Connect with us

Finance

Charley Walters: Vikings’ owners facing tough financial decisions

Published

on

Charley Walters: Vikings’ owners facing tough financial decisions

During the 17 years that Zygi and Mark Wilf have owned the Vikings, the team has made the playoffs seven times. A loss on Sunday to the favored Detroit Lions would make the postseason unlikely. Going forward, the Wilfs face difficult spending decisions.

Minnesota Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins (8) loosens up during warm ups before the start of a NFL Wildcard Round game against the New York Giants at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis on Sunday, Jan. 15, 2022. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

Foremost will be quarterback. It’s unclear whether the underwhelming play of Vikings backups will improve Kirk Cousins’ free agency market, which could reach $40 million next spring.

It seems likely that had Cousins not been lost for the remaining nine games due to Achilles surgery, the Vikings would have won a couple more games and been a legitimate NFC North contender with the Lions.

But Cousins isn’t expected to be fully recovered in March when free agency begins. The draft isn’t until April, and there’s no guarantee the Vikings could get an elite QB. There’s also the risk that Cousins, 36 next year, could reinjure the Achilles. That risk will affect how much money the Vikings would be willing to guarantee in a contract.

The Vikings can’t go into next season with Nick Mullens, Josh Dobbs or Jaren Hall as their starter.

Advertisement

It’s unclear whether the Wilfs are willing to pay Justin Jefferson the mega-deal he wants (anticipated $150 million for five years). Will they re-sign free agent Danielle Hunter ($65 million or so for three years)? Hunter turns 30 next season.

With Jordan Addison and T.J. Hockenson signed, would the Vikings dare trade Jefferson for draft picks to take a quarterback?

Going forward, there are multiple intertwined pieces to the Vikings’ puzzle for the Wilfs to try to figure out.

—Best free agent bet for Cousins, if the Vikings don’t re-sign him, seems to be the Atlanta Falcons, who could have $50 million in salary cap space after some anticipated player cuts, including QB Taylor Heinicke, the ex-Viking.

—If the Lions (10-4) have already clinched the division and don’t have a lot to play for in the final game against the Vikings in Detroit on Jan. 7, they could rest some starters to protect against injury and prepare for the playoffs.

Advertisement

—The Vikings this season are the 17th-oldest team in the NFL. The Packers are the youngest. The Lions rank No. 11.

—Joe Mauer needs 75 percent from among nearly 400 baseball writers for Hall of Fame election in the former Twin’s first year of eligibility. With nearly 10 percent of ballots this month known, tracked unofficially by Ryan Thiboudaux, Mauer on Saturday was trending at 76.3 percent.

The 2024 Baseball Hall of Fame class will be inducted on July 21 in Cooperstown, N.Y.

—A children’s book centered on Joe Mauer, “The Right Thing To Do” about the Twins great’s kindness off the field by KSTP-TV’s Joe Schmidt, will be launched at a party at Target Field on Jan. 20.

—Defenseman Brock Faber, the ex-Gopher who is a rookie with the Minnesota Wild, is on pace to receive a maximum $1 million in incentive bonuses this season. That would be more than his salary.

Advertisement

Faber, from Maple Grove, has four contract levels of production worth $250,000 apiece: top-four Wild defenseman in ice time; 10 goals or 25 assists; all-NHL rookie team, and top-two defenseman in blocked shots. He also is among the top-three team defensemen in plus-minus on ice, but only four categories count toward the $1 million in bonuses.

Faber, 21, has an entry-level contract with a base salary of $832,000.The Wild acquired Faber in the Kevin Fiala trade with the Los Angeles Kings. A left winger, Fiala, 27, has 29 points in 29 games this season.

—That was ex-Gophers men’s basketball coach Dan Monson leading Long Beach State to its recent 84-79 victory over Southern California, which featured the college debut of LeBron James’ son, Bronny. That made Long Beach State the only team in the country this season with road victories against teams in the Big East (DePaul), Big Ten (Michigan) and Pac-12 (USC).

—Max Shikenjanski, the former Stillwater QB star who suddenly as a Gophers freshman is backup to Cole Kramer for Tuesday’s Quick Lane Bowl game against Bowling Green, is unfazed that Minnesota has three incoming QBs in its 2024 recruiting class and couldn’t be more excited about his status.

—Deephaven’s Tim Herron of the Champions Tour underwent Dupuytren’s contracture hand surgery the other day so he can practice without pain, which has limited his play.

