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SpecOps

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Posts posted by SpecOps

  1. Yesterday I posted a case study on my blog which I used to test my valuation skills. I was looking for others to weigh in with their strategies and valuations so that we (I) can hopefully improve from shared insights.

     

    Its got readers but so far no one has joined me in the challenge so I thought surely someone on this forum would stick their neck out and share their thoughts on it. I'll be posting up how my thesis turned out and an autopsy of my valuation later today.

     

    Here is the first article

     

    http://investingsidekick.com/interactive-case-study/

  2. I just read an amazing piece by Michael Lewis, adapted from his book http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/06/magazine/flash-boys-michael-lewis.html?hp&_r=2

     

    I never properly understood what went on with the exchanges and HFT but this article does a brilliant job of explaining it in an entertaining way and I wanted to share it.

     

    It talks about the guys that set up the IEX - investors exchange, I hadn't come across it before but it sounds like a great step forward for investors

  3. Man uses first-class ticket to eat for free at airport's VIP lounge ... for almost a year

    By Mike Krumboltz, Yahoo News

    January 30, 2014 9:51 AM

    The Sideshow

     

    View photo

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    Free lunch (Thinkstock)

    In the grand tradition of the mad genius who bought mountains of Healthy Choice pudding so he could rack up millions of frequent flier miles on the cheap comes the story of a Chinese man who took advantage of a loophole to eat for free in an airport VIP lounge for nearly a year.

    The story was originally covered in the Chinese-language newspaper Kwong Wah Yit Poh in Malaysia, according to the New York Post.  The man, who isn't named in the piece, purchased a refundable first-class ticket aboard China Eastern Airlines that came with a complimentary meal at the airline's VIP lounge.

     

    That was almost a year ago. Every day since the purchase (after eating his meal), the man would then rebook his ticket (for free) for a flight on the following day. Then he'd return to the airport, eat, change his flight and go home.

     

    Eventually, according to the Post, the airline grew wise to the man's ruse and confronted him. This was after officials noticed that his ticket had been canceled and rebooked an incredible 300 times over the course of one year. That's a lot of complimentary shrimp cocktails.

     

    Because the ticket was fully refundable, the man was able to turn it in and get all his money back.

     

    Apparently there is such a thing as a free lunch. You just have to be willing to hang out at the airport to eat it.

     

    Follow Mike Krumboltz on Twitter (@mikekrumboltz).

     

    That reminds me of my dad, who has a store card just so he gets a free cup of coffee each day haha

  4. I found this presentation given by Tilson interesting http://www.scribd.com/doc/215835994/Shorting-Whitney-Tilson-ValueWalk

     

    I'm not a shorter myself but his logic is interesting. I agree with him that in shorting you not only need to be right on fundamentals but timing is also important. It can take years of pain for ideas to play out.

     

    He says it allows him to be more "aggressive" on the long side which I guess means he can make more assumptions about economic growth and general market trends and gives his Netflix position as an example (but that doesn't seem like value investing to me) and sees shorts are more of an insurance against market collapse.

     

    He does say his shorting has cost him and his investors a fortune over the last 5 years.

     

  5. I've slowly been coming to the conclusion that being "cheap" isn't always in my best interests. Like walking 30 minutes to a different shop just to save $2 on groceries isn't worth my time.

     

    I generally now just try to disregard price for the most part on things that cost less than $5, and as long as I'm frugal on the rest of it  especially big ticket items, then I'm not really losing much.

     

    These days I spend far more than I did a few years ago, if I were really living frugal I could save a lot more but I'm trying to enjoy life a bit more and not obsess over money so much. Its a hard habit to break when you're wired that way though.

     

    I focus more on 'value' now. Like I buy tailored, nice shirts (ok online so they're a bit cheaper!) but I think of it as I'm paying $60 for a shirt that I wear a lot, will last me years, and that will make me look good (cheap shirts just look bad for the most part). So $60 is a good price considering the value I'm getting.

  6. Value investors as a group have at least one thing in common, they like to get $1 for 50 cents. I've heard stories of Buffett buying hail damaged (refurbished) cars because they are at knock down value and similar stories of how the value investing philosophy extends beyond investing.

     

    Personally I would say outside investing, I have exactly the same mindset. If I see an item in a shop I like, I'll wait until its been marked down (discounts are pretty regular in the UK) before buying it. Even buying my daily sandwich at lunchtime, I know which shops offer the best value (cheap price but also accounting for how generous the filling is!).

