Stocks are simple. All you do is buy shares in a great business for less than the business is intrinsically worth, with management of the highest integrity and ability. Then you own those shares forever. I will tell you how to become rich. Close the doors. Be fearful when others are greedy. Be greedy when others are fearful.

February 04, 2011

Walter Schloss’ Presentation at The Benjamin Graham Center for Value Investing

Walter Schloss’ Presentation at The Benjamin Graham Center for Value Investing
July 25th, 2010 · 1 Comment · Uncategorized
http://www.schloss-value-investing.com/2010/07/walter-schloss-presentation-at-the-benjamin-graham-center-for-value-investing/#more-70

Walter Schloss conducted a recorded video / audio presentation at the Richard Ivey School of Business’ Benjamin Graham Center for Value Investing. If you would like to see the audio / video, we have it on our value investing resource page. In this post, I am going to take notes on Schloss’ speech and add some commentary later in the week. Enjoy.

Started fund in 1955 when Graham said he was going to retire
Schloss was left handed (I never knew that)
Started out with 19 partners, each with approximately $5,000
Stayed in field until 2001 (or 2003…couldn’t recall). Son couldn’t find any good value stocks.
Started work when his father lost his job – the family had no money. Started off making $15/week. Wanted in the research department. Was denied. Was told to read “Security Analysis”
Question: How do you choose stocks? Answer: Stocks that are hitting new lows. Schloss fines Value Line very helpful. He doesn’t have a computer and likes to look at the numbers. He doesn’t talk to management teams.
Went to work for Graham in the beginning of 1946
Question: What process did you follow to minimize mistakes? Answer: I don’t like to lose money and therefore buy stocks that are protected on the downside and then the upside takes care of itself. Look for companies that do not have a lot of debt. By looking at the proxy statement and annual reports, can get a sense of how much stock the directors own, who owns a fair amount of stock, and the history of the company.
Look at companies selling at new lows. It means the company has problems. Debt exacerbates these problems.
Love companies with simple capital structures. Not a lot of debt. The company has to have history. Management needs to own stock.
Schloss admits he was never good at evaluating management character. Therefore he stuck to the numbers.
Value Line is helpful because you get a good sense of history on the company because they have 10-15 years of performance data.
Question: If stock falls, what do you do? Answer: If I like a company, I’ll buy more on the way down. Stock brokers do not like recommending stocks that are going down. The stockbrokers don’t want to look like fools. People get nervous when stocks go lower.
Likes to try to get 50% profit. Only long-term profits (don’t want to pay short term taxes)
Admits that he makes mistakes in sales. He will buy at $30, sell at $50, and see it go to $200
Likes stocks selling below book value. Reiterates how much he hates debt.
Read annual report. Figure out why the company is having problems.
If you get a stock selling significantly below book value, has a good history over 20 years, and little debt with lots of management holdings, probably a good purchase.
Margin of Safety to Schloss is if the company’s book value is substantially higher than the market price. Companies get bought out that are trading at significant discounts to book.
Question: Emotional mistakes? How do you control? Answer: Schloss does not get emotional about stocks. One reason he doesn’t talk to management teams is because management presents the company the way you want to see them. Schloss is not a good judge of people. Warren Buffett is. Schloss says you have to look at situations logically, not the way you WANT to look at it.
He wants to buy things the way there are, not the way they may be in the future. He wouldn’t buy a company with a prospect of an electric car just because of that prospect.
Seems to me that he uses Good to Cancel Orders
Question: Outstanding company at a fair price or a fair company at an outstanding price? Answer: He doesn’t want to buy good companies at what they are worth – he wants to buy these companies at a discount. Sometimes people get VERY nervous and bargains arise, but that is not too often. You want to buy stocks that you can make 50% over a couple of years.
He doesn’t like to lose money. So he buys companies that are having problems. He likes companies with no debt.
Quite often the stock market reacts emotionally. Bad news causes troubles. If you are managing money for other people you should not tell your limited partners what you own – Why? Don’t want competition. Don’t want to deal with investors emotions and don’t want to hear their complaints. If LPs are worried, don’t take them as investors.
Question: Three traits to be a successful value investor? Answer: Be calm and not to be emotional. Be intellectual and look at the facts. Never get emotionally involved in a stock.
Distinguish between temporary and permanent problems.
He likes companies to be a success. If you sell early, and the stock triples, who cares? Move on.
Question: Is the upcoming recession worse than previous ones? Answer: Schloss tries to stay away from what is going on in the overall economy. He has no idea what is going on in the economy. He buys stocks on what they are worth – and not what is going on in the macro economy.
Stop worrying about what is going on in the overall economy or where the market is going – buy cheap stocks – if you go into a recession, you’ll have to wait longer to make your money. Just buy cheap stocks.
Graham liked to compare stocks that started with the same letter of the alphabet. Intellectual exercise. Compared the stocks.
Compare stocks in the same field. Two liquor companies for instance. What are their trading levels?
Question: Has market become more efficient? Answer: As an analyst, your job is to determine why one stock is selling lower than another. If an industry is having a problem, take a look. A lot more competition but that being said, “value analysts” are still not happy buying stocks that are going down.
Harder to determine when to sell versus when to buy.
Question: Personal view on diversification? Answer: Stay away from industries that are outside of your circle of competence. More comfortable with very old industries. More comfortable in stocks than bonds because inflation eats up return. Very few people become millionaires buying bonds. Bonds are for old people.
Seems to me this guy is incredibly humble. Jives with what I have read in the past.
Question: Raising capital in the 50s as a young fund manager? Answer: Not an aggressive man in going around to raise capital. Get your feet wet with family money. Very difficult to start a fund. You don’t want to lose money. If you like math, if you like investing, you can do it as long as you control your emotions.
Question: Biggest mistake? Answer: ”I forget my mistakes.” Awesome. Schloss didn’t lose money often. Never put a great amount of money in any one stock. Held over 100 stocks at any one time.
Compared value of a company versus its working capital…i.e the company was trading at 2 dollars a share but had 7 dollars of working capital per share.
Didn’t like getting involved in legal actions
Never focused on mistakes – including selling too early
Question: China? Answer: Schloss does not buy foreign companies. It is not easy to judge foreign companies. Insiders have too much advantage overseas.
Question: When to sell / mechanics of sales? “I don’t know when to sell” Schloss will sell at 100% profit. At Graham Newman will scale their sales. Will usually hold stocks for 3 years. Schloss likes profit, but he has no formula for when to sell.
If a stock gets high enough, it becomes a lot more vulnerable.
Schloss quotes from Ben Graham from the 3rd edition of Security Analysis: McDonald’s was selling at $14, down from $35. Graham’s arbitrage formula for return per year.
Question: Max you would allocate to a stock in a portfolio? If you really like, individually, you might put 20% in one stock for yourself. In a partnership, you may put only 10% in.
Shorted stocks in the tech bubble. Historically never did it before. It made him feel uncomfortable.
Question: Research – just Value Line and Annual? Answer: Less than book value, not much debt. Then you look at company itself – company might suck, but it may have a lot of book value.
Question: How do you become comfortable with an industry? He likes simple manufacturing companies. Companies might have lots of growth, but stockholders might do poorly. Simply capitalized companies. Look at the last 20 years. And then get an annual report.
Buys stocks where the outlook is not good.
Value Line: Look where stock was ten years ago.
The point is: You do not want to lose money. Buy stocks that are depressed, that aren’t going broke.
Warren Buffett – very brilliant guy – but some people were reluctant to invest because there was no income.
Question: What is the most important thing in investing and in life that you have learned in the past 50 or so years? Answer: Honesty is the best thing you could have.
Stay tuned over the next week as we analyze this Walter Schloss’ speech on value investing.

