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Ballinvarosig Investors

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Posts posted by Ballinvarosig Investors

  1. I see that the ITEX Board have submitted their proxy statement. It's disappointing that this has come down to a proxy battle. I would still like to see Steve White coming to an agreement with Polonitza/Pagidipati, but I guess it's too late for that now. Are there many ITEX holders here, I'm assuming that you're all supporting Polonitza/Pagidipati? Will Biglari support Polonitza/Pagidipati? I would say his stake will be key in which way the vote will swing.

  2. I am not a big technology investor.  In fact, in the past I wrote the only two I would invest in is Google and Apple.   These 2 have performed well, but quite frankly, I am too old/stupid/ignorant to invest in Akamai, Riverbed, or Micron.

     

    But now I am looking at Nokia.  Pays a 4.5% dividend, and could be a cheap way to enter the wireless device movement on a global basis.

     

    Any thoughts/comments appreciated.

    Have you looked at the financials? In an expanding market, revenue for Nokia fell last year and has continued to fall as of the last quarterly. Because earnings are falling, the dividend doesn't even look sustainable in the long-term. Maybe I'm wrong, but an investment in Nokia looks highly speculative at this point.
  3. We're systematic, so we have automatic entries and exits.

     

    Come on don't be so shy gives us your magic number  :)

    Just invert what he has said. If I've read correctly, he'll ride this stock until the growth slows. The beauty of his strategy is that he should be able to sell at a little below the peak price (some day a 10q will come out with numbers that aren't so hot); assuming that he has the discipline to recognise this turning point (not trivial).
  4. Netflix insiders have had automatic sale programs in place since the $30s.  I think that says something.

    Have you answered your own question?

    Myth, I used to view insider buying as paramount in a deep value or distressed situation, but I have learned that sometimes the insiders get scared too and simply can't pull the trigger.  To give you an example, I almost bought Select Comfort (SCSS) in March 2009 at $0.20 per share.  Finally, I talked myself out of it because I thought, "If this is so cheap, why aren't insiders buying?"  Less than a year later, the stock was at $10, so I would have turned $100,000 into $5 million.  Expensive lesson that says don't be too dogmatic.  Insider buying is a plus, but sometimes even the insiders don't have the guts to do what's right.
  5. Warren Buffett never shots stocks. He said  that he has never been wrong on the overvaluation of a stock, but problem for shot is that it is difficult to get the timing right.

     

    Pabrai has similar comment.

     

    I am not smarter than Buffett and I never shot stocks.

     

    That's all I want to add to this topic.

    Shorting is difficult. Shorting something with momentum is even more difficult. A fund manager friend of mine lost big when he shorted a clearly overvalued housing market in 2005. Timing is everything when shorting.

     

    Anyway, I just can't understand why anyone would want to short, you can only ever make 100%.

  6. Although one thing I think (I think) I remember from the Snowball was that he was running at 60% or something prior to his partnership (in the Columbia/Graham-Newman days).

    You are correct.

     

    Buffett has compounded returns of 61% from 1951 to 1955. When I was in college working with only a few thousand Dollars, I got close to 50% returns over three years doing odd-lot's, splits, liquidations, tender offers, etc. I personally found that when you even started working with a 5-figure sum, that the return started to decline as a lot of the special situations that I was looking at were only worth a few hundred Dollars a pop. When you move up to a 6-figure sum, the special situation stuff that I look at barely makes a scratch on your return. While I think getting a 50% return on a six-figure sum is possible, I think it requires highly concentrated and selective investing with a good measure of scuttlebutt thrown in.

  7. Hey Parsad, I have a question about the Polonitza group, not ITEX per se, so maybe you can answer it for me.

     

    I'm curious, did you guys know each other before you got together for ITEX? I'm just curious because it's not often that you see such a disparate group of people get together for an investment. Also, do you see such a thing becoming more common place? It's certainly something I have an interest in because there have been times I have been able to own 1-2% of a company, which is a big chunk for me, but not quite big enough to influence a board.

