jtvalue Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 Admittedly it's a tough market, but I am trying to find some new long-term ideas (minimum 3-5 year holding period). Any suggestions? My favorite is Markel but it's already a full position for me. Simplistically, I have a high level of confidence the company can compound BVPS at 13-15% over the long-term. At 1.25x book today, that means it trades at 8.3x - 9.6x economic earnings.
oddballstocks Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 Why is it a tough market? I just ran a screen for companies in France selling below 85% of book value with an ROE > 10%, there are 20. I can run the same screen around the world and probably come up with 30 good investment candidates, sure it's not 200 or 2000, but to those willing to turn over rocks I think there are great opportunities out there. I just ran my screen, there are 682 companies worldwide that are selling for less than 75% of BV with ROE's above 15%. Maybe half of those results are junk, so 321 names that are potential purchases, it seems like there's a lot of opportunity...
blainehodder Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 Why is it a tough market? I just ran a screen for companies in France selling below 85% of book value with an ROE > 10%, there are 20. I can run the same screen around the world and probably come up with 30 good investment candidates, sure it's not 200 or 2000, but to those willing to turn over rocks I think there are great opportunities out there. I just ran my screen, there are 682 companies worldwide that are selling for less than 75% of BV with ROE's above 15%. Maybe half of those results are junk, so 321 names that are potential purchases, it seems like there's a lot of opportunity... Spot on. Even in the US markets there are cheap behemoths and tiny companies alike. BAC JPM C AIG GM F HPQ NOC TRV ...alll pretty cheap. On the tiny side, I own companies like REPR that trade sub 15 P/E in spite of 40% annual growth, and 60% gross margins. Nate blogs asset bargains every week. You could just go buy all of those and do pretty well. Packer posted some pretty great ideas in the US telecom realm. ALSK and GNCMA are cruising along nicely. I own some of those. Saj Karsan has a killer cannibals list site... ASBB repurchased 11% of shares last Q. Trades at 80% of BV. JCTCF is another 10%/yr cannibal that is basically a microcap magicformula type stock. There was a thread here yesterday with a list of Japanese net-nets: http://www.cornerofberkshireandfairfax.ca/forum/general-discussion/finding-japanese-net-nets/50/ You can buy the whole Russian ETF at a P/E of 6. Gazprom has a monopoly on gas and trades at a P/E of like 3 or something stupid. Pretty hard to go wrong on that with a couple year horizon. Most of Europe trades dirt cheap. Buy the EWI, GREK, EIRL etc. ETFs, the banks, the telecoms... the zipper makers, whatever... pepole are giving these things away... I think you could buy GVAL and I bet you'd get double digit returns over 5-10 yrs. Nate posted this huge list a while back. Tons of great stuff on here. I am sure he has sold some, but there are a pile of bargains: ANCPA ANACOMP INC IND NEW CL A GAV:CH CARLO GAVAZZI HOLDING AG CHF15.00 (BR) B 9476:JP CHUOKEIZAI-SHA INC NPV CDU:PT CONDURIL-ENGENHARIA SA EUR5 7591:JP EXCEL CO LTD NPV FAVS FIRST AVIATION SVCS INC CL A NEW ALGEV:FR GEVELOT EUR35 GWOX GOODHEART WILLCOX INC STAL:FR INSTALLUX SA EUR16 KRK:NZ KIRKALDIE & STAINS NPV MA MASTERCARD INC CL A ALNEX:FR NEXEYA EUR0.50 6149:JP ODAWARA ENGINEERING CO NPV PREC:FR PRECIA NPV RBRG RANDALL BEARINGS INC REOP REO PLASTICS CORP SVIN SCHEID VINEYARDS INC CL A SHFK SCHUFF INTERNATIONAL INC 9932:JP SUGIMOTO & CO NPV TTHG TITANIUM HLDGS GROUP INC 3331:JP ZAKKAYA BULLDOG CO LTD NPV 6947:JP ZUKEN INC NPV BWLA BOWL AMER INC CL A HNFSB HANOVER FOODS CORP CDT CL B IVWIX IVA WORLDWIDE FUND CL I MPAD MICROPAC INDUSTRIES INC OPST OPT SCIENCES CORP COM PDRX PD-RX PHARMACEUTICAL INC RSKIA RISK GEORGE INDS INC CDT CL A SODI SOLITRON DEVICES INC COM PAR $0.01 SSY SUNLINK HEALTH SYS INC WEBK WELLESLEY BANCORP INC COM WEIN WEST END IND BANCSHARES INC FIRT FIRST BANCTRUST CORP NEW COM FRMO FRMO CORP COM NEW KOGL KOPP GLASS INC SPCO STEPHAN CO (FL) 53994158 AVALON CORRECTIONAL SVCS INC COM TENDERED FROM CUSIP 0534361 CNRD CONRAD INDUSTRIES INC FSBW FS BANCORP INC COM NSBC NORTH ST BANCORP SVCTF SENVEST CAPITAL INC COM NPV ISIN #CA81731L1094 SEDOL #279629 SFBC SOUND FINL BANCORP INC COM UCBA UNITED CMNTY BANCORP IND COM BOTJ BANK OF THE JAMES FINL GRP INC CZWI CITIZENS COMMUNITY BANCORP INC PBCP POLONIA BANCORP INC MD WBB WESTBURY BANCORP INC WVFC WVS FINANCIAL CORP I don't know what will do the best, but I bet if you buy the whole pile of stuff above you would do very well... maybe not at Ericopoly pace, but I don't need to do that well!
