Monday 21 October 2013

Investment Methods According to Big Fat Purse

I often see my industry colleagues attempting to forecast stock price movements based on news flows, and fail miserably. I often use basic valuation methods like: Price to Book, Cyclically Adjusted Price to Earnings Ratio, ROE, Dividend Yield to screen for the best value for money stocks. Then I'll use qualitative measures like management ability, potential earnings growth, economic moats and technical analysis to pick the 10 to 15 stocks for my portfolio.

                                           
                                                                                                
BigFatPurse
Invest in Assets or Earnings?
By Alvin Chow

Warren Buffett made to the list of richest men through investing. Many investors are inspired by his success in value investing and believes that Buffett’s strategy is the most superior. The funny thing is that Warren Buffett has never described his strategy in detail except stating a few considerations in his letters to shareholders. Commentators and authors studied Buffett’s investment choices and concoct theories on how Buffett chooses his stocks. The investment concept of earnings growth, intrinsic value and competitive advantage has define the investment culture of our time.
I’ll challenge the concept of earnings-based investing in this article and offer you an alternative way to invest.

A Story on Personal Finance

Ashton is a retiree. He worked hard during his career and accumulated enough wealth to own a $1m house and $1m in stocks. He has no debt or any liability. He has a reasonable standard of living and the dividends from his stock investment are more than enough to pay for his expenses.
Earnest is a very successful lawyer who earns $200k a year. He has found his niche in his practice and no one else could compete with him in this area. He expects his income to grow by 5% per year for the next 10 years. If this is true, his income will grow to $325,778 in the 10th year. He does not have any assets or liabilities.
If you were to put your money in either Ashton or Earnest, who would you choose? Assuming you can invest in them and “own” them for $1m, who will it be?
Ashton is assets-rich but has low or no earnings. Earnest on the other hand, has earnings but no assets. If Ashton and Earnest are companies, Ashton has low Price-to-Book ratio (P/B) while Earnest has a high discount to its intrinsic value.
The so-called Warren Buffett style of investing will choose Earnest because of his earnings prowess. However, remember that it is estimated and projected that Earnest will have his income growing at 5% per year. There can be many possibilities for Earnest not to earn that income. For example, he may meet an accident and unable to work anymore. He may also acquire so much debt that his income cannot cover. The uncertainty can never be eliminated and would you put so much faith in his future as an investor?

The shadow of Warren Buffett

Benjamin Graham has many disciples and Warren Buffett is just one of them. There is another successful but very much less known disciple of Graham – Walter Schloss.
Walter Schloss has averaged about 15.3% returns per annum for 45 years. If you have invested $10k, you will have $6m after 45 years.
Unlike Buffett, Schloss does not invest based on earnings. He invest in companies which are asset-rich with low debts. Essentially, low P/B companies. He has a reason for it and he said,
“Try to buy assets at a discount than to buy earnings. Earnings can change dramatically in a short time. Usually assets change slowly. One has to know how much more about a company if one buys earnings.”
Warren Buffett pays a lot of attention on assessing the management of the company (according to experts on Warren Buffett). He will only invest after doing substantial amount of investigative work and interactions with the management.
On the other hand, Schloss knows that he is not as good as Buffett in evaluating management or a business. Hence, Schloss prefers to invest in assets and he said,
“I’m not very good at judging people. So I found that it was much better to look at the figures rather than people. I didn’t go to many meetings unless they were relatively nearby. I like the idea of company-paid dividends, because I think it makes management a little more aware of stockholders, but we didn’t really talk about it, because we were small. I think if you were big, if you were a Fidelity, you wanted to go out and talk to management. They’d listen to you. I think it’s really easier to use numbers when you’re small.”
Schloss knows his strengths and weaknesses very well and play the investing game to his advantage. He knows his firm is small and he won’t get access to management. Malcolm Gladwell wrote about David and the Goliath, where you should know whether you are a big player or a small player, and play a strategy that applies to your context.  Being a small shareholder, it is much easier to invest in assets than earnings.

The Waiting Game

It is true that earnings is the key driver of stock price. But I will challenge that it is because the entire investment community and the financial industry paid too much attention on earnings that it became the most important driver of stock price. Any factor can be a key driver to stock price as long as majority of the investors focuses on it.
The common worry for investing in companies with discount to their assets but have poor earnings, is that the stock price may never reflect the value of the companies and even if it does, the wait might be very long.
Walter Schloss said that when you buy assets, three things will go in your favor:
  1. Earnings turn around and the stock appreciates significantly
  2. Someone buys control of the company (buyout)
  3. The company begins buying its own stock
Any of these 3 things happen and the stock price will go up. That will be an opportunity to realise the profits. And yes, you have to wait for these 3 things to happen and you will never know when.
However, if you diversify your investment into many asset-rich companies, there is a higher chance that a few of those stocks may rise in value and contribute to the returns in your portfolio. Remember Schloss did this and achieved 15.3% returns per year. Diversification is not necessarily damaging to your returns and Warren Buffett praised Schloss for that,
“Walter has diversified enormously, owning well over 100 stocks currently. He knows how to identify securities that sell at considerably less than their value to a private owner. And that’s all he does. He doesn’t worry about whether it it’s January, he doesn’t worry about whether it’s Monday, he doesn’t worry about whether it’s an election year. He simply says, if a business is worth a dollar and I can buy it for 40 cents, something good may happen to me. And he does it over and over and over again. He owns many more stocks than I do — and is far less interested in the underlying nature of the business; I don’t seem to have very much influence on Walter. That’s one of his strengths; no one has much influence on him.”

Play as David, not as Goliath

We are all small retail investors and we must acknowledge that. We have no influence on companies’ management and they won’t give a damn if we want to speak to them and understand their outlook of their business, or even accede to a tour around their company compound. By the way, I do not think we have the time and interest to do what Buffett does.
If so, play like what a small player should do. Invest in asset-rich companies like Schloss. It is a much easier game geared for the small investors. Of course, buying assets is not just buying low P/B companies. There are more to it but we shall leave it for another day. Do subscribe to our email update and look out for it!


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