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You Won't Believe What the Best Value Investors Are Buying Now
By Graham Summers
April 25, 2007

Telecom is back.

While the rest of the investing world focuses on the housing bubble, interest rates, and Iran, the telecom sector has quietly been proving itself to be one of the best investments of the last nine months.

Starting in July of last year, the U.S. telecom ETF has soared (see chart below). It's nearly doubled the performance of the S&P 500. Verizon (VZ) is up 22%, and AT&T (T) has rallied nearly 50%. Sprint Nextel (S) has rallied 20% but is breakeven for the period due to weak earnings in early August 2006. 

What's going on here is simple... sectors that become immensely overvalued usually require seven to 10 years to disgust investors and become bargains again. And telecoms have been plenty disgusting since the tech bubble burst in 2001. All three of the telecom majors are down between 30% and 60% from their tech-bubble highs.

But it's beginning to change.

The massive debts incurred during the fiber-optics expansion from 1998 to 2001 have been written off. The new technology (high speed internet, cell phones) is now widely accepted. And the industry as a whole has completed a strong period of consolidation (SBC bought AT&T, Sprint bought Nextel, Verizon bought MCI).

Simply put, the U.S. telecom industry has stabilized and grown in profitability in the last two years. Today, AT&T and Verizon are producing free cash flow of $7 billion a year. Even Sprint is producing $5 billion.

It's hard to believe, but nowadays these companies are actually value plays. All three are now throwing off more free cash than they were during the tech bubble.

Verizon is generating enough free cash flow that it could take itself private. Sprint Nextel is trading well below its five-year average for its price-to-cash flow multiple. AT&T's 2006 earnings are on par with its tech-bubble levels. Yet the company's share price is 30% cheaper than in 2001.

Even at today's levels, these companies are still relatively cheap. So cheap that the world's best value investors have begun piling into the sector.

Company
Owners    
Holdings
Verizon 
David Dreman
Tweedy, Browne 
$148 million
$740,000
AT&T  
Charles Brandes
David Dreman
$555 million
$16 million
Sprint Nextel  
Mason Hawkins
George Soros
$1.4 billion
$7 million

The irony of seeing Mason Hawkins and David Dreman buying telecom stocks is almost overwhelming. Hawkins manages the Longleaf family of mutual funds. Over the last 10 years, he's shown investors average annual gains of 12%, trouncing the 8% gains of the S&P 500 for the same time period. He's a value investor to the core. The same can be said of Dreman, whose Large Cap Value Fund has shown investors average annual gains of 17% since 1991.

Ten years ago, these guys wouldn't have touched a telecom company with a 10-foot pole. Yet today, they're buying large-cap telecom stocks with hundreds of millions of dollars.

That's contrarian investing at its finest.

Good trading,

Graham

Russian Financial Boom Nearing End
Russia's financial boom will come to a painful end "in the near future", a leading London banker with long experience of the country warned on Monday.

After seven years of growth, Russia is reaching its capacity limits in an expansion fuelled by credit, much of it from foreign markets, said Hans-Joerg Rudloff, chairman of Barclays Capital, the investment banking arm of Barclays.

"It is a boom which is not sustainable and I have to warn people... there will be downturns. There will be more difficulties," Mr Rudloff told the Russian Economic Forum in London. FT($)Read on...

Hedge Fund Managers Get Older, Richer
James Simons, a 69-year-old publicity shy former math professor, uses complex computer-driven mathematical models to make bets on stocks, bonds and commodities, among other things.

His earnings last year were $1.7 billion. 

As one of the leading hedge fund managers, Mr. Simons makes a sum that dwarfs that of the top chiefs on Wall Street.  The highest paid on the Street, Lloyd C. Blankfein of Goldman Sachs, earned $54.3 million in salary, cash, restricted stock and stock options last year. (Unlike the total for Mr. Simons, Mr. Blankfein's reported compensation does not include gains on investments.) Read on...


