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Rabbitisrich

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Posts posted by Rabbitisrich

  1. Don't believe me? Take one from our own book as value guys. How many of you crawl into annual reports and don't trust what a bunch of the WS analysts say for forward P/Es and such? How many times do you find that people freak out about things they shouldn't, but don't have an appreciation for dangers that are very apparent to you when dealing with stocks?

     

    My guess is pretty often. By extension, that is the same thing that I see with houses in my hometown. I don't think that it is too different from different places in the US, but, could be wrong. All I am saying is that I think there is a significant number of people that don't know what they are doing, and that they will get burned at worst and at best, will pass along a house to a greater fool at some point in the future....

     

    Thoughts?

     

    I would say you have either been a landlord or have very good intuitive skills because you have described very accurately what it means to be a rental property owner. 

     

     

     

    He has some great stories on his website about the the investment process. I'm waiting for the next part of this ominously named series:

    http://ragnarisapirate.blogspot.com/2012/05/sometimes-its-best-to-take-pass-40.html

    http://ragnarisapirate.blogspot.com/2012/06/walking-away-from-few-million-dollars.html

     

     

  2. http://www.corelogic.com/about-us/news/corelogic-reports-shadow-inventory-fell-in-april-2012-to-october-2008-levels.aspx

     

     

    • As of April 2012, shadow inventory fell to 1.5 million units, or four-month’ supply and represented just over half of the 2.8 million properties currently seriously delinquent, in foreclosure or REO.
    • The four-month’ supply of shadow inventory is at its lowest level in nearly three years. It parallels the unsold months’ supply of non-distressed active listings that hit a more than five-year low in April, falling to a 6.5-months’ from a 9.1-months’ supply just a year ago.
    • Of the 1.5 million properties currently in the shadow inventory (Figures 1 and 2), 720,000 units are seriously delinquent (two months’ supply), 410,000 are in some stage of foreclosure (1.1-months’ supply) and 390,000 are already in REO (1.1-months’ supply).
    • The dollar volume of shadow inventory was $246 billion as of April 2012, down from $270 billion a year ago and a three-year low.
    • Serious delinquencies, which are the main driver of the shadow inventory, declined the most in Arizona (-37.0 percent), California (-28.0 percent), Nevada (-27.4 percent), Michigan (-23.7 percent) and Minnesota (-18.1 percent).

     

     

  3. If anyone needs a break from reading about banks, Europe, and China: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/watchdog/chi-0604sushi-1-story,0,4666032,full.story

     

    And the fish businesses have thrived. Company officials say the wholesale distribution arm, True World Foods, had revenue of $250 million last year.

     

    According to True World Foods, its fleet of 230 refrigerated trucks delivers raw fish to 7,000 sushi and fine-dining restaurants nationwide. Dozens of those trucks leave each day from the Elk Grove Village warehouse, one of 22 distribution facilities around the country.

     

    True World Foods' Alaska plant processes more than 20 million pounds of salmon, cod and pollock each year, the company says. Its International Lobster operation in Gloucester ships monkfish and lobster around the world from a 25,000-square-foot cold storage facility that is among the largest on the East Coast.

     

    The reverend Moon is a heck of a businessman: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Unification_Church_affiliated_organizations#Businesses

     

    Affiliated businesses include a gun manufacturer, a Chaebol, the Washington Times, and a U.S. property development company.

  4. Thanks for the summary. That is really unfortunate. Looking at the March '08 report for FPA Fund, they had some really interesting ideas in retail, but plunked most of their risk money into energy and tech underperformers.

     

    The retail picks were really impressive, particularly given their bearish view. Lots of contrarian and thoughtful names... almost seems like a sub-portfolio w/ separate management.

     

  5. I dunno, he didn't offer a real thesis on interest rate directions except to offer a variation of "they can only go up". Similarly, the statement about japanese flows is descriptive, not explanatory. It's like saying that Mcdonald's outperforms because they get customers who pay money for food.

     

    Does anyone follow FPA? Why were their returns so low despite holding so much cash leading up to the market drops? Did they let the cash allocations blow up when their stocks collapsed?

     

  6. ECRI made a recession call on Sept. 23, 2011, for its clients.

     

    9 months later and still no sign, and the US stockmarket has once again gone up.

     

    ECRI looking like fools. Tremendous amount of credibility has already been lost.

     

    If they hadn't been so downright insistent on a recession having begun by the middle of this year, perhaps they wouldn't look as bad as they do right now.

     

    Some of the lost reputation is healthy for the firm and for its clients. Supporters were getting cultish and credulous because of ECRI's track record. Even now, it is a great record, and Achuthan has been more specific with his criteria recent interviews.

  7. Some of the Amazon reviews imply that the techniques Waitzskin offers aren't broadly applicable. Have any of you found practical uses?

     

    I read similar critiques for Joshua Foer's book, but the basic descriptions of mnemonic techniques have been extremely productive.

     

    I can't really say because I'm only about 70 pages in, but even if the rest of the book was to start sucking, just what I've read so far would be worth it IMO. Some insightful stuff about mindsets and avoiding bad decision downward spirals, psychological resilience, etc. Some stuff I already knew about, but always good to refresh memory, just like re-reading Buffett.