Advertisement

—Some Target Center courtside seats for Timberwolves games are $1,500 per ticket. In Los Angeles for Lakers and New YOrk for Knicks games, courtside seats approach $4,000 apiece.

—The Timberwolves are 17th in the 30-team NBA in attendance, averaging 18,024 per game.

—Coach Chris Finch considers Karl-Anthony Towns the Timberwolves’ best shooter and said he’s also among the best in the NBA.

—A 2005-06 game-used Timberwolves No. 21 Kevin Garnett jersey has received a $1,500 bid on a VSA national auction. A 1991 Kirby Puckett autographed 1991 No. 34 jersey has fetched a $5,000 bid.

—Minnehaha Academy grad Chet Holmgren of Oklahoma City ranks No. 9 on NBA Social’s top-10 most viewed players. No Timberwolves are among the top 10.

Advertisement

—Late Vikings-San Antonio Spurs owner Red McCombs’ grandson, Joseph
Shields, is buying into the Spurs as a limited partner, per sportico.com.

—The Minnesota Myth — the latest local Arena Football League team — begins training camp on April 1, with the first game later in the month at Target Center. An open tryout camp will be Jan. 20 at the University of Minnesota, where the coach, Rickey Foggie, starred under Lou Holtz (1984-85).

Foggie, who played quarterback for eight seasons for AFL teams and coached for five seasons in the AFL besides coaching at Park Center, Red Wing, St. Thomas Academy and DeLaSalle high schools, said the new 16-team league will play 10 games.

“The first year is always hard in any sport, so we’re just looking to coach the young men up and put a good product on the field and see what happens,” Foggie said.

Foggie, 57, who resides in Burnsville, said he’s working on finding a quarterback.

Advertisement

“Can’t find anyone better than me yet,” he said with a laugh.

Foggie said the interesting part of the team is that it has a woman owner, attorney Diana Hutton, who is wife of Lee Hutton, also a lawyer and a former Gopher who is the league’s commissioner.

“Diana wants to do a lot of stuff in the community off the field, and the good part of it is that she’s going to let me run the football side,” Foggie said. “So it couldn’t be any better than that.”

—In five seasons coaching football at St. Thomas Academy, Dan O’Brien’s teams were 49-5 with five straight state tournament appearances. A year ago, O’Brien left for a new challenge, Holy Family, which had lost its previous 25 games.

This year, with a hall of fame staff, O’Brien’s team finished 7-4, losing to Minneapolis North for a chance to advance to the state tournament.

Advertisement

“To be honest, if someone had said before the season, would you take 7-4, I would have taken that in a second,” O’Brien said. “The kids worked hard — I was happy for them. It’s been a nice turnaround.”

O’Brien, 59, and his staff will return to Holy Family next season.

“I’ve got the two legends — Jeff Ferguson and Dave Nelson — locked in for another year and they are fantastic,” he said. “I learned a lot from them. Nellie called the offense and Fergs helped on defense with Jeff Moritko.”

O’Brien’s son Casey coaches quarterbacks. Casey, 24, the celebrated former Gopher who has courageously fought back from osteosarcoma — a rare bone cancer — has undergone three lung-related surgeries the last four weeks but is cancer free. Casey has had more than 30 overall surgeries.

“The good news is there’s no cancer,” his dad said.

Advertisement

—Daniel Oturu, the former Gopher from Cretin-Derham Hall, has been dominant playing basketball in Istanbul, Turkey, and could get another chance in the NBA by the all-star break in February.

—Top infield prospect in the L.A. Dodgers system is second baseman Michael Busch, 26, from Simley. He’s also the No. 5 overall prospect combined as an outfielder.

Busch, who hit .167 with two home runs in 27 games for the Dodgers last season and is spending the offseason working out in Minneapolis, is naturally excited about the Dodgers’ signing of Shohei Ohtani, who received an astounding $700 million contract.

“Quite a bit of money there; it’s awesome that he’s part of the organization,” Busch said. “Pretty cool.”

Excited to be a teammate?

Advertisement

“Who wouldn’t be,” he said.

—Dallas Mavericks’ top assistant Sean Sweeney, the former Cretin-Derham Hall and University of St. Thomas basketball star, led Dallas to a 130-106 victory over Houston as acting head coach when Jason Kidd was out for sickness last month.

