How to Make the Right Sector Calls

01/17/01 - 01:32 PM EST

David Edwards

At the start of each year, my firm decides in which sectors to concentrate our clients' money. We believe the only way to consistently beat the S&P 500 index is to focus on those industry groups whose earnings have a reasonably good shot of growing faster than the earnings of the S&P 500 over the next year and the next five years, but whose valuations remain reasonable.

Today I'll walk you through the numbers my firm uses to determine the strongest sectors. Keep in mind, though, we don't put all our funds in any one sector. That kind of concentration would introduce more risk to our portfolios than our clients could stomach. This diversification requirement meant that while we gave up some of the upside in technology stocks in 1999, we weren't killed by the tech sector's selloff in 2000.

For definitions of the sectors, see my last column, Making the Most of Your Sector Plays.

If you own individual stocks, I recommend sorting your stocks by sector and calculating the percentage of your portfolio in each sector. Compare it to the sector breakdown of the S&P 500 (which you can find in its monthly report). For more information on how to do this, take a look at last January's Tune Your Portfolio With a Year-End Review.

If you own mutual funds, check the sector allocations to understand what risks the fund managers are taking relative to the market. For example, if you own three growth funds, and all three are 50% invested in technology:

  1. You are less diversified than you think, and

  2. You'd better hope tech does better this year than last.

If you focus your research on those industry groups expected to grow the fastest over the next year and the next five years, select from the highest-ranked companies within those groups and keep your portfolio reasonably diversified (30 to 40 stocks across several sectors), you should end up with good (12% to 15% annualized) returns in a tax-efficient portfolio that allows you to sleep at night.

Now let's look at each sector. The percentage next to the sector name indicates its weighting in the S&P 500 index.

Tables are broken down into industry groups and offer one-year and five-year growth rates plus a measure of the industry group's valuation relative to its growth rate, known as the PEG ratio peg.

Bear in mind that many of these estimates seem high (supermarkets with a five-year growth rate of 15.8%?) compared with the S&P 500's estimated growth rate of 8.6% for 2001 and 14.1% over the next five years. Also keep in mind that companies with high growth prospects can be expensive, so seek out stocks with lower PEG ratios than others in their industry group. Stocks and industry groups with PEG ratios less than 1 (for example, a current price-to-earnings ratio pricetoearnings of 20 and current-year earnings growth of 25% implies PEG of 0.80) are very attractive. The S&P 500's PEG ratio is 1.90.

The entry N/A results from negative current earnings growth. You probably want to avoid industry groups that didn't grow this past year while the U.S. economy was running flat out.

Basic Materials (2.36%)

Basic Materials
Industry Groups Projected Growth
2001
Projected Growth
Next 5 Years
PEG Ratio peg
Chemicals
Diversified 8.7% 13.5% N/A
Fibers 8.6 20 N/A
Plastics 19.3 16.5 N/A
Specialty 9 10.9 1.93
Containers
Metal / Glass 14.8% 11.5% N/A
Paper / Plastic 19.3 15.5 2.41
Metal
Product Distributors 8.8% 12.8% 1.22
Products / Fasteners 9.4 14.8 0.79
Processing / Fabrication 20.9 12.3 N/A
Mining
Gold 8.1% 21.4% 0.97
Iron 25 10 N/A
Miscellaneous 21.1 19.6 N/A
Non Ferrous 34.7 15.9 0.34
Silver 24.5 14.3 N/A
Rubber
Plastics 12.1% 15.0% 0.32
Tires 21.7 7.6 N/A
Steel
Pipe and Tube 33.3% 21.7% 0.74
Producers 8.7 13.3 3.78
Specialty 30.0 10.4 0.39
Source: Standard & Poor's, Zacks

Basic materials stocks appreciated at a 3.1% annual rate over the last five years, the slowest of any sector. Most of the companies here produce commodities whose sale price tends to converge with the cost of production, especially in the low-inflation environment as we have seen in recent years. I would not put money here unless I saw capacity constraints or a surge in inflation. Gold stocks have proved particularly bad investments over recent years as T-bills Treasury Securities have supplanted bullion as the safe haven of choice.