yadayada Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 Bought AMZN how do you get comfortable that buffett looked at this and didn't like it? He owned the bonds in 2003. This is basicly a typical buffett company. Right market cap , large moat, and he holds a lot of cash. And I would bet a lot of money that Buffett read all the AR's.
writser Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 @ blainehodder:interesting list, was this the result of a screener of some kind or just a portfolio snapshot? I own or have owned about ten names on this list and have studied another dozen. Probably because they all were featured on some popular value blogs. Might make sense to look at the rest too. With regards to Amazon: Hmm. Warren Buffett vs Palantir. Thats a tough one. -CM ;)
Palantir Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 how do you get comfortable that buffett looked at this and didn't like it? He owned the bonds in 2003. This is basicly a typical buffett company. Right market cap , large moat, and he holds a lot of cash. And I would bet a lot of money that Buffett read all the AR's. I did not know he looked at it. That being said, I mean, do you think Buffett was correct on passing on it?
blainehodder Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 @ blainehodder:interesting list, was this the result of a screener of some kind or just a portfolio snapshot? I own or have owned about ten names on this list and have studied another dozen. Probably because they all were featured on some popular value blogs. Might make sense to look at the rest too. The pasted ticker list of community banks and netnets is from Nate (Oddball). The whole post above isn't a pure portfolio snapshot but I would be happy with the total list for sure. I would sleep well at night owning all of those, ETFs, netnets, megabanks and all... I do own a little of many. I want 15%+ returns though... not 40%+. turnkeyanalyst has some cool screeers too. I quite like Greenblatt's magicformula idea as well! LO (pretty much milked now), PM, GPS, RGR, SWHC, BCOR (went on sale today!), EBIX looks set for a squeeze.
muscleman Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 how do you get comfortable that buffett looked at this and didn't like it? He owned the bonds in 2003. This is basicly a typical buffett company. Right market cap , large moat, and he holds a lot of cash. And I would bet a lot of money that Buffett read all the AR's. I did not know he looked at it. That being said, I mean, do you think Buffett was correct on passing on it? What is your thesis on AMZN? I looked at it but found it hard to understand.
Palantir Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 With regards to Amazon: Hmm. Warren Buffett vs Palantir. Thats a tough one. -CM ;) Given that AMZN is up 800% since Buffett passed on it, Buffett has been dead wrong.
writser Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 I guess he should've bought Salesforce too. Up 1000% since he passed on it. And CYNK, how could he miss that one? The fact that a stock goes up after you decline to buy it doesn't mean your analysis was wrong ..
Palantir Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 Then pray tell, what makes your analysis right? Is it correct if enough fanboys on an internet forum get excited about it? Given that AMZN has been up 800%+ since Buffett bought the bonds, passing on the equity was indisputably the wrong decision. The fact that you put AMZN in the same group as CYNK tells me all I need to know. As a BRK shareholder, I would have no problems with Buffett buying CRM 10+ years ago.
yadayada Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 I think the thesis is that they will get bigger since internet retailing is still pretty small %, and eventually they will rise their prices somewhat? But find it hard to see when this will happen, and how much scale will play a role in this. If you had to put a rough ball park figure on what Amazon would be earning 5-10 years from now, could you do it?
writser Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 Then pray tell, what makes your analysis right? Is it correct if enough fanboys on an internet forum get excited about it? Given that AMZN has been up 800%+ since Buffett bought the bonds, passing on the equity was indisputably the wrong decision. The fact that you put AMZN in the same group as CYNK tells me all I need to know. As a BRK shareholder, I would have no problems with Buffett buying CRM 10+ years ago. I have done no analysis and I never said that I did. I was just pointing out that your argument is results-oriented. If you put $1000 on black and win with roulette, did you make an 'indisputably' correct decision? No - you were just lucky. To judge the decision you have to focus on the business, not the stock price. Hence the CYNK reference.
Palantir Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 ^ Yeah for sure, I think i-retail will be much bigger, but IMO limited in scope internationally as it is fairly US-centric, although they are investing in India. Not to mention their internet services business has such a huge potential market, from infrastructure to applications. I think 10 years from now, I hope they make 20B in FCF, or owner earnings if you will.
