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Everything posted by Spekulatius
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To invert this, with CVET doing poorly, it seems that HSIC (from which CVET was spun off) dodged a bullet and ought to be a better business now. It seems reasonably valued too. I put it on my watch list together with CVET. I would be more inclined to buy HSIC here than CVET.
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There are three sort of posts that I appreciate the most 1) Posts that present a new idea or view to the community 2) Posts that lead me to change my mind 3) Posts that Save me a lot of Time I think packer16 Post on CTO is angriest example of #3 http://www.cornerofberkshireandfairfax.ca/forum/general-discussion/any-reit-experts-here/msg384761/#msg384761 It’s a very short but succinct analysis of the pros and cons of CTO, presented in a former post from Gregmal. A good example of 2) was this in the SPOT thread where griezemann23 pointed out a huge error that Aswath made (and didn’t catch it): http://www.cornerofberkshireandfairfax.ca/forum/investment-ideas/spot-spotify/msg383561/#msg383561 A great example (for me) Of 1) was John ‘s post about ODET. I was just researching music labels and knew that Bollore had a stake in this business. I had ODET on my research list and this post reminded me to look again: http://www.cornerofberkshireandfairfax.ca/forum/investment-ideas/odet-pa-financiere-de-l'odet-se/ I am the first to omit they I post mostly for my own benefit. That sometimes leads to “throwing something on the wall and see if it sticks”. The result are some times obvious errors. Despite that, I do hope that some of the stuff on the wall is beneficial to other board members too.
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FRFHF. Trying for Swingtrade To $480+. I am thinking we are closer to the bottom here than a top. I do expect a book value loss this quarter. Smallish position, will add If we get closer to the 52w low. I don’t like the stock that much long term, but I do like the risk reward for a swingtrade.
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Sold my smallish SMTA Position for a marginal game, after disappointing liquidation guidance (or do I read this wrong?).
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Wedgewood Partners on selling their BRK stake
Spekulatius replied to wisowis's topic in Berkshire Hathaway
Yes, I see it in a similar way. His last really good deals with public markets was BNSF. Everything after that was private deals (BAC, OXY etc). In a way, he has done a great deal reinventing himself, as a private market investor. Even though he may have lost some edge as an investor, I really like BRK stock here and I don’t think he really needs to hit it out of the Park here in terms of investing in commons stock to do well. If he can just get a few good deals done in the next downturn, while his operating companies and resilient insurance ops put up good results, the BRK should outperform significantly in a downturn and do Ok in an upturn with overall very satisfying results. -
Wedgewood Partners on selling their BRK stake
Spekulatius replied to wisowis's topic in Berkshire Hathaway
1) Warren lost his edge in public markets in the late 90’s and I think he knows it too. He still has an edge in private deals. 2) He has become a closet market timer. This has to do with 1). That’s why most of his cash deployments will be in some sort of market dislocation, when there are pitches that are obvious to him. 3) It’s still a much better situation than FRFHF, where they lost their edge investing, but don’t acknowledge it. -
re GRIF vs CTO, I like GRIF much better. They do one thing (smaller warehouses) in a few markets reasonably well and trade to a significant discount to NAV. It’s easier to get this sold than CTO. I don’t own it (sold it for a quick swingtrade) but would buy this any time if it falls back a little.
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I was impressed by the Dakshana foundation, until I read this in their 2018 annual report: $3.7M loss with $10.5M cash in a foundation????? To be fair, the foundation made ~+$1.1M the year before, but still.
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The issue with a REIT conversion is that it comes with a huge tax bill usually, as assets need to be valued to fair market value. I could be wrong with this and don’t know about CTO specifically, but that’s what I heard in other cases where a change in incorporation was discussed.
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It’s pretty close to these targets. Based in the press (from unnamed sources - ha) there actually isn’t any deal yet, just the promise of a kick the can deal - the Chinese buy some AG goods, Trump delays the tariffs. Better than a poke in the eye, but not a breakthrough. We will see where this goes next week. One comment # if a pattern keeps repeating, it’s probably not a good signal any more.
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Proposed new SEC rules for OTC securities, relevant for us?
