Jump to content

scorpioncapital

Member
  • Posts

    2,857
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    2

Everything posted by scorpioncapital

  1. people and institutions have to make up their vast losses in terms of time from the crashes and mistakes of the past. This force is very strong but also blinding to risks and impossibilities.
  2. The joys of living in a country that taxes capital gains (some don't at all) :) I would not let tax considerations determine the optimal investment choice. But one should ask how sure one is of what one believes.
  3. Value has become synonymous with cheap junk. Therefore I'd buy quality in any cycle, anytime because I prefer it even to cheap junk that bounces back.
  4. There are two kinds of valuation - qualitative and quantitative. Too many people focus on the quantitative valuation and then wonder what happened when the perfectly beautiful numbers blindsighted them to competitive problems - or management problems.
  5. Biggest gain was berkshire on 2x leverage. Don't expect a repeat :)
  6. There's a company PCRX whose main product is a new opiod-free post-surgery painkiller.
  7. You can read Buffett's article , something along the lines of 'how inflation swindles the equity investor'. His thesis is that securities are not a good haven for inflation in the general sense. Only a select sub-group of all securities offer decent protection and it is the job of the intelligent investor to study his/her portfolio and think about whether the securities held offer this protection or are going to be below average.
  8. The only reason to own #1 - all net worth in small business is because you think you are going to earn 1000% or 10,000% on a small base over a medium period of time. Since that isn't possible with #2, the question really is do you have any capital to start with or you're looking to create capital out of thin air.
  9. Let's think about this logically. Suddenly these companies have a lot more money, paying less tax. But this could have been done ages ago. Seems to me there is too much money swirling around chasing assets or returned to shareholders via dividends and buybacks. What's it called when too much money is chasing fewer assets or money is indirectly helicoptered to people who own stocks? :)
  10. I think Buffett said this too - when rates are low you can afford to take your money out slowly. In the consumer realm, this means basically carry a debt forever until you die - almost a free lunch on the individual level. If rates are high or much higher, it means you need to get your money - return - out faster. On the personal level this means liquidation, bankruptcy for those who got in last or have income issues - in other words, you run out of time before the goal of dying with the largest debt. If you think about it, it's imminently rational - why would any consumer not stream out a huge debt over their entire lifetime and live off the banks and state and then die with a state old age pension? It's an upside down world :)
  11. So let's call it $220/share - $240/share. And nothing says in a bull market you can't trade at 2x IV or $440 to $480 per share. Although that's not something you are counting on. But an overshoot is also possible.
  12. meltup is value when inflation runs rampant. If it didn't , even a slow rise would actually be a big loss.
  13. "the scrutiny of a central bank – the drug dealers, arms merchants, money launderers, dirty money, etc. And that money cannot get out of crypto – unless you or I buy crypto …. and pay in fiat." In other words the same politicians and the rich - have you seen Panama Papers and Paradise Papers? Even fiat has not stopped anyone. I don't blame them incidentally. Our social systems are so screwy I see more and more chipping away at trust in the system. Bitcoin has a large natural reason for being. I'd like to know if governments can shut it down. Probably there will be some tax haven nations that will benefit by allowing it for their currency or in case Western countries ban it for legal tender like paying salaries and expenses.
  14. Trust me, the hypocrisy in America is nothing compared to countries were literally if you have any amount of capital you can avoid paying any tax altogether, and virtually no capital taxes. I'm surprised not everyone is piling into these nations - although they are to some degree.
  15. definitely #4, especially if you are saying you need this money to pay the bill.
  16. Why should money have a return in excess of maintaining a 0% real purchasing power? It's not like money produces anything, or is a business.
  17. I guess his argument is there is no protection except in high quality businesses that can have a high chance of earning a good spread regardless of changes in rates. Reminds me a bit of the tide showing who will be naked. Now the tide is lifting everyone.
  18. A very bizarre thing has happened with FWONA and FWONK. The k which has the lower voting rights has traded below the a since almost the beginning of the year. It's the reverse with DISCA/K right now. Is it perhaps that in a merger the Ks were given as a currency and then there were selling shareholders and just more holders of K vs A? Would the same thing happen after DISCK/A merger ?
  19. I'm confused about the claim of inflation and real estate values. Some commentators say higher rates mean lower REIT prices, others say, higher inflation (higher rates?) means higher real estate prices that compensate for the higher rates so it's a wash.
  20. What about the theory that debt/credit is a life-long proposition. I.e. if you can pay some monthly mortgage - FOR LIFE - and never pay off the property, does it matter if you die, you got the use of the house for the entire time. But if everyone goes in with wild abandon when rates are 3%, if they go to 6% or higher maybe you actually will get kicked out of the house before you pass on...unless of course you get a bailout. Which is a distinct possibility. In which case maybe you can continue to stay on as a perpetual debtee. Is this the golden age of almost free lunches?
  21. Real estate in North America is highly subsidized. As are banks in Canada. I sometimes wonder if people are racing into a sinking ship instead of abandoning it.
  22. "I decided early on that I never wanted to owe more than 25% of my net worth, and I haven’t… exept for in the very beginning." Found this interesting. Was he using margin loans of 1.3 to 1.5 at the start ?
  23. omaha herald says flying j is worth 9 billion so 80% is 7 billion (38.6% of that was the down payment).
  24. I think he was playing devil's advocate, but a bit more devil then usual :)
  25. If Berkshire is a buy at $185 now, what was it 5 years ago at half this price? "Could anyone take Berkshire's mkt cap in cash & re-create the company?" I think yes, easier than others, except the private owned businesses. From this I conclude the vast value is in the excess of goodwill over purchase price (almost always cash) over the years not accounted for (revised upward) on the balance sheet. Although the market price may reflect some of that difference. Still the input of energy, time, and opportunism definitely is the bulk of the value. In investing, unlike what some cigar butt investors claim, the bulk of the value is in factors that cannot be measured on a balance sheet or income statement. Most value is hidden which makes number crunchers somewhat uncomfortable :)
×
×
  • Create New...