Palantir Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 I have done no analysis and I never said that I did. I was just pointing out that your argument is results-oriented. If you put $1000 on black and win with roulette, did you make an 'indisputably' correct decision? No - you were just lucky. To judge the decision you have to focus on the business, not the stock price. Hence the CYNK reference. You said, "The fact that a stock goes up after you decline to buy it doesn't mean your analysis was wrong". Ok, then what shows this analysis is wrong or right?
Hielko Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 I have done no analysis and I never said that I did. I was just pointing out that your argument is results-oriented. If you put $1000 on black and win with roulette, did you make an 'indisputably' correct decision? No - you were just lucky. To judge the decision you have to focus on the business, not the stock price. Hence the CYNK reference. You said, "The fact that a stock goes up after you decline to buy it doesn't mean your analysis was wrong". Ok, then what shows this analysis is wrong or right? We don't know what Buffett's analysis was so we can never know if it was right or wrong, and even if we did we still might never know. That's the unfortunate reality of investing: we can only observe what has happened, but we can't observe what could have happened.
topofeaturellc Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 I have done no analysis and I never said that I did. I was just pointing out that your argument is results-oriented. If you put $1000 on black and win with roulette, did you make an 'indisputably' correct decision? No - you were just lucky. To judge the decision you have to focus on the business, not the stock price. Hence the CYNK reference. You said, "The fact that a stock goes up after you decline to buy it doesn't mean your analysis was wrong". Ok, then what shows this analysis is wrong or right? Two points 1) Its antithetical to value investing to believe that market price moves validate or invalidate the research you did. 2) It doesn't really matter if your thesis was incorrect on something you didn't buy. Its almost never worth rehashing it. The reality is that value investing will always miss some great ideas. You have to be comfortable with that. I would never buy AMZN and I can't possibly fathom how someone who calls themselves a value investor as I conceive value investing could buy the shares. But that's ok.
topofeaturellc Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 and I would hope you would at least question things if you were a BRK owner, understood how Buffett conceives value investing (Which is different from how I do BTW) and saw him buy CRM or even AMZN. It wouldn't be logically consistent. The closest thing to those businesses that he's participated in was NetJets - except there he was providing all of the capital. And I'm not even sure how the returns on that look today to be honest.
writser Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 I have done no analysis and I never said that I did. I was just pointing out that your argument is results-oriented. If you put $1000 on black and win with roulette, did you make an 'indisputably' correct decision? No - you were just lucky. To judge the decision you have to focus on the business, not the stock price. Hence the CYNK reference. You said, "The fact that a stock goes up after you decline to buy it doesn't mean your analysis was wrong". Ok, then what shows this analysis is wrong or right? We don't know. The last 10 years could've worked out better or worse for Amazon and the next decade could go either way too. That's why I think it's a bit assuming that you announce Buffett was 'dead wrong' on Amazon. You don't know what considerations he made, what alternative futures for Amazon he considered and how he weighted these scenario's. You can't look at a stock price now and judge a decision made 10 years ago - investing doesn't work that way. Also, if you look at Salesforce, basically it has never been profitable. Any thesis that justified buying the business a decade ago hasn't been proven correct so far. Same thing holds (to a lesser degree) for Amazon. The jury hasn't reached a verdict yet, as far as I am concerned. If you bought KO in the 1980's, MSFT in the 1990's or GOOG in the 2000's the current and past earnings justify the purchase made. Although also in these cases things could've turned out completely different and you could argue that the thesis to buy them was incorrect at the time I'd say that these are in a whole different ballpark than AMZN and especially CRM. By the way, I'd be aghast if Buffett had decided to buy Salesforce. It's brave that you try to make this point on a value investors forum though, always good to have a few dissenters in the mix :) .
Palantir Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 I have done no analysis and I never said that I did. I was just pointing out that your argument is results-oriented. If you put $1000 on black and win with roulette, did you make an 'indisputably' correct decision? No - you were just lucky. To judge the decision you have to focus on the business, not the stock price. Hence the CYNK reference. You said, "The fact that a stock goes up after you decline to buy it doesn't mean your analysis was wrong". Ok, then what shows this analysis is wrong or right? We don't know what Buffett's analysis was so we can never know if it was right or wrong, and even if we did we still might never know. That's the unfortunate reality of investing: we can only observe what has happened, but we can't observe what could have happened. I don't disagree, and I'll point out that I'm not the one who brought up "Bufett vs Palantir". Buffett can do as he pleases, I have no problem with him investing or passing on AMZN.
yadayada Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 haha i opened up pandora's box with that comment FWIW, Morningstar seems to think it is undervalued.
LC Posted August 8, 2014 Posted August 8, 2014 Probably in the too hard pile. It is for me, anyways. Warren B. has boatloads of cash sitting around, and meanwhile here in Amazon we have the low cost retailer of the present and future. Even if he was "right" or "wrong" about investing in Amazon 10 years ago, why doesn't he pull the trigger now? Maybe he just hates retail? Who knows! C'est la vie. Edit: i think my point is...it's annoying enough to figure out why I personally did or didn't buy something. why waste time wondering why someone else does or doesn't do something!?
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