Best Oil Stocks To Buy For 2011

You don’t have to be an adherent of peak oil theory to be bullish on oil and oil stocks over the next two, five, ten years. Simple math shows that the world’s energy needs are rising – even with the entrance of electric cars into the North American market. Individual stock investors are wise to have some exposure to this sector of the energy market.Another part of the reason I focus on these types of posts is that there’s a dearth of information for US investors on international stocks and their valuations. Since I keep up on analysis of the Canadian equities markets, I’m happy to share with you what I’ve learned. I’m not a financial advisor, however, so keep that in mind and use these as suggestions for further research only.

When I say “best,” I mean some mixture of both the largest, the companies with the most lucrative oil patch locations, and the stocks that are most often recommended by Canadian analysts specializing in this sector. Also note that all of these are mature oil producers and they all pay dividends. I’ve listed them here according to market cap.

Best Oil Stocks To Buy For 2011: Suncor (TSX: SU)

One analyst called this the “#2 go-to name” for foreign investors. Suncor is another solid management team with steady, if not spectacular, growth prospects projected ahead. They recently acquired Canada’s #2 gasoline company, Petro-Canada, which owned a large number of gas stations throughout the country. Market Cap: $55.3 billion. Yield: 1.1%

Suncor Energy Inc. is a growing, integrated energy company, strategically focused on developing one of the world’s largest petroleum resource basins – Canada’s Athabasca oil sands.

In 1967, Suncor made history by tapping the oil sands to produce the first commercial barrel of synthetic crude oil. Since then, Suncor has grown to four major businesses with more than 5,000 employees.


  • Near Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada, Suncor extracts and upgrades oil sands into high-quality refinery feedstock and diesel fuel.
  • In Western Canada, Suncor explores for, develops and produces natural gas.
  • In Ontario, Suncor refines crude oil and markets a range of petroleum and petrochemical products, primarily under the Sunoco brand.
  • In Colorado, Suncor’s downstream assets include a Commerce City-based refinery, crude oil pipeline systems and 43 retail stations branded as Phillips 66.
While we work to responsibly develop hydrocarbon resources, Suncor is also investing in clean, renewable energy sources. By 2008, Suncor plans to have four projects in operation with a total capacity of 147 megawatts of renewable energy as an alternative to hydrocarbon-fuelled generation. These projects are expected to offset the equivalent of approximately 270,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide annually. In Ontario, Suncor expects to complete construction in 2006 on a plant that will supply ethanol – a renewable energy source – for lower-emission blended fuels.

Suncor Energy (SU:TSX) is one of Canada's premier integrated energy companies. Suncor's operations include oil sands development and upgrading, conventional and offshore oil and gas production, petroleum refining and product marketing under the Petro-Canada brand (Annual Report 2009). Suncor's common shares are listed on the Toronto and New York Stock Exchanges.

Currently Suncor's stock price is trading close to its mid-point in the 52 week time range. It's last closing price was recorded at $34.32. It's 52 week low price was $27.44 and it's 52 week high price was $40.79.
Suncor Fundamental Valuation Metrics

All of Suncor's financial ratios other than the Return on Equity and Gross Profit Margin are lower than the industry average. Its operating performance measures are on par/better than some of its closest peers.

However, its relative valuation measures are higher than the industry average as illustrated below:



Suncor Valuation

Is the valuation justified?

Suncor has a strong recoverable resource base of 27 billion barrels of oil equivalent.

Suncor also has in place a debt retirement plan and is now in the process of divesting assets it inherited in the merger with Petro-Canada that do not support its core operations. The company expects to close most sales by the end of the year. The proceeds from these sales are expected to be around CAD $ billion 2 to 4 and are expected to be used in reducing the company's debt. Along these lines, Suncor recently announced that it has entered into an agreement to sell certain natural gas-heavy assets in west-central Alberta for C$235 million ($230 million) in cash.

With 84% of the value in Suncor coming from oil, rising oil prices are Suncor's strongest catalyst for growth. For the near future, the US Energy Information Administration forecasts oil price to average USD 80.06 in 2010 and USD 83.50 in 2011.

Best Oil Stocks To Buy For 2011: Encana (TSX: ECA)

Encana has been described as one of the “bluest of the blue-chips.” Its focus is unconventional oil and gas with strengths in clean energy production, although it is weighted to natural gas. However, it has the second-largest market cap of any Canadian oil company. Market Cap: $45.4 billion. Yield: 2.8%

EnCana is a leading oil and gas producer in North America, where the company's primary focus is on the development of resource plays and the in-situ recovery of oilsands bitumen.



Christina Lake In-situ oilsands, northeast Alberta, EnCana's largest potential oilsands project

Located in northeast Alberta about 120 kilometers south of Fort McMurray, Christina Lake has the potential to be EnCana's largest oilsands project. Pilot project work over the past five years has taken steam-assisted gravity drainage production, from six well pairs drilled into the McMurray formation, to a level that is expected to average 6,000 barrels of bitumen per day in 2006. A current expansion is expected to take production to about 18,000 barrels per day in 2008 and the project is targeted to grow to more than 250,000 barrels per day over the next decade.


With a reservoir thickness of up to 150 feet of oil-bearing sands, Christina Lake is estimated by EnCana to have an unbooked resource potential of about 1.8 billion barrels of oil.

Foster Creek

In-situ oilsands, northeast Alberta, commenced commercial operations in 2001.

Foster Creek is the quintessential resource play — a high-quality, unconventional resource with large potential and scalable, repeatable operations that enable the company to incorporate technical advances.

Foster Creek produces from the McMurray formation of the Athabasca oilsands, and features a technology called steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD). We conducted a multi-year pilot project prior to starting commercial operations in 2001. In SAGD, horizontal wells are drilled in pairs — running parallel above one another about 17 feet apart. Steam is injected in the upper well to warm the bitumen and make it less viscous so it can drain to the lower production well bore.

A critical SAGD thermal efficiency measure is the ratio between the quantity of steam injected and the quantity of oil produced. Our steam-oil ratio of 2.5 times is industry leading. With a high-quality reservoir and leading thermal efficiency, Foster Creek delivers excellent returns.

Oil production averaged 29,019 bbls/d in 2005. In the fourth quarter of 2005, we completed the first stage of an expansion which added an additional 10,000 bbls/d of capacity. The second stage of the expansion, which is expected to add an additional 20,000 bbls/d of capacity, is expected to be completed around year-end 2006.

