vinod1
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Vinod - do you mean "were being valued"? As far as I can tell, the three companies you mentioned all have low-mid teens PEs. Unless I'm missing something... -M I was not clear. I took the orginal poster to mean, "why are banks currently an investment candidate if healthcare was deadmoney the last 8 years. Can banks suffer something similar?" I am referring to valuations about 8 years back in healthcare. They are priced to perfection at that time so it is not surprising that they did not provide good returns. Right now the valuations of Banks is vastly different compared to the situation with healthcare in 2002. Banks have their share of risks, but valuations are such that, on a risk adjusted basis (fully incorporating say a complete wipeout probability of say 10%), they are starting to look attractive. Vinod
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Not really. JNJ forward earnings yield = 7.7% PFE = 13% MRK = 10% You cannot just break down a case for investing in a bank because of its P/E ratio, it's far too simplistic. That's the kind of mentality that got people killed when they were investing in seemingly cheap banks on backwards looking metrics during the financial crisis. I am talking about valuations of healthcare back in early 2000-2002 time frame (8 years back). I do not disagree with you, just pointing out that while 8 years is a long time period, for healthcare stocks the past 8 year period started with very high valuations as opposed to Banks at the current time. Vinod
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The main difference is valuation. JNJ, PFE, MRK, etc are all being valued at PE ratios in the mid 30's. At an earnings yield of less than 3%, poor returns are baked in at those prices. Even using conservative normalized earnings, some of the bank stocks are at PE of about 6. At an earnings yield of greater than 15%, unless you run into some really severe economic/company specific issues you should have a satisfactory return. Vinod
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The main point is that before you read any value investing books like Security Analysis, etc you need to get a good understanding of accounting. A good place to start is "The accounting Game" by mullis. Vinod
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My background is in engineering and did not have any economic/finance background. Reading Intelligent Investor and other value investing books, it felt like sitting in the cockpit of a space shuttle - you get exited and want to do something but did not have a real clue. I completed my CFA which provided a good background - accounting, economics, statistics, financial analysis (at least how not to do it or way it is performed by analysts). I did feel it is a waste of time relative to the time spent. If you can look at the curriculum it provides a roadmap of what things you might need to learn and in what order. It however misses completely on how to actually go about investing in the markets. I found that I learned most from Graham's Security Analysis, the practical aspects of it. Then started reading and analyzing Annual Reports/10-K's, etc. The first 200 annual reports did not make much sense, but I kept reading anyway. Then after getting a good feel for the various industries and companies from reading the annual reports, I then selected a few industries and a few companies in each. Then spent a couple of years drilling down into the industries and companies. So I would really dig deep into 2-4 companies in a specific industry. 20-30 years of annual reports if available and try to also look at data of the past 30-40 years to see how they have evolved. Now I am comfortable with valuing companies that are within these specific industries. So if I have to look at a new company within the industry it takes relatively less time to get upto speed. Vinod
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damianolive, Outstanding effort. Thanks for sharing. Vinod
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Bronco Sorry. I agree completely with you w.r.t the examples. What I was commenting on is your statement "is it double counting if in today's terms I have both the assets and the NPV of future earnings." I made the assumption that the future earnings are being produced by the same assets. In your examples that is not the case. The investor referred to in the article seem to be adding up both the asset and furture earnings from the same asset. Vinod
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It is double counting no doubt but I think we might be missing the context in which he is adding up the asset value and earning power value. Look at the example, Here ’ s a basic explanation of how Rees determines value. Say Rees fi nds a company with low debt and fi gures out that its tangible asset value is $ 5 per share. If his estimate for forward earnings per share was $0.10 he might apply a price - earnings multiple of 10 to that. That would amount to $ 1 of future earnings value, so Chris would simply add the two to get a $ 6 estimated fair value for the stock. He would then seek to purchase it at a 50 percent discount to that value, or $ 3. If the stock price was too high, he would simply move on to the next candidate. The earnings are 2% on the business tangible value. So he is estimating what the tangible value would be like a few years out and seeking to purchase at a discount to its eventual tangible value. If you think of it it is no different than removing any expected losses from the tangible value to arrive at an expected tangible value a little further out in the future. It would have made more sense if he is projecting the asset value say over 2-3 years rather than projecting out for 10 years (which is more like capitalizing earnings). Vinod
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For every dollar that you are putting into either WFC common or WFC warrants, the equation seemed to be 1. If WFC trades below $54 around the expiry of options in 2018 - WFC common has the higher expected return 2. If WFC trades above $54 around the expiry of options in 2018 - WFC warrants has the higher expected return The downside seems to favor WFC common as long as WFC trades above $0. So if you are expecting a price of about $54 in 2018 I would think common is the better option. If you have higher expectations on WFC price then the warrants are the way to go. Vinod
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At the end of the day 0% rates are like shuffling money from the left hand pocket to the right had pocket as each $ saved by a borrower is offset by an equivalent $ that is not earned by a saver. So it is a form of redistribution. The only benefit seems to be to induce some sort of bubble and pray that it fuels economic growth (at least in the short term) and hope that the bubble pops out when the economy is in a much better shape to handle the aftermath. Vinod
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What percentage of your portfolio is in Fairfax Financial?
