A Triple in the Making

Recs

17

America is talking about Affiliated Managers Group!

OK, not really. In fact, there's a good chance you've never even heard of this company. Yet its value more than tripled after Tom Gardner recommended it in Motley Fool Stock Advisor in September 2002. (He later issued a sell recommendation -- more on that later.) What made this stock a success? Three main reasons, a couple of which are surprising:

1. Obscure company
Obscure, and rather boring, AMG is a holding company of midsized money-management firms from around the country. These businesses, which invest money in stocks for other people, include Essex Investment Management, Friess Associates, and Tweedy, Browne.

Most great success stories were unknown in the beginning. Even Wal-Mart garnered no excitement in its early days. But these under-the-radar companies can offer individual investors some bargain prices.

2. Efficiently run
AMG has done a great job of assembling high-quality asset-management firms and leaving them largely autonomous. Yet all the affiliates benefit from lower administrative costs, access to better technology, new-product development, and diversified approaches across the company. In addition, incentives are tied to the performance of cash earnings per share. Haphazard or indifferent management doesn't cut it at AMG, and the result is a lean, efficient, well-operated machine.

3. Bad industry
When Tom uncovered this solid business, it had been beaten down nearly 40% from its 52-week high. Of course, we were smack-dab in the middle of one of the worst bear markets in years, and the entire asset-management industry was hurting. Who cared about these companies, anyway?

But because of top-notch efficient management, AMG was not only able to weather whatever the market threw at it, it was also poised to reap big benefits when the market eventually turned around. It was a quality company available at a bargain price.

The next AMG?
There are other factors to consider when sizing up a potential investment. But if you can identify a company that's obscure, efficient, and in an out-of-favor industry -- well, that's a beautiful thing. You may have found a stock that's beaten down well below its fair value and is ready to break out when the industry recovers.

To illustrate, I selected a few industries that have hit the skids recently, and I screened for companies within those industries that had net margins and return on assets significantly better than industry averages. Here's a short list of such companies that now trade well below their 52-week highs:

Company

Industry

Recent Price

52-Week High

Williams Companies (NYSE: WMB)

Oil/gas

$11.82

$40.75

First Solar (Nasdaq: FSLR)

Semiconductors

$122.31

$317.00

Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM)

Oil/gas

$68.97

$96.12

NVIDIA (Nasdaq: NVDA)

Semiconductors

$9.74

$25.35

Interoil (AMEX: IOC)

Oil/gas

$24.66

$41.62

Titanium Metals (NYSE: TIE)

Metal mining

$5.37

$19.65

Harley-Davidson (NYSE: HOG)

Recreation

$13.01

$48.05

Some of these aren't exactly obscure, but I wanted to include some bigger names you might like to investigate. All these companies are presented solely to encourage further research; this is not a "buy" list.

Foolish bottom line
After tripling in value, Affiliated Managers Group no longer carried a bargain price tag. Though he still believes in the management and its business model, Tom issued a "sell" recommendation because of AMG's valuation. But he continues to search for that winning trifecta every month for his Stock Advisor members.

The Stock Advisor service is now more than six years old. Tom and his brother David's recommendations are beating the S&P 500 by an average of 32 percentage points each. If you'd like to check out all of the formal Stock Advisor recommendations, plus the top five Best Buys Now, we're offering a 30-day free trial. A new issue released today with two brand new recommendations. Click here to give it a whirl.

This article was originally published April 21, 2006. It has been updated.

Rex Moore salutes another of his former schools, Anderson High School in Austin, Texas. He does not own shares of any company mentioned. NVIDIA and Titanium Metals are Motley Fool Stock Advisor selections. Wal-Mart is an Inside Value recommendation. The Motley Fool is investors helping investors.

Comments from our Foolish Readers

Help us keep this a respectfully Foolish area! This is a place for our readers to discuss, debate, and learn more about the Foolish investing topic you read about above. Help us keep it clean and safe. If you believe a comment is abusive or otherwise violates our Fool's Rules, please report it via the Report this Comment Report this Comment icon found on every comment.

  • Report this Comment On March 22, 2009, at 12:24 PM, Kickstart70 wrote:

    I'm starting to hate articles that talk about "52 week highs". We just hit a major crash of worldwide markets. *ANY* company that has good financials is a bargain and a great buy opportunity when compared to the current 52 week high. It's a horrible metric for the market right now.

    Now...compare it to the 3 month high, with the same multiples and still see a fantastic bargain...then we're talkin'.

  • Report this Comment On March 23, 2009, at 12:21 PM, SteveTheInvestor wrote:

    KickStart:

    I've made several comments to that effect over the last year. Personally, I couldn't care less about a 52 week high. For one, it's almost always a hyper-inflated price from the days of our fantasy economy. I also don't see a return to those prices (for the majority of stocks) for a quite some time to come. The 52 week high is just some random number in my mind. How about 5 week high? Perhaps 5 year high? Just about as useful.

  • Report this Comment On March 23, 2009, at 5:25 PM, kencooksam wrote:

    IOC is the most undervalued stock we have ever looked at. They have found the largest NG well in the world.Shorts got in before they found this find and can't figure out how to get out without losing their shirts.IOC has fired MER and hired two investment banking firms to sell off up to 25% of their assets. Raymond James figures the replacement cost of IOC assets is $22 Billion with the companies market cap

    of $700 or so million. With the sale of a slice of the company IOC stock price will soar. There could be 3 asset sales in tital as IOC searches for long term partners. Time period is the next 60-90 days.Csiro the Australian Enginnering firm says IOC's NG came from an oil deposit. When will IOC find that oil deposit.?? Now thats an interesting question...

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