24 Feb 2008 08:18:53 | Hari Wibowo
Earning Season is always volatile to stock prices. Traders jerk
in and out depending on the outcome of the report. For example,
Texas Instrument (TXN) reported that its third quarter earning
of 2005 rising 12% year over year. And yet, TXN fell after hour
due to weak forecast. The game now is the expectation game. If
the company beats, share price normally rise. If it doesn't,
share price plunge.
There are ways to beat the expectation game and reduce
volatility to your portfolio. You do not have to wait for the
press release and wait nervously whether your company beat or
miss expectation. One way is to buy company with a modest
expectation.. The definition of modest varies among individuals
but to me, modest expectation has a forward P/E ratio of less
than 10. What happens when a company with modest expectation
miss expectation? While, share price may get clobbered, I don't
think it will move much. Why? Because P/E of 10 already
incorporates a 0% EPS growth. Even if EPS stays constant for the
next ten years, company with P/E of 10 will return its
shareholder roughly 10% a year.
Another way is to pick company that has predictable cash flow
and dividend payment. Investors hate uncertainty. Companies that
pay dividends eliminate some of that uncertainty. For example, a
stock has a 4% dividend yield and it misses expectation for the
quarter. The stock might tumble, pushing the dividend yield up
to 4.2 or 4.5 %. By then, a lot of value investors will be
interested in owning the stock and the drop in stock price will
be less severe.
Finally, the last way to reduce volatility is to pick up
companies with cash rich balance sheet. Some companies may have
cash up to half of their market capitalization. For example,
OmniVision Technologies Inc. (OVTI) has a market capitalization
of $ 720 M. It has $ 300M in net cash, about 41.6% of market
cap. With $ 300 M in cash cushion, it is hard to imagine the
company to have market capitalization below $ 300 M. It is
possible, but it is uncommon.
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