Motley Fool Money - The Meme Casino Reopens

Episode Date: May 14, 2024

One tweet is all it takes to add a few billion dollars in market cap. First, (00:21) Jim Gillies and Ricky Mulvey discuss the surge in short term speculation over meme stocks, and the long-term inves...tment story at Home Depot. Then, (19:05) Alison Southwick and Robert Brokamp discuss how investors can evaluate exchange traded funds. Companies/Tickers discussed: GME, AMC, HD, SPY, VOO, IJR, VB, SPY, GRMAX Check out the Range Rover Sport at www.landroverusa.com Host: Ricky Mulvey Guests: Jim Gillies, Alison Southwick, Robert Brokamp Producer: Mary Long Engineers: Dan Boyd, Desiree Jones Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:27 Welcome to the mania. You're listening to Motley Full Money. I'm Ricky Mulvey, joined today by Jim Gillies. Jim Memstocks are back. How are you celebrating? I'm not. Thanks for the invite. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:01:00 Happy to have you on this show. Because if I say good to see it, then you say good to be seen. And occasionally I got to throw in a little bit of a curveball to get us for. There is like one topic we have to talk about today. and that is the meme stocks gym. GameStop. It's up more than 200% over the past five days. At the time of this writing,
Starting point is 00:01:20 it could be anywhere between negative 300 to plus 2,000. The rally kicked off from a tweet from Keith Gill, aka Roaring Kitty, aka another screen name I'm not going to say on the show, of a man sitting forward in a chair to play a video game. If you don't know Roaring Kitty, he's the retail retailer, Redditor, sort of ringleader
Starting point is 00:01:44 who kicked off the first rally with videos and tweets and memes, had a book and movie made about him, gave a congressional testimony, and this meme that kicked off this rally came after a three-year hiatus and at one point added $4 billion to the market cap of GameStop. That's a lot of setup. Jim, what do you make of the comeback?
Starting point is 00:02:05 If you had any doubts that we are living in the stupidest timeline, line, this should erase them. So I remember well the GameStop saga because I'm actually the fool who recommended GameStop about two months before the original meme stock craze took hold. And it's funny because if you go back and look at the thesis that I had at the time, and I'll build it out in a minute. But then you go look at Roaring Kitty stuff on Reddit and what he talked about in the in his congressional testimony. There was a lot of similarities to what I was talking about at the time. So in other words, I'm not saying he stole anything. He doesn't know who I am. I don't
Starting point is 00:02:45 know who he was. But that there was enough investing things here. There was a legit investment case for GameStop in the fall of 2020, the autumn of 2020, that doesn't exist now. But because it's a meme stock, it doesn't matter if there's an investing case. Doesn't matter if this is a thesis. This is bro culture going woo and bidding. It's utterly asinine and silly. And look, having a bit of silly fun occasionally is fine. You got a couple hundred bucks. You want to throw in a meme stock.
Starting point is 00:03:19 Have a good time. Do not convince yourself what you're doing is investing. Do not convince yourself that this ends in anything other than ash for the long-term holder of a meme. You're not sticking it to any man. You're, I mean, look, I literally had lunch with an old friend this weekend whose son made, made us some very good money, like 50 bagged his own money in the original meme stock craze in AMC, oddly enough, but, you know, went from a thousand bucks to 50,000 bucks or whatever. And that money spends just fine.
Starting point is 00:03:57 That money spends like money, right? Like, that's okay. But he at least had the good sense to get out. Again, this ends no way but ash. And I think it's interesting that Roaring Kitty, like, he posted a picture. Yeah. Posted a sketch. Why are we doing this?
