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Ignore The "Noise"

“If a business does well, the stock eventually follows.Warren Buffett

The past two weeks have been the perfect example of why, as an investor you must ignore the market action as it pertains to your existing portfolio and focus on the reason you bought shares of the companies in it in the first place. I am going to use my favorite and largest holding in the ValuePlays Portfolio, Sears Holdings (SHLD) as an example.

We first have to remember the reasons why we bought Sears:
1- Retail operations improving
2- Increasing cash hoard for Eddie Lampert to invest (this is a large part of the “value” in SHLD, his 16 yr. track record of 28% annual returns)
3- Reducing debt and shares outstanding
4- Growing profits

Now we have to look at the past two weeks and follow the events of them. We will then see why we were wise to ignore those events and then what that did for us. Feb 26th saw the S&P (.INX) begin what would end up being a 5.2% decline over the next two weeks (it should be noted we added another 1.7% to our lead over the S&P during this slide). If you picked up a paper or watched CNBC you were inundated with dire prognostications.

We had Alan Greenspan aimlessly wandering around the Asian continent incoherently mumbling to any innocent bystander who would listen the US had a “1/3 chance of recession by the end of the year”. It was only after officials found him, reminder him that he no longer was the head of the Fed and that all economic indicators point to the opposite, he changed his statement to, “it is possible we could get a recession toward the end of this year, but I don’t think it’s probable.” Right, and it is also possible your reporter wife Ms. Saywer was first attracted to your chiseled looks, not your decades long access to Washington’s inner circles, but not probable. Alan, its over buddy, go home, take a bath, read a book, do whatever, just please shut up, Ben’s the guy now. Your predecessors where classy enough to be quiet and let you do your job, lets try to exhibit the same to Mr. Bernake and let him do his.

In Asia, the Bank of Japan raised rates 1/4 of a point. This set off a chain of events as people who had borrowed (we are talking billions of dollars here) money in Japan where it was cheaper to buy stocks here no longer enjoyed the lower rate (the “carry trade” you have heard about). This caused them to to then have to sell the stocks they had bought with that money to have to pay off those loans, putting downward pressure on the market.

We then had a sub-prime (these are mortgages given to the most risky prospects) mortgage implosion which, for some reason seemed to make everyone panic. They were actually surprised that when you give as person with a marginal credit history a mortgage you know they probably will eventually not be able to afford, they default on it. The only surprise was that it did not happen 6 months ago. The fear was that the defaults “would spread into the prime market”. Right, so because my neighbor bought a house he could not afford with financing he was not really qualified for and invariably defaulted on his loan, now I should on mine? This is the type of logic we are dealing with folks…

To top it off we had a home builder executive telling us in no uncertain terms that “2007 is going to suck“. An important note here: January 2007 home figures were the 3rd highest in history (despite the declines), this “sucks?” What he really should have said was “look we are fools, we bought way to much land because we thought the party would never end and now it is time to pay the piper.” Real estate has been in a bubble phase for 5 years now and just because they got stuck with their pants down does not mean it will suck, it just won’t be as good. Nothing goes up at a record rate forever and home-builders bought land and started building homes like it would. These guys are like a lottery winner who, after getting his winnings sprints into the nearest bar yelling “the drink are on me”. He then proceeds to fill up the bar with booze, turn around and only then realizes he is at an AA meeting.

All these events, when looked at individually were probably not enough to cause the problem but when you consider the S&P had not had a significant drop in almost a year (remember nothing goes up uninterrupted) you had the mix for panic. We got it.

In the middle of this mess Sears released 4th quarter and full years results. On March.1, the day of the earnings report, shares opened at $180.25 a share. What happened?

Profits- Increased 27%
Debt- Reduced by $815 million
Shares Repurchased- $429 million
Cash On Hand- $4 billion
Retail Margins- Improved 25%

On every metric we bought shares in the company on, it has improved. Would anything you saw make you think about selling your shares? Me neither. But lots of people, listening to the noise above and ignoring these results did as shares dropped $4 that day to $176. Those of us who sat tight and laughed at the panic stricken hoards watched as shares not only climbed out of the hole, but finished this past week at $180.38.

“Only buy something that you’d be perfectly happy to hold if the market shut down for 10 years” says Buffett. If the market was shut down and you looked at Sears last earnings report you would be thrilled, do not let to those who trade pieces of paper and do not “buy pieces of companies” affect your outlook of an investment, let the investment itself do that. The past week and a half saw a ton of “noise” and ton of panic but, those of us who stayed calm and focused came out just fine.

