SUNDAY, DECEMBER 21, 2008 - VOL. CCLII NO. 140

Archive for the ‘Benjamin Graham’ Category

Vigorish.wordpress.com

In Arbitrage, Benjamin Graham, Security Analysis on November 25, 2008 at 2:20 am

Vigorish.wordpress.com is a private forum detailing arbitrage and hedging opportunities in equities, bonds, derivatives and convertible securities. I am not certain of how to proceed with the blog; however due both to technical matters and my desire to keep opportunities “close to the vest,” I do want to limit the audience to 35 individuals. Candidates will be selected based on the quality of their ideas (submitted to me via email).

oswaldshot

Wild Card: Well forget about EMH, would you agree a lot more riskless opportunities exist now than say…back in 2006?
How highly efficient can this market really be right now?

Deep Throat: Riskless is very relative. The tricky part of a market like the one we have is figuring out which deals are fairly priced. Ok, that’s the tricky part of every market. But my point is that you might be more easily become overly excited in a market like this than in a much calmer market, when perhaps people with the tiny amount of capital that we have are more likely to blow their wad on stuff that’s not worth it.

In other words, look at those people on google finance who invested in Freddie and Fannie, thinking it was a riskless opportunities. Obviously, we’re not that dumb… but it’s all relative.

Cogitator: No, [REDACTED]. As I understand the English language, riskless means “without risk.” And the [REDACTED] arbitrage truly is without risk; you short sell 3.3682 shares per [REDACTED], and exercising the [REDACTED] gives you 3.3682 shares back. It’s like selling 10 apples at $1 each and getting those identical apples back for a price of only $0.93. It yielded a riskless 7% return today.

How could an investment in Fannie Mac riskless? Any directional bet is by its terms riskier than an arbitrage. Granted, the Volkswagen/Porsche incident demonstrates the risk of this technique, but that is a peculiar case. If you buy and short sell economically equivalent securities (of the same issuer) at a substantial spread (say, 30% or more), the risks should be nil.

The market is efficient most of the time for virtually all participants. However, Ackman makes a very good point: not everyone has permanent capital (capital not subject to redemption). A great deal of Buffett’s success is due to having steady access to capital at times when the rest of the world does not.

Continue Reading

Highlights From Security Analysis Sixth Edition: Seth Klarman & David Abrams

In Arbitrage, Benjamin Graham, Carl Icahn, Ivan Boesky, Net Current Asset Value, Security Analysis, Seth Klarman, Warren Buffett on September 18, 2008 at 10:19 pm

The sixth edition of Security Analysis is a strange amalgamation of Graham’s original work (styled in British English) and new commentary from prominent value-oriented investors (in American English). I find it impossible to read fluidly. Nonetheless the contributors make a strong independent showing, especially Seth Klarman and his protégé, David Abrams. They argue—as I have done in numerous essays—that market inefficiencies are smaller in magnitude and frequency than before.

I am especially pleased that both men acknowledge the hedging opportunities present in derivative securities. This has become my favorite area of study and action—and one that appears unlikely to be outmoded soon. (Elsewhere, I have found much of the “value investing” philosophy to be comparatively inadequate.)

Continue Reading

The “Missing” Berkshire Hathaway Letters (1969-1976)

In Arbitrage, Benjamin Graham, Berkshire Hathaway, Buffett Partnership, Charlie Munger, Net Current Asset Value, Security Analysis, Victor Niederhoffer, Warren Buffett on August 25, 2008 at 5:33 pm

There is a conspicuous gap between the last Buffett Partnership letter, written in 1969, and the first Berkshire Hathaway letter posted on the company’s website, written in 1978. Recently I discovered several of the “missing” documents.

A consistent theme in Buffett’s early management of Berkshire is that capital from the textile operation was best redeployed in either marketable securities or business acquisitions. From 1969 to 1977 the textile operation averaged a return on capital of less than 3%, while the insurance and banking subsidiaries averaged well above 10%. Buffett’s refusal to shut down the Berkshire mills resulted in an immense opportunity cost compounded over nearly 20 years.

The moral seems to be that basing investment solely upon asset value (quite significant in Berkshire’s case) is not intelligent. This was a rewarding activity when security analysis was in its infancy, but a great deal has changed since then. One of the best criticisms of the “Graham approach”—which involves net working capital bargains, classic arbitrage, etc.—can be found in Victor Niederhoffer’s The Education of a Speculator:

“On the rare occasion when a true guru shares secrets of a recurring, well-defined systematic nature, the cycles are about to change. Better to go against. What looks good today is encapsulated in the market tomorrow and will change the expected profits, the probabilities, and the paths of least resistance in subsequent periods. A good bet is that all systems will stop working when you use them.”

