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Stanley Druckenmiller at Ira Sohn Conference [LIVE]

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Stanley Druckenmiller Ira Sohn coverage brought to you by ValueWalk.

Stanley Druckenmiller Ira Sohn

Stanley Druckenmiller founded Duquesne Capital Management, which he ran until he closed the firm at the end of 2010. Stanley Druckenmiller was a Managing Director at Soros Fund Management, where he served as Lead Portfolio Manager of the Quantum Fund and Chief Investment Officer of Soros, and had overall responsibility for funds with a peak asset value of $22 billion. Stanley Druckenmiller is Chairman of the Board of the Harlem Children’s Zone, a Board member of the Children’s Scholarship Fund, Memorial Sloan Kettering, and the Environmental Defense Fund, a member of the investment committee of Bowdoin College and co-founder and Board member of the Kasparov Chess Foundation.

You can always come visit the site frequently to find the latest. Other (and easier options include) following us on  Google+LinkedinTwitterFacebook,  RSS,  where we will be posting live coverage. You can also sign up for our newsletter to get coverage of the event at 3PM EST (make sure to select business and daily under the options).

Check out below to see our live coverage.

Find our full coverage of the event here

Stanley Druckenmiller Ira Sohn Conference Live

2:25 PM EST: Stanley Druckenmiller to present “The Commodities Conundrum”. Does not like Bernanke post QEII. Druckenmiller is not a fan of market correction, Says he likes market short term, hates them long term.

2:28: Druckenmiller thinks QE will end soon, does not have a time stamp.  Says BoJ’s Kuroda’s easing is Bernanke’s times 3.

2:30: Unitl Fed changes policy he sees no case for a bear market. Says BoJ’s policy is more appropriate, compared to Fed’s, as it is achieving deflation target.

2:32: Sees a 18 months run in NIKKEI 225 (INDEXNIKKEI:NI225) even if BoJ’s policy fails.

2:33: Druckenmiller is discussing why commodity prices are going down. Thinks the super cycle in commodities is at an end now.

2:35: China misallocated resources and misread signals. Commodity producers ramped up production and misread situation

2:38 The current supply demand situation in commodities is deadly.

2:40 Says super cycle is over, last two years have shown that. The past two years are not a correction, they are a trend.

2:41: Druckenmiller says avoid commodities and short the Australian dollar. Also cautions against Brazil and South Africa. currencies because of commodity slowdown. (Sidenote: George Soros is rumored to be short AUD)

2:45: Says he finds no other US company as well positioned as Google Inc (NASDAQ:GOOG), no China exposure, amasses 80 percent of search and very few hedge fund major holdings.

Presentation ends after drawing many laughs from audience.

 

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Steve Eisman At Ira Sohn Conference [LIVE]

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Steve Eisman Ira Sohn coverage brought to you by ValueWalk.

Steve Eisman Ira Sohn

Steve Eisman is Founder and Portfolio Manager of Emrys Partners, L.P. Mr. Eisman has over 20 years of investing experience. Prior to founding Emrys, Steve Eisman was a Partner and the Senior Portfolio Manager of the FrontPoint Financial Services Fund, which began operations in March 2004, and the FrontPoint Financial Horizons Fund, which began operations in January 2006. Prior to FrontPoint, Steve Eisman was a Managing Director and Senior Financial Services Analyst at Chilton Investment Co. Steve Eisman was ranked as an All-Star Analyst by both Institutional Investor and The Wall Street Journal on multiple occasions.

Steve Eisman Ira Sohn Conference Live

3:08 PM EST: Eisman starts off by discussing housing in USA vs Canada. Bullish on housing in USA. Says affordability best in decades.

3:10 PM: Eisman likes Forestar Group Inc. (NYSE:FOR). If 136k land valued at mark to market, Forestar would be easily worth $30.

3:13 PM: Eisman recommends Colony Financial Inc (NYSE:CLNY), CLNY has potential to spin out single family rental business and increase leverage to boost shares.

Colony Financial Inc (NYSE:CLNY) up on Eisman’s recommendation

3:15: Eisman on Ocwen Financial Corp (NYSE:OCN), says the company is completely misplaced. OCN up in trading.

3:18: Eisman calls OCN most powerful play in housing. At FCF of 20-25 percent annually, OCN could grow tremendously. Says it can produce an operating cash flow equal to a substantial percentage of its market cap over the next three years.

3:21: Canada housing prices have shrugged off weak personal income growth. Canadian banks have very large funding gaps, $427 billion for the top six banks.

OCN up from 38.8 to 39.8 on Eisman’s remarks.

3:25: The funding gap in Canada has been filled by their Canada Fannie Mae, so many Canadian mortgage loans are insured by CMHC, Canadian banks hold very little capital domestically. CMHC providing growth in mortgage credit while banks cut exposure.

3:29: 50 percent of Canadian wealth in residential structures, could lead to trouble for Canada. If bubble cracks Banks will be hit as they are expensive.

3:32: Home Capital Group Inc (TSE:HCG) is relying on non prime uninsured mortgages, largest non prime mortgage originator in Canada.

Presentation ended.

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David Stemerman at Ira Sohn Conference [LIVE]

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David Stemerman at Ira Sohn: coverage brought to you by ValueWalk.

David Stemerman Ira Sohn

David Stemerman is Founder and Portfolio Manager of Conatus Capital Management, a global long-short equity manager. Conatus Capital seeks to generate out performance from both long and short investments through individual stock selection based on in-depth, fundamental research into U.S. and global equities. Prior to launching Conatus Capital in 2008, David Stemerman was a partner and portfolio manager at Lone Pine Capital. Previously, David Stemerman was an analyst at equity long-short hedge funds Ulysses Management, the successor firm to Odyssey Capital, and HPB Associates and was an associate at McKinsey & Company.

David Stemerman at Ira Sohn Conference Live

3:39 PM EST: Stemerman, Tiger cub 2.0 is now presenting. Stemmerman bearish on South Africa (second one today, Druckenmiller recommended short too). Unsustainable income, unsound lending, cycle turn from boom to bust, the SA Banks are vulnerable.

3:41: South Africa banking is heading towards bust, says SA today similar to practices in subprime crisis in US.

3:46: Stemerman’s visits to SA revealed that half of loan officials had less than a year of experience. Says mainstream lenders have already begun to pull back, start of a meltdown.

3:48: African Bank is offering as much as $20,000 without collateral, says Stemerman.The bank gives out loans for no collateral, has grown 30 percent a year and taken 27 percent market share. Stemerman recommends short African Bank.

3:52 Presentation wraps up.

 

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Jonathon Jacobson Ira Sohn Conference [LIVE]

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Jonathon Jacobson Ira Sohn coverage brought to you by ValueWalk.

Jonathon Jacobson Ira Sohn

Jonathon Jacobson is the Founder, Chief Investment Officer and Chief Executive Officer of Highfields Capital Management LP, an $11 billion Boston-based investment management firm established in July 1998. Prior to founding Highfields, Jonathon Jacobson spent eight years as a senior equity portfolio manager at Harvard Management Company, Inc., which is responsible for investing Harvard University’s endowment.

Jonathon Jacobson currently serves as a Director of Clear Channel Media Holdings, Inc. He is also a past member of the Asset Managers’ Committee of the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets, formed in 2007 to foster a dialogue with Federal Reserve Board and Department of the Treasury on issues of significance to the investment history.

You can always come visit the site frequently to find the latest. Other (and easier options include) following us on  Google+LinkedinTwitterFacebook,  RSS,  where we will be posting live coverage. You can also sign up for our newsletter to get coverage of the event at 3PM EST (make sure to select business and daily under the options).

Check out below to see our live coverage.

Find our full coverage of the event here

Jonathon Jacobson Ira Sohn Conference Live

5:10 PM EST: Jacobson is up next. He used to manage Harvard’s investments, and now he’s in charge of Highfields Capital Management LP.

5:15 PM EST: Jacobson is about to outline a short. It’s going to be difficult to follow Chanos.

5:15 PM EST: The last time Jacobson talked about a short it was Enron, this could be good.

5:17 PM EST: Jacobson is telling the Ira Sohn to beware AT&T Inc. (NYSE:T). All dividends are not created equal.

5:18 PM EST: Beware AT&T Inc. (NYSE:T). A big T flashes behind Jacobson.

5:19 PM EST: Jacobson also tells everyone to beware Linn Energy LLC (NYSE:LNN).

5:20 PM EST: Digital Realty Trust Inc. (NYSE:DLR) is a melting ice cube says Jacobson.

5:20 PM EST: Digital Realty Trust Inc. (NYSE:DLR) is a REIT with a market cap of over $10 billion. Shares have dropped almost 5% after market.

5:22 PM EST: Price Target $20 on Digital Realty Trust Inc. (NYSE:DLR). Stock closed at $69 today. Short interest on float is around 13%.

5:23 PM EST: Digital Realty Trust Inc. (NYSE:DLR) dividend not sustainable, no moat, capex keeps going higher. Stock down 7% now.