—Stars for the Providence Academy girls basketball team are Maddie Greenway, sophomore daughter of ex-Vikings linebacker Chad Greenway, and eighth grader Ari Peterson, daughter of ex-Vikings running back Adrian Peterson.

—Former Minneapolis North basketball star Khalid El-Amin has Anoka-Ramsey off to a 6-5 start in his first season as the Golden Rams’ men’s coach.

—Most popular jersey at the Vikings Locker Room store at Mall of America is Justin Jefferson. T.J. Hockenson is No. 2.

Advertisement

—High-energy 5-foot-8 former Stillwater outfielder-pitcher Brayden Hellum is transferring from Kirkwood JC in Iowa to the Gophers.

—Sports power lunch at Yard House in St. Louis Park last week: Bob Hagan, Dave Lee, Patrick Klinger, Dan O’Brien, Pete Eckerline, Jeff Munneke and Randy Handel.

—State golfers posted nearly 90,000 more rounds played in 2023 than in 2002, per the Minnesota Golf Association.

Don’t print that

—Some Gophers boosters the other day came forward with some substantive name, image and likeness packages for football. Meanwhile, six Big Ten men’s basketball teams this season have raised at least $1 million for NIL deals. The Gophers are not among them.

—The 15th player on the No. 1 Purdue’s basketball roster is getting $100,000 this season, with 7-4 center Zach Edey collecting $1.1 million.

Advertisement

—A new NIL deal for Iowa basketball star Caitlin Clark, who plays the Gophers on Feb. 28 before a sellout at Williams Arena, is a multi-year endorsement with Gatorade. Other Clark NIL deals, which total in excess of $1 million: Nike, Buick, Topps and H&R Block.

—The Gophers say 85 percent of NIL contributions actually go to their athletes. The rest is operating expenses.

—Gophers football has the 38th-best 2024 recruiting class, per 247sports. Wisconsin is No. 22, Iowa No. 33.

New Big Ten 2024 teams recruiting rankings: Oregon No. 6, USC No. 18, Washington No. 36 and UCLA No. 62.

—The Twins have released VP-assistant GM Rob Antony, 58, after 35 years with the organization. Antony was an invaluable talent evaluator and contract negotiator for younger players.

Advertisement

—There would be a tremendous backlash from alumni who have financially supported the Gophers baseball program (including a major upgrade of Siebert Field) if the university dared discontinue the sport following the retirement of hall of fame coach John Anderson at the end of next season.

For several years, Bethel coach Brian Raabe, the former Gopher-Twin, has been considered Anderson’s successor-in-waiting, provided there would be adequate support from administration, which Anderson has never received. Dan Wilson, the former Gopher-Mariner, is a name mentioned in past years.

Although Anderson is the all-time leader in Big Ten victories, he is paid half of what Ohio State’s Bill Mosiello and Michigan’s Tracy Smith receive.

—There are 41 football bowl games. The worst, No. 41, is the Quick Lane Bowl featuring the Gophers (5-7) vs. Bowling Green (7-5) in Detroit on Tuesday, per assorted rankings. Minnesota is the only bowl participant with a losing record. Still, Gophers coach P.J. Fleck gets a $100,000 bonus for making the bowl.

Among Quick Lane Bowl player gifts: $175 Amazon gift cards and Harman wireless headphones (value $100).

Advertisement

—Pending Timberwolves-Lynx co-owner Alex Rodriguez has had trouble finding a Special Purpose Acquisition Company (SPAC) with which to merge, per the “Hustle,” but as the Pioneer Press reported this month, the sale of the teams to Rodriguez and Marc Lore is now on track to soon become official despite Glen Taylor offering a second deadline extension.

—Rodriguez, 48, on his business approach, per Sports Illustrated: “Any business that we own, we think about owning it for 100 years.”

—Joe Rossi, 44, gone as Gophers defensive coordinator for the same job at Michigan State, owes Minnesota $330,000 via a buyout. But the Spartans, not Rossi, are expected to pay.

—There’s whispering that the University of St. Thomas is interested in having its basketball, hockey and football games in a broadcast package on WCCO-AM. The school has had its football games aired on KSTP-AM since 2021.

—There’s little doubt that the University of St. Thomas men’s basketball team, which came within six points of upsetting No. 7 Marquette in Milwaukee the other day and scored 104 against Wisconsin-River Falls, would be a legitimate challenge for the Gophers.

Advertisement

—People close to the Gophers will be surprised if sophomore basketball guard Braeden Carrington from Brooklyn Park doesn’t enter the NCAA transfer portal.

