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thrifty

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Fascinating accusations. Let's see how the drama teacher does in this game of chess.  First play: publically accuse a foreign country of crimes with no evidence and show unequivocal public support for a militant separatist movement. 

Edited by ICUMD
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29 minutes ago, ICUMD said:

Fascinating accusations. Let's see how the drama teacher does in this game of chess.  First play: publically accuse a foreign country of crimes with no evidence and show unequivocal public support for a militant separatist movement. 


I assume that journalists were going to break the story anyway and after what happened with Chinese election interference, I’m not sure they had much choice but to disclose it. 

 

The companies that are applying for approvals are Indian so it might be a stretch to assume it’s going to slow approvals. They were pretty darn slow to begin with.

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Add to the fact that general elections are around the corner in India and overall history of being looked down upon by the west in the past. Even if accusations are true, there is no reason to do this discreetly unless you are pandering to some vote bank

 

Cant see an easy out for both parties now

 

 

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39 minutes ago, ICUMD said:

Fascinating accusations. Let's see how the drama teacher does in this game of chess.  First play: publically accuse a foreign country of crimes with no evidence and show unequivocal public support for a militant separatist movement. 

There is a very long history behind this movement. Have family members from that part of India and it was horrible when this movement was at its peak. A lot of people were killed in the violence during the 80s on both sides. People have very dark memories of that era and any sign of it getting revived is going to create a lot of angst

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11 hours ago, Haryana said:

 

Are you saying this sarcastically or asking with real concern?

 


I’m really trying to understand why we’re coming up on two years (?) of delays on FFH’s conversion from 49% to 74% ownership in Digit. What’s actually going on? Are the bureaucrats trying to extract a pound of flesh and Prem not having it? Are we about to find out that, sorry, no, Canadians can’t actually own Indian assets without some beyond extortionate fees/taxes? Just seems like more and more of a shitshow and I’m genuinely wondering how Fairfax India investors get comfortable with worsening political dynamics when protectionist bureaucratic nonsense was already a major risk.
 

Is that too reactionary? I am genuinely wondering what Fairfax India investors think about all this right now.

 

I am frustrated with it as a FFH investor, but Digit is still only a few percentage points of FFH GAV, so it’s annoying but doesn’t break the thesis.

 

Edited by MMM20
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10 hours ago, MMM20 said:


I’m really trying to understand why we’re coming up on two years (?) of delays on FFH’s conversion from 49% to 74% ownership in Digit. What’s actually going on? Are the bureaucrats trying to extract a pound of flesh and Prem not having it? Are we about to find out that, sorry, no, Canadians can’t actually own Indian assets without some beyond extortionate fees/taxes? Just seems like more and more of a shitshow and I’m genuinely wondering how Fairfax India investors get comfortable with worsening political dynamics when protectionist bureaucratic nonsense was already a major risk.
 

Is that too reactionary? I am genuinely wondering what Fairfax India investors think about all this right now.

 

I am frustrated with it as a FFH investor, but Digit is still only a few percentage points of FFH GAV, so it’s annoying but doesn’t break the thesis.

 

So just on your BV question re Digit, not a legal expert here but looks like Fairfax has recognised the fair value gain on the Compulsory Convertible Preferred Shares in Go Digit Infoworks (majority owner of Digit Insurance), not the fair value gain under IFRS they would receive on their equity shares on achieving majority ownership or control  of Digit. 

 

On your Nationalisation question. My view is foreign Investment is critical to India's & Modi's current  strategy to drive economic growth and strategic objectives (incl national security etc) - we have seen Modi flying all over the world in recent months meeting with world & businesses leaders eg Big Tech CEOs etc to encourage them to bring foreign investment to India. Any threat to nationalise here over this issue, would would undermine all this work & run counter to that strategy. And you have to look at Modi's economic track record as well which has been pro-business. So I think this is a low risk here IMHO.

