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Showing posts with label s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label s. Show all posts

Will the Best Leon Cooperman Picks Please Stand Up?

By guest contributor Insider Monkey author Jake Mann. It’s not uncommon to hear hedge fund managers and other prominent investors sounding off on the economy, companies they’re invested in, or even why they hate Apple. So when Leon Cooperman, the billionaire head of Omega Advisors, was on CNBC earlier this week discussing his favorite stock picks, it would appear that this was rational advice all viewers should pay attention to.

Except it’s not.

According to our research at Insider Monkey, the best opportunity for hedge fund piggybackers to outperform the market lies in the small-cap space. Our newsletter that follows this strategy returned 47.6% in its first year (learn how we did it here), and longer-term returns are equally as promising.

In his interview on CNBC, Cooperman mentioned five of his top value investments: Sprint (S), AIG (AIG), Qualcomm (QCOM), KKR Financial (KFN) and SandRidge Energy (SD). All of these picks are fine and dandy in their own right, but only the last two are actually small-caps. In addition to KKR and SandRidge, Leon Cooperman has a few other small-cap stock picks that you should know about.

Atlas Energy

Atlas Energy (ATLS) is Cooperman’s top small-cap pick, and sits at the seventh largest position in his $6.5 billion equity portfolio. Richard Driehaus and Jim Simons are a couple other names that hold this oil and gas E&P, which is up 45% year-to-date. Shares of Atlas have had such a good 2013 because of a few factors: 1) MLPs have seen rising interest from traditional institutional investors, 2) more ETFs are looking at this space, 3) dividend yields have been growing, and 4) the macro environment for domestic natural gas, oil and NGLs is very bullish.

In addition to the impressive appreciation, Atlas Energy pays a 3.5% dividend yield that has quadrupled since 2011, and the valuation isn’t overblown at an enterprise value 2.3 times its revenue.

Chimera Investment

Chimera Investment (CIM), on the other hand, is a small-cap REIT that has been held by Cooperman since the second quarter of 2012 (see the full history here). Like the mythological origin of its name suggests, Chimera is a multi-faceted REIT that invests in residential MBS and different types of mortgage loans and it breaths quite a bit of fire with a 12% dividend yield.

Although quarterly dividend payments have fluctuated in value, they’ve been consistent in presence, and free cash flow has more than doubled over the past two years. On average, Wall Street expects funds from operations to grow by 5% to 6% a year over the next half-decade, but be aware that FFO has missed analyst targets in four of Chimera’s past five quarters. Even with the volatility, there’s no denying this REIT’s ridiculously attractive yield.

Atlas Pipeline Partners

Keeping Cooperman’s big bet on Atlas Energy in mind, it’s no surprise that the billionaire is also bullish on another MLP affiliated with the company, Atlas Pipeline Partners (APL). The natural gas processor is the 14th largest holding in Cooperman’s equity portfolio, and shares have had a solid year, up 20.8%.

In comparison to Atlas Energy, Atlas Pipeline’s focus as a full-service midstream company has allowed it to generate about twice the cash as its aforementioned ally, and thus, a higher dividend yield. Atlas Pipeline currently offers a yield of 6.5% on its shares and dividend payments have grown in five consecutive years. 

A couple more

We haven’t even discussed KKR and SandRidge yet. The latter is another oil and gas E&P, but unlike some of Cooperman’s other picks in the energy sector, SandRidge does not currently pay a dividend. With earnings growth of more than 40% expected this year alone, however, there’s much more momentum behind any bullish thesis here, and shares are actually pretty cheaply valued at 1.6 times book and a close parity on a price-to-sales basis.

Cooperman has held SandRidge stock since the fourth quarter of 2012 and depending on when he bought in, he could have booked as much as a 15% return so far on his investment.

KKR Financial, meanwhile, sits just inside Leon Cooperman’s 15 largest holdings and offers a whopping dividend yield of 8%. Yes, they’re up only 3.5% over the past year, but shares of KKR Financial are extremely attractive because of their depressed valuation; they trade at less than 7 times forward earnings and a price-to-earnings growth ratio of a mere 0.6. With double-digit annual earnings growth expected over the next five years and positive free cash flow, dividends appear sustainable.

Disclosure: none

Dodge & Cox's Latest Dividend Stock Buys And Income Holdings

Dodge & Cox fund investing strategies originally published at long-term-investments.blogspot.com. The Dodge & Cox fund is a real equity based investment vehicle with around USD 81.3 billion in assets under management.

The investment firm was founded in 1930, by Van Duyn Dodge and E. Morris Cox. With this long history in background, there is also a long performance review available. 

