Yearly Archives: 2012

A Reader Asks What is the Best Way to Learn Using the Resources Here.

How Best to Learn?

An intelligent reader and I have had an exchange on how to approach using the resources on this blog to learn most efficiently. There are many resources on this blog and in the Value Valut–just email me at aldridge56@aol.com to request a key)–but the orgainization can be improved upon.

Ben Graham was right when he said a conservative investor can do better than average through using a disciplined, rational approach here: http://www.grahaminvestor.com/

Benjamin Graham always tried to buy stocks that were trading at a discount to their Net Current Asset Value. In other words he buy stocks that were undervalued and hold them until they became fully valued.

“The determining trait of the enterprising investor is his willingness to devote time and care to the selection of securities that are both sound and more attractive than the average. Over many decades, an enterprising investor of this sort could expect a worthwhile reward for his extra skill and effort in the form of a better average return than that realized by the passive investor.” Ben Graham in “The Intelligent Investor”, 1949.

The problem is how difficult it is to perform much better than average. You have to expand your skills and circle of competence while keeping the costs of your learning to a minimum.

I will be traveling the next few day (until Tuesday), but I will think carefully on my answer to his question. Other readers, please feel free to offer your experiences, thoughts and suggestions. The quality of readership here is outstanding.

Dialogue

Hi John,

Just a quick question regarding your suggested learning methodology.

I am currently working through your lectures (blog and Value Vault) and there are a number of useful book recommendations. Would you suggest reading the books before moving on, to appreciate and understand the subsequent lectures? e.g. In lecture two, you quote, “The professor (Joel Greenblatt in his Special Situations Investing Class at Columbia GBS) stressed studying carefully the essays of Warren Buffett.”

I do have the book and was wondering whether to take a break from the lectures and study the book, then return to the lectures. Given you’ve been through the learning process already, what would you recommend?

I’d be very interested to hear your thoughts. Keep up the good work, it is really appreciated.

My reply: Dear Reader please tell me about your background, how you became interested in investing and how YOU think is the best way to learn.

What drives your interest in investing? Then I can better frame my answer.

THANKS.

That is a very good question and I’ll try to be as clear and honest as possible.

Background: I am from the UK, 42 years old, married, with one child.

Job: Sales & Marketing Director for a small Manufacturing Company selling custom robotics/automation machines/systems to pharmaceutical and petro/chemical industries.

Professional Background: I am a Chartered Mechanical Engineer.

Education: 2001 – First Class Honours Degree in Mechanical Engineering.

2006 – MBA from XXXXX Business School.

2010 – MSc module Valuation with Professor Glen Arnold at Salford University (10 week semester). Glen is author of “Value Investing” and other related investing/corporate finance titles (FT Pearson).

2012 – Professional Certificate in Accounting (Open University). This was a distance learning course done over two years in financial accounting (year 1) and management accounting (year 2).

Background: Hard to say how I started out, but I invested in Thatcher’s UK privatisation initiatives in the mid 80s. I made a small amount of money on this purchase of UK utility company British Gas and I was hooked. I was 16 years old.

Since then I had limited free capital due to mortgage, pension and so on. About seven years ago, I became interested again and read “The Motley Fool Investment Guide” on investing which basically advocated index/mutual funds. I did this for a couple of years, invested mainly in Fidelity funds, UK, China, India, US index funds and by sheer good fortune sold out near the top of the market to buy a house (May 2007). Shortly after I had a brief spell spread betting (futures), with limited success, actually no success! I wanted to get rich quick and attended numerous trading seminars in London. I shorted one of the worst hit UK banks (RBS) during the banking crisis and still lost money because of the volatility (and my ineptitude). Imagine losing money shorting Lehman! It was that bad.

I managed to stay out of the market for 2008 and started to reinvest in 2009, mainly FTSE100 companies that are mostly popular (by volume e.g. Vodafone, Royal Bank Scotland) but with no analysis or reason to invest other than a ‘gut feel’ that they would go up! They did, but so did everything else…I later sold once I became interested or aware of small cap value.

I’ve read (once only) many classic investment books (Graham, Dreman, Lynch, Greenwald, Glen Arnold, Montier, Shefrin, Buffett partnership letters, Greenblatt, Pabrai etc.). As you know there are many references in these books to the accounting numbers and having read them I realized I didn’t know that much about accounting despite my MBA education. As a side note, I did the part-time Executive MBA and it was way too hurried to absorb the vast amount of information, so my finance learning was minimal. I oculd calculate WACC, CAPM etc., but didn’t understand the context. And so I decided to embark on an accounting distance learning course which I recently passed a couple of months ago.

