vinod1
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Basel - risk weighted assets; anyone know the percentages?
vinod1 replied to claphands22's topic in General Discussion
This is speech that might be of interest to you. Shows a study on how banks calculate risk weights differently and that it might impact the capital ratio calculation by about 2%. http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/speeches/2011/speech484.pdf Vinod -
Basel - risk weighted assets; anyone know the percentages?
vinod1 replied to claphands22's topic in General Discussion
Risk weighting is done at a much more fine grained level - using loan level data. So I do not think you can calculate it from the data in financial statements. Also there are lots of off-balance sheet items like derivatives and standby letters of credit, etc that need to be included. Finally it is not just a cumulative weighted addition but it has some complicated (means I do not understand :) ) calculation that takes into account the correlations. Different companies can come up with different total RWA for the same balance sheet. Dimon has complained about this in the past. Vinod -
"Fairfax enters India to invest in local firms"
vinod1 replied to bluedevil's topic in Fairfax Financial
From the comfort of living in N. America it is easy to romanticize India from afar. -
"Fairfax enters India to invest in local firms"
vinod1 replied to bluedevil's topic in Fairfax Financial
"Robber baron". The mantra would be "Dream with conviction and corruption". -
Very interesting that one can like Security Analysis but be turned off by Aggressive Conservative Investor. I spent the better part of 6 months going through the first 4 editions of Security Analysis line by line and summarizing the essence of each chapter. So I am definitely not looking to be spoon fed :) Somehow I quite did not get all that much out of the Aggressive Conservative Investor. Perhaps I had high expectations going in. My detailed notes on the Security Analysis are at http://vinodp.com/documents/investing/security_analysis_index.html Vinod
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His books are classics. Whitman is a very smart man. All that being said, I have found his books to be impenetrable. I rarely don't finish a book, yet found his to be very difficult to get through and didn't finish the Aggressive Conservative Investor. He spends the first 50-100 pages telling the reader what he is going to be telling them, but never provides too much detail. The rest of those pages is in rants about others in the market and how his approach is much better. Personally, I would stick with his shareholder letters which are fantastic and have his views distilled into something that is actually readable. Just my 2 cents. I second that. However good he may be as an investor, the Aggressive Conservative Investor is a series of rants about EMH and other things. He does have a good nugget of wisdom here and there but it is extremely frustrating as it lacks in coherence and I would likely not read any book he authors in the future. Vinod
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WD-40 has been mentioned and it is a good example. Also See's Candies is a good example of a very small company with moat - not public but Buffett has commented on this quite a bit and addresses your question. Vinod
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bank stocks and new Fed capital rules rumors
vinod1 replied to ERICOPOLY's topic in General Discussion
BAC estimated interchange fees to be reduced by about $2 billion annually. This revenue loss would be mitigated partially via other fees so I do not see this as the main issue for the Big banks. My guess is that the market is pricing lower ROE due to potentially higher capital ratios. Vinod -
bank stocks and new Fed capital rules rumors
vinod1 replied to ERICOPOLY's topic in General Discussion
I agree, I just do not get the fuss about the new capital rules. WFC, BAC, C have Tier 1 Common ratios at 8.3%, 8.6% and 10.8%. Even if the risk weighted assets shift a little bit with the new rules, earnings are going straight to Tier 1 common capital in absence of any share buy backs and token dividends. Any increases would be phased in as well so I do not see any big concern about equity dilution which I think Fed would try to avoid as well given that management would slam the brakes on loan growth. Vinod -
That is exactly the argument merchants like Warmart's make. The card companies and payment processors (visa, mastercard) do not agree which reminds me of a quote: Man is incapable of understanding any argument that interferes with his revenue. Vinod
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Capital One had $500 million in interchange fees on about $13 billion in revenue in 2009. Vinod
