The Media, Market Logic and History

The farther back you can look, the farther forward you are likely to see.–Winston Churchill

Study history, study history, study history–Seth Klarman.

Contributing to….euphoria are two further factors little noted in our time or in past times. The first is the extreme brevity of the financial memory. In consequence, financial disaster is quickly forgotten. In further consequence, when the same or closely similar circumstances occur again…they are hailed by a new, often youthful, and always supremely self-confident generation as a brilliantly innovative discovery….There can be few fields of human endeavor in which history counts for so little as in the world of finance.  Past experience, to the extent that it is part of memory at all, is dismissed as the primitive refuge of the those who do not have insight to appreciate the incredible wonders of the present. — John K. Galbraith.

The Media, Market Logic and History

Read the two articles below. The Death of Equities was written in 1979 proclaiming a perpetual bear market for stocks while the other, Why Stocks are Riskier Than You Think, was recently written on March 12, 2012.  The point is not that these articles have no merit, but what are the illogical premises and conclusions in the articles? Can you think of at least three? What lessons of history can you learn?

http://www.businessweek.com/investor/content/mar2009/pi20090310_263462.htm 

The Death of Equities: How inflation is destroying the stock market

Editor’s Note: The huge declines in U.S. stocks in recent months have revived interest in a Business Week cover story from August 1979 entitled “The Death of Equities.” At the time the story was written, the stock market had sustained serious losses and the long-term health of the U.S. economy was a significant concern. The story has aroused some controversy over the years, as the stock market staged a strong comeback in the decades that followed its publication. But few, if any, market forecasters were willing to call such a recovery at the time, and the story provides a telling look at how inflation had ravaged the market landscape—and investor psychology—at the close of the 1970s. So step back in time with us and read BW’s take on the state of the market in August 1979, as originally published in the Aug. 13, 1979 industrial edition of Business Week.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204795304577221052377253224.html

Why Stocks Are Riskier Than You Think (March 12, 2012)

Most people can get the money they need for retirement without gambling heavily on equities, say Zvi Bodie and Rachelle Taqqu

Meet the Ex

If you can’t find at least three fallacies, then you will have to meet my Ex. Here she is: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&NR=1&v=E55ni_xc4ww

History Lessons

Several fallacies from the two articles that you were asked to read are discussed in Howard Marks’ article: It’s Déjà vu All Over Again.

http://www.oaktreecapital.com/MemoTree/D%C3%A9j%C3%A0%20Vu%20All%20Over%20Again%2003_19_12.pdf 

If two major business publications–Business Week and The Wall Street Journal–have articles with such muddled thinking then imagine what you encounter in your daily reading.

As Mr. Marks writes, “History amply demonstrates the tendency of investors and commentators alike to be pessimistic when the negatives collect, depressing prices, and optimistic when things are going well and prices are soaring. The lessons of history are highly instructive. Applying them isn’t easy, but they mustn’t be overlooked.”

Be on guard!

Chapter 11 in Competition Demystified: Games Companies Play, Of Interest

Obvious prospects for physical growth in a business do not translate into obvious profits for investors.–Ben Graham

Games Companies Play: A Structured Approach to Competitive Strategy, Part II Entry/Preemption Games.

This chapter may help you with your case study in Fox Broadcasting (Previous post found here:http://wp.me/p1PgpH-AK).

Question 1: What are the four characteristics of entry/preemption or “quantity” competitive situations that differ from pricing issues?

Question 2: What can a potential entrant do to discourage incumbents from resisting its entrance?

Question 3: You are faced with analyzing a competitive industry, and you want to understand what the players might do. Describe what techniques you might use to accomplish this analysis.

Weekend Reading

Ben Bernanke gives his point of view: http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2012/04/the-villain/8901/

Prize awarded to anyone who can explain the following. If central planning of an economy has been shown repeatedly to fail–witness USSR, Communist China, Cuba, North Korea, Welfare Europe–how can the Federal Reserve succeed in manipulating interest rates for a multi-trillion dollar economy?

How is Ben doing? Purchasing Power Calculator:   http://www.bls.gov/data/inflation_calculator.htm

Corporate compensation or Failure is the New Success:http://prudent-speculation.blogspot.com/2012/03/gimme-failure-baby.html  Why is this not surprising?  Why do corporate CEOs receive such distorted compensation. Hint: follow the money!

The government builds a listening center. Comforting. http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/03/ff_nsadatacenter/all/1

Next week while you do your case studies, we will discuss how to read a Value-Line Tear Sheet.  Do you know that almost any major library will have Value-Line available on-line for your use from home? It doesn’t get better than that!

Have a good weekend.