—It wouldn’t be surprising if Mike Zimmer, 67, fired as Vikings coach two years ago, returns to the NFL as defensive coordinator after his contract expires this year to work for Arizona coach Jonathon Gannon.

Fired with Zimmer, ex-Vikings GM Rick Spielman is a NFL draft evaluator via the X social platform.

—Gersson Rosas, fired two years ago as Timberwolves basketball president, has ended up as senior VP with the N.Y. Knicks.

—The University of Minnesota, conceptually, has considered either renovating Williams Arena or building a new arena in the parking lots north of the arena.

Advertisement

Overheard

—Fast-working Twins pitcher Louie Varland, on baseball’s pitch clock: “I pride myself on a fast pace. It turned into a strategy because the players behind me love it, the coaches love it, the fans love it. Everybody loves the fast pace except for the batter — they don’t have time to think.”

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Finance

The hiring rate trending lower could be a sign of problems to come

Published

on

The hiring rate trending lower could be a sign of problems to come

A version of this post first appeared on TKer.co

The stock market climbed to all-time highs, with the S&P 500 setting a closing high of 5,762.48 on Monday. For the week, the S&P rose 0.2% to end at 5,751.07. The index is now up 20.6% year to date and up 60.4% from its October 12, 2022 .

On Friday, we learned the U.S. economy created a healthy 254,000 net new jobs in September. While the number confirms that the labor market isn’t falling apart, the pace of net job creation in this economic cycle.

One labor market indicator that’s been drawing more attention lately is the . In addition to measuring those hired into newly created jobs, this metric also captures those hired into existing jobs vacated by quitters, fired workers, and others. It’s been trending lower, and it .

According to the report, employers hired 5.32 million workers in August. While hires far exceed the 1.61 million people laid off during the period, the hiring rate — the number of hires as a percentage of the employed workforce — has fallen to 3.1%, matching the lowest level of the current economic cycle.

Advertisement

As we’ve been discussing , the layoff rate has , trending at around 1%, which is below prepandemic levels. That’s a good thing.

But with , we should be at least a little wary about resting on the economy’s low layoff laurels.

“The hiring rate turns BEFORE layoffs,” Renaissance Macro’s Neil Dutta explained in a research note on Tuesday.

When you think about how well-managed companies operate, this makes sense.

When the economic tides begin to go out, companies usually don’t go from hiring people one month to immediately sending workers to the unemployment office in the next month.

Advertisement

Unless you’re facing a major business or economic calamity, you probably don’t want to take a hatchet to the headcount. Because what if business activity quickly turns around and you need those workers?

For starters, companies can reduce or freeze hiring, which means not filling new job openings or backfilling roles vacated by former employees. It’s a relatively easy way to keep expenses contained.

If challenges persist, then layoffs could be the next option.

It’s worth mentioning that layoff activity does not need to increase for the unemployment rate to rise. Think about it. Even when the economy is booming, — but many will quickly go back to work if hiring activity is strong. If the same number of people get laid off into an economy with weakening hiring activity, then more jobseekers will not be able to get back to work, and unemployment rises.

Advertisement

The JOLTS survey — which provides data on job openings, hiring activity, layoffs, and quits — can be helpful in predicting what’s to come for the major headline economic metrics like net job creation, the unemployment rate, and inflation.

For example, when the posted by employers is high and rising, then you can expect payroll employment to rise and the unemployment rate to fall or stay low. An could be a reflection of worker confidence in a labor market with increasingly competitive wages, which is a .

Today, with but the layoff rate still depressed, the JOLTS metric to watch right now may be the falling hiring rate.

The question now is whether the economy, , will develop in a way that helps stabilize or improve the hiring rate. Friday’s news that the U.S. continues to create jobs at a healthy pace is encouraging.

And to be crystal clear, most metrics point to a strong economy that continues to grow at a healthy clip. In fact, the hiring rate today is higher than where it was during much of the 2009-2020 economic expansion. Our discussion today is not about sounding alarms. However, we should always be mindful of the fact that . And those downturns often come with early warning signs.

Advertisement

There were a few notable data points and macroeconomic developments from last week to consider:

The labor market continues to add jobs. According to the report released Friday, U.S. employers added 254,000 jobs in September. It was the 45th straight month of gains, reaffirming an economy with growing demand for labor.

Total payroll employment is at a record 159.1 million jobs, up 6.8 million from the prepandemic high.