In November of 2005, we announced that EnCana is developing plans to significantly expand production from its estimated 5 billion to 10 billion barrels of recoverable oilsands resources - assets that have the potential to reach a production rate of 500,000 bbls/d of oil per day in the next 10 years.
Best Oil Stocks To Buy For 2011: Imperial Oil (TSX: IMO)
Imperial Oil has not been getting as much attention lately, but is still clearly a major player rounding out the profile of the largest Canadian oil companies. Imperial has not only consistently won awards for being one of Canada’s top employers, but they actively work to improve their environmental record. The dividends are meagre, however. But the management team is considered solid, and if you can call an oil company “blue-chip,” this is as close as they get. Market Cap: $35.1 billion. Yield: 1.0%
Imperial Oil Limited was incorporated under the laws of Canada in 1880. It is an integrated oil company. It is active in all phases of the petroleum industry in Canada, including the exploration for, and production and sale of, crude oil and natural gas. The Company's operations are conducted in three main segments: Upstream, Downstream and Chemical. Upstream operations include the exploration for, and production of, conventional crude oil, natural gas, upgraded crude oil and heavy oil. Downstream operations consist of the transportation, refining and blending of crude oil and refined products and the distribution and marketing thereof. The Chemical operations consist of the manufacturing and marketing of various petrochemicals. The Company owns and operates four refineries. Two of these, the Sarnia refinery and the Strathcona refinery, have lubricating oil production facilities. The Strathcona refinery processes Canadian crude oil, and the Dartmouth, Sarnia and Nanticoke refineries process a combination of Canadian and foreign crude oil. In addition to crude oil, the Company purchases finished products to supplement its refinery production. Crude oil from foreign sources is purchased by the Company at market prices mainly through Exxon Mobil Corporation. It owns and operates crude oil, natural gas liquids and products pipelines in Alberta, Manitoba and Ontario. Its known brand names are notably Esso and Mobil. The Company's Chemical operations manufacture and market ethylene, benzene, aromatic and aliphatic solvents, plasticizer intermediates and polyethylene resin. Its major petrochemical and polyethylene manufacturing operations are located in Sarnia, Ontario, adjacent to the Company's petroleum refinery. The Company's competitors include major integrated oil and gas companies and numerous other independent oil and gas companies. All phases of the Upstream, Downstream and Chemical businesses are subject to environmental regulation pursuant to a variety of Canadian federal, provincial and municipal laws and regulations, as well as international conventions.

IMO.TSX Revenue

As a value investing shop, we are interested in seeing how IMO.TSX's revenues measure up against past performances. One easily understandable way of doing that is to compare Price to Sales per share levels over a given time frame. Assuming it is available, Ockham prefers to look at ten years of history (for this stock there are 10 years of history available) and we weigh recent years more heavily. This allows us to find weighted average historical high and low Price to Sales ratios, which give us a better idea of the stock's current underlying value. Using this method, we have established a high range for Price to Sales of 1.67x and the low end of the range at 1.09x.

With respect to these historically rational metrics, notice that the current Price to Sales per share ratio for IMO.TSX of 1.49x is somewhat above its historical average. As such, the current Price to Sales ratio suggests a neutral share price forecast. In order for us to become more positive about IMO.TSX we would need to see a drop in the Price to Sales ratio of 7% given current sales per share levels in order to return to its historical weighted average.

IMO.TSX Cash Earnings

Cash Earnings is always one of the most important factors to review for a company and, more importantly, an investment in a stock. IMO.TSX is significantly above their historical average multiples of Cash Earnings, as calculated by our proprietary analysis. It is incredibly important to understand that for IMO.TSX, the current level of Cash Earnings compared to its historical levels helps identify where IMO.TSX is in relation to what the investing community was willing to pay for this level of Cash Earnings in the past. With a historical high Cash Earnings per share ratio of 17.13 and a historical low Cash Earnings per share ratio of 11.35, an investor can relate where value becomes optimal.

Just recall that when a stock's price, as in the cases of IMO.TSX, is significantly elevated to the level of Cash Earnings being generated, the market has already priced in much of that value. For example, the historical average for IMO.TSX's Price to Cash Earnings ratio is 35% below the current ratio of 19.28. That is not an insignificant amount, and diminishes our overall outlook on IMO.TSX. However, you need to review several areas of a company's potential, and as management would point out, one metric is not the end-all-be-all of any analysis.

IMO.TSX Dividends

While it is not necessary to pay an attractive dividend or a dividend at all, to receive a positive rating from Ockham, we view dividends as an additionally helpful measure in determining the future potential of any company.

In IMO.TSX’s case, the estimated annual dividend is 0.40 resulting in a current dividend yield of 1.00%. Similar to our review of Sales and Cash Earnings per share, we evaluate dividend yields from IMO.TSX against the historic high and low levels over the past 10 years. The highest dividend yield from IMO.TSX over this period was 2.47% while the lowest dividend yield was 0.61% With that range in mind, IMO.TSX’s current dividend yield is a full 35.24% below its median dividend yield historically. This is a negative from our perspective.

Best Oil Stocks To Buy For 2011: Talisman Energy (TSX: TLM)

An independent company since 1992, Talisman is headquartered in Calgary, Alberta. It has subsidiaries operating in the UK, Norway, Southeast Asia, and North Africa. Talisman is another reputable big-cap, oil-weighted stock with gas exposure. It’s also more likely to be a buyer rather than a target of a takeover. Market Cap: $18.6 billion. Yield: 1.2%

Talisman Energy Incis considered to operate in the Energy sector. They specifically operate in the Independent Oil & Gas business segment contained within the Oil & Gas - E&P industry.

Talisman Energy Inc. is a global, diversified, upstream oil and gas company, headquartered in Canada. Talisman's three main operating areas are North America, the North Sea and Southeast Asia. The Company also has a portfolio of international exploration opportunities. It is a Canadian-based independent oil and gas producers. Talisman's main business activities include exploration, development, production, transportation and marketing of crude oil, natural gas and natural gas liquids. It has a diversified, global portfolio of oil and gas assets. The Company believes this portfolio would provide growth from shale gas development in North America, project developments in Southeast Asia, and its international exploration portfolio. Talisman investigates strategic acquisitions, dispositions and other business opportunities on an ongoing basis, some of which may be material. The Company's activities are conducted in five geographic segments: North America, UK, Scandinavia, Southeast Asia, and Other. The North America segment includes operations in Canada and the United States. The Southeast Asia segment includes exploration and operations in Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam and Australia and exploration activities in Papua New Guinea. The Other segment includes operations in Algeria and exploration activities in Peru, Colombia and the Kurdistan region of northern Iraq.

TLM.TSX Revenue

Cash earnings is the most important factor in our analysis, but it goes without saying that if a company cannot produce sales then there is no ability to generate cash flow. By that logic we look very closely at revenue numbers as our second most important factor in valuing a company's stock. We have established reasonable Price to Sales per share ranges based on historical data of the last 10 years. For, TLM.TSX the high and low end of the Price to Sales per share ratios are 2.55x and 1.43x respectively.

Notice that TLM.TSX's current Price to Sales per share ratio is 2.55x, which is high enough compared with historical norms of TLM.TSX to cause some concern. The current Price to Sales per share is near the upper end of the historical range. In our eyes, this is a negative factor because it is more likely that it will return to the normal range than continue rising outside of the range. At current sales per share levels, we would need to see a decline in the Price to Sales ratio of 28% merely to return TLM.TSX to its historical average.