After reading these books and several biographies on Buffett, I became more and more interested in the value philosophy (low P/E, P/BV etc.). I stumbled across various value oriented blogs such as Richard Beddard in the UK, Geoff Gannon and your own blog. Since reading these blogs I started to follow the UK small cap scene. (John Chew Small-caps have the tendency to be more over-or-undervalued for liquidity and informational reasons). The reasons for this philosophy are mainly based on Buffett’s early days, Greenwald, Beddard and Glen Arnold’s teachings. I can also relate to the idea that they are under researched, too small for the institutions and are a lot easier to understand.

So far my learning process has evolved from trying to understand quantitative financial analysis through books and working my way backwards, i.e. if I don’t understand something in a book or on a blog, I know I have to educate myself rather than think I know what I’m doing. I’d like to think I recognize my behavioral failings e.g. overconfidence, which I hear a lot in investing. My current thinking is to learn financial statement analysis first, along with valuation and then I can focus on the qualitative factors such as competitive advantage etc.

I believe that to buy a company cheap, you should know its intrinsic value and so I have become more interested in valuation and the teachings of Damodaran. I have just started to look at his Spring 2012 lectures. At the same time I saw his course mentioned in your first lecture. Not long after reading your first lecture, my question occurred to me, i.e. if John is recommending these resources – does he suggest that the reader works through those recommendations first before proceeding with the lectures. I realize that if you read and did everything you posted, it would take a lifetime, so although I am definitely not looking for shortcuts, I would appreciate advice on the case study approach to learning. My intention is to work through the lectures and stop at the point a book is recommended. However there are about five or six books mentioned in lecture one alone. I’ve just started, Essays of Warren Buffett by Cunningham. I also understand there is no substitute for getting your hands dirty and reading the financial reports of the companies you’ve either screened or shortlisted for some reason. I suppose I’m at the stage where I’m not sure what ratios are important, profitability vs financial strength etc. Do I look at a company qualitatively first or do I screen based on PBV, P/E, Yield, ROIC, ROE, EV/EBITDA etc.? I’m conscious that I need to avoid value traps, so maybe look at F-Score, Z-Score, solvency.

I realize you can never stop learning, but I just need some direction from a person who’s been there already. Once I have the right approach in mind, I will study and ultimately learn from my mistakes akin to Kolb’s experiential learning theory.

What drives my interest in Investing?

I suppose this could be answered with a quote from the Guy Thomas book, Free Capital:-

“Wouldn’t life be better if you were free of the daily grind – the conventional job and boss – and instead succeeded or failed purely on the merits of your own investment choices? Free Capital is a window into this world.” Guy Thomas – Free Capital.

That quote would sum it up for me. I can cope with not being rich, but being free would be pretty good! In addition, I actually love the game of investing and the intellectual challenge interests me enormously. I read investing books for fun, much to my wife’s disapproval!

I hope the above gives you enough to answer my original question and thank you for your time and help.

Microsoft’s Write-offs: What Lessons Can We Learn?

Microsoft Takes $6.2 Billion Charge, Slows Internet Hopes

Published: Monday, 2 Jul 2012 |

By: Reuters

I was shocked: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HqVBKO_QM3o

Lessons to be learned

There are several lessons:

  • First, this is an example of why you must discount/haircut the value of the EXCESS CASH on Microsoft’s balance sheet.
  • Second, the importance of the ability of management to invest outside their circle of competence; in other words, how management allocates capital.
  • Finally, what strategic logic did Microsoft violate? Hint: Google has 65% of the search market.

Hint: If I wanted a job at Microsoft or an investment bank servicing technology companies, I would do an intensive analysis showing why there would almost always be failure due to faulty strategic logic. You may not get the job, but I guarantee you would do better than submitting countless resumes.  Say you saved MSFT $6 billion plus the money that could have been earned on that amount–what percentage would be fair compensation? Not a bad payday.

Microsoft admitted its largest acquisition in the Internet sector was effectively worthless and wiped out any profit for the last quarter, as it announced a $6.2 billion charge to write down the value of an online advertising agency it bought five years ago.