Capital Goods (8.96%)

Capital Goods
Industry Groups Projected Growth
2001
Projected Growth
Next 5 Years
PEG Ratio peg
Aerospace
Defense Electronics 20.4% 16.1% 10.14
Defense 15.5 12.1 1.67
Electrical
Misc. Components 29.7% 26.5% 0.86
Components - Semiconductors 29.9 31.7 0.76
Connectors 36.1 14.4 3.27
Manufacturing Machinery 23.7 23.9 0.47
Military 16.6 19.9 5.97
Measuring Instruments 24.7 25.1 0.6
Parts Distributors 14.9 17 0.15
Misc. Products 33.4 24.9 0.86
Instrumentation
Control 20.4% 17.5% 2.32
Scientific 22.6 23.5 1.56
Machinery
Construction and Mining 11.5% 16.7% N/A
Electrical 15.9 21.5 3.95
Farm 14.3 10.6 21.36
General Industrial 20.0 12.4 1.87
Material Handling 14.8 11.5 0.31
Print Trades 47.1 30 5.25
Thermal Processes 19.6 14.8 1.46
Machine Tools 14.9 13.8 1.65
Office
Automation 26.3% 16.8% 9.11
Equipment and Supplies 10.7 12.8 1.18
Source: Standard & Poor's, Zacks

Capital goods stocks appreciated at a 17.5% annual rate over the last five years. This group does well when U.S. and world economies are expanding, and when interest rates are flat or falling. The riskiest time to own these stocks is during a slowdown or at the start of a recession, so be careful investing in this sector right now. The best companies to own are those that have the largest market share of their respective industry groups.

Consumer Cyclicals (7.51%)

Consumer Cyclicals
Industry Groups Projected Growth
2001
Projected Growth
Next 5 Years
PEG Ratio peg
Auto
Domestic -13% 6.1% N/A
Foreign 15.5 11.8 N/A
Parts - Retail / Wholesale 9.7 14.7 N/A
Truck Original Parts 1.9 14.2 N/A
Truck Replacement Parts 9.3 15.5 2.30
Building and Construction
Cement / Concrete / Aggregate 14.8% 11.7% N/A
Miscellaneous 12.7 13.0 4.87
Heavy Construction 27.7 17.8 0.93
Maintenance and Service 18 15.7 1.29
Mobile / Manufactured and RV 14.2 12.6 N/A
Heating and Air Products 14.5 11.3 0.63
Doors and Trim Products 33.8 19 0.72
Lighting Fixture Products 16.6 12.2 0.55
Retail / Wholesale Products 16.9 16.1 1.32
Wood Products -2.8 11 N/A
Residential / Commercial Products 10.1 13 0.33
Leisure and Recreation
Gaming 19.7% 15.2% 0.78
Products 18 17.3 0.46
Services 25.2 15.4 42.76
Publishing
Books 4.7% 14.3% 1.37
Newspapers 13.1 12.8 5.71
Periodicals 1.1 16.7 1.17
Real Estate
Development -4.5% 11.2% N/A
Operations 16.7 12.8 0.72
Real Estate Investment Trusts
Equity 7% 8.0% 0.20
Mortgage 4.7 8.3 N/A
Retail
Apparel / Shoes 19% 18.9% 1.14
Convenience Stores 15.4 18 0.59
Consumer Electronics 20 19.8 0.60
Discount 23.4 17.8 3.00
Drug Stores 19.3 16.1 3.58
Home Furnishings 18.1 20.6 0.88
Jewelry 23.2 14.9 0.78
Mail Order 25.3 24.3 0.62
Miscellaneous / Diversified 18.6 18.7 0.87
Major Department Stores 12.9 10.2 1.72
Restaurants 15.3 18.5 0.98
Regional Department Stores 20.5 16.5 3.80
Supermarket 16.5 15.8 14.71
Vending 8.6 7.9 N/A
Wholesale Components 24.9 21.7 0.65
Textile
Apparel 18.7% 15.2% 1.25
Home Furnishing 18.4 13.1 0.71
Products 24.1 12 N/A
Source: Standard & Poor's, Zacks

Consumer Cyclicals stocks appreciated at a 13.4% annual rate over the last five years. As with capital goods, these stocks perform poorly heading into economic slowdowns and perform well in expanding economies. This sector is less sensitive to overall interest rates (consumers buy homes, cars and furnishings very happily on credit while corporate purchasers worry about budgets). Given current high levels of consumer debt and an increasingly picky and bargain-aware consumer (as we saw in holiday retail sales figures), we're shying away from this sector right now.

