories was that it improved liquidity, but back in a time of fixed tick sizes, where everything traded in eighths, and higher commissions, that made little sense to a number of economists.? Splits made trading costs rise in aggregate for the same amount of dollar volume traded.

In the present though, there are many venues for execution of trades, commissions are much smaller, and negotiable.? Perhaps today more shares at lower prices does add liquidity, and the way to test might compare the bid-ask spread and sizes pre- and post-split.

The professors late last year completed a study of all U.S. stocks that split their shares by a factor of at least 1.25-to-1 between January 1988 and December 2007. They say the evidence their study uncovered suggests that splits are an “indication of sustained strong earnings going forward.” It therefore shouldn’t be a big surprise that split stocks outperform other high-price stocks that don’t undertake a split.

What this might mean is that stocks that split are examples of price and/or earnings momentum.? A management team splits the stock as a signal that corporate profit growth has been good, and will continue to be so.? If not, the management team runs the risk that if the stock price falls, it looks bad to a management to have a low stock price.? There are some investors who won’t buy stocks below $10, $5, etc.? Why run the risk of lowering your stock price if you think the odds are decent that the price will fall from there?? Low stock prices affect the confidence of many.

Investors looking to profit from the stock-split phenomenon should shun stocks that have undergone a reverse split and focus instead on those that have split their shares. You will have to invest in such stocks directly because there is no mutual fund or exchange-traded fund that bases its stock selection on stock splits.

Fortunately, constructing a portfolio of such stocks needn’t be particularly time-consuming.

For example, there is no need to guess in advance which companies are likely to split their shares?which in any case would be difficult, if not impossible, to do. There even appears to be no need to buy a company’s stock immediately after it announces a split, since research shows that it is likely to outperform the overall market for up to three years following that announcement.

Still, Mr. Macneale recommends that investors be choosy when deciding which post-split stocks to purchase. He cites several studies suggesting that the post-split stocks that perform the best tend to be those that, at the time of their splits, are trading at relatively low price/earnings or price/book ratios. Both are commonly used measures of a stock’s valuation, with lower readings indicating greater value.

I’m going to have to find the papers that say that post-split stocks outperform for the next 30 months.? Doesn’t sound right — a result like that would have been found from the research pre-1980, and no one suggested that; in fact, the evidence contradicted that consistently.

Note that the investment manager in question uses cheap valuation to filter opportunities.? That the stock has split usually indicates strong price momentum.? Value plus momentum is usually a winner, so why should we be surprised that stock splits often do well?

But I know of three papers that focused on predicting stock splits — two in 1973, and mine in 1982.? It’s not that hard.? Most of it is price momentum, and with a balanced set of stocks that would and would not split, the models predict 70% of the companies that would split.

What’s better, is that the formulas to predict stock splits pick good stocks in their own right — they end up being value and momentum, and maybe a few other factors.? I remember my thesis adviser being surprised at how good my models were at picking stocks.

This brings me to my conclusion: stock splits are a momentum effect, but it is larger when companies are still have a cheap valuation.? Perhaps splits have no effect on stock performance — it is all momentum and valuation.? To me, that is the most likely conclusion, and my thesis anticipated quantitative money management by 10+ years.

In one sense it is a pity I didn’t do anything with it, but if I hadn’t become an actuary, I would never have gained many other insights into the ways that the market works.? I’m happy with the way things worked out.

The Rules, Part XL

The Rules, Part XL

Unions create inefficiency.? This creates an opportunity for new technologies that perform the same function, but aren?t as labor-intensive.? (E.g. integrated steel vs. mini-mills)

Unions were a useful force in the US in their early days.? They helped get safe working conditions, and helped workers get the Sabbath off, so that they could go to church.? Those were admirable goals, but after that, unions outlived their usefulness.

Unions restricted my father and uncle on whom they could hire, yet required them to be a part of the union, but gave them no vote because they were owners (they hired one worker at most).? My mother was particularly annoyed at the union, but today she draws a pension from it.

The main inefficiency of unions comes from work rules.? In most other ways, unionized workers are not inefficient.? But the inefficiency of unions attracts efforts from employers to substitute capital for labor.? One of the best examples is listed above — unionized steel gets its market share eroded by mini-mills, using a lot more science, fewer people, and producing steel a lot cheaper.

