Jump to content

Semper Augustus


crocodon

Recommended Posts

Skip his monetary policy/Fed section ("The Point of No Return") - he clearly doesn't understand how any of this works.

wabuffo

What's the difference between when somebody is wrong and when one is 'clearly' wrong?

Outside of some specific factual inconsistencies and a different perspective, what is so clearly wrong concerning the 'point-of-no-return' section?

yea5j.jpg

-----

Looking at his results from the letter (before fees i assume?), Mr. Bloomstran has returned (since 2000 not audited GIPS or otherwise, CAGR) about 10.9% versus 8.0% for BRK and 6.6% for the S&P 500. Is that alpha enough to go through (sometimes irrelevant?) what he says, on an annual basis?

Anyways, the coin on page 29 was 'printed' to the effigy of Julia Domna, wife of Septimius Severus and mother of Caracalla, two emperors who were critical actors in the Roman Empire decline. The decline is still looking for an explanation but currency debasement was certainly a symptom, if not a cause. Julia Domna was unusually powerful for a woman and was known for her moderation. She must have been concerned when Caracalla issued new coins with the same face value but with 25% less metal but the emperor was known to be irrational, if not psychotic and that was the name of the game, then. The Roman Empire could tolerate a slow debasement but could not eventually tolerate the seeds of destructive debasement that the two emperors sowed. During that period, the outcome for emperors was death by killing, 86% of the times.

http://money.visualcapitalist.com/deaths-roman-emperors-vs-silver-coin-content/

-----

One thing which is nice with the Semper Augustus letter is that the author provides the reasons for his conclusions which makes it an interesting exercise for independent thought.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 229
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

While his style is extremely verbose – this is hands down the most complete and comprehensive valuation update on Berkshire.  Period.  Really interesting example on what buybacks and a shrinking sharecount could look like over the next 5 – 10 years, and what this might mean for future returns for shareholders.  He has shares currently at a deep discount to IV valuation among his various methodologies.  Extremely interesting to see BHE have a negative effective tax-rate.  Not many distressed utility deals out there - but I'd love to see BHE be more active there (ONCOR anyone??) over the coming years. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The only authority worth learning from on the Decline penned a total of six volumes on the topic.

I read all six something like 20 years ago, unfortunately as great historical work that was, it was not easy to pin down one element.

 

As a side note, Asimov's Foundation Trilogy was partially based on Edward Gibbon' work.

Perhaps there is a gem worth exploring in the Foundation Trilogy that can be linked to Fed M2 expansion.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think it is fair to consider these if you are looking at an estimate of earning power.  Obviously for valuation purposes, the public securities portfolio is quoted regularly so the maket's valuation is included in book value.

 

Berkshire owns 5.4% of Apple and as it stands you would not be able to get an accurate picture of Berkshire's true earning power derived from its Apple stake as only dividends received show up on the income statement.

 

In comparison, KHC earning power is regularly reflected on the income statemen due to equity accounting although the form of ownership is essentially the same with a 26.4% ownership in this case.

 

The issue is whether Bloomstran is being aggressive in the numbers he is using. I don't think he is. The 2019 Annual report had a table at the start of the letter which shows the retained earnings for just the top 10 portfolio holdings were $9b. Bloomstran uses $10b for the entire portfolio a year later so it doesn't look like he has applied unduly optimistic values here.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don’t think using look through earnings is aggressive, as long as one doesn’t then double count the stock portfolio.

 

What’s more aggressive is to normalize the earnings power for interest rates without any other adjustments. He points out how much of the earning power this is so it’s easy to get rid of/not include.

 

 

We measure Berkshire’s normalized profitability at roughly $42 billion for 2020. How much of that is available for investment? Consider that $10 billion is spoken for because it stays with the stock market investees as retained earnings. Another $7 billion, at least, represents capital expenditures in excess of depreciation charges. Much of this is contemplated growth capital spending at predictable returns. Finally, another $5 billion of “assumed income” is presently not being earned thanks to interest rate suppression by the Fed. Our method for

deriving normalized profitability assumes that a portion of Berkshire’s current cash will ultimately be

invested in higher-earning assets. $5 billion represents the present value of the portion of cash likely be

deployed in the intermediate term, perhaps on share repurchases. In all, of the $42 billion in “profit,” just

over half is already accounted for (or doesn’t exist yet as cash profit).

