Yearly Archives: 2012

Fraud School: Muddy Waters Research

In a boom fortunes are made; individuals wax greedy and swindlers come forward to exploit that greed–Charles Kindleberger in Manias, Panics, and Crashes

Case Study of Chinese Swindles

I once went to a Yale University Graduate Business Seminar on Investing in Cuba.  After four hours of hearing all the amazing “opportunities” available in Cuba that the students uncovered, I asked, “What return would you require to invest in Cuba?”  A commotion ensued as the calculators whirred and then students cried out, “12%, 15% even 20%.”  “OK” I replied, “If your deal is estimating a 20% annual return, what is your cost of capital now-as I tore up the imaginary contract into tiny pieces and then threw the confetti in the air?”  SILENCE.

By the way, to this day Cuba has defaulted on ALL their TRADE DEBT! What good is a cost of capital calculation with no rule of law? Don’t be a lamb lead to slaughter.

Muddy Waters Fraud School

http://www.muddywatersresearch.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/MW_FraudSchool_20120410.pdf

http://www.muddywatersresearch.com/

Free Book on Aptitudes from Johnson O’Connor Research Foundation, Inc.

Johnson O’Connor was first mentioned here: http://wp.me/p1PgpH-vM

Free Book available for download

http://www.jocrf.org/resources/books.html

We are happy to announce the publication of a
new book, Understanding Your Aptitudes.

A copy is given to every client, and it is also now
available as a .pdf file. Click on link above and scroll to the bottom of the page (92 pages).

Case Study: Stub Stocks or Sum of the Parts Analysis of Loews (L)

If you go to work tomorrow wearing a green shirt and say, “I’m going to win a million dollars today because everyone knows when you wear a green shirt on Tuesdays, you win a million dollars,” your colleagues will grab a giant butterfly net. You’re predicting an outcome that 1.) has no historical precedent and 2.) lacks any rooting in reality. You see that clearly.

Yet every time I (Ken Fisher) talk about history’s role as a powerful tool in capital markets forecasting, inevitably some say, “Past performance is no indication of the future!” Well, that is not why you should look at history. Use history as a laboratory–to understand the range of reasonable expectations. For example, when event X happens, the outcomes are usually B,C or D, but can be anywhere from A to F.  So I know that anything could happen, but odds are greater something like A through F happens, with odds still higher on B, C, and D. And the odds of something outside that range happening is very, very low, so it would take exceptional extra knowledge to bet on something like that happening.  (Source Markets Never Forget, But People Do, Fisher)

Case Study in Valuing a Stub–Loews, Corp (L)

These opportunities can offer (mostly) non correlated returns to the general market. Calculating the price of a stub is relatively straight-forward with publicly traded subsidiaries. These are typically non-franchise companies. Our goal in this case is to find the value of the stub (residual value) versus the market price of the conglomerate and its various subsidiaries. Is there opportunity here? What else would you need to consider?  In a day or two I will post the analysis. To help you, I have posted several readings below this case.

Link to Loews Annual Report and 10-K (2011): http://ir.loews.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=102789&p=irol-index

Readings on Sum of the Parts Analysis and Stub Stocks

Sum of the Parts Conglomerates

Pratte on Liquidation and Creation of Stub Stocks

Stubs Maurece Schiller 1966  Prof. Greenblatt referenced and suggested this book as an example of how long special situation opportunities have existed. Interesting historical examples. Chapter on Stubs.

Leveraged Recaps and Exchange Offers_NYU

Case Study Update on SNPK: How the Scam Works and Who is Behind the Promotion

In the last post on SNPK (SunPeak Ventures) http://wp.me/p1PgpH-z5 we discussed toxic convertibles (“Death Spiral Converts”). Since then, the price has doubled as the email blasts and press releases pour forth, “MASSIVE upmove, ROCKET price rise, TO THE MOON, Next Price targe, $5!” I am missing out on  SPECTACULAR gains!!!  When I went to do my typical company visit, all I found was a P.O. Box on Long Island.

For a more detailed analysis of how the scam works: http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=73392869#

In a nutshell, various promoters receive “free” stock and then sell on the price rise as the fools rush in.

