Jean-Luc Ichard
While reviewing various research reports, I came across a recent report from Goldman Sachs that was sent to bank clients on December 5, 2022. In it, the analysts look at the tactical positioning of mutual funds (x-axis) and hedge funds (y-axis) and conclude that FAAMG companies are currently underweight:
Goldman Sachs, 2023 US Equity Outlook [December 5th, 2022], author’s notes
That is, demand for these stocks from institutional investors has fallen for one reason or another. Recently, I have already published individual articles on some of these companies, in particular:
However, I’ve never touched Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) before here on Seeking Alpha, although MSFT is one of the most stable mega-cap stocks together with Apple (AAPL):
I consider Microsoft one of the most stable in its niche, but at the same time still quite expensive to buy now, even after a 23% YTD drawdown. In my opinion, we will still have a good opportunity to buy MSFT near the bottom – my analysis suggests such an opportunity in 2023. Therefore, I strongly recommend that you get your dry powder ready until then.
I suggest dwelling on the above Goldman Sachs report for a while and analyzing it in more detail. As I understand it, the chart you saw above is based on the inflows and outflows of 2 groups of institutional investors – a positive difference in the total flows indicates a tactical overweight, and a negative indicates an underweight.
The “bad news” applies to all FAAMG companies at once – why are you reading specifically about MSFT now?
The point is that MSFT is the most important company for most institutional investors (hedge funds). As the same GS report shows, provided that this position is among the 10 largest holdings, it reaches 8% of the total portfolio on average:
Goldman Sachs, 2023 US Equity Outlook [December 5th, 2022], author’s notes
At the same time, the company is among the candidates for more modest EPS growth and a lower net margin compared to what is currently priced in:
Goldman Sachs, 2023 US Equity Outlook [December 5th, 2022], author’s notes
From this, I conclude that in the scenario where Microsoft fails to meet investors’ expectations of upcoming earnings (in the next quarter or even a few quarters later), the stock could be affected by a massive exit of hedge funds from their positions.
Lower earnings will demand more modest multiples from the company for a less rosy future – in any case, I think there is room to move down in MSFT valuation multiples today:
Author’s calculations, based on macrotrends.net and roic.ai
2018 was notable for MSFT despite falling EPS (it fell over 22% YoY). That year, the company experienced frenetic growth in its cloud segment, launched Windows 10, and acquired GitHub – all of which combined to allow the stock to grow >35% while maintaining an unnaturally high P/E of 40-45x.
In 2015, although layoffs and the phone business weighed heavily on Microsoft’s financial results (EPS declined 44% YoY), it was the company’s success in the cloud that helped its share price rise 20%. Some acquisitions pointed to a potentially bright future for the company – and that allowed MSFT to justify the increase in its multiple from an average P/E of 15.9x in 2014 to 31.2x in 2015.
I rightly expect 2023 to be like no other. However, my impression is that MSFT stock, which along with other biggest technology companies takes up too large a share of the overall market, is likely to shrink as liquidity is blown away in the market – this picture looks too unsustainable to remain relevant in the event of downward revisions to EPS numbers:
Crescat Capital
Goldman Sachs, 2023 US Equity Outlook [December 5th, 2022], author’s notes
In my opinion, most of the company’s multiple is not due to upside potential – EPS growth of only 17.5% is projected for the next 2 years – but to the liquidity that the Fed has pumped into the market over the past few years. Why? Because when the company was growing at 20-30% per year (in terms of earnings per share), its average annual P/E ratio was only 15-20x, and now it’s 27.7x, making the company grossly overvalued compared to the entire IT sector:
Seeking Alpha, MSFT, Valuation
The issue of market liquidity was recently addressed by Tony Pasquariello, global head of hedge fund client coverage at Goldman Sachs [below is his Dec. 9 note]:
I can’t see the argument for lasting, significant upside: with QT and negative earnings revisions just starting to really kick in — alongside money market rates that are assuredly heading higher — we’re going into 2023 with a stock market that charges an 18 multiple for the prospect of … 0% earnings growth.
MSFT’s EPS has been revised 36 times in the last 3 months – all revisions have been to the downside. I expect analysts to keep revising their price targets in the next few quarters based on even lower EPS numbers or multiples – this is not just a problem for MSFT, but for the entire stock market. In any case, the macroeconomic models [provided by Alf from The Macro Compass, November 24, 2022] indicate the inevitability of this process:
Alf from The Macro Compass [November 24, 2022]
Therefore, I must recommend selling the rips in MSFT stock (or at least holding the stock) for the next 6 months and not adding at current levels.
In the very long term, I remain optimistic because of Microsoft’s unique market position – more than 70% of OS’s market share and more than 1/5 of the whole cloud market share allow the company to invest intelligently and diversify accumulated cash flows into technologies such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, which surprised everyone just a few days ago. SA fellow Livy Investment Research even called this technology the company’s “prescient investment,” which it most likely is.
I also like the company’s development in the gaming space – becoming the market leader with a projected long-term CAGR of 9% looks quite interesting as this growth can be leveraged through synergies from the integration of the company’s other products.
However, I expect a sharp decline in earnings per share in 2023 – or at least a P/E multiple contraction to reflect slowing growth [compared to the 2021-22 high base] – so MSFT will likely become undervalued again sometime in mid-2023. Then we’ll all need a lot of dry powder to buy the dip – but now, Microsoft stock is a strong Hold for me.
Thanks for reading!
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This article was written by
Chief investment analyst at a small Singapore-registered family office. Mainly focused on special situations, IPOs, and undercovered/hidden stocks.
BS in Finance. In my bachelor’s thesis, I looked at finding the best statistical/machine learning methods to predict underpricing of Initial Public Offerings (IPOs). A brief summary of my findings: using the KNN method, you could add about 24% of alpha compared to the average return of each initial public offer. In other words, with the AI algorithm I developed, it was possible to distinguish good IPOs from bad IPOs, where the average underpricing of selected companies in the test sample was 64.5%, while the overall average underpricing would be only 41.39%. More can be found here.
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**Disclaimer: Associated with Oakoff Investments, another Seeking Alpha Contributor
Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.