21.9 C
New York
Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Barac Capital Management 2Q17 Commentary

By VW Staff. Originally published at ValueWalk.

Barac Capital Management commentary for the second quarter ended June 30, 2017.

Get Our Activist Investing Case Study!

Get the entire 10-part series on our in-depth study on activist investing in PDF. Save it to your desktop, read it on your tablet, or print it out to read anywhere! Sign up below!

We respect your email privacy

Timeless Reading eBook

Also read:

Dear All,

This is the Fund’s eighteenth regular quarterly report to provide updates on the Partnership’s performance. The Partnership’s Fund administrator, Fund Associates, LLC, is also generating monthly investment reports for each Partner, by directly and independently accessing the Fund’s electronic brokerage data.

This quarter’s report will also provide a further update on the Fund’s performance for the third quarter through last Friday’s market close on August 18th.

For the three-months ending June 30, 2017, the Barac Value Fund L.P. (the “Fund” or “Partnership”) delivered net returns of 2.00% (after the deduction of management fees) versus a return of 2.33% for the benchmark1. For the 3rd quarter through the most recent business close, the Fund delivered net returns of 0.80% versus a return of 0.70% for the benchmark.

Gross and net annualized returns for the Fund since inception through the most recent business close, amounted to 10.24% and 8.58%, respectively.

Barac Capital Management 2Q17

Q2 and Q3 (to-date) performance

From the beginning of Q2 through the most recent business close, returns for the Fund amounted to 3.46% on a gross basis and 2.82% on a net basis (after fees) compared to 3.03% for the benchmark.

Top individual contributors for the period included Adidas AG (+18% for the period), Ralph Lauren (+4%), and Target (+3%). The worst individual stock performers included Dick’s Sporting Goods (-35% from position entry on 5/16), U-Haul, (-6%), and Entravision (-8%).

As always, it is also important to re-state that the Fund’s returns were generated without leverage (either direct or effective leverage through options), without taking highly concentrated positions, and while conservatively holding substantial cash and/or Treasury bond positions. I also continue to “put my money where my mouth is” and most of my liquid net worth also remains invested in the Fund along with the other Partners.

Performance Commentary

From the beginning of Q2 through the most recent close of business, domestic equities2 delivered a return of 3.48%. Bond returns, on the other hand, were also solidly positive as the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury decreased from 2.40% to 2.19% and the bond sub-component3 of the Fund’s benchmark increased by 2.37%.

The returns for the Fund’s positions in both Target and Ralph Lauren were disproportionately better than their share price returns (of 4% and 3%, respectively) for the period. While the actual returns for these two stocks was modestly positive, there was significantly price volatility over the period — during which time I was able to add exposure at levels substantially below current prices.

As I discussed in the previous quarterly letter, I had reduced the Fund’s position in Target to less than 3% of assets-under management (“A.U.M.”) after disappointing fiscal year-end results (I sold some shares at $58.52 on the day of earnings). Subsequent to Target’s year-end results, the company reported better-than-expected fiscal Q1 earnings which also resulted in management acknowledging expectations for full-year results to be above the mid-point of guidance. Despite these positive developments, Target’s shares declined by over 15% from the price level that I had sold shares in late February through to July 10th of this year.

This substantially changed the risk/reward dynamics of owning Target’s shares. Not only were the first quarter results positively reassuring, but the stock had become substantially cheaper (in an environment where domestic equities, overall, had become modestly more expensive). Furthermore, I believed that the magnitude of the market concerns that had hurt the share price (e.g. Target sold off by over 5% on the day Amazon announced they were buying Whole Foods) were not rational. As a result of these different factors, I added substantial exposure during the second quarter through to July 10th) at an average price of $51.18/share.

Subsequent to my recent purchases, Target’s share price increased 9%4 on the back of a second quarter earnings beat and a substantial positive revision to full-year guidance (from $4.00/share to $4.44 at the mid-point of guidance). This increase was from a considerably depressed level and (even after the recent post-earnings’ share price increase) Target’s shares remain 3% lower5 than where they closed following their disappointing full-year results and guidance this past February.

Interestingly, this share price decline occurred despite the positive earnings news that has come out since Target’s year-end earnings’ announcement (and the tail-wind of a rising domestic stock market). I don’t think that this disconnect is justified and I believe that the shares now offer substantial value.

While competition (both on-line and bricks-and-mortar) for Target remains strong and execution risks remain substantial, I believe that these risks are much more than adequately priced into Target’s share price. The company’s shares now trade at a forward price/earnings (“P/E”) ratio of 12.5x with a dividend yield of 4.5% (versus 18.7x and 2.0%, respectively, for the S&P 500)56. Target is now the Fund’s largest single-name position, accounting for approximately 6.1% of A.U.M. as of Friday’s close.

Shares in Ralph Lauren also sold-off substantially during the second quarter of this year. Sentiment for the company was particularly poor in May when shares were trading at levels as low as 42% below their 52-week highs (and 64% below their highs of less than 3 years prior). While the full investment thesis for Ralph Lauren is beyond the scope of the letter, I felt that this sell-off was also overdone and the market was not fully appreciating the long-term value of the company and its brand. As a result, I added exposure to Ralph Lauren at an average price of $67.67/share.

Unfortunately, the amount of these purchases was considerably less than those of Target, as sentiment for Ralph Lauren improved considerably during June and July and was further bolstered by a stronger-than-expected earnings report on August 8th. As a result, the company’s shares increased by 25% (to $84.32 as of last Friday’s close) from the levels where I had added exposure. Ralph Lauren accounted for 3.9% of the Fund’s A.U.M. as of Friday’s close.


So far, two-for-two “on buying the dips”!…but….

The outcome from purchasing depressed shares of Dick’s sporting goods wasn’t nearly as positive. I bought shares in Dick’s after they had reached levels over 34% below their 52 week-highs following disappointing Q1 results. I viewed the situation for Dick’s as somewhat similar to that of Best Buy at the end of 2012 — when the market severely discounted their shares on fears surrounding competition from Amazon, Wal-Mart, etc.

Best Buy was subsequently able to regain the market’s confidence and demonstrate their ability to be a long-term survivor in their niche market. As a result, shares in Best Buy have increased by over 400% from their 2012 lows. While I don’t necessarily expect the same magnitude of upside for Dick’s, I do believe that they are also a long-term survivor with a very strong market position in a sustainable niche market (retail sporting goods).

Unfortunately, subsequent to my purchases of shares in Dick’s, the stock fell by a further 35%. Most

The post Barac Capital Management 2Q17 Commentary appeared first on ValueWalk.

Sign up for ValueWalk’s free newsletter here.

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Stay Connected

157,362FansLike
396,312FollowersFollow
2,290SubscribersSubscribe

Latest Articles

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x