The unemployment rate — that is, the number of workers who identify as unemployed as a percentage of the civilian labor force — declined to 4.1% during the month. While it continues to hover near 50-year lows, the metric is near its highest level since October 2021.

While the major metrics continue to reflect job growth and low unemployment, the labor market isn’t as hot as it used to be.

Advertisement

Wage growth ticks up. Average hourly earnings rose by 0.4% month-over-month in September, up from the 0.5% pace in August. On a year-over-year basis, this metric is up 4.0%.

Job openings rise. According to the , employers had 8.04 million job openings in August, up from 7.71 million in July. While this remains slightly above prepandemic levels, it’s from the March 2022 high of 12.18 million.

During the period, there were 7.12 million unemployed people — meaning there were 1.13 job openings per unemployed person. Once a sign of , this telling metric is now below prepandemic levels.

Layoffs remain depressed. Employers laid off 1.61 million people in August. While challenging for all those affected, this figure represents just 1.0% of total employment. This metric continues to trend near pre-pandemic low levels.

Hiring activity, while cooling, continues to be much higher than layoff activity. During the month, employers hired 5.32 million people, down from 5.42 million in July.

Advertisement

People are quitting less. In August, 3.08 million workers quit their jobs. This represents 1.9% of the workforce. It continues to move below the prepandemic trend.

A low quits rate could mean a number of things: more people are satisfied with their job; workers have fewer outside job opportunities; wage growth is cooling; productivity will improve as fewer people are entering new unfamiliar roles.

Job switchers still get better pay. According to , which tracks private payrolls and employs a different methodology than the BLS, annual pay growth in September for people who changed jobs was up 6.6% from a year ago. For those who stayed at their job, pay growth was 4.7%.

Unemployment claims tick higher. rose to to 225,000 during the week ending September 28, down from 219,000 the week prior. This metric continues to be at levels historically associated with economic growth.

Card spending data is holding up. From JPMorgan: “As of 25 Sep 2024, our Chase Consumer Card spending data (unadjusted) was 0.6% above the same day last year. Based on the Chase Consumer Card data through 25 Sep 2024, our estimate of the U.S. Census September control measure of retail sales m/m is 0.13%.“

Advertisement

Gas prices fall. From : “Despite literal and figurative storm clouds here and abroad, the national average for a gallon of gas still fell by three cents from last week to $3.19. The devastation wrought by Hurricane Helene did little to impact gasoline supply, but it crushed demand in affected areas by destroying infrastructure and causing power outages.”

Mortgage rates tick higher. According to , the average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rose to 6.12%, up from 6.08% last week. From Freddie Mac: “The decline in mortgage rates has stalled due to a mix of escalating geopolitical tensions and a rebound in short-term rates that indicate the market’s enthusiasm on rate cuts was premature. Zooming out to the bigger picture, mortgage rates have declined one and a half percentage points over the last 12 months, home price growth is slowing, inventory is increasing, and incomes continue to rise. As a result, the backdrop for homebuyers this fall is improving and should continue through the rest of the year.”

There are in the U.S., of which 86 million are and of which are . Of those carrying mortgage debt, almost all have , and most of those mortgages before rates surged from 2021 lows. All of this is to say: Most homeowners are not particularly sensitive to movements in home prices or mortgage rates.

Construction spending ticks lower. declined 0.1% to an annual rate of $2.13 trillion in August.

Manufacturing surveys don’t look great. From S&P Global’s : “The September PMI survey brings a whole slew of disappointing economic indicators regarding the health of the US economy. Factories reported the largest monthly drop in production for 15 months in response to a slump in new orders, in turn driving further reductions in employment and input buying as producers scaled back operating capacity.”

Advertisement

Similarly, the ISM’s signaled contraction in the industry.

Keep in mind that during times of perceived stress, soft survey data tends to be more exaggerated than hard data.

Services surveys look great. From S&P Global’s : “U.S. service sector businesses reported a strong end to the third quarter, with output continuing to grow at one of the fastest rates seen over the past two-and-a-half years. After GDP rose at a 3.0% rate in the second quarter, a similar strong performance looks likely in the three months to September. Encouragingly, inflows of new business in the service sector grew at a rate only marginally shy of August’s 27-month high. Lower interest rates have already been reported by survey contributors as having buoyed demand, notably for financial services which, alongside healthcare, remains an especially strong performing sector.”