TLM.TSX Cash Earnings

Looking at TLM.TSX specifically in their Cash Earnings capabilities, Ockham views TLM.TSX as significantly above their historical average multiples of Cash Earnings, as calculated by our proprietary analysis. It is incredibly important to understand that for TLM.TSX, the current level of Cash Earnings compared to its historical levels helps identify where TLM.TSX is in relation to what the investing community was willing to pay for this level of Cash Earnings in the past. With a historical high Cash Earnings per share ratio of 16.60 and a historical low Cash Earnings per share ratio of 9.93, an investor can relate where value becomes optimal.

Just recall that when a stock's price, as in the cases of TLM.TSX, is significantly elevated to the level of Cash Earnings being generated, the market has already priced in much of that value. For example, the historical average for TLM.TSX's Price to Cash Earnings ratio is 204% below the current ratio of 40.37. That is not an insignificant amount, and diminishes our overall outlook on TLM.TSX. However, you need to review several areas of a company's potential, and as management would point out, one metric is not the end-all-be-all of any analysis.

TLM.TSX Dividends

A positive Ockham rating does not require a company to pay out an inviting dividend or a dividend at all. However, we believe dividends provide a useful measure of a company's inherent expectations.

Comparable to our analysis of Sales and Cash Earnings per share, we examine dividend yields from TLM.TSX against the historic high and low levels over an available data range. Because TLM.TSX has an established history of paying a dividend to shareholders, there is value in comparing recent dividends to historical dividends. In TLM.TSX’s case, the estimated annual dividend is 0.24 producing a current dividend yield of 1.35%. The highest dividend yield from TLM.TSX in recent history was 2.42% while the lowest dividend yield was 0.54%. TLM.TSX is not making us feel all that confident when their current dividend yield is below the historical median by 9.08%.

Best Oil Stocks To Buy For 2011: Crescent Point Energy (TSX: CPG)

This is by far the hot Canadian oil stock right now, but for good reason. Not only does it seem to have the best growth and production prospects over the next ten years, but it has the best location of reserves in both southwest and southeast Saskatchewan. I have yet to see an analyst have anything negative to say about this company. Take that for what it’s worth, but I’m just saying. One factor to consider is its small market cap relative to others in the sector. It also has an unusually high yield, perhaps owing to its recent conversion from income trust status. Market Cap: $5.7 billion. Yield: 7.8%

Crescent Point Energy Corporationis considered to operate in the Energy sector. They specifically operate in the Independent Oil & Gas business segment contained within the Oil & Gas - E&P industry. Through Crescent Point Resources Ltd. and other subsidiaries, explores for, develops and produces oil and gas in western Canada.

CPG Revenue

As a value investing shop, we are interested in seeing how CPG's revenues measure up against past performances. One easily understandable way of doing that is to compare Price to Sales per share levels over a given time frame. Assuming it is available, Ockham prefers to look at ten years of history (for this stock there are 8 years of history available) and we weigh recent years more heavily. This allows us to find weighted average historical high and low Price to Sales ratios, which give us a better idea of the stock's current underlying value. Using this method, we have established a high range for Price to Sales of 5.94x and the low end of the range at 3.30x.

With respect to these historically rational metrics, notice that the current Price to Sales per share ratio for CPG of 8.54x is well above its historical average. This means that CPG looks relatively expensive compared to its historical Price to Sales average, and thus it is more difficult to believe that there is significant price appreciation potential. In order for the stock to become more attractive, we would like to see a decline in the Price to Sales ratio of 84% just to return CPG to its historical average.

CPG Cash Earnings

Cash Earnings is always one of the most important factors to review for a company and, more importantly, an investment in a stock. CPG is significantly above its historical average multiple of cash earnings as calculated by Ockham. Similar to our analysis of sales per share, Ockham looks at the last 8 years of cash earnings levels for CPG to identify where the current high and low price levels have been historically in relation to profit per share. Again, we utilize a weighted average methodology which relies more heavily on recent years of data. This weighted average framework provides us with an average high Price to Cash Earnings ratio per share of 18.82 and a 11.99 low over the same period.

Therefore, at the current price of 37.83 and a Price to Cash Earnings ratio of 4,770.83, CPG is significantly overvalued. This diminishes the attractiveness of CPG until we see either a significant increase in cash earnings or a decline in price. A decline of the Price to Cash Earnings ratio of 30869% is needed just to return to the historical cash earnings multiple.

CPG Dividends

A positive Ockham rating does not require a company to pay out an inviting dividend or a dividend at all. However, we believe dividends provide a useful measure of a company's inherent expectations.

Comparable to our analysis of Sales and Cash Earnings per share, we examine dividend yields from CPG against the historic high and low levels over an available data range. Because CPG has an established history of paying a dividend to shareholders, there is value in comparing recent dividends to historical dividends. In CPG’s case, the estimated annual dividend is 2.76 producing a current dividend yield of 7.30%. The highest dividend yield from CPG in recent history was 14.40% while the lowest dividend yield was 0.00%. Therefore, the current dividend yield of CPG is above the historical median by 1.36%. This is definitely a positive in our view.

Best Oil Stocks To Buy For 2011: Canadian Natural Resources (TSX: CNQ)

Canadian Natural Resources, Ltd.is considered to operate in the Energy sector. They specifically operate in the Independent Oil & Gas business segment contained within the Oil & Gas - E&P industry.

Canadian Natural Resources Limited was incorporated under the laws of the Province of British Columbia on November 7, 1973 as AEX Minerals Corporation (N.P.L.) and on December 5, 1975 changed its name to Canadian Natural Resources Limited. It is a Canadian based senior independent energy company engaged in the acquisition, exploration, development, production, marketing and sale of crude oil, NGLs, and natural gas production. The Company's main core regions of operations are western Canada, the United Kingdom sector of the North Sea and Offshore West Africa. It initiates, operates and maintains a large working interest in a majority of the prospects in which it participates. It focuses on exploiting its core properties and actively maintaining cost controls. The Company's business approach is to maintain large project inventories and production diversification among each of the commodities it produces namely: natural gas, light/medium crude oil and NGLs, Pelican Lake crude oil (14-17º API oil, which receives medium quality crude netbacks due to lower production costs and lower royalty rates), primary heavy crude oil, thermal heavy crude oil and SCO. Its operations are centered on balanced product offerings, which together provide complementary infrastructure and balance throughout the business cycle. Virtually all of the Company's natural gas and NGLs production is located in the Canadian provinces of Alberta, British Columbia and Saskatchewan and is marketed in Canada and the United States.

CNQ Revenue

For a long time, value investors have used the current share price relative to sales per share levels as an important valuation tool. We utilize a historical weighted average methodology that treats recent years more importantly in the calculation. When looking at CNQ through this framework, we can see that our weighted average historical high and low Price to Sales per share ratios over the last 10 years are 3.07x and 1.31x respectively.