vinod1 replied to ourkid8's topic in Fairfax Financial
COC, What an outstanding first post! I have a word document of comments on this board that I want to re-read and your first post went right into it. I hope to have the pleasure of reading more of your comments. Thank you! Vinod -
Making 50% per year like Buffett (on small sums)
vinod1 replied to netnet's topic in General Discussion
I think that is an extremely good point that often seems to get ignored. For all his talk about getting 50% returns, if you look at what Buffett has actually achieved, it had been about 25%-30% in his partnership days. This I would take it as the upper limit of realistic performance that can be achieved by a super investor. Mere mortals should not be too dis-satisfied with something lower. Vinod -
Agree completely. I think many people on this board can and would outperform the market by a significant margin. My point is regarding only mutual funds and that for the average person (not the value investing fanatics of this board :-) ) index funds are the more reasonable choice. Vinod
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Good point. I am shooting from the hip here, based on vague recollection. I stand corrected. Thanks Vinod
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If you think Fairholme would be able to beat S&P 500 by 10% going forward over the next 10 years, I would gladly take up an offer to bet otherwise. Vinod
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Graham had a wonderful paragraph that I am unable to find now. It goes something like this: Investing is a business undertaking and should be carried out as such. It is incorrect to think that with just a little effort one can achieve results substantially better than the market as a whole. It requires a level of intensity that a businessman would employ in the conduct of his business. Nevertheless a great majority of the people seem to have this belief. No one would think that can achieve great wealth in a business if they spend just a little effort but this same reasoning does not seem to apply when investing in stocks. I probably butchered what he wrote but that I think is what he said. All the funds you mentioned are good. The question is, can an average Joe - who would never every read or even understand the Intelligent Investor at least to the degree that is required to select good managers - been able to find these managers 10-20 years before they had this performance? I would not name a message board that I had participated in a long while back about indexing, but we had people with several years of experience who ran trading floor and have written books on investing (pretty good too) argue about the riskiness of a 3% allocation between two funds one of which had 600 stocks and the other had 2000 stocks. Here they are worrying about a 3% portfolio allocation that is spread over 600 stocks as being too risky and that the 2000 stocks fund is better. My point here is just because someone reads Intelligent Investor (many of these guys did), it would make them good value investors. Let me say that the first time I read the Int Investor, I liked it but did not really get it. You could count me in as one of the basket cases at that time :-) Vinod Vinod
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I would look at 20 year returns for a better idea of what returns can be achieved. I posted longleaf's and they are not all that impressive. Also, most value funds and incorrectly measured against the overall market rather than to the type of stocks that generally are populated in their funds. Take Pabrai for example, he loads the funds mostly with small and value stocks (per the academic definition, of low price/book), so I do not think it would be correct to measure his performance aganist S&P 500 but rather aganist say Russell 2000 value or some combination thereof. I know measuring performance this way is a can of worms, but this is something I found most good value investors have done a bad job off, as a result of insufficient attention/thinking on this topic. Mairs and Powers, yes it out performed by 4% over 20 years, but if you had instead looked at in comparision to small value index, it probably outpermed by a smaller percentage over this period. Yes, we have a few mutual funds that have outperformed by a little (1-3%) over 20 years, but I do not think it would have been easy to pick the succesful funds ahead of time. I am not saying someone who is well immersed in value investing like folks on this board, cannot pick good value managers who can outperform the market by a little bit. For the average investor, it is practically impossible. If you really want to look at Sequoia performance under current manager's take out BRK and look at the performanc of the rest of the portfolio. You know they have BRK due to their predecessor's inclusion, so this would give you a good idea of current manager's capabilities. It is not very impressive. Vinod