5:24 PM EST: Competition coming in from Google Inc (NASDAQ:GOOG), Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT).

5:27 PM EST: Recurring capex looks like $413 million to Jacobson. Digital Realty Trust Inc. (NYSE:DLR) share recovered slightly, down 5.8% now.

5:29 PM EST: Bottom line from Jacobson Digital Realty Trust Inc. (NYSE:DLR) can’t pay dividends.

 

 

 

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Hottest Links: The Wall Of Worry, Charlatan Of The Year, And JCP Fail

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Hottest links for Wednesday 4th December, the late edition (see Tuesday’s edition of hottest links). Get our free daily newsletter (which HAS BEEN RECENTLY UPDATED) and never miss a single linkfest. Also, now if you sign up you will get our new e-book on value investing.

Top stories for today are included below.  We’ve got some great stories today, including a great way to look at the macro environment, a promotion backfiring on JCP, and of course some classic Warren Buffett on value investing.

Hottest Links: Stories

Value Investing

CIO Of Buffett’s GenRe Issues Direst Warning Yet

The Chief Investment Officer of General Re-New England Asset Management – a company wholly-owned by Warren Buffett’s
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE:BRK.A) (NYSE:BRK.B), has issued one of the direst proclamations about the future to date and blasts the Fed’s role in creating the biggest mess in financial history, is truly upside down. [Tyler Durden, ZeroHedge]

 Hottest Links

Charlie Gasparino Has An Idea

As the world’s foremost business and economics reporter, everyone expects Gasparino to attend the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. [Bess Levin, DealBreaker]

The Last Word On Asness’ Alpha, Buffet’s Beta

I was informed that the theses that took me three five posts to present was wrapped up by Matt Levine in one little package two days prior to my attempts. And he does it better, backwards and in heels. Plus, to get the alliteration in the headline I had to mix up the alpha and the beta. [Climateer Investing]

10 Simple Rules that Brought Me Financial Nirvana

Now, while I am too young to dispel any life-changing advice on “how to be a financial rockstar” or “how to remove all financial worries from you life”, I am happy to share below 10 rules that have changed my life for the better over the past few years, and how these can also benefit anyone who practices them with discipline and integrity. [Vishal Khandelwal, Safal Niveshak]

Avoiding Ignorance

You can’t deal with ignorance if you can’t recognize its presence. If you’re suffering from primary ignorance it means you probably failed to consider the possibility of being ignorant or you found ways not to see that you were ignorant.  [Shane Parrish, Fanam Street]

Funds

The 2013 Wall of Worry

We saw this bias in the media over the antics in Washington, D.C., fixating on the threat of a default on U.S. Treasury debt during the debt ceiling discussions, or a return to recession due to the impact of the sequester spending cuts. [Cullen Roche, Pragmatic Capitalism]

LPL2  Hottest Links

Build Your Own BS Index — and Don’t Be Fooled By Math

Dickson did it by grouping all S&P 500 stocks by letter of the alphabet, equal-weighting the groups. Alcoa Inc (NYSE:AA) and Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) (AAPL) go with the A’s, Broadcom Corporation (NASDAQ:BRCM) and Broadcom Corporation (NASDAQ:BRCM) go with the B’s, etc. The equal weighting shaves the large stocks’ disproportionate influence.

 Hottest Links

Analyst Estimates And Downgrades: A Look At Nuance

While Thill downgraded his rating of Nuance Communications Inc. (NASDAQ:NUAN) due to the his long-term outlook of the country, Standpoint’s Ronnie Moas looked at the short term indicators, concluding that “the stock is a nice price for good company.” [TipRanks, ValueWalk]

Special Report: Is Corporate India Healthy?

As we continue our special coverage of India, it becomes important to ask the obvious. How are Indian companies doing? For that, we turn to the chief investment officer of SBI Mutual funds, Navneet Munot, CFA. [William Ortel, CFA Institute, ValueWalk]

NQ Mobile’s Bylaw Proposal Reminds Some Of Chesapeake, Green Mountain

When insiders of any company pledge their shares for a personal loan, eyebrows are raised, and now NQ Mobile Inc (ADR) (NYSE:NQ) is changing its bylaws make it easier for what some see as a questionable practice. [Michelle Jones, ValueWalk]

Cautionary Signals for Investors

The mission of a good investment analyst is to think about the impossible thoughts — or at least the ones that seem improbable to most. The job of a prudent portfolio manager is to anticipate problems in the face of increasing momentum. [A. Michael Lipper, CFA Institute, ValueWalk]

Japan economic package to total $182 billion

The package, to be approved by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government on Thursday, will be worth 18.6 trillion yen ($181.6 billion), the sources told Reuters on condition of anonymity. [William Mallard, Reuters]

US Corporate Plans Hit Five-Year High in Funded Ratio

A typical US corporate pension plans’ funded ratio improved to 93% as of end of November, a record high since October 2008 and up 19% year-to-date, according to Mercer. [Sage Um, aiCIO]

Kyle Bass On Potential War Between Japan And China

Kyle Bass lived in relative obscurity until 2007, when he burst on the global hedge fund scene with a huge bet on subprime mortgages. Some might argue that outsized bets befit his Texan origins. But everything Bass does seems larger than life and goes against the conventional tide. [ValueWalk]

CIOs Earn $2.43 Million on Average… At Hedge Funds

As with CIOs, the typical CEO’s compensation dropped compared with last year, although it still amounted to a comfortable $2.28 million. Portfolio managers came in just behind CEOs as the third-best paid employee,s with average earnings of $2.27 million. [Leanna Orr, aiCIO]

Long-Short Hedge Funds Warm Up to Europe

U.S. and European Regulators have prescribed notably different remedies to help their economies recover. With Europe finally on the mend, perhaps, a region that had neem a feeding ground mainly for credit and distressed hedge funds is looking increasingly attractive to long-short equity managers. [Imogen Rose-Smith, Institutional Investor]

Misc

The Ultimate Guide To Value A Stock

Suppose temperament wise, you have all that it takes to be a sound investor. You can wait decades without selling, can remain uninfluenced by market noise, even have the required skills to determine whether the company is fundamentally strong. [Sumit Sinha]

Charlatan of the Year

Who should win the 2013 “Charlatan of the Year” award in the category of finance? #FCOTY [Survey Money]

Supreme Court to Consider Overruling “Fraud-on-the-Market” Presumption

On November 15, 2013, the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari in the case of Halliburton Company (NYSE:HAL) v. Erica P. John Fund, Inc., No. 13-317, raising the prospect that the Court will overrule or significantly limit the legal presumption that each member of a securities fraud class action relied on the statements challenged as fraudulent in the lawsuit. [Noam Noked, Law.Hardvard.edu]

JCP PR Ploy Backfires

Shortly after the J.C. Penney Company, Inc. (NYSE:JCP) press release hit last night on how its post-Thanksgiving weekend sales were up 10% I tweeted: “JCP big comps for the holiday weekend but… against what? [Herb Greenberg, The Street]

The post Hottest Links: The Wall Of Worry, Charlatan Of The Year, And JCP Fail appeared first on ValueWalk.

Jim Brilliant, Co-CIO Century Management’s 2013 On The Value Gap

Don’t Overthink It: Gross Profitability Matters In Emerging Markets

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Profitability should be a key focus for investors seeking investment in emerging market equities, notes PIMCO in its recent research report.

PIMCO analysts led by Masha Gordon analyzed the performance of a quality investment style that consists of systematically overweighting stocks that display high profitability.

Profitable firms outperformed in developed markets

PIMCO analysts point out that empirical evidence has so far focused on developed markets, particularly the U.S. The empirical evidence corroborates the view that in these developed markets, profitable firms tend to consistently outperform unprofitable ones.

The analysts point out that profitable firms tend to remain profitable over time, and this phenomenon is as true in emerging markets as it is in developed markets.

Gross profitability attracts premium in Emerging Market equities

PIMCO analysts believe the performance of gross profitability attracts a significant premium in Emerging Market equities. However, the analysts also examined more traditional profitability measures such as ROE and ROIC.

By considering ROE as a measure, the analysts have estimated transition probabilities for MSCI Emerging Market constituents at the annual frequency using data from January 1998 until September 2013. At the end of each month, they formed quintiles by sorting stocks on ROE from lowest (Q1) to highest (Q5).

As can be deduced from the following table, if a stock is currently in quintile Q5, the estimated probability that it will remain in Q5 until next year is 58.3%. PIMCO analysts point out that it will be demoted to Q4 with a probability of 18.7%

Estimated probabilities Emerging Market

The analysts also repeated the above analysis over a three-year interval and found the same conclusion.

Performance of long/short gross profitability strategy

PIMCO analysts also analyzed the performance of a long/short gross profitability strategy, which is long the top quintile and short the bottom one. This is encapsulated in the following graph:

Long-short gross profitability strategy Emerging Market

 

The analysts note the Sharpe ratio is 0.71, higher than the ones obtained by the ROE and ROIC strategies. The average excess return is also substantially higher compared to the other quality strategies considered by the analysts. The market displayed a Sharpe ratio of 0.27 over the same period.