Starting point is 00:04:15 It's, I mean, it is hilarious. It is hilarious to be. But if you're coming at this from an investor standpoint. So, so I'm going to take you back to September 2020. Here's why I recommended GameStop in 15 seconds or less. It was the start of a console refresh cycle, GameStop, it always had, new, new consoles, new, new PlayStation. no Xbox, always a good time for GameStop. These consoles used physical media, which means they still have a need for what GameStop sold. They had more cash than debt. They were cash flow
Starting point is 00:04:47 positive, and they had no fewer than four high profile activists circling the company, and they were trading it four times free cash flow. That's an investing thesis. That's why it made sense at that time. And I said to my members, I said, I was expecting a double, maybe a triple in the next two years and then we'll be out. What we got was an 8X in four months and I said, see you, uh, because, uh, the meme stock idiot showed up and turned this into a casino. And casinos are fun. We all like casinos, but the house always wins in a casino. And that's probably what ultimately happens here. Well, there's a couple things. One is that roaring kitty is funny. Like he's funny. hilarious. hilarious. Yes. He was doing a congressional testimony. I was
Starting point is 00:05:29 rewatching it this morning. First of all, he's doing this bit to a group of people who are allowed to buy and sell stocks for companies in which they legislate. And that irony is not lost on the viewer. And he's just, you know, why did you buy it? I like the stock. Also, I am not a kitten. But you bring up, you bring up something interesting, which is that, you know, what are the lessons that maybe retail traders are coming into this, this meme stock craze with? Because a lot of them got, you know, you have your friend's kid who made a lot of money on AMC, but a lot of them got burned for holding on for too long. And I wonder, if you'll see more trading in and out this time, and if, you know, that means this cycle's
Starting point is 00:06:08 going to be a little bit quicker than the first one. Probably. Can't believe I'm about to do this, but my advice to meme stock traders, do it. This is how I get fired fools. Ricky's going to egg me on. I would not own any of these things past an end of day. In other words, if I was going to play in this area, and thankfully, I cannot because the Motley Fool, our training rules require us to own all stocks that we purchase a minimum of two weeks.
Starting point is 00:06:34 immediately disqualified. Good. Very happy to be so. But if you don't have that type of restriction, I would not enter a position until after I saw the stock was actually going up in the day, and I wouldn't own the position past 4 o'clock in the afternoon. I would not let myself, because the fact, it could be up 30, 40, 50 percent in the pre-market and out of the gate. And tomorrow, you might be down 30, 40, 50 percent in the pre-market and out of the gate. You know, easy come, easy go. So I would not, I would only be playing with this during Open market hours myself. The other thing is never lose sight. Have this tattooed on your forearm if you need to.
Starting point is 00:07:11 This ends in ash. My favorite non-game stop example, and I've got a few more, but is the aforementioned AMC. And yes, my friend's son made some very nice money. But he was risking a thousand bucks, right? Or in Ballport. He was risking a grand. He made good money because he got out. I have another friend who made a bit of money on AMC as well.
Starting point is 00:07:34 Neither one of them thought they were investing. But the long-term shareholder in AMC, if you actually bought it on some sort of perception to kind of stick it to big hedge funds or just know this. Over the past three years, the market is up 33%. That's roughly the timeline of the AMC meme stock craze. The market's up 33%. AMC is down 95%. And that's after a couple of big days.
Starting point is 00:08:01 The insiders at AMC have gotten rich selling more. shares to Robs and keeping this turkey afloat. The retail crowded didn't time their exits have been ground into pace. And that's going to happen again. So if, you know, if you want to play speculative games, we all like a good lottery ticket. We all like a visit to the casino, or at least most of us do. But this is not investing. Play speculative games, win speculative prizes. AMC might be doing something kind of smart, which is that they're doing an at-the-market offering of shares. As the stock was going up, they raised, I think it was $250 million. Like I said, selling more shares to Roops.
Starting point is 00:08:42 Like, again, if you don't know who the Patsy at the table is, it's you. Right? And look, again, like, I have fun with it. If that's your jam, it's not my jam, but it's fine. But again, realize that you're not making any kind of societal statement. You're not like, if you get the money out, that's great. but again, long term, this is death. I think one key difference about this, and I'm going back to GameStop, then the first craze
Starting point is 00:09:11 is, to your point, the first one was really sticking it to big hedge funds that it very much overshorted the company. And I think at the time, well, I guess it was the pandemic, but previously it had been profitable on an operating basis. Now the company is not making an operating profit. And also, the mechanics are going to be different because a quarter of the GameStop shares outstanding or short compared to 140% at the time of the craze, in which case is the stock price rose, people had to cover their shorts. That's from Bloomberg columnist, John
Starting point is 00:09:43 authors. I think that changes the dynamics of this rally. But then again, I could be very wrong, Jim, because the internet does crazy things, and I don't know. The internet does crazy things. I will say, I whistle two things and we'll move on to the next more palatable story. Shorting, not wrong, not evil, not illegal. I have a soft pot in my heart for shorts who get the thesis right. Who get the thesis right. I got no problem with Shrachy, if you come to me and you're going to short my stock, I have a stock that I own.