     

    Looks interesting, thanks.

  8. Some of the Amazon reviews imply that the techniques Waitzskin offers aren't broadly applicable. Have any of you found practical uses?

     

    I read similar critiques for Joshua Foer's book, but the basic descriptions of mnemonic techniques have been extremely productive.

     

  9. I heard a couple good investing related allegories this week.

     

    A fisherman noticed that his catch had been particularly good in recent days and decided to mark the location. After making careful measurements, he precisely drew an X on the floor of his boat.

     

    An economist absentmindedly drove his car until he felt a thump. Heart pounding, he looked behind and saw a prone figure. With a cry of "I must fix this", he hit the reverse.

  10. I'm still up 40% YTD.  There, I jinxed it and you can take that as a sign to sell everything tomorrow.

     

    The problem with the March YTD thread was less about luck, and more about the use of short-term market results to validate business theses. It's an easy habit to form, and fairly dangerous.

  11. I could not find the series of posts which appeared earlier in the year where some were bragging about their returns, I used that as a signal to start raising cash now sitting around 40%. I suspect that around the time of the Grrek elections we may see something more positive emerge with mkt trends. I suspect a Greek Euro exit maybe Europes Bear Stearns moment and a larger countries exit would be their Lehman moment. The record low 10 years yields on treasuries and Bunds indicate to me that the deflation trade is pretty crowded at the moment. I personaly have found it a difficult mkt, I am a few percentage points away from new high water marks but have been relagated to being happy with single digit returns for the last 5 years because I am unwilling to go all in when stuff looks cheap. I have never been willing to take my cash below 20%.

     

    There was a March thread about YTD results that was a definite warning sign. When the Corner of Berkshire and Hathaway starts reporting YTD results in March...

     

     

  12. 2. Low ROA of Japanese banks is due to several reasons. Among them, due to cross holdings Japanese banks are holding more than 150% of the common equity in stocks of other companies. All these equity investments are less than 5% each so they are exposed to stock market declines but these are not marked to market and they had to write them down over a period of several years. Their loan losses and NPL are also much much higher. A consequence of their total RE value being priced at 5x their GDP and banks using this overvalued RE as collateral. You can look at corporate governance, shareholding patterns, Govt response. Low ROA is not primarily due to low NIM. And none of this is even remotely close to what we have in US.

     

    Vinod, have you seen any report on this?

     

    Nothing that directly addresses the question of causes behind low NIM. But a good paper that goes into the issues is by IMF www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2000/wp0007.pdf

     

    Vinod

     

    The first attachment looks at the stability of Japanese bank NIMs despite the zero boundary and rising credit costs. The second attachment covers a later period and describes some of the factors that led to improving ROEs despite diminishing NIMs.

    Tsuyoshi_Oyama_and_Shiratori_Tetsuya_-_Margins_Of_Japanese_Banks.pdf

    Loukoianova_Elena_-_Changes_In_Japanese_Bank_Profitability.pdf

  13. The downside of being so rhetorically aggressive is that wounded parties don't want to listen:

    http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/06/01/the-breakeven-point-wonkish-but-terrifying/?smid=tw-NytimesKrugman&seid=auto

     

    Paul McCulley held a similar viewpoint and received walking papers from PIMCO for his perspective. Every country can point to unique villains (Greenspan) so it takes a while to see common threads.

     

  14. Biaggio,

     

    What, you re going to pay someone to hold your cash?

     

    Imagine you have $100m that you want to save.

     

    What are your alternatives?  You don't have FDIC protection (and there is no reasons why bank accounts can't have negative rates), and you can't put that in a safe under your bed.

     

    Sure, regular Joe's with $5,000 don't have to accept negative rates, but they aren't the majority of deposits.

     

    Not arguing that we will see those rates, but I'm just saying that there is some reason for why T-Bill yields sometimes go negative.  It could happen for longer dated issues too.

     

    Ben

     

    To protect $100m you only need to purchase 400 certificates of deposit -- each one from a different bank.

     

    The $250,000 in FDIC protection is only the limit of protection that you have from each individual bank.

     

    FDIC coverage is unlimited for non-interest until the end of the year.

  15.  

     

    I was referring to this quote of his:

     

    "...gold is a great thing to sew onto your garments if you're a Jewish family in Vienna in 1939 but civilized people don't buy gold - they invest in productive businesses."

     

    Maybe I am interpreting it wrong but he is basically making fun of people who buy gold thinking the shit will hit the fan (hence the holocaust reference.)

     

     

    I was taken aback by the comment as well. But Liberty's interpretation is probably the correct one because the statement doesn't actually make sense if intended to denigrate refugees. Munger probably (hopefully!) meant "civilized" to refer to people living in civilization, and not to connote culture or elegance.

     

     

  16.  

    I dont believe JPM and WFC will retain their premium over BAC for more than 2 additional quarters.

     

    I agree with that, other than the 2 additional quarters.  I think it will take a little longer because of all of the legal overhang. 

     

     

    Why wouldn't WFC maintain a premium vs. BAC, given that USB maintains a premium vs. WFC? Do you see a pathway for BAC to depart from historically inferior unlevered profit margins, and to compensate for the leverage handcuffs of Basel III?

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