To quote Jesus (of the traders), “They know not what they do….”

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More Great Value Blogs

Here are couple more of my favorite sites. Both of these are littered with the wisdom of Buffet. It is my belief that you cannot read enough Buffet because it is necessary to reinforce the tenants of value investing and calm yourself during turbulent times like the past two weeks. If you are a regular ValuePlays reader I would suggest checking out these sites as the sentiment I express is echoed here.

Fat Pitch Financials

Fat Pitch Financials is a value investing and personal finance blog.

George seeks to invest with a wide margin of safety in companies that have wide moats (i.e., sustainable competitive advantages). This is very similar to Warren Buffett’s style of investing. We both try to wait for so called “fat pitches”.

While he waits for these fat pitches, he also researches arbitrage and special situation opportunities that provide individual investors an edge in short term opportunities. These include going private transactions, odd-lot tender offers, spin-offs, split-offs, and other opportunities. The inspiration for this type of trading was Joel Greenblatt, as well as Warren Buffett.

The current going private transactions table that he maintains is what originally attracted many of Fat Pitch Financials’ readers. That content, along with most of my other special situation tracking, is now in the premium section of Fat Pitch Financials called Contributor’s Corner.

He tracks two portfolios at Fat Pitch Financials so my readers can know how he’s doing. The first portfolio is the Fat Pitch Financials Port that is a virtual portfolio tracked at Marketocracy. This portfolio focuses on “Fat Pitch” discoveries.

The second portfolio, the Special Situations Real Money Portfolio, is a Coverdell Education Savings Account he started for his son at about the time Fat Pitch Financials started in 2004. This portfolio is very small and focuses on going private transactions and other special situation opportunities. It is based on the research provided in Fat Pitch Financials Contributor’s Corner.

Value Investing News

Value Investing News is a community driven value investing news site.
You can submit links to news items, bid up stories to the front page, bid down stories, and make comments. There is also a forum and a user powered link directory is starting to roll out.

Members are rewarded for the success of Value Investing News by sharing in the Adsense revenue.

There is also a monthly user contest. This month they are giving away a free pass to the Value Investing Congress West (This is the most valuable prize so far.)

Value Investing News leverages several web2.0 technologies including social bookmarking, social networking, user powered ratings, collaborative filtering recommendations, RSS feeds, and a submission bookmarklet. The goal is to harness the network effect of web2.0 technologies to help fellow value investors save time following the news.

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A Book, A Robbery & A Great Blog To Visit

Friday Tidbits:

* Publisher John Wiley has sent me a copy of “The Little Book of Common Sense Investing” by the legendary John Bogle. I will try to get through it this weekend and if I decide to recommend it will post an Amazon link here for you if you then wish to purchase it.

* Topps (TOPP).

Founded in 1938 as Topps Chewing Gum, and in its early years produced a popular penny “Topps Gum” from a factory in Brooklyn, N.Y. After World War II, the company developed Bazooka Bubble Gum, and in 1950, added trading cards to its product line. Baseball cards appeared in 1951 and quickly became a vital part of pop culture, a tradition that continues to this day, and includes football (both American and European) and basketball, in addition to entertainment cards and stickers and albums. In July 2003, Topps acquired WizKids, LLC a designer and marketer of collectible strategy games. Topps maintains offices in Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Italy, and Argentina, in addition to the U.S. Topps also manufactures the popular lollipop brands marketed as Ring Pops, Push Pops, Baby Bottle Pops and other novelty candy and gum products. Now headquartered in New York City, the company has worldwide distribution, annual net sales for Fiscal 2006 of $293,838,000, and employs over 487 people worldwide.

Recently, Micheal Eisner lead group that offered $385 million for the company. In what might be the best and latest example of boardroom incompetence, Topps agreed to the buyout. This should be criminal. A cursory look reveals what I am talking about.

Topps
Cash on hand $81 million
Shares Outstanding 39 million
Debt – ZERO
Cash per Share $2.07
Offer Price $9.75
Closing Price Day Before Offer $8.91

Do you see where this is going? We have to subtract the cash on hand from the offer price because Eisner’s group will receive that cash (and have no debt to pay off) once the deal closes. We then take the offer price of $9.75 minus cash on hand of $2.07 and we have an answer of $7.68. What does that mean? If you are a shareholder your management just agreed to sell the company 13.8% BELOW the current market value! If you are one of those “lucky” shareholders you now know how Ned Beatty felt in “Deliverance.”