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Value Investing Resources
http://www.schloss-value-investing.com/value-investing-resources/

Here I am in the process of compiling literally everything I can find on the web as it relates to Walter Schloss, Irving Kahn, and other members of the Graham – Newman Partnership. This list will continually be updated as I stumble upon more items – that being said, if you have something to share, please shoot me an email at hunter [at] distressed-debt-investing.com

Walter Schloss Resources

Schloss honoring Janet Lowe

Profiles in Investing Walter and Edwin Schloss

Schloss on Graham from Lowe’s Biography

Walter Schloss on Liquidations

Walter Schloss List of Stocks

In Defense of Stock Dividends

Intrinsic Value is Key Factor

Walter J. Schloss_Searching for Value

Schloss Seminar at CBS ’93

The Over-Valuation of Some Blue Chip Stocks

Profiles in Investing Walter and Edwin Schloss

Who is Walter Schloss – Barrons Article

The Hippocratic Method in Security Analysis

Making Money Out of Junk

Walter J. Schloss: Searching for Value

Factors needed to make money in the stock market

Walter Schloss on Liquidations

Schloss at Grant’s Interest Rate Observer Conference

Schloss: “Why We Invest the Way We Do”

Why Schloss is Such a Great Investor

Schloss on the DJIA

Walter Schloss: 1985 Barrons Article

Benjamin Graham and Security Analysis: A Reminiscence
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Walter Schloss and Value Investing – Barron’s Article from 1985
August 23rd, 2010 · No Comments · Uncategorized

One of the reasons I started a value investing blog on Walter Schloss, Irving Kahn, early Warren Buffett and other members of the Graham-Newman Corporation was my fascination on how rare their early investment style is still applied today. I think we can all agree that finding 2/3 net/nets as Ben Graham prescribed is difficult. That being said, far too often we hear about GARP or EV/EBITDA versus as asset based approach so effectively employed by Walter Schloss.

In 1985, Barron’s ran a story entitled “The Right Stuff: Why Walter Schloss is Such a Great Investor.” You can find a link to the piece in our value investing resources page. In this post, like one of our earlier Walter Schloss posts on the blog, I will be using bullet points to document my notes.

