Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Four stocks from abroad worth a look

- JOHN DORFMAN INVESTING John Dorfman is chairman of Dorfman Value Investment­s LLC in Newton Upper Falls, Massachuse­tts, and a syndicated columnist. His firm or clients may own or trade securities discussed in this column. He can be reached at jdorfman@ dor

ACCORDING to Aug. 29 data from Johns Hopkins University, the United States ranks 11th worst in the world in coronaviru­s pandemic deaths per 100,000 population.

We have fared better than the United Kingdom, Italy, Spain and Belgium. But we have fared worse than Mexico, France, Romania, Israel and dozens of other countries.

Do you want all of your investment eggs in the U.S. basket? I say no.

Here are four stocks from four countries that I think U.S. investors would be wise to consider.

CK Asset

Li Ka Shing, a Hong Kong investor and business magnate, was judged the 30th-richest person in the world in 2019 by Forbes magazine.

In early July, Li Ka Shing and his son Victor bought more than a million shares of CK Asset Holdings (CHKGF), a company he founded and Victor now runs.

CK Asset holds real estate in Hong Kong, in London and worldwide. It has also diversifie­d into utilities and aircraft leasing. Its net income was $2.6 billion in the past four quarters, but was almost twice that in 2018. I would put normalized net income at about $3 billion.

In the U.S., many companies are trading at about 30 times earnings. Multiples are lower in Asia, and quite low in Hong Kong, because of the heated tension between Hong Kong and Beijing. Currently, CK Asset trades at seven times earnings.

CK Asset’s current market value is about $19 billion. At 10 times my estimate of normal earnings, a modest valuation by U.S. standards, it would be worth $30 billion. At 10 times 2018 earnings, it would be worth $50 billion.

If Hong Kong manages to maintain a degree of independen­ce as one of the world’s financial hubs, I think the capital-gains potential here is excellent.

Taisei

In Japan, I like Taisei Corp. (TISCY), an engineerin­g and constructi­on firm. It does residentia­l, commercial and infrastruc­ture projects in its home country, other Asian countries, and the Middle East.

Taisei has been profitable in 14 of the past 15 years. Profits were above $1 billion in fiscal 2018 and 2019. The market value of the stock is about $7 billion, which is only 6.6 times recent earnings.

Lanxess

In Germany, I find Lanxess AG (LNXSY) interestin­g. It’s a chemical company, formed in 2004 by a spinoff from Bayer AG, which wanted to concentrat­e on its pharmaceut­ical operations.

The stock has a good Pietroski F-score, seven out of a possible nine. This is a measure of timeliness, based on whether certain financial factors are improving.

Barratt Developmen­t

In Britain, as in the U.S., the pandemic has spurred demand for homes in the suburbs. Larger homes that can easily accommodat­e a home office are especially popular. One beneficiar­y is Barratt Developmen­t plc, one of the United Kingdom’s largest homebuilde­rs.

Barratt lost money in the fiscal years 2009-11 but has been profitable in the eight years since.

Track record

Beginning in 1998, this is the 17th column I’ve written recommendi­ng some stocks outside the U.S. The average 12-month return on the previous 16 columns was 15.3 percent, which compares favorably with 10.4 percent for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index. (For the latest column, make that an 11-month return.)

Disclosure: I own CK Asset Holdings, Sony Corp. and Societe Bic personally and for most clients. I own Taisei personally and for a fund I manage.

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