Here what it should look like, $8.91 closing price plus $2.07 in cash = $10.98 starting price for bids.

Fortunately there is a white knight: Topps director Arnaud Ajdler, along with the investment firm Crescendo Partners II, have launched a campaign to kill the deal. Crescendo owns about 6.6 percent of the company’s shares, according to filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Ajdler is also a managing partner of Crescendo. In his filing he says “Since the Board of Directors has decided to pursue this transaction over the significant concerns which I have continually and repeatedly voiced to the Board, I intend to actively solicit votes and campaign against the proposed transaction.”

Here’s hoping he succeeds………


Recommended Blog:

Gannon On Investing

“Value investing blog and value investing podcast influenced by Benjamin Graham, Joel Greenblatt, and Warren Buffett’s value investing model. Built upon the value investor insights of intrinsic value, margin of safety, competitive advantage, and protection of principal.”

Basically, it’s a value investing blog with longer articles about investing concepts, specific stocks (analysis), and the market (at least insofar as my normalized P/E posts go). He has some stuff from three other contributors in the “Columns” and “Book Reviews” sections.

Some people might like the “Encyclopedia” section which links to and contain entries like this one:

Finally, there’s the directory of other investing sites. Also, there’s the podcast – new visitors might enjoy listening to the podcast episodes.

He does a “20 Questions” series with other bloggers that is something I enjoy (and will be features on soon)

Some of his best work is on “normalized PE ratios”, definitely worth checking out.

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The Berkshire Letter: A Value Investors Instruction Manual

Here is Warren’s annual missive. This is the value investing instruction manual. A word of warning: Be careful about relying on the media to frame his comments for you. Quite often in the past they have taken snip-its that sound good on TV but when you read them again in the context they were written, do not necessarily convey the same sentiment.

Berkshire Hathaway Annual Letter (you need Adobe Reader to view it)

Some commentary that is relative to recent news events:

Real Estate:

“The slowdown in residential real estate activity stems in part from the weakened lending practices of recent years. The “optional” contracts and “teaser” rates that have been popular have allowed borrowers to make payments in the early years of their mortgages that fall far short of covering normal interest costs.

Naturally, there are few defaults when virtually nothing is required of a borrower. As a cynic has said, “A rolling loan gathers no loss.” But payments not made add to principal, and borrowers who can’t afford normal monthly payments early on are hit later with above-normal monthly obligations. This is the Scarlett O’Hara scenario: “I’ll think about that tomorrow.” For many home owners, “tomorrow” has now arrived. Consequently there is a huge overhang of offerings in several of HomeServices’ markets. Nevertheless, we will be seeking to purchase additional brokerage operations. A decade from now, HomeServices will almost certainly be much larger.”

On A Replacement:

” I have told you that Berkshire has three outstanding candidates to replace me as CEO and that the Board knows exactly who should take over if I should die tonight. Each of the three is much younger than I. The directors believe it’s important that my successor have the prospect of a long tenure. Frankly, we are not as well-prepared on the investment side of our business. There’s a history here: At one time, Charlie was my potential replacement for investing, and more recently Lou Simpson has filled that slot. Lou is a top-notch investor with an outstanding long-term record of managing GEICO’s equity portfolio. But he is only six years younger than I. If I were to die soon, he would fill in magnificently for a short period. For the long-term, though, we need a different answer. At our October board meeting, we discussed that subject fully. And we emerged with a plan, which I will carry out with the help of Charlie and Lou.

Under this plan, I intend to hire a younger man or woman with the potential to manage a very large portfolio, who we hope will succeed me as Berkshire’s chief investment officer when the need for someone to do that arises. As part of the selection process, we may in fact take on several candidates. Picking the right person(s) will not be an easy task. It’s not hard, of course, to find smart people, among them individuals who have impressive investment records. But there is far more to successful longterm investing than brains and performance that has recently been good.

Over time, markets will do extraordinary, even bizarre, things. A single, big mistake could wipe out a long string of successes. We therefore need someone genetically programmed to recognize and avoid serious risks, including those never before encountered. Certain perils that lurk in investment strategies cannot be spotted by use of the models commonly employed today by financial institutions.

Temperament is also important. Independent thinking, emotional stability, and a keen understanding of both human and institutional behavior is vital to long-term investment success. I’ve seen a lot of very smart people who have lacked these virtues.

Finally, we have a special problem to consider: our ability to keep the person we hire. Being able to list Berkshire on a resume would materially enhance the marketability of an investment manager. We will need, therefore, to be sure we can retain our choice, even though he or she could leave and make much more money elsewhere.