There are other examples of this, but if in the private sector attempts to raise wages above levels justified by productivity, or limit flexibility of work processes, there will be the tendency for non-union firms to come in and take market share.? Example: non-union auto parts companies now provide most of the parts to auto manufacturers.

This is one reason why I think non-union technology has been more harmful to unions than foreign competition.? Creativity is not union, by and large, though I know there are exceptions.? In an era of technological improvement, non-union firms have more quickly embraced change.? This is what has hollowed out the unions, leaving them largely to serve governments, where technological improvement plays little role, because there is no possibility of competition in government, mostly.

Yes, there may be modest changes here and there, but when was the last time you heard of a municipality breaking a police, fireman, or teachers’? union?? Until pensions break the states and municipalities, that will not happen.

Thus I expect unions to continue to decrease in power for the near term, aside from government employment.? Unions will always occupy the most backward parts of the economy.

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Companies

  • Delta Sees S&P 500 in Reach as Credit Ratings Rise http://stks.co/rEBE? I would b cautious here, airlines have destroyed a lot of capital $$
  • Berkshire?s Weschler Holds Almost $150 Million of DaVita http://stks.co/pEIf? FD: + $BRK.B | The slow takeover of Davita continues $$
  • The real Apple tax scandal http://stks.co/gWz1? Scrap the corporate income tax & raise taxes on realized capital gains & dividends $$
  • Berkshire Hathaway Seeks Release of ResCap, Ally Financial Report http://stks.co/dVOD? Wants 2c if there was any fraudulent conveyance $$
  • Oil Revolt Generates $35 Billion as Icahn-Singer Agitate http://stks.co/jWnd? Many activist investors trawling in energy stocks $$
  • Inside Google’s Secret Lab http://stks.co/qE31? “Since its creation in 2010, Google has kept X largely hidden from view.” Long but good $$
  • Explaining Apple?s Irish Tax Dodge http://stks.co/hXHa? A good transfer pricing accountant is worth his weight in gold $$
  • Deal of the Week: Penney Holds Real Value http://stks.co/rDoO? $JCP needs to turn around its retailing much more than managing property $$
  • After all, that’s how BK conservation is done in the insurance industry, taxpayer never gets on the hook (please ignore $AIG) $$
  • Customer Service Is Next Job for IBM’s Watson http://stks.co/tDcy? Could Watson replace the grunts that take care of customer service? $$
  • “…insurance giants such as ACE Ltd and Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd” http://stks.co/qDeA? $ACE is a giant @ $31B , $ENH not @ $2B $$
  • $VOD to Keep $VZ Payout Amid Europe Struggles http://stks.co/cV0K? Not surprising they stalemated on VZW, & no special div | FD: + $VOD $$
  • Regulators Scrutinize Firms’ Ties to Insurers http://stks.co/sDXn? How much unsafe assets are held by life companies of $APO $HRG $GS ? $$

 

Market Dynamics

  • Murray International?s Stout Says Stocks Too Expensive http://stks.co/aVhD? This means invest in cash, long Tsys or gold if correct $$
  • Bargain-Hunting Buoys Treasurys [sic] http://stks.co/rEBC? Strength Returns as Bargain-Hunters Appear, but Prices Still Fall 4 the Week $$
  • EVERGREEN VIRTUAL ADVISOR http://stks.co/eVjh? A very good publication this week. If u beg, u can get on the distribution list. $$
  • Richard Band notes that the S&P 500?s prices-to-sales ratio is 1.5 to 1, almost 60% above its average since 1955 http://stks.co/gX6Z? $$
  • Paul Tudor Jones: Macro trading, babies r a ?killer? 2a woman?s focus http://stks.co/gX54? Any significant outside activity harms focus $$
  • Is This the Best Time for Investors? Don’t Bet On It http://stks.co/cVSF? Long term valuation measures r flashing red, play defense $$
  • 3 articles on gold http://stks.co/pE4K? & http://stks.co/sDwa? & http://stks.co/rDwK? New hedging, record shorting, paper gold $$ $GLD
  • Follow the Leader @mktanthropology http://stks.co/jWlB? Global economy feeling deflationary; stock markets poised to follow down $$
  • Goldman raises S&P 500 targets through 2015 http://stks.co/gWYI? Not impossible historically, but not likely, profit margins would b2hi $$
  • James Surowiecki: Is There a Stock-Market Bubble? http://stks.co/sDac? Argues profit margins sustainable: lower taxes, globalization $$
  • Looking for Investments With Higher Yields in a Low Interest-Rate World http://stks.co/pDgr? Grab hi yields now= walk tightrope; no net $$
  • Gold in Yen and SP500 and Bitcoin : Back to the Future http://stks.co/fWYb? Gold almost back to peak in yen terms & much more $$
  • Gold Bear Bets Reach Record as Soros Cuts Holdings http://stks.co/jWKK? Market delivers pain to the gold longs: bears now overextended? $$
  • Gold Rebounded After Moody?s Says U.S. May Face Downgrade http://stks.co/qDZq? People want certainty somewhere, whether in Govt or gold $$
  • Junk Stocks Spur Broadest Equity Advance Since 1995 http://stks.co/qDZm? Highly indebted firms take the lead in the equity market $$

