Today's stock market is not what you may have gotten used to from 2020 through 2023. For most of that time, technology stocks ruled the land due to their hypergrowth projections and attractive propositions. The epitome of this market preference can be seen in the price action for NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA). The stock kept breaking past all-time highs to trade at a massive 95x P/E ratio.
So, where can you find additional upside after the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ indices have both been hitting all-time highs? Well, you can see some room to squeeze returns by spreading out the performances between the Technology Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSEARCA: XLK) against the Consumer Discretionary Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSEARCA: XLY), which would come to be a vast 27.4% gap in favor of tech.
You also have to consider that the FED will likely cut interest rates this year, which, according to the FedWatch tool at the CME Group (NASDAQ: CME), could come as soon as May. When rate cuts become imminent, large investors and traders may start to bargain hunt for turnaround plays within the consumer discretionary names since they tend to do well during low interest rate environments. Here is why V.F. (NYSE: VFC) could quickly become a prime target.
The story fits
Remember that the narrative here is mainly focused on turnarounds. This is where you seek a trend that is quickly going into a potential expansion after a brief – or net – period of contraction.
Do you want to know how the big players on Wall Street pick the industries and sectors to invest in before they move? Here's the start. Following a 'top-down' research process, you can start by reviewing the ISM manufacturing PMI index trends. This will make it very clear to you why apparel stocks may be in play today.
Over November and December, the apparel and textile mills industries saw heavy contractions, which could be blamed on the industry's seasonality. Still, it was more of a desperate attempt to clear out built-up inventory.
Have you been getting emails for up to 40% discounts from Ralph Lauren (NYSE: RL)? Because it has been only one of several brands trying to move items out of their stores. The struggle could be over for these names, as the major PMI trends have taken a wild turn to start the 2024 year.
For January, the apparel industry reported the most growth out of the 18 sectors the report keeps tabs on. Coming in second, textile mills also came in an expansion, which does check out since they will likely be pumping out more materials to meet the newfound breakout for their apparel customers.
Here is where things get a bit more complex. While most retail investors and traders will focus on the bigger names like Abercrombie & Fitch (NYSE: ANF), the real juice – that is worth the squeeze – is found in names like V.F. and even Foot Locker (NYSE: FL) and Under Armour (NYSE: UAA).
How to pick 'em
Abercrombie stock grew its earnings per share by a decent 46.5% in the past twelve months. Here's why you can disqualify this stock from your turnaround suspects. Analysts expect this stock to grow its EPS by only 6.4% in the next twelve months, which is significantly slower than the company did last year.
That may be why these same analysts see a net downside of 36.9% from today's prices, based on their $69.4 share price target, far from a turnaround.
For Foot Locker and Under Armour, there are signs of a potential turnaround in that they are both turning an EPS contraction from the past twelve months into an expansion for this year. Foot Locker saw falling EPS of 31.8% in the last twelve months, whereas analysts expect to see growth of 48.2% this year.
With a $26 a share price target, though, Foot Locker analysts see an 11.3% downside in that stock.
Under Armour's earnings declined by 18.3% in the past year, and analysts reward this name with a 22.4% upside for the next twelve months to bring you another turnaround prospect. For reasons kept by Wall Street, analysts are more bullish on this name with their $9.9 a share price target, implying a rally of 22.6% from today's price.
Now, why and how is V.F. a better choice here? With an EPS decline of 14.1% last year, analysts think 2024 could be much different at 28.1% growth. A price target of $18.7 a share also brings you a potential upside of 22.2%; so far, nothing stands out from the rest of the peers except this.
The price-to-book valuations for Foot Locker and Under Armour are 0.9x and 1.7x, respectively, below the industry average of 3.1x. Remember the saying, "It must be cheap for a reason." Don't put yourself at risk to find out what that reason is. Instead, check this out.
V.F. stock sells for 3x P/B to align with the rest of the industry, meaning that markets are more accepting of the potential turnaround being proposed by analysts in the company's EPS and price targets. As you may know – perhaps by painful mistakes - you should never fight the market.