There are surely people who fit what we need, but they may be hard to identify. In 1979, Jack Byrne and I felt we had found such a person in Lou Simpson. We then made an arrangement with him whereby he would be paid well for sustained overperformance. Under this deal, he has earned large amounts. Lou, however, could have left us long ago to manage far greater sums on more advantageous terms. If money alone had been the object, that’s exactly what he would have done. But Lou never considered such a move. We need to find a younger person or two made of the same stuff.

* * * * * * * * * * * *
The good news: At 76, I feel terrific and, according to all measurable indicators, am in excellent health. It’s amazing what Cherry Coke and hamburgers will do for a fellow.

Some Changes on Berkshire’s Board

The composition of our board will change in two ways this spring. One change will involve the Chace family, which has been connected to Berkshire and its predecessor companies for more than a century. In 1929, the first Malcolm G. Chace played an important role in merging four New England textile operations into Berkshire Fine Spinning Associates. That company merged with Hathaway Manufacturing in 1955 to form Berkshire Hathaway, and Malcolm G. Chace, Jr. became its chairman.

Early in 1965, Malcolm arranged for Buffett Partnership Ltd. to buy a key block of Berkshire shares and welcomed us as the new controlling shareholder of the company. Malcolm continued as non executive chairman until 1969. He was both a wonderful gentleman and helpful partner.

That description also fits his son, Malcolm “Kim” Chace, who succeeded his father on Berkshire’s board in 1992. But last year Kim, now actively and successfully running a community bank that he founded in 1996, suggested that we find a younger person to replace him on our board. We have done so, and Kim will step down as a director at the annual meeting. I owe much to the Chaces and wish to thank

Kim for his many years of service to Berkshire. In selecting a new director, we were guided by our long-standing criteria, which are that board members be owner-oriented, business-savvy, interested and truly independent. I say “truly” because many directors who are now deemed independent by various authorities and observers are far from that, relying heavily as they do on directors’ fees to maintain their standard of living. These payments, which come in many forms, often range between $150,000 and $250,000 annually, compensation that may approach or even exceed all other income of the “independent” director. And – surprise, surprise – director compensation has soared in recent years, pushed up by recommendations from corporate America’s favorite consultant, Ratchet, Ratchet and Bingo. (The name may be phony, but the action it conveys is not.). Charlie and I believe our four criteria are essential if directors are to do their job – which, by law, is to faithfully represent owners. Yet these criteria are usually ignored. Instead, consultants and CEOs seeking board candidates will often say, “We’re looking for a woman,” or “a Hispanic,” or “someone from abroad,” or what have you. It sometimes sounds as if the mission is to stock Noah’s ark. Over the years I’ve been queried many times about potential directors and have yet to hear anyone ask, “Does he think like an intelligent owner?”

The questions I instead get would sound ridiculous to someone seeking candidates for, say, football team, or an arbitration panel or a military command. In those cases, the selectors would look for people who had the specific talents and attitudes that were required for a specialized job. At Berkshire, we are in the specialized activity of running a business well, and therefore we seek business judgment.

That’s exactly what we’ve found in Susan Decker, CFO of Yahoo!, who will join our board at the annual meeting. We are lucky to have her: She scores very high on our four criteria and additionally, at 44, is young – an attribute, as you may have noticed, that your Chairman has long lacked. We will seek more young directors in the future, but never by slighting the four qualities that we insist upon.”


Misc.


“Berkshire will pay about $4.4 billion in federal income tax on its 2006 earnings. In its last fiscal year the U.S. Government spent $2.6 trillion, or about $7 billion per day. Thus, for more than half of on day, Berkshire picked up the tab for all federal expenditures, ranging from Social Security and Medicare payments to the cost of our armed services. Had there been only 600 taxpayers like Berkshire, no one else in America would have needed to pay any federal income or payroll taxes.”

“Our federal return last year, we should add, ran to 9,386 pages. To handle this filing, state and foreign tax returns, a myriad of SEC requirements, and all of the other matters involved in running Berkshire, we have gone all the way up to 19 employees at World Headquarters. This crew occupies 9,708 square feet of space, and Charlie – at World Headquarters West in Los Angeles – uses another 655 square feet. Our home-office payroll, including benefits and counting both locations, totaled $3,531,978 last year. We’re careful when spending your money.