Interesting point about how Barron’s had not heard of Walter Schloss until Warren Buffett blew his cover in the ever famous “The Superinvestors of Graham-And-Doddsville”
Walter recounts how he got into the business. It is interesting to note that in this interview, he says “Graham was writing his book on the stock market, and I remember helping him with one chapter.” I never knew that part of the story – this is all before Schloss had enlisted.
Very heartily recommends The Intelligent Investor
Compares Ben Graham to an undervalued security: “It’s a funny thing about Graham. I think he was like an undervalued security, if you want to know. People said, ‘Oh, Ben Graham, he’s very smart.’ But then they’d go off and do their own little thing with computers, or whatever the popular thing was at the moment. They kind of forgot. They’d say ‘Oh, we like undervalued stocks,’ but then they wouldn’t buy them.” He then goes on to point out that Graham’s ideas made perfect sense to him.
Ben Graham’s philosophy on buying a diversified pool of stocks stems from the pain he experienced during the Great Depression.
At Graham Newman they followed “the idea of buying companies selling below working capital – at two thirds of working capital – then, when the stocks’ prices went up to match working capital per share, we’d have made 50% on our money. And the firm averaged about 20% a year on that basis.” Schloss, like I noted above, then goes on to note that during the fifties, those stocks started disappearing.
Why did these stocks trade at these levels previously? “They were mostly secondary companies; they were never the top grade companies. And they tended to be ignored by the public because they didn’t have any sex appeal, there wasn’t any growth – there was always trouble with them. You were buying trouble when you bought these companies, but you were buying them cheap. Of course, when you got them too cheap, they maybe ended up going down the tubes. So you try to be a little careful. But people don’t like to buy things that are going down.”
Philosophy: “Graham liked the idea of protection on the downside and basically, that’s what I do. I try not to lose money.”
When asked what he think the market will do, his response: “I’ve got no idea; your guess is as good as mine.”
Schloss on timing: “Timing is a very – everybody tries to do it, so I stay away from the game that everyone’s trying to do. If you buy value – and you may buy it too soon, as undoubtedly I do – then if it goes lower; you buy more. You have to have confidence in what you are doing.”
Again using five years as a yardstick. But notes their average holding period is 4 years.
Liked to stay under the radar.
On his investing style: “I am a passive investor. There are people who try to be very aggressive; they try to buy companies [Editor Note: Remember this is during the LBO Boom of the mid to late 80s]. We just buy the stock, and if it goes to what we think is a reasonable price, we sell it and move on to something else. Graham made the point in his book where he said, ‘You buy stocks like you buy groceries, not like you buy perfume.’ You’re looking for value.”
No ticker tape machine in his office – he tries to stay away from the emotions of the market. The market appeals to fear and greed – He doesn’t want to be a part of that.
Blames Warren Buffett for the uprise in value investing and how hard it is to buy cheap stocks.
Gives an anecdote about a stock that Schloss purchased for the fund and then the company was bought out shortly thereafter: “But the point is, if it hadn’t worked out that way, Stauffer was a really good company, and in a few years it would have worked out satisfactory. It happened to work out quicker, that’ all.”
Doesn’t like short term gains.
On the insert lists the rationale’s for a number of his stock picks:
“The downside is limited…so you buy it”
It isn’t exactly cheap. But it’s a good value.”
“Basically a good company and there will be another deal”
“It does have problems. I can’t say that enough.”
“The timber is worth a lot more than the market price.”
“You couldn’t replace it for what it sells for.” (On Texaco)
“A good value stock. They had a terrible break.”
“There’s no particular point selling it. I have a big profit.”
“It’s got a lot of cash flow”
Note that he was managing $45M in 1987
Notes that Graham returned a substantial amount of his limited partners capital when he couldn’t find cheap stocks in 53′.
On portfolio management: “The thing is, we don’t put the same amount in each stock. If you like something like Northwest Industries, you put a lot of money in it. But we may buy a little bit of stock, to get our feet wet, and get a feeling for it. Sometimes if you don’t own a stock, you don’t pay enough attention. Then also, we sell stock on scale. Sometimes we sell some, and then stock poops out on us, and then we’re stuck.”
Continuing: “Sometimes we get into situations where we really don’t sell at all. So we have more securities than I’d like to have, and yet, I feel comfortable owning them. Then, of course, you get a situation where you buy the stock, and it seems a good value, and it goes up a fair amount, and you like it better. You become a little more attached to it, and then you see some pluses that you may not have realized before.”
The quote above confuses me: Does he mean you like the stock because it has gone up or because you’ve done more work on it and got lucky with the price action?
Adjusted Working Capital = Current Assets – Current Liabilities – Debt
Again notes about management holding stock – seems to be very import to Walter Schloss
Talk about analyzing the balance sheet: “And of course a lot of companies have lots of assets tied up in plant and equipment. Well is it an old plant, or is it a new plant?
“You don’t have to just look at book value. You can look at what you think companies are worth, if sold. Are you getting a fair stake for your money?”
Talks about a “good company” and dubs it a “not a book value stock.” (For reference, the company was selling at 10x earnings, 5.5% dividend yield, 1.5x book, 15% ROE)
Here is a very interesting quote (probably my favorite in this article): When asked why “park money” in a stock: “If the market was very low, I’d say ‘Well, CPC probably isn’t a great stock to own. If the market is so cheap, you want something with a little more zip in it, or potential.’ In a market like ours, which is not very cheap – I wouldn’t say its way overpriced, because it isn’t; it’s in a more reasonable area-there’s more risk on the downside. CPC probably doesn’t have that much downside risk, and therefore I feel comfortable with it. If the market should collapse, we, then maybe we’d sell it, assuming we’d be getting that price, and buy something that’d gone down a lot.”
Notes how he doesn’t get involved in looking at earnings potential.
Why difficult to sell? Upward price movements feed on themselves …
On holding cash: “We’ve never really done that. We’ve always been fully invested. Which may be good, and may not be good – it’s psychological. I find I’m more comfortable being fully invested than I am sitting with cash.” …very different from a number of Value Investing Legends…
Note he doesn’t play in options, doesn’t write covered calls, doesn’t short stocks
Noted that Graham thought when there were no working capital stocks, the market was overvalued…Schloss does not that theory does not really apply anymore.
Schloss on the market: “I simply say, if there are not too many value stocks that I can find, the market isn’t all that cheap.”
Simply incredible. Stay tuned later in the week when we explore more value investing articles on Walter Schloss and start digging into some securities.
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Investment Nuggets

WALTER SCHLOSS
Walter Schloss is considered one of the investment greats, a value investor in the same league as the Oracle of Omaha, Warren Buffet. Like Buffett, Walter Schloss was also trained under the legendary Benjamin Graham. For a brief while in the 1950s, Schloss and Buffet even shared the same office.

