When Dawn Alston Paige, co-founder of Durham, North Carolina-based Piedmont Investment Advisors (No. 12 on the be asset managers list with $1.4 billion in assets under management), picked Office Depot as part of a defensive-minded portfolio, she thought the stock would rise by about $10 to a target of $50 per share within 12 to 18 months (See “Defensive Moves,” Moneywise, December 2006).
But after approaching $45 last fall, Office Depot shares have dropped by nearly 47%, to the $21 range. Office Depot executives have blamed the housing recession for a pullback in spending by small businesses, its prime customers. Office Depot’s woes dragged down the overall performance of Paige’s five-stock portfolio to a gain of 15.7%, just behind the 18% increase of the S&P 500 index.
MEMC Electronic Materials Inc. performed the best of Paige’s picks, returning 69.1%. The company’s polysilicon is used not just in microchips but in the burgeoning solar panel industry as well. Oil refiner Valero Energy
Corp., meanwhile, was another big winner, posting a 51% gain. “It’s a good long-term holding,” Paige says. “Take some profits here, but don’t get out completely.” The reason to hold on to some shares? The stock could hit $80 within six months, she says.Finally, home mortgage giant Fannie Mae came within a hair
of Paige’s $70 target price this summer, closing at $69. Paige sees Fannie’s stock hitting $80 within six months. “The demise of the subprime market should be favorable, since they provide liquidity to more traditional mortgages.”Company (Ticker) | Price 9/25/06 | Price 10/09/07 | Total Return* |
Amgen (AMGN) | $71.22 | $57.08 | -19.9% |
Fannie Mae (FNM) | 53.50 | 66.95 | 25.1 |
MEMC Electronic Materials (WFR) | 37.95 | 64.18 | 69.1 |
Office Depot (ODP) | 40.40 | 21.52 | -46.7 |
Valero Energy Corp. (VLO) | 47.80 | 72.19 | 51.0 |
Total Portfolio | 15.7 | Â | Â |
S&P 500 | 1,326.37 | 1,565.15 | 18.0 |
Current Value of $5,000 Investment:$5,786.96
source: yahoo finance
* reflects stock splits and dividends