Corporate bigwigs often complain about government spending, criticizing bureaucrats who they say spend taxpayers’ money differently from how they would if it were their own. But sometimes the financial behavior of executives will also vary based on whose wallet is getting depleted. Here’s an illustrative tale from my days at Salomon. In the 1980s the company had a barber, Jimmy by name, who came in weekly to give free haircuts to the top brass. A manicurist was also on tap. Then, because of a cost-cutting drive, patrons were told to pay their own way. One top executive (not the CEO) who had previously visited Jimmy weekly went immediately to a once-every-three-weeks schedule.”

“Every now and then Charlie and I catch on early to a tide-like trend, one brimming over with commercial promise. For example, though American Airlines (with its “miles”) and American Express (with credit card points) are credited as being trailblazers in granting customers “rewards,” Charlie and I were far ahead of them in spotting the appeal of this powerful idea. Excited by our insight, the two of us jumped into the reward business way back in 1970 by buying control of a trading stamp operation, Blue Chip Stamps. In that year, Blue Chip had sales of $126 million, and its stamps papered California. In 1970, indeed, about 60 billion of our stamps were licked by savers, pasted into books, and taken to Blue Chip redemption stores. Our catalog of rewards was 116 pages thick and chock full of tantalizing items. When I was told that even certain brothels and mortuaries gave stamps to their patrons, I felt I had finally found a sure thing

Well, not quite. From the day Charlie and I stepped into the Blue Chip picture, the business went straight downhill. By 1980, sales had fallen to $19.4 million. And, by 1990, sales were bumping along at $1.5 million. No quitter, I redoubled my managerial efforts.

Sales then fell another 98%. Last year, in Berkshire’s $98 billion of revenues, all of $25,920 (no zeros omitted) came from Blue Chip. Ever hopeful, Charlie and I soldier on.”


CEO Comp.


“At Berkshire, after all, I am a one-man compensation committee who determines the salaries and incentives for the CEOs of around 40 significant operating businesses. How much time does this aspect of my job take? Virtually none. How many CEOs have voluntarily left us for other jobs in our 42-year history? Precisely none.

Berkshire employs many different incentive arrangements, with their terms depending on such elements as the economic potential or capital intensity of a CEO’s business. Whatever the compensation arrangement, though, I try to keep it both simple and fair. When we use incentives – and these can be large – they are always tied to the operating results for which a given CEO has authority. We issue no lottery tickets that carry payoffs unrelated to business performance. If a CEO bats .300, he gets paid for being a .300 hitter, even if circumstances outside of his control cause Berkshire to perform poorly. And if he bats .150, he doesn’t get a payoff just because the successes of others have enabled Berkshire to prosper mightily. An example: We now own $61 billion of equities at Berkshire, whose value can easily rise or fall by 10% in a given year. Why in the world should the pay of our operating executives be affected by such $6 billion swings, however important the gain or loss may be for shareholders?”

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When To Sell? The Case Of Coca-Cola

So, we have discussed what types of stocks to buy and that our holding period is measured not in days or months but in many times years. The question now begs us, when should we sell? There are a couple of scenarios.

Deterioration of Business Environment: Let’s compare Coke (we will use Coke (KO) here since it is #1 but any soft drink will do) with tobacco. Currently soft drinks are under fire by health conscious politicians as our national obesity epidemic grows. Pretend for a minute (this is not such a big stretch) that in order to pay for “the health effects and costs of obesity” soft drink makers (like the tobacco companies) are ordered to pay billions to the states. Congress eliminates the companies ability to advertise their products to stop their use by minors and levies oppressive taxes on them to help pay these health costs. This causes the cost of a can of soda in a vending machine (when you can find one) to go from the now $1.50 to $2.50 or more. All soda is eliminated from schools or anywhere a child under 18 can easily purchase it. Unlike tobacco, whose users are addicts (and who seem more than willing to let these costs be passed down to them), the soft drink industry would collapse under this strain as people stopped buying them and switched to cheaper options. Any hint of this scenario would be time to sell any soft drink maker in your portfolio.

Valuation: During the frenzy in stocks that precluded the inevitable crash in 2000 Coke’s valuation became, in a word insane. Coke hit a high of $83 a share at the end of 1998 and sported a pe of over 50 times earnings. This is irrational for a company like Coke (I would argue it is irrational for ANY company but that is another post). Coke was a mature company growing in the teens (growth rate) and had typically only ever had high price to earnings ratios in the low 20’s. Investors were paying over twice that! Had you considered buying shares of Coke at the time I would have argued that it was too expensive (overpriced) on both a historical and absolute level. Now, if it is too overpriced to buy, ought not we consider selling it if we own it? Our own rule tells us the price must fall to a level commensurate to its growth rate. It did, to about $45 a share and now trades at a pe ratio of 20 times earnings, in line with historical averages. Why not sell it then and wait patiently for it to come to an appropriate valuation and purchase shares again? In this case it would have taken until Jan 2003 until its valuation was something that I would be willing to invest in (it would have been fairly priced, not a value). Coke’s largest investor Warren Buffett has several times in interviews lamented the fact he did not sell his stake in Coke during this period.