Near-term GDP growth estimates remain positive. The sees real GDP growth climbing at a 2.5% rate in Q3:

We continue to get evidence that we are experiencing a where inflation cools to manageable levels .

Advertisement

This comes as the Federal Reserve continues to employ very tight monetary policy in its . More recently, with inflation rates having from their 2022 highs, the Fed has taken a less hawkish stance in — even .

It would take monetary policy as being loose or even neutral, which means we should be prepared for relatively tight financial conditions (e.g., higher interest rates, tighter lending standards, and lower stock valuations) to linger. All this means for the time being, and the risk the into a recession will be relatively elevated.

At the same time, we also know that stocks are discounting mechanisms — meaning that .

Also, it’s important to remember that while recession risks may be elevated, . Unemployed people are , and those with jobs are getting raises.

Similarly, as many corporations . Even as the threat of higher debt servicing costs looms, give corporations room to absorb higher costs.

Advertisement

At this point, any given that the .

And as always, should remember that and are just when you enter the stock market with the aim of generating long-term returns. While , the long-run outlook for stocks .

A version of this post first appeared on TKer.co

Continue Reading

Finance

HSBC and Tradeshift Launch SemFi to Transform Embedded Business Finance

Published

on

HSBC and Tradeshift Launch SemFi to Transform Embedded Business Finance

“Semfi from HSBC (derived from seamless, embedded finance) will embed HSBC payment, trade and financing solutions across a range of e-commerce and marketplace venues, including Tradeshift’s own B2B Network.

“This marks a transformative step in Tradeshift’s ability to deliver vital, value-adding services to our network, tackling a key challenge for businesses: access to liquidity, cash flow management and seamless financial integration within supply chains.

“With Semfi now in the mix, we’re ready to rapidly scale to meet the demand for these services across a broad range of businesses.”

What’s next for SemFi?

Although SemFi will launch first in the UK, HSBC plans to expand the service globally over time. The venture is designed to operate as a technology company rather than a traditional bank.

Clients will be onboarded by HSBC, and the bank’s balance sheet will be used for financing, but the goal is to offer a tech-forward solution that meets the evolving demands of businesses worldwide.

Advertisement

With HSBC supporting 1.3 million businesses globally and facilitating more than US$800bn of trade each year, SemFi is set to become a key player in the world of embedded finance. For SMEs, the ability to access HSBC’s services seamlessly within their e-commerce workflows could represent a significant step forward in efficiency and growth.

Continue Reading

Finance

Emerson Electric Co. (EMR): Strengthening Market Position with Financial Confidence

Published

on

Emerson Electric Co. (EMR): Strengthening Market Position with Financial Confidence

We recently published a list of 10 Wonderful Stocks to Buy Now at a Fair Price. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR) stands against other wonderful stocks to buy now at a fair price.

In H2 of the year so far, there are signs that the S&P 500 index has been broadening beyond technology leadership and the index is reverting to a more normalized state. This means that there are several high-quality stocks outside of the popular names and investors are required to be diversified. This diversification should not be limited to the style level, but also to the stock level. Market experts opine that the AI theme has largely fuelled the narrow market. This concentration, along with an increase in passive investments, resulted in a significant cycle of consensus positioning and stretched valuations. This led to the vulnerability in the market, which resulted in a sharp correction in July and early August.

As per Fidelity International, when it comes to passive investing in the S&P 500, it demonstrates nearly a third of holdings in only 7 stocks. Considering their dominance, a stumble in performance means the index will see a significant impact, and the investors have already seen some mega-cap technology names that are unable to deliver on strong expectations.

S&P 500 Index – Transition and Concentration

The US equities saw an outstanding performance in H1 2024, with the S&P 500 Index rising 15.3%, as per ClearBridge Investments (A Franklin Templeton Company). The investment firm believes that solid earnings results and fiscal stimulus mitigated the influence of higher interest rates. However, the headline performance numbers, aided by a ramp-up in mega-cap stocks and, more specifically, semiconductor leadership, eclipsed the recent signs of deterioration below the surface.

Since the Mag 7 stocks have disproportionately driven earnings growth over the previous 2 years, ClearBridge Investments expects a rebound in earnings among small-cap stocks in the upcoming 12– 18 months. The investment firm believes that small-cap companies have seen the impacts of higher rates. In 2023, profits for Russell 2000 companies declined ~12%. This year, they are up ~13.6%, and for 2025, the projections hover at around ~31%. If this happens, there might be a broadening of the market which should provide an opportunity for active managers.