US Politics & Economic Policy

  • Obama Bully Pulpit Bullied With Congress Probes Obscuring Agenda http://stks.co/jWz8? Maybe we should limit Presidents to one 4-yr term $$
  • Fannie Mae Profiting as Market Middleman Angers Lenders http://stks.co/sEB4? If we really want 2wind down F&F, we should end purchases $$
  • Goldman Sachs Research Disputes TBTF Subsidy http://stks.co/aVW5? In quiet times, advantage difficult to detect, easy during crisis $$
  • Unaccountable Executive http://stks.co/rDwj? If President doesn’t run government, who does? Can delegate authority, not responsibility $$
  • The Prisoner?s Dilemma of Central Banks [pdf] http://stks.co/rDwg? Everyone has an incentive 2 inflate, which leaves everyone worse off $$
  • The Fed Is Squeezing the Shadow-Banking System http://stks.co/tDy5? As they should: repo market was a big part of the financial crisis $$
  • The FED & F-35: Still no Rules of Engagement http://stks.co/pDwg? The Fed doesn’t know what they are doing; making it up, smiling a lot $$
  • Sheila Bair: Dodd-Frank really did end taxpayer bailouts http://stks.co/jWPv? Will follow BK pecking order, after that charge industry $$
  • Naming Names in the Dodd Frank Mess http://stks.co/jWPr? Mark Wetjen manages to stymie Dodd-Frank reforms; some of it is good, some bad $$
  • What Strong Dollar? US Boom Provides Oil Hedge http://stks.co/tDcb? W/more energy produced in the US, $$ has less impact on oil prices
  • White House urges Senate to cut crop insurance in farm bill http://stks.co/cV18? Difficult to beat the Ag lobby on crop insurance $$
  • Health Law Costs: Employers Eye Bare-Bones Plans http://stks.co/tDXo? Obamacare messes up the health system; avg person less well-off $$
  • Puerto Rico Statehood Bid Gets New Push http://stks.co/pDdM? Sensing future bankruptcy, Puerto Rico reconsiders a permanent liege-lord $$
  • Does Rand Paul’s Rise Signal A Broader Libertarian Moment? http://stks.co/aV62? Somehow I think this one will end in disappointment too $$
  • US Immigration Plan Encounters Business-Labor Rift http://stks.co/hWgM? Fascinating how seeming certainty of immigration bill has gone $$
  • The end of QE? http://stks.co/rDKW? @izakaminska tells us why more QE won’t help, & why the process will have to end soon. $$ #becareful