Odd Merger’s: There are many times mergers make sense. Proctor & Gamble (PG) buying Gillette, for instance. Two large consumer products companies coming together to make a stronger one. Then there are merger’s that make you scratch your head like AOL (AOL) and Time Warner (unmitigated disaster), Kraft Foods (KFT) and Phillip Morris (MO) or RJ Reynold’s Tobacco (RAI) and Nabisco Foods which have not worked out fully for either companies investors. Currently Altria (Phillip Morris) is in the process of spinning off Kraft Foods to “unlock value for investors” (translation: undoing the merger). This merger has dampened the appreciation of the stocks of both companies. The price investors are willing to pay for Altria stock is depressed because the low margin food business was seen as a drag on the highly profitable tobacco business and the tobacco business’s constant litigation woes are seen as a drag on the food business depressing the impact of Kraft’s contribution to the whole company. Now, contrast this to Altria’s purchase of 30% of SAB Miller (Miller beer) which has been a huge success for both companies (booze and cigarettes go together better than cigarettes and mac & cheese). Now, Altria’s stock has been one of the best market performers in history but even conservative estimates today place a 20% value appreciation from its current levels to investors after the spin off. Yes I own and would recommend you buy shares of Altria (MO). Coke, and even Pepsi for that matter have been very smart here . They have expanded their product lines in what they do best, non alcoholic beverages. Pespsi (PEP) ventured outside this with its purchase of Frito Lay but I think we would all agree that chips and soda mesh perfectly. Were ether to venture outside of this arena to an area wholly unrelated to their current businesses, red flags for investors should go up.

Note: The merger discussion does not apply to Holding Companies. By their very nature, holding companies set out to acquire a wide variety of unrelated business, take the profits from them and acquire more business. They have mandates from their board of directors to do this as their growth strategy.

I hope you can see that there really aren’t many reason to sell a stock IF you purchased it correctly. If you buy a good company with a durable competitive advantage and at great price there are only two real reasons to sell it. A fundamental change to the company (poor merger) or its business that negatively alter its future prospects, or its stock price becomes irrational overvalued. Be careful on price induced selling, there are always tax implications to consider when selling. The level of excess valuation must be far greater than the tax you will be forced to pay on your profits for this to be worthwhile. A poor quarter is not a reason to sell and in all actuality if the underlying business is still strong and the reasons you purchased it still apply, this is a perfect time to purchase more shares if their price falls.

If the stock price stays stagnant for an extended period of time, this too is no reason to sell. During the tech bubble of 1998-99 Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) shares fell almost 40%. Investors fled to tech shares and the latest “hot stock” they heard about at cocktail parties. Most of these companies had not yet figured out how to make money but did have fancy websites and a whole new vernacular to impress potential investors. Yet, there was nothing wrong with Berkshire’s businesses. They were all performing well and growing. Buffett was called “out of touch” with the new business paradigm because he felt paying 140 times earnings for Yahoo was a bad idea. The inevitable happened, there was no new paradigm, earnings still mattered and Berkshire stock has more than doubled off its lows while tech investors are still underwater with their picks.

The business matters more to you than the stock price. There will be times when there is a disconnect between the current state of the business (its actual value) and its stock price. Both the Coke and Berkshire examples above illustrate this. Do not get caught up in the hype either way. As Buffett likes to say “buy fear and sell greed”. When prices are unjustly inflated (Coke in 1999) sell and when they are unjustly depressed (Berkshire in 2000) buy and thus a value investor you shall be (wealthy too).

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Durable Competitive Advantage – Why it matters

It sounds nice but what does it mean and as an investor why do I care about it? Durable competitive advantage is sometimes referred to as a “business moat”. In its simplest term, it means the scale of a business in its field vs it peers. That is its “competitive advantage”. But, what makes it durable? What make an advantage durable is the cost and time it would take a current or potential competitor to grow large enough it this area (high barrier of entry) to adversely impact our business. A high level of durability allows us with a greater degree of accuracy to predict future earnings and thereby arrive at a price we are willing to purchase a piece of the business (share of stock). Now, how do we recognize those businesses that have this (or don’t) and how we look for it. Strict adherence to the “durable” portion of the phrase enables us to do one thing before we even begin to look at possible stocks to invest in: eliminate whole sectors of possible investment. This makes our investing easier by shrinking the field of candidates and reduces the chances of us making the mistake of investing our money in a good company in a lousy business.