The announcement came as a surprise, but did not shock investors, who had largely forgotten Microsoft’s [MSFT30.56 -0.03(-0.1%) ] purchase of aQuantive in 2007, which was initially expected to boost Microsoft’s online advertising revenue and rival Google Inc’s [GOOG580.47 0.40(+0.07%)] purchase of DoubleClick.

The company’s shares dipped slightly to $30.35 in after-hours trading, after closing at $30.56 in regular Nasdaq trading.

Microsoft said in a statement that “the acquisition did not accelerate growth to the degree anticipated, contributing to the write-down.”  

Editor: Discuss MSFT’s flawed strategic logic.

The world’s largest software company bought aQuantive for $6.3 billion in cash in an attempt to catch rival Google Inc. in the race for revenues from search-related advertising. It was Microsoft’s biggest acquisition at the time, exceeded only by its purchase of Skype for $8.5 billion last year. But it never proved a success and aQuantive’s top executives soon left Microsoft.

As a result of its annual assessment of goodwill – the amount paid for a company above its net assets – Microsoft said on Monday it would take a non-cash charge of $6.2 billion, indicating the aQuantive acquisition is now worthless.

The charge will likely wipe out any profit for the company’s fiscal fourth quarter. Wall Street was expecting Microsoft to report fiscal fourth-quarter net profit of about $5.25 billion, or 62 cents a share, on July 19.

In addition to the write-down, Microsoft said its expectations for future growth and profitability at its online services unit – which includes the Bing search engine and MSN Internet portal – are “lower than previous estimates.” 

Again, through your lens of strategic logic what obvious flaw did management make and WILL make again if it doesn’t understand what?

The company did not say what those previous estimates were, as it does not publish financial forecasts.

Microsoft’s online services division is the biggest drag on its earnings, currently losing about $500 million a quarter as the company invests heavily in Bing in an attempt to catch market leader Google. The unit has lost more than $5 billion in the last three years alone. Even though its market share has been rising, Bing has not reached critical mass required to make the product profitable.

Before rolling out Bing in June 2009, Microsoft’s Windows search engine had 8 percent of the U.S. Internet search market, compared with Yahoo’s 20 percent and Google’s 65 percent.     

In the three years since then, Bing has almost doubled its market share to 15 percent, but that has been mostly at the expense of Yahoo, which has had its share whittled down to 13 percent. Google now has almost 67 percent, according to research firm Comscore.

Another article:

http://www.montrealgazette.com/business/Microsoft+writes+admits+aQuantive+acquisition+worthless/6873661/story.html

Great News for us: Why Analysts May Stop Covering INDIVIDUAL Stocks

 

 

Why Analysts May Stop Covering Individual Stocks

Published: Monday, 2 Jul 2012 | 1:51 PM ET

By: John Melloy Executive Producer, Fast Money & Halftime

With markets continuing to move in lockstep to every headline out of Europe, China or the Fed, the days of individual stock analysts may finally be numbered.

“There is an old saying about analysts among the gray hairs of Wall Street: ‘In a bull market, you don’t need them, in a bear market, they’ll kill you,’” said Nick Colas, chief market strategist at ConvergEx Group. “And in a flat market, it seems, both apply.”

After a 12 percent surge in the first quarter, the S&P 500 then gave up all those gains in the second quarter as another seemed to be in jeopardy.

While the market   is back up on the year after a rebound in June, fears of a China Slowdown, an ornery German leadership and an uncertain November Election continue to   overhang the market.

With most stocks moving on these big picture headlines, rather than their   individual merits, it’s made the job of a single-stock number cruncher that   much more difficult.

“In this type of situation, it doesn’t make sense to spend time analyzing   details of specific companies when most movements are lockstep with the   prevailing risk appetite,” said James Iuorio, managing director at TJM   Institutional Services. “This type of trade should continue as global markets   work their way through unusually large event risk.”

Analysts have had seismic headwinds against them for more than a decade now: from the stock-research scandal in the early 2000s, to the boom-bust nature of the market turning off baby boomers, to the explosion in hedge funds , to the ETF-ization of the marketplace.

“The nail went through the industry’s heart years ago as Wall Street research morphed away from variant and hard hitting analysis to maintenance research,” said Doug Kass of Seabreeze Partners. “(Former New York Governor Elliot) Spitzer’s legislation was the catalyst for the exodus of many of the better sell-siders into the hedge fund industry and then the Great Recession of 2008-09 uncovered their worthlessness.”