Over the recent years, the fund’s performance suffered a bit. There was a small underperformance of 2.7 percent over the recent three years and 9.2 percent over the past five years. The excess gain to the S&P 500 over the longer term was also small with up to 2.9 percent at the peak (15 years).

They own in total 163 companies of which two were recently new in the fund. Kraft Foods Group and Abbvie are the two names.

Dodge & Cox have a real focus on financial, healthcare and technology stocks. More than half of their funds (59.9 percent) are invested in these three stock categories. The biggest impact on the buy side had the technology sector which is now net 0.7 percentage points bigger compared to the previous quarter.

Dodge & Cox have a dividend focus and they like large capitalized stocks. From their 20 biggest stock buys and sells in Q1/13 pay 17 a solid dividend and 17 have a valuation over USD 10 billion. Hewlett Packard is the biggest holding, worth around USD 4 billion. The latest big stock increases are up 26.03 percent year-to-date.

How To Invest $15,000 In The Stock Market

A reader of my blog asks me for help by investing 15k of his money. Here is his question:

“I am a Canadian beginner, 56 years old, 29 years with the Federal Govt. I want to retire next year. I have $15K to start, and I don't know where to start...what would you recommend? Right now I have $5K CP, $5K CNR, $1K Sprint...and they are just not doing much right now.

Another question: If Sprint is bought by DISH, will the stock go up, or cease to exist and I would loose my holding? I am holding approx $1000. at $7.15 per share. I don't want to loose my investment to stupidity...Thanks again for your time.

My first thought is that 15k is enough to start investing. I also started to buy stocks with a similar amount in EUR. Ten years later my net worth developed to a six-figure amount and I’ve received a total dividend amount of more than 30k.

My second thought to your current holdings is that they are not really diversified. You have a strong focus on value. Canadian Railways stock could deliver a great stability for your portfolio but with only 3 holdings and 4k of cash it’s hard to make money if you have only two bets. $CNR has good fundamentals and the stock price follows. Canadian Pacific Railway $CP grows dividends but the earnings go down. The stock price explodes. Sprint Nextel $S received a bid from $DISH – They will be off. All have in common that they are infrastructure bets and deeply integrated within the economy and they all have a very low dividend yield. Infrastructure is a very capital intensive business and also very inflexible.

To your second question: You will receive cash in exchange for your Sprint shares if the deal passes through. DISH offers $7 per Sprint share.

I would recommend to increase your bets when the time is right to invest. If you have a cheap broker you can build a better portfolio by owing more stocks with a lower value. Some offer a $1 trade commission. It’s hard to make money and with 15k and a solid return of 8 percent coul result in $1,200 capital income per year of which $450 could be dividends, calculated on a 3% dividend yield. All you need is to be disciplined and diversified.

Below is a nice graphic about how to buy stocks and build a dividend portfolio with only $5,000.


How to Start a Dividend Portfolio Source: Intelligentspeculator.net

If you have any further questions, to not hesitate to contact me. If you like my answer, please give me a Facebook Like. You can also subscribe to my free e-mail list or follow me on Facebook or Twitter.

Happy Investing!
Tom Roberts

David Einhorn - Greenlight Capital Q4/2011 Fund Portfolio

David Einhorn - Greenlight Capital Q4/2011 Fund Investing Strategies By Dividend Yield – Stock Capital, Investment. Here is a current portfolio update of David Einhorn’s - Greenlight Capital - portfolio movements as of Q4/2011 (December 31, 2011). In total, he manages 38 stocks with a total portfolio worth of USD 4,804,323,000.

4 Stocks You Should Prefer Government Bonds

Four Dividend Stocks safer than US Treasuries By Dividend Growth Investor. Over the past few weeks, financial markets have gotten concerned about the possibility that US congress would not raise the debt ceiling on US government debt. The implications range from credit downgrades on US Treasuries to de facto default by the US government if it chooses to delay payment of Social Security Benefits. Currently, US Treasuries are rated AAA, and are regarded as the safest investment instrument in the world. As a result, institutions and foreign governments hold trillions of dollars of this highly liquid and safe investment. The high budget deficits as well as the high level of US government debt however, have some experts doubting whether the status quo of US Treasuries as “safe investments” will change.

Here are four dividend growth stocks which have global operations that spot AAA ratings:



Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)
Yield: 3.40%


Exxon Mobil Corporation (XOM)
Yield: 2.30%


Automatic Data Processing (ADP)
Yield: 2.70%


Microsoft Corporation (MSFT)
Yield: 2.40%

Related Stock Ticker:
JNJ, XOM, ADP, MSFT

Source: www.dividendgrowthinvestor.com