Chapter 10: Fox Becomes a Network (Into the Henhouse)

In my house there’s this light switch that doesn’t do anything. Every so often I would flick it on and off just to check. Yesterday, I got a call from a woman in Madagascar. She said, “Cut it out.” — Steven Wright

Chapter 10 in Competition Demystified: Into the Hen House

HBR Case Study on Fox News Network: https://rcpt.yousendit.com/1427965236/6c910671770adc188996bd7639688499

QUESTION 1: Describe how the three networks (ABC, NBC, and CBS) played the prisoner’s dilemma game in the 1960s and 1970s in regarding advertising pricing, advertising inventory, purchasing of shows, and hiring of talent.

QUESTION 2: How did Fox influence the other networks’ responses to its efforts to get behind their barriers to enter their market?

QUESTION 3: How effective was Fox’s strategy of having synergistic media business?

The analysis will be posted next Friday. Good luck!

STep Lightly

Have a good weekend and step lightly: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=spv1a5NMyvw&feature=related

In Good Faith

There is a sucker born every minute–P.T. Barnum

I am on several penny stock lists so I receive many promotions–fertile ground for finding short ideas occasionally. A by-product of this means I am a target of email like this………..

Re: In Good faith,

My name is Mrs. Maimouna Khalid, this as a personal mail directed to you and I request it to be treated as such. I lost my husband during the civil war in November 5th 2010. (Tactic one: build sympathy)

My personal doctor sent a letter of medical checkup last year March 2011 and testifies that I have a lung cancer, which can easily take off my life soon. I found it uneasy to survive myself, because a lot of investment cannot be run and manage by me again. (Tactic two: more sympathy, immediate action and set the hook).

I quickly call up a prophet as my adviser to give me positive thinking on this solution, He ministered to me to share my properties, wealth, to motherless baby/orphanage homes/people that need money for survival, both students that need money. (Tactic 3: provide another reason to help–help the orphanages).

I am writing this letter to you to help me distribute this(USD$12.5M )Twelve Million Five Hundred Thousand United States Dollars kept with a Fiduciary fund holder here in Abidjan Cote d’Ivoire to motherless babies/orphanage homes/people that need money for survivor in your country. (Tactic 4: A “reason” for me to be involved.)

15% of this money will be for you and your family; you must give 75% to (Motherless homes), orphanages, and widows in your country. (Tactic 5: appeal to my greed)

I will give more information to you as I await your response immediately. You are blessed.

 I certainly am blessed!

Sallam,

 

Mrs. Maimouna Khalid

 

Preventing Recession; Secret to Investing, Fascism, Billionaire lessons

Kill the poor?

A government secret meeting on a full-proof method to prevent recessions. Brilliant! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=owI7DOeO_yg&feature=related

The Secret to Investing?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jN1ZBvH8VUk

Fascism

http://mises.org/daily/5963/The-Vampire-Economy-and-the-Market

Billionaire Secrets

http://www.jamesaltucher.com/2012/03/the-spanx-woman-is-worth-a-billion-my-key-takeaways/

China’ Run on the Treasury http://lewrockwell.com/north/north1109.html

Coke and Pepsi’s Uncivil Cola Wars-Case Study Analysis

Money is better than poverty, if only for financial reasons–Woody Allen

Besides understanding economies of scale, the next area you need to master is understanding the prisoner’s dilemma and how companies coexist or compete within barriers to entry.

The case readings were presented here:http://wp.me/p1PgpH-yl

Remember that if the links do not work, then the materials are in a folder in the VALUE VAULT. Simply email Aldridge56@aol.com and request a key.

CASE STUDY ANALYSIS

The case study discussion in a PDF because of financial tables. Go here: http://www.yousendit.com/download/M3BsM25ITmFsMHhESjlVag

 Pepsi and Coke’s Uncivil Wars

Chapter 9 in Competition Demystified: Uncivil Cola Wars: Coke and Pepsi Confront the Prisoner’s Dilemma

What are the sources of competitive advantages in the soda industry?

First we should look at industry structure. The cola companies buy raw materials of sugar, sweeteners and flavorings from many suppliers then they turn the commodities into a branded product which consists of syrup/concentrated combined with water and bottles. The companies are joined at the hip with their bottlers/distributors who then sell to many retail outlets.  Selling bulky and heavy beverages lends itself to regional economies of scale advantages.

The soda companies cannot operate successfully unless their bottlers and distributors are profitable and content whether company-owned or franchised.

The existence of barriers to entry indicates that the incumbents enjoy competitive advantages that potential entrants cannot match. In the soft drink world, the sources of these advantages are easy to identify. First, on the demand side, there is the kind of customer loyalty that network executives, beer brewers and car manufacturers only dream about. People who drink sodas drink them frequently (habit formation), and they relish a constancy of experience that keeps them ordering the same brand, no matter the circumstances.