To be sure, many investors said that markets can’t move forever on the whims of central banks. At some point in the future, individual stock picking and research is bound to matter again.

The question is, how long will that take? Investment banks and boutique firms can’t keep low-margin research businesses going forever, especially with the proliferation of free content on the Internet.

“The impact of the internet is not given its fair due in this issue,” said Enis Taner, global macro editor for RiskReversal.com. “Universal access to stock-specific content and research has made the brokerage shop’s analyst research much more commoditized. In my personal investing, I much prefer reading the direct sec.gov 10Q or 10K release of the company than the filtered research of the stock analyst.”

Sounds like a CSInvesting reader, doesn’t it?

Hedge Fund Manager on Where the Jobs Are

Inside Goldman Sachs

http://www.economicpolicyjournal.com/2012/07/inside-goldman-sachs_01.html Listen to this interview from the Robert Wenzel Show with Derei Pilecki.  I hope this helps readers who are trying to crack the job search morass. Good luck!

This week’s guest on the Robert Wenzel Show is Derek Pilecki. Pilecki is Managing Member, Founder and Portfolio Manager of Gator Capital Management. From 2002 through 2008, Derek was a member of the Goldman Sachs Asset Management Growth Equity Team. While at GSAM, Derek was the co-Chair of the Investment Committee for the Growth Team and was a Portfolio Manager. He was also a member of the portfolio management team responsible for the Goldman Sachs Capital Growth Fund, and provided primary coverage of the Financials for the Growth Team.

On the show, Pilecki talks about what it is like to work at Goldman Sachs. He also goes into detail explaining where the jobs are now on Wall Street and how to get one.

Editor (John Chew) Pilecki offers great advice for young folks in how to break into Wall Street–head for private wealth management; show what you can do. He gave the example of a blogger who got a job through his work here:http://www.frogskiss.com/  Hint: Study his past write-ups. Learn and then go do it!

Then its on to a discussion of Pilecki’s  investment philosophy and his views on stocks such as Blackrock, American Express and Rouse Properties. Find out what regulatory cloud hangs over American Express and  why Dodd-Frank regulation will likely force small cap bank mergers that will ultimately result in the merged banks being taken over by the big banks.

A Purpose Driven Life

Ask for what you want.

Note the focus and determination in this short video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WGMz8NyXMsU&feature=related

Or especially here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lYOoWCv_PYE&feature=related

Have a HAPPY Fourth of July 2012

What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

Updated Post on Dangers of Using a DCF

I updated this post http://wp.me/p1PgpH-WC with two articles from Montier and Mauboussin on the Errors and Dangers of using the DCF approach.

Thanks to a reader in Norway!

I occasionally update prior posts with additional material so be aware that this blog is fluid.

Value or Death Trap. The Erie Canal and RIMM

Value or Death Trap?

A blog posted their discussion on the balance sheet of RIMM: http://www.oldschoolvalue.com/blog/stock-analysis/a-case-study-of-rimms-balance-sheet-troubles

Go the extra step and read the last two annual reports of RIMM and see if you agree.

But good investors use mental models to place their specific investment into context. Seth Klarman says to study history, study history, and study history.

Can anyone relate how the history of investing in the Canals would help investors today know what might happen to RIMM? What are the parallels and differences (if any)?  What does history of technology investing teach us?

The best answer/reply in a few sentences will win a prize by next week as voted on by readers.

Background on Erie Canal

http://geography.about.com/od/urbaneconomicgeography/a/eriecanal.htm

VIDEO http://www.history.com/shows/america-the-story-of-us/videos/building-the-erie-canal#building-the-erie-canal

The period between the end of the War of 1812 and the Civil War was a time of swift improvement in transportation, rapid growth of factories, and significant development of new technology to increase agricultural production. Americans moved with relative ease into new regions and soon produced an agricultural surplus that changed them from subsistence farmers into commercial producers. Manufacturing became an increasingly important sector of the economy and set the stage for rapid industrialization in the late nineteenth century. The economic and technological developments brought important changes to American society.

