Jump to content

Ballinvarosig Investors

Member
  • Posts

    885
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Ballinvarosig Investors

  1. You would be a fool to predict timelines, but here is where I think we're at.

     

    When compared to the past, the S&P 500 is almost certainly expensive. The problem is that today is not the past. We've had interest rates at historic lows for 7 years, that has driven money out of fixed income into equity, pushing returns down, giving us stock market yields of about 5%, as opposed to the traditional 7-8%. How long can this go on? Who knows. However, it will not go on forever. At some point however, inflation is going to pick up, and when that point comes, it will be the next best buying point investors have. Why? Because there is now trillions of Dollars worth of money out there that is invested in low yielding fixed income with long maturities. There will be a bloodbath when investors rush to the exit doors, and I suspect that across the capital structure, you are going to see a massive amount of forced selling. The bad news is that if the Japanese experience was to be re-produced here, we could be dead of old age by the time this happens.

     

    As for what to do today? Well if you think the US is expensive, then look at other markets. Hint - you do not have far at all to look to find one that is cheaper.

  2. Trying to think of historical examples of countries being better off after breaking up from a formed union. Can't think of any.

    I can think of a few.

     

    Finland separated from Russia and the gap between the two nations has widened to 3x GDP.

     

    Ireland has 25% higher GDP than the United Kingdom today despite being about half the size after independence.

     

    The states that emerged from Serbian dominated Yugoslavia like Slovenia and Croatia have been doing very well in comparison to Serbia.

  3. You misunderstand what a ponzi scheme is. A ponzi scheme requires new money into the system to perpetuate the fraud. What Warren is talking about is because Berkshire can always count on new money to replace existing claims, they are able to delivery superior performance. If you are never dipping into float, then it's reasonable to consider using a good proportion of that float to invest with a longer-term in mind. If new premium money was to fall below payout claims, that doesn't make Berkshire a fraud. It would only mean that Berkshire could be forced into selling securities to cover payouts.

  4. I've been doing the investing thing for ten years now. I first started like Buffett, trying to find the tiny undiscovered needles of gold in the haystack, looking at micro/nano-caps to try and discover the cheapest stocks. I was lucky, because when I started in 2006/2007, the market was ready to go straight into the ditch and very quickly, I was able to discover cheap stocks (on my own, and through here too). A few stocks ended up going to zero, a few went nowhere, a few doubled/tripled, one or two went up 5x. It was a strategy that made money, but in hindsight, it wasn't really necessary to go sifting through so many awful companies to find a few gems. If I had just bought the best insurance company (Beazley Group), the best bank (Hingham Institution), the best conglomerate (Berkshire), the best retailer (Walmart) and a basket of long-term consumer stocks (Coke, J&J, Procter, etc.) I would have probably performed even better with about 10% of the effort.

     

    I couldn't be bothered with the first strategy anymore. Too much work, too many headaches, too much stress when you could achieve superior results with less effort by just buying quality when it comes down in price.

     

    What are you thoughts on Hingham?  Why's it the best bank?

    I like to look at historical ROA, ROE, efficiency ratio, the non-performing loan trend, NIM, price to book, loan book growth (you don't want this too high). I didn't think it was the absolute best bank in its class, but it was in the top 5% of all banks and the cheapest I could find. Looks a little expensive these days though trading at 2x book with stalling growth.

  5. I've been doing the investing thing for ten years now. I first started like Buffett, trying to find the tiny undiscovered needles of gold in the haystack, looking at micro/nano-caps to try and discover the cheapest stocks. I was lucky, because when I started in 2006/2007, the market was ready to go straight into the ditch and very quickly, I was able to discover cheap stocks (on my own, and through here too). A few stocks ended up going to zero, a few went nowhere, a few doubled/tripled, one or two went up 5x. It was a strategy that made money, but in hindsight, it wasn't really necessary to go sifting through so many awful companies to find a few gems. If I had just bought the best insurance company (Beazley Group), the best bank (Hingham Institution), the best conglomerate (Berkshire), the best retailer (Walmart) and a basket of long-term consumer stocks (Coke, J&J, Procter, etc.) I would have probably performed even better with about 10% of the effort.

     

    I couldn't be bothered with the first strategy anymore. Too much work, too many headaches, too much stress when you could achieve superior results with less effort by just buying quality when it comes down in price.

  6. You can still get access to his blog through Google cache, if you so wish. I do feel bad for him though. Energy investors have been hit by a perfect storm. However, it does seem to me that investors in that sector have been drinking the Kool-Aid for too long. It seems there was a perception that energy costs could only ever go up, and that led to a heck of a lot of speculation in the market.

     

    What I find remarkable is how Buffett seems to have foreseen this trainwreck.

  7. It's been funny watching the several stages of denial that those opposed to Trump have been going through.

     

    Stage 1 - "This is obviously a publicity stunt, or something" - at first, political commentators regarded him as nothing more than a joke candidate with no chance whatsoever. He was 100/1 with bookies here in Europe, the kind of odds you would have got for Sarah Palin.

    Stage 2 - "Oh, so he actually is going for the presidency?" - people acknowledged he actually would be a candidate, but expected him to be one of the first to drop out.

    Stage 3 - "Ok, so he has some extremist support, but he will never move mainstream" - Trump starts moving up the polls, by no means a front runner, but not without support.

    Stage 4 - "Sure, he might get the Republican nomination, but why would anyone vote for him over Hilary?" - this is where we're at now, for some reason Hilary is favourite, which is strange given how much she polarizes public opinion.

     

    Honestly, I think only Trump can get Trump beat. Only a gaffe or some skeleton in his closet will make him lose.

