U.S. Investing

Enjoy a Tale of Two Tech Titans in the Age of COVID

This was a watershed week for every investor who wanted to see how the global economy is weathering the coronavirus shutdown.

After a season of questions, we’re finally getting big answers from Silicon Valley and the results are mixed. I like transparency to see which companies are rising to the occasion and which companies are simply drifting, since it helps us pick future winners and losers in the market.

After all, we’ve lived through a period where a staggering 93% of all stocks have been pushed into 10% correction territory simply because investors no longer had any way to separate strength from weakness. Now we know.

Amazon Reaps the Retail Whirlwind

Let’s start at the top and see how a few of the world’s biggest technology companies are diverging as the pandemic drags on. Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) grabbed the spotlight once Wall Street figured out that people confronted with empty supermarket shelves could still shop online.

That’s the “new American economy” I’ve been talking about on my Millionaire Makers radio. Have you been listening? (Click here for recorded episodes and local stations.)

But the stock looks like the happy days are over for the time being. As it turns out, delivering all those boxes last quarter added no more than $2 billion to the sales that Amazon’s Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Jeff Bezos expected before the pandemic kicked in.

Three months ago, he was feeling pretty good about hitting $73 billion if everything went his way. He ended up with $75 billion. That’s real money to you and me, but it’s only an extra 2% on the growth rate. It doesn’t move the needle on a trillion-dollar company.

And when that nudge comes at the cost of wiping out ALL profit for the foreseeable future, it’s bad news. Keeping those packages flying is going to cost Amazon an extra $4 billion this quarter alone.

Extra expenses include protective masks and overtime for skittish employees in the warehouse. The company now is filling 175,000 emergency positions. More boxes than ever need to get filled and shipped, only now under “social distancing” rules. And what’s the reward for all that?

Bezos speculates that he might book $81 billion in revenue at the high-end this quarter. Wall Street was looking for $78 billion anyway. He is literally spending $4 billion in order to capture $3 billion at best.

No profit for the foreseeable future means no reason to buy the stock at a lofty $2,500. Now it’s below $2,400. When potential profit increases appeared ahead, we could make an informed decision whether the multiples worked out right. With no such extra profit, there is no need to do the math.

Rock-solid Apple

Mighty Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) has reported, and all the coronavirus outbreak was able to do was keep the top line roughly where it was last year. That’s CEO Tim Cook’s achievement here. He held the line.

All the growth he was hoping to see in the quarter went up in smoke. Phone sales are still down 24% over the last two years. This is a declining business. Everyone can see that.

Even Cook’s greatest accounting tricks can’t hide the hole the fading iPhone boom leaves behind. His precious “services” are expanding 16% a year, and the Apple Watch is finally making Wearable Computing happen. But on both, the base is so low that all that growth barely balances weakness across the hardware side.

It is going to take another couple of seasons before the new business really come into its own. Until then, the best outcome Cook has been able to engineer, in this time of COVID-19, is a stall. That stall continues to this day. He won’t issue any guidance.

That said, it’s not the end of the world. People who want Apple gadgets are buying them online. As Tim Cook says, demand is picking up again. All he needs is for the economy to open again.

Meanwhile, he keeps buying back stock to make soft results look a little stronger. Apple clawed back 55 million shares last quarter, shrinking the float by another 1%. Over the last three years, the company has spent $232 billion on buybacks.

Tim Cook still has enough dry powder to keep it up for years. He just launched a fresh $50 billion repurchase program. There’s close to $200 billion on the balance sheet behind that. Apple isn’t going away any time soon. I just want to know if it’s going anywhere “interesting” in the immediate future.

It isn’t growing fast, but it isn’t collapsing either. Apple is now the kind of stock that forms the backbone of my Value Authority when the timing works out. But it’s a long way from the go-go growth days when the iPhone was the hottest thing on the planet.

Hilary Kramer

Hilary Kramer is an investment analyst and portfolio manager with 30 years of experience on Wall Street. The Financial Times describes Ms. Kramer as “A one-woman financial investment powerhouse” and The Economist distinguishes her as “one of the best-known investors in America”. Ms. Kramer is often quoted in publications such as the Wall Street Journal, New York Post, Bloomberg, and Reuters. She is a frequent guest commentator on CNBC, CBS, Fox News and Bloomberg, providing investment insight and economic analysis. Ms. Kramer was an analyst and investment banker at Morgan Stanley and Lehman Brothers.  Ms. Kramer founded and ran a long-short hedge fund and has been chief investment officer overseeing debt and equity portfolios. Since 2010, Ms. Kramer’s financial publications have provided stock analysis and investment advice to her subscribers.  Her products include GameChangers, Value Authority, High Octane Trader, Triple-Digit Trader, 2-Day Trader, IPO Edge and Inner Circle. Ms. Kramer, a Certified Fraud Examiner, has also testified as an expert in investment suitability, risk management, compliance, executive compensation, and corporate governance. Ms. Kramer received her MBA from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania and her BA with honors from Wellesley College. Ms. Kramer has provided testimony regarding investment policy to the U.S. Senate and is a frequent speaker on the markets, portfolio management and securities fraud and compliance. Ms. Kramer is also the author of “Ahead of the Curve” (Simon & Schuster 2007) and “The Little Book of Big Profits from Small Stocks” (Wiley 2012).

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