The canal craze. After the War of 1812, DeWitt Clinton of New York boldly suggested that a canal be constructed from Lake Erie to Albany (363 miles) using the Mohawk River and then the Hudson River to connect with New York City. Such a project had no precedent in the United States. Clinton obtained a subsidy from the New York legislature and began construction on July 4, 1817. Completed in 1825, the Erie Canal was an instant success, bringing prosperity and additional settlement to its western terminus at Buffalo and helping to make New York City the preeminent American seaport. Philadelphia merchants, jealous of New York’s success, pressed for a canal between eastern Pennsylvania and Pittsburgh, but this waterway presented even greater obstacles than the New York project. The 395-mile Pennsylvania Canal required 174 locks—more than double the number on the Erie Canal—and a funicular railway to get cargo over the Allegheny Mountains. Completed in 1834, it carried considerable traffic but never rivaled the Erie Canal in terms of total tonnage or economic impact.

The success of these projects fed a craze for canal construction throughout the Midwest. By 1837, companies had built 750 miles of canals in Ohio alone. Canals linked Toledo to Cincinnati, Evansville to Fort Wayne, and Akron to Cleveland. While financially risky private investments, canals benefited farmers throughout the Ohio Valley and the Great Lakes region by providing a relatively inexpensive means to get their produce to market. Even though the barges that carried lumber, coal, hay, wheat, corn, and oats traveled only two miles an hour (they were towed by mules walking along the banks), the canals greatly reduced shipping costs, time, and distances. They also contributed to a shift in population as cities like Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, and Milwaukee grew at the expense of such river ports as Louisville.

Railroads. Railroad construction began in the United States in 1825; by 1860, more than thirty thousand miles of track had been laid. Originally concentrated in the Northeast, by the eve of the Civil War, lines reached as far west as St. Joseph, Missouri. In the South, railroad building lagged just as much as canal building.

Railroads had several advantages over canals. They required a smaller initial capital investment; offered more direct routes; and provided fast, year-round service (rivers and canals froze in winter). There was little coordination among the different railroads though, which worked against creation of a uniform rail system. Because the companies selected their own track gauge, freight often had to be unloaded at the terminus of one line and reloaded at the start of another line, adding to costs. Despite this shortcoming and their comparatively high maintenance costs, railroads expanded and eventually moved ahead of canals in total tonnage shipped in the late 1840s.

Good luck!

Comprehensive List of Investing Books

Ordway Letter

As per the last post:http://wp.me/p1PgpH-WS, I mentioned signing up for a free newsletter at pcordway@gmail.com.

Below is an example of his letter. His reading list on value investing is  comprehensive. My suggestion is to read the Intelligent Investor by Graham, then Margin of Safety (posted on this blog and in the Value Vault) several times to understand the mindset of a value investor, then move onto the Buffett readings. Question and reread. Study accounting and competitive advantage while perusing annual reports of companies that interest you. If you don’t understand something, then try to find the answer through sleuthing. Practice THINKING INDEPENDENTLY (The experts don’t know the future either!) Apply principles to specific examples, that is why this blog emphasizes case studies.

Be patient. If it was easy, then the rewards wouldn’t be there. Competence will begin to appear in five or six years of intensive study and perhaps expertise after ten to fifteen years. I am still a student after 25 years with a long journey ahead.

An analysis on Share Repurchases: MauboussinOnStrategy_–_ShareRepurchaseFromAllAngles_June_2012

Bearish_on_Brazil I worked in Brazil, and the problems come down to abuse of property rights and poor laws and institutions. Don’t be fooled.

Ordway_reading_list

Suggested reading material or any other commentary is always welcome — just send me an email. I hope everyone is doing well and has a great 4th of July holiday next week.
Quoted