This criticism extends to merger arbitrage, convertible arbitrage and liquidations, as well as to other approaches that are less systematic. Recent experience suggests that even value-oriented investors are unsafe.

Relative Value Strategies & Market Efficiency

In Arbitrage, Benjamin Graham, Buffett Partnership, Long-Term Capital Management, Security Analysis, Seth Klarman, Warren Buffett on August 18, 2008 at 6:46 pm

Recently I studied the prospectus for Royal Dutch’s 2005 exchange offer. On page 47 it reads:

“The historical trading relationship between Royal Dutch ordinary shares (RDA) and Shell Transport ordinary shares (SHEL) has broadly matched the 60/40 interests set forth in 1907. When this relationship has deviated from parity, it appears to have done so for reasons external to the Royal Dutch/Shell Group, such as index inclusion, relative index performance and taxation changes.”

From 1986 to 2005, the market capitalization of RDA as a percentage of the Royal Dutch/Shell Group averaged 61.72.

This mispricing per se does not prove that security prices are inefficient. The short sale of RDA and simultaneous purchase of SHEL had been consistently profitable, with one exception: in 1998 it cost Long-Term Capital Management several hundred million dollars. In the case of closed-end fund arbitrage, which involves the purchase of fund shares below NAV and the short sale of underlying portfolio securities, the magnitude of mispricing is correlated with the difficulty of finding shares to short sell. These two cases vindicate efficient market hypothesis as I understand it. While mispricings exist, they are either too risky, too costly or too difficult to exploit.

Relative value strategies, however, do not need to be narrowly defined as the type practiced by LTCM, West End Capital (a Buffett investee) or Salomon Brothers. Early this year I effected a relative value hedge by purchasing $3,000 worth of Genesco and $3,000 worth of Finish Line. My initial success has given me a strong interest in specialized operations of this kind—among other things, I have concluded that money can be made both conservatively and plentifully by buying two common stocks which analysis shows to be inconsistently discounting the chance of one major event. This is an unpopular strategy but one that seems to be entirely logical. In the mid-1960s, Warren Buffett practiced a more common variant:

“‘Generals – Relatively Undervalued’ – this category consists of securities selling at prices relatively cheap compared to securities of the same general quality. We demand substantial discrepancies from current valuation standards, but (usually because of large size) do not feel value to a private owner to be a meaningful concept. It is important in this category, of course, that apples be compared to apples – and not to oranges, and we work hard at achieving that end. In the great majority of cases we simply do not know enough about the industry or company to come to sensible judgments – in that situation we pass.

“As mentioned earlier, this new category has been growing and has produced very satisfactory results. We have recently begun to implement a technique which gives promise of very substantially reducing the risk from an overall change in valuation standards; e.g., we buy something at 12 times earnings when comparable or poorer quality companies sell at 20 times earnings, but then a major revaluation takes place so the latter only sell at 10 times. This risk has always bothered us enormously because of the helpless position in which we could be left compared to the “Generals – Private Owner” or “Workouts” types. With this risk diminished, we think this category has a promising future.”

This technique was well suited to the “Nifty Fifty” era, when for instance GM sold at a large premium to Ford, despite nearly identical operating metrics. A great deal has changed since then. First, it is almost impossible to find two corporations similar enough in their operations to be comparable (even Coca-Cola and Pepsi are quite different); and second, the speculative component that caused divergent valuations in the 1960s is no longer present.

Nonetheless I believe that low-risk relative value opportunities will arise from time to time—perhaps once a year.

Benjamin Graham: Method of Operation

In Arbitrage, Benjamin Graham, Net Current Asset Value, Security Analysis, Warren Buffett on July 7, 2008 at 2:13 am

Judging by the track records of analysts, money managers, OPMIs, bloggers, etc., the endeavor to select issues with above average expectancy is not on the whole a satisfactory activity. It is successful at times and it is unsuccessful at other times, but on balance it does not pay. The work of many intelligent minds engaged in this field becomes self-neutralizing and self-defeating given equal access to information.