Advertisement

Opportunities Apart from Magnificent Seven

Companies that are unable to meet hefty expectations might see a disproportionate sell-off, and the stocks riding the wave of AI might be significantly exposed considering the amount of capital deployed versus the uncertain future environment. Given such trends, Fidelity International believes it is unsurprising that so far in H2 2024, there have been signs that the S&P 500 is broadening beyond tech leadership, with some non-tech sectors surpassing the broader market.

There are abundant high-quality stocks apart from the popular names. This means that dozens of companies in the S&P 500 continue to offer a return on invested capital (ROIC) and earnings growth of more than 30%. This is true for several other quality metrics, reflecting an underappreciated depth of opportunity in the broader US equities.

While diversification remains critical, even looking beyond the Magnificent Seven might not necessarily offer the required diversification considering that the US market remains heavily weighted towards growth sectors like IT. As per Fidelity International, diversified portfolios need negative correlations between assets, but few styles provide consistent negative correlations to quality growth companies. That being said, cyclical value and defensive value remain 2 key exceptions.

To get a negative correlation, the investors are required to avoid an overlap at the stock level. As of now, the US market provides a range of attractive stock opportunities that offer this valuable diversification.

As per ClearBridge Investments, the top 5 stocks now constitute ~27% of the S&P 500 and the top 10 make up ~37%. As per the investment firm, this concentration might stagnate near current levels, with mega caps delivering solid, but slower, earnings growth in comparison to the recent past. The investment firm expects that diversified portfolios should outperform in the upcoming 12–18 months.

Advertisement

With this in mind, we will now have a look at 10 Wonderful Stocks to Buy Now at a Fair Price.

Our methodology

We first sifted through multiple online rankings and ETFs to identify quality stocks with wide moats. Next, we selected stocks that were trading at a forward P/E of less than ~23.65x (since the broader market trades at a forward multiple of ~23.65, as per WSJ). The stocks are ranked in ascending order of the number of hedge funds that have stakes in them, as of Q2 2024.

Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter’s strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 275% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 150 percentage points (see more details here).

Emerson Electric Co. (EMR): Strengthening Market Position with Financial Confidence

Emerson Electric Co. (EMR): Strengthening Market Position with Financial Confidence

Engineers analyzing a complex network of process control software and systems.

Advertisement

Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR)

Expected Earnings Growth: 23.4%

Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 51

Forward P/E Multiple (As of September 30): 18.45x   

Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR) is a technology and software company, which provides various solutions for customers in industrial, commercial, and consumer markets.

Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR) has a wide economic moat, which is mainly based on switching costs, and on brand intangible assets. Moreover, the company’s strong geographic presence and diversified customer base further solidify its moat. Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR) remains confident in its financial health and strategic initiatives. The company continues to focus on integrating National Instruments and potential share buybacks.

Advertisement

The company expects its backlog to increase YoY as it enters FY 2025. Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR) has been adjusting its strategy to focus on growth areas like innovation and renewable energy investments while, at the same time, managing softer segments. Therefore, Wall Street analysts are optimistic about the company’s future performance and its strategic positioning in the global automation market.

The company sold its remaining interest in the Copeland joint venture, hinting at the fact that Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR) is focusing on simplifying its portfolio. It highlighted that demand in process and hybrid markets, which is being led by a constructive capex cycle, has been meeting expectations. In Q3 2024, its operating leverage performance exhibited the benefits of its highly differentiated technology. For 2024, Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR) anticipates net sales growth of ~15% and operating cash flow of ~$3.2 billion.

Redburn Atlantic initiated coverage on 8th July on the shares of the company. It gave a “Buy” rating and a $135.00 price target. Insider Monkey’s Q2 2024 data revealed that Emerson Electric Co. (NYSE:EMR) was part of 51 hedge funds.

Overall, EMR ranks 7th on our list of Wonderful Stocks to Buy Now at a Fair Price. While we acknowledge the potential of EMR as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some deeply undervalued AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns, and doing so within a shorter timeframe. If you are looking for a deeply undervalued AI stock that is more promising than EMR but that trades at less than 5 times its earnings, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock.

 

Advertisement

READ NEXT: $30 Trillion Opportunity: 15 Best Humanoid Robot Stocks to Buy According to Morgan Stanley and Jim Cramer Says NVIDIA ‘Has Become A Wasteland’

 

Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.

Continue Reading

Trending