Barron's Streetwise - A Second Chance to Panic
Episode Date: May 2, 2025Jack gives his thoughts on the market rebound, and previews Disney earnings. Plus, Allspring Portfolio Manager Bryant VanCronkite gives us some stock picks, and explains why he's going with value over... growth. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I think this is an opportunity for investors to rethink about their overall positioning
and use the weakness in certain categories to build better and bigger positions.
Hello and welcome to the Barron Streetwise Podcast.
I'm Jack Howe.
The voice you just heard, that's Brian Van Kronkite.
He's a portfolio manager at AllSpring Global Investments.
And in a moment, we'll hear about why Brian thinks the time is
right for mid cap stocks.
They're not really that mid as the young people may or may not still say they're fire.
How am I doing here, Alexis?
Very close.
Close enough.
Brian particularly likes mid cap value stocks and he'll share with us a few of his favorites.
That's coming up.
Listening in is our audio producer Alexis Moore.
Hi Alexis.
Hey Jack.
Stock market's bouncing right back.
It's almost back to its, what do you call it again?
The term Liberation Day. It's almost back to its Liberation Day you call it again? The, the, the, liberation day.
It's almost back to its liberation day perch.
That's good.
Well, hallelujah.
Hallelujah.
Earning season has been decent.
There've been some good tech earnings.
It hasn't been perfect.
I saw this past week that McDonald's reported
its largest US same store sales decline since 2020.
I think of that as one of those economic indicators.
McDonald's to me is no longer super affordable.
I have ranted on this podcast before about how, how the, how those Big Mac
meals have gotten kind of pricey.
I think that's something that you stop buying when the economy is looking
tough or budgets are getting tight.
So we'll have to see what that means for spending.
How much was a Big Mac when you were growing up?
Well a value meal was $3. It was $2.99. You get a two cheeseburger meal with fries and
a Coke. And my move was I would say, and can I have some extra pickles on the side? Because
if they put them on your burger, they might give you one or two. But if you ask for them
on the side, they put them in a little cup and they would just mathematically I noticed that they would always put more when they put them in the
side. So you might end up with, you know, they're busy people. They're not going to sit there
and count out pickles if they don't have to. But if they're putting them in a cup, they
were throwing like six, seven, eight in there. I was going wild with pickles when I was young.
That huge. Thanks for putting me on game. Yeah. I don't know if you can get away with that today.
I haven't tried it.
Uh, I haven't tried it in, uh, 35 years.
You know what?
Maybe it's time.
Recession indicator.
Speaking of things that have gotten too pricey, I will be interested to see
Disney's results this coming week.
Uh, I think expectations there are low enough, but that's one.
I I'm someone who used to go to Disney with the kids regularly.
And I haven't been in years that around the time when a Disney vacation came to
costs like what college tuition costs almost let's call it in state tuition.
I noticed two things about Disney this past week. One is that the movie Snow White that hit $200 million in box office revenue,
which sounds like a good thing, but it's been out for six weeks now.
So the receipts have slowed to a trickle and it costs reportedly somewhere
around $250 dollars to make.
So as you know, in the, in the movie game, you have to make, what is it?
Two, two and a half times because you got to pay to distribute it and
market it and all that.
So you got to bring in, I don't know, 500 million, 600 million plus
to make a profit on that movie.
In other words, Disney is not going to come anywhere close.
I don't think on snow white and. And it has already canceled, brace yourself, Alexis.
I don't know if you're a Rapunzel fan,
but it has canceled a live action remake of,
what's it called, Tangled,
which is based on the Rapunzel story.
I'm sorry, I should have,
I should have taught,
I should have broken that in more gently off the microphone.
I'm sorry to do that to you.
It's okay, it's okay.
Alexis, what's the last movie you saw at the theater?
At the theater was Sinners, the Ryan Coogler film,
and IMAX, it was beautiful.
I know what IMAX is,
I don't know what any of that other stuff is.
It's sort of like a horror historical film.