  • “Former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said the U.S. will emerge relatively unharmed from the debt crisis in Europe as efforts by Greece, Spain and other nations to stabilize their economies persist for the long-term. ‘Although Europe is a drag, the U.S. will continue to muddle along with growth that really isn’t enough to make a dent in employment,’ Paulson…said at a [June 19] biotechnology industry conference in Boston. Europe will eventually stabilize and avoid a ‘catastrophic outcome,’ he said, [but] under the best circumstances, ‘this will drag on over time.’” (Source: Bloomberg)
  • Regarding the outlook in Europe: “I’m sure of three things. I  don’t know what’s going to happen; nobody else knows what is going to  happen; and all the experts are predicting different outcomes so 90% of  them must be wrong, if not 100%. It is a folly to listen to anyone who  says they know what is going to happen and make investments on that  basis.” — Howard Marks*
    • * Remarks delivered at a conference in New York on June 12, 2012. Any misattributions or mistakes are my own. Further comments are paraphrased as follows: Europe will probably get by, with the governments — namely Germany — doing the bare minimum. But there is certainly a non-zero chance of of something very bad happening. Either way, Europe in general is a huge mess and will likely remain so for years. The wall of worry in today’s market is well deserved; the litany of macro concerns prevalent today may be the most extreme in my or anyone’s career, but they also have existed for years — we just weren’t focusing on them. The riskiest thing in the world is a lack of belief in the presence of risk in the market; that is certainly not the case today. Act cautiously; insist on value and safety. Low-priced, well-capitalized corporate assets are — as always — the best options in this environment.

Facts and Figures

  • In the past six years, the balance sheets of the world’s eight largest central banks have more than tripled (in dollar terms) from $5.4 trillion to $15+ trillion. (Source: Bianco Research)
  • Coca-Cola will return to Myanmar (Burma) for the first time in 60 years. The only two countries left in the world without Coke will then be Cuba and North Korea. (Source: Bloomberg)
  • “From 1985 through 2011…for every dollar spent in [capex, M&A, dividends and buybacks], roughly $0.55 went to capital spending, $0.27 to M&A, and $0.18 to dividends and buybacks.” (Source: Michael Mauboussin — see attached; note: dividends and buybacks were about equal at ~9% each)
    • In the past 10 years, dividends and M&A have remained about the same (~9% and ~26%, respectively), while capex has fallen to 50% and buybacks have climbed to 14%. In the last five years, the trend is even clearer: still almost 9% in dividends, only 43% in capex, 16% in buybacks and 32% in M&A

Attachments

  • Reading List — A couple of friends asked for this recently, so I thought I’d send it around in case you’re looking for some good reading material this summer. The “top 100” and groupings are just my opinion — there should be something for everyone on this list, and hopefully some new or overlooked books or articles. Please let me know if you have any suggestions or corrections to the list.
  • “Share Repurchases from All Angles” — An excellent article from Michael Mauboussin offering some clear-headed thinking on share buybacks.
  • “Bearish on Brazil” — A great debate about Brazil’s economic prospects. The attached is an essay in Foreign Affairs adapted from the author’s new book Breakout Nations: In Pursuit of the Next Economic Miracles. I haven’t read the book yet, but the essay is interesting. The author, who is head of Emerging Markets and Global Macro at Morgan Stanley Investment Management, explores Brazil’s lofty reputation as a growth market and attributes most of the successes to a heavy reliance on rising commodity prices driven by Chinese demand. The author also believes Brazil has a “hidden cap” on growth — due to high interest rates, inflationary feedback, uncompetitiveness, an overvalued currency, chronic government overspending and misinvestment, lack of productivity growth, and a lack of investment in anything other than a welfare state — that will be exposed as commodity demand/prices weaken.

Books

  • Hedge Fund Market Wizards Jack Schwager has just released the fourth book in his Market Wizards series. I’ve read the others, which began more than 20 years ago, and this one is the best yet. They’re all focused more on “trading” than “investing,” and some of the trade-y stuff really makes me cringe, but even the staunchest Grahamite still has something to learn here. In particular, Schwager’s interview with Edward Thorp is excellent — that material alone would make a great book.The only overlap with The Alpha Masters is a chapter on a Ray Dalio, which is longer and more detailed in Schwager’s book.  And if nothing else, Schwager’s interview with Joel Greenblatt gives this book all the credibility it needs. Highly recommended.
    • An interview with the author by Opalesque (via a great blog) is here.