Starting point is 00:10:14 God bless, I have no problem. Shorts are a price discovery and they're quite often, you know, they teach you things that you didn't already know about a company. So I think they're an excellent and a vital part of a functioning market. I will say, though, I laid out my thesis at the time, for GameStop, which I hope sounds like a reasonably intelligent way to think about a stock as an actual business. I will say that none of what I put into my thesis at the time, with the exception of more cash than debt, I suppose. None of those six things that I talked
Starting point is 00:10:48 about in my thesis at the time, besides the more cash than debt, are actual true today. Companies burning money, the activists are gone. Well, one took over. That'd be Ryan Cohen. There is no console refresh cycle. They're burning money, hand over fist. And the next console refresh cycle, which probably happens in about four or five years from now. That one probably doesn't have physical media.
Starting point is 00:11:16 So the folks who were erroneously calling GameStop the next Blockbuster three, four, and five years, ago might actually be right three, four, and five years from now. All right. That's the end of this segment that I like to call. Let's bait Jim Gillies into going on a rant. Let's move on. Let's move on to a significantly more boring story, which is that Home Depot reported this morning, tough transition.
Starting point is 00:11:40 Comp sales are down about 3%. Net earnings down 7%. But the company reaffirmed guidance, the CFO, excuse me, Richard McPhail, said that customers are basically in a waiting game because of higher interest. They have the money to do these big renovations. They're just holding off because they want to see how the interest rate decreases or stays the same. How that shakes out, what's your headline takeaway from the quarter for Home Depot? I'm not sure I buy that, to be honest with you.
Starting point is 00:12:09 I mean, well, look, if you have the money, you do it anyway because you don't need to borrow. But if you're going to borrow, like, you know, like when I've done large renovations at my house or large projects at my house. We use our helock. We got a helic tied to the house. We've used that from time to time. If interest rate cuts indeed show up three, four, five months from now, guess what?
Starting point is 00:12:32 My helic rate goes down. Like, you know, so like, it's a floating rate debt. So I'm not, I'm kind of, I'm hearing what the CFO is saying. I'm going like, eh, I don't know about that, dude. I have the money. I have the money. I just, I just have some questions first. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:48 Like, look, I mean, he's got to talk. He's got to talk his game. But it was a perfectly fine quarter. HomeDue was actually one of my favorite case studies to kind of give to folks about the power of long-term investing and the power of changing strategic choices. And I suspect I might surprise you with some of what I think about this one. So if you go back to the early 2000s and right up to about, I think it was January 2007, you know, for the first five or six years, they had a terrible CEO named Bob Nardelli who, you know, came over from GE. He was going to bring the GE way. And all he did. just kind of, all he largely did was kind of tried to basically reform a company, a perfectly good company in his own image that was the GE way. We have enough examples of the GE way failing post Jack Welch that I think, you know, it ended the way I think we suspected it would. But don't worry about Bob. He got, you know, a quarter billion dollars to go away. But following the Bob Nardelli fiasco, Home Depot did a really smart thing in my book. Home Depot said,
Starting point is 00:13:50 you know what? I'm going to make up the numbers here, but they're roughly right. 90 plus percent of the population of North America lives 15 minutes or less from a Home Depot. We are saturated. Continental U.S., Mexico, Canada, like, we got stores. We should probably stop growing. We should embrace ourselves as a cash cow. And so they did. They, at the time, so I'm looking here at the end of fiscal 07, so it's February 2008, for those of you playing along at home. In a fiscal 07, they had 2,234 stores. Today, 16 years later, they have 2,337 stores.
