I like to think of stocks I own in two general ways, on conceptual level apart from detailed spreadsheet analyis of earnings growth prospects. Both are important:
–concept, which in its simplest form is the two-minute elevator speech you’d use to explain to someone else why you own a given stock–what the company does, why that’s a profitable thing to do and what you think the market doesn’t fully understand–and therefore substantially underestimates the company’s potential earnings growth. The conclusion here will presumably be that as earnings reports reveal this superior growth the stock will move significantly higher
–valuation, or the price you’re willing to pay for expected earnings. This is especially important for “value” stocks, whose main attraction is that the company possesses a hoard of assets–land, factories, distribution networks, brand names–that are currently being misused/mismanaged. The general idea is that you’re being paid to wait for some catalyst for change–like new management or acquisition by a rival.
In today’s market as I see it, AI-related stocks are the ultimate in conceptual attractiveness. The biggest issue with them is that they’re all well-known, they’re expensive and there’s already been a significant rotation away from the central players like Nvidia to more peripheral issues like Broadcom or Oracle, and from them to component makers like Sandisk and Micron (I own shares of MU right now, but not the others).
That leaves valuation–and traditional value stocks–as a potentially fruitful area to investigate. Also, the collapse in the US dollar since the inauguration would typically have foreign firms anxious to improve their US presence salivating over the bargains this presents. I’ve been fooling around in this area, on the idea that’s Warren Buffett’s claim to investment fame–that intangible assets like brand names and distribution networks are extremely valuable, but are reflected in a company’s financial statements only as expenses (a semi-geeky aside: if company A takes over company B because B has tons of intangibles, A is allowed to list what it has paid for on the balance sheet as assets. This is the only way they appear in the financials).
There is a big obstacle here, however–the significant, and continuing, black eye that the US brand has been sporting since the inauguration. This is partly pure economics, given the administration’s desire to reduce the value of Treasuries owned by foreigners by weakening the currency plus its eagerness to use the military to seize foreign oil. It’s also partly the current administration socioeconomics: ICE gun violence, Federal imprisonment and deportation of migrants, the failure to r elease the Epstein files to Congress…
All this argues, I think, for a sideways market domestically, with better prospects abroad. I find my tendency has been, oddly enough, toward Chinese companies listed in Hong Kong.