Utilizing this range we can see that CNQ’s current Price to Sales per share ratio of 2.83x is high enough compared with historical norms of CNQ to cause some concern. The current Price to Sales per share is near the upper end of the historical range. In our eyes, this is a negative factor because it is more likely that it will return to the normal range than continue rising outside of the range. At current sales per share levels, we would need to see a decline in the Price to Sales ratio of 28% merely to return CNQ to its historical average.

CNQ Cash Earnings

As a value investment framework, Ockham Research is similar to a private equity firm in terms of our valuation methods. We are always on the lookout for value in the form of sales and cash numbers. In the case of CNQ, Ockham views their current Cash Earnings as significantly above their historical average multiples of Cash Earnings, as calculated by our proprietary analysis. It is incredibly important to understand that for CNQ, the current level of Cash Earnings compared to its historical levels helps identify where CNQ is in relation to what the investing community was willing to pay for this level of Cash Earnings in the past. With a historical high Cash Earnings per share ratio of 17.05 and a historical low Cash Earnings per share ratio of 7.30, an investor can relate where value becomes optimal.

So what does this tell us about CNQ in particular? Basically, we would value the current level of Cash Earnings per share (which is at 14.25) as significantly overvalued. Just by looking at the last closing price of CNQ, which was 32.47, we can see that compared to the historical high Price to Cash Earnings levels we calculated, the market has already rewarded CNQ with a higher stock price. So basically, we don't view this level of Cash Earnings or stock price as compatible with a long term value at this point. Just remember, that does not mean that CNQ may not have other merits with which to find a good investment opportunity, it just means that we would prefer to see either an increase in Cash Earnings or a decrease in stock price before we would become bullish on this metric.

CNQ Dividends

A positive Ockham rating does not require a company to pay out an inviting dividend or a dividend at all. However, we believe dividends provide a useful measure of a company's inherent expectations.

Comparable to our analysis of Sales and Cash Earnings per share, we examine dividend yields from CNQ against the historic high and low levels over an available data range. Because CNQ has an established history of paying a dividend to shareholders, there is value in comparing recent dividends to historical dividends. In CNQ’s case, the estimated annual dividend is 0.23 producing a current dividend yield of 0.67%. The highest dividend yield from CNQ in recent history was 2.15% while the lowest dividend yield was 0.37%. With that range in mind, CNQ’s current dividend yield is a full 46.57% below its median dividend yield historically. This is a negative from our perspective.

2011 Stock Market Top Ahead?These Two Stocks Say Yes

While I hate to be the bearer of bad news, something is suddenly happening in the luxury high-end consumer market that stock analysts and economists have failed to pick up on.

Coach, Inc. (NYSE/COH), a seller of high-end leather handbags and a stock I follow closely to monitor consumer spending patterns on luxury items, yesterday reported that it made $303 million in its latest quarter on $1.26 billion in sales. Same-store sales climbed 13% and the company announced a $1.5-billion stock buyback program.

Looking at Coach’s results, one would think the luxury high-end consumer is back to his/her 2007 spending habits and that the luxury market is back big-time. But one thing is terribly wrong with this picture. Even though Coach’s sales were strong, even though they beat analyst expectations and even though they are buying their stock back because management believes it is such a great deal, the stock is quickly moving down in price.

Coach’s stock reached a 52-week high of $58.55 in mid-December 2010. Since then, the stock has been coming down. In fact, it’s down 9.3% since then to $53.09. We all know January has been great for stocks, with the Dow Jones Industrials up 3.5% in January, so why is a high-end luxury company (with great earnings) seeing its stock price decline?

Well, Coach is not alone. If we look at the stock of Tiffany & Co. (NYSE/TIF), the high-end retail store operation, we see the same picture: Tiffany’s stock traded at $65.76 in mid-December 2010. Despite better than expected earnings from Tiffany as well, Tiffany’s stock is down 11% since mid-December to $58.60 today.

Hence, we have two bellwether consumer luxury item retailers down about 10% in the past four to six weeks, while the stock market continues to rally. In my opinion, the price action of these stocks smells of trouble ahead.

I’m a big believer in stock prices being a leading indicator. And if I didn’t know better, I’d say that the price action of these two stocks is telling us that the high-end consumer market will suddenly be cooling spending in the months ahead—something very few analysts and economists are predicting today.

Another signal of a market top coming and economic trouble ahead? Unfortunately, that is what the price action of these two well-known luxury brand stocks are telling us.

Michael’s Personal Notes:

Words of wisdom released Monday from my highly respected colleague, Robert Appel:

“We get that, after some 10 years of anguish, readers want to hear good news, but unfortunately we have a policy of telling the truth, at least as we see it. Stocks are holding up only because Mr. Bernanke has prioritized the market as against all other asset classes. Bully for him.

Gold is consolidating for a time -- we did call this for you, but this too shall pass…and provides an opportunity to increase positions.

A lot of potential bad news is on the way. This includes Euro debt, the collapse of bonds, unsold inventory in housing that is not being disclosed, the collapse of cities and states, massive food inflation, general inflation, and more unpredictable weather. There could be a major heat wave this summer -- which will additionally interfere with the growing cycle.

And labor unrest -- the working man is actually the “canary in the mineshaft;” he is told by the media that there is no inflation, but he knows precisely what it costs him to feed and care for this family. The news should hit no later than late spring.”

In specific to gold bullion, Appel says:

“There are no absolutes here. In 2010, we saw the gold complex take what we called the ‘Death of a Thousand Cuts’ over a period of many months before rocketing in the fall, and making a lot of money for our readers. The year 2011 is NOT going to follow that pattern, we think. There appears to be the fast pushing of a negative pall (down move) over the entire gold/silver market which will drive away all but the most determined and act as the setup for a much bigger up push to come.

We still expect $2,000 gold by next year and remind you that, unlike many others, we have never talked to you about $5,000 or $10,000 or $20,000 gold because the powers that run the world would sooner have a collective root canal than allow that to happen. But $2,000 gold in very doable and would reward those nations (Russia, China) that have been accumulating, while Britain and the U.S. have been dumping.

In the meantime, watch the $1,265-per-ounce level, which should provide an interesting test of a local bottom, while at the same time being enough of a drop from the $1,400-plus range to mystify the weak traders who will, by then, be hiding under their beds.”

Where the Market Stands; Where it’s Headed:

The Dow Jones Industrial Average opens this morning up 3.5% for the year. There is no doubt about it; stocks are off to a great start in 2011. I’ve been writing in these pages throughout December 2010 and January that, in the immediate term, stocks would rise. And that is exactly what has been happening. Dow Jones Industrials 12,000, here we come.

But the air of optimism is getting too thick for me. Last night, when I was listening to President Obama’s State of the Union address, the President made specific mention of the stock market “being back up.” Too many investors and analysts are turning bullish. While we may be a few weeks away still from a market top, the bullishness I see amongst market participants is characteristic of the type of investor sentiment we see when the stock market is topping out.