SNPK was set up from day one to put shares that cost next-to-nothing into the hands of undisclosed insiders using Panamanian based business entities with hired officers as a front so that these insiders could dump their shares during a paid promotion and make out with millions of dollars in profits.
These Panamanian based business entities have extremely strong links to Eric Van Nguyen’s promotional companies leaving this poster very confident that Eric Van Nguyen and others close to him may really control the shares being held in the name of the anonymous Panamanian based entities.

Awesomepennystocks only wants you to buy SNPK shares so  those Panamanian based entities can sell their shares.  The company started spewing press releases at the same time as the paid promotion started. The company is involved in helping with the insider enrichment scheme.  SNPK sold those shares for pennies to those Panamanian based entities then forward split those shares 45:1 to increase the profits made from the selling of those shares.

The plan is to haul in profits while illegally manipulating the stock through promotional spam and wash trading, eventually leaving a bunch of gullible impressionable bag holders in their wake.  The recently confirmed involvement of the regulators asking questions is probably going to hurt APS’s plans to enact their insider enrichment scheme.  Awesomepennystocks is trying to put a positive spin on things and keep investors from selling their stock before the Panamanian based entities can finish unloading theirs. See below:

Habana Investments got 350,000 shares for $1,750 ($.005/share) which after the forward split became 15,750,000 shares ($.00011/share)

CHP Investments got 350,000 shares for $1,750 ($.005/share) which after the forward split became 15,750,000 shares ($.00011/share)

Verna Thompson got 350,000 shares for $1,750 ($.005/share) which after the forward split became 15,750,000 shares ($.00011/share)
When the original SNPK shell was first set up 8 entities were given 350,000 shares of SNPK for $1,750.

What will happen?

How can this happen? Who will stop this? The price promotion/scam stops when there are no more fools left to sell to then the price will collapse “mysteriously.”

Will the SEC or Attorney General step in to “save” investors from themselves? No, the government is too busy preparing to fence-in its citizens from escaping. Go here:http://www.truthistreason.net/senate-bill-1813-owe-taxes-your-passport-and-travel-is-denied  What is next?  If you owe a parking ticket, then without due process, your passport–after you are stripped searched–will be revoked. If only we had a constitution that was respected. The Sheeple won’t act.

I will continue to report on the on-going saga of SNPK. Who needs entertainment while this unfolds. Like a horror film; you don’t know the precise ending–just that the scene will end badly.

Search Strategy: Copying Others

Search Strategy

If you plan to look through the investment positions of other known investors like Marty Whitman, Michael Price, Seth Klarman, etc., make sure you have as good an understanding or better of the particular company that you buy. Never cease to do your own work or you will neither learn nor probably profit.  Mr. Mohnish of www.pabraifunds.com uses this technique shamelessly. I personally doubt that Mr. Pabrai has a solid grasp of what a franchise is by his investments in Pinnacle Airlines, Exide (XIDE), a battery company, and Lend, a subprime originator. You may be copying others who, in turn, are copying others–a reflexive circle of ignorance and sloth.

An interesting blog post: Trolling through 13-Fs or a Search Strategy: http://classicvalueinvestors.com/i/2012/04/i-am-an-investor-not-an-inventor/

Don’t forget to view other blogs:www.simoleonsense.com and www.greenbackd.com

Enjoy Your Easter.

Valuing Growth

Try saying Profits without “Quotation Marks.”

Valuing Growth

A reader, Arden, asked an intelligent question about how I value growth. Since I am on the road and will not post again until Tuesday, I wanted to post Prof. Greenwald’s Lecture Notes on valuing growth.

Valuing Growth_ManagingRisk

Read through these and post your thoughts.

Have a happy Easter!

Robert Higgs on The Government’s Fear and Ratchet Effect

Last night at the NYC Junto, Robert Higgs who is an author, economist and historian spoke about our current situation. In summary, we are on the Titanic. If America’s spending, taxing, regulatory, and entitlement trends do not radically change then expect extremely low to negative real economic growth, more political tension and higher inflation. Nothing has been done to reduce or eliminate risks in the financial system. In fact, banks are more concentrated and the Fed has shown it will intervene in any way possible. Economic and financial uncertainty reigns.