PIMCO analysts also simulated a modified version of the long/short strategy by restricting the universe to the largest 125 stocks in the MSCI Emerging Market universe and observed the resulting Sharpe ratio is remarkably close to the one obtained by selecting stocks from the full universe. The analysts note both average return and volatility are slightly higher for the large-cap version.

The analysts point out that these findings suggest that the profitability premium is not concentrated in the smaller stocks of the Emerging Market universe.

PIMCO analysts conclude that profitability should be a key focus for investors in Emerging Market equities. The analysts note in the long run, highly profitable firms outperformed those with inferior profitability overall in Emerging Market. They point out that by holding high-profitability names in his portfolio today, a portfolio manager can expect to end up with a high-profitability portfolio at the end of the investment period.

The post Don’t Overthink It: Gross Profitability Matters In Emerging Markets appeared first on ValueWalk.

Ed Hyman And Bill Miller Wealthtrack [PREVIEW]

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Beginning tomorrow, January 10 at 7:30 p.m. on public television (check local listings**) and on wealthtrack.com, Consuelo Mack WealthTrack features an exclusive, two-part TV interview with two legendary investors: ISI Group Chairman Ed Hyman, Wall Street’s number one-ranked economist for an unprecedented 34 years and Legg Mason Inc (NYSE:LM)’s history-making Portfolio Manager Bill Miller, who discuss the outlook for the economy and markets — including the unprecedented role the Federal Reserve is playing in both — and their top investment strategies for 2014.

Ed Hyman

In Consuelo Mack WealthTrack “Legendary Investors’ Predictions, Part 1″ — premiering nationwide Friday, January 10 at 7:30 p.m. on public television (check local listings**) and on wealthtrack.com — Anchor and Executive Producer Consuelo Mack asks Ed Hyman and Bill Miller to describe the forces that shaped last year’s economic and market performance, that set the foundation for this year.

Here’s a preview of Mack’s exclusive TV interview with Hyman & Miller:

Ed Hyman on why he thinks we will see a strong market rally between now and the spring:

“Over the next three months the Fed is going to inject $200 billion in the economy and the Bank of Japan will do about the same thing, so you’ve got $400 billion in three months, multiply that by four, that’s $1.6 trillion coming into the world economy, and the bond market doesn’t look particularly attractive, and I think there will be a pretty good push here.”

Ed Hyman on the biggest uncertainty in the economy and market:

“The biggest uncertainty is this unprecedented monetary experiment. We’ll have to take a step carefully each day to see if it looks like it’s working….I’m a nervous wreck.”

Bill Miller on the Fed:

“There’s a Chinese proverb or statement, ‘forget about waves and try to find the current’…The underlying current is it’s a bull market…The thing I’m concerned about is if the economy grows too strongly, let’s suppose we start seeing 4% plus quarters this year [n GDP growth] and then unemployment drops rapidly and capacity utilization rises pretty quickly and then you pull forward the Fed’s first interest rate increase. I think that’s where you are likely to run into some heavy going…As long as the Fed pins the short rate around zero and that’s going to continue until around 2015, then the market’s path of least resistance is clearly higher.”

Consuelo Macks says: “Both Hyman and Miller think the economy will continue to grow for several years and that the market rally will continue unless something changes significantly.”

In Consuelo Mack WealthTrack “Legendary Investors’ Predictions, Part 2″ — premiering nationwide Friday, January 17 at 7:30 p.m. on public television (check local listings**) and on wealthtrack.comEd Hyman and Bill Miller will discuss why they both believe the U.S. is the best place in the world to invest. They also discuss names of stocks they like. Miller once again talks about Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) — his no-brainer last year still is — and they both recommend Citigroup Inc (NYSE:C).

**Local market airdates and more info on Consuelo Mack WealthTrack are below.

About Consuelo Mack WealthTrack

New episodes premiere every week nationwide on public television (check local listings)

**New York metro area: Fridays at 7:30 p.m. on WLIW21, Saturdays at 8 a.m. on THIRTEEN and Sundays at 10:30 a.m. on NJTV

**Los Angeles area: Saturdays at 8 a.m. on PBS SoCal WORLD, Sundays at 3:30 p.m. on KLCS, and Tuesdays at 11:30pm on KVCRDT3 Desert Cities

**Other markets:

http://www.aptonline.org/catalog.nsf/vLinkTitle/CONSUELO+MACK+WEALTHTRACK+X

Online: New episodes stream Mondays on wealthtrack.com

Since July 2005, Consuelo Mack WealthTrack has provided trustworthy, understandable advice about building and protecting wealth over the long-term from the best minds in the business world. The weekly financial series remains the only program on television devoted to long-term diversified investing. In season 10, WealthTrack continues to give viewers pathways to build their financial security and tackle economic, market and political changes, featuring new interviews with “Great Investors” and “Financial Thought Leaders,” including David Winters, Dan Fuss, Richard Bernstein, and Bill Miller. Anchor, Executive Producer and Managing Editor Consuelo Mack, an award-winning, veteran business journalist with an extensive rolodex, handpicks each guest based on their professional credentials, performance and integrity. Following an in-depth discussion about the most significant current trends affecting investors, guests recommend “One Investment” that every individual should own in a long-term diversified portfolio. Each week’s episode concludes with Consuelo’s “Action Point,” one to-do item to help viewers achieve financial security. The series website -

wealthtrack.com – features new upgrades including a redesign to match the series’ new HD broadcast look for season 10, and exclusive enhanced content. Full episode streams, Consuelo’s “Action Point,” guests’ “One Investment” picks, transcripts, WealthTrack Web Extra featuring exclusive episode outtakes, interview podcasts and more, are also available at wealthtrack.com.

Consuelo Mack WealthTrack is a presentation of WLIW21 in association with WNET. The series is distributed nationally by American Public Television and sponsored in part by New York Life and MainStay Investments, Loomis Sayles, and Wintergreen Advisers.

Consuelo Mack WealthTrack official websites:

http://wealthtrack.com

http://facebook.com/wealthtrack

@ConsueloMack

http://youtube.com/wealthtrack

The post Ed Hyman And Bill Miller Wealthtrack [PREVIEW] appeared first on ValueWalk.


Hottest Links: Trading Myths Debunked, Buffett’s Letter, And The Timer

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Hottest links for Thursday, March 27th, the late edition. Get our free daily newsletter and never miss a single linkfest. Also, now if you sign up you will get our new e-book on value investing.

Top stories for today are included below.  This afternoon, we’ve got some very interesting and compelling stories, including some not-so-great news coming out of Vetropack’s just-released numbers, an analysis of Buffett’s annual letter to shareholders which is positively positive on Berkshire Hathaway, and a bold (and somewhat alarming) statement that when it comes to tech IPOs, profits don’t matter.

Hottest Links: Stories

Value Investing

Why Value Investing is So Hard (Russian Edition)

A basic, “explain to your 12 year old niece reason why it works”.  Value investing, at its most basic, is buying $1 for $.80 (or less than intrinsic value).  Most of the alpha out there (or smart beta or whatever it is being called these days) is either hard to find or hard to DO. [Meb Faber]

Buffett the Market Timer? Part 2 and Part 3

The first time I notice common stocks mentioned in the Berkshire Hathaway letter to shareholders is in 1966 (the earliest I have is 1965 from Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE:BRK.A) (NYSE:BRK.B): Letter to Shareholders 1965-2012). This, by the way, is before the insurance acquisition.  The letters from 1965 to 1969 are signed by Kenneth V. Chace, President of BRK, but actually written by Buffett. [KK, The Brooklyn Investor] Buffett talks about trying to find whole businesses to buy but sees better opportunities in the stock market: Currently, we find values most easily obtained through the open-market purchase of fractional positions in companies with excellent business franchises and competent, honest managements. [KK, The Brooklyn Investor]

Governance & Culture: Munger, Peter Thiel & Netflix Combined

Combining Munger takes on Governance, Peter Thiel’s insights and Netflix, Inc. (NASDAQ:NFLX) HR presentation was fun to delve into intelligent governance frameworks sourced from an equity investor, a venture capitalist and a company. So, what are them? [Tropical Value Investing]

Thoughts on Warren Buffett’s 2013 Shareholder Letter

The writing on the wall doesn’t get any clearer than this. Buffett thinks that Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE:BRK.A) (NYSE:BRK.B) is worth much, much more than book value and he will be aggressive at buying back stock at the 120% level from any shareholder willing to sell.  This is interesting because BRK is selling at 131% of book value. [Kevin Graham, Canadian Value Investing]

Investing in the Unknown and Unknowable

Central concepts in decision analysis, game theory, and behavioral decision are deployed alongside real investment decisions to unearth successful investment strategies. [Cullen Roche, Pragmatic Capitalism]

You need an investing system

Investors seem to have an intrinsic drive to classify themselves.  People will say something like “I’m a mix of Graham and Buffett with a dash of Rockefeller and the temper of Carnegie.”  Sometimes these classifications border on ridiculous, other times confusing. [Nate Tobik, Oddball Stocks]