Ben Graham’s superior performance is due at bottom to his preference for obscure situations and techniques. I have excerpted relevant sections of his memoir:

Continue Reading

Security Analysis: Sixth Edition Coming in September

In Benjamin Graham, Charlie Munger, Joel Greenblatt, Martin Whitman, Net Current Asset Value, Security Analysis, Seth Klarman, Warren Buffett on June 30, 2008 at 12:11 pm

Sound investment policy will by its terms yield satisfactory performance over many years and through various market conditions. One of the first books to outline such a policy was Graham & Dodd’s Security Analysis. Some of its key points: (1) fixed income obligations must be viewed “from the standpoint of calamity,” i.e. normalized EBIT should cover interest payments by at least seven times; (2) preferred shares lack both the safety of bonds and the appreciation potential of common shares and should thus be purchased only at large discounts from par, when they are “friendless;” (3) net working capital approximates the minimum liquidating value of a business; thus common stocks selling below net working capital and showing a satisfactory record of earnings are likely to be attractive bargain purchases; (4) common stocks should be valued from the standpoint of a private owner, since companies selling below this value are likely to be purchased by a private owner; (5) hedging and arbitrage commitments fall within the scope of intelligent investment; and (6) the investor should allocate less of his portfolio to common stocks when the market is high, based on various technical standards. These rules have withstood major financial developments over nearly 75 years—due at bottom to Graham’s emphasis on quantity, measurement and utility.

Continue Reading

Mathematical Expectation of Securities

In Arbitrage, Benjamin Graham, Bill Ackman, Charlie Munger, Joel Greenblatt, Martin Whitman, Net Current Asset Value, Security Analysis, Seth Klarman, Warren Buffett on June 22, 2008 at 3:44 am

My observation has been that analysts, money managers, OPMIs, bloggers, etc., cannot consistently select issues with above-market returns. I believe this is due to a feature inherent to all parimutuel systems, viz., calculations of expectancy should vary only slightly from one person to another—with any major difference resulting from some unknowable factor. The selection of securities is often akin to a shell game.

We should not conclude from this that securities markets are strong-form efficient. On the contrary, investors with access to material non-public information have earned high returns without bearing commensurately high risk. In 1925 Ben Graham learned that Northern Pipeline—selling at only $65 per share—had “$95 in cash assets for each share, nearly all of which it could distribute to stockholders without the slightest inconvenience to its operations.” Major brokerage firms were never aware of this information; Graham found it at the Interstate Commerce Commission in Washington, D.C. A more recent example is Bill Ackman’s MBIA short position, which is predicated on special knowledge of reserve adequacy, unusual insurance transactions, etc. (Ackman supposedly went through 140,000 pages of internal documents.)

Allied to the foregoing are situations involving neglect of public information. This has been especially persistent in the field of distressed debt, where vulture investors profit from claimholders unwilling to interpret bankruptcy documents. (Seth Klarman, Michael Price and Marty Whitman owe a great portion of their returns to this activity—and not to common stock investments exclusively.) Many of the opportunities mentioned on stableboyselections.com tend to be neglected because they fall outside the scope of traditional equity investment.

I do not believe that passive “value investors” as a class will yield above-average returns by focusing on large U.S.-based companies. The investment community has wised up to the extent that apparent bargains now involve greater risk. This is a natural consequence of the increasing popularity of “value investing,” which seems to have reached an historical peak over the past few years. (Most worrisome is the crowding in such stocks as USG, SHLD, FMD and Mortgage Originator X, Y, Z.) You can take it as an axiom that strategies become less effective as they become more popular.

The really spectacular returns will come from investors who discover unpublicized or underpublicized inefficiencies. At present, auction-rate securities, distressed debt, arbitrage and certain Chinese stocks seem to offer the most favorable mathematical expectation.

“If the reader interjects that there must surely be large profits to be gained from the other players in the long run by a skilled individual who, unperturbed by the prevailing pastime, continues to purchase investments on the best genuine long-term expectations he can frame, he must be answered that there are, indeed, such serious-minded individuals. But we must also add that… investment based on genuine long-term expectation is so difficult today as to be scarcely practicable. He who attempts it must surely lead much more laborious days and run greater risks than he who tries to guess better than the crowd how the crowd will behave; and, given equal intelligence, he may make more disastrous mistakes.”
- J. M. Keynes

Integrity & Investment Performance

In Arbitrage, Benjamin Graham, Berkshire Hathaway, Charlie Munger, Security Analysis, Seth Klarman, Warren Buffett on May 11, 2008 at 11:13 pm

“Index funds are imperfect, but they provide the best outcome for most know-nothings, in order to avoid being misled by fools and liars.”

Charlie Munger

Investing is the process of putting money away now to be sure of getting more money back in the future. A good definition of success is the ability to earn a higher rate on one’s principal than commonly available. Ideally this would be achieved over at least a 10-year period, where the terminal level of the S&P 500 is the same as the starting point. An examination of investors’ track records shows that success, as so defined, is scarcely practicable; more than 90% of portfolio managers fail to earn excess returns consistently.

