December 10, 2009
Recs
37
I set out to find the hottest stocks in the market right now.
I looked for the top performer in each sector, with only these restrictions: The company had to have a market cap of at least $200 million at the beginning of the year and sell on a major U.S. stock exchange.
You may be surprised that the piping-hot shares of Sirius XM Radio(Nasdaq: SIRI) and Ford (NYSE: F) weren't hot enough to make the list. Without further ado:
December 10, 2009 | Comments (17)
Recs
37
I set out to find the hottest stocks in the market right now.
I looked for the top performer in each sector, with only these restrictions: The company had to have a market cap of at least $200 million at the beginning of the year and sell on a major U.S. stock exchange.
You may be surprised that the piping-hot shares of Sirius XM Radio(Nasdaq: SIRI) and Ford (NYSE: F) weren't hot enough to make the list. Without further ado:
Industry Company YTD Return Energy Berry Petroleum 256% Materials Teck Resources (NYSE: TCK) 603% Industrials Trina Solar 415% Consumer discretionary TRW Automotive 565% Consumer staples Rite Aid 307% Health care Human Genome Sciences (Nasdaq: HGSI) 1,179% Financials XL Capital 391% Information technology RF Micro Devices (Nasdaq: RFMD) 547% Telecommunications services Abovenet 301% Utilities AES 55% Average 462% S&P 500 24%
Sources: Capital IQ (a division of Standard and Poor's) and Yahoo! Finance.
Those are some blistering returns, to be sure. But they won't help us today -- unless their runs continue. The question remains: Will 2009's hottest stocks be 2010's?
Let's take a quick step back to see what happened with last year's winners.
Industry | Company | 2008 Return | 2009 YTD Return |
---|---|---|---|
Energy | Vaalco Energy | 60% | (43%) |
Materials | Eldorado Gold | 66% | 43% |
Industrials | Beacon Roofing Supply | 65% | 16% |
Consumer discretionary | Fuel Systems Solutions | 129% | 54% |
Consumer staples | Prestige Brands | 41% | (29%) |
Health care | Sequenom | 108% | (77%) |
Financials | Crawford & Co. | 250% | (75%) |
Information technology | NCI | 76% | (17%) |
Telecommunications services | Shenandoah Telecommunications | 18% | (32%) |
Utilities | Laclede Group | 41% | (25%) |
Average | 85% | (19%) | |
S&P 500 | (37%) | 24% |
Sources: Capital IQ (a division of Standard and Poor's) and Yahoo! Finance.
All right, that's a lot of data to look at. Let's summarize it into three quick bullets:
- None of 2008's big winners made 2009's list.
- As a group, they got trounced by the market.
- Only two of 10 beat the market; seven had negative returns.
I don't show you this data to try to extract any speculative rules from one year's worth of data. It's just a reminder that momentum eventually breaks. Jumping into the hottest thing around frequently looks good for a while. Until it doesn't.
The housing bubble taught us that on a grand scale.
The exception
There's a problem with ignoring 2009's hottest stocks, though. Sometimes a hot stock is an amazing growth stock story. And sometimes an amazing growth stock story looks just like a bubble.
Here's a quick example from recent history: A stock IPO's and shares increase by 300% in less than two years ... despite a huge post-IPO market crash. If you refused to get in, you would have been somewhat vindicated the next year. The stock fell 3%. Then it went upanother 500% in the following three-year period!
That was the Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) story from 1986 to 1991, well before its bubble-assisted growth in the late '90s.
And another exception
It can also be easy to ignore growth stocks because they frequently look expensive using measures like P/E ratios -- especially after big runs.
As their name suggests, growth stocks require years of high growth to justify those lofty valuations. When Motley Fool co-founder David Gardner recommended Intuitive Surgical(Nasdaq: ISRG) in his Rule Breakers newsletter back in 2005, it had a P/E ratio of 71. However, its earnings have grown by so much that its P/E ratio is now lower after a 500% share price increase. Nice.
That's not always the case. More often than not, a stock with a P/E ratio of 71 is just plain overvalued.
Given that many of the hottest stocks I identified above have expensive P/E ratios, how do we tell the difference between an overvalued, bubblicious stock and a stock like Microsoft in 1986 or Intuitive Surgical in 2005?
I went back to David Gardner -- the guy who named his newsletter "Rule Breakers" -- for the answer. The stocks he's willing to pay up for are the ones that are "truly disruptive in their industries." In other words, they break the rules that their competitors cling to.
We all know how Microsoft disrupted the computer industry. Intuitive Surgical's business is replacing human surgeons with robots. I'd call that pretty darn disruptive as well.
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