Until recently, I would have avoided regional banks. However, the green shoots of the U.S. recovery are now sturdy enough that select financial institutions are showing highly bullish charts backed by strong fundamentals. Both the technicals and fundamentals tell me there is a good trading opportunity at hand.
According to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC), the number of bank failures has dropped dramatically since June 2011. At this time two years ago, 48 banks had entered receivership. By this time in 2012, the number dropped to 31. So far this year, only 16 banks have failed -- one-third the number of failures compared with 2011.
Moreover, revenue and earnings prospects for select regional banks should continue to improve. For starters, the Federal Reserve's pledge to keep interest rates near record lows means low-cost loans for consumers, and that translates to strong loan demand at banks. According to Reuters, demand for commercial and industrial loans is on the rise. Continued economic growth should spur consumer spending and further increase demand for loans.
Regional banks are also seeing improving credit quality. With credit issues largely behind them, banks no longer need to stow away large sums of cash to offset problematic loans. According to the trading site Shine's Trading Room, these factors, coupled with stronger balance sheets, mean that regional banks are positioned for growth in 2013.
However, not all regional banks are created equal, and I believe only those with the strongest technicals and fundamentals should be bought at this stage of the sector's recovery.
Based on its solid outlook, Chemical Financial Corp. (Nasdaq: CHFC) is my top regional bank pick.
Headquartered in Midland, Mich., Chemical Financial is the parent company of Chemical Bank. With 156 offices spread across 38 counties and $6 billion in assets, Chemical Financial is the second-largest banking firm in Michigan.
According to David Ramaker, Chemical Financial's chairman, CEO and president, the bank continues to post strong earnings growth because of lower credit-related costs and organic balance sheet growth. Management expects future earnings growth will be driven by improving cost control and loan loss figures.
From a technical standpoint, the bank's growth prospects are certainly favorable.
Since hitting a low near $13.65 in September 2011, shares have formed a major uptrend line and nearly doubled to date.
In March 2013, the stock touched a multi-year high near $26.50, but it could not maintain that strength and dipped to support near $23.
Quickly rising off this support level, shares reached a new multi-year high of $26.82 in late May.
The stock has struggled to break this level, which now marks an important resistance level. Shares have since traded in a very narrow rectangular range, finding support above $25. Support held even after the market dropped dramatically in the days after Bernanke first mentioned winding down the Fed's bond purchase program, a bullish sign.
If resistance can be successfully penetrated, the stock would bullishly complete an ascending triangle pattern, marked by the intersection of the major uptrend line and $23 support.
According to the measuring principle for a triangle, calculated by adding the height of the triangle to the breakout level, the stock should reach a minimum price target of $30.22 ($26.61 - $23 = $3.61; $3.61 + $26.61 = $30.22). At current levels, this target represents almost 17% returns.
The bullish technical outlook is supported by solid fundamentals.
For the upcoming second quarter, scheduled to be reported July 22, analysts expect revenue will increase 1.3% from the same quarter last year, to $60.5 million. For the full 2013 year, analysts project increasing loan demand will help push revenue up 1.1% to $242.1 million from $239.4 million last year.
The earnings outlook is also solid.
For the upcoming second quarter, analysts estimate earnings will dip slightly, to 48 cents a share from 50 cents a share a year ago. However, for the full year, analysts expect earnings will rise 3.2%, to $1.92 a share, thanks to asset growth combined with credit-cost reduction.
In addition to an upbeat technical and fundamental outlook, the stock has an attractive forward annual dividend yield of about 3.2% (84 cents a share), which should help support the share price. Management has maintained a quarterly dividend in the 20-cent range since 2001.
Risks to consider: Signs of an economic recovery are helping boost regional bank stocks. As the economy picks up, consumer spending should increase, causing loan demand to rise. However, if economic activity is more sluggish than anticipated, decreased loan demand could hurt regional banks like Chemical Financial.
Action to Take -->
-- Place a buy-on-stop order on CHFC at $26.63
-- Set stop-loss at $22.89, just below current support
-- Set initial price target at $30.22 for a potential 13.5% gain in six months
This article originally published at ProfitableTrading.com
The One Regional Bank Stock I Would Buy for a Breakout
P.S. -- If you like dividend-paying stocks like CHFC, you should learn about a special group of dividend growers beating the market 7-to-1. We call them "rich parents" stocks, because they all have a wealthy "parent" company giving them sweetheart deals and special pricing. A $10,000 investment in one of these stocks in 2001 would be worth $177,200 today -- and thanks to their "rich parent" advantage, that looks like just the beginning. To get the names of some of these stocks, click here.
No comments:
Post a Comment