CP revisited

A few days ago we recommended this stock as a short to our broker friends (there is only one). We have been way too early before on this one and that may happen again, but we feel strongly that this stock is in it’s own bubble. We now also have a plausible wave count as per the chart below;

cp june 4 2013

The count may well be wrong but it is nevertheless plausible. The e-wave in the triangle is a little underdeveloped but otherwise most other aspects fit the description.

cp and cnr june 4 2013

Also the stock’s performance , apart from , perhaps, the operating ratio, is on a par with CNR. And, after tripling their money the hedge fund primarily responsible for the agitation, has now made it known that their position has grown relatively too large. Is this legal ?? Anyway a number of extremely astute investment dealers like RBC have now cut back on their expectations for the stock (this is known as “running with the bulls”). Add to that a p/e of 41. If the stock does what it is supposed to do, it should return to the bottom of the triangle in about the same time as it took to climb up. The stock could therefore be below $60 by the end of 2014. A put option would fit this situation best.

CP, Canadian Pacific and CNR

See our previous blog of July 2nd. We got CNR just about right, a month too early and a couple of dollars too low , but it has already dropped quite nicely. Not so with CP which is at least $10 higher than we expected so here is the update;

cp oct 24 2012

Enthusiasm for Mr. Hunter Harrison’s talents is unlimited. The 67 year old rainmaker is quickly solidifying his reputation gained at CNR as a train-maker. Profits were up 20% with the top line up 8%, most gains stem from cost cutting. Accordingly the operating ratio went down from 75.8 to 74.1 , all though some detractors point out that the storms that played havoc last year did not occur this time. The stock has doubled in a year and we think that is enough for the moment, actually way too much. With a p/e close to 25 (CNR is more like 14) the stock is grossly overvalued.

In EW terms the stock appears to have completed, or will complete, a text-book flat in which the A-B-C has three legs approximately the same size. The subdivision are nicely balanced and symmetric. Next stop is $35/$30 if this scenario proves to be correct. Sell on the open or use a tight stop-loss.

CP, Canadian Pacific Railway and CNR, Canadian National Railway

CP jul 2012 lcnr jul 2012 l

The charts do not have the same time frame! CNR is the larger of the two and the only one with East to West and North to South capabilities. Up to 1995 it was a crown corporation. But it is CP that has adopted the beaver as the animal to emulate for its smarts, engineering capabilities and enormous level of energy, in short all those things that Canadians have in abundance. But  in the opinion of one Mr. Ackman of Pershing Square, a hedge fund, the company has very little of those attributes. So after a few years of yanking at its chain he has managed to crown the ex-CEO of CNR as the new CEO of CP, a fellow by the name of Hunter Harrison , a 67 year old no nonsense American from the South. All this is interesting simple because it is so un-Canadian, otherwise we will not comment on the merits of all this.

However, looking at the charts and adjusting for the time difference, the performance is not that dramatically different as both start between $10 and $20 and move up to $80 to $90. The operating ratio was the tricky part, at which  the beaver consistently underperformed. Lots of excuses from snow to no-snow, from bulk goods to normal freight etc. etc. failed to explain that and ultimately a change at the top  was the only solution. Unfortunately that  will probable do absolutely nothing for the shareholders. CP (see a previous blog) probable topped out months ago while CNR is also ready for a big correction. CP completed a B-wave while all this was happening and CNR a 5th wave. Both could lose about $50 in the next few years. In detail;

cp jul 2012 scnr jul 2012 s

CP had a nice run-up  as all this was going on and perhaps all the good things coming from this, supposing there are some, are already discounted in the stock. This one looks like it will turn out to be a buy on rumour, sell on fact situation regardless of whether or not there will be a fact other than this recent CEO appointment.

By the way, if you look closely at the channel drawn in the big Yahoo chart of CP, you will notice that the above expectation would be fulfilled just by regression (reversion) to the mean – often referred to as the surest rule in the stock market – , at about the mid-point of that channel. Nothing really to write home about.

CP, Canadian Pacific Rail

CP

Luck should have little to do with investing but if it is presented to you on a silver platter by all means take it. They up leg from the $45 low looks suspiciously like a B-wave, that is fake, unreal and usually entirely based on rumours. It is also a double top and the RSI has peaked at levels not seen in the past three years. It may well be that we are in 4 of c of this B-wave, so a minor 5th is still needed to complete this pattern, that is not worth waiting for.