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SJ, I am talking about the average Joe, not the members of this message board. If I had a pick of several investors on this message board especially the majority of those who post with some frequency, I have no doubt in my mind they (yourself included) would outperform the market. Value Investing (a la Buffett/Graham) is so counter-intutive and unlike how the work is accomplished/success is achieved in other fields. I do not think it can be practiced successfully say by 80 to 90% of the overall general population. That and only that is my point. Vinod
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Chairman Warren Buffett reiterated his view that for most small investors who don't have time to research individual companies, cheap index funds are the best way to invest in the stock market. "The best way in my view is to just buy a low-cost index fund and keep buying it regularly over time, because you'll be buying into a wonderful industry, which in effect is all of American industry," Buffett told CNBC anchor Liz Claman. "If you buy it over time, you won't buy at the bottom, but you won't buy it all at the top either," the billionaire investor said. http://www.marketwatch.com/story/warren-buffett-backs-index-mutual-funds-over-etfs When a shareholder asked for the single best specific investment idea Buffett could recommend to an individual in his 30s, Buffett said: "I would just have it all in a very low-cost index fund from a reputable firm, maybe Vanguard. Unless I bought during a strong bull market, I would feel confident that I would outperform ... and I could just go back and get on with my work." http://seekingalpha.com/article/75563-buffett-s-advice-to-the-berkshire-faithful-buy-index-funds Vinod
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If you take a look at some of the best value mutual funds, they have only added a very modest (1-2% ) after-tax out-performance over the broad stock market. Take longleaf partners fund, they outperformed before-tax by about 2.6% over S&P 500 index. If you really benchmark this over say Russell 1000 value which I think is the most appropriate and that investors could own this fund (though not over the same period), then it turns into insignificant out-performance to downright underperformance (I really dont have the numbers for 1000v but know it outpermed S&P by a little bit). I posted the performance records of about 20 pre-selected group of value investors mutual funds in the old MSN message board wondering why they have not really shown any good performance compared to the stock market. It seems it should be so easy to beat the market but it is not in practice. A lot of this is due to (1) behavior of investors themself which force managers to worry about short term performance and make subobtimal choices (2) drag due to asset size that does now allow many opportunities to be expolited (3) compensation more aligned with getting more AUM. Vinod
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Believe it or not, investing in Index funds has nothing to do with efficient markets (though they tend to go together in peoples minds). It is simple math and logic. People investing in Index funds for the very long term (DCA over 30-40 year period for example) would earn the business returns i.e. about 6% real returns. Since all the active investments involve much higher costs, nearing about 1.5% to 2% of the real returns every year, active investors as a group earn about 4% real returns. Thus on aggregate, indexers outperform something like 80-90% of all investors over say a 30 year period. It makes a lot of sense to just invest in an index fund and outperform 80-90% of the people over a 30 year period. If you disagree, you need to answer one question: Do you believe that all the investors in aggregate can outperform the market? and Do you think all the investors in aggregate earn return higher than what the business generates over the long term? Now efficient marketeers take this to an extreme and say no one can outperform the market expect by luck. We know that is not true. However, this does not take away from the fact that for the vast majority of the people, by definition, index funds are the most suitable option. I spent several years immersed in efficient markets and their study before finding home in Graham and Buffett. "It is no difficult trick to bring a great deal of energy, study, and native ability into Wall Street and to end up with losses instead of profits." - Ben Graham Vinod
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I would not buy anymore because I have as much as I want at the current discount to IV. If I did not have any then maybe my answer would be different. Vinod