For sheer uninterrupted performance record, few investors can match Walter Schloss. For 45 years from 1955 to 2000, he managed the investment partnership, Walter J. Schloss Associates and delivered an astounding compound annual return of more than 15 per cent per year compared to a gain of S&P 500 of just over 10 per cent.

And this is what Buffet had to say about Walter Schloss: "He knows how to identify securities that sell at considerably less than their value to a private owner: And that's all he does. He owns many more stocks that I do and is far less interested in the underlying nature of the business; I don't seem to have very much influence on Walter. That is one of his strengths; no one has much influence on him."

"One of the things we've done is hold over a hundred companies in our portfolio. Now Warren (Buffet) has said to me that, that is a defence against stupidity. And my argument was, and I made it to Warren, we can't project the earnings of these companies, they are secondary companies, but somewhere along the line some of them will work. Now I cannot tell you which ones, so I buy a hundred of them. Of course, it does not mean you own the same amount of each stock."

"I'm not very good at judging people. So I found that it was much better to look at figures rather than people. I didn't go to many meetings unless they were relatively nearby. I like the idea of company-paid dividends, because I think it makes management a little more aware of stockholders, but we did not really talk about it, because we were small. I think if you were big, if you were a Fidelity, you wanted to go out and talk to management. They would listen to you. I think it is really easy to use numbers when you're small."

"Timidity prompted by past failures causes investors to miss the most important bull markets."

"We did not get involved in many companies that turned crooked. I know there were a few people that had poor reputations and their stocks were low, and when we did buy some of those we were sorry afterwards because they figured out a way of taking advantage of you, and you were always worried that they'd do something that didn't like."

"When companies have problems they often like to have their annual meetings in cities and states where there are not too many stockholders."

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January 30, 2011

Lou Simpson on investing

Lou Simpson, has long managed the investment $4 billion portfolio of GEICO, the insurance company Berkshire Hathaway owns. He is also the only man other than Warren Buffett who has managed stock investments in Berkshire’s portfolio. Like Warren Buffett, he has a general distaste for technology stocks. He favors intensive research to find attractive companies to invest in and a willingness to bet on just a handful of stocks. In 2004, the only time that Berkshire ever stated Geico’s performance separately, Mr. Simpson over 24 years had posted a 20 percent average annual gain, surpassing the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index by 6.8 percentage points. Mr. Simpson is known for eschewing publicity so it is a unique opportunity to learn more about him.

On many occasions when the media announces that Berkshire Hathaway has taken a sizable stake in a publicly-traded business, it is actually a position initiated by Mr. Simpson for the GEICO portfolio. You can learn a lot by reading about one of his rare interviews, given in 1987 with the Washington Post. Lou Simpson said:

Think independently - We try to be skeptical of conventional wisdom, he says, and try to avoid the waves of irrational behavior and emotion that periodically engulf Wall Street. We don’t ignore unpopular companies. On the contrary, such situations often present the greatest opportunities.

Invest in high-return businesses that are run for the shareholders - Over the long run, he explains, appreciation in share prices is most directly related to the return the company earns on its shareholders’ investment. Cash Flow, which is more difficult to manipulate than reported earnings, is a useful additional yardstick. We ask the following questions in evaluating management: Does management have a substantial stake in the stock of the company? Is management straightforward in dealings with the owners? Is management willing to divest unprofitable operations? Does management use excess cash to repurchase shares? The last may be the most important. Managers who run a profitable business often use excess cash to expand into less profitable endeavors. Repurchase of shares is in many cases a much more advantageous use of surplus resources.

Pay only a reasonable price, even for an excellent business - We try to be disciplined in the price we pay for ownership even in a demonstrably superior business. Even the world’s greatest business is not a good investment, he concludes, if the price is too high. The ratio of price to earnings and its inverse, the earnings yield, are useful gauges in valuing a company, as is the ratio of price to free cash flow. A helpful comparison is the earnings yield of a company versus the return on a risk-free long-term United States Government obligation.

Invest for the long term - Attempting to guess short-term swings in individual stocks, the stock market, or the economy, he argues, is not likely to produce consistently good results. Short-term developments are too unpredictable. On the other hand, shares of quality companies run for the shareholders stand an excellent chance of providing above-average returns to investors over the long term. Furthermore, moving in and out of stocks frequently has two major disadvantages that will substantially diminish results: transaction costs and taxes. Capital will grow more rapidly if earnings compound with as few interruptions for commissions and tax bites as possible.

Do not diversify excessively - An investor is not likely to obtain superior results by buying a broad cross-section of the market, he believes. The more diversification, the more performance is likely to be average, at best. We concentrate our holdings in a few companies that meet our investment criteria. Good investment ideas--that is, companies that meet our criteria--are difficult to find. When we think we have found one, we make a large commitment. The five largest holdings at GEICO account for more than 50 percent of the stock portfolio.

16 golden rules from Walter Scholos

Here are 16 golden rules for investing from Walter Scholoss. This came from a 1994 lecture he gave. Thanks to Todd Sullivan for the finding:


1. Price is the most important factor to use in relation to value

2. Try to establish the value of the company. Remember that a share of stock represents a part of a business and is not just a piece of paper.

3. Use book value as a starting point to try and establish the value of the enterprise. Be sure that debt does not equal 100% of the equity. (Capital and surplus for the common stock).

