Strategas – Wealth Management Industry

This is a very good read from Strategas that broadly discusses the landscape of wealth management. Here is an excerpt that gives an outline of the paper:

“In one way, what was old is new again. The importance of the fiduciary and the provision of holistic, relationship-driven, risk-based advisory services has moved firms to again covet the same affluent clients that bank trust departments worked for 50 years ago – there are just so many more of them. We will explore the re-emergence of the fiduciary and ponder some of the implications on the business.”

Peter Malone, CFA

Research Analyst

Direct: 617.226.0030

Fax: 617.523.8118

Crestwood Advisors

One Liberty Square

Suite 500

Boston, MA 02109

www.crestwoodadvisors.com

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Strategas – Summer Essay Series.pdf

Strategas – Magnitude of Repatriation

Attached is a piece from Strategas that discusses repatriation, fiscal policy, and global tariffs. While many of these numbers are forward projections or estimates, Strategas does make a few major points:

1.) Total Repatriation: they estimate that U.S. companies repatriated $200 billion in Q2 bringing the total amount for the calendar year up to $500 billion; based on these projections, they are trending at $1 trillion of fiscal policy for 2018

2.) Repatriation & Tariffs: tariffs are broadly poor economic policy and can have long term effects on the global economy; however, in the short term, approximately $38 billion in global tariffs will be implemented in 2018 while Cisco alone has repatriated $67 billion so far this year. The potential for shareholder return and/or corporate growth driven by repatriation far exceeds the dollar effects from tariffs to this point

3.) Use of Cash: while some money is being given to shareholders in the form of dividends or buybacks, paying down debt is the most cited use of cash by companies in the S&P 500; this includes increased pension contributions (closing the gap for underfunded pensions) as the tax bill let companies make pension contributions through September at a 35% tax reduction (2017 rate)

Net Dividends from Foreign Subsidiaries – up to 3.4% of GDP if $700 billion gets repatriated

Calendar Year 2018 – Tax cuts vs. tariffs

Use of Repatriation – Announcements from S&P 500 Companies

Peter Malone, CFA

Research Analyst

Direct: 617.226.0030

Fax: 617.523.8118

Crestwood Advisors

One Liberty Square

Suite 500

Boston, MA 02109

www.crestwoodadvisors.com

PLEASE NOTE!

We moved! Please note our new location above!

Strategas Repatriation 8.30.18.pdf

Uncommon Sense – Emerging Market Equities

Attached is the most recent “Uncommon Sense” piece put out by Michael Arone and SSGA. In this article, he suggests that now may be the time to substantially increase an allocation to emerging market equities.

We are currently comfortable with our emerging market weights in our portfolios, but this provides a different perspective on the state of the asset class. Mr. Arone’s optimism is based on the following:

Continue reading “Uncommon Sense – Emerging Market Equities”

By the Numbers – A look at the housing market

Attached is the “By the Numbers” piece from MFS.

Below are two interesting stats about the housing markets in the United States:

“Just 1 out of every 23 home mortgages in America (4.36%) was at least 1 payment past due as of the 2nd quarter 2018. That result is an improvement from the 1 out of every 10 home mortgages (9.85%) that was at least 1 payment past due as of the 2nd quarter 2010 or 8 years earlier.”

“American households headed by individuals under the age of 35 were split 44/56 between homeowners and renters in the 2nd quarter 2004, i.e., 14 years ago. American households headed by individuals under the age of 35 were split 36/64 between homeowners and renters in the 2nd quarter 2018”

While the first numbers indicate that the overall creditworthiness of Americans has improved, the second stat could imply that younger generations are burdened with other debt (student loans), making it difficult to take on the financial responsibility of a mortgage.

Peter Malone, CFA

Research Analyst

Direct: 617.226.0030

Fax: 617.523.8118

Crestwood Advisors

One Liberty Square

Suite 500

Boston, MA 02109

www.crestwoodadvisors.com

PLEASE NOTE!

We moved! Please note our new location above!