     

    For big items I will usually buy second hand, or ex display models unless the item being brand-new affects my enjoyment of it. Like a couple of years ago I bought a new electric piano, found the model I liked, but then found the model as it had been the year before (which it had basically not changed from) and purchased it for cheap from a dealer on ebay looking to offload the "old" stock.

     

    My girlfriend thinks I'm crazy (and tight-fisted) but for me it is just a mindset and like Buffett says the philosophy either instantly resonates with you or doesn't

     

    So is anyone else like me, and has anyone got any amusing stories of how cheap they've been outside investing?

  7. Just seems weird these guys get punished for it. I mean you have the responsibility to not do dumb things with your money and to actually check if what they say is true. How are these people suddenly victims? It literally takes like an hour to actually check annual reports etc to see if they are not lying. If you cant be bothered to invest like a fking hour to get rich, you deserve to lose your money.

     

    :o

     

    In a way I agree with you, but I also think that authorities need to sometimes protect people from themselves.

     

    Part of me doesn't really see the difference between this, and people like Ackman and Icahn going public on positions, which do move markets although nowhere near as much as with penny stocks.

     

    If I were to run a blog, and post a great thesis on a penny stock and its price ran up 200% as a result, I could quite legitimately sell as its reached full value, but to outsiders this looks like a pump and dump. Ethically, it is all about the intention of the one "pumping" the stock, but that's pretty hard for a court to ascertain.

  8. DEMBF, AOBI, SSY.  I don't know if they are good deals or not now.  I am starting to think some of them may have been mistakes.

     

    There was a blogger posting the other day about a german open end real estate investment funds that are being forced to liquidate.  I can't remember the name of it.

     

    AlphaVulture blog has some interesting ones from time to time.  As does whopper investments.

     

    The RMGN situation was interesting.  I missed it and I am not sure if it was doable or not anyway.  If it was it would have been a hell of a deal.

     

    The blog which mentioned German real estate funds was http://wertartcapital.com/

    Good blog I recommend following

     

    http://investingsidekick.com has a few special sits among investment companies on the small AIM market in London.

     

    http://stockspinoffs.com is another great website for following spin offs which was a Greenblatt favorite for special situations

  9. The follow up article to this is a great read too

     

    http://brooklyninvestor.blogspot.ca/2014/03/buffett-market-timer-part-1-partnership.html

     

    It is interesting to see that Buffett didn't really time the market with cash. Personally I dont do this myself but notice at times I have more cash just because there aren't enough ideas (well I havent tried hard enough)

     

    For a small investor with access to micro caps there are never really going to be too few opportunities to require large cash holdings, but obviously mere mortals like us will struggle to find them in frothy markets if we have a day job too.

  10. I've got one, Geng Jinping. The company is now bankrupt, and the Execs were executed for their mistakes!

     

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/8375638.stm

     

    Also Dasani, the water by Coca Cola, was launched in the UK a few years ago and a story leaked to the papers that it was just tap water. Then they had to recall them because of contamination. The brand was a complete flop after that and I think they just removed it from sale in the end.

     

    http://www.theguardian.com/business/2004/mar/20/medicineandhealth.lifeandhealth

     

     

    But in general I would tend to agree, reputational damage, unless very serious, usually blows over

  11. You will probably find it difficult to get access to the data. These terminals usually have a limit to 1-2 users in the terms & conditions and anyone with the raw datasets will be a reseller and wont just give it out free.

     

    Your only hope is to find a library that has one of them, or to ask one of the companies sales departments for trial access, but then you might have a problem publishing figures from this data.

  12. I don't know about in Canada but in the UK pay and conditions in the finance sector have taken a real dive since 2008. I know a few people that work for banks as traders and their bonuses are only something like 10% of what they once where.

     

    The pay isn't that good either considering the hours they work.

     

    Also bear in mind the kind of work you will be doing as a trader, it is all about short term performance, I dont think the usual value investing philosophy works in most financial institutions as it usually comes with volatility in results.

  13. I focus more on the downside than upside when weighting the portfolio. If the upside isn't large then I probably wont buy it in the first place.

     

    I also think about the likelihood of the business deteriorating, how what position would I be comfortable with if I had to hold it for 5 years.

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