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This isn't quite true; it depends on the facet of the credit card business that you looking at. Visa and Mastercard make their revenues based on transactions, not based on balances. It's primarily banks and retail locations (think The Home Depot Card or The Macy's Card) that make their big bucks off of those who don't have a strong understanding of compound interest. Pure-play credit card businesses such as Capital One and American Express are also directly exposed to this segment of borrowers. Regardless, all players take a cut of transactions executed. So even if their customers get wise (as they should), they will still make very nice revenues on the transactions side. Not as amazing as the retail loans business, but still nice. I do not even think of Visa and Mastercard as credit card companies. I am referring to the card issuing lines of business like Capital One's US Card segment where most of the money is made on the spread and various fees/charges. The cut from executing each transaction mostly is balanced via rewards so this alone makes up only a small fraction of the revenues. Thanks Vinod
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Credit card companies business model does not work on the subset of people who are very knowledgeable in finance and are disciplined like you. This however is a good statistical bet for the company across the broader population. What proportion of the people would pay on time say 36 consecutive times (just in the first three years)? I would bet a decent chunk of people would end up paying high rates. Vinod
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From what I read, Japanese managers would go to great lengths to avoid layoffs. Once read a story of how a manager committed suicide and left the insurance or some money that he would get upon his death for his workers. So I think this is mostly cultural. You might find some charts on the data you are looking for by googling "The First Cuckoo of Spring? Is Japan A Buy?". It has profit margins, ROE, div yield charts going back 30 odd years. Vinod
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In the end they are going to raise the limit. We might get a replay of the TARP vote. Congress votes down the increase, markets drop 20%, Congress votes for an increase. Good times.
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Anyone know what type of investment FFH has in Intel? It looks like its value is about $1 per share/unit and it is not a call or put, so what can it be? Thanks Vinod
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I track the warrants of about 10 companies. Here is the URL to get more info from Nasdaq on these http://www.nasdaq.com/aspx/flashquotes.aspx?symbol=ROICW&symbol=C/WS/A&symbol=AIG/WS&symbol=CMA/WS&symbol=JPM/WS&symbol=VLY/WS&symbol=PNC/WS&symbol=BAC/WS/A&symbol=WFC.WS&symbol=COF.WS&selected=ROICW I know that Ford, Lincoln National, Washington Federal, Hartford Financial and First National Bankcorp have warrants outstanding. You can check these from Nasdaq. Vinod
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This is pretty much what Buffett seems to have said at the AM. Question 29: Crowd- Questioner asked a question about goodwill, including goodwill when you calculate return on equity and write offs of goodwill. Buffett: The AOL-Time Warner goodwill should have been written off. In general, goodwill should be not amortized, but should be written off when necessary. Goodwill should also not be used in evaluating a business. What the management is doing and how the operating businesses are doing are what the most important factors. In this case, the focus should be on returns on tangible assets. But when you are assessing how well he and Charlie are doing in calculating return on equity, you need to include goodwill. Vinod
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The vast majority of the companies have link to "Order Printed Materials" on their investor relations section of their website. It allows you to order Annual Reports, 10-K's and 10-Q. I have a auto form filler plugin installed in Firefox to make it easier to fill in these forms. I get the majority of the forms this way. For companies that do not have this link, I email the investors relations contact listed on their website. Only 2-3 companies do not mail printed reports in among the 200 odd companies that I follow. Vinod
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I just checked and it seems to be working fine. You can give it another shot and if you still have a problem, email me at vpalika in the hotmail.com domain. Vinod
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There is overlap between the normalized earnings and the investments. We can either do pure look through earnings i.e. his normalized earnings of $12 billion + share of undistributed earnings (adjusted if he already included dividends into normalized earnings) or the standard two column. Either way I think IV is coming to a little above $100 per B share. Vinod
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Thank you Sanjeev! Vinod
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Did anyone uderstand the rationale for issuing of AIG warrents?
vinod1 replied to vinod1's topic in General Discussion
Thanks for the caution. I just digging into this in a little more detail as it is very intriguing due to size of Berkowitz's bet and no obvious undervaluation. Vinod