
merkhet
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Everything posted by merkhet
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I agree here -- Berkowitz likely sees value above $62, which is where the stock traded earlier this year, and I doubt that recent volatility for his fund as a whole would change his opinion. FWIW, I estimate that AIG is trading for about 1/3 its intrinsic value, but I don't want to hijack this thread into an AIG thread or anything...
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AIG has about $30B of DTAs, but present value is probably only about 1/3 of that. AIG has a book value of about $100B, but that doesn't count any of the DTAs.
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The real question is the following: Are they doing this because: (1) They don't see sufficient value in the markets right now (2) They believe their earnings engine is going to explode over the next few years (3) Both (1) and (2)
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Isn't gold supposed to go up at times like these?
merkhet replied to Liberty's topic in General Discussion
Haha, that sounds about right... -
Exactly right -- I've been buying all day, actually. I've still got about 33% in cash. (Well, with a 10% position in Fairfax, which I view as being good as cash, it's about 43% cash & "cash equivalents.")
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Exactly. :-) I know I posted this in the Berkowitz/WealthTrack thread, but I love the quote "In February I was a hero, now I’m a bum. So, we’ll see six months from now. Revenge should be sweet." Six months ago, people (sans people on this board, of course) thought Prem & Co. were bums for hedging their exposure to equity markets -- nice to see them vindicated.
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I've looked at ARO in the past, and I think it's likely to provide a stellar investment over time. They've cloned the original The Limited playbook (have a fast manufacturing/distribution process and immediately clone the new styles) as it pertains to J. Crew, American Eagle, The Gap and Abercrombie.
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This might be a little simplistic, but I'm looking at the warrants in the following way. According to ValueLine's 10 year table, Wells has been able to compound book value at roughly 10% per annum. So in 2018, their book value could be roughly 2x the current book of about $24. Since Wells has historically been one of the better banks, it has been able to historically earn an ROA of about 2% and a ROE of 20%. So, by 2018, Wells should be earning about $9.60 a share. Slap a 10x multiple on that, and you've got a $96 share price. With a strike of $34.01 (ignoring any dividends that might come down), you've got a warrant price of about $62, and you can buy a warrant for about $8 per warrant. @ 7.75 over 7 years, that's a 34% CAGR. Alternatively, breakeven is $34.01 + $8 per warrant = $42.01. In 2018, I figure it's unlikely that Wells Fargo trades below $42, so it's unlikely that you'd suffer a permanent loss of capital.
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What the hell does the market price have to do with his being right or wrong? One of my favorite parts of the Consuelo Mack interview -- "In February, I was a hero. Now, I'm a bum. So we'll see six months from now." ~ Bruce Berkowitz
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Ah, found it -- I love the Kindle. Also, for those that are interested, re-reading Greenblatt's "You Can Be A Stockmarket Genius" provided some insight on how Greenblatt valued LEAPS -- he goes into detail on Wells Fargo (a coattail on Berkowitz's 1992 OID interview, actually).
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Uccmal, where did you get the info re $1 million to buy BC Power Bonds? I knew Charlie used margin, but I didn't know specifics. Greeenblatt definitely used LEAPs and warrants -- he mentions it in his first book.
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How does the leverage "in the system" affect Bank of America specifically?
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I can't recall if he's said this before, but in this interview, he indicated the following: $36 billion PTPP for Bank of America. Potentially $3 per share in earnings. Additionally, I believe he said he's thinking AIG could double its book value by 2021.
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[amazonsearch]The Holy Grail of Macroeconomics[/amazonsearch] I know most of us spend very little time on reading the macro tea leaves, but this is a pretty good read nonetheless.
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Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe he means Berkshire in this instance. At some point, Mohnish viewed Berkshire as being "good as cash" in the event of a crash -- but in 2009, that wasn't true. So now, he just holds the cash.
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I just small chunk things. It provides a small boost to happiness when you accomplish a small chunk item. And the dopamine/serotonin seeking behavior does the rest on auto-pilot.
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None of the above. We're on the US chart, only you don't know what that chart looks like -- time will tell us. Well, it depends on the politicians now... http://static.businessinsider.com/image/4bc5bb587f8b9a9c28420700-590/slide-141.jpg Notice that the dips in JohnDoe's chart parallel with the dips in Richard Koo's slide concerning austerity measures "fiscal reform"... The perverse thing is that I think a lot of people think that the market is suffering because we're no longer triple-A (and Europe, etc.) and they also believe that solving the debt problem will "reverse" the slide that began with our triple-A woes. So, oddly enough, I think we'd get an upswing in the markets if we took steps to reduce the deficit drastically (say, if the Republicans win and begin appeasing Tea Partiers) -- and that would be the moment to put on hedges for the cardiac arrest that's forthcoming... (And that'll be the 2 minutes this year that I spend futilely prognosticating macro...)
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Looks like no QE3
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BRK does make $5B investments in common stock year-in and year-out. The question is how often does BRK make a $5B investment without moving the price significantly. Of course he's not going to go out and buy it all in a day or a week -- the two important things are (1) will your volume/purchases on a daily basis move up the stock price and (2) can you pick up all you need before you have to report that you're doing so? Again, not really what I was saying. There are few opportunities to pu $5B to work at 6%, but both Warren and Charlie have said that most people forget opportunity cost. If you're putting money to work at 6% you're forgoing the opportunity to put it to work 6 months, 1 year, etc. in the future for much greater than 6%. I'm sticking to my position that the investment was not about the 6% -- I mean, it's better than sitting around in treasuries right now, but his real goal is the warrants.
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Prior to this announcement, the market cap of BAC fluctuated between $60 and $70 billion. If he tried to buy a slug of $5 billion of shares on the open market, what do you think would have happened to the price of the stock? It would have soared a lot higher than $7 a share by the time he was done. Instead, he lends $5 billion @ 6% and receives warrants for 700 million shares with a strike of ~$7 per warrant. In other words, he gets to invest $5 billion in Bank of America's common without moving the price. I don't claim to have any personal insight into Warren's thinking, but he's not making this investment because he's trying to earn 6% on his cash. He's buying into this for the warrants/common.
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It's too bad that Warren made this "terrible" investment. He "used" to be such a good investor. I bet he couldn't articulate the bull thesis either. ;-)
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As BAC stock continues to fall, interesting perspective
merkhet replied to Munger's topic in General Discussion
You're right -- mis-labeling on my part. Total PIIGS exposure and total PIIGS sovereign exposure is what I should have written. Thanks for the French numbers. -
As BAC stock continues to fall, interesting perspective
merkhet replied to Munger's topic in General Discussion
Am I reading this incorrectly or is Blodget basically saying -- "Yea, I didn't dig into Bank of America's balance sheet before I pulled numbers out of my @$$"... I read Yves quite frequently, and she has a bit of a mea cupla up this morning. (For the record, I find her generally very good, but in this case, I think she's off.) http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2011/08/more-on-the-opacity-of-bank-of-americas-financial-statementss.html You can see Thompson said they have $16.7 billion and then said they have $1.6 billion. The 10-Q clarifies matters Bank of America's total European exposure is $16.7 billion. Bank of America's total European sovereign exposure is $1.6 billion. I guess Yves (and by extension Blodget) got confused because neither read the actual 10-K/Q before posting. Oops. -
Another data point: http://www.gurufocus.com/stock-market-valuations.php
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I second this -- FFH and BRK are always April/May so it'd be nice to have a Oct/Nov event.