Consumer Staples (11.23%)

Consumer Staples
Industry Groups Projected Growth
2001
Projected Growth
Next 5 Years
PEG Ratio peg
Beverages
Alcoholic 17.2% 13.7% 1.17
Soft 26.3 16.5 0.78
Consumer Products
Staples 20.2% 18.4% 1.22
Discretionary 16.5 15.2 N/A
Food
Canned 19.1% 9.7% N/A
Confectionary 12 10.2 2.41
Dairy Products 42.7 22.1 3.95
Flour and Grains 18.8 11.1 1.32
Wholesale Items 19.3 13.6 1.16
Meat Products 31.7 10.6 N/A
Source: Standard & Poor's, Zacks

Consumer stables appreciated at a 12.2% annual rate over the last five years. This sector is traditionally recession-proof (consumers buy toothpaste and beer no matter what the state of the economy). We rarely invest in the food group -- low margin, labor intensive and the products must be sold before spoilage.

Energy (6.38%)

Energy
Industry Groups Projected Growth
2001
Projected Growth
Next 5 Years
PEG Ratio peg
Canadian Export and Production 23.5% 21.1% 0.17
Canadian Integrated 1.7 14.1 N/A
Field Services 42.3 21.9 3.25
Field Machinery and Equipment 45.8 24.8 N/A
Oil and Gas Drilling 33.5 24.8 31.38
International Integrated -8.5 18.9 0.19
International Specialty 0.1 11.6 N/A
Production / Pipeline 13.0 10.9 2.74
Refining and Marketing 14.6 10.8 1.07
US Export and Production 18.9 18.2 2.47
US Integrated -14.9 10.0 N/A
US Royalty Trust -5.9 10.0 N/A
Source: Standard & Poor's, Zacks

Energy stocks appreciated at a 13.9% annual rate over the last five years. This commodity has a different dynamic than most basic materials because the OPEC cartel of major oil exporting nations has a much firmer grip on production than other cartels (copper, for example). Large multinational companies are relatively unaffected by changes in the price of oil because of extensive hedging operations. We often own these for their dividend yields. Drillers and equipment and oil service companies are turbocharged by changes in the price of oil. As the price of oil falls to the cost of production (as we saw in the summer of 1999), the revenues of these companies are hammered. But as oil prices surge, exploration and production pick up (as we see right now) and industry stock prices surge as well.

Financial (17.66%)

Financial
Industry Groups Projected Growth
2001
Projected Growth
Next 5 Years
PEG Ratio peg
Banks
Foreign 15.1% 12.8% 1.86
Major Regional 11.1 10.7 7.58
Midwest 12.4 11.9 1.68
Money Center 13.5 10.9 N/A
Northeast 9.4 10.7 1.81
Southeast 13.2 13 2.95
Southwest 16.6 12.9 0.95
West 16.6 12.5 0.99
Finance
Consumer Loans 23.6% 21.2% 1.04
Investment Bankers 12.2 20.6 0.95
Investment Funds 8.8 25.7 N/A
Investment Management 14.6 15.7 0.75
Leasing Companies 15.4 18.7 8.08
Mortgage and Related Services 15.9 14.9 1.26
SBIC and Commercial 17.0 13.2 N/A
Savings and Loans 11.9 10.7 1.43
Insurance
Accident and Health 22.7% 14.2% N/A
Brokers 24.0 14.7 10.46
Life 10 12.8 1.89
Multi Line 15.4 12.0 N/A
Property and Casualty 18.8 11.3 N/A
Source: Standard & Poor's, Zacks

Financial stocks appreciated at a 21.8% annual rate over the last five years. Stock prices in this sector used to be tightly correlated with changes in interest rates. In recent years, the companies have become more adept at managing interest-rate risk, but the stock prices still tend to move higher when rates move lower. Consolidation and cost control are a much bigger driver of stock prices, and with fewer takeover targets available, we don't see this group growing at quite the same rate as the past five years. Banks and finance companies tend to do poorly heading into recessions, as bad loans increase and as transaction income dries up. Insurance companies, particularly property and casualty companies, suffer when underwriting competition drives down premiums.