BTN 8-27-18.pdf

Hilton Note & Slide

I did a write-up on Hilton. Sorry, it got a bit long, but if you weren’t at the presentation and feel like reading it, I think it’s a helpful run through of the Hilton story.

Hilton is a hotel operator with a portfolio of 5,400 hotels and 880k rooms under 14 different brands. A six level “chain scale” spanning from luxury to economy defines quality in the hotel industry and Hilton’s brands participate in all but economy. This gives them chain scale diversity and, with their global portfolio, they also spread their bets geographically. Their key brands are Hilton, Hilton Garden Inn, Hampton Inn and DoubleTree – together they are about 80% of their portfolio. They have 12% market share in the US and 5% globally. Similar to the other major hotel brands (e.g. Marriott and IHG), Hilton has been evolving to an asset-light model, meaning they generally don’t own hotels which results in a less volatile revenue stream and means they can grow faster and grow with other people’s capital. Their product is their brand, their technology, their know-how and their millions of loyalty members. There is a network effect that stems from their brand and scale which is their moat. Like all network effects, the power is in its virtuous cycle which propels growth. Scale leads to more scale. In 2007, Blackstone took them private and accelerated this transition to asset-light, which concluded in a tax-free spinoff of PK (REIT) and HGV (timeshare) in early 2017, four years after they returned to the public markets.

The global hotel industry is fragmented and underpenetrated. The US accounts for about 5 million of the 17 million global hotel room supply. That means they have 30% of hotel rooms with about 4% of the population. Granted, domestic population is not a perfect measure of adequate room supply because it’s not the only demand driver – international travelers account for about 8% of room night demand in the US (this number is vastly higher in some markets like Miami and New York). But domestic and international travelers will mutually be growing sources of demand in other markets too. As global GDP grows, the global middle class grows and people travel more. International arrivals, a measure of cross-border travel, is expected to CAGR about 3% for the next decade and global travel spending is expected to CAGR 7%. Safe to say, the less than 2 rooms per 1000 people penetration in markets with massive middle class growth potential (e.g. China, India, Brazil) vs the 16 rooms per 1000 people in the US, is not enough. This is against a backdrop of a global hotel pipeline of close to 1.8m rooms, or 10% growth over the next few years which is a low-single-digit CAGR. So, there is opportunity for new units and, though this can vary by market, in general supply doesn’t look poised to outstrip demand.

There is also opportunity for unit growth within existing supply because this is a fragmented market and it’s getting harder for independents to compete. Brands dominate in the US, making up around 70% of the market. Internationally, most markets hover between 20% to 25% brand penetration. In the US, the top 5 brands are about 50% and those same top 5 are only 25% of global share. In general, there is a secular shift to brand affiliation because the economics are better. Overall, Hilton rooms command a premium vs like rooms because of brand power, quality standards, and their 78 million member loyalty network. Being part of the Hilton brand also means lower distribution costs. For example, online travel agent (OTA) fees (e.g. Booking and Expedia) are hugely burdensome for independent hotels. They can be 20% or more of room revenue depending on the market. Hilton can both negotiate lower fees and reduce the mix of rooms booked through OTA’s because their loyalty network drives almost 60% direct booking of their total room nights. Roughly speaking, for a hotel owner the lower distribution costs of brand affiliation offset franchise fees and the revenue lift is essentially flow through which delivers the better economics of being a Hilton. Moreover, when the cycle weakens independents are more likely to run for cover with a brand which makes such conversions a bit countercyclical.