Links

  • Debunking the Myth of Intuition” — A great interview with Prof. Kahneman on a range of topics.
  • Julian Robertson Interviewed on Bloomberg TV — A rare interview with Julian Roberston. Topics include hedge funds and investment strategy, Europe and the debt crisis, and American politics.
  • The Five Mega-trends Shaping Tomorrow’s Customers” — An op-ed by Coca-Cola CEO Muhtar Kent about the key forces driving the world’s consumers.
  • The Formula That Killed Wall Street? The Gaussian Copula and the Material Cultures of Modelling” — Don’t let the title scare you.
  • Why I’m Betting Big on Europe— A profile of David Herro and his investments in European banks. Regardless of an opinion on the merits of these investments, this is certainly not a mutual fund manager with any fear of a little tracking error!
  • The State of the Nation’s Housing” — The latest annual report from The Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University. I’ve always found this report to be one of the very best ways to understand the conditions in the housing industry (and it’s free!). This year’s press release reads: ““While still in the early innings of a housing recovery, rental markets have turned the corner, home sales are strengthening, and a floor is beginning to form under home prices. With new home inventories at record lows, unless the broader economy goes into a tailspin, stronger sales should further stabilize prices and pave the way for a pickup in single-family housing construction over the course of 2012.”
  • This is Your Brain on Bargains: JC Penney and the Curse of Discounts” — An interesting look at consumer behavior, the history of coupons and discounts, and the potential impact on JCP’s strategy.
  • Shatel Q&A: Friendships are Buffett’s Sport Riches” — Speaking of Michael Lewis (see below), I thought Moneyball was a pretty good book. In this interview, which is more of a curiosity than anything else, Buffett said in response to a question about sports figures asking for advice from him: “I get a lot of them that just want to talk. Billy Beane called. He’s a  Berkshire shareholder. He was running the A’s. He was running them like  Berkshire, he thought. There’s a fair number of them who are  shareholders.”
  • In Insider and Enron Cases, Balancing Lies and Thievery— I think this is a really interesting debate. And this essay is amazing — the lead Enron prosecutor walks through a very honest assessment of the case; admits that it had “fundamental weaknesses” and that Skilling “took steps inconsistent with alleged criminal intent”; and states that his trial strategy breakthrough came after watching the movie based on Bethany McLean’s outstanding book The Smartest Guys in the Room (which is highly recommended, by the way).

Articles

  • Remarks at the Festival of Economics — A recent speech by George Soros in which he outlines his theory of reflexivity and his thoughts on the euro/EU crisis. It’s long and a little dense — and the reflexivity stuff certainly isn’t new — but there are worthwhile thoughts and analysis in here if you wade through it. And here and here are other Soros articles on the topic.
  • Don’t Eat Fortune’s Cookie” — Michael Lewis’s recent speech to the graduating class at Princeton. I have mixed emotions on his articles and books — I love some of them, others not so much — but in the spirit of the recently passed graduation season, this is worth a quick read. Other commencement links:
  • Unequal Shares” — A look at dual-class share structures and public company governance in light of the recent Facebook IPO. A recent issue of The Economist also looked at the possible demise of the public company, which obviously a bit of hyperbole but has some worthwhile thoughts behind it.
  • “Not So Expert” — A column in The Economist about psychological biases and financial decisions. “The need for financial advice may be more psychological than practical.”
  • NYSE CEO: Public Has Lost Trust in Market — I think there is something to the NYSE’s side of the argument. And much like the move from private partnerships to publicly-traded corporations, I would view the exchanges’ decisions to IPO as a seminal moment in the evolution of the environment we have today.

Sign up!

Reading of Interest: Market Perspective Since the 1800s

Value Investing Newsletter

Value investing newsletter/email–ask to be on his distribution list so you can uncover interesting articles on investing: pcordway@gmail.com,

Two excellent blogs we can learn from:

http://brooklyninvestor.blogspot.com/

http://theenterprisinginvestor.blogspot.com/

And thanks to a reader, we have a chart book of markets since the 1800s for perspective. Fascinating!  The Longest Picture

Marie Eveillard

Another investor with an Austrian perspective on the gold market: http://www.kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/Broadcast/Entries/2012/1/24_Jean-Marie_Eveillard.html

Investment Fees: http://blogs.cfainstitute.org/investor/2012/06/28/investment-management-fees-are-much-higher-than-you-think/

 Chanos Discusses Value Traps

 Chanos Value Traps June 2012 and more on Chanos:

Chanos_presentation-Ira_Sohn_conf-5-27-09-1

29857553-Chanos-Transcript

Try to go the extra mile and look up the financials of any company he speaks about. What can you use from studying his presentation?

Financial Shenanigans!

A contributor, the Mysterious Dr. M, generously donated this book to the library in the Value Vault–Financial Shenanigans by H. Schillit.  This is a great book to improve your accounting and analysis skills. It doesn’t get better than this.

Financial_Shenanigans

Thanks to Dr. M’s generosity!