What He Said:

“You’ve been reading my articles over the past few months and have seen how negative I’ve become on the U.S. economy. Particularly, I believe it’s the ramifications of the faltering housing sector that are being underestimated by economists. A recession doesn’t take much to happen. It’s disappointing that more hasn’t been written on the popular financial sites and in the newspapers about the real threat of a recession happening in 2007. I want my readers to be fully aware of my economic opinion: I wouldn’t be surprised to see the U.S. economy in a recession sometime in 2007. In fact, I expect it.” Michael Lombardi in PROFIT CONFIDENTIAL, November 13, 2006. Michael was one of the first to predict a U.S. recession, long before Wall Street analysts and economists even thought it a possibility.

The power of a few large-cap companies to sway stock market sentiment is great. As recent corporate events illustrate, not only does good earnings news move the market, but, increasingly, dividend news is moving share prices. This is big and it’s a sign of the new age of austerity among corporations and individual investors.

Dividend investing is a growth industry because of demographics, interest rates that are historically low, and the fact that a lot of big corporations have excess cash to play with. In fact, the cash hoard among many large, brand-name companies is growing and investors can expect much more news related to increased dividends and share buybacks.

Corporations and individuals with money have the same problem. There are very few places to invest that offer a decent return. Investors seeking income can’t find the kind of inflation-adjusted returns in virtually any other capital market other than equities. Corporations with excess cash can’t invest that money and make a decent return with interest rates so low. Accordingly, they’re returning the cash to shareholders in the form of share buybacks and dividends.

Frankly, it’s a good time to be a dividend investor, especially if you expect the economy to grow modestly over the coming years. While I’m not an advocate for taking on new positions in the stock market at this time, the performance of a number of my benchmark companies has been tremendous in recent history—and most of these companies pay shareholders a respectable dividend (DD, CAT, UTX, MMM, CMI, ADP, and PEP, for example.) Just like in the fashion industry, trends change. Over the next several years, I think that large-cap, higher-dividend-paying stocks are going to outperform. I know that history suggests that small-cap companies outperform coming out of a recession, but not this time. The business cycle this time around favors large-cap, international companies with excess cash and pricing power. Domestic small-caps won’t be able to compete.

I would even go so far as to advocate investing in those dividend-paying large-caps that have already experienced major upward moves in their share prices. In a way, it’s kind of like momentum investing in dividend-paying stocks. I’d rather own a proven winner over a large-cap, dividend-paying company whose stock price is in the doldrums. I like value in growing small-cap companies, but I like a proven track record in large-cap investing. Value here is less important in this business cycle.

I know a lot of investors who spend a lot of time looking for income-generating securities. It’s going to be a growth industry for investment banks. My grandmother never owned a stock her entire life and only bought CDs to sock away some money. She liked the security. But with interest rates so low (even if they go up later in the year), she might think twice nowadays with a company like PepsiCo yielding around three percent and a long-term track record of solid capital appreciation.

There is optimism on Wall Street, but be careful as there is also risk. You need to understand the concept of risk management as a key element to investing success. The reason why I want to discuss risk management is my sense that there are some of you who probably fail to incorporate some sort of risk-management strategy. If you do have one, that’s fantastic and you are probably sleeping well at night. If you have been delinquent in this area, be careful.

I have been involved in the markets for over 20 years. After reading the strategies of some of the world’s best traders, a commonality surfaces: the most important tenet in trading is preserving your investable capital via the use of risk management. The last thing you want to happen to you is to trade sloppily and lose your tradable capital. Instead of being a player in the exciting world of trading, you would be relegated to watching from the sidelines. But guess what? You can avoid this by following some simple strategies.

When the price of a stock trends higher, you should always think about a potential exit strategy. This does not mean liquidating profitable trades, but rather protecting your unrealized gains.

If you have a price target for your stock, you can sell the stock when it reaches that target. Alternatively, if the gains are significant, you can take profits on a portion of the position and let the remaining portion ride. For instance, if a stock rises by 100%, you can liquidate 50% of the position and let the remaining half ride. Under this simple strategy, you realize some profits but at the same time create a zero-cost trade, as you have already recouped your original investment. You can view the remaining half as your risk capital.

Another strategy that needs to be considered is the use of mental or physical stop-loss limits. The reality that is no one is perfect in trading. I have made mistakes and so have many of you. If you can accept this, then that’s half of the battle. To protect against mistakes, you should use stop-losses on your positions. Where to place the stop depends on how much capital you are comfortable with risking. Stops can range from three percent below the purchase price to as much as 15% or more. Setting a close stop can take you out quickly in a fast market. Conversely setting the stop too low can entail large losses.

Stops should also be used when a stock is trending higher. These stops are referred to as trailing stops and are constantly adjusted as the price of the stock rises. This can easily be done in a spreadsheet or by hand. Adapting trailing stops helps to protect your gains as the stock rises.

Some of you may be wondering if the stop-loss should be a mental or physical stop. I prefer the physical stop, as it effectively eliminates the potential influence that emotion can play when you trade. I’m going to say it here. EMOTION kills good trades and often makes you keep your losers. Keeping losers is counterproductive and will make you a viewer from the sidelines. EMOTION has no role in trading.

I consider EMOTION the cancer of trading and it needs to be eradicated!

And for those of you familiar with options, you can employ a “Put Hedge” or “Protective Put” to help minimize the downside loss. If you own mutual funds, you can buy the appropriate index Put by determining the type of fund it is (e.g. small-cap, blue chip, S&P 500, technology, etc.).

If your portfolio is 50% technology, 30% large-cap, and 20% small-cap, you can hedge the risk by allocating 50% to Puts on the NASDAQ 100, 30% to S&P 500 Puts, and 20% to Russell 2000 or S&P 600 Small Cap Puts. If you hold only a few large positions, say Microsoft, Pfizer, General Electric, Citigroup and Home Depot, you can simply buy corresponding Puts to match.

If you are already adhering to risk-management strategies, good for you! Otherwise, learning them will make you a better and more successful trader and investor.

Buffett's Favorite Stocks For 2011

Earnings of Dow stocks Procter & Gamble, Kraft and Johnson & Johnson will be scoured the most by billionaire investor Warren Buffett, whose Berkshire Hathaway is among the top four shareholders of each.
Warren Buffett

Getty Images
Warren Buffett

Those three companies, and the other Dow consumer-goods stock McDonald's, will start reporting earnings Jan. 24.

Procter & Gamble, Kraft, Johnson & Johnson and McDonald's had virtually flat earnings last year, according to analysts' estimates.

Nevertheless, Buffett has made a fortune by buying large and steady companies. (He also owns Coca-Cola [KO 62.96 --- UNCH (0) ] .) As the economy rebounds this year, not only growth stocks such as Apple [AAPL 341.40 --- UNCH (0) ] and Netflix [NFLX 186.74 --- UNCH (0) ] may outpace the S&P 500 Index, but also laggards including Dow Jones Industrial Average top stocks for 2011.