Oh.
So it was a big thing, partly because it was on all these different screens, but
also because he had this, you know, sort of uncommon deal that he made with Warner
Brothers where he got first dollar gross, meaning he gets paid before the studio.
And he gets the rights reverted back to him after 25 years, which is really cool.
I'm not entirely sure what that means, but I'm telling everyone I got
first dollar gross on something on this podcast.
Let me have first dollar gross of this episode.
I said there were two things I noticed about Disney.
The movie is one of the second one.
This is just quietly happened.
It's amazing to me.
Back in 2018, there were there were big
announcements about how Netflix had just passed Disney in stock market value.
They were both around 150 billion ish at the time, dollars in market value. And
sometime late last year, Netflix reached double Disney's value, and now it's just about at
triple.
Netflix is flirting with a half trillion dollars in stock market value.
Disney has gone pretty much nowhere since 2018.
I mean, the share count has gone up a little, the stock price has gone down a little, and
they're in kind of the 160 something billion dollar range in market cap. So Netflix is three times the size of Disney. Here we
are. By the way, I think Netflix, this is a gut feeling more than anything else,
but I think it's become the anti Big Mac indicator. I think it's become the last
thing that people are going to let go of. If we go into a recession or people sort of pull back on spending, I think that
Netflix has become, you cancel your cable bundle, you get rid of all your
streaming services, you hold onto Netflix until the bitter end, but if you get rid
of Netflix, boy, the economy is in trouble.
That's how I feel about it.
Fortunately, Netflix's latest numbers were pretty good.
So we're not there yet.
We're passing by the drive-through at McDonald's,
but we're not canceling our Netflix.
Let's see what we're doing with our Disney Plus.
Next week, we'll tell that.
I wanna just briefly touch on what I'll call
a second chance to panic.
And that is the stock market, as we mentioned,
has kind of plugged away and retraced its
steps and we're almost back to Liberation Day levels.
But I don't know if we're totally out of Liberation Day troubles.
Remember there were these huge tariff announcements and everyone panicked and now we have a pause
and a big portion of the tariffs, 90 days.
So those sky high tariff rates country by country are gone for
at least 90 days and that pauses up on July 8th.
And I don't really know what can be done between now and then
I think it takes years for two countries to hammer out a
comprehensive trade deal.
You could come up with agreements to make agreements and
maybe that would appease investors.
I don't really know which way it's going to go.
I hear a lot of talk about a Trump put and a Fed put.
I don't really love those terms because they're so vague.
You never know where you stand, but a Fed put basically means if things get really bad
with the stock market, then the Fed will step in and do something to make investors bullish
again, like lower rates.
But it wouldn't do that if we still had higher inflation than the Fed wants.
So there's some discussion about whether there is or is not a Fed put at this point.
A Trump put means that if the stock market tanks, then the president might relent on
some of the things he said about tariffs or, you know, say things to appease the market and investors.
It's good to have something like that as a backup, but it gets weird if the tariff announcements
were the things that sent the market down to begin with.
Right?
I mean, you can't be ping ponging back and forth.
The market goes up, you say, we're going to get tough on tariffs.
Market goes down, you say, we're going to make some deals.
Up tough, down deals. I don't know how long I want to rely on that as an investor.
If you felt panicked when stocks were at their lows
and you held on wisely, right?
That has worked out for you.
The stock market has bounced back.
Now you're feeling better.
Now you're not as panicked.
My advice is to take this moment to revisit your panic and ask yourself, is there
anything that you felt that you were missing? When you were at
that point, did you say to yourself, boy, I wish I wasn't
so loaded up in this S&P 500 fund or US large cap growth or
whatever it was. I have too much tech, for example, if you felt
that way, then you get a second chance to do something about it now.
That something is not selling out of all your stocks, bailing out of the market,
going to all cash. Maybe it's just bringing down your percentage in stocks.
Maybe it's shifting to different kinds of stocks. Europe and Japan have done well
relative to the US. If you don't have exposure there, here's another chance.
