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racemize

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Everything posted by racemize

  1. I'm in final stages of data collection at this point. If any investors feel like posting or pm'ing me their 5+ year annual performance numbers, I can enter it in and see how much cash would have been ideal, given the returns. Mostly, I'm doing this to see if it matches my thesis and compare it to real world data, so the more the merrier! Perhaps you would like to know the answer as well? (although probably you already know it). In any event, I'll put it all together in an essay and get it posted, but those usually take me a while, so don't hold your breath!
  2. Hi All, after looking over Pabrai's record and hits or misses, it seems as though the requirement of 2-3x in 2-3 years mostly works, but when it doesn't, it can be quite painful. Rather than simply looking at Pabrai's history, however, I'd like to get input from investors with long-term, high return records (let's say >15-20%). 1) How often are you wrong? (e.g., thesis was not correct, and had to exit at break-even or loss) 2) How often are you wrong and it causes significant loss, e.g., >50% permanent loss? 3) How volatile are is your yearly performance (e.g., lows and highs)? Thanks in advance!
  3. I agree, I think I've mostly come to a conclusion on this one, so I'll probably write up an essay on it. If people are interested, I'll post it here.
  4. I think the distribution is a little bit odd since 25% is very close to S&P returns. There's probably a lot of people very close to 25% that are in the 10-24% bucket.
  5. Ok, so as another test, I just went and recalculated what Pabrai's performance would have been if he had held cash most of the time and put it all in after the big downturns (2009 and 2012). Results are interesting: For PIF2, adding any amount of cash reduced overall performance For PIF3, ideal cash amount turned out to be 33% For PIF4, ideal cash amount turned out to be 98% So, mixed bag! Pabrai's returns seem to be more prone to needing cash than the market, which I've never gotten a positive result for holding cash.
  6. I actually tend to disagree with this approach. e.g., if I were to invest in the S&P, I would not do it in the same manner I would invest in stocks. For example, some of the skill is identifying when is a good time to buy a security, and which may correspond to a market downturn (e.g., 2009/2011). An indexer will not do this; instead, they would dollar cost average and never pay any attention. Thus, I think putting the same amount of money in the S&P at the same time either gives too much benefit to the S&P benchmark if you are right, or doesn't give credit to the S&P benchmark if you are wrong.
  7. Well, I'm mostly trying to figure out if it makes sense. We want to be sure we learn the right lessons from 2008 and do not overreact to it. Marks said something similar, e.g., if we try to prepare for 2008 scenarios, we can only own cash and gold, or something along those lines.
  8. Similar type of comments coming from BAM, where they think the sheer capital inflows will have to go someplace, and in their theory, real estate/real assets. Same reasoning might drive down yields.
  9. I tend to think the younger folks are the ones who are on here during the day. Give it some time to develop.
  10. This has been done before? I did a quick search and didn't find one. I feel like it was a year ago, don't remember the post name though. It was horrendously lop-sided, as I recall.
  11. last time, I think it came down to 99% male.
  12. I got in with a write-up of AIG, but then someone else posted one while I was waiting for approval, so I couldn't use it as one of my ideas. Generally, I think just be very thorough. I can send my AIG write-up if you like. I let my VIC expire. I think the board is better, and moreover, forcing 2 ideas a year seems like a bad idea, are there really 400+ good ideas a year? I don't think so...
  13. from a guy with 1100 posts lol *rolleyes* I think he's been here a while... Also, 5 is probably the biggest issue with the board, but it is understandable. I posted way too much when I first joined too. Perhaps I still do.
  14. Well, I'll add a lower one to make you 50%s feel better. I'm at 24.2% for the year, mostly due to lower returns of compounders (e.g., FFH) and a residual holding from last year that went down pretty hard. BAC calls mostly offset those though. For all the >100% people, I guess you were moving in and out of stuff? I don't have any positions with > 50% gains, other than BAC calls.
  15. Well, the change in regime is very interesting--however, it seems hard to really pinpoint the reasons for it. Certainly, I could see accounting changes having a part in it, but I tend to think the lack of war idea is probably not that big of factor. I'll also be interested to see how the next 20 or so years go, so I mostly withhold judgement until then.
  16. How is that even possible? I had also assumed it would be all or nothing always. Are you using fixed income for cash? Thanks Vinod I'm not entirely sure--either there's an error in several of my examples, or the behavior is something I didn't expect. I'm looking at it more now. Edit: Looks like it is a trade off between the value of the normal returns versus the bonus return and how often the cash is deployed. I think it makes sense, but where that point is is not intuitive.
  17. Sure, but they are extremely messy, so I'm not sure anyone can understand what is going on besides me: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AhTPR9eP5nWedEJBNk9ucGNxOUJzTkotQXVNMkg3OHc&usp=sharing
  18. I take back my statement about the cash % always being all or nothing. I found a situation where the ideal cash number was 35%, interestingly. Back to the models...
  19. might as well wait an extra couple of weeks.
  20. Well, in those situations, you would not have had opportunities that met your hurdle, so you would naturally have cash. I'm talking about the situation where you do have opportunities exceeding your hurdle, and whether or not it makes sense to hold cash in spite of them.
  21. Joel, I am not talking about downturns… great opportunities might arise for very different reasons… And a general market downturn is only one of them! A BP’s offshore plant blows up, and XOM sells off abruptly… Merck is sued over some flawed drug in its portfolio of patented dugs, and Abbott sells off abruptly… They are only two of the examples that come to my mind right now, and that I was able to take advantage of in the recent past. How could you predict when and why those kind of opportunities might present themselves? Imo, it simply is not possible. Gio It is not possible, but the question is, should you turn away other good investments that meet your hurdles in order to get that opportunity? Unless they happen very often, the answer appears to be no. Moreover, I find it hard to believe that if one of these opportunities arose, one could not find a position that had not appreciated that could be sold for the new opportunity. The only time that is not the case is in market downturns, when most positions have not appreciated. Then it may start to make sense, but the opportunity has to be very large to sacrifice the gains that would have been made by not holding the cash!
  22. Sure, I guess, but that doesn't indicate whether it was rational or not. Him being stubborn doesn't make any sense to me to argue one side or the other--either he had good reasons or he didn't.
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