Table of Contents

Consumer Cyclical

The 30-Second Summary

What is a Consumer Cyclical? A Plain English Definition

Imagine your personal budget. There are things you have to buy every month: groceries, toothpaste, electricity, and soap. These are your “needs.” Then there are things you want to buy when you've got a little extra cash, maybe from a bonus or a promotion: that new big-screen TV, a weekend trip to the coast, a brand-new car, or a fancy dinner out. These are your “wants.” Consumer cyclical companies are in the “wants” business. They are the fair-weather friends of the stock market. When the economy is booming, unemployment is low, and people feel optimistic, these companies thrive. Consumers open their wallets and spend freely on discretionary items. Car dealerships are busy, airlines are full, restaurants have waiting lists, and luxury brands fly off the shelves. But when the economy hits a rough patch—a recession looms, jobs are at risk, and uncertainty is in the air—these are the very first expenses people cut. The vacation is postponed, the old car will have to last another year, and dinners are cooked at home. As consumer spending on these items dries up, the revenues and profits of cyclical companies can plummet. This is the opposite of their more reliable cousins, the consumer_defensive stocks. These are the companies in the “needs” business (think Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola, or Colgate-Palmolive). People buy toilet paper and toothpaste in good times and bad, which makes the earnings of these companies far more stable and predictable. In short, a consumer cyclical stock is a direct bet on the spending habits of the average person, which in turn is a bet on the overall health of the economy.

“The intelligent investor is a realist who sells to optimists and buys from pessimists.” - Benjamin Graham
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Why It Matters to a Value Investor

For a value investor, the dramatic mood swings of cyclical stocks are not a bug; they are a feature. The core of value_investing is to buy companies for less than their intrinsic_value. The manic-depressive nature of the market, which Benjamin Graham called “Mr. Market,” provides the perfect opportunity to do just that with cyclicals. Here's why they are so important to our philosophy:

How to Apply It in Practice

Analyzing a consumer cyclical company isn't about using a single magic formula. It's a method, a way of thinking that protects you from the emotional roller coaster of the market.

The Method

Here is a step-by-step process a value investor might follow when analyzing a potential cyclical investment.

A Practical Example

Let's imagine two hypothetical companies in the year 2007, right before a major recession.

Here's how their performance might look through an economic boom and bust:

Metric Luxury Cruise Lines (LCL) Essential Soaps & Sundries (ESS)
Year (Boom) 2007 2007
Earnings Per Share $5.00 $2.00
Stock Price $75 (P/E = 15) $40 (P/E = 20)
Year (Bust) 2009 2009
Earnings Per Share -$2.00 (a loss) $2.10 (slight growth)
Stock Price $10 $35

Analysis from a Value Investor's Perspective in 2009: The market is in a panic. LCL's stock has collapsed over 85%. Headlines scream that “no one will ever take a cruise again.” The amateur investor sees the losses and runs for the hills. The value investor, however, sees an opportunity and begins their homework: 1. Economic Stage: Clearly in a deep recession. Pessimism is at a maximum. Check. 2. Survival Test: They dig into LCL's balance sheet. They discover that while business is terrible, LCL has a low debt level and enough cash to survive another 2-3 years even with no improvement. It won't go bankrupt. Check. 3. Normalize Earnings: They look back 10 years and see that LCL's average, through-the-cycle earnings are about $2.50 per share, not the $5.00 it earned at the peak. 4. Value and Margin of Safety: Using the normalized EPS of $2.50, they might assign a conservative value of $37.50 per share (15 x $2.50). The current market price is $10. This represents a margin of safety of over 70% ($10 is just 27% of the $37.50 estimated value). This is a compelling opportunity. The value investor buys LCL at $10, knowing it may be a bumpy ride. A few years later, the economy recovers. People start booking cruises again. LCL's earnings return to their normal level, and the stock price rebounds to $40, quadrupling the investor's money. Meanwhile, the stable ESS stock might have only moved from $35 to $50 in the same period. The cyclical stock offered greater risk, but for the prepared investor, it also offered far greater reward.

Advantages and Limitations

Strengths

Weaknesses & Common Pitfalls

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This quote perfectly captures the mindset needed to successfully invest in cyclical stocks. The goal is to buy them when pessimism is at its peak and the business is out of favor.