This blog is devoted to helping investors make informed decisions. It will be regularly updated and provide opinions on earnings results. It is not intended to give investment advice and should not be taken as such. Consult your investment advisor.
t has been a somewhat perplexing reporting season for many
companies in cyclical industries. I’ve detected a recurring trend with a
number of technology and industrial companies. Simply put, Q4 of last
year ended quite strongly, and encouraged a sense of optimism that many
companies haven't lived up to in 2013. The result is that many warned
and lowered guidance.
Is now the time to take advantage of lowered expectations and
cheaper share prices? I want to look at three factors that might help
you make your mind up.
IT Staffing Companies are reporting good growth
Following the earnings misses at tech bellwethers like IBM and Oracle(NASDAQ: ORCL)
investors in staffing companies must have been fearing the worst over
prospects for their tech operations in their upcoming results. However,
the reality turned out much better than most could have predicted.
On Assignment(NYSE: ASGN)
is a staffing company that generates the majority of its revenues from
the IT sector. It reported a strong start to the year and guided towards
the high end of its previous full year forecast. Its IT end markets
were cited as being particularly strong- with the largest growth coming
from healthcare, telecoms & media. Overall revenue was up 13.6% and
the stock rose double digits in response. Moreover, the outlook for its
tech sector was flat for Q2 vs. Q1; in other words it is not reporting
any sequential slowdown, and strong demand will continue.
In addition, Robert Half International (NYSE: RHI)
reported good results within technology. Overall its numbers were a bit
disappointing, but this is largely due to weaker European results. In
comparison the US numbers were in line with expectations, and it
declared that this was the first quarter in years in which its tech
operations had reported sequential improvement. Investors will hope it
can stabilize its European operations.
My view is that the strength that the staffing companies have
seen in tech is a consequence of underlying structural strength. Whereas
the weakness reported by the software companies is more of a tactical
response to fears over sequestration.
Business survey’s are indicating strength
If this is a tactical issue –which could be resolved pretty
quickly- then business surveys should be showing underlying strength. I
find the Duke University Fuqua CFO Business Outlook Survey to be a useful indicator of corporate spending plans.
I’ve broken out the key data that interests us:
It’s clear from the graph that capital and technology spending
tends to lag the earnings growth outlook. This is also intuitively true
because if revenues are rising then the spending needed to service it
should grow too. Note also that employment plans appear to be improving
this year.
It sounds good, but we still need to reconcile this sort of
survey data with the reality that tech spending was weak in Q1. My view
is that, again, this is due to some sensitivity over short term events
rather than an underlying malaise.
We’ve seen this before
If this argument holds, then we should have seen elements of it
previously. Political and economic uncertainties have been with us for a
while, and they are not going away anytime soon. In a sense I think
businesses have become hyper-sensitive to them. As I’ve articulated in an article here,
corporations and individuals have cleaned up their balance sheets and
debt situations. It’s now time for the government to do so.
The current worries are over the effects of the sequester on
the economy and they were around last year too. They hit their zenith in
Q3 over ‘fiscal cliff’ worries. I would argue that this is why we saw
such a relatively strong Q4 in technology. In other words, firms held
off from spending in Q3, which then got released in the next quarter.
For example, IBM talked of US orders falling off a cliff in
September and spooked the market, only to report a strong quarter in the
next set of results. Guess what? IBM missed estimates this time around
as sequester fears kicked in. Oracle also gave a disappointing set of
numbers this quarter and blamed it on internal execution. Even smaller
companies like F5 Networks(NASDAQ: FFIV), Fortinet, Citrix Systems,TIBCO Software and others have warned over profits.
Fascinatingly, they have all said a similar thing with regards
their pipelines. None have seen them reduce –as they might in a
systematic slowdown- but rather that there was a failure to convert them
into orders. The reasons for this differ with the individual companies.
F5 and Fortinet saw notably weaker performance from telcos, Oracle
blamed sales execution, IBM blamed a mix of things, while Citrix Systems
said a new solution caused order delays.
Of these companies I think TIBCO may be facing competitive
pressures, and F5 Networks' near-term prospects are somewhat made
unclear, thanks to its product refresh taking place. These things can
take a quarter or two to work themselves through, so anyone looking for a
tech stock to play a 'bounce back' may want to be a bit cautious with
it for now. In addition, Citrix reported a good quarter with its rival
Netscaler product, so it may well be taking market share from F5.
I think that they all experienced some tactical reluctance
amongst customers, with many of them adopting the same ‘wait and see’
approach that they did in Q3.
The bottom line
If this thesis is correct, then this is not the time to go
underweight in technology, and investors should hold their nerve with
some of the disappointing results we have seen in the quarter. If Q2
bounces back in the way that Q4 did, then the sector could outperform in
the coming months.
No comments:
Post a Comment