Bank of America has been writing a lot about large cap value.
They say all roads lead to large cap value.
Basically, their strategists say that higher volatility is here to stay.
And that if we're going to have that, you do not want momentum stocks,
and you do want quality stocks.
And it just so happens that there's a lot of quality found in value indexes right now. What do I mean by quality? They define it
as stability in earnings and dividend growth. Companies that can be relied
upon to make money. You wouldn't normally think of let's say,
industrials and financials. Those are two groups that turn up in value
indexes. You wouldn't normally think of those as being the most stable.
Maybe you think of them as more cyclical, but B of A rights.
We just went through a decade of industries like these being deprived of
investment funds and taking the time to consolidate and to shore up their balance
sheets.
So actually there's a lot of quality in those industries and in value stocks in
general, the S and P 500 has done so well for so long that I'm always a
little skeptical when people talk about a rotation into value, but if you feel
like events of the past couple of months have changed things and you wish you had
more value stocks in your portfolio with the S&P 500 back up, here's a second
chance. You can buy an ETF, something like the iShares Russell 1000 value ETF. The ticker there is IWD.
I show the S&P 500 as we speak at around 21 times earnings.
We certainly used to call that expensive.
That doesn't necessarily mean
we're headed for another big downturn.
Anyhow, that's it, no big whoop.
If the last downturn made you panicky,
now we're back and you feel better,
but take
this time to pre-panic just in case there's another panic.
Should we take a quick break first?
I don't want to DTM.
I don't want to do too much.
Oh my gosh.
Probably time for a break, right?
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Welcome back. I want to get to mid-caps.
I want to hear about Alexis running a 5K this weekend.
How's that going to go? Are you a runner? Have you been training?
I'm not a runner. I have been training.
I don't particularly like running, which is a problem.
Wait, is this the corporate challenge?
No, no, no.
I used to do that like a hundred years ago.
It was a little too much of the challenge part for me,
so I stopped doing it.
What's your time gonna be?
Where are you gonna come in this 5K?
I just wanna finish.
That's where I'm at.
Hold on, let me get the calculator out.
George Bush, not the elder, the younger.
I think he used to run seven minute miles.
That's a, that's a good benchmark for a fit president.
I think I was more of an eight minute mile guy back when I was running them.
Eight is a little, is a little quick for me.
I'm a newbie.
I mean, George, the younger George Bush used to run seven minute miles.
You can't be a president.
He was, you know, he was a middle-aged man at that point.
I, let me tell you, I have no, if I finished it, then I'm happy.
I wish you the best of luck with your race.
We'll be cheering for you.
Uh, I'm going to get on my treadmill and I'm going to do a walk.
I don't, I'm not trying, I'm not trying to compete with you.
I'm just, we're all out there doing our part.
Let's turn to Brian van Cronkite.
He's a portfolio manager at Allspring and I had a chance to speak with him
recently about his view of the market.
I think this is an opportunity for investors to rethink about their overall
positioning and use the weakness in certain categories to build
better and bigger positions.
We saw a GDP print that came in pretty weak.
Obviously, everyone's worried about recession, but they're also worried about stagflation.
This to me is an opportunity to rebalance your book, to stay invested, but to improve
the positioning of it and make it healthier for the next five to 10 years.
When we think about investing and through our process we want to do is find
companies that can spend their balance sheet flexibility in a unique way that
surprises the market. And those things can look like acquisitions, it can be R&D,
it can be capex, it can be buy and back stock. But when you become extremely large, the
ability to have one of those transactions or events and actually drive a material change becomes more challenging.
I asked Brian for some of his favorite stocks right now, and he gave me three starting with LabCorp.
Tickers LH in the healthcare space.
That was a phenomenally important business to the medical industry, right?
We all know costs are high, access to care can be challenging.
We all know costs are high, access to care can be challenging, but as we get more and more sophisticated around medical devices and drugs,
we're relying more and more on diagnostic tools to help us make the right decisions.