The trend is toward more government control (Obamacare, FEMA, Ignoring/Eliminating the US Constitution, etc.). The government creates the crisis through negative real interest rates which cause massive malinvestment, the economy crashes, then the government blames Wall Street, greedy speculators and the lack of regulation. Then more controls are put in place, the economy slows, more stimulus, a manipulated boom occurs, then an inevitable bust-repeat as necessary.

Expect 1970s markets and inflation. The nominal price of stocks may go up, but the real price won’t. Expect MUCH MORE volatility.

He goes into more detail here:

Lectures:http://mises.org/authors/369/Robert-Higgs

How the government uses to fear to increase its powerhttp://mises.org/daily/1819

http://mises.org/daily/5640/Public-Choice-and-Political-Leadership

Readers in NYC: Robert Higgs, Historian and Austrian Economist, Speaking on Current Pol/Econ. Crisis

Tonight at 7:30 PM (sorry for such late notice), Mr. Higgs, Ph.d (history and economics), who is an expert on the Great Depression, will speak tonight in New York City at the JUNTO. His books like Crisis & Leviathan or Resurgence of the Warfare State, the Crisis Since 9/11 have an insightful grasp of both history and economics. For a 19 minute radio interview of Mr. Higgs discussing why the current recovery has been so sluggish and the historical context go here:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tcFBoXgDsU0  Remember Charlie Munger’s Advice: Study History.  This man can teach it!

See you there if you can make it.

PLACE: At the Junto (started by Victor Niederhoffer) this evening (Thursday, April 5, 20102)

General Society Library, 20 West 44 St., between 5th and 6th Aves., NYC near the Grand Central Terminal

TIME: Admission Free — No reservation necessary * We’ll socialize from 7:00pm. * The meeting begins at ABOUT 7:30pm with a discussion of current issues and events. * The featured speaker is introduced at ABOUT 8:00pm. * The meeting will continue to ABOUT 10:00pm.

SPEAKER: Robert Higgs will speak on: “Likely Politico-economic Legacies of the Current Crisis”  He is a sr. fellow political economy, author “Leviathan” and many other books. He’s the editor of the Independent Institute’s quarterly magazine Independent Review. Here’s his bio, with links to his writing, multimedia, blog posts, presentations and working papers: tiny.cc/Higgs. In his Junto talk he’ll consider some of the most significant changes wrought by the economic crisis since 2008 and the government’s responses to it.  For the near term, some legacies are fairly certain; for the longer term, the legacies are less certain, but we may speculate about the possibilities and their effects on government and the economy.  His newest book will be released on May 1st. You can read about “Delusions of Power: New Explorations of the State, War, and Economy” at: tiny.cc/HiggsBook. Many of his presentations are available at YouTube: tiny.cc/HiggsVideo.  His three-hour appearance on C-SPAN’s “In Depth” program on Book TV is here, in three one-hour sections: tiny.cc/HiggsDepth.

Junto

Junto is a group that shares information
and discusses current issues...
plus presents speakers to talk with us:

Robert Higgs
"Likely Politico-economic Legacies of the Current Crisis"

Thursday, April 5th 7:30 PM Admission FREE 

DIRECTIONS: Subway: 4, 5, 6, S to Grand Central -- 42nd St.
or
 B, D, F, 7 to 42nd Street -- Sixth Ave. at Bryant Park
or
A, C, E, N, Q, R, S, 1, 2, 3 to Times Square -- 42nd St.

Bus: M1, M2, M3, M4, M5, M42, M98, M101, M102, M104, Q32

Train: MTA Metro-North Railroad to Grand Central 

Car: Some private parking facilities in the area. Parking on
side streets is metered, limited to specific days and times.