Starting point is 00:14:41 That is less than 5% growth total in about 16 years. Okay? Their CAP-X, they slashed at their CAP-X in fiscal 06, I think fiscal L6, maybe fiscal 07, was 3.6 billion. Their CAP-X today is still below that. They cut their CAP-X by nearly three-quarters in the next two years, and they just embrace the cash cow story. No more stories, but we make a lot of cash because, you know, everybody goes to Home Depot, everybody knows Home Depot, where doers get more done, right? or whatever the slogan is.
Starting point is 00:15:16 They cut their CAPEX by 73%. They turned into cash cow. This was a very, very, very good decision for Home Depot and its shareholders. They made a cumulative between fiscal 08 and fiscal 23, 16 years total. They made a cumulative $144 billion with a B dollars in free cash flow. They use $64 billion of that roughly. $64 billion to pay a dividend. By the way, actually we'll put that over there for a minute.
Starting point is 00:15:49 They did about $96 billion to buy back shares. They reduced their share count by over 40% during that time period. And again, you pay dividends on the shares that are outstanding. So even as you can raise your per share dividend because the total went down, because the total shares went down, the payout didn't rise as fast. So that $64 billion cumulative paid out over the past, 16 years and dividends meant that the per share dividend went from 90 cents a year in fiscal 09 to $9 this year.
Starting point is 00:16:23 It's 10fold. That's 15.5% annual growth. The stock, but this cash cow shift clobbered the market. Without dividends, ignore dividends since the shift, the transition in the year post-Nardelli, Home Depot is more than 10 bagged. It's up 1,070% or about 16.5% annually versus a market that's up 8.6% annually. If you factor in the dividends, which you kind of should, because again, the dividend is 10-fold over the past 15 years, the dividend adjusted total return. It's close to 1,700%. That's a 19.4% annualized return versus a total return on the S&P 500 by 10.7%. They're beaten the market by like eight and a half, almost nine percentage points a year.
Starting point is 00:17:16 And it's still Home Depot. You're still going to go to Home Depot. You're not going to abandon them on mass and go to Lowe's or Canadian Tire or whatever. Why would you give up cash cow status, which has done such sweet things for your investors and your executives as well, because stock price go up? Why would you abandon that to return to Empire Building? Doesn't make sense to me. It wants to get that pro market. That's why it's buying a distribution company for $18 billion and delivering things like insulation straight to job sites. There's a lot of that pro market they can go out and take, Jim.
Starting point is 00:17:49 As an incremental business, that's fine. As long as they don't decide, you know what we need? What we need are, you know, every American, say, if you're within a 15-minute drive of a Home Depot, we don't need a new growth strategy where, you know, We want that to be every American within seven minute drive. We don't want the, you know, small mini stores like Best Buy did or little vending machines. Again, like Best Buy did.
Starting point is 00:18:15 That'd be tough with lumber. Well, it would be tough with lumber, but, you know, maybe not a few other products. You know, they're your light bulb, your light bulb source. But like, again, this has been one of the great, you could have bought, you could have bought Home Depot in the teeth of the credit crisis for $19. It's $340 today or whatever it is posted up. Like, again, with the dividends. Like, if you, imagine you'd bought, Ricky, imagine you bought it 19 or 20 bucks. Now you're getting $9 a share in dividend for year.
Starting point is 00:18:43 There's nothing I love doing more than imagining how much money I could have made by buying stocks 20 years ago. Today, where Home Depot is at. I mean, you talked about Berkshire Hathaway as a bedrock stock for a portfolio. Do you think Home Depot deserves a similar stock for an investor's portfolio? Yes. All right. Very good. Jim Gillies.
Starting point is 00:19:02 It's very simple. That's the shortest answer. We've gotten. It's the last one. Jim Gillies. Thanks for your time and your insight. No problem. Take care. These days, I'm all about quality over quantity, especially in my closet. If it's not well-made and versatile, it's just not worth it. That's honestly what I love Quince. The fabrics feel elevated, the cuts are thoughtful, and the pricing actually makes sense. Quince makes high-quality wardrobe staples using premium fabrics like 100% European linen, silk and organic cotton poplin.