  8. Up mid-single digits, 80% of that was Dollar appreciation.

     

    Had to write a letter to clients just a week ago explaining that in the entire year of 2015, I didn't make a single investment. Intellectually speaking, it's been a testing year. You have central banks still doing everything they can to increase asset prices and force bond yields negative - the temptation to buckle and buy something is immense. The market still looks moderately overvalued, so I won't be buying anything unless prices decline by 10%.

  9. I caught this on the news and I had to do several double takes to get the gist of the story.

     

    The United States and Turkey (allied through NATO) have been sponsoring ethnic Turkish terrorists operating in Northern Syria. The Russian warplane in support of the current Syrian government was shot down in Syria after briefly crossing into Turkish airspace. The two Russian pilots who successfully parachuted from the plane were then killed by the US-backed terrorists and a Russian rescue helicopter was then destroyed by the same terrorists using US weapons.

     

    I think it's pretty clear that Turkey has an interest in Syria (ethnic Turks) and used the incursion of their airspace as a pretext to attack the Russian plane. It seems to me that Turkey are making use of the crisis in Syria as an attempt to secure the territory in Syria were the Turkmen live. They will argue that the natural home for the Turkmen people is within Turkey - but what about the Kurds in Turkey, a people who have been totally oppressed in Iraq, Turkey and Syria and have no one supporting them?

  10. Parsad likes companies with a lot of free cash flow, so I would be expecting the price/FCF multiple to be pretty low.

     

    As suggested by someone else, a small cap natural resources stock seems unlikely to me - this kind of stock would be too risky for Parsad to make it a 25% position in my eyes.

     

    I don't think it's BAM either. The financials on it look ok, but certainly nowhere near good enough to make it a 25% position.

     

    I am guessing the company has a long history of stable earnings, has lots of free cash flow, but maybe has some quirk that is preventing the full value of the stock being realised....

     

    Put me out of my misery Parsad - am I way off?

  11. I don't own BBRY, but after reading the report yesterday, I'm not sure how anyone can write off BBRY after one quarter's worth of data.

    Just one quarter of bad numbers? The collapse in subscriber numbers is accelerating.

     

    2012 Q3 - lost 1M subscribers.

    2012 Q4 - lost 3M subscribers.

    2013 Q1 - lost 4M subscribers.

     

    The launch of BB10 and the Z10 in particular looks like it has been a disaster. The fact that more people are buying BB7 devices (a platform that is all but dead) says it all. Even the diehards on Crackberry sound utterly gutted and demoralized. BB10 not being ported to the Playbook looks like the final kick in the teeth for many of them.

     

    If the Q10 or the Q5 don't gain any traction in the next quarter, then the best thing Blackberry could do is just kill off BB10 rather just burning through cash.

  12. $10 is very reasonable, just don't go getting ideas and end up doing a Biglari on it by jacking up the fee later on ;D

     

    Since you have a few bucks to play around with, why not run a competition in the Investment Ideas board? To make things interesting, you can use all that registration cash to put up a token prize ($20 or something similar) for the best idea. Just a thought to maybe generate some more discussion.

  13. http://www.rte.ie/news/2012/0619/ryanair-makes-all-cash-offer-for-aer-lingus.html

    In a statement to the Irish Stock Exchange, the airline says the offer values Aer Lingus at approximately €694 million.

     

    Ryanair already owns 29.82% of Aer Lingus, a stake acquired over five years ago.

     

    The stake was reviewed by the European Union and has recently been referred by the UK Office of Fair Trade to the UK Competition Commission.

     

    Ryanair will make the offer through a wholly owned subsidiary Coinside Ltd.

     

    The 29.8% stake was acquired for the most part by Ryanair between late 2006 and early 2007.

     

    Ryanair said the cash offer represents a premium of 38.3% over the Aer Lingus closing price.

     

    A spokesperson for Aer Lingus said it had no comment to make on the Ryanair bid.

     

    Ryanair said it believes that the future of the Aer Lingus will be best served as part of Ryanair and that Ryanair will be one of five large airline groupings in Europe as the market consolidates.

     

    The Ryanair statement also notes the context of the offer in that European airlines are consolidating, Dublin airport is operating at 50% capacity, that the Government is selling its 25% share in Aer Lingus and has committed to the Troika to do so.

     

    It notes Etihad's 3% stake and its reported "strong interest" in Aer Lingus.

     

    The Ryanair statement notes that the Employee Share Ownership Trust (ESOT) no longer controls 15% of Aer Lingus.

     

    Ryanair says that its confident that 50% of Aer Lingus shareholders will accept the offer.

     

    Transport Minister Leo Varadkar said he had only just become aware of the Ryanair bid.

     

    He said he would have to study it and discuss it further with his Cabinet colleagues before making any further comment.

     

    Ryanair willing to move to allay competition fears

     

    It says it is confident that the European Commission will approve the deal, if successful, and says that Ryanair is willing to offer appropriate remedies to allay any competition concerns.

     

    Michael O'Leary says the offer represents a significant opportunity to create one strong Irish airline group.

     

    In a statement, he said it represents the best opportunity for Aer Lingus to grow, not only in Europe but also in terms of transatlantic traffic.

     

    He said Ryanair's performance contrasts with that of Aer Lingus and that in six years as a public company, Aer Lingus has failed to deliver value for shareholders.

    I believe Francis Chou has a few share in Aer Lingus (it's trading below net cash) and am sure there are a few value investors around these parts that might hold some Ryanair stock. I don't think O'Leary will actually succeed in getting Aer Lingus at €1.30, but if he gets it at anywhere near that price, I think it will be an extremely canny move. Aer Lingus have one of the youngest fleets of all the carriers and there is plenty of room in the former state-owned company for cost cutting!
×
×
  • Create New...