Please note:
* Junto is not the usual sort of meeting with a long speech
followed by Q & A. Junto's invited speakers give a short
presentation and are challenged to defend their assertions.
* Discussions are intense, but polite. Participation by all attendees is highly encouraged. * Junto meets on the first Thursday of every month, at the
General Society Library, 20 West 44 St., NYC, between
5th and 6th Aves., near Grand Central Terminal

—————————————————————————
Visit Junto's site for information on current and past speakers,
read previous newsletters, to sign up for the Junto e-newsletter:
NYCjunto.com     Visit Junto on Facebook:
on.fb.me/JuntoNYC

Analysis of Fox News: A Fox in the Henhouse-Entry Strategies

Chase after money and security and your heart will never unclench. Care about other people’s approval and you will be their prisoner. Do your own work, then step back. The only path to serenity. Lao Tzu

Fox News Entry Strategy

Questions on Chapter 10 in Competition Demystified and the HBR Case Study of Fox’s Strategy were posted: http://wp.me/p1PgpH-AK

As a review, this case is important to study for how a company enters under barriers to entry. If you can find such a company in the early stages of building a competitive advantage, you can earn huge returns as an investor. It ain’t easy, but one way to start is to study this case. Also, instructive in how incumbents respond. For those who don’t have a digital copy of the book, you can email me at aldridge56@aol.com and write (ONLY) BOOK in the subject line. I will email you the PDF within 24 hours. The PDF lacks the graphs and tables but has the text. I suggest you splurge on the $12 to $13 with shipping for a second-hand book through www.Amazon.com.

My write-up of the case is here:Fox News Case Study on Entry Strategies Chapter 10 of Comp Demyst

Note the subtleties of Murdoch’s entry moves.

Pepsico, Inc. (PEP) Value-Line Case Study

Robert L. Rodriquez, CFA and CEO of First Pacific Advisors in a speech to Institute for Private Investors on Feb. 15, 2012: “I met Charlie Munger in my USC graduate school investment class and had the opportunity to ask him this important question, “If I could do one thing to make myself a better investment professional, what would it be? He answered, “Read history! Read History!” This was among the best pieces of advice I ever received.”

The full speech  at Gurufocus is here (scroll down for the direct link): http://www.gurufocus.com/news/162873/caution-danger-ahead–r-rodriguezfpa

Value-Line Analysis of Pepsi

Our last analysis of a Value-Line Tear Sheet was Balchem (BCPC): http://wp.me/p1PgpH-CY

Now lets look at Pepsi Co., Inc. (PEP): Pepsi_VL

Without glancing at price (easy to do when flipping through the Value-Line at the library or open the digital PDF while looking away from your computer, scroll down and then focus on the numbers) I see Return on total Capital (ROTC) of 30% to 16%, now in the high teens. Return on Equity has ranged 42% to 29%. The 80% higher ROE than ROTC means debt is helping boost returns significantly. Debt is useful as long as its doesn’t impair the company under stressful conditions. The ten-year history of 16 to 25% ROTC shows that this is probably a franchise. Good. Value will be in the growth.

As a review for beginners from Value-Line:

Return on Shareholder Equity, meanwhile, reveals how much has been earned on just the stockholder equity. Value Line calculates this by dividing net profits by shareholder equity, which includes both common and preferred equity. Again, higher percentages are generally better.

Neither of these measures can be used in exclusion, however. They are best used as a starting point or as a comparison tool. Note that comparisons between companies in the same industry will provide more insight than comparisons between companies in different industries. Indeed, because of the differences between industry fundamentals, some industries will have a preponderance of low scores while others will have large numbers of companies with high scores. That said, using these two measures as a first screen can help to quickly limit the number of companies under review and will, generally, direct investors toward higher quality entities.

It is also interesting to compare these two measures for the same companies, which can provide insights into how well companies are making use of their debt. For example, if Return on Total Capital is going up but Return on Shareholders Equity isn’t following along, or, worse is static or falling, additional debt financing isn’t benefiting shareholders.

Another statistic to consider along with these two is Retained to Common Equity, which is colloquially referred to as the “plowback ratio”. Value Line calculates this measure by dividing net income less all dividends (common and preferred) by shareholder’s equity. It measures the extent to which a company has internally generated resources to invest in the company’s future growth. A high percentage here, coupled with an increasing Book Value, is a clear signs that management is increasing the value of its business. This can help validate both the above measures and provide a degree of reassurance that a business is self-sustaining. Like the other two measures, this data point is available in the Statistical Array of each Value Line report.

