Barron\'s - 09.03.2020

(National Geographic (Little) Kids) #1

M2 BARRON’S March9,2020


both times. “A round trip after witnessing


two of the biggest advances in a decade is


bearish,” writes Frank Cappelleri of No-


mura Instinet. “There’s no way around it.”


The data back him up. Since 1929, there


have been 121 one-day moves of 4.2% or


more, according to John Kolovos, chief


technical market strategist at Macro Risk


Advisors—and in those instances, the


chances of a positive return over the fol-


lowing 65 trading days were no better than


a coin flip. Half of the time, the S&P 500


fell with an average drop of 14.5%. The


other half, the S&P 500 gained an average


of 18.1%.


“When viewed within the context of a


postmarket crash or panic, the snapback


rally we’ve seen is par for the course and


unfortunately has yet to sound the all-


clear,” Kolovos writes.


It’s tempting to see a comeback in the


works. The economic data released this


past week were stellar. February’s Institute


for Supply Management services index hit


57.3, the highest in a year, while Friday’s


payrolls report showed 273,000 jobs being


added last month. Unfortunately, neither


reflects the damage, if any, done since coro-


navirus fears ratcheted up. “There’s no use


spending much time paying attention to


the economic data this week,” explains


Hank Smith, co-chief investment officer at


Haverford Trust. “It’s useless.”


In fact, we suspect that the coronavirus


isn’t done with the market. The Seattle


school system has shut down because of


the virus—and plans to have 23,000 stu-


dents learn from home—while companies


likeJPMorgan Chase(ticker: JPM) have


been testing to see what happens if employ-


ees work from home as they prepare for


the disease to spread.


As more tests are conducted, there is


likely to be a spike in the number of corona-


virus cases in the U.S. That’s apt to cause


another selloff, says Christopher Harvey,


head of equity strategy at Wells Fargo Secu-


rities, but also a buying opportunity. “The


headline reaction will be negative,” he


explains. “But you’ll ultimately be able to


take on more risk.”


Just not yet.


Seritage Looks Overvalued

Real estate was the ace in the hole in Ed-


die Lampert’s investment strategy for


Sears Holdings.So in 2015—a decade


after the hedge fund manager’s ESL In-


vestments took over the struggling retail


chain—Sears spun off its interests in


some 260 shopping mall properties into a


real estate investment trust calledSeri-


tage Growth Properties.


Before that year was out,Berkshire


HathawayCEO Warren Buffett used his


own money to buy a 7% stake in Seritage


(SRG) for about $35 a share. The stock hit


$57 the next year amid enthusiasm that


Seritage would replace the bargain rents


paid by Sears with market-rate tenants.


The real estate play looked like a winner to


Barron’sin early 2017.


But Sears was still Seritage’s main ten-


ant. When Sears Holdings (SHLDQ) filed


for bankruptcy protection in 2018, the


retailer still filled 70% of Seritage’s space.


Seritage stock now goes for about $31 a


share. That prices the enterprise at $3 bil-


lion and, by most measures, values Seritage


on a par with the better mall REITs. Look-


ing closely at Seritage’s recent results, it is


hard to understand why its stock deserves


that generosity. Seritage and Lampert de-


clined our requests for comment, while


Buffett didn’t respond to our query.


After Sears’ bankruptcy, the chain va-


cated over 200 Seritage properties. Its con-


tribution to the REIT’s rental income has


dropped to 5% of the total. Revenue at Ser-


itage in 2019 was $169 million, down


sharply from the 2016 level of $250 mil-


lion. Its net loss in 2019 was $64 million,


or 1.77 cents a share. REITs use an operat-


ing cash-flow measure called funds from


Vital Signs

Friday's Week's Week's
Close Change %Chg.