 

Edited by glider3834
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15 hours ago, MMM20 said:

Just seems like more and more of a shitshow and I’m genuinely wondering how Fairfax India investors get comfortable with worsening political dynamics when protectionist bureaucratic nonsense was already a major risk.
 

Is that too reactionary? I am genuinely wondering what Fairfax India investors think about all this right now.

 

I am frustrated with it as a FFH investor, but Digit is still only a few percentage points of FFH GAV, so it’s annoying but doesn’t break the thesis.

 


In terms of the term "shitshow", I think of this video at 7:57 about the real shitshow of Western Adult Entertainment!

 

 

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12 hours ago, glider3834 said:

So just on your BV question re Digit, not a legal expert here but looks like Fairfax has recognised the fair value gain on the Compulsory Convertible Preferred Shares in Go Digit Infoworks (majority owner of Digit Insurance), not the fair value gain under IFRS they would receive on their equity shares on achieving majority ownership or control  of Digit. 

 

On your Nationalisation question. My view is foreign Investment is critical to India's & Modi's current  strategy to drive economic growth and strategic objectives (incl national security etc) - we have seen Modi flying all over the world in recent months meeting with world & businesses leaders eg Big Tech CEOs etc to encourage them to bring foreign investment to India. Any threat to nationalise here over this issue, would would undermine all this work & run counter to that strategy. And you have to look at Modi's economic track record as well which has been pro-business. So I think this is a low risk here IMHO.

 

Further to this SEBI is under the pump and in a bit of a transition phase.   Madhabi Puri Buch took charge of the regulator in March 2022. She is the first non-bureaucrat to hold the post and is trying to put in systems to ease the bureaucracy.  It sucks but from everything I have read there has been a few go rounds on the IPO but no show stoppers.  The conversion and IPO are tied at the hip IIRC.

 

Edit: Not excusing the situation.  It must drive the team at Fairfax nuts at times.  However I am sure they sleep easy with the recent life insurance license approval from the IRDAI.  To me this gives them a massive play, once they have scale on, much needed infrastructure.  Very accretive to their view of what constitutes a 100 year business.

Edited by nwoodman
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disclaimer - below figures could be wrong - this is not investment advice & always do your own due diligence

 

So this is just a snapshot of top 5 holdings of Fairfax India representing 83% of their total assets vs their YE Mar 2023 net income

 

If we ignore BIAL, the 2nd to 5th largest holdings, trading on a FY23 PE of 10.7 x (using avg exchange USD/INR rate of 80.31)  but note I haven't looked deeply into operating earnings of these businesses.

 

With BIAL I don't regard the earnings number below as meaningful as T2 was only just starting to open up in January & T2 is still not operating at capacity. But in 2019 the net earnings for BIAL was 68M (for T1 only). Also I have noted 52% economic ownership below for BIAL but assuming FIH buy another 7% from Zurich later this year, this should move to 59%. 

 

image.thumb.png.3d7e5f6a642fc066bced4e4c8cdbe86d.png

 

 

 

Edited by glider3834
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3 hours ago, glider3834 said:

disclaimer - below figures could be wrong - this is not investment advice & always do your own due diligence

 

So this is just a snapshot of top 5 holdings of Fairfax India representing 83% of their total assets vs their YE Mar 2023 net income

 

If we ignore BIAL, the 2nd to 5th largest holdings, trading on a FY23 PE of 10.7 x (using avg exchange USD/INR rate of 80.31)  but note I haven't looked deeply into operating earnings of these businesses.

 

With BIAL I don't regard the earnings number below as meaningful as T2 was only just starting to open up in January & T2 is still not operating at capacity. But in 2019 the net earnings for BIAL was 68M (for T1 only). Also I have noted 52% economic ownership below for BIAL but assuming FIH buy another 7% from Zurich later this year, this should move to 59%. 

 

image.thumb.png.3d7e5f6a642fc066bced4e4c8cdbe86d.png

 

 

 


IIFL Finance also looks cheaper vs consensus estimates. It’s interesting they sold some recently to help fund the additional BIAL purchase. If they also use it for buybacks, arguably, they buy IIFL Finance back at a big discount too!