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Starting point is 00:20:08 Now available in Canada, too. Don't keep settling for clothes that don't last. Go to QINCE.com slash Motley for free shipping and 365-day returns. Quince.com slash Motley. When's the last time you checked up on your ETS? Alison Southwick and Robert Brokamp discuss how you can evaluate them and one major thing to look for. All right, so here are the steps to follow to evaluate a fund,
Starting point is 00:20:43 whether it's one you're considering or one you already own. First up, start with performance. Yep, we're going to start with the bottom line on this. I'm going to talk through how you evaluate performance and other criteria by using Morningstar, the fun research company that coincidentally celebrates its 40-year birthday this Thursday. Morningstar was founded by Joe Mansovado out of his one-bedroom apartment in Chicago, and today the company employs more than 100,000 people and is worth $12.7 billion, which, you know, it's kind of like a fun little American success story. So I'll be talking about how to use Morningstar's website a lot in this episode, but just know that most of the information
Starting point is 00:21:17 is also available on the fund company's website. Also, many brokers and 401K providers have partnerships with Morningstar, so you may be able to find the same info on their websites. Okay, so here's how to evaluate a fund's performance. You go to Morningstar.com, enter the funds ticker, and click on the performance tab. And when you scroll down, you'll see the year-by-year returns, and further down, you'll see the trailing returns table. There you're going to see the returns over various time periods, like five, 10, 15 years of the fund has been around that long. Most importantly, you'll see the fund's percentile rank, which compares its performance to other funds with similar objectives. So, for example, if you're checking up on your U.S. large-cap value fund, the percentile
Starting point is 00:21:59 rank measures how it fared relative to all other U.S. large-cap value funds. And this is crucial because it ensures you're making an apples-to-apples comparison. Now, the lower the number, the better. So, for example, if a fund's percentile rank is 25, then it has performed in the top 25 percent, and outperformed 75% of those types of funds for that time period. I would say you should look beyond one year or even three. Every great investor hits a rough patch every once in a while, but after five years, certainly 10, you can expect a fund to be showing its true colors. All right.
Starting point is 00:22:32 Your next step is to compare it with another index fund. Yeah, you can have an actively managed fund that outperforms most of its peers, but still underperforms an index fund. In that case, it might be time to just ditch the actively managed fund for the index variety. If you already own an index fund, compared to others in its category, to see if it's a leader or a laggard. You do this by finding comparable index funds or an ETF to measure your fund against. You could look at the options offered at VETIFE's ETF database found at ETFDB.com. And Morningstar has a page that lists index funds and it has a whole page devoted to ETS.
Starting point is 00:23:09 You just scroll down to the bottom of that page for links to lists of all the ETS in various categories. Next step, it's time to look under the hood. Now, you likely bought a fund to get exposure to a certain type of investment. However, you may be surprised at how much your fund holds other types of investment. For example, it's not uncommon for U.S. stock funds to be allowed to invest 10% to 20% of their assets in international stocks. Another example is index funds that are supposedly dedicated to a certain type of company or investment, but actually have a good bit of exposure to others. So, for example, maybe you've heard that small caps are particularly cheap these days.
Starting point is 00:23:48 They're like, okay, I want to look for a good small cap index fund. You find that among the top ones in terms of size is the I shares S&P small cap ETF, ticker IJR, it's actually the biggest small cap ETF. And it has 99% of its assets in small caps. That's great. But then you look at the third biggest small cap ETF, that is a Vanguard small cap ETF, ticker VB, and you find that actually a third of its assets, assets are in mid-cap stocks. So, it's a mixture of small and mid-caps, what they often call
Starting point is 00:24:19 Smith. So if you're looking more for a pureplay small cap, you might choose to go with the I-shares ETF. And you'll find all this info about your fund by looking up on a Morning Star and clicking on the portfolio tab. For a stock fund, you'll see how its holdings break down by size, sector evaluation, other metrics, including how much of the fund is invested domestically versus internationally. You can also review its top holdings. For a bond fund, the Morning Star Portfolio tab will delineate the holdings by type of security, you know, corporate versus treasuries versus asset-backed bonds, credit rating, and duration, which is related to maturity and indicates the fund's sensitivity changes in interest rates. So the higher the duration,
Starting point is 00:25:01 the more the fund will go up and down according to changes in interest rates. As you review what's in the fund, ask yourself whether it's investing according to your expectations. and whether the funds holdings are significantly different from what you own elsewhere in your portfolio. Because if it's not that different from everything else you own, you're not really getting any additional diversification, so why bother owning it? And a final note about checking your funds innards. These days, well more than half of 401k participants invest in target date funds. And I love the idea of target date funds, but they're intended for investors with a moderate risk tolerance. So they may be playing it too safe for the typical.