Both Coke and Pepsi exhibit the presence of barriers to entry and competitive advantage—stable *ROE can be influenced by whether bottlers’ assets are off or on the balance sheet

Second, there are large economies of scale in the soda business both at the concentrate maker and bottler levels. Developing new products and advertising existing ones are fixed costs, unrelated to the number of cases sold. Equally important, the distribution of soda to the consumer benefits from regional scale economies. The more customers there are in a given region, the more economical the distribution. A bottler of Coke, selling the product to 40% to 50% of the soda drinkers in the market area, is going to have lower costs than someone peddling Dr. Pepper to 5% to 56% of the drinkers.

During the “statesmen” era of Pepsi and Coke, what actions did each of the companies take? Why did they help raise profitability?

Note the stability of market share and ROE. ROE dipped in 1980 and 1982 as Pepsi and Coke waged a price war. Yet, market shares did not change as a result of the price war—both companies were worse off. Pepsi gained market share in the late 1970s versus Coke. Coke was slow and clumsy to respond.

Price wars between two elephants in an industry with barriers to entry tend to flatten a lot of grass and make customers happy. They hardly ever result in a dead elephant. Still, there are better and worse ways of initiating a price contest. Coke chose the worst. Coke chose to lower concentrate prices on those regions where its share of the cola market was high (80%) and Pepsi’s low (20 percent). This tactic ensured that for every dollar of revenue Pepsi gave up, Coke would surrender four dollars.

Coke luckily developed New Coke which allowed it to attack Pepsi in its dominant markets in a precise way—minimizing damage to Coke’s profits–and force a truce in the price wars.

They made visible moves to signal the other side that they intended to cooperate. Coca-Cola initiated the new era with a major corporate reorganization. After buying up many of the bottlers and reorganizing the bottler network, it spun off 51% of the company owned bottlers to shareholders in a new entity, Coca-Cola Enterprises, and it loaded up on debt for this corporation. With so much debt to service, Coca-Cola Enterprises had to concentrate on the tangible requirements of cash flow rather than the chimera of gaining great hunks of market share from Pepsi. PepsiCo responded by dropping the Pepsi Challenge, toning down its aggressive advertising and thus signaling that it accepted the truce. Profit margins improved. Operating profit margins went from 10% to 20% for Coca-Cola. Pepsi gain was less dramatic but also substantial.

Both companies focused on ROE rather than market share and sales growth.

The urge to grow, to hammer competitors and drive them out of business, or at least reduce their market share by a meaningful amount, had been a continual source of poor performance for companies that do have competitive advantages and a franchise, but are not content with it.

Alice Schroeder Criticizes the Deity; Housekeeping

Alice Schroeder savages Buffett

Alice Schroeder criticizes the deity, Warren Buffett: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-03-19/buffett-message-is-do-as-i-say-not-as-i-do-alice-schroeder.html

I recommend Snowball, Ms. Schroeder’s book on Buffett. I also think she points out several inconsistencies in Mr. Buffett’s public pronouncements on taxes and public policy. For example, how can Mr. Buffett be aware of the pernicious ravages of inflation upon investors yet not speak out against the Fed’s bail-outs and huge increases in money aggregates? What would Mr. Buffett’s father think–a Libertarian Senator who believed in the classical gold standard? Why wouldn’t he be for tremoving the power of fiat money from the government since the dollar has lost 96% of its value since the Fed;s creation in 1913? He knows the abuses of the printing press. Though, I do not agree with all her comments in this article. Learn from Mr. Buffett’s discussions about investing and business, then disregard the rest.

Also, disagreement, criticism and discussion are what helped to establish this country.

Coke-Pepsi Case Study

The analysis of this case will be posted by late tomorrow. Last chance to think through the case questions: http://wp.me/p1PgpH-yl

Video on Ken Shubin’s Investing Course at CBS; Winn Dixie Test; Blog Recommendation

Booms do not merely precede busts. In some important sense, they cause them. This idea, on which so much of the analysis of these pages rests, is borrowed from the Austrian School of economics. It was the Austrians who observed that people in markets periodically miscalculate together. One important source of misjudgment is the interest rates that the central banks impose. A too-low rate provides high spirits and speculation; a too-high rate induces morbidity and contraction. Thus, the ultra-low money-market rates of 1993 not only strengthened balance sheets and reduced mortgage-interest costs, as policymaker intended. They also cause an outpouring of capital investment, as policymakers might or might not have intended. If precedent holds, these projects will be carried to extreme lengths. Like the Manhattan skyscrapers of the 1920s and the Texas oil rigs of the 1980s, the white elephants of the 1990s (coffee bars and semiconductor fabricating plants are the top candidates at this moment) will bring grief to their sponsors and drama to the next recession. Overbuilding and underbuilding constitute opposite sides of the same cyclical coin. James Grant in The Trouble with Prosperity (1997)