Funds

Update: Vetropack (CH0006227612)

Vetropack Holding AG (SWX:VETE) just released 2013 numbers and the annual report yesterday. All in all, things don’t look so great. Sales increased 2%, however EBIT margins declined and net income declined significantly as the one-off gain from a property sale in 2012 could not be repeated. [Memyselfandi007, Value And Opportunity]

Hottest Links

“Earnings drive the market” LOL

Ryan Detrick (Schaeffers) drops a vicious guest post at See It Market in which he debunks six popular trading myths. Here’s one of my personal favorites, the idea that earnings growth during any given year has any correlation with stock market performance… [Joshua M Brown, The Reformed Broker]

Hottest Links

Schwab: survey finds retail investors grow more bearish

It appears that retail investors, just like their professional colleagues, are turning more bearish on U.S. stocks. Charles Schwab Corp (NYSE:SCHW)’s most recent sentiment survey showed bearishness among retail investors rose to 20%, up from 10% in December of 2013. [Anora Mahmudova, The Tell]

Tech IPOs: Profits don’t matter

Today, a different company came to market, armed with $568 million in 2013 profits on $1.8 billion in revenue. That would be King Digital (KING), maker of highly-addictive mobile games like Candy Crush Saga. It managed to price its shares at $22.50 (middle of its proposed range), giving it an initial market cap just north of $7 billion. [Dan Primack, Term Sheet]

The reluctant portfolio manager

You are charged with investing other people’s money in a set of assets that you think is overpriced.  What do you do? Unless you work at one of the rather small number of asset managers that has defined itself as being willing to let cash build if the opportunity set is unattractive (and taking the business risk that comes along with it), you put the money to work. [Tom Brakke, The Research Puzzle Pieces]

Hottest Links: Not the Onion

Russia Hires Goldman As Corporate Broker To Boost Image

The bank has signed a three-year agreement with the Economy Ministry and the Russian Direct Investment Fund to advise on issues such as communicating government decisions and setting up meetings with investors, according to Sergei Arsenyev, Goldman Sachs’s managing director of investment banking in Moscow. [Jason Corcoran, Bloomberg]

The post Hottest Links: Trading Myths Debunked, Buffett’s Letter, And The Timer appeared first on ValueWalk.

BlackRock’s David Cassese Breaks Down Microsoft’s Bright Future

David Winters Videos On Value Investing: ‘Part III’

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David Winters of Wintergreen Advisers is posting a lot of great videos on their youtube account (and best of all no ads on them). For your convenience we are posting them in a few series of articles (if we did one would load too slowly). See some earlier videos here. Below is ‘part III’, see parts I and II here.

david winters

How can I tell if a portfolio manager is looking out for their shareholders?

Wintergreen Advisers CEO David Winters says the best way to know if a portfolio manager is aligned with their shareholders is if they have a material amount of their own money invested in their fund.

What is the advantage of investing in a global value mutual fund?

Value investor David Winters explains the advantages of investing in a global value mutual fund – they are professionally managed, not speculative, and have the ability to be long-term holders of securities.

What is your main objective at Wintergreen Advisers?

Global value investor David Winters talks about his objectives at Wintergreen Advisers – how he looks for investments that should do well not matter what happens in the world, and how he prefers companies that generate lots of free cash flow in multiple currencies.

What is global value investing?

David Winters describes what global value investing means.

What is diversification?

Value investor David Winters discusses the importance of investing in a variety of securities that are not in the same pool, and explains why companies like Jardine Matheson make attractive investments.

When should I start investing?

Value investor David Winters believes everyone should always be thinking about saving some money and making wise investments.

Does frenetic trading lead to higher returns?

Global value investor David Winters discusses why he thinks patience and less turnover often leads to better returns.

How important is patience to a global value investor?

Global value investor David Winters explains the importance of patience, doing your work, and waiting things out, as keys for successful investing.

The post David Winters Videos On Value Investing: ‘Part III’ appeared first on ValueWalk.

‘Best Idea’ Trades of Mutual Fund Managers [STUDY]

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‘Best Idea’ Trades of Mutual Fund Managers [STUDY]

Lukasz Pomorski

University of Toronto – Rotman School of Management

March 17, 2009

Any given portfolio manager is likely to have a number of investment ideas. They are not all equal and the manager will rank them according to their attractiveness. This premise, coupled with a limited amount of money each idea can potentially absorb, has become a vital part of our understanding of the fund industry, both through theoretical (e.g., Berk and Green, 2004) and empirical work (e.g., Chen, Hong, Huang, and Kubik, 2004, Pollet and Wilson, 2008). However, managers’ rankings are not observable, and, consequently, we know relatively little about about how attractive the best ideas” are compared to the benchmarks and other trades, how frequently they occur, and how much they affect overall fund returns.

This paper addresses such questions using a proxy for the ranking of attractiveness of funds’ trades. Importantly, this proxy is not based on any performance-related information. While fund managers’ best ideas indeed turn out to generate abnormal pro¯ts, under this proxy the ranking of trades is determined before performance is evaluated. Distinguishing “best ideas” from other transactions offers a novel perspective on the ability of portfolio managers and sheds light on what the “upper limit” of their skill is (i.e., how much they could outperform in the best of circumstances).

To identify trades that managers consider particularly valuable I study management companies that sponsor multiple funds. Managers employed by such companies share resources, such as buy-side research, and exchange information in their company’s communication networks. If the information they share includes a valuable news item, multiple funds are likely to act on it and buy or sell similar stocks. Thus, when multiple funds that belong to the same company trade the same stock in the same direction, this trade is classi¯ed as a best idea.” This proxy is fundamentally di®erent from simply counting possibly unrelated funds that trade a stock in that managers from the same company have access to similar information. Making the same trade in multiple portfolios is a vote of confidence for a particular item from their information set. In contrast, managers from unrelated companies have different information sets. Even if they receive the same news, it may be less valuable than other information they already have.
Thus, when multiple unrelated managers make the same trade, it may not be the best idea” of any of them.

In the quarter subsequent to when best ideas” are identified, these trades beat benchmarks and other fund trades by as much as 0.33% per month. This effect is apparent already in trades at least two same-company funds make. However, the results are stronger when three-or-more-fund trades are considered, and the strongest when at least four funds trade the same stock.

It is crucial that best ideas are generated from information shared by same-company managers. In contrast, trades made by multiple managers from unrelated companies, if anything, under-perform the benchmarks. Consequently, the difference in performance of best ideas and trades repeated by multiple unrelated funds reaches 0.47% per month.

The number (or capacity) of best ideas is fairly low: They account for only about 30% of a typical management company’s dollar volume. The remaining trades, given the proxy proposed in this paper, rank lower in managers’ list of ideas. Unfortunately for fund investors, these additional trades do not outperform passive benchmarks even before transaction costs. For example, the 95% confidence interval for the characteristic-adjusted returns on such trades is from about -4 to 8 basis points per month. Even the highest values from this interval are likely too small to cover transaction costs and other fund expenses. Since such additional trades account for most of fund volume, this helps explain why overall after-fee returns of mutual funds are, on average, negative.

‘Best Idea’ Trades of Mutual Fund Managers [STUDY] via SSRN

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Looking Closer at Morningstar Peer Groups for Fund Analysis

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A conversation between Gunjan Banati and Francis Gannon Last updated June 20, 2014

Looking Closer at Morningstar Peer Groups for Fund Analysis by Royce Funds

Director of Risk Management Gunjan Banati sits down with Co-Chief Investment Officer Francis Gannon to discuss the results of her Morningstar peer group research and suggests ways in which investors can compare funds within peer groups more effectively.

See Gunjan Banati video on Morningstar peer groups here.

Gunjan Batanti Morningstar peer group

Francis Gannon: So tell us about the most recent Royce research article.

Gunjan Banati: Our most recent article is based on peer groups, specifically how the Morningstar peer groups have changed over time.

We get a number of questions through due diligence about which peer groups should our different Royce Funds be compared to and why, sometimes, when we say that it’s a certain kind of small-cap fund that it doesn’t look the same in the Morningstar style box, or the Morningstar category, and also the Morningstar peer groups.

Francis: So Morningstar does have peer groups, the categories, and styles. What’s the difference between them all?

Gunjan: That’s a great question. So the style box is the most common graphic that you see that Morningstar puts up, and what that is is that’s a point-in-time snapshot of where your portfolio’s holdings are aggregating as a centroid onto that particular grid. And when you look at a category, what that is is that’s a three-year look-back at where all those style boxes have been, so they aggregate those then to come up with your category, and your category is what determines your peer group. So your peer group and category will always be the same, but your style box may be different.

Francis: Well, how can there be a disconnect sometimes between where advisors think our Funds should be and where Morningstar places them?

Gunjan: Well, there’s a number of different reasons why there might be a disconnect. Morningstar’s process of putting a fund into a category or style box is completely formulaic. It’s based on your holdings.

Francis: It’s a snapshot.