Back to the PEP Value-Line

Operating margins 20% and net profit margins at 10% with a slight trend down. This may be good or bad depending if margins will stabilize or go up. Even if the margins go down even more–if the company is earning more than its cost of capital and the market price is more pessimistic–then the company could still be a good investment, depending upon price. Just note the slight decline in margins, the business is under temporary stress? Higher capex, higher costs that are not passed through, etc.  We don’t know the details of the story, just a question we need to answer with further research.

Sales per share have been rising 8% to 10% for the past decade, and sales did not drop in 2009, so this company has a stable product with low cyclicality.

Book value shows a steady 6% to 7% increase. 40% to 45% of their earnings are being paid out to shareholders in the form of dividends, share count is declining very slightly. Good, the company is a slow grower and is returning excess capital to shareholders.  The danger might be if management leveraged the company too much.

A glance at the balance sheet shows $26.8 billion in long-term debt; $5.5 billion in net pension obligations and 1.6 billion in cap. leases then subtract 3 billion in cash so we have 30.9 billion or $31 billion in net debt (round up) to add to the market cap to reach our Enterprise Value (Remember we are buying the whole company including its debt). With 1.55 billion shares that is $31 debt/1.55 shares or $20 of net debt per share.

I see about $6 of “Cash Flow” and about $2 of capex for $4 of FCF per share. Note the jump in Capex from 2009 to 2010-what happened? With no growth I certainly would pay $40 to $45 for about a 10% return if I was confident of the company’s franchise. All metrics have grown 7% to 10% over the past ten years. Can that growth continue? This company seems like and inflation pass-through–Sales and profits will rise at least as fast as nominal inflation on average. Good. So if this company could grow at 5% to 6% and I was confident of that growth I would pay $65 to $80 per share for that cash flow, but my confidence level for that future growth had better be high.

Anyway, I have about $40 no growth value for the company but more like $65 to $80 for the business if I assume 5% to 6% growth–like buying a bond. My alternatives are 3% for 20 year US Bonds.

Now to the market price, I see we have a $66 share price as of April 4, 2012 so the market cap is 1.55 billion shares x $66 or about 102 billion but for simplicity–$100 billion then add the 31 billion in net debt for a total of $130 billion for the business (133 billion if we wish to be more precise) for an Enterprise value of $84 to $85 per share.

My range is $65 to $80 (aggressive assumptions?), so the company is out of my range by $5 to $20 or a 5% to 25% swing in price), but a swing of 10% to 15% in price (thank you index selling!) could make this an attractive investment.

Now I do a quick double-check. I have about $85 per share in enterprise value divided into $4 of FCF for an earnings yield of 4.7%. Growth has averaged 9% for the past ten years and I will knock that down to 4% to 6% to be conservative, then add that to 4.7% earnings yield–over 45% of that earnings yield is being paid out to me in the form of a 3.5% dividend yield based on the current market price. Now I have a range of return 8.7% to 10.7%. Not bad assuming I can have confidence in the franchise which 80 years of history leads me to believe I can. However, I do need to note the issues I brought up like the increase in capex from 2009 to 2010, insider activity and the terms of the company’s debt (ALWAYS check terms of debt and READ THE PROXY).

The company trades at a market multiple but is an above average company. If I HAD to own stocks, I would own PEP because you are getting an above average company for the market price. However, I (not you perhaps) seek a 12% to 15% return. A $8 to $15 dollar drop (certainly possible) could make this very attractive to me. Conversely I could sell a 2013 or 2014 put at a 55 strike for the amount of shares I would wish to own (I want a 20 to 25 company portfolio of “cash gushers” to supplement my spin-off asset investments).

I place this in the #2 work-on pile. Remember not to fool yourself. If I drove up to Pepsi’s headquarters in Purchase, NY (20 minutes from where I live) and spent two years studying the company, I don’t think I would understand the business better than reading the last 5 annual reports and proxies.  PEP is a world-wide conglomerate operating in 100 countries with 100s of different products in major food categories. I am looking at this more as a financial machine. Since the company is selling consumer products (branded food) I know the operational risks are lower than a cyclical steel company.  I will look for bombs on the balance sheet or any tricky accounting. If I can’t understand the financials, then pass. Time spent 2 minutes.

Miller Industries, Inc. (MLR)

Anyone want to take a crack at MLR: MLR_VL? I will post your analysis.