The 2010 share-price returns of the four Dow consumer stocks are led by McDonald's, at 27%, and bracketed by Johnson & Johnson, with a decline of 0.7%. Dow stocks gained 11% last year, while the S&P 500 rose 15%. The Dow industrials have advanced a mere 7% over the past decade, trailing small- and mid-cap stocks.

But large-cap stocks are considered undervalued, based on current price-to-earnings ratios versus historical norms, and are overdue for a breakout, according to fund managers including Bruce Berkowitz of the Fairholme Fund and Donald Yacktman of the Yacktman Fund. So these companies could soon shine, especially as inflation quickens when they can pass on rising costs to customers.

Among the challenges faced by food-industry firms McDonald's and Kraft [KFT 31.18 --- UNCH (0) ] is rising agricultural commodity prices, which put pressure on profits in the fourth quarter. They are expected to bump up prices because of that.

Another common issue is the push for a bigger geographic footprint. Johnson & Johnson and Procter & Gamble are long-standing international forces. Kraft bought the U.K.'s Cadbury, a candy maker, about a year ago to boost its international business. And McDonald's is pinning much of its growth prospects on China, where business is booming.

Buffett's investing philosophy includes buying high-dividend-paying stocks with strong fundamentals and some sort of "moat" such as a strong brand name, market dominance and industry leadership.

And each of those companies has those characteristics.

Buffett is also known as a buy-and-hold investor. As evidence of that, the three companies were also among the top seven holdings of Berkshire Hathaway at the end of 2008.

What follows are the fourth-quarter earnings expectations of four companies in the Dow's consumer-products sector, arranged by reporting dates, starting with McDonald's.

Buffett's Favorite Stocks For 2011: McDonald's [MCD 75.48 --- UNCH (0) ] , the fast-food giant, reports earnings Jan. 24. Wall Street analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters expect earnings of $1.16 per share on revenue of $6.2 billion. For the same period a year earlier, profit was $1.11 per share on $6 billion in revenue.

Business from China was a big contributor to fourth-quarter earnings, and the earnings outlook from analysts increased 3.5% over the period because of that. China is expected to be the growth driver in coming years, and the company plans to boost capital spending there by 40% this year.

The consensus analysts' estimate from Thomson Reuters calls for 2010 earnings of $4.60 per share, rising to $5.02 in 2011. It said analysts' consensus price target over the next 12 months is $85.40, a 15% premium to its current price.

Shares of McDonald’s gained 27% in 2010 versus the 35% increase of the restaurant sector tracked by Morningstar. Its shares are down 2% this year. They have a dividend yield of 3.3%.

At the end of the third quarter, Capital World Investors was the largest shareholder, with a 6% stake, despite selling 7 million shares in the period. Fidelity was the second-largest shareholder, and bought 3 million shares to grow its stake to 4% in the third quarter.

Analysts have eight "strong buy" ratings, seven "buy" ratings, 10 "holds," and one "reduce" on its shares, according to Thomson Reuters.

Buffett's Favorite Stocks For 2011:Johnson & Johnson [JNJ 61.08 --- UNCH (0) ] will release its fourth-quarter earnings Jan. 25. Analysts expect it to report $1.03 per share, versus $1.02 last year, according to Thomson Reuters. In the third quarter it earned $1.23. That would bring 2010 earnings to $4.75. It earned $4.63 in 2009.

The company's quarterly earnings have been relatively flat over the past three years. Analysts expect its earnings to grow 5% to $4.97 per share in 2011. Projected 2010 revenue is $62 billion, flat to 2009.

Johnson & Johnson is one of the world's largest and most diverse health-care companies, with three divisions: pharmaceutical, medical devices and diagnostics, and consumer products.

Johnson & Johnson also has been one of the most respected brands in its various fields, but that is being undermined by a series of recalls, the most recent about a week ago.

On Jan. 14, it announced the recall of nearly 47 million units of over-the-counter medicines including bottles of certain Tylenol, Benadryl, Sudafed and Sinutab products distributed in the U.S., the Caribbean and Brazil.

The company faces challenges on other fronts as well. The patent rights of two of its big sellers — the antipsychotic Risperdal and the neuroscience drug Topamax — expired recently, which will hurt revenue.

But its fundamentals are solid, including a diverse revenue base (each business represents about a third of annual revenue), protected markets, because of its many patents and huge cash flow that it uses to fund its research pipeline and make acquisitions.

Johnson & Johnson's shares gained 11% in 2009, lost 0.7% in 2010 and are up 1% this year. It shares have a dividend yield of 3.49%. The company announced a $10 billion share-repurchase program late last year, which should help boost prices.

A poll of 17 analysts by Thomson Reuters gives it a 12-month price target of $67.70, or an 8.2% premium to the current price. Those same analysts give its shares three "buy" ratings, 10 "buy," and 11 "hold."

At the end of the third quarter, State Street was the biggest shareholder, with 5% of outstanding shares, about the same as over the course of the previous year. Berkshire Hathaway is the fourth-largest shareholder, at 1.6%, and the number of shares owned was up by over 30% in the first three quarters of 2010.

Buffett's Favorite Stocks For 2011:Procter & Gamble [PG 66.70 --- UNCH (0) ] , the international household-products conglomerate, is expected to report earnings of $1.10 per share on Jan. 27 for its second fiscal quarter, down from last year's $1.49 per share. In the previous quarter, its first fiscal quarter, which ended Sept. 30, it earned $1.02 per share. Analysts expect 2010 earnings of $3.98 per share down from $4.11 in 2010.

Among P&G's well-known branded products are Tide detergent, Dawn dishwashing liquid, Bounty paper towels, Pringles snack chips, Gillette shavers and Duracell batteries. The firm offers multiple products in a category and often more than one brand and regularly comes out with improvements to retain customers.

The mean consensus 12-month share-price target of 18 analysts is $71.60, a 9.3% premium to the current price, according to Thomson Reuters. It has a dividend yield of 2.9%. A healthy 9.5% dividend increase in fiscal 2010 and planned share buybacks of $6 billion help make its share s more attractive.

The stock has underperformed the broader market over the past two years, gaining 9% in 2010 and about 1% in 2009. Shares are up 1.6% this year and hit a 52-week high Jan. 18. Berkshire Hathaway is third-largest shareholder, at 2.7%. Its share holdings were down slightly in the third quarter, the latest period for which such information is available.

Kraft Foods will release its fourth-quarter results Feb. 10. Analysts expect earnings, on average, of 46.5 cents per share, versus 48 cents last year. In the third quarter, it reported 47 cents per share. Kraft's quarterly earnings have hovered around 50 cents per share for the past four years. Earnings for 2010 are pegged at $2.03 per share on revenue of $49 billion, and are seen rising to $2.32 per share in 2011.

Kraft acquired U.K. candy company Cadbury early last year in a $19 billion deal and is still in the process of restructuring to integrate it into its other businesses. Cadbury's brands and distribution capabilities worldwide are expected to leverage sales of Kraft's products. The company manufactures and markets packaged food products, including snacks, beverages and packaged grocery products.