Gunjan: Correct. They don’t actually ask the portfolio manager, “Where do you think you should reside?” This is based on the holdings. So as a result of that, where you think you should be might be different based on where your portfolio currently is in terms of the evolution of the market cycle, an evolution of an investment thesis, and, also, it’s a comparative computation, so it could also be based on the fact that everybody is doing something else differently.

Francis: So you did a deep dive into the small-cap category. How did you compile that data?

Gunjan: What we did to compile this data is we tried to actually recreate what a Morningstar category looked like 10 years ago. So we were looking at just the small-cap categories for this exercise, and so we looked at all funds that were in the small-cap Blend, or Value, or Growth at year end 10 years ago, adding back in all the liquidated funds and all the merged funds just to create a picture of what that would have been, and we did that for 10 years ago, for five years ago, and for three years ago, then compared it to today.

Francis: And what stood out in the results?

Gunjan: Our results were actually really interesting. We were surprised to see the degree of flux that takes place in Morningstar peer groups. For example, in the small-cap Value category that we looked at, we found that only 33% of funds stayed in the same category over a 10-year period of time.

Francis: Now does that change over shorter periods, three and five years?

Gunjan: So we looked at shorter time periods as well. For example, again, in small-cap Value, we found that over a five-year time frame 48% of funds stayed in the same category and the rest of them had actually moved or had been liquidated out of the category, and over a three-year period, across all three categories, we saw only about 75% of funds stayed in the same place. So that means one in four funds actually moved out of that category over a three-year period.

Francis: So given the amount of flux you saw in your data, how are investment advisors effectively able to compare funds within peer groups?

Gunjan: So one of the ways we’d suggest is instead of looking at just the Morningstar-defined categories of Blend, and Value, and Growth, to create larger categories, and that’s something we do here at Royce. We create a much broader category and compare our Funds to, say, all small-cap funds.

Francis: So could advisors create custom groups as well?

Gunjan: Absolutely. That’s a great example. You can create custom groups in a number of different ways. You can use a combination of holdings-based, style-based analysis. I would suggest asking the portfolio manager where do they think they should be in a peer group, and using that to create custom peer groups.

Francis: Can you give us an example of a custom peer group?

Gunjan: Sure. For example, if you were trying to evaluate a dividend-oriented large-cap strategy, you could compare it to the Morningstar category it’s in, which would probably most likely be large-cap Value, and you’d be subjected to some of the flux issues that we see with creating, with comparing, funds within a category. You could create a custom category of all dividend-oriented large-cap funds and use that instead, and I think you’d find the results would be a lot more accurate.

Read the research article: How Morningstar Category Flux Impacts Peer Group Analysis

The post Looking Closer at Morningstar Peer Groups for Fund Analysis appeared first on ValueWalk.

Allan Mecham On His Investment Style; Favorite Books

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Interview with Allan Mecham…. more on this topic here and more here. We also hope to have more (and exclusive info on Allan) to ensure you do not miss coverage sign  up for our free newsletter.

Allan Mecham on his favorite books

: I enjoy all the behavior psychology stuff and would recommend  Predictably Irrational,: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions [by Dan Ariely], Nudge [by Richard Thaler], How We Decide [by Jonah Lehrer], and Think Twice: Harnessing the Power of Counterintuition [by Michael Mauboussin].

The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine [by Michael Lewis] is a good book and a very entertaining  read.

Roger Lowenstein’s new book, The End of Wall Street, is very good as  well.

I’d also recommend The Relentless Revolution: A History of Capitalism [by Oldham Appleby]. I  like reading history of all sorts and think it’s beneficial to investing.

Allan Mecham

Interview continues below…

We recently had the pleasure of interviewing Allan Mecham who heads Arlington Value Management. The firm has established an impressive ten-year record, including a positive return in 2008 despite no reliance on short selling. We are pleased to bring you this interview exclusively in Portfolio Manager’s Review.

The Manual of Ideas: Over the ten years ended December 31st, 2009, the S&P 500 delivered an underwhelming return of negative 9.1%, equaling a 1.0% annual loss. Bruce Berkowitz’s Fairholme Fund achieved a net annualized return of 13.2% during the same period, while your fund returned 15.5% annually net of fees. Berkowitz’s record has made him somewhat of a “rock star” in the investment business. How come you are still flying below the radar?

Allan Mecham: Ha! Good question… I’m eagerly awaiting The Little Book on Becoming a Hedge Fund Rock-Star. In all seriousness, it’s likely a combination of factors (Salt Lake City-based LLC, only $10+ million under management for the first five years with no serious marketing), but certainly my limitations marketing Arlington are partly to blame. Additionally, and probably the biggest reason for our obscurity, stems from our fanaticism about accepting the “right” capital. Maintaining a culture that’s conducive to rational thinking and investment success has been the top priority since inception. We have turned down significant sums of money on many occasions because of this stubborn commitment. As I said in my most recent letter, we get far more satisfaction from producing top returns than from the size of our paycheck… though we’re hopeful this distinction won’t need to be highlighted for much longer!

Many potential investors require monthly transparency into the portfolio and are overly focused on short-term results. Accepting “hot” money would endanger the culture and my ability to perform. My partner Ben [Raybould] considers it his most critical job to cultivate and maintain a culture that minimizes emotional noise and short-term performance pressures, to which I must say he has done a fantastic job. We believe patience and discipline are critically important to investment success. Taking emotion out of the equation, or at least minimizing it as much as possible, is vitally important and difficult to do if you have investors peering over your shoulder in real time, questioning ideas. That’s like telling someone what’s wrong with their golf game in the middle of their backswing — it’s the last thing you need when you’re trying to concentrate and execute a shot.

MOI: We could conduct this entire interview simply by revisiting quotes from your past letters, which are a tour de force. You recently didn’t hold back on your view of certain types of institutional investors: “Many times these gate-keepers of capital have expressed admiration for our results. Yet for them to invest we would need to not only continue to find undervalued stocks, we’d need to find more of them; additionally, we would need to identify overvalued stocks – and short them – as well as find ideas across the globe in both large and obscure markets. Such comments are flattering, yet we see nothing but wild-eyed hubris attempting to outsmart people, more often, in more ways, and in more markets, as opposed to sticking with what produced top-tier results in the first place.” Clearly, the proliferation of investment vehicles whose partners’ interests are at odds with those of the ultimate owners of capital has resulted in misallocation of capital. Do you see owners waking up to this inherent conflict and demanding a more sensible approach to investment? Is it feasible for a fund like yours to bypass the agents and go directly to the owners of capital?

Allan Mecham: I think it’s possible to gain traction but I’m not optimistic about change on a large scale as there are multiple factors at play. Bypassing the agents is a laborious process that’s difficult for a two-man shop like ours. The fees throughout the financial system are crazy and make no sense when thinking about the industry as a whole. A lot of financial intermediaries and hedge funds operate using a form of the “Veblen” principle — where status is attached to the high cost and exclusivity of the product. The financial middlemen satisfy the clients’ emotional needs more than the financial needs. The comfort of crowds is strongly at play throughout the system. At the end of the day I think managers are giving clients what they want — peace of mind and smoother returns, albeit at the expense of long-term results.

………………………….

 

See full Exclusive Interview with Allan Mecham in PDF format here.

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Managing Expectations III: Mining Stocks And Respecting The Bear

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Managing Expectations Part III: Picking Mining Stocks in a Bear Market by Frank Holmes

In the first part of this three-part series, I discussed the importance of cycles such as four-year presidential elections and the life of a gold mine, and how they play into our investment strategy here at U.S. Global Investors. Part II dealt with statistical diagnostic tools, in which I strived to simplify the definitions of standard deviation and mean reversion and explain how they’re applied.

The third part of this series on managing expectations is devoted to fundamental resource stock evaluation. I’ll discuss some of the statistical tools we use to pick quality stocks during a treacherous bear market, such as what we’ve seen in gold stocks the last three years.

Let it be known, however, that, though our approach might vary slightly depending on the condition of the market, we fervently seek to pick the best stocks at the best price and execution.

How I Learned to Respect the Bear

The traditional definition of a bear market is when broad stock market indices fall more than 20 percent from a previous high—which sounds like a catastrophe, but is in fact “normal” market behavior. According to self-professed “investing nut” Ryan Barnes, a contributor for Investopedia, “bear markets… are a natural way to regulate the occasional imbalances that sprout up between corporate earnings, consumer demand and combined legislative and regulatory changes in the marketplace.”

Think of bear markets, then, as the gradual transition from warm summers into frozen winters. Trees lose their leaves, snow and ice blanket the ground, many animals—the bear the most notable—hibernate for the season. All life seems to take a breather. But just as you can always count on spring to emerge and, with it, new life, you as an investor can count on the market to rebound with fresh vigor.

As you might have known, the tail end of “winter” is when you want to take part in the inevitable recovery. If the market never had a winter season, if it were perpetually trapped in an endless summer, investors would be hard-pressed to find an ideal entry point.

It’s easy to determine when winter becomes spring. But what about the end of a bear market? How do you know when it’s bottomed and the optimal buying time has been reached?

