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Cabot Wealth Advisory 11/14/11 - Toyota Prius, Tata Nano, Tesla Roadster and More
Released on 2013-09-09 00:00 GMT
Email-ID |
1317034 |
|---|---|
Date |
2011-11-14 22:45:00 |
From |
TimothyLutts@cabotwealth.com |
To |
megan.headley@stratfor.com |
Cabot Wealth Advisory
11/14/11 - Toyota Prius, Tata Nano, Tesla Roadster and More
Cabot
Wealth Advisory Logo
Toyota Prius, Tata Nano, Tesla Roadster
and More
November 14, 2011 Timothy photo
Salem,
Massachusetts Timothy Lutts
By Timothy Lutts [IMG]
[IMG] [IMG] [IMG]
---
Toyota Prius, Tata
Nano, Tesla Roaster and More
The Automotive Revolution
The Best Stock of the Bunch
---
Investment Digest Ad
These are exciting
times for observers of the automobile industry ... and
for a
small percentage of investors in it.
The Toyota Prius
has become the poster child of the hybrid car movement,
leading
a growing range of hybrid offerings--including the massive
Cadillac Escalade-- from nearly every manufacturer.
Pure
electric cars are just beginning to emerge, with the Chevy Volt and
Nissan Leaf targeting the mass market and Tesla aiming
higher.
And as these technologies improve and gasoline
and diesel-burning engines
are gradually displaced from our
roads, the result will be lower
pollution, better health and
lower oil prices, too.
But investing in automobile
companies is difficult, not least because this
is a mature
industry.
More than four years ago, in September 2007,
I surveyed all the publicly
traded automobile manufacturers,
asking if there were any that were
attractive investments,
based on either valuation or growth.
And I ranked them
from best to worse.
Here's a much-abbreviated version
of my comments then.
"Nissan (NSANY) ... having
its lunch eaten by Toyota.
"Ford (F) ... being
killed by legacy costs, ... by some measures, it's a
screaming
bargain, but only if the company can find its way back to
profitability.
"General Motors (GM) ... also
cheap ... but earnings estimates have been
cut ... and the
stock has been weak for most of this year.
"Honda
(HMC) ... a fine track record of growing both revenues and earnings
... but the stock has only equaled the market's performance
over the past
five years.
"Toyota (TM) ...
the most expensive major carmaker in the world, measured
by
price to sales ratio. Trouble is, it's performed no better than the
broad market over the past 12 years.
"DaimlerChrysler
(DAI) ... sells at just 58% of annual revenues ... and
it's
in an uptrend, so it's probably a decent investment here.
"Tata
Motors (TTM) ... is a real growth story! ... Not as cheap as the
preceding companies ... but it's got great growth prospects.
"Volkswagen (VLKAY) ... is hitting new highs ...
both revenues and
earnings are on growth tracks ... the most
successful foreign automaker in
China. In short, I like it."
And how have these stocks done since?
Well,
in the short term, Volkswagen was the top performer, climbing 255%
from the time of my recommendation to its October 2008 peak
as investors
fled from American automakers that were nearing
extinction. It's now 27%
below that 2007 point and not
particularly attractive.
But in the long-term, the top
performer has been Ford, which did find its
way back to
profitability (wisely passing up a government handout on the
way),
and is up 37% since that week in 2007 (after falling 88% along the
way ... could you have held on through that?). But the stock
is weaker
than Volkswagen's and analysts are predicting
reduced earnings in both
2011 and 2012, so it's not
attractive to me.
As to the others:
While
all Japanese automakers were hurt by the March tsunami, there are
bigger problems. Honda and Toyota are both having their lunch
eaten by
Hyundai/Kia of Korea. Revenues at both Japanese
companies peaked in 2008
and their stocks are in downtrends.
And investors in Toyota have lost 45%
since 2007; that's
partly a consequence of the stock being the most highly
valued
back then.
Nissan is slightly better, having posted
record revenues in fiscal 2011.
But its stock is a yawn.
Daimler looks terrible. Revenues peaked way back in
2005 and the stock is
down 52% since 2007.
General
Motors looks no better. Revenues peaked in 2006, and the stock has
been steadily underperforming the market since the government
sold it back
to the public a year ago.