Rest of the World

  • Turkey Moves 2Curb Alcohol Sales http://stks.co/hXJT? This will b an interesting test of govt power; vodka is delivered quietly in Iran $$
  • Foreign Fighters Enter Syria to Defend Shiites and Al-Assad Regime http://stks.co/tEAp? “Islam is a religion of peace” “Islam is a…” $$
  • The Great Chinese Property Bubble: a Wall of Worry? http://stks.co/pEH3? 2 much 2 occupy; prices 2 high; enough debt 2b troublesome $$
  • BRICS risk ‘sudden stop’ as dollar rally builds http://stks.co/cVY1? EM blowups often preceded by rise in $$ | Good 4 EM exporters though
  • Wrong:Avoid These 3 Stocks on Japan, Says Expert http://stks.co/dVX1? An expert that doesn’t understand insurance trashes $AFL | FD:+ $AFL
  • Asia Goes on a Debt Binge as Much of World Sobers Up http://stks.co/sE8v? Over-indebted economies don’t grow rapidly; complexity chokes $$
  • 2 articles on Japan http://stks.co/fWuS? & http://stks.co/hX67? Rising bond yields & trade deficit, monetary policy drives both $$
  • Two articles on the Tokyo market rout http://stks.co/qE7K? & http://stks.co/rE2d? Abenomics is stretching the limits of the possible $$
  • Nobel Laureate Phelps Warns Against EU as Iceland Abandons Talks http://stks.co/fWui? Iceland gets smart, doesn’t join the Eurozone $$
  • Death in Parched Farm Field Reveals Growing India Water Tragedy http://stks.co/cVN6? Water shortages r big factor 4 India’s development $$
  • The Abenomics Experiment: Major Risks for Banks http://stks.co/gWlx? If interest rates rise 2much, banks in Japan go to neg net worth $$
  • Experts call for urgent measures to tackle debt http://stks.co/qDtR? One advantage of US over China; we resolve troubled debts better $$
  • Stockholm Riots Continue for Third Night http://stks.co/gWlk? If this can happen in Stockholm, it can happen in a lot of other places 2 $$
  • Hollande Bonds Without AAA Shine Brighter Than Gold http://stks.co/dUzy? Similar things worked 4 Japan 4a while, but now may b shifting $$
  • World?s Biggest Volatility Jump Spurs Fund Outflow http://stks.co/gWTm? Investors invest outside Japan 2 escape perpetually falling yen $$
  • China April housing inflation quickens to two year high http://stks.co/fWM5? Chinese inflation is the endgame for many globally $$ #theend

Wrong

Other

  • Soldiers Turn Entrepreneurs as One Million Exit Military http://stks.co/gX55? Military training has similarities w/entrepreneurship $$
  • The Exercise Equivalent of a Cheeseburger? http://stks.co/cVY6? Exercise is good; too much exercise is worse than little exercise $$
  • How Rail is Reshaping America?s Energy System http://stks.co/iWqJ? Summary piece on how tank cars r taking cheap fuel to the coasts $$
  • Wined, Dined, Canned http://stks.co/tDq6? Inside the insiders game that is the Cannes film festival $$ Movie about the business of movies
  • ?Teen?s invention could charge cellphone in 20 seconds http://stks.co/eVD0? Wonder how stable supercapacitor will b? Might b an issue $$
  • ??I?m going to be setting the world on fire,? she said. http://stks.co/jWPq? Having seen overpowered capacitors burn, could b literal $$
  • The Tech Innovator Who Almost Killed Saddam Hussein http://stks.co/dV1x? Long interesting article; Sabra becomes rich computer maven $$
  • Getting Along With the Original Other Woman?Your Mother-in-Law http://stks.co/iWbp? Husbands, support your wives. Mothers, bow out $$
  • New Rival Emerging for Bloomberg Chat http://stks.co/bV4p? Bloomberg may learn the hard way: messaging security can’t be compromised $$

Comments, Replies, & Retweets

  • @Sir_Strangelove Had not caught that, thanks for correcting me
  • “There is one thing you neglected: Baa bond yields are 3% lower than in 1999. That roughly comports?” ? D_Merkel http://disq.us/8d7ha9? $$
  • @joshuademasi It’s like long-tail reinsurers in the mid-’80s, most were technically insolvent, but book capital was +; losses eaten slowly
  • “Jeff Matthews is correct; Dealbook, though usually good, is wrong.” ? David_Merkel http://disq.us/8d735b? $$
  • “This is a failure of the regulators, that they let this happen at all. They have the power to top it” ? D_Merkel http://disq.us/8d730h?
  • @danielckoontz I know that dividend swaps exist, can imagine the possibility of leverage, don’t think it’s done much though, I hope
  • @danielckoontz So long as there isn’t any leverage on the person holding the dividend paying stocks, generally it should self-limit

FWIW

  • My week on twitter: 35 retweets received, 1 new listings, 66 new followers, 30 mentions. Via: http://20ft.net/p?
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