Health Care (14.07%)

Health Care
Industry Groups Projected Growth
2001
Projected Growth
Next 5 Years
PEG Ratio peg
Medical
Biomedical / Gene 20.1% 33.1% N/A
Dental Supplies 18.7 18.9 NA
Drugs 21 25.9 N/A
Generic Drugs 30.6 20.7 N/A
HMO 7.9 15.9 1.54
Hospitals 21.1 18.9 2.31
Instruments 14.2 26.9 N/A
Nursing Homes 3.9 16.5 0.91
Outpatient / Home Care 17.5 21.9 7.30
Products 23.6 26.9 14.5
Wholesale Drugs 21.2 20.9 1.17
Source: Standard & Poor's, Zacks

Health care stocks appreciated at a 22.9% annual rate over the last five years. Companies in this sector also are relatively recession-proof -- when you need medicine you need medicine. Conventional pharmaceutical companies offer relatively predictable returns. Biotech companies offer outsize returns with outsize risks. Hospitals, HMOs and other care facilities are subject to mismatches between rate increases and cost increases. HMOs did very well last year (gaining 81%) as rates rose faster than costs. Medical equipment, products, supplies and services can do well. The whole sector is subject to regulatory oversight, which can be very deleterious, as we saw during the discussion of the Clinton health care proposals in 1993.

Technology (21.81%)

Technology
Industry Groups Projected Growth
2001
Projected Growth
Next 5 Years
PEG Ratio peg
Computer
Graphics 49.0% 28.7% N/A
Integrated Systems 16.0 26.3 1.78
Mainframe 13.0 31.0 N/A
Micro 38.0 22.9 18.23
Mini 14.0 22.5 2.12
Networks 35.3 36.3 N/A
Peripheral Equipment 5.4 26.5 108.0
Services 29.2 31.4 8.51
Software 35.1 33.2 18.62
Storage Devices 31.7 26.6 14.41
Internet
Internet Content 68.3 44.5 N/A
Internet Services 32.5 48.5 N/A
Internet Software 35.8 51.0 N/A
Source: Standard & Poor's, Zacks

Technology stocks appreciated at a 25.8% annual rate over the last five years, the fastest of any sector. Growth in this sector is subject to the same pressures as other capital goods, but demand for technology remained high during the great productivity investments of the 1990s. Even when overall demand is high, companies are at great risk from "paradigm shifts" (e.g., mainframe computers supplanted by desktop computers supplanted by Internet-oriented machines.) Also, companies that fall behind the technology curve or fall to third or fourth in segment market share are very vulnerable. The mortality rate among companies exploiting new concepts is very high.

Communications Services (5.45%)

Communications Services
Industry Groups Projected Growth
2001
Projected Growth
Next 5 Years
PEG Ratio peg
Equipment 26% 32.7% 6.85
Services 25 31.5 N/A
Source: Standard & Poor's, Zacks

Communications services stocks appreciated at a 7.5% annual rate over the last five years. We usually group this sector with technology, but as phone services became commoditized in recent years, stocks in this sector have done poorly.

Transportation (0.67%)

Transportation
Industry Groups Projected Growth
2001
Projected Growth
Next 5 Years
PEG Ratio peg
Air Freight 14.3% 14.4% 30.0
Airline 21.7 14.2 1.12
Equipment and Leasing 12.5 12.7 N/A
Railroad 19.9 13.6 2.09
Services 21.0 15.6 1.66
Shipping 36.2 22.3 0.52
Truck 18.5 14.8 1.64
Source: Standard & Poor's, Zacks

Transportation stocks appreciated at an 8.8% annual rate over the last five years. Most of the growth in this sector has been in air freight and airline companies, and the stocks have performed accordingly. These companies are sensitive to rising fuel rates, rising interest rates (since most equipment is financed or leased) and the overall state of the economy. Since transportation is a commodity (an airline seat is an airline seat is an airline seat) pricing tends to converge with costs even in the best of times.

Utilities (3.89%)

Utilities
Industry Groups Projected Growth
2001
Projected Growth
Next 5 Years
PEG Ratio peg
Electric Power 12.2% 9.3% 1.62
Gas Distributors 14.2 7.4 1.30
Telephone 8.6 23.0 2.30
Water Supply 8.7 7.7 5.16
Source: Standard & Poor's, Zacks

Utilities stocks appreciated at an 11.5% annual rate over the last five years, reflecting the benefits of deregulation and increased demand. Futur