4. Have patience. Stocks don’t go up immediately.

5. Don’t buy on tips or for a quick move. Let the professionals do that, if they can. Don’t sell on bad news.

6. Don’t be afraid to be a loner but be sure that you are correct in your judgment. You can’t be 100% certain but try to look for the weaknesses in your thinking. Buy on a scale down and sell on a scale up.

7. Have the courage of your convictions once you have made a decision.

8. Have a philosophy of investment and try to follow it. The above is a way that I’ve found successful.

9. Don’t be in too much of a hurry to see. If the stock reaches a price that you think is a fair one, then you can sell but often because a stock goes up say 50%, people say sell it and button up your profit. Before selling try to reevaluate the company again and see where the stock sells in relation to its book value. Be aware of the level of the stock market. Are yields low and P-E rations high. If the stock market historically high. Are people very optimistic etc?

10. When buying a stock, I find it heldful to buy near the low of the past few years. A stock may go as high as 125 and then decline to 60 and you think it attractive. 3 yeas before the stock sold at 20 which shows that there is some vulnerability in it.

11. Try to buy assets at a discount than to buy earnings. Earning can change dramatically in a short time. Usually assets change slowly. One has to know much more about a company if one buys earnings.

12. Listen to suggestions from people you respect. This doesn’t mean you have to accept them. Remember it’s your money and generally it is harder to keep money than to make it. Once you lose a lot of money, it is hard to make it back.

13. Try not to let your emotions affect your judgment. Fear and greed are probably the worst emotions to have inconnection with purchase and sale of stocks.

14. Remember the work compounding. For example, if you can make 12% a year and reinvest the money back, you will double your money in 6 yrs, taxes excluded. Remember the rule of 72. Your rate of return into 72 will tell you the number of years to double your money.

15. Prefer stock over bonds. Bonds will limit your gains and inflation will reduce your purchasing power.

16. Be careful of leverage. It can go against you.

Walter Schloss - buy less than book value, no debt

Experience
http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2008/0211/048_print.html

Bernard Condon 02.11.08, 12:00 AM ET
At 91, the man Warren Buffett famously dubbed a "superinvestor" is still picking unloved stocks.

Walter Schloss has lived through 17 recessions, starting with one when Woodrow Wilson was President. This old-school value investor has made money through many of them. What's ahead for the economy? He doesn't worry about it.

A onetime employee of the grand panjandrum of value, Benjamin Graham, and a man his pal Warren Buffett calls a "superinvestor," Schloss at 91 would rather talk about individual bargains he has spotted. Like the struggling car-wheel maker or the moneylosing furniture supplier.

Bushy-eyebrowed and avuncular, Schloss has a laid-back approach that fast-money traders couldn't comprehend. He has never owned a computer and gets his prices from the morning newspaper. A lot of his financial data come from company reports delivered to him by mail, or from hand-me-down copies of Value Line, the stock information service.

He loves the game. Although he stopped running others' money in 2003--by his account, he averaged a 16% total return after fees during five decades as a stand-alone investment manager, versus 10% for the S&P 500--Schloss today oversees his own multimillion-dollar portfolio with the zeal of a guy a third his age. In a day of computer models that purport to quantify that hideous and mysterious force called risk, listening to Schloss talk of his simple, homespun investing methods is a tonic.

"Well, look at that," he says brightly, while scanning the paper. "A list of worst- performing stocks."

During his time as a solo manager after leaving Graham's shop, he was a de facto hedge fund. He charged no management fee but took 25% of profits. He ran his business with no research assistants, not even a secretary. He and his son, Edwin (who joined him in 1973), worked in a single room, poring over Value Line charts and tables.

In a famous 1984 speech titled the "The Superinvestor of Graham-and-Doddsville," Buffett said Schloss was a flesh-and-blood refutation of the Efficient Market Theory. This hypothesis holds that no stock bargains exist, or at least ones mere mortals can pick out consistently. Asked whether he considers himself a superinvestor, Schloss demurs: "Well, I don't like to lose money."

He has a Depression-era thriftiness that benefited clients well. His wife, Anna, jokes that he trails her around their home turning off lights to save money. If prodded, he'll detail for visitors his technique for removing uncanceled stamps from envelopes. Those beloved Value Line sheets are from his son, 58, who has a subscription. "Why should I pay?" Schloss says.

Featured in Adam Smith's classic book Supermoney (1972), Schloss amazed the author by touting "cigar butt" stocks like Jeddo Highland Coal and New York Trap Rock. Schloss, as quoted by Smith, was the soul of self-effacement, saying, "I'm not very bright." He didn't go to college and started out as a Wall Street runner in the 1930s. Today he sits in his Manhattan apartment minding his own capital and enjoying simple pleasures. "Look at that hawk!" he erupts at the sight of one winging over Central Park.

One company he's keen on now shows the Schloss method. That's the wheelmaker. Superior Industries International gets three-quarters of sales from ailing General Motors and Ford. Earnings have been falling for five years. Schloss picks up a Value Line booklet from his living room table and runs his index finger across a line of numbers, spitting out the ones he likes: stock trading at 80% of book value, a 3% dividend yield, no debt. "Most people say, 'What is it going to earn next year?' I focus on assets. If you don't have a lot of debt, it's worth something."


Schloss screens for companies ideally trading at discounts to book value, with no or low debt, and managements that own enough company stock to make them want to do the right thing by shareholders. If he likes what he sees, he buys a little and calls the company for financial statements and proxies. He reads these documents, paying special attention to footnotes. One question he tries to answer from the numbers: Is management honest (meaning not overly greedy)? That matters to him more than smarts. The folks running Hollinger International were smart but greedy--not good for investors.