Oil & gas pipelines continue an amazing run... Buckeye Partners, Enbridge Energy Partners, Magellan Midstream, TC Pipelines, Teppco, and Williams Companies reach yearly highs. 

Shipping still booming:  DryShips, Omega Navigation, and Quintana Maritime at yearly highs.

Infrastructure and building plays continue to lead the market. New highs for Kennametal (cutting tools), Terex (heavy equipment), Cummins (diesel engines), and AK Steel (steel).

Earnings today: Akamai, ConocoPhillips, EnCana, America Movil, Raytheon, and Exelon.

Last Change 52-Wk
S&P 500 1481.94 0.07% 13.29%
Oil (USO) 50.37 -1.66% -29.07%
Gold (GLD) 67.79 -0.69% 9.96%
Silver (SLV)* 137.37 -1.39% -0.54%
US Dollar 81.54 -0.29% -6.97%
Euro 1.362 0.45% 10.16%
VIX 13.04 8.04% 12.51%
HUI 355.00 -0.33% -5.00%
10-year yield 4.65% -0.02 -0.36
* Since ETF inception

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Company Sym Industry

MedImmune

MEDI

biotech

Alex & Baldwin

ALEX

holding company

Buckeye Partners

BPL

oil & gas pipeline

Constellation Energy

CEG

utilities

DryShips

DRYS

shipping

Enbridge Energy

EEP

oil & gas pipeline

Janus Capital

JNS

asset mgmt

Humboldt Wedag

KHDH

holding company

Luxottica

LUX

eyeglasses

Magellan Midstream

MMP

oil & gas pipeline

PowerShares Biotech

PBE

ETF

Southern Copper

PCU

copper

Smithfield Foods

SFD

meat products

Terex

TEX

heavy machinery

CVS Caremark

CVS

drug store

Whirlpool

WHR

appliances

AK Steel

AKS

steel

Cummins

CMI

diesel

Credit Suisse

CS

investment bank

Merck

MRK

Big Pharma

Paccar

PCAR

trucks

Force Protection

FRPT

defense vehicles

Highland Hospitality

HIH

hotel REIT

Medco Health

MHS

drug store

Honeywell

HON

aerospace

Boeing

BA

aerospace

PetroHawk Energy

HK

oil & gas

Cypress Semi

CY

technology

Williams Companies

WMB

oil & gas pipeline

Snap-on

SNA

tools

Chubb Corporation

CB

property insurance

Mirant

MIR

utilities

Allegheny Energy

AYE

utilities

General Mills

GIS

food products

Worthington Indu

WOR

steel

Florida East Coast

FLA

railroads

Bally Technologies

BYI

gaming

Estee Lauder

EL

beauty products

iShares Russell Mid

IWP

ETF

PowerShares Health

PTJ

ETF

Exelon

EXC

utilities

Omega Navigation

ONAV

shipping

Industrial SPDR

XLI

ETF

iShares South Korea

EWY

ETF

Aflac

AFL

insurance

Akzo Nobel

AKZOY

medical equip

Blue Square Israel

BSI

Israeli grocer

Central European

CEDC

booze

Canadian National

CNI

railroads

Corn Products Intl

CPO

food products

Fidelity National

FNF

insurance

CurrencyShares Euro

FXE

Currency ETF

Guangshen Railway

GSH

railroads

Holly Energy

HEP

oil & gas pipeline

iShares Utilities

IDU

ETF

Kennametal

KMT

tools

Norsk Hydro

NHY

oil drilling

Quintana Maritime

QMAR

shipping

TC Pipelines

TCLP

oil & gas pipeline

Teppco

TPP

oil & gas pipeline

T Rowe Price

TROW

mutual funds

Company Sym Industry

Sirius Satellite Radio

SIRI

radio

Southwest

LUV

airline

Brown Forman

BF-A

booze

Vonage

VG

telecom

Mesa Air

MESA

airline

McClatchy

MNI

newspapers

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