Starting point is 00:25:40 typical Motley Fool podcast listener. If you're invested in a Target Date Fund, check out the stock bond split and see if that's where you want to be. If it's too conservative for you, choose a Target Date Fund, which has a date that is five to 10 years later than when you actually plan to retire. Your next step is to count the costs. Several years ago, Morningstar studied how well it's Stars rating system as well as cost predicted future fund performance. And the verdict, according to the report, and I'm just going to read a quote from it. If there's anything in the whole world of mutual funds that you can take to the bank, it's that expense ratios help you make a better decision. In every single time
Starting point is 00:26:19 period and data point tested, low cost funds beat high cost funds, end of quote. The fees charged by a mutual fund are mostly captured in the expense ratio, which is the percentage of your investment taken by the fund each year to pay for operating costs. Now, sometimes the funds have higher expense ratios than others because it costs more to invest in those markets. According to the Investment Company Institute, here are the asset weighted average expense ratios for different categories. So, for U.S. stock funds, the average expense ratio is 0.44%. International stock funds, 0.58%, and sector stock funds, 0.63%. Stocks are going to be more than bonds, because the average expense ratio for a bond fund is 0.37, money market fund, 0.13%. And for target date funds, 0.32%. So if you have a fund with an
Starting point is 00:27:04 expense ratio that is higher than those averages, make sure you're getting above average performance as well. Finally, keep an eye on the cost of your index funds. Some are cheaper than others. As an example, the oldest or perhaps most well-known ETF is the Spider-S-P-500, ticker SPY. It has an expense ratio of 0.09 percent, which is pretty dang low. But Vanguard's S&P-500 ETF, ticker V-O-O-O, is even lower at 0.03 percent. And that ever so slightly lower cost has contributed to slightly better returns. And both of those ETFs are significantly better than the nationwide S&P 500 mutual fund, ticker GRMAX, which has an expense ratio of 0.58%, and charges a 5.75% upfront commission just to get into the fund. And there's just no reason to invest in this fund
Starting point is 00:27:54 when significantly cheaper options are available. All right. Your next step is to limit Uncle Sam's take. And this is for the funds you own or are considering owning in a taxable brokerage account and not in a 401k or IRA. Because for funds you own in a brokerage account, you'll have to pay taxes on the interest, dividends, and capital gains distributed by the fund each year. And remember, even if you don't sell a single share of the fund, you may still owe taxes on the capital gains realized within the fund when the manager
Starting point is 00:28:24 sells an investment for a profit. Now, to get an idea of how much you might pay, look up the fund on Mornings and click on the price tab, scroll down to where you can see what is called the tax cost ratio. And that is the amount of return each year that would have been lost to taxes by someone in the highest tax bracket. And you'll see many funds that will lose one to two percent of return each year to taxes. Now, most people aren't in the highest tax bracket, so the actual tax costs will be lower for most people, but it's still an important consideration. What you'll find is, very generally speaking, index funds have lower tax cost rates.
Starting point is 00:29:01 ratios than actively traded funds, and ETS have lower ratios than traditional open and mutual funds. But it's not always the case. So do your research. All right. So there we have it. Steps for evaluating your funds. It's a fair amount of research. How often do you do this exercise, bro? Once a year. I mean, it's one of the benefits of owning a fund. I don't think you have to stay on top of them as much as maybe your individual stocks, but certainly once a year is important. As always, people on the program may have interests in the stocks that.
Starting point is 00:29:36 they talk about, and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against, so don't buy or sell anything based solely on what you hear. I'm Ricky Malvey. Thanks for listening. We'll be back tomorrow.

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