Schloss doesn't profess to understand a company's operations intimately and almost never talks to management. He doesn't think much about timing--am I buying at the low? selling at the high?--or momentum. He doesn't think about the economy. Typical work hours when he was running his fund: 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., only a half hour after the New York Stock Exchange's closing bell.

Schloss owns a prized 1934 edition of Graham's Security Analysis he still thumbs through. Its binding is held together by three strips of Scotch tape. In the small room he invests from now, across the hall from his apartment, one wall contains a half-dozen gag pictures of Buffett (the Omaha sage with buxom cheerleaders or with a towering stack of Berkshire Hathaway tax returns). Each has a joke scribbled at the bottom and a salutation using Schloss' nickname from the old days, Big Walt.

Schloss first met that more famous value hunter at the annual meeting of wholesaler Marshall Wells. The future billionaire was drawn there for the reason Schloss had come: The stock was trading at a discount to net working capital (cash, inventory and receivables minus current liabilities). That number was a favorite measure of value at Graham-Newman, the investment firm Schloss joined after serving in World War II. Buffett came to the firm after the Marshall Wells meeting, sharing an office with Schloss at New York City's Chanin Building on East 42nd Street.

Schloss left the Graham firm in 1955 and with $100,000 from 19 investors began buying "working capital stocks" on his own, like mattressmaker Burton-Dixie and liquor wholesaler Schenley Industries. Success drew in investors, eventually rising to 92. But Schloss never marketed his fund or opened a second one, and he kept money he had to invest to a manageable size by handing his investors all realized gains at year-end, unless they told him to reinvest.

In 1960 the S&P was up half a percentage point, with dividends. Schloss returned 7% after fees. One winner: Fownes Brothers & Co., a glovemaker picked up for $2, nicely below working capital per share, and sold at $15. In the 1980s and 1990s he also saw big winners. By then, since inventory and receivables had become less important, he had shifted to stocks trading at below book value. But the tempo of trading had picked up. He often found himself buying while stocks still had a long way to fall and selling too early. He bought Lehman Brothers below book shortly after it went public in 1994 and made 75% on it in a few months. Then Lehman went on to triple in price.

Still, many of his calls were spot-on. He shorted Yahoo and Amazon before the markets tanked in 2000, and cleaned up. After that, unable to find many cheap stocks, he and Edwin liquidated, handing back investors $130 million. The Schlosses went out with flair: up 28% and 12% in 2000 and 2001 versus the S&P's --9% and --12%.

The S&P now is off 15% from its peak, yet Schloss says he still doesn't see many bargains. He's 30% in cash. A recession, if it comes, may not change much. "There're too many people with money running around who have read Graham," he says.

Nevertheless, he has found a smattering of cheap stocks he thinks are likely to rise at some point. High on his watch list (see table) is CNA Financial, trading at 10% less than book; its shares have fallen 18% in a year. The insurer has little debt, and 89% of the voting stock is owned by Loews Corp., controlled by the billionaire Tisch family. He says buy if it gets cheaper. "I can't say people will get rich on it, but I would rather be safe than sorry," he says. "If it falls more, I won't worry about it. Let the Tisches worry about it."

Schloss flips through Value Line again and stops at page 885: Bassett Furniture, battered by a lousy housing market. The chair- and tablemaker is trading at a 40% discount to book and sports an 80-cent dividend, a fat 7% yield. Schloss mutters something about how book value hasn't risen for years and how the dividend may be under threat.

His call: Consider buying when the company cuts its dividend. Then Bassett will be even cheaper and it eventually will recover.

If only he had waited a bit to buy wheelmaker Superior, too. It's been two years since he bought in, and the stock is down a third. But the superinvestor, who has seen countless such drops, is philosophical and confident this one is worth book at least. "How much can you lose?" he asks.
--------------------------------------------------
Walter Schloss-1995
What makes these successful investors particularly interesting is that their good fortune is not uniformly attributable to extraordinary brilliance–though they are certainly smart–but more to the principles of value investing, which anyone with a solid grasp of high school mathematics can learn. Value investors don’t try to predict the growth prospects of the latest high-tech darling. Instead they focus on stocks that are cheap by basic measures such as market value to book value or earnings to price.
Take a closer look at the record of Walter Schloss, a walking, talking refutation of just about every major tenet of the EMT and probably the purest example of a traditional value investor. Schloss, 78, has been beating the S&P 500 since before there was an S&P 500. (Although data for the index now go back to 1926, S&P didn’t create the 500 until 1957. Schloss began his market-beating run in 1955, and the following year outpaced what would become the S&P 500.)
Over the 39 years that Schloss has been managing money on his own, the firm has averaged an annual rate of return of slightly over 20%, while his limited partners have made 15.5% a year on their money, reflecting the 25% cut of profits Schloss collects for his services. Over the same period, the S&P 500 averaged a 10% return.
The high returns that Schloss has earned are possible in a world governed by the EMT, but only if you take on much more risk than the market as a whole entails. Schloss, however, has taken less risk. Consider: Since the Brooklyn Dodgers beat the Yankees in the 1955 World Series, the S&P 500 has finished in the red nine times. Schloss lost money in only six years, and eased the pain for his clients in those periods by forgoing
management fees. Says he: “I don’t think I should get paid if I do a lousy job.”
Described by someone who knows him well as “a man of modest talent and light work habits,” Schloss practices investing in a way that any ordinary investor can. Dressed in a well-worn trader’s smock, he works entirely from public documents and a few publications like Value Line in one cramped, little office squirrelly with annual reports, 10-Ks, pictures of Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, and Schloss’s children and grandchildren. The
one window looks out onto an air shaft. The total value of the fixed assets in that office? Three thousand dollars. He has never had a computer or a fax machine, and he still pecks away on an old Olympus manual typewriter to correspond with clients.