Kraft has operations in more than 70 countries. Its brands include Oscar Mayer meats, Philadelphia cream cheese, Maxwell House coffee and Nabisco cookies and crackers.

Shares gained 20% last year and 5.6% in 2009. They are down 1% this year. They have a dividend yield of 3.7%. Kraft's shares are seen as cheap, given its 14.1 forward price-to-earnings ratio.

According to Thomson Reuters, analysts give Kraft shares seven "strong buy" ratings, eight "buys" and six "holds." Their current 12-month share-price target is $35.10, a 2.3% premium to the current price. Berkshire Hathaway [BRK.A 124680.0 --- UNCH (0) ] is the largest shareholder in Kraft, at 6% of outstanding shares, which is almost 7% of Berkshire Hathaway's assets. That stake is down about 24% from the beginning of 2010. Kraft shares were up 20% in 2010 and are down 1% this year.

Best Small Stocks To Buy For 2011

Despite economic challenges, the United States remains as a compelling hotbed of innovation. So many items in everyday use -- especially in the field of medicine -- got their start here. [In fact, Andy Obermueller recently revealed his favorite game-changing medical picks in the latest issue of Game-Changing Stocks]

The quest is always on to develop devices, drugs and services that help save money and boost the user's experience. And investors who get in early can be richly rewarded.

Of course, the path from idea to large-scale revenue can be excruciatingly slow at times. And up until now, these three companies were better known for consuming capital. But each of them has hit upon novel, potentially game-changing technologies that may eventually shower investors with riches.


Best Small Stocks To Buy For 2011: BioLase Technologies (Nasdaq: BLTI)


Nobody likes going to the dentist. Memories of a metal drill boring into our gums linger long, and it's often a reason why people don't go to the dentist as often as they should. But Biolase has an alternative: Lasers that can cut dental tissue in a very precise fashion. As you know, the use of a drill usually requires that a patient be injected with Novocain since drilling and grinding can be quite painful. Lasers cause no pain and require no anesthetic. This shortens the amount of time a patient is in the dental chair, allowing dentists to see more patients in any given day. It also leads to much happier patients, making them more likely to maintain regular dental visits.

Yet the set-up can be expensive for dentists, which explains why only a minority have gone the laser route. In the first half of the past decade, sales grew sharply, hitting $67 million by 2007. Sales have since cooled and most recently outright plunged as the company was unable to see its products gain traction with key dental distributors such as Henry Schein (Nasdaq: HSIN). Shares of Biolase, which hit $18 in 2004, have lost 90% of their value.

Despite appearances, laser-based dentistry wasn't a bust. Instead, the company has been forced to re-think designs, remove costs from the manufacturing process, and alter sales incentive programs with distributors. The outlook for 2011 is perking up, setting the stage for the first year of sales growth since 2006.

Among the positive recent developments: Biolase has recently signed a second major U.S. distributor, Benco, that augments an existing relationship with Henry Schein. In addition, the company is rolling out new portable devices such as the iLase, which is off to an impressive start. The company is also now expanding into Asia.

Needham's Dalton Chandler sees 2011 sales rebounding more than 50% to $40 million, but even more modest sales growth at half that rate would likely put like put this former hot stock back on investors' radars. Shares of this microcap trade for around $1.50, but Needham predicts they'll double in 2011.



Best Small Stocks To Buy For 2011: Research Frontiers (Nasdaq: REFR)



This company has led many investors to chuckle. Most of its press releases involve yet another round of capital-raising. The company has cracked the $1 million sales mark just once and has never come close to making a profit. But Research Frontiers may have the last laugh in 2011. The company's specialized glass technology, which automatically adjusts to filter out sunlight at times of high air-conditioning loads, has caught the attention of major construction firms, some of which are expected to use the glass in 2011.

But it's the auto market that has captured a great deal of recent buzz, pushing shares from $4 to $7 in the last three months. Mercedes apparently intends to use Research Technology's "Smart Glass" in an upcoming line of cars. Some suggest the technology will be adopted for the whole car line, and the company's most bullish supporters expect other auto makers to make similar moves in 2011 as well.

The rising stock price implies those rumors may have merit. But the company's history should give you pause. Research Frontiers has been oh-so-close to success many times before but thus far has been unable to capitalize on the opportunity. How big an opportunity does the company face? The automotive glass industry likely tops $5 billion and the architectural glass biz is similarly-sized. If only a small portion of auto makers and architects utilized the technology and Research Frontiers was able to secure a small percent of royalties, then the company may be looking at tens of millions in revenue, most of which would flow to the bottom line. Not bad for a company valued at just $122 million.

Sooner than later, we'll know if the Mercedes rumors are true. Several months from now, shares will either be well higher than current levels or they'll fall all the way back toward the $4 mark.

Best Small Stocks To Buy For 2011: BSD Medical (Nasdaq: BSDM)


BSD's systems are used to treat certain tumors with heat (hyperthermia) while increasing the effectiveness of other therapies such as radiation therapy. Cancer cells can be killed at just 108 degrees, a lower temperature than other cells. As the body senses the heat in the treated area, it also moves to generate other benefits such as increased blood flow, which raises oxygen levels, which raises the effectiveness of radiation therapy. The clinical data in support of BSD's devices have been quite strong.

This is another company that has been long on promise but short on results. Sales cracked $5 million in 2008, but have been falling since. Shares, which hit $7 in late 2007, fell all the way to $1 this past summer before a recent rebound back to almost $5. The rebound comes from rising hopes that BSD's novel cancer treatment, which has proven to be effective, could soon win more converts as the company signs up a growing roster of distributors.

At this point, BSD must figure out ways to get the many customers that have been testing the system to make a purchase. Or the company needs to partner with -- or sell to -- a larger medical device firm that is better-equipped to tackle this "missionary" type sales effort. There's lot of promise here, but investors will need to see better sales traction in 2011.

These stocks should never constitute core holdings in a portfolio. But if you have some discretionary funds that can be tapped to swing for the fences, these stocks may turn out to be tidy additions. I like the basket approach: A small position in several speculative plays. One home run can more than offset losers elsewhere.

15 Best Stocks Worth Considering

Coal is probably our most abundant energy resource. We have provable reserves, within our own borders, equal to a quarter of the world’s reserves and more coal than any other country in the world. Coal generates approximately 50% of our electricity, more than any other energy source. Coal can meet our domestic energy for the next 100 years. Coal also costs a fraction of alternative sources of energy such as natural gas.

Clean coal is a reality today and not a futuristic goal. New coal plants today have greater than 90% removal for SO2, NOx and mercury. Emissions can be reduced to near zero levels. With this knowledge it is hard to understand why we maintain such dependence on imported oil for electricity generation in this country. Further, the vast sums expended on alternative, renewable energy have largely been failures. There are very real environmental issues and problems to be resolved in regard to coal mining and energy production. In some ways, it is easier to deal with the environmental problems of oil production when the problems are on the other side of the world.