 

From sharing the idea with others it seems like the biggest reason I hear from investors for not owning Fairfax India is the fee structure. In reality, cheap NAV plays without known catalysts to close the discount seem like they will permanently trade cheap (see E-L Financial). The real reasons are no analyst coverage, low liquidity, unpredictable earnings and not being in a relevant benchmark.
 

There is just too much competition from liquid cheap stocks with catalysts i.e. energy, uranium etc and the fee structure is a narrative to explain the discount for not wanting to own stock since markets are supposed to be efficient.

 

What do you all think?

IMG_3903.jpeg

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55 minutes ago, SafetyinNumbers said:

 

There is just too much competition from liquid cheap stocks with catalysts i.e. energy, uranium etc and the fee structure is a narrative to explain the discount for not wanting to own stock since markets are supposed to be efficient.

 

What do you all think?

IMG_3903.jpeg

 

I tend to agree. This traded at a large premium for awhile post-IPO. The fee structure was the same. Nobody was arguing why it should trade at a discount back then - they were justifying the premium. 

 

It's all sentiment driven. They make the narrative fit the share price. 

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  • 2 weeks later...
  • 3 weeks later...
Just now, patterson said:

Does anyone have insight as to why Fairfax India would be down 27+ percent after hours? I don't see any news, but just a single 100 share transaction at 8.87. https://www.nasdaq.com/market-activity/stocks/ffxdf/after-hours-trades.

My understanding is that this is just FFXDF and not the Canadian shares, so I'm not saying it will open down 27 percent on Monday. However, I'm just not sure why shares would change hands at such a price. 

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https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2023/11/02/2772911/0/en/Fairfax-India-Holdings-Corporation-Third-Quarter-Financial-Results.html

 

"At September 30, 2023 common shareholders' equity was $2,833.4 million, or book value per share of $20.89"

 

"

  • The company continued to buy back shares under its normal course issuer bid and during the first nine months of 2023 purchased for cancellation 2,609,481 subordinate voting shares at a net cost of $33.9 million ($12.98 per subordinate voting share)."
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Which is frankly not a whole lot, it's an incremental 1M shares repurchased in the Q...with like 137M outstanding.

 

Understand they probably want to retain capital for growth but that's like a 2.5% annual repurchase, and I'm not netting out share issuances.

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16 hours ago, LC said:

Which is frankly not a whole lot, it's an incremental 1M shares repurchased in the Q...with like 137M outstanding.

 

Understand they probably want to retain capital for growth but that's like a 2.5% annual repurchase, and I'm not netting out share issuances.

 

I also wish the repurchases were bigger, but understand this was intended to be a permanent vehicle and quickly taking it under my be counter productive. 

 

But even 2.5% annual rate @ a 35% discount to NAV results in near 4% annual BV growth solely from the repurchases w/o considering the investments so in generally good with a +4% spread of alpha to the underlying investments. 

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3 hours ago, TwoCitiesCapital said:

 

I also wish the repurchases were bigger, but understand this was intended to be a permanent vehicle and quickly taking it under my be counter productive. 

 

But even 2.5% annual rate @ a 35% discount to NAV results in near 4% annual BV growth solely from the repurchases w/o considering the investments so in generally good with a +4% spread of alpha to the underlying investments. 

 

Don't see how you are getting a 4% BV growth. If 2.5% of the shares are reduced each year at 0.65x BV, then you are gaining IV of about 0.35 per share of BV x 2.5% of shares. This should result in about a 0.9% gain in BV (0.35 x 2.5) for remaining shares.


Vinod

Edited by vinod1
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Let us say there are 100 shares with value 21 and price 13.

 

They buyback 2.5 shares paying 13 each for a total of 32.5.

 

Now they are left with equity of 2100-32.5 and 97.5 shares.

 

New BVPS is 2067.5/97.5=~21.21, so yeah just about 1% gain.

 

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