Ken Shubin Discusses his Advanced Value Investing Course At Columbia’s GBS

http://www.valuewalk.com/2012/02/ken-shubin-stein-on-value-investing-at-columbia-business-school/

Ken mentioned the CIA Manual for Intelligence Analysis (120 pages): https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/books-and-monographs/psychology-of-intelligence-analysis/PsychofIntelNew.pdf

Even Value Investing Professors struggle with understanding how to grasp the critical aspects of a business and its industry. We are trying to avoid such a misunderstanding by our diligent study of competitive advantages.

QUIZ

Ken Shubin is Spence774 here: http://www.valueinvestorsclub.com/value2/Idea/ViewIdea/2998. Here he recommends Winn Dixie Stores(WINN) – $18.61 on Nov 29, 2007

Shubin’s Summary: WINN is less than a 50 cent dollar.  It is a post-bankruptcy supermarket chain located in the Southeast in the midst of a multi-year turnaround.  WINN’s margins are currently 1/6 of industry average.  WINN has temporary, fixable problems with no structural impediments to the achievement of industry average operating metrics.  With a strong balance sheet, excellent management, and strategic assets with great potential, we believe WINN shares have the potential to more than double over three years, with little risk of capital loss.

The price dropped 50% from his recommended price before the company was bought in December 2011 by another Supermarket chain.

QUESTION: What key question must you ask about Winn-Dixie (Winn)? Where might Winn have any chance of a competitive advantage? How would you analyze this industry? Your studies of Wal-Mart and competitive advantage should give you the understanding to answer this quiz.  An answer will be posted in the comments section by tomorrow.  What does the “Professor” neglect in his analysis?

Short Idea on Winn: http://www.valueinvestorsclub.com/value2/Idea/ViewIdea/28593

Recommended Blog: http://www.oddballstocks.com/2012/03/adams-golf-gets-buyout-and-other-net.html  An investor on the journey of learning how to invest.

 The Results of My Aptitude Test

I recently had an extensive aptitude test to prepare me for a career upgrade. Video of my results: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gV5OAfKhe34&feature=related

Opportunities in Life Insurance Stocks–Research from the Great Shelby Cullom Davis

And what I’m interested in is investing in people.– Arthur Rock

As a bull market continues, almost anything you buy goes up. It makes you feel that investing in stocks is a very easy and safe and that you’re a financial genius. –Ron Chernow

We discussed the relatively unknown, great investor, Shelby Davis, who compounded his capital by over 23% for 47 years in the insurance sector here: http://wp.me/p1PgpH-zM. I was able to dig out one of his research reports from Jastor (A scholarly Research Database). This 1957 report is worth reading because it shows you how a great investing mind thinks about an industry. Also, Mr. Davis goes back 30 to 50 years in his research–showing you his respect for understanding the history of the industry. Lessons for today.

Opportunities in Life Insurance Stocks by Shelby Cullom Davis

The present (August 1957) opportunity in life insurance stocks stems from three factors: (1) They are desirable long-term growth investments. (2) They are attractively priced at 10-12 times estimated 1956 adjusted earnings. (3) They have undergone a price correction for 18 months which has carried many issues as much as 30% to 40% below their highs. Yet earnings this year will be at an all-time high and the fundamentals on which earnings rest  (sales, improved mortality, high interest rates) appear favorable for the foreseeable future. The present opportunity exists largely because of market congestion.

The research report is here:https://rcpt.yousendit.com/1422135444/8aea00fbe09e0b2b58586a585283b49a  And this will be in the Value Vault Investor folder under Davis.

Xerox Case Study Analysis

 

To steal ideas from one person is plagiarism; to steal from many is research.–Steven Wright

We discussed the Xerox (XRX) here: http://wp.me/p1PgpH-zH.

Is the company over-leveraged?

You can download my comments here: http://www.yousendit.com/download/M3BsUXVpeFUwMEdLRmNUQw

Our goal is to have you practice skimming through the 10-K to find the critical information for making a particular judgment. There is no clear black or white answer since most investing requires judgment honed by practice and experience.

When determining the appropriate leverage, we have to understand the terms and conditions of the debt as well as the quality/cash flows of the assets being financed by that debt. Segment the different types of financing to gain a clearer understanding of the business and credit risks.

This wasn’t the best example, but the more you practice reading a 10-K the faster you will be able to organize your time.