In short,
the stocks of all well-known automakers are unattractive.
You
shouldn't buy them for the dividends. The biggest payer is Tata,
which
pays 2.2% per year.
And you shouldn't buy
them for value. None of these companies qualifies
for the Top
250 Value Stocks list of Cabot Benjamin Graham Value Letter.
But
in the case of two companies, you might invest for growth!
The
first is Tata Motors, whose stock has been weak in the recent
difficult market, but may have turned the corner. The company
has seen
revenues grow every year of the past decade, and
analysts are looking for
record revenues and earnings in
2012. Tata's after-tax profit margin is a
healthy 5.9%.
Additionally, the company's Indian labor force is
cost-competitive, and Tata's ability to sell into that market
as the
middle class grows is tops. Finally, Tata has a broad
product line,
ranging from the tiny Nano--the world's
cheapest production car--to luxury
cars made by Jaguar and
LandRover, which Tata bought from cash-strapped
Ford in 2008.
So the stock is worth keeping an eye on.
The second,
and most exciting company, is Tesla (TSLA), which came public
in
June 2010 at 17, and is now trading at 34, just 6% off its all-time
high.
If you're into cars, you probably know more
about Tesla's electric cars
than I can tell you here, but if
you're not, you should pay attention.
I'll give you the
main points right up front.
While Toyota has blanketed
the U.S. with milquetoast hybrid Priuses,
following the
standard old automakers' game plan, and the Chevy Volt and
Nissan
Leaf are uninspiring "appliances," Tesla has done
something
different. It has built cars that are thrilling to
drive. And from its
headquarters in Silicon Valley, it's been
acting like a high-tech company!
And why not,
considering that co-founder and current CEO Elon Musk made
his
fortune by selling PayPal to eBay for $1.5 billion?!
While
there are five official co-founders of Tesla, Musk looms large in
the story because he used much of his own money to bankroll
the project,
supplemented in time by money from private
investors--as well as $465
million from the U.S. Department
of Energy. Last year's IPO was just the
latest chapter of
financing, and possibly the last.
From the beginning,
the goal of the company has been to create and sell
affordable
mass-market vehicles that would have a material impact on oil
consumption. But Tesla hasn't yet targeted the mass market!
Its first step was to build and sell two-seat electric
sports cars costing
$109,000. It's sold more than 2,000 of
these Roadsters (in 30 countries)
and will stop after 2,500.
The revenues from that effort are driving work on the
company's next car,
the Model S, a sedan that sells for
$57,400. Tesla has already taken
reservations for more than
6,000, and will begin deliveries next year. It
also expects
to offer an SUV (Model X) based on the same platform, and
begin
deliveries of those in 2014.
Tesla Model S photo
Photo
courtesy of www.teslamotors.com
And the profits from
those cars will fund development of a mass-market
car, priced
around $30,000, that will compete with the likes of the Toyota
Camry, Honda Accord and Ford Taurus.
This
strategy mimics the way successful Silicon Valley companies launch
products; hit the rich early adopters first, then drive costs
down to
serve the mass market.
Furthermore, Tesla
has boosted its cash flow by inking major deals with
Daimler
and Toyota for its proprietary powertrain systems ... which tells
me these components are the best!
The company's
revenues were $15 million in 2008, $112 million in 2009 and
$117
million in 2010. Next year could bring in $550 million, as the
Model
S hits the streets. And Musk promises a profit in 2013.
In conclusion, Tesla looks like one of the stars of the
evolving
automotive revolution.
While recent
history has left the roadside littered with old names
(Mercury,
Plymouth, Pontiac and Saturn are dead, and Saab is comatose),
Tesla is a fast-growing young company with minimal debt
burdens and no
retirees with costly pensions!
So
what to do? You could simply buy the stock today and hope for the
best.
Or you could take a no-risk subscription to Cabot Top
Ten Trader, which
recommended the stock back on September 26,
when it was trading at 26, and
continues to update
subscribers in each issue.
I recommend the latter,
because this stock could be very big, and having
expert
guidance will help you make the most of it.
For more
details, click here.
Yours in pursuit of wisdom and
wealth,
Timothy signature
Timothy Lutts
Publisher
Cabot Wealth Advisory
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