Spekulatius replied to writser's topic in General Discussion
Yes, if you manage money for others and hold shares in noinfo stocks, you are between a rock and a hard place. As you stated, an individual investor can do as he pleases. I don’t like this rule either, that’s why I wrote a comment email to the SEC as well, but then again, if it causes forced sales, I am willing to take the other side and buy some shares at deep discounts to prevailing prices ( let’s say 30% below prevailing prices) and see what happens. -
No Fidelity and Schwab haven’t walked anything back in terms of commissions. Fidelity does not allow buying noinfo OTC stocks, so keep that in mind, if you consider them. I believe Schwab has no restrictions on what you can buy , but I don’t have a lot of experience- I just opened a test account with them yesterday. I personally would close my Etrade Account if I were you.
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Im just kidding... relax. Im just shocked at the prices people pay for investing advice. The buyer doesn’t pay for investment advice, they pay for advertising that comes from a possible news story with him having lunch with a semi famous person.
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He has gotten excellent feedback as a seller on various ~$80 used computer monitors and for a $3500 30 min conference call.
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Thank you Packer. Do you know anything about mortgage REITs? It seems like ABR is a mortage REIT paying over 9%. These REITs don't have real properties right? No, these mortgage Reits typically hold paper (commercial and residential mortgages), lever them up and live off spreads. Get something wrong like duration (easy to mess up with callable residential mortgages) or credit risk and you have a zero. So essentially these mortgage REITs have the same nature of lending business like the banks, but with a higher funding cost? The concerns you outlined seem to be the exact same concerns banks have. But WFC and BAC still seem to be investible by a lot of members here. When I look at mortgage REITs, what particular concerns should I have and look out for? Banks are diversified and regulated business. Mortgage Reits are one trick ponies and not regulated and cater to yield hungry investors. That makes the risk profile entirely different. It doesn’t mane that they are bad business, but I think most business that are designed as yieldcos aren’t great business to begin with.
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Thank you Packer. Do you know anything about mortgage REITs? It seems like ABR is a mortage REIT paying over 9%. These REITs don't have real properties right? No, these mortgage Reits typically hold paper (commercial and residential mortgages), lever them up and live off spreads. Get something wrong like duration (easy to mess up with callable residential mortgages) or credit risk and you have a zero.
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Fund managers who blew up their performance over the years
Spekulatius replied to opihiman2's topic in General Discussion
The problem with those kind of performances track records is that they outperform when the fund is small and underperform when the fund is large (from fund inflows). When you look at the total amount money gained and lost, CMGFX lost their customers money on average, relative to an index fund. -
FNMA and FMCC preferreds. In search of the elusive 10 bagger.
Spekulatius replied to twacowfca's topic in General Discussion
Farmers Mac isn’t really the same business model, it’s income mostly comes from the net interest margin, while the GSE would be 2/3 fees and 1/3 interest income (roughly) The GSE would have a more stable income stream, specially in a low interest rate environment. AGM stock only took off after interest rates came off from zero. -
Do you think the price improvements will go away & they'll start selling order flow? https://www.fidelity.com/bin-public/060_www_fidelity_com/documents/press-release/Fidelity-Price-Improvement-Guide-Media-Advisory_02192019.pdf I really don’t care. I reviewed the price improvements I received this year va commissions paid and they were roughly 5% of the commission cost. (I do a lot of small trades when I scale in and out of positions). If you trade low priced stocks I low liquidity markets, then the price improvement matters, otherwise it has marginal impact. More important is that Fidelity pays higher interest on cash balances than most other brokers, except IBKR. IBKR is best from a cost benefit perspective, but I don’t like to put all eggs in one basket.
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Bought a starter in PAYP (premarket yesterday) and also DD (rebuy). On an unrelated note, Fidelity went commission free today - yay!
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FNMA and FMCC preferreds. In search of the elusive 10 bagger.
Spekulatius replied to twacowfca's topic in General Discussion
FWIW, there is still a GSE trading in the public markets, which may serve as a reference - Farmers Mac: https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/AGM?p=AGM The valuation is pretty undemanding. -
Proposed new SEC rules for OTC securities, relevant for us?
Spekulatius replied to writser's topic in General Discussion
Done. On the other side, forced sales sounds interesting too. There could be real bargains to be had, if funds owning these buggers can’t hold them any more, because the value is unknown. A private investor would need to be willing to hold them for a decade. < Corrected for grammar > -
The owners are pretty crusty and made waves because there are no women on board and probably none in their mangement either. Colorful history, they changed from an plantation into a real estate investment vehicle with a decent track record. I own a few shares. Probably good podcast material with a bit of digging.