CLSA consultant Russell Napier, in his now-classic 2009 book Anatomy of the Bear, describes the determinants of the end of a bear market:

The bottom is preceded by a period in which the market declines on low volumes and rises on high volumes. The end of a bear market is characterized by a final slump of prices on low trading volumes. Confirmation that the bear trend is over will be rising volumes at the new higher levels after the first rebound in equity prices.

Look at the chart below. You’ll see that, in three decades, the PHLX Gold/Silver Sector (INDEXNASDAQ:XAU) has never had a losing streak for more than three years.

Mining Stocks
click to enlarge

Historical precedent suggests that gold stocks were due for a jump in 2014, and just as expected, the XAU has returned close to 20 percent year-to-date (YTD) after an abysmal 2013, the “final slump of prices on low trading volumes.”

The following line graph illustrates just how dramatically gold and silver stock performance has rebounded. As you might remember from our discussion last week, what we see here is an example of mean reversion, which occurs when the price of a security reverts back to its historic average.

Mining Stocks
click to enlarge

These data exemplify the notion that you should remain patient during downturns, avoid getting discouraged and allow the security—in this case, precious metal stocks—to revert back to its long-term mean. When it does, you’ll find that the wind is suddenly at your back instead of in your face.

Spencer Johnson, author of the 2009 book Peaks and Valleys: Making Good And Bad Times Work For You—At Work And In Life, writes, “You cannot always control external events, but you can control your personal peaks and valleys by what you believe and what you do.” Likewise, we might not have any control over how the market behaves, but we can control how we respond to it: with grace, intelligence and levelheadedness.

Value Drivers for Superior Performance

One of the tools we use to navigate around volatility, regulate emotion and focus on facts and fundamentals is an invaluable model we call the portfolio manager’s cube. It helps us separate the weak from the strong, evaluate a company’s attractiveness and pick the best GARP-y stocks. “GARP” stands for “growth at a reasonable price,” which is an investment strategy that aims to identify companies with superior growth and value metrics.

Mining Stocks

The cube allows us to sift, sort and prioritize. It draws attention to the intersections among a resource company’s production, cash flow and reserves (rows) and relative value, momentum and event drivers (columns). Using this model, we compare stocks on a relative basis in production per share to find attractive opportunities and overpriced risks. We also identify events that could increase reserves and/or production per share over the next 12 months.

More than anything else, the cube affords us the framework for conducting relative valuation of a stock. Relative valuation is a method that compares a security’s value to that of others to determine its financial worth.

For example, we evaluate mining stocks in the same way you or I might compare cars on multiple metrics before making a purchase. On this topic, I urge you to check out one of my favorite websites, Dennis Boyko’s GoldMinerPulse, for a look at the type of fundamental analysis and relative evaluation that goes into comparing and contrasting mining stocks.

The following is an example of how we might use the cube. Suppose a young mining company has just discovered a gold deposit. This event might excite potential investors and compel them to enter when the stock is undervalued, expecting it to skyrocket. But it’s important to conduct a cross-sectional analysis of this discovery in terms of production, cash flow and reserves. How much gold does the company expect to produce in relation to others? The average concentration of gold in the earth’s crust is 0.005 parts per million, making a substantial yield very rare. About one in 2,000 companies is lucky enough to stumble across at least a one-million-ounce deposit.

Other questions might include: Does the company have ample cash flow to finance the costly yet necessary infrastructure, equipment, geological analyses and manpower to extract the metal, not to mention pay dividends? Has it kept up with its cash reserves to remain solvent during development of the mine and subsequent excavation? Many years, after all, typically go by before ounce one is plucked from the ground.

Besides using models such as the portfolio manager’s cube to determine a mining company’s or asset’s relative value, we also rely on “boots on the ground” experience. Members of our investment team and I routinely visit domestic and global projects to gain tacit knowledge and ensure that operations are running smoothly and management is knowledgeable and has a firm handle on things.

To see photos of what these visits look like, check out our most recent slideshow, On a Quest for Copper.

The Five Ms

A mine’s lifecycle is the perfect segue into what I call the five Ms to picking the best mines. Most of what follows can be found in the 2008 book I co-wrote with London-based financial writer John Katz, The Goldwatcher: Demystifying Gold Investment.

One of the five Ms is Mine Lifecycle, which I cover at length in Part I of this series along with other cycles such as weather patterns, gold seasonality trends and four-year presidential cycles.

Mining Stocks
click to enlarge

The other four Ms are Market Cap, Management, Money and Minerals, detailed below.

Market Cap

Market cap is simply the number of shares outstanding multiplied by the stock price. The gold sector is broken down into three sectors by market cap: seniors (market caps >$10 billion), intermediates (between $2 and $10 billion) and juniors ($2 billion).

If a gold company has 10 million shares outstanding at $1 per share, the company is valued at $10 million. The question any investor should ask is, “Is this company really worth $10 million?” If the market pays $25 per ounce of gold in the ground, the company should be valued at $25 million (one million ounces in reserves X $25 an ounce). If the company’s market cap is only $10 million, it may look undervalued. Accordingly, if the company’s market cap is $50 million, it may appear to be overvalued.

For larger gold companies, an investor can measure a company’s market cap against its production level, reserve assets, geographic location and/or other metrics to establish relative valuation. For junior mining companies—an area of focus for our U.S. Global Investors World Precious Minerals Fund (MUTF:UNWPX)—we look for balance sheets with ample cash for exploration and development of prospective reserves, but we resist paying more than two times cash per share.

Management

Essentially, management of mining companies must have both explicit and tacit knowledge to be successful. Explicit knowledge is academic. How many PhDs or masters in geology/engineering does company management have?

Tacit knowledge is more personal in nature and much more difficult to obtain. It is acquired over time through first-hand observation, experience and practice. How many years have they worked in the industry? Has management ever successfully completed a project with similar geopolitical/environmental constraints?

Success in the mining sector, especially the juniors, relies on the ability to raise capital and communicate with investors. Often the heads of junior companies are geologists or engineers who have no relationships in the brokerage business. This lack of relationships impedes their ability to generate market support. Historically, companies with the highest number of retail shareholders have the highest price-to-book ratios and carry higher valuations than peers.

Some of the most successful company builders in the gold-mining industry are what I call the “financial engineers”—people who have the relationships and understand the capital markets and who know how to hire the best geological and engineering teams. We tend to have more confidence investing in them.

Money

Mining is an expensive business. Often, companies burn through substantial amounts of capital before generating their first $1 in cash flow. A gold exploration company has to deliver reserves per share to have a chance at another round of financing. It has to convince the capital markets that it is an attractive investment on a per-share basis.

We call this the “burn rate”—how long will the company’s current cash levels last before it has to return for additional financing. If a junior exploration company has $15 million in cash reserves and is spending $3 million a month, it has five months to deliver enough reserves per share to convince capital markets it is worth the risk.

This calculation can be done quickly. Exploration reserves are generally valued at one-third the reserve values of a producing mine—if producing reserves are valued at $150 an ounce, exploration reserves would be $50 per ounce.

The gold-equities market is generally efficient at judging reserves per share, so if the exploration company doesn’t come up with the results necessary to get an evaluation—find gold for less than $50 an ounce—investors quickly lose confidence. There is an old rule when it comes to exploration companies: don’t pay more than two times cash per share if there are no proven assets in the ground.

Minerals

Compared to the rest of the mining sector, gold companies have the highest industry valuations based on price to earnings, price to cash flow, price to enterprise value and price to reserves per share.

Companies operating mines that produce gold as well as industrial metals tend to have lower valuation multiples.  For example, the current price-to-earnings ratio for Freeport-McMoRan, is 8x-times forward earnings. Investors can use the low relative valuations of copper/gold producers to increase their margin of safety in anticipation of an upward move in gold prices.

I must stress once again that these relative valuation techniques apply whether we’re in a bull or bear market. In Peaks and Valleys, Spencer writes, “Have you ever noticed that your life is filled with ups and downs? It is never all ups or downs.”

Similarly, the market is never all ups and downs. As active money managers, we have learned to adapt to an ever-changing climate—from “summer” to “winter”—to select what we believe are the best, most reasonably-priced mining stocks for our investors.

Next week, look out for my discussion on how our investment team trades uses statistical tools to make trades around core positions.

Happy investing!

Further resources on active management of resource stocks:

For more on my unique approach to active management, listen to my interview with Frank Curzio of S&A Investor Radio.

Also be sure to watch the latest edition of Kitco News, in which Daniela Cambone and I chat about what’s in store for gold in the coming weeks.

Please consider carefully a fund’s investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. For this and other important information, obtain a fund prospectus by visiting www.usfunds.com or by calling 1-800-US-FUNDS (1-800-873-8637). Read it carefully before investing. Distributed by U.S. Global Brokerage, Inc.

Past performance does not guarantee future results.

All opinions expressed and data provided are subject to change without notice. Some of these opinions may not be appropriate to every investor. By clicking the link(s) above, you will be directed to a third-party website(s). U.S. Global Investors does not endorse all information supplied by this/these website(s) and is not responsible for its/their content.