Continue Reading

Wide Ranging Expected Value, A Binary: LEAPS vs. Common Stock

In Benjamin Graham, Joel Greenblatt, Security Analysis on April 14, 2008 at 1:30 pm

Loan originators are either worth (a) nothing; if banks continue to refuse financing loans, alternative methods of lending are not used, etc. or (b) far more than current market capitalizations; if conditions reverse. If the probability of each scenario is 50%, originators have positive expected value. And under these assumptions, LEAPS are more attractive than common stock. Take the following as an illustration:

First Marblehead is currently selling at $360 million, or $3.60 per share. If banks regain the willingness to finance student loans, a conservative valuation for FMD might be $2 billion, or $20 per share. (The company earned $159 million in 2005, and conditions in 2009 might resemble those in 2005.) A person who buys 100 shares at $3.60 stands to lose $360 or to gain about 4.5 times this amount.

Continue Reading

▶ View 20 Comments

Discounted Cash Flow Method Defective

In Benjamin Graham, Charlie Munger, Security Analysis, Warren Buffett on April 11, 2008 at 3:14 pm

“Warren talks about these DCF models. I’ve never seen him do one.”
-Charlie Munger

One major defect of discounted cash flow models is that they draw attention away from the enterprise as a whole—involving certain magnitudes of sales, profits and invested capital. My observation has been that the basing of investment upon DCF valuations will on average not yield satisfactory results, when you take a census of operations over many years and including many companies. (One criticism that I have to offer of the Wall Street approach—which applies to security analysts, investment companies and everybody else—is that so little effort is made to keep track of what has happened in the large number of analyses that have been made year after year—how they actually worked out.)

Corporate Earning Power and Market Valuation

In Benjamin Graham, Berkshire Hathaway, Buffett Partnership, Security Analysis, Warren Buffett on April 5, 2008 at 2:31 pm

I do not believe that anticipating stock market fluctuations is on the whole a satisfactory activity. The work of many intelligent minds constantly engaged in this field tends to be self-neutralizing and self-defeating over the years. (For example, Jim Cramer and Abby Joseph Cohen have been less reliable than the tossing of a coin.)

It is possible to know when stocks as a group are too high or too low. This can help investors determine what percentage of capital to deploy in arbitrage operations, which are insulated from market fluctuations, as opposed to generally undervalued securities.

Continue Reading

Economic Goodwill vs. Accounting Goodwill: “Good” Businesses vs. Mediocre Businesses

In Benjamin Graham, Berkshire Hathaway, Security Analysis, Warren Buffett on March 8, 2008 at 3:06 am

Apparently, readers of the latest Berkshire letter have paid particular attention to a section titled “Businesses - The Great, the Good and the Gruesome.” I believe this enthusiasm is unwarranted, as Buffett essentially rehashes his thoughts on ideal business characteristics. “Goodwill and its Amortization,” from the 1983 letter, is more insightful (note that goodwill is no longer amortized):

Continue Reading

Net Working Capital Strategy: Historical Perspective

In Benjamin Graham, Net Current Asset Value, Security Analysis on February 17, 2008 at 4:29 am

It is a mere statistical chore to find stocks selling below net working capital, defined as current assets minus total liabilities. While approximately 10% of U.S.-listed stocks met this criteria in 1976, fewer than 1% do so today. I believe that the sharp reduction has two main causes: first, corporate earnings as a percentage of invested capital have improved since 1976; and second, there has been increased enthusiasm toward common stocks and a consequent increase in scrutiny.

At present, virtually all of the companies underlying sub-net working capital issues are unprofitable, and many are practically insolvent after the omission of inventory values. A composite of such issues has not yielded satisfactory results in recent years and is unlikely to do so going forward. Yet many Graham-Dodd fundamentalists persist. I believe this foolishness is due to (1) lack of self-criticism and a resultant neglect to examine one’s track record and (2) lack of historical perspective. The following excerpts from Security Analysis Third Edition should help with the second problem.

Continue Reading

▶ View 2 Comments

Statistical Bargains: Historical Perspective

In Arbitrage, Benjamin Graham, Buffett Partnership, Charlie Munger, Net Current Asset Value, Security Analysis, Warren Buffett on February 12, 2008 at 3:54 am

In 1952, Warren Buffett made a concentrated bet on Western Insurance Securities. At two times earnings and half of book value, the stock had tremendous upside and no downside. An enterprising investor could easily find opportunities with similar mathematical expectation ((probability of loss x size of loss) + (probability of gain x size of gain)).