Schloss doesn’t speak to the managements of the companies he invests in, because he says he doesn’t want to get attached to them. And he doesn’t attend the companies’ annual meetings unless they are within a 20-block radius of his office. The simple truth here is that Schloss holds no advantage over other investors. And he agrees: He claims to have no special ability at analyzing businesses–a modest assertion with which his friends generally agree. Other investors may fly around the country searching for investment ideas; Schloss is far more likely to spend the entire day chatting with his son Edwin, the only other member of the firm, about the theater or the latest Updike novel, while their one telephone sits, un- ringing, on Schloss’s desk. What Schloss does have, however, says Chris Browne, of the old-line investment firm Tweedy Browne, which has provided Schloss with office space for many years, “is the ability to think for himself. Walter leans into the wind until the wind changes.”
Although Schloss says that he is flexible, he favors buying cheap companies as measured by market to book value. He prefers looking at asset values rather than earnings because he feels that accounting rules leave too much wiggle room to manipulate profits. Generally he prefers to buy stocks that are selling for one-half to two-thirds of book value. But they aren’t easy to find–only about 15 members of the 1,600-stock Value Line
universe meet that criteria. So he will go up to 100% of book or even slightly over. He gets in cheap, and when the stock price rises to what he thinks is fair, he gets out. Like many other dyed-in-the-wool value investors, Schloss doesn’t put a time limit on stocks he buys. As long as the reasons for buying remain valid, he’s willing to wait years for the payoff.
Not all of Schloss’s picks work out, but by maintaining a portfolio of about 75 to 100 stocks, which he turns over once every four years, he limits the damage from bad decisions. And he has had a few of those, including Intertan, an electronics retailer that Schloss bought in 1992, when the shares were $12. After Schloss invested, the stock suffered a big drop as its earnings dried up. He sold last year at $8 a share. Says Schloss:
“We bought it at about half book value, but it just got worse.” Even great value investors occasionally have to admit they were wrong.
Schloss keeps his risk low in other ways: Because he gets in when prices are already low and the market has low expectations for the company, he runs less chance of disappointment than if he owned fast-growth stocks, where investor expectations run high. Proof of Schloss’s low-risk style came in a dramatic way in 1987. Going into that fateful October, Schloss was up 53% for the first nine months, vs. 42% for the market.
But he finished the year up 26%, vs. the market’s 5%.
There are no secrets to the way that Schloss invests. The value investing he practices can be learned by anyone who takes the time. Just ask Schloss’s landlord and fellow outperformer, Tweedy Browne, which has passed on its successful value investing strategy from one generation to the next like Grandma’s recipe for pfefferneusen.

January 28, 2011

Mohnish started building an investment checklist

http://www.gurufocus.com/news.php?id=109358
I am lucky enough to be attending the Value Investing Congress. I took extensive notes on every speech and hope to post each one on GuruFocus over the next few days, in addition I will be posting a couple of interviews I plan on conducting. To follow my live updates from the Congress sign up for my Twitter alerts

http://twitter.com/valuewalk

Mohnish Pabrai spoke on the second day of the conference.

Mohnish Pabrai, is Managing Partner of Pabrai Investment Funds, a group of focused value funds. Since inception in 1999 with $1 million, Pabrai Funds has grown to over $500 million in assets under management. Pabrai is the author of two books on value investing,Mosaic andThe Dhandho Investor.

Mohnish Pabrai’s talk centers on checklists for investing. Mohnish “highly, highly recommends reading Dr. Atul’s book,The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right.”

In 1935 when the US was looking for next bomber, Boeing invented the B-17 bomber widely exceeded everything the army had previously put out, however they had a test run and two pilots died.

Boeing went back to look at what happened. And they realized that this was too complex. So Boeing engineers came up with a checklist. Afterwards the plan had a flawless bomber.

Today the aviation check list has become very organized, and the pilots are trained to live and die by that checklist.

The list is highly practical and easy to understand. The checklist is extensively researched and is stimulated by flight simulators to see if anything should be added or subtracted.

In America there are five million lines inserted into America in ICUs. About 80% of these line insertions led to infection, of which 20-25% of which were fatal.

A doctor in John Hopkins had nurses stand by the doctors before line insertions.

He listed five points in his check list which are all pretty basic thinks like washing hands with soaps before line insertions.

Nurses noticed that a lot of these rules were missed, so he had the nurses make sure the doctor kept to the five rules. After this happened the amount of infections went down to zero. He took this approach to other hospitals. And nowadays this procedure has become standard in US hospitals.

The FAA is actually one of the most successful agencies.

The FAA has very little to do with actual flights, they only go into action when an accident occurs. The FAA gets down of what happened. Bird hits happen to be a major problem for airplanes. When the Hudson crash occurred due to the Canadian geese, the FAA made sure to keep better track of Canadian Geese.

Flying is very cheap and safe. However, the nuclear industry took a different approach which was not pragmatic and could not tolerate a single human life. And we are praying the price 20 years later.

Mohnish found that the FAA approach could be used in investing. He compares a crash to a loss of capital.

Mohnish started building an investment checklist. He looked at mistakes Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger made and mistakes by other great value investors.

Mohnish compiled a list of 70 items two years ago. Since then Mohnish has achieved a zero error rate. However, Mohnish warns there are bound to be errors in the future.

