Geoff Considine, Ph.D | Sep 06, 2021 18:49
Ford (NYSE:F) has had a tumultuous year, with several impressive new vehicles in the line-up, the chip shortage, and the increasing focus on EVs. Shares are up about 87% over the past year but are down 19.4% from the YTD high close of $15.99 on June 3.
Ford shares’ early-2021 surge was largely due to an improving outlook based on the firm’s new models and, particularly, enthusiasm about Ford’s EV offerings. The logic for the rapid increase in share price seems to have been based on the belief that EV firms can support higher valuations than traditional auto manufacturers, with Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) being the key example (TSLA has a consensus rating is bullish and the 12-month price target is 19.96% above the current price. Of the 21 analysts, there are 2 with sell ratings on Ford and the lowest of their 12-month price targets is $11.
Source: Investing.com
It is encouraging that the analyst consensus is for 20%-28.6% price appreciation over the next 12 months and that the prevailing outlook is bullish. The question is whether the expected gains justify the risks, a topic explored further in later sections.
I have analyzed call and put option prices at a range of strikes to generate market-implied outlooks for F. To build a nearer-term outlook (4.5 months into the future), I analyzed options expiring on Jan. 21, 2022. For a slightly longer view (6.3 months out), I analyzed options expiring on Mar. 18, 2021. Options trading on F is very active, which adds confidence in the meaningfulness of the market-implied outlook.
The standard presentation of the market-implied outlook is in the form of a probability distribution of price returns, with probability on the vertical axis and return on the horizontal.
Source: author’s calculations using options quotes from eTrade
The market-implied outlook is quite symmetric, with comparable probabilities for a range of positive and negative returns of the same magnitude. There is not a well-defined peak probability, but there is a modest negative tilt, withe elevated probability of negative returns. The annualized volatility derived from this distribution is 44.2%. This is quite high for an individual stock, as would be expected given the rapid gains and drops in F in 2021.
To make it easier to directly compare the probabilities of positive and negative returns, I look at a version of the market-implied outlook with the negative return side of the distribution rotated about the vertical axis (see chart below).
Source: author’s calculations using options quotes from eTrade. The negative return side of the distribution has been rotated about the vertical axis.
This view shows the elevated probabilities of negative returns for the range of returns from about -20% to + 20% (the red dashed is consistently higher than the blue dashed line on the chart above from 0% to 20% on the horizontal axis. The largest elevated probability for a negative return corresponds to a price return of -9.8%.
In general, we expect that the market-implied outlooks for stocks will be somewhat negatively tilted because risk-averse investors in F may overpay for put options to limit their downside exposure. Compensating for this effect is subjective. I interpret this market-implied outlook as being neutral with a slight bearish tilt.
Source: author’s calculations using options quotes from eTrade. The negative return side of the distribution has been rotated about the vertical axis.
When I run the market-implied outlook for the next 6.3 months (using options that expire on Mar. 18, 2022), the view is somewhat more bearish, with a better-defined peak probability at -10% return. The probabilities of negative returns are even more elevated related to positive returns than they were in the shorter-term outlook (there is a bigger distance between the red dashed line and the solid blue line). Even with consideration of the tendency to see a negative tilt, this market-implied outlook is slightly bearish. The annualized volatility derived from this distribution is 44.5%.
The market-implied outlook goes from neutral, with a slightly bearish tilt, over the next 4.5 months to modestly bearish over the next 6.3 months. The two outlook periods match on expected annualized volatility of about 44%. The market-implied outlooks from my last analysis were much more bearish.
The auto industry is at what appears to be a major transition point, with traditional internal combustion engines being increasingly placed by electric motors. The capital markets are very enthusiastic about the potential for EVs, as reflected in the valuations of companies that manufacture them.
Ford is recovering from the impacts of COVID-19, while faced with a shortage of chips used in manufacturing cars and trucks. At the same time, Ford has made impressive steps in building out EV’s as well as some having a solid pipeline of vehicles coming to market (the Bronco and Maverick, for example).
The market is struggling to value Ford shares, as evidenced by the large swings in the share price. The Wall Street consensus projects the shares will gain 20%-29% over the next 12 months. The market-implied outlook is neutral, with a slight bearish tilt, between now and mid January 2022, but becomes more bearish by mid March.
The contrast between the bullish analyst consensus and the neutral-to-slightly-bearish market-implied outlook brings me to a neutral rating as a compromise.
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