Hilton earns revenue in three ways: owning hotels (small and shrinking % of their biz), managing hotels and franchising. Only 10% of EBITDA is from owning, the rest is fee driven from either managing or franchising. Owning hotels comes with high fixed operating costs that amplify the impact of a cycle and can result in running a loss when RevPAR weakens. RevPAR is average daily room rate multiplied by occupancy. It’s a combination of unit revenue and capacity utilization that spreads total room revenue across all available rooms. What separates managing and franchising is in who runs the day-to-day operations of the hotel and the composition of the fees they receive. With management contracts, Hilton runs the hotel, the employees are theirs and the fee stream is a mix of base management fees (% of room revenue) and incentive management fees (% of hotel profitability). Because they operate the hotel in this scenario, all the expenses run through Hilton’s P&L. Reimbursement for those expenses hit their revenue line, but are just a pass through. The optics of this makes their revenue look higher and thus their FCF margins look narrower than they actually are (mid 30% range). And these margins will go up as the incremental margin on fee revenue is close to 100%. Their other source of fee revenue, franchising, is essentially brand rental. Instead of the shared risk of managing, the owner takes on more risk (and more reward) and pays Hilton a royalty that is only a percent of room revenue. Because the fee stream in franchising is not tied to profitability, it is the less volatile of the two and a differentiator between them and Marriott. Marriott has a higher mix of management contracts and their contracts tend to include an owner’s priority with incentive management fees. This means Marriott stands behind some determined hurdle rate of profitability for the hotel owner before they get fees beyond base management fees. By contrast, Hilton participates at the first dollar of profitability (but at a lower %). This dynamic gives Marriott a higher beta fee stream that benefits late cycle.

These industry dynamics and the flywheel effect of their network set Hilton up for a lot of growth. Their loyalty members, brand and scale drive the better economics of branding, which feeds their pipeline, which further drives their scale and on and on. Their pipeline of 360K rooms would increase their current portfolio by over 40% and is over 50% international. That’s about 20% share of the 1.8m of global pipeline rooms or 4x their current market share of 5%. That “4x” gives them industry leading pipeline share relative to their current market share, substantiating the value proposition of their brands relative to everyone else’s. This is an important fact because they essentially “win” this share. They win 3rd party capital willing to put a Hilton name on their hotel which drives incredibly capital efficient growth for Hilton. Marriott has a large pipeline as well, but they’re also buying their growth (massive Starwood acquisition) which is more expensive than organic growth and carries integration risk. Hilton expects about 6% unit growth per year which is in the neighborhood of 50K+ rooms. So that’s about 6 years of growth in their pipeline, half of which is under construction. So, three years of growth in construction already. To give a sense of the capital efficiency of their model, that 360k rooms is worth about $720m in run-rate EBITDA, or $2K/room/year. Hilton will spend $185m for those rooms, and 3rd parties will spend $50B. That’s a 390% incremental return on capital for Hilton. And if you put a 14x multiple on it, it’s worth $10B in enterprise value vs their current $30B.

In terms of risks, there are inherent risks in franchising because you don’t control your product. Hilton does a lot of hand-holding in the development and running of franchised hotels, they run central reservations, perform inspections, have capital improvement requirements etc. There are also contract clauses around performance which lets them eliminate big underperformers. Most importantly, their room revenue premium speaks to their execution in quality control. Weaker than expected pipeline growth is also a risk. If a tightening lending environment curbs construction, the previously discussed countercyclical aspect of conversions can be somewhat of an offset to deceleration in pipeline growth. Alternative accommodations are probably the most discussed risk in this space. Without going on too much of a tangent about this, the key rebuttals are that the customer/occasion is a little different and RevPAR has only gone up since their inception, driven by record occupancy. Hotels have a higher mix of business travelers, stays are shorter in duration and comprised of less group travel. Airbnb is not a disruptor like Uber, it’s just a new facet of aggregate supply – supply that cuts across chain scales with really inconsistent product. Their incremental supply is most harmful to the weakest players and increases the value of brand affiliation. Urban markets see the largest supply influx, yet interestingly the top 25 markets in the US have had robust performance despite Airbnb. Finally, Airbnb faces regulatory challenges which vary a lot by city, with some major cities getting much more restrictive. They also face new tax levies in many regions. State and Local governments are enforcing short-term occupancy taxes similar to what hotels pay, impacting their price competitiveness.