By 1967 Buffett realized that the situation had changed:

“Statistical bargains have tended to disappear over the years. This may be due to the constant combing and re-combing of investments that has occurred during the past twenty years, without an economic convulsion such as that of the ’30s to create a negative bias toward equities and spawn hundreds of new bargain securities. It may be due to the new growing social acceptance and usage of takeover bids which have a natural tendency to focus on bargain issues. It may be due to the exploding ranks of security analysts bringing forth an intensified scrutiny of issues far beyond what existed some years ago. Whatever the cause, the result has been the virtual disappearance of the bargain issue as determined quantitatively - and thereby of our bread and butter.”

Continue Reading

Zunicom (ZNCM): Relative Value Arbitrage Opportunity???

In Arbitrage, Benjamin Graham, Net Current Asset Value, Security Analysis on January 15, 2008 at 9:55 pm

Zunicom conducts all of its operations through AlphaNet Hospitality Systems, a provider of computer access to hotel guests. This business is in serious decline as contracts expire and marketing efforts cease. According to Zunicom’s most recent 10-Q, AlphaNet lost nearly $600,000 in the first nine months of 2007.

Continue Reading

▶ View 8 Comments

Buffett Partnership Letters: Lessons for Professional Investors

In Arbitrage, Benjamin Graham, Buffett Partnership, Security Analysis, Warren Buffett on January 15, 2008 at 3:09 am

À la Lawrence Cunningham, I have rearranged the Buffett Partnership letters by topic. Pay particular attention to the final section—The Dearth of Bargains.

warren-buffett-young.jpg

Continue Reading

The Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) Designation & Market Efficiency

In Benjamin Graham, Security Analysis on January 5, 2008 at 3:58 am

“The New York Society is now taking the first positive steps to establish a quasiprofessional rating or title for security analysts who meet specified requirements. It is virtually certain that this movement will develop ultimately in full-fledged professional status for our calling.”
-Cogitator
1952

In 1963 the Institute of Chartered Financial Analysts administered its first certification exam, and today there are over 83,000 charterholders. CFA is to finance as M.D. is to medicine; it is the ultimate professional designation.

Continue Reading

▶ View 1 Comment

Magic Formula Investing Is Unsound (Though It May Have Been Sound Before It Was Discovered)

In Benjamin Graham, Joel Greenblatt, Security Analysis on December 24, 2007 at 1:05 pm

In 1996, an obscure money manager named James O’Shaughnessy published What Works on Wall Street. He claimed that from 1954 to 1994 an investor could have turned $10,000 into $8 million—beating the S&P 500’s return ten times over—by purchasing stocks with (1) the highest one-year returns, (2) five straight years of rising earnings and (3) share prices less than 1.5 times their corporate revenues. O’Shaughnessy obtained a patent for his automated strategy and launched four mutual funds. By early 2000, all of them had underperformed the S&P 500 and O’Shaughnessy retired. Even Ben Graham—one of the greatest investors in history—achieved poor returns when he used mechanical methods of stock selection in lieu of security analysis.

I believe that the change in “Magic Formula Investing” results is not accidental. It demonstrates an inherent characteristic of trading formulas in the fields of business and finance. Those formulas that gain followers do so because they have been adapted to the statistical record of the past. But as their acceptance increases, their reliability tends to diminish. The moral seems to be that any approach to moneymaking in the stock market which can be easily described and followed by a lot of people is too simple to last.

Continue Reading

▶ View 3 Comments

Vacation in Asia: A Search for Value (Part II)

In Benjamin Graham, Security Analysis, Warren Buffett on August 27, 2007 at 10:48 am

When I requested annual reports from HSBC and Charles Schwab, the employees took awhile to understand what I was asking. Evidently brokerage clients in Hong Kong do not read financial statements. One man even admitted that “Chinese people don’t look at the price paid; they buy whatever has been going up.” The investment environment is analogous to that of America in 1929. (Incidentally the margin requirement is also 10%.)

Continue Reading

Unearned Premium Reserve & Associated Valuation Errors

In Benjamin Graham, Insurance, Security Analysis, Warren Buffett on August 6, 2007 at 6:49 am

Let’s say my annual car insurance premium with AIG is $2,000. On January 1, my entire payment goes on AIG’s balance sheet as an unearned premium liability, since coverage has not yet applied. (This is analogous to unearned revenue in non-insurance companies.) By July 1 this amount is reduced to $1,000, and by December 31 it is reduced to zero. Unearned premium thus becomes earned premium in a prorated fashion.

Continue Reading