Some examples of sectors that lack the “durable” portion:

Airlines: Investing history is littered with airline bankruptcies. Once high fliers fall victim to either high or low jet fuel prices or a recession and go under. After 9/11 were it not for the US Gov’t bailout of the airlines, most of them would have failed despite only being out of business for less than a week. High union costs, fickle customers and volatile fuel prices make any accurate assumption of future profits by investors impossible. Why would you buy into a company in which you have no idea of its future profitability? Southwest Airlines is a great company and the best managed of all the airlines but investing in it is akin to having the best lounge chair on the Titanic, eventually you’ll be sorry.

Tech: We have to be careful here and not throw the baby out with the bathwater. Not all tech qualifies here but let’s look at it generally and you will have to decide on a case by case basis. Warren Buffett of Berkshire Hathaway (BRKA) said it best about tech investing. I will paraphrase “I cannot invest in something that two teenagers with a pc in a garage can destroy”. What? Simple, Micheal Dell started building pc’s in his Texas dorm room, Bill Gates started Microsoft in his garage, Ebay was launched in a weekend from a living room after a labor day conversation and Google was a research project by two Stanford University students. All these businesses toppled industry leaders at the time and Google is in the process of doing it to several now. How can you be confident about an investment that an 18 year old writing code in his family room before he takes out the trash could make obsolete? This industry must constantly reinvent itself almost yearly in order to survive. The pace of the necessity of this change is accelerating every year. Look at the ipod, its success has exploded the last 3 years and in 6 months the iphone comes out. Having an ipod and a phone and having to carry both around will be a thing of the past. Competitors will flood the market with similar products and the stand alone ipod will be history. It will be relegated to the “remember when” conversations. This is how fast things change in tech and all these companies make missteps along the way and when they do, investors pay the price, heavily. Remember, since 2000 when investors thought these companies reinvented the rules of investing, Microsoft (MSFT), Dell (DELL), Amazon (AMZN), Yahoo (YHOO) and other are all still down over 40%. When is the last time you did not buy a bag of M&M’s because they “were so yesterday”, searched for the “newest version of Arm & Hammer baking soda” or would not be caught dead eating a Hershey’s candy bar? Me either..

You have to wade through the tech field carefully (I personally avoid it) and if you do decide to jump in, please do not do what most tech investors do, overpay for your shares (see yesterday’s Google post).

Auto Industry: See airlines

Pharmaceuticals: Decades ago these were great investments. However, the advent of generic drugs has turned this into a simple commodity business. They used to enjoy the financial fruits of new drugs for decades, now the exclusive locks up are shorter and increased competition means competitors have similar products in the market almost simultaneously with the generics undercutting profits. This industry is under attack by govt’s and now in the courts by users of their products. The economics of their industry have permanently changed for the worse and it should be avoided as they are spending more and more money to develop drugs with smaller profits potential. Bad equation.

So, now we have a brief idea of what to avoid it would be nice if I gave you some ideas of companies that have a competitive advantage that IS durable.

McDonald’s (MCD)- The turn of the century was hard on the golden arches. They had the perfect storm of bad events and the stock was punished over the next two years from almost $50 down as low as $14. Some of the mistakes were theirs and others were from events beyond their control. The turn of the century began with a heightened interest by consumers of what they put into their bodies. McDonald’s was slow to recognize this and their sales began to suffer. Then came mad cow. The whole fast food industry suffered as consumers began to look for options other than meat products to eat and McDonald’s was once again slow to react. Then the Jack In The Box chain in the pacific northwest began serving ecoli burgers and killed several people. These events lead people to fear the drive thru window. But, what was really wrong with McDonald’s that a menu fixin‘ wouldn’t cure? Nothing! Because of the durable competitive advantage it held over the rest of the industry and the value the McDonald’s brand held worldwide, after some menu tampering McDonald’s was once again off to the races. It has a worldwide distribution system second to none. It has since survived the premature death of 2 CEO’s and share are up 214% from their lows. Recent proof of McDonald’s advantage has been the introduction of coffee at its locations (good coffee I should say). It has been a huge success and chains like Dunkin‘ Donuts and Tim Horton’s have noticed sales declines were McDonald’s competes. At is low McDonald’s was a value investors dream…

John Deere (DE) / Caterpillar (CAT): If you are either farming or in construction your search for equipment most likely begins and ends at either of these companies. Both basically invented the industries in which they operate and by far are the world leaders in them to this day. Both stocks are up over 125% since 2000.