Gold, precious metals, and precious minerals funds may be susceptible to adverse economic, political or regulatory developments due to concentrating in a single theme. The prices of gold, precious metals, and precious minerals are subject to substantial price fluctuations over short periods of time and may be affected by unpredicted international monetary and political policies. We suggest investing no more than 5% to 10% of your portfolio in these sectors.

The Philadelphia Gold and Silver Index (XAU) is a capitalization-weighted index that includes the leading companies involved in the mining of gold and silver.

The post Managing Expectations III: Mining Stocks And Respecting The Bear appeared first on ValueWalk.


Milk Helped Francis Chou Become A Top Value Investor

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Milk, of All Things, Helped Francis Chou Become One of Canada’s Top Value Investors. by Morningstar

Francis Chou is the co-founder of Chou Associates Management, the parent firm of five mutual funds, including Chou Associates, which has returned an annualized 11.5% over the past 27 years. In 2004, Morningstar Canada named him the manager of the decade. Chou has a history of rebating fees to shareholders in years when the funds underperform. 

1. How did you end up becoming a portfolio manager?

I was working at Bell Canada as a technician. I wanted to change that so I was reading a lot, trying to find out what field to go into next. Once I read Security Analysis I knew I wanted to be a portfolio manager.

2. You started your firm with $51,000 from six investors. 
What was harder, convincing those first six to invest or keeping the clients you have now?

It was difficult to get the six investors on board. I was just a technician with no formal education in investing. The initial capital was a lot of money for them. But once they saw how well we did, it was easy to keep them on board.

3. There is a story of you as a child checking milk jugs 
for freshness and price. How do situations like that play a part in your outlook on investing now?

See full Interview with Francis Chou by Morningstar

H/T Dataroma

The post Milk Helped Francis Chou Become A Top Value Investor appeared first on ValueWalk.

Buffett Beyond Value Explains Buffett’s Investing Approach

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New book, Beyond Value by Prem C Jain, explains Warren Buffett approach to investing By Sanjay Kumar Singh, The Economic Times

Many books have analysed Warren Buffett’s investment approach that has led to the maestro amassing a fortune of more than $60 billion over a career spanning more than half a century. Prem C Jain’s book adds to that rich corpus. Contrary to popular perception, says Jain, Buffett is not a pure value investor. He was indeed Benjamin Graham’s favourite pupil and in his early years he did bet on low-priced stocks. Since the results he got were not to his satisfaction, he scouted around for other approaches. His quest led him to Philip Fisher’s approach. What Graham is to value investing, Fisher is to growth investing. The essence of this approach is that you identify a stock that has the potential to increase its earnings for years to come, and hold it for long. Buffett’s investment approach today is a synthesis of value and growth investing. As Jain’s analysis of many of Buffett’s stock purchases reveals, he is willing to pay a valuation that is reasonable, but not high, for stocks with strong growth prospects. He then holds on to them for years, often decades.

The author has explained both value and growth investing in a lucid manner. He urges readers not to limit themselves to either style but to use both. By not buying overvalued stocks, investors will curtail their downside risk. And if the stock is of a high quality, the investor need not necessarily sell it once its price approaches its intrinsic value, as a value investor would. Instead, he can hold it for years and partake of its growth.

See full article by The Economic Times

Buffett Beyond Value – Description

Buffett Beyond Value

Buffett Beyond Value: Why Warren Buffett Looks to Growth and Management When Investing by Prem C. Jain

A detailed look at how Warren Buffett really invests

In this engaging new book, author Prem Jain extracts Warren Buffett’s wisdom from his writings, Berkshire Hathaway financial statements, and his letters to shareholders and partners in his partnership firms-thousands of pages written over the last fifty years. Jain uncovers the key elements of Buffett’s approach that every investor should be aware of.

With Buffett Beyond Value, you’ll learn that, contrary to popular belief, Warren Buffett is not a pure value investor, but a unique thinker who combines the principles of both value and growth investing strategies. You’ll also discover why understanding CEOs is more important than studying financial metrics; and why you need an appropriate psychological temperament to be a successful investor.

  • Reveals Buffett’s multifaceted investment principles
  • Discusses how Buffett thinks differently from others about portfolio diversification, market efficiency, and corporate governance
  • Highlights how you can build a diverse and profitable investment portfolio

With Buffett Beyond Value as your guide, you’ll learn how to successfully invest like Warren Buffett.

Buffett Beyond Value -Book Review

From the Inside Flap

While Warren Buffett’s investment ideas are simple to understand, his success can be difficult to duplicate—unless you become familiar with how he really goes about the process of investing.

In this engaging new book, “Buffett Beyond Value: Why Warren Buffett Looks to Growth and Management When Investing“, author Prem C. Jain extracts Warren Buffett’s investment wisdom from Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE:BRK.A) (NYSE:BRK.B) annual reports, Buffett’s letters to shareholders and partners in his partnership firms, and as many of Buffett’s other writings as he could find—thousands of pages written over the past fifty years. Through this effort, Jain uncovers the key elements of Buffett’s approach and offers an accessible way to apply it to your own investment endeavors.

With Buffett Beyond Value, you’ll quickly learn that, contrary to popular belief, Warren Buffett is not a pure value investor, but a unique thinker who combines the principles of both value and growth investing strategies. You’ll also discover why Buffett emphasizes the importance of high-quality management above many other metrics when evaluating a company he’s interested in.

Written for anyone serious about stock market investing, this unique guide skillfully outlines the proven principles Buffett has followed over the course of his long and successful career and shows you what it takes to make them work for you. Topics include:

  • How to build a diverse and profitable portfolio the Warren Buffett way
  • Why you need an appropriate psychological temperament to be a successful investor
  • Buffett’s thoughts on market efficiency and the ways in which you can incorporate them into your investment decision making
  • How issues related to profitability and accounting can provide you with a perspective that is uncommon in investing circles
  • Why Buffett thinks differently from others about portfolio diversification, corporate governance, and much more

If there’s one person worth listening to when it comes to investing—whether you’re an individual investor, a student, an academic, or a professional portfolio manager—it’s Warren Buffett. And with Buffett Beyond Value as your guide, you’ll gain valuable insights that could enhance your understanding of investing and improve your ability to make more profitable decisions in today’s markets.

From the Back Cover

“Many books about Warren Buffett describe him as simply a ‘value’ investor. Jain gives us a clearer understanding of the techniques of the man known as ‘the world’s greatest investor’ and shows that his investment principles are consistent with many of the precepts of modern financial theory.” –BURTON MALKIEL, Professor, Economics Department, Princeton University; author of A Random Walk Down Wall Street and The Elements of Investing

“This is required reading for all Buffettologists looking for more than just sound bites and folk wisdom in their quest to peer into the mind of one of the greatest investors of all time. Read Buffett Beyond Value slowly and savor every page while sipping a Cherry Coke!” –ANDREW W. LO, Harris & Harris Group Professor, MIT Sloan School of Management

“What better way to become a successful investor than to study the teachings of Warren Buffett? And, what better way to study those teachings than to read Buffett’s forty-year writings contained in his annual reports? Prem C. Jain jump-starts those lessons by culling Buffett’s most salient investment secrets and summarizes them in a wonderful and easy-to-read book.” –HOWARD M. SCHILIT, author of Financial Shenanigans; founder, Financial Shenanigans Detection Group

“Post the 2008-2009 financial crisis, everyone from New York to New Delhi is looking for investment advice. The advice has just arrived! Prem C. Jain’s lucid, accessible encapsulation of Buffett’s investment wisdom is a page-turner—it’s full of investment nuggets and entertaining anecdotes, and yet the write-up is faithful to economic theory. Buffett’s investment thesis is now out in the open, and therefore may a thousand Buffetts bloom!” –S.P. KOTHARI, Managing Director, Blackrock; Gordon Y Billard Professor of Management, Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Small Is Beautiful: ‘Bond King’ Expected Alpha and Assets Under Management

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Small Is Beautiful: ‘Bond King’ Expected Alpha and Assets Under Management

Claude B. Erb

TR

September 30, 2014

Abstract:

Many fixed income investors allocate assets to funds managed by “bond kings” with the expectation of achieving significant market beating “alpha”. The investment performance of “bond kings” reflects the intersection of 1) those perceived to be skilled at identifying and exploiting mispriced securities and 2) the availability of investment capital. Historically, the value-added, the alpha, of “bond kings” has declined as the availability of capital has increased. As an empirically observed historical rule of thumb, a doubling in “bond king” assets under management has been associated with a 10-20% decline in achieved alpha. As a result, historically a “bond king” with a smaller asset base has outperformed a “bond king” with a larger asset base. For investors seeking the possible beauty of “bond king” alpha, the trade-off between size and alpha suggests that small is beautiful.