Lastly, there’s the cyclical risk. The key here I think is that it’s hard to time cycles, and the more important fact is that Hilton should be bigger and better 5 and even 10 years from now and will get there by compounding capital at a high rate which drives intrinsic value. It’s not a straight line and with cyclical industries the line is less straight, but importantly Hilton’s reaction to a cycle will be different than it has been in the past because their business model has fundamentally changed. In 2006, their top 8 hotels drove 30% of EBITDA, and owned hotels were 43% of total company EBITDA. Now owned is only 10% of EBITDA (and shrinking) and the top 10 hotels drive 7% of total EBITDA. In ’06, valuation was underpinned by having real estate in land constrained urban markets. Now it’s underpinned by a more stable fee-based revenue model. Furthermore, their unit growth is offsetting to cyclical RevPAR weakness. Management says they could see 2-3% RevPAR declines and still have EBITDA growth. To put this in perspective, the US has only seen RevPAR worse than that twice since 1990 (1990 is just the furthest back I have data, not an arbitrary cutoff to benefit my point). That happened in 2001 and 2009. Simply having supply outpace demand is not what produced these results. Supply outpaced demand in 1996-1999, 2007 & 2016 and RevPAR was positive in all of those years. What has produced that kind of negative RevPAR is a meaningful decline in demand (measured in room nights sold). That’s what happened in both 2001 & 2009, and in both instances it was event driven: 9/11 and the financial crisis. So, obviously not predictable or inevitable. Also of note, Blackstone is no longer a shareholder. In 2016, they sold most of their remaining stake (25%) to a Chinese firm (HNA) which (due to their own leverage driven duress), sold their shares in a secondary offering this past April. This, however, was after months of an overhang on Hilton’s shares because HNA had indicated their intent to sell their stake months prior.

Finally, valuation. I do a DCF for valuation, but for these purposes I thought it might be helpful to put a high level back of the envelope framework around valuation. They should grow top line mid-single-digits with pipeline growth and minimal RevPAR growth. The rooms for this unit growth are already under construction. Assuming consistent cash flow margins, they should get to $1.3B in FCF in 2019. They use this cash for their dividend (<1% yield) and share buybacks. Buybacks are also amplified by incremental debt as they aim to keep their leverage ratio around 3-3.5x. They target roughly 275m shares at fiscal year-end 2019. So, that’s about $4.70/share in FCF. If they trade at a 5% yield, that’s a $94/share price. They’re trading at $76/share now.

Sarah Kanwal

Equity Analyst, Director

Direct: 617.226.0022

Fax: 617.523.8118

Crestwood Advisors

One Liberty Square, Suite 500

Boston, MA 02109

www.crestwoodadvisors.com

Hilton One Pager.pptx

Taking Exception to Longest Bull Market

Headlines over the past few days have been celebrating the current bull market as the longest in history. However, there are some that would argue that this is not truly the case.

A bull market begins at the bottom of a bear market, which is widely accepted as a 20% drop from the latest peak in the cycle. The argument can be made that in October 2011, during intraday trading the S&P 500 reached a 20% decline relative to the most recent post crisis high.

This is not meant to truly dispute the “record” but rather to point out that this continued rise in the S&P 500 was not a straight line upward. This is another example to our clients that remaining invested over time provides a much greater opportunity for positive returns. It is easy to look back now at the extreme highs reached since 2009 and forget the major drawdowns in 2011, 2015, and even earlier this year.

Below is a link to a WSJ article discussing this point and a chart from Strategas depicting the different highs and lows since 2009:

https://www.wsj.com/articles/calling-bull-on-the-longest-bull-market-1534940689?mod=hp_lead_pos6

Peter Malone, CFA

Research Analyst

Direct: 617.226.0030

Fax: 617.523.8118

Crestwood Advisors

One Liberty Square

Suite 500

Boston, MA 02109

www.crestwoodadvisors.com

PLEASE NOTE!

We moved! Please note our new location above!