DJ Industrials 25864.78 +455.42 +1.79

DJ Transportation 8956.06 -432.13 -4.60

DJ Utilities 901.70 +61.74 +7.35

DJ 65 Stocks 8503.09 +108.46 +1.29

DJ US Market 735.71 +2.68 +0.37

NYSE Comp. 12352.03 -28.93 -0.23

NYSE Amer Comp. 2149.77 -63.93 -2.89

S&P 500 2972.37 +18.15 +0.61

S&P MidCap 1797.79 -16.21 -0.89

S&P SmallCap 867.20 -17.58 -1.99

Nasdaq 8575.62 +8.25 +0.10

Value Line (arith.) 5615.30 -188.67 -3.25

Russell 2000 1449.22 -27.21 -1.84

DJ US TSM Float 30275.44 +71.72 +0.24

LastWeek WeekEarlier

NYSEAdvances 1,479 111

Declines 1,570 2,967

Unchanged 28 10

New Highs 99 160

New Lows 809 1,139

Av Daily Vol (mil) 6,019.7 6,372.8

Dollar(Finex spot index) 96.09 98.13

T-Bond(CBT nearby futures) 179-220 171-120

CrudeOil(NYM light sweet crude) 41.28 44.76

Inflation KR-CRB(Futures Price Index) 155.85 159.45

Gold(CMX nearby futures) 1670.80 1640.00

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March9,2020 BARRON’S M3


operations, or FFO, and that number sank


at Seritage from a positive $16 million in


2018 to a negative $34 million in 2019, or


minus 61 cents a share. It pays no divi-


dends on its common stock.


The red ink will be about as deep this


year, Wall Street says. One has to look to


2021 to find a positive forecast for Seritage


funds from operations. The sole analyst


polled by FactSet projects about $20 mil-


lion in FFO for next year, or 38 cents a


share, on revenue of $260 million. That


means today’s stock price for Seritage is 80


times next year’s forecast for FFO.


By way of comparison, the classiest of


the class-A mall operators,Simon Prop-


erty Group(SPG)—at its current stock


price of $119—trades for just nine times the


consensus forecast for 2021 funds from


operations.Macerich(MAC) trades for six


times. A well-regarded shopping center


REIT, such asRegency Centers(REG),


trades for 15 times next year’s FFO.


Malls are a forlorn sector these days,


but even in its unhappy class, Seritage


stands out for how many of its properties


stand vacant. The company’s annual re-


port makes painful reading, with a six-


page list of wholly owned properties stud-


ded with empty malls in towns like


Burnsville, Minn., and Lebanon, Pa. In all,


only 43% of Seritage’s 29 million square


feet of space was leased at the end of De-


cember. At Simon Property, 95% of retail


space was occupied.


A main theme in the Seritage strategy


has been the re-leasing of Sears locations to


new tenants, at rents several-fold higher.


But many retail tenants are struggling,


these days. In addition to the 6% of its rent


roll still paid by Sears and Kmart at year


end, Seritage’s top tenants included the


arcade chainDave & Buster’s Entertain-


ment(PLAY), theAt Home Group


(HOME) furnishings chain, and the cloth-


ing discounterBurlington Stores


(BURL)—totaling 18% of the REIT’s annual


rent and all causing angst in their own in-


vestors lately, amid faltering revenue.


Seritage’s other strategy is to redevelop


its retail space and parking lots as fitness


centers, restaurants, medical offices, or


multifamily dwellings. In recent visits with


investors, Seritage executives called atten-


tion to mixed-use projects near Seattle,


Dallas, and Chicago that will together cost


over $325 million in just the initial phase.


The REIT has good reason for staying


in touch with institutional investors. Seri-


tage has some remaining credit facilities,


but without operating cash flow, it will


have to fund its billions of dollars worth of


redevelopment ambitions by selling off


property and by selling stock. So share-


holders should brace for dilution.


Meanwhile, if you’ve got a clever use


for an empty Sears store, give Seritage a


call.—Bill Alpert


The Long and the Short

Here’s what else caught our attention this


past week:


Kroger(KR) gained 13% after reporting


better-than-expected earnings, but the


stock’s rise had as much to do with corona-


virus. After a rally like that, the stock may


have gotten ahead of itself.


Biden starred on Super Tuesday, but


health-insurer stocks were the real win-


ners.Humana(HUM), up 15%, was the


fourth-best stock in the S&P 500, while


UnitedHealth Group(UNH) gained 11%.


Don’t be surprised if the gains continue.


Carnival(CCL) tumbled 19% after one of


the cruise line’s ships was quarantined. The


stock is down 47% in 2020, but it might still


not be a buy. Analysts have started fretting


about its dividends, and we worry that


health concerns could keep customers away


long after the headlines fade.—B.L.


Industry Action

Performance of the Dow Jones U.S. Industrials, ranked by weekly percent change.*


Utilities 7.90%


Health Care 4.54


Telecommunications 4.53


Consumer Goods 3.23


Basic Materials 0.22


–0.22 Consumer Services


–0.58 Technology


–1.02 Industrials


–1.59 Financials


–7.79 Oil & Gas



  • For breakdown see page M36. Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices


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