Overview

  • A “bond king” is a fixed income portfolio manager perceived to be highly skilled
  • A “bond king” is assumed to have the talent necessary to “beat the market”, to produce “alpha”
  • There are very few “bond kings” at any given time
  • Empirically “bond king” fund alpha has declined as assets under management have increased
  • An abundance of “bond king” skill does not increase the size of the universe of mispriced securities
  • As a result, “bond kings” perform best when they manage a relatively small asset base
  • A “bond king” with a “smaller” asset base may outperform a “bond king” with a “larger” asset base
  • Historically, a doubling in assets under management led to a 10-20% reduction in “alpha”

The Historical Relationship Between “Bond King” Fund Size And Fund “Alpha”

  • There are currently two “bond kings”: Bill Gross and Jeffrey Gundlach
  • Historically, the “alpha” of Gross’ PIMCO Total Return Bond Fund declined as assets rose
  • Historically, the “alpha” of Gundlach’s DoubleLine Total Return Bond Fund declined as assets rose
  • The negative asset size-alpha trade-off may reflect too much capital chasing too few opportunities

Bond King Alpha

Matching Current “Bond King” Fund Size With Possible Future “Alpha”

  • Naïve extrapolation of the historical relationship between fund size and one year “alpha” suggests
  • Bill Gross’ new “unconstrained” bond fund could have an “alpha” of about 10%
  • Jeffrey Gundlach’s fund alpha could be about 3%
  • Bill Gross’ “old fund” might have an alpha of about 90 basis points

Bond King Alpha

Building Blocks: Historical Performance Of The DoubleLine Total Return Bond Fund

  • Since inception, the DoubleLine Total Return Bond Fund has outperformed “the market”
  • The outperformance is widely seen as a reflection of “bond king” portfolio manager skill
  • This performance has caught the attention of many investors

Bond King Alpha

Building Blocks: Historical Assets Under Management Of The DoubleLine Total Return Bond Fund

  • Many investors are aware of the performance of the DoubleLine Total Return Bond Fund
  • This awareness has lead to an increase in fund assets under management
  • At the end of August 2014, assets under management were approximately $35 billion

Bond King Alpha

Building Blocks: Historical Relationship Between Fund Size And Fund “Alpha”

  • Should there be a positive, a negative or no relationship between fund alpha and fund asset size?
  • Historically, the greater the assets under management the lower the “alpha” of DoubleLine Total Return Bond Fund Class I (MUTF:DBLTX)
  • This may be a historical curiosity or a reflection of the scarcity of mispriced assets relative to fund size
  • Historical relationships may not be stable, but there is only one history and one historical relationship

Bond King Alpha

Building Blocks: Historical Relationship Between Fund Size And Fund “Alpha”

  • Historically, the greater the assets under management the lower the “alpha” of PIMCO Total Return Fund Institutional Class (MUTF:PTTRX)
  • This may be a historical curiosity or a reflection of the scarcity of mispriced assets relative to fund size
  • Curiously, investor flight from PTTRX could improve its “alpha” potential

Bond King Alpha

Building Blocks: Historical Assets Under Management Of The PIMCO Total Return Bond Fund

  • Since April 2010, the size of the PIMCO Total Return Bond Fund has declined
  • Reasons for the decline in fund assets are varied including
  • Perceived challenging performance, and
  • An awareness of alternative investment opportunities

Bond King Alpha

See full article here

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Richard Bernstein & David Rosenberg – Redwood Conference [VIDEO]

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Richard Bernstein & David Rosenberg via Redwood Asset Management

On October 30, 2014 Redwood Asset hosted a luncheon for investment advisors in Toronto.  Providing their outlooks were two of the industry’s most well-respected strategists, Richard Bernstein and David Rosenberg.

Richard Bernstein and his firm Richard Bernstein Advisors are the lead portfolio manager of the Redwood Global Equity Strategy Class

The lunch has been broken out into segments below:

  1. Opening Remarks
  2. Richard Bernstein Presentation
  3. David Rosenberg Presentation
  4. Question: What are your key indicators?
  5. Question: What are the side effects of the size of the Fed’s balance sheet?
  6. Question: Outlook for oil?
  7. Question: Views on the improving U.S. economy?
  8. Question: What changes  have you seen in the indicators you use and their effectiveness?
  9. Question: What are the biggest mistakes investors make?
  10. Question: Thoughts on gold?
  11. Question: Thoughts on profit margins?
  12. Question: What major sector themes are you seeing?

1. Opening Remarks by Peter Shippen (2:15)

2. Richard Bernstein Presentation (11:39)

3. David Rosenberg Presentation (14:34)

4. Question: What are your key indicators? (5.06)

5. Question: What are the side effects of the size of the Fed’s balance sheet? (6:54)

6. Question: Outlook for oil? (5:47)

7. Question: Views on the improving U.S. economy? (3:58)

8. Question: What changes have you seen in the indicators you use and their effectiveness? (9:31)

9. Question: What are the biggest mistakes investors make? (5:30)

10. Question: Thoughts on gold? (3:09)

11. Question: Thoughts on profit margins? (3:33)

12. Question: What major sector themes are you seeing? (7:30)

For more information on the Redwood Global Equity Strategy Class, please contact the Redwood Sales Team.

 

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Managed Investment Assets Projected To Reach $6.7 Trillion In 2018: MMI

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The Money Management Institute (MMI), the national association representing the $3.8 trillion managed investment solutions and wealth management industry, today released selected findings from a proprietary survey of industry growth trends published in its 2014-2015 MMI Industry Guide to Managed Investment Solutions – Trends and Statistics.

Among the key findings, assets under management in managed solutions are forecast to reach $6.7 trillion by year-end 2018, representing a five-year compound annual growth rate of 14 percent and an increase of 74 percent over the $3.8 trillion in assets as of September 30, 2014. All segments of the managed solutions industry are projected to continue to post positive asset gains and net flows, sustaining the upward trajectory seen since the end of the 2007-2008 financial crisis and providing evidence that financial advisors and their clients continue to embrace the discipline and objectivity of managed solutions.

Managed Investment Assets

Managed Investment Assets Projected to Reach $6.7 Trillion by the Close of 2018

Money Management Institute Releases Annual Industry Guide with Growth Forecasts

WASHINGTON, D.C., December 18, 2014 – The Money Management Institute (MMI), the national association representing the $3.8 trillion managed investment solutions and wealth management industry, today released selected findings from a proprietary survey of industry growth trends published in its 2014-2015 MMI Industry Guide to Managed Investment Solutions – Trends and Statistics.

 

Each year MMI develops an industry growth forecast that is based on a survey of sponsor firms that are MMI members conducted by Dover Financial Research. Respondents are asked to provide industry trend information and projected growth rates for five managed solutions market segments – Separately Managed Accounts (SMA), Mutual Fund Advisory, Rep as Advisor, Rep as Portfolio Manager and Unified Managed Accounts (UMA). The responses are consolidated into an aggregate industry forecast.

 

Among the key results:

 

Strong Industry Growth Projected through 2018

  • MMI asked sponsor firms to provide a five-year forecast for 2014 to 2018, enabling for the first time projections that take into account 10 years of actual and forecasted data. Assuming no material shifts in the underlying capital markets, survey respondents forecast managed solutions industry assets under management of $6.7 trillion by year-end 2018, representing a five-year compound annual growth rate of 14 percent and an increase of 74 percent over the $3.8 trillion in assets at the close of the third quarter of 2014.

 

  • The market share of wirehouses is projected to continue to slip as their asset growth rate lags that of the total managed solutions market, a trend reflecting heightened competition from other distribution channels.

 

  • Independent broker-dealer (IBD) and third-party service providers are the most optimistic about long-term growth prospects, a result partially driven by the continued success of IBD Mutual Fund Advisory programs, as well as their emphasis on providing a variety of affiliation models which attract advisors and Registered Investment Advisers (RIAs) interested in greater independence.

 

Projected Growth Opportunities by Market Segment

  • With the exception of UMA programs, all of the major segments are forecast to exceed $1.0 trillion by 2018. UMAs, which have the lowest current asset base at $325 billion as of June 30, 2014, have a projected compound growth rate of 24 percent through 2018. UMAs are seen as beginning to look more like Rep as Portfolio Manager programs as the silos between advisory program types break down. Looking ahead, UMAs are projected to either be part of the broader investment management solution or the solution. Either way, market share will continue to increase.
  • Survey responses indicate that Rep as Portfolio Manager programs are poised for the greatest growth over the next several years with assets projected to reach $1.5 trillion by 2018, surpassing Rep as Advisor asset levels. In 2013, 36 percent of sponsor firms indicated that Rep as Portfolio Manager programs would offer the greatest opportunity for growth within the managed solutions sector. A year later, that figure has risen to 50 percent.

 

  • Rep as Advisor programs will continue to experience declining market share as financial advisors opt for advisory solutions that give them greater control and more discretion.

 

  • Given the deep and broad usage of Mutual Fund Advisory programs, it is expected that they will continue to grow at a healthy rate, but will not expand their market share because advisors will increasingly adopt Rep as Portfolio Manager and UMA programs for their mutual fund holdings.

 

  • As platform consolidation creates product neutrality, solutions will be chosen based on merit rather than ease of access, a trend expected to benefit SMA programs. However, the market share of SMAs as a standalone segment is projected to decline as the shift to UMA programs and/or consolidated platforms continues.

 

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