Similarly, solar-generated electricity in quantities sufficient to fuel our economy is more a matter of theory than of fact. The major solar panel manufactures in China are exporting their products to the West at the time the Chinese government is increasing the importation of coal. Solar and wind power may someday contribute meaningfully to our energy needs at a reasonable, unsubsidized price but this will not occur for many years to come. As I write this article, I wonder if snow-covered solar panels are efficient and if they produce enough electricity to power my computer.

In the meantime, we present a number of coal mining companies worthy of consideration. Of this group, we favor Cloud Peak Energy (CLD). Cloud Peak Energy is a spin-off from Rio Tinto (RIO). The company is the third largest U.S. coal producer and a pure-play in the Powder River Basin mines in Wyoming and Montana.


Third quarter earnings came in higher than expectations due to strong demand. Production for 2011 seems about sold out and projections for 2012 and 2013 look good.

On metrics we think important, CLD appears to be undervalued. Cash return on invested capital is about 16.54%; EV to EBITDA is about 6X; EV/FCF is 6.6X and ROE is about 78%. The stock is trading down from the high end of its 52-week trading range.


Ticker



Company


Price


CFROI



EV/EBITDA


EV/FCF



EV/FCF to Sales Growth


ROE


Price 52W Range



AHGP


Alliance Holdings GP, L.P.



47.14


12.31



8.46


28.28


1.43



53.60


76.75


ARLP


Alliance Resource Partners, L.



64.96


n/a


n/a



n/a


n/a



55.10


81.99



ANR


Alpha Natural Resources, Inc.


55.22



8.47


10.95



20.32


0.27


4.00



64.41


ACI



Arch Coal, Inc.


31.61



6.97


15.41


24.40



1.27


5.30



71.91


CLD



Cloud Peak Energy Inc.


21.17


16.54



5.97


6.59



0.23


78.30


75.36



CNX


CONSOL Energy Inc.



50.23


0.42



15.61


435.90


41.12



13.20


78.77


ICO


International Coal Group, Inc.



8.25


5.71


19.29



27.58


27.58



1.30


73.42



JRCC


James River Coal Company


21.50



3.35


6.32



37.47


16.29


36.00



55.94


MEE



Massey Energy Company


52.71



-0.12


n/a


-1,391.71



-1,265.19


-4.20



82.34


NRP



Natural Resource Partners LP


33.88


8.25



16.57


25.99



2.92


14.20


83.49



PCX


Patriot Coal Corporation



23.18


-2.89



21.50


-44.98


12.85



-4.30


76.29


BTU


Peabody Energy Corporation



58.17


8.96


13.65



22.56


5.94



16.20


74.66



PVR


Penn Virginia Resource Partner


27.41



10.98


12.98



16.95


0.56


12.00



91.10


WLT



Walter Energy, Inc.


119.99



31.00


12.51


16.58



0.56


89.90



75.75


YZC



Yanzhou Coal Mining Co. (ADR)


29.91


-5.88



16.46


-35.24



1.75


33.20


78.30


Disclosure: The author has no position in any company mentioned in this article and will not take a position within 72 hours of publication.

The 10 best stocks for a volatile ’11

With so much uncertainty and potential for crisis, the year ahead could be rough. I’m focusing on 3 clear trends — and 10 stocks that will succeed because of them.
[Related content: Deere, Joy Global, Freeport McMoRan, Banco Santander, Jim Jubak]
By Jim Jubak
2011 is shaping up to be a volatile year. The euro debt crisis threatens to expand to include Spain, before Greece and Ireland have even moved out of danger. The U.S. economy seems to be on a path of moderate growth, but the end of spending from the 2009 stimulus package in 2011 — along with the uncertain effects of the Federal Reserve’s $600 billion program to buy Treasurys and of the extension of the Bush administration tax cuts — leaves the country poised between too much inflation and too little growth.
Plus, China’s economy is in danger of overheating. But it’s so hard to calculate the odds that the central bank will raise interest rates and cut growth down to 8% or so that I’ve actually suggested that investors watch next summer’s vegetable harvest for clues.
But that doesn’t mean you won’t be able to make a profit, a pretty good profit, in 2011. As I noted in my post “Why 2010 was so volatile, and why 2011 will be just as wild a ride,” this has been a wild year and yet, as of the beginning of December, investors were looking at a return of 10.64% for the first 11 months of the year — once you adjust for inflation and dividends — versus an annual average return of 8.71% for the Standard and Poor’s 500 stock index ($INX) (after the same adjustments) since 1950.
Making money in 2011 won’t be impossible — just hard. It will be a year when you need to put all the trends you can identify at your back — so that you have the best chance of beating market averages. And then you’ll need to pay careful attention to individual stock picking.
Today I’m going to quickly lay out three trends that I think will be strong enough to pull your portfolio higher — if you hitch your wagon to them. And then I’ll give you 10 stock picks for taking advantage of those trends.
3 trends that hold true
Why start with the trends? Why not go straight to stock picks? In a volatile year, like 2010 or (as I project) 2011, the toughest challenge is staying invested. The second-toughest is knowing when to use the swings of the pendulum toward excessive fear to buy. (For more on this, see my column on investing when you fear the zombies are about to walk.)
You want to use market volatility to buy low — and not let it send you running to the hills after you’ve sold low. The easiest way to do that is to indentify some longer-term trends that you want to own through a reasonable amount of volatility.
What are some of those longer-term trends for 2011? Here are three.
  • Food prices are headed higher, as are farm incomes. Speaking at the Bank of America/Merrill Lynch Global Industries Conference on Dec. 15, fertilizer company Potash of Saskatchewan (POT) said that by the middle of 2010 it had become apparent that, for the eighth time in the past 12 years, grain production would fall short of consumption and the world would have to draw down its stockpiles. In 2011, Potash estimates, it will take a 5% increase in grain production to keep pace with consumption. That will be a tough if not impossible task, because grain production has grown by only an average of 2% a year in the past few decades. Without a record increase in production, global grain stocks would fall to the historical lows of 2006 and 2007. That’s certain to produce higher grain and food prices — good for farmers and the companies that sell stuff to them but bad for consumers, especially poor consumers. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, by November 2010 the year-to-year increase in the global food price index was 22%.

Commodity prices are rising, and there’s a real possibility of supply falling short of demand for such commodities as copper. Encouraged by this, the global mining industry is raising capital-spending budgets for 2011 and beyond as fast as it can. A survey of global mining executives by the Financial Times puts mining capital spending at $115 billion to $120 billion in 2011. That would be a record, surpassing the peak of $110 billion set in 2010. Now, I can’t tell you what the price of any commodity will be in 2011 — too much depends on where the People’s Bank of China comes down on inflation and growth in 2011. But I can tell you that mining companies are not going to cancel orders for capital goods on volatility in commodity prices, and they’re going to be reluctant to cancel orders even on extraordinary volatility, because they’re afraid of losing their place in the customer line. These companies remember from the last big commodities boom that supplies of capital goods are limited and suppliers can quickly ramp up to meet demand. Order early or forget about getting your order filled