  8. Japan looks incredibly interesting at the moment, not just from a real estate angle. The Yen is making record highs, Japanese businesses are basically getting roasted alive. Look at the sheer volume of government debt that's financed at pathetic rates, if people think U.S. Treasurys are cheap they ain't seen nothing. Then you've got the stock market, which has been a dog for 20 years now, but yet has some of the cheapest companies in the world. It's strange though, it's still the (real) second largest economy in the world, yet it's treated as some sort of outlier, a sort of white elephant to be ignored.

     

    Real estate aside, has anyone got any ideas for investments in Japan, particularly with inflation in mind for Japan? I'm thinking low-capital intensive businesses like Nintendo, although I would rather find lesser known companies.

  9. Over the same period of time shown on that graph, the population of the world has increased from 3.7 to 6.7 billion people... If you expect that trend to continue and that living standards will rise globally - farmland might be in greater demand.

     

    So even though I wont invest in it, I dont think it is so crazy.

    Well, let me put it like this. People on this forum have discussed RRGB quite a lot. To me, it's quite clear that there's value here. It's a $300 million company that's generating $90 million in cash from the business, management have already started to try and turn the company around, so it's clear you already have an instant catalyst for a great turnaround here.

     

    Farmland though, I dunno, I just can't see the value.

  10. Bizarre choice. Land and property were some of the assets that went to the most extreme prices during the credit bubble. When you pull trillions of dollars of credit from the system, it's extremely hard to see how prices can even remain as high as they are. Burry has either lost the plot, or he sees something that no one else does.

     

    I think there is a big difference between buying farmland and buying a house in Florida.

    Of course, but farm land got artificially expensive in the credit boom.

     

    http://www.bullfax.com/imgs/b44ce4470a319e04e189d9e902f1adaa8de4ae0e.jpg

  11. Bizarre choice. Land and property were some of the assets that went to the most extreme prices during the credit bubble. When you pull trillions of dollars of credit from the system, it's extremely hard to see how prices can even remain as high as they are. Burry has either lost the plot, or he sees something that no one else does.

  12. What's interesting with CCME is that we are also seeing a very rapid increase in cash following the audited financials as of yearend 2009.  At December 31, 2009 cash was $57 million.  Then on March 31, 2010 it was $114 million (unaudited), and on June 30, 2010 it was $139 million (unaudited).

    I see that China Marine Food have been at the same carry-on. They made a wonder acquisition in January 2010 that has led to the cash balance mushrooming in the recent quarters. The only thing I don't understand is that insiders are buying, rather than selling - http://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/own-disp?action=getissuer&CIK=0001099977
  13. I just don't get it.

     

    They have a real auditor and a growing cash pile. If the company was a fraud, there is no way in hell that Deloitte and Touche would not have unearthed the inconsistency in their findings. On the otherhand, the financials look almost too good to be true. The margins are crazy high, cap-ex is tiny and the growth is unreal.

     

    I own a tiny position, although it's more to do with morbid curiosity rather than sound investment strategy. Can any experienced accounts throw any light on the legitimacy of the numbers?

  14. I have been a net seller since the last version of this thread was posted.

     

    Stuff I have been buying:

    Star Buffett

    United American Healthcare (own x% of this and it's complicated)

     

    Stuff I have sold:

    Fortress International Group

    Aspen Exploration

    Signature Eyewear

    Manhattan Loan

     

    Stuff I am still holding:

    AutoInfo

    Penn Miller

    ITEX

    Solitron Devices

  15. The RSS alerts on the EDGAR site are brilliant, they just make your life so much easier. I use personally use a desktop application called RSSOwl to gather my feeds. I like it better than Google Reader because it's that bit faster and I like the layout better. I have 400 company feeds currently set up and ever day I usually get a few new filings to look at. My only problem is that I simply don't have enough time to read everything  :-[

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