And the cost of lab work relative to the overall cost of care is extremely low.
And so it's critical and doctors do more and more tests to get more and more clarity
and frankly to make sure they protect themselves
from bad diagnosis.
And so LabCorp is an important piece of the pie,
but what's happening right now is that consolidation
is crossing over that echelon
where LabCorp and Quest have now got such scale
that they become dominant in their ability
to have lower costs to produce the products,
they have lower costs to operate the labs, and they have a lot of capital available to make acquisitions. And we're seeing the acquisitions
ramp up right now. A lot of the labs that are inside hospitals, they're losing money. They're
hard to run, they're annoyances now for the hospital operators, and they're looking to sell
off that business. And LabCorp is one of the bigger acquirers of that. As they do that,
the cost to acquire, once you roll up synergies, it becomes very, very low and the returns on that capital deployed are
very high. They have a massive runway of opportunity right now, but along the way,
their defensive cash flow characteristics are very appealing during
uncertain macro times. So I like LabCorp as a combination of defense, while at the
same time a unique opportunity for them to continue to deploy capital in a way that could materially change the future income statement and
return profile of business.
Okay.
That's lab corp.
Alexis, you know what I like to say when someone's making a case on lab corp?
Right now.
I like to say, I agree with your analysis.
Brian also likes a home builder, DR Horton. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on.
Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. Come on. out of, to a large extent, the land ownership business, and really focusing on the core
of actually manufacturing and building homes.
And as they've gone through that process, they've freed up capacity on their balance
sheet to spend capital wisely.
We sold the stock out of one of our portfolios and then had recently bought it back because
the stock has underperformed meaningfully here as home construction has slowed.
But why DR Horton?
Well, we believe the work
they've done has put them in the pole position for being able to maintain the
margins as we work through the trough of the cycle. Ultimately grow the margins
meaningfully on the other side of this. They are also able to now position
themselves to win as rates come back in. And we can talk more macro, but
ultimately, the cycle will be reset.
Maybe it's post recession, maybe it's because the Fed decides to cut down rates,
but ultimately, we think rates are going to have to move lower.
And as that does, we think the market will rapidly move to stocks like DR Horton,
even before the fundamentals change.
This is one of those times where you can start to begin to think offensively
with a portion of your allocation and use this as an opportunity to go back
into a name, into a stock that we think is grossly mispriced over
the three year horizon.
I was pretty familiar with LabCorp and DR Horton.
I didn't know much about the third company that Brian mentioned.
It's called Graphic Packaging.
The stock took a big drop this past
week on quarterly results. Revenues were in line but guidance was a little bit
below expectations. Here's Brian. I think it's GPK. They do packaging for
consumer products. It could be in the grocery store with box goods. It could be
in your health and beauty products, but they do a
lot of paperboard products that touch consumer beauty and other categories and
they're obviously exposed to the health of the overall consumer. And we're seeing
spending at your targets and your Walmarts and your Kroger is slowing down
and its volume is slowing down and so the amount of boxes they're making it's
been under pressure.
Volume's been sort of in that flat to down a little bit.
That's the near term opportunity,
because the market sees that and says,
wow, maybe this stock isn't what I wanna own right now.
Here's what I see.
I see a company that about two years ago
began a process of exiting non-core businesses.
Those non-core businesses were commodity-like in nature,
meaning that the pricing they had,
well, they wasn't their own.
They were subject to the whims of a broader market.
That creates high volatility cashflow,
a cashflow stream I don't like.
But they sold that business and reinvested it back
into their company through research and development.
You're gonna have the most efficient manufacturing footprint
of their entire category, which will allow them, we believe, to begin to take more market share.
We believe it will boost their margins.
It'll boost return on capital.
It's all going to happen at a time when their capex is dropping quickly.
Thank you, Brian.
Alexis Moore is our fleet footed producer.
If you have a question you'd like played and answered on the podcast, you can send it in. It might be in a future episode. Just use the voice
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