TJX 2Q19 Earnings Update

Current Price: $106 Price Target: $120 (updated price target)

Position Size: 2.3% TTM Performance: 48%

TJX reported a great quarter, beating on revenue and EPS ($1.17 vs consensus $1.05) and gave a very positive view on the retail environment. The beat was driven by significantly better than expected SSS (excludes c-commerce).

· SSS were an impressive +6% vs. consensus of +2% & +1-2% guidance. This was a big acceleration from +3% last quarter. Traffic was the biggest driver. They saw an acceleration across all divisions, with their core Marmaxx division (60% of revenue) delivering SSS growth of 7% (above even the highest estimates).

· Performance was solid across all divisions and geographic regions.

· They noted a “very strong start” to Q3. Not to apply Fed-like word parsing, but this was apparently the first time they used “very” in this outlook commentary in over 3 years.

· Canada SSS were +6%. They mentioned significant wage pressure in Canada.

· Europe is doing well and they are taking share. International (Europe & Australia) SSS were +4% an improvement from 1% last quarter and a big change from last quarter’s commentary of a “challenging retail environment” in Europe (where they have over 500 stores). They are taking share in European retail market – “we believe the gap in comp performance between us and many other major retailers has continued to widen.” In mainland Europe, they are in only 4 markets: Austria, Germany, Poland and the Netherlands. They also have stores in the UK, which is where they saw the biggest positive inflection in performance.

· Full year EPS and SSS guidance raised. Full year EPS guidance is $4.12 at the midpoint vs $4.07 previously (excluding benefit from a lower tax rate).

· SSS now expected to be +3-4% vs +1-2% previously (in their 40+ yr. history they’ve had only 1 year of negative SSS).

· They again made a point about their ability to attract a younger customer to validate the sustainability of their business model. “We are particularly pleased that we have been attracting a significant share of millennial and Gen Z shoppers among our new customers”…”the majority of new customers at Marmaxx, are these younger customers which indeed bodes very well for our future.” There were several minutes of discussion around this, so they must be getting a lot of questions from investors.

· Merchandise margin was down, but would have been up significantly excluding freight costs – i.e. they are not “buying” this better growth with deeper discounts. Inventory grew in line with sales, a positive indicator for future merchandise margins.

Continue reading “TJX 2Q19 Earnings Update”

Medtronic (MDT) 1Q19 earnings recap

Current Price: $94 Price Target: $100 (NEW)

Position Size: 2.96% TTM Performance: +7.8%

Key Takeaways:

Medtronic released their first quarter fiscal year 2019 results this morning. Both revenues -all 4 segments- and EPS beat consensus, but the FY19 organic growth and EPS guidance raise, in addition to upbeat comments from the management team regarding their pipeline, is driving the stock higher today: “we’re executing on the strongest pipeline in Medtronic’s nearly 70-year history”. An increased focus on cash flow generation is positive, with 1/3 of the managers’ compensation tied to free cash flow results. Medtronic can now track free cash flow to a more granular level thanks to a new IT system. The US tax overhaul is increasing MDT’s access to cash to 100% vs. 55% before, opening the door for M&A. On the margin front, the 80bps expansion is good, especially knowing that some of the operating leverage was actually reinvested in the business, pushing R&D higher in cardiovascular and diabetes, which in turn should support organic growth. Their new diabetes pump & glucose monitors were up 26%, lifting the segment’s growth to 6.8% this quarter. We are updating our price target to reflect better focus on FCF, but still think it will be difficult for MDT to get back to past high level of FCF margin as the company needs to spend more on R&D to fight off competitors and sustain top line growth.

Continue reading “Medtronic (MDT) 1Q19 earnings recap”

By the Numbers – YoY Inflation

Attached is a weekly piece put together by MFS called “By the Numbers”. It includes various facts surrounding the markets, personal investing, and other random tidbits.

One stat that jumped out was that “inflation using CPI advanced +2.95% on a year over year basis ending 7/31/18, inflation’s largest annual increase since December 2011”.

Continue reading “By the Numbers – YoY Inflation”