Revealed: Buffett’s ‘Magic’ Formula For Beating The Market
Of the 11 sectors covered by S&P Capital IQ, only one is on track for lower profits in 2013: technology.
The profit anemia stems from several factors, including:
- Extremely low levels of government spending due to the current sequester.
- Depressed sales activity in Europe. The tech sector has more exposure to Europe than any other sector.
- A lack of any hot new products or trends to trigger interest among buyers.
#-ad_banner-#Yet as we’ve noted many times, several tech firms are sitting on stunning levels of cash. Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO), Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT), Oracle (Nasdaq: ORCL) and others may have a hard time generating organic growth, but they have a long track record of acquisitions to help get the needle moving.
Though it’s unwise to buy a stock simply because you suspect it is a buyout candidate, you can’t ignore a company’s appeal in a merger and acquisition (M&A) scenario if it has a strong base of technology or an impressive customer list. And you surely need to pay attention if that stock has recently traded sharply lower, creating more compelling valuations for a potential buyer — or simply on a stand-alone basis.
Here are two slumping tech stocks that now hold solid value in light of their considerable growth prospects and market positioning.
Palo Alto Networks | |||||||||
Those partnerships have helped fuel triple-digit annual sales growth for five straight years, and sales are on track to rise another 50% this year to around $400 million. Still, the “laws of bigness” are starting to kick in and sales growth could slip below 40%. Slowing growth may explain why this stock has suddenly fallen out of favor. Another explanation for falling shares: Management has decided to sharply boost headcount (from a recent 950 to roughly 1,400 a year from now) to help keep sales growth above 35% for the foreseeable future. That hiring spree is eating into near-term profits. Right now, Palo Alto is the fourth-largest network security firm behind Cisco, Juniper Networks (NYSE: JNPR) and Check Point Software Technologies (Nasdaq: CHKP). However, other companies involved in network management — such as Microsoft, IBM (NYSE: IBM) and Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ) — have reportedly been eyeing the security niche in recent years, thanks to its robust growth prospects. Palo Alto Networks would quickly make them one of the leading security vendors in terms of software functionality. Analysts at JMP Securities “believe Palo Alto leverages significant technology advantages in the next-generation firewall market,” and they see shares rebounding toward a $60 price target. |
Fusion-io | |||||||||
I have written about Fusion-io (NYSE: FIO) several times in the past (and you can always read about any stocks we cover by typing the ticker symbol into our search box), and I’ve repeatedly taken note of the company’s radical and game-changing approach to data storage management. That confusion has led to a shake-up in management and a 55% drop in the stock from the 52-week high. Yet even with that turmoil, this is still a fast-growing business. Sales shot up from $36 million in fiscal 2010 to $359 million in fiscal 2012, and analysts see that figure exceeding $550 million in Fusion-io’s current fiscal year, which began this week. |
Risks to Consider: Never buy a stock solely on the basis of buyout hopes. Instead, look at possible M&A activity as a potential catalyst.
Action to Take –> It’s hardly a bold move to predict that we will see major transactions in the technology sector in the second half of this year. Deal-making is the lifeblood of this sector, and cash-rich balance sheets, along with an anemic top-line organic growth, set the stage for more deals. Whichever tech stock you are researching, analyze them in the context of the broader landscape. Do the companies you’re looking at have the right products or customer bases that would hold appeal to bigger players? Those traits have been markers for success in the past.
P.S. — Part of investing is finding opportunities no one is talking about, like finding a potential M&A target. The reverse is true, too, for a special class of “spin-off” companies. That’s why we recently put together a special report on 17 little-known firms. Because of the way they were formed, these companies have beaten the market 7-to-1 in the past decade and raised dividends as much as 600% — yet most investors don’t understand them at all. To get the names and tickers of some of these stocks immediately, click here.