 

 

Overall, appreciate his work.

 

EDIT: on second thought, this may actually not be that aggressive in that at reasonable earnigns multiples, you'll get a value lower than the actual cash amount.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi :)

 

I think that counting all of the retained earnings is just slightly aggressive, since Buffett most likely wouldn't own the same companies if he didn't have to pay taxes when selling them. But I think that giving them credit for deploying so much of the cash pile is quite aggressive given the historic cash to float ratio.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 11 months later...

Thought I would revisit this thread, wondering when the new letter from Semper is going to drop? I was looking back at previous letters and looked like they all released around Feb 14/15 in previous years so should be expecting it soon..I guess I would have expected it on the 14th but maybe now the 21st, this Monday? Always enjoy reading it as it pertains to BRK.

Edited by Blugolds11
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, gfp said:

Good letter as usual but what the hell is he talking about that he is going to heat his pool with a wind turbine at his residence in Missouri?  He mentions it multiple times, is it a joke?

 

No, I think he's serious.  Actually, from a conceptual perspective, it's a perfectly good application for an intermittent energy source.  When the wind is blowing, a small windmill (or solar panels) can dump a pile of heat energy into a large heatsink (a swimming pool) and then when the wind stops blowing for a while, it doesn't much matter because it takes a long time for that thermomass to cool off.  Whether the numbers work out and whether the municipal government will permit a windmill is yet another question...

 

SJ

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...
  • 7 months later...

Finally completed the 2022 objective of reading the Berkshire portion (page 75 and up) of this years report.

Page 106-107 were the highlights for me, when he talks about capital surplus vs. its peers.

 

The reinsurance operation at Berkshire, National Indemnity (including retroactive reinsurance and periodic payment annuity) and General Reinsurance, holds and requires most of the insurance capital. Berkshire Hathaway Reinsurance Group, as the combined entity is now known, will write close to $20 billion in premium volume in 2021 on surplus of more than $200 billion. By comparison, the entire global reinsurance industry has combined surplus of roughly $600 billion (closer to $700 billion when including alternative capital such as catastrophe bonds and insurance-linked securities). The industry will write roughly $300 billion in premiums. Berkshire writes less than 7% of combined reinsurance industry premium volume but has more than one-third of industry equity capital. If anybody wonders how Berkshire can have so much of its insurance companies’ investments in common stocks instead of fixed income securities, look no further.

 

On a different note, if i am not mistaken, the "client letter" portion of Semper site is now locked-up. (on demand only)

 

Client Letter (semperaugustus.com)

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Xerxes said:

...On a different note, if i am not mistaken, the "client letter" portion of Semper site is now locked-up. (on demand only)

 

Client Letter (semperaugustus.com)

 

Thank you, @Xerxes,

 

You're right, i.e. same observation for me.

 

Personally, I have enjoyed tremendously Mr. Bloomstrans Berkshire writing for years now, but since I read his first letter, always have been thinking about the below mentioned.

 

There was no way with regard Mr. Bloomstrans public appearance and behavior [public letters for clients, twitter appearance , interviews, etc.] during the last years that he would not be approached by one or several of his LPs asking him challenging questions about his time allocation, confronting him with questions about if running a fund with external partners with USD 330 M in assets is considered by Mr. Bloomstran as a part time job.

 

There is a difference between being an investor, a writer, a money manager, a GP in a fund or a sermonator when you're a Berkaholic.  In my opinion, there are lots of people out there who can't relate to their role and assumed responsibilities, related to actual own behavior.

 

Somehow, it's all about ticket selling or personal branding, most of the cases "I'm good in this I'm doing, so now I'm going to make money on that as a writer [, too, $X pr. month pr. subsciption]", forgetting what I was actually doing in the first place, and getting paid for doing before this "misperception".]

 

I simply can't remember how many of these "writers" I have seen run out of steam in the last decade.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



×
×
  • Create New...