Walt Disney (DIS): When you think of your childhood or amusement parks does anything other than Disney come to mind? After stumbling at the turn of the century the House of Mouse has righted its ship and shares are back on the march. If you are my age and your folks had bought you Disney shares when you were born you would be sitting on a 5000% gain.

Hershey (HSY): The Hershey Company markets such well-known brands as Hershey’s, Reese’s, Hershey’s Kisses, Kit Kat, Almond Joy, Mounds, Jolly Rancher, Twizzlers, Ice Breakers, and Mauna Loa, as well as innovative new products such as Take 5 candy bar and Hershey’s Cookies and is the largest chocolate manufacturer in N. America.

Coke (KO)/ Pepsi (PEP): The two dominant worldwide soft drink makers. If you really think about it, they are really the only two of any significance. Their products are known worldwide and both stocks have produced. Had your folks bought you share in either when you were born in the early 70’s you would be sitting on in excess of 3000% gains.

All of these companies have rewarded loyal shareholders with great gains. The important thing to recognize is all have had their problems and because of their durable competitive advantages, have not only weathered the storms but emerged stronger companies.

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Sears Holdings (SHLD), Time To Enter The Insurance Biz?

Yesterday I opined about a few retail aquisitions Mr. Lampert could consider and what he should avoid. Let go a completely different route today.

Much has been said about SHLD becoming another Berkshire Hathaway. In Berkshire’s early years, Buffett made several very diverse aquisitions. For SHLD to follow in this path, might it be time to jump outside of the retail space? Perhaps follow into Warren’s footsteps and enter the insurance business? This does have the immediate benefit of officially qualifying SHLD as a holding company and not just a pure retailer. This will change how it is veiwed and shift the focus from the current miopic hysteria over its same store sales and onto its profits and investable cash (like Berkshire) were it should be. So, if we decide to go into the insurance biz, where to look?

I enected a couple of parameters here for looking at companies. I am looking for:

  • Can it be bought with cash? I do not want to use debt to purchase something
  • Does it have relatively high insider ownership
  • Billions in investments
  • Must have low debt
  • Trade reletively cheap to insurance peers

I came up with a few:

  1. Zenith National Insurance (ZNT) Does business pricipally in California insuring the workers compensation market. Insiders own approx. 13% of the business. Earnings growth has been very strong ($67 million in 2003, $112 million in 2004, $157 million 2005, and $174 million through the first 3 quarters of 2006). Total debt now stands at $59 million, a pittance. Here is the kicker, it has an investment portfolio Eddy would now control of $2.7 billion and a market cap of only $1.7 billion. Currently it trades at a pe of only 7 times ttm earnings and 7 times next years, well below its peers. Return on equity stands a 31%.
  2. Aspen Insurance Holdings (AHL) Headquatered in Bermuda, Aspen is another attractive candidate. Insider own 9% of the business. The investment portfolio here is the story, it currently stands at $4.4 billion vs. a market cap of only $2.4 billion. It trades at only 8 times ttm earnings and only 6 times next years projected. Total debt is higher than Zenith at $250 million but low for the industry and it recently began to accelerate its stock buy back program.
  3. Mercury General Corp (MCY) Insiders own 34% of this one. The investment portfolio here is another story. It stands at roughy $4.2 billion dollars and management has earned about 4% on it for the past several years. Can you imagine what Eddy could do to this ones earnings with his ability to invest? It has a market cap of $2.8 billion. Currently trades at 13 times ttm earnings and about 11 times next years projected, still a bit below inudstry average. Total debt stands at about $145 million.

All three would make excellent additions. They can be had for below market prices and come with billions in investments for Eddy to play with. Even better, they can be had without SHLD taking on any additional debt or shareholder dilution.

An aquisition of another retailer would have SHLD valued on the potential merits of its retail operations. Should Lampert instead gobble up an insurer, I beleive SHLD’s valuation would explode to the upside as Berkshire Hathaway comparisons would have more merit and people who missed the Berkshire boat many years ago would not make the same mistake twice. This would cause a rush to buy a stock with a small public float creating massive upward pressure. Add to this the large short position in SHLD and you could have a move to the upside that could bust many of the shorts.

Either way, this will be very interesting…..