Mohnish looked at many the great fund’s 13Fs from 2004 to see approximately what their buy price and look at their sell price. He analyzed twelve investors and came up with a list of 320 companies that these investors lost money in totaling $20 billion. He looked at why they might have bought and sold these securities.

He picked 26 of the 320 companies and looked in depth at them. He only looked at three financial companies to diversify across industries. Now Mohnish is up to 97 points in his checklist.

Mohnish quotes Jack Welsh as stating that GE will only be in an industry where they are number one or two.

HP and Lexmark had a duopoly in printers. Oakmark and Davis Funds lost a lot of money in Lexmark.

However, if you looked at checklist you likely would have avoided this investment. Lexmark was more similar to Schick than to Gillette.

One are with the largest area of mistakes has to do with moats. The question that must be asked is if the moat is sinking. LongLeaf lost $550 million in Sun Micro systems.

There was a huge decrease in computer prices over the past few years, plus a shift from desktops to laptops this affected Dell a lot. LongLeaf, and Fairfax had some pain in that company.

LongLeaf bought GM thinking that GM owned the truck business. When gas went to $4, GM was decimated. One of the checklist items is to look at what other factors can affect a moat in this case being commodity prices.

There are give categories in the check list:

Personal biases are a small part.

Leverage, Management, Moat and valuation are the main four items of the checklists.

The checklist highlights the possible main failure points. But there will never be an investment that will fit all 97 items.

Mohnish is currently building a cheap Japanese basket of cheap stocks. Mohnish believes there is a great opportunity in that market. Despite the fact that it is hard to invest in the low cap and micro cap Japanese stocks.

Mohnish does not currently have a checklist for selling.

Disclosure: No Positions

比亞迪 系統極限已被觸及

比亞迪股份有限公司(下稱比亞迪)董事局主席兼總裁王傳福“不按常理出牌”的經營策略成就了比亞迪汽車昨天的奇跡,也為今天的突然“宕機”埋下了伏筆。隨著經銷商退網等一系列矛盾的總爆發,比亞迪汽車在第三季度面臨空前危機,原有組織運營的系統極限已被觸及。

  目前,業界普遍預測今年全年汽車將接近1800萬輛,增幅超過30%。而從11月份的汽車銷售數據顯示,比亞迪汽車銷售有限公司(下次比亞迪汽車)銷量為41714輛,同比下降17.6%,環比增長2.8%。前11個月比亞迪汽車累計銷量為46.85萬輛,完成全年銷量目標60萬輛的78.1%。若按12月銷量比11月增長10%估算,比亞迪汽車全年銷量增幅很可能低於20%,這也是比亞迪汽車銷量增幅首次低於20%。

  中國汽車市場一路高歌猛進,從銷量上來看已經是全球第一大市場,比亞迪汽車卻為何在此時遇到了麻煩?雖然今年本土汽車品牌的增幅普遍不高,甚至很有可能僅吉利一家能完成年初預定的目標,但是對於近幾年飛躍式增長的比亞迪汽車,這一切對比顯得過於鮮明。不過在業內人士看來,今年比亞迪汽車銷量和增幅的下滑,包括經銷商渠道大規模的負面新聞不過是比亞迪汽車內在問題的一次集中爆發。

  “人海戰術”變陣

  11月中旬,加入比亞迪汽車銷售有限公司(下稱比亞迪汽車)尚不滿一年的李彤(化名)黯然離職。這個去年剛畢業的大學生,曾堅信自己一定會在比亞迪的舞臺上大展拳腳,因為就李彤了解,哪怕一個普通的本科畢業生,只要肯幹就很快能有獨當一面的機會,而且收入相當可觀。但是10月以來,比亞迪各“戰區”(即銷售大區)實施的大裁軍擊碎了他的夢想。

  雖然比亞迪汽車從來沒有辭退員工的傳統,但是對於一個本科畢業生來說,被轉調入製造部門當普通工人,李彤一時難以接受,只好選擇離開。

  李彤只是比亞迪汽車此次內部調整的一個無足輕重的小角色。比亞迪汽車似乎經歷了2009年的一撥高潮突然跌進一個波谷,加上內部部門的調整多少瀰漫著一絲不安的氣息。這對於老員工來說並不新鮮,不進則退就是遊戲規則,對於新進的員工而言似乎顯得格外殘酷,這裡有魔鬼和天使共存的一面。

  比亞迪從一家做手機代工和電池的公司半路出家做汽車,憑藉製造領域的垂直整合及銷售領域的人海店海戰術,比亞迪汽車銷量實現了每年翻番的幾何級數增長奇跡。如果按照這樣的速度,比亞迪股份董事長王傳福“2015中國第一,2025年全球第一”的夢想似乎指日可待。

  王傳福曾在公開場合表示,不要過度相信傳統行業裏的觀念,不要過於強調專業化分工。因此,比亞迪整車除了東安動力三菱4G18發動機和變速箱以外,多數零部件都實現了自給自足。有自己的模具廠,甚至連各種安全電子系統也有自己開發製造。與比亞迪汽車不同的是,傳統汽車公司都企圖努力把最關鍵的發動機掌控在自己手裏,而把技術含量不是很高的配件分配給供應商。

  至於人工成本更是比亞迪創業的絕招,王傳福走了一條“半自動”的中間路線——用大量的勞動力和必要的機器替代全自動生產線。擴大汽車產能時,比亞迪盡可能的使用大量夾具和人工以節省設備的巨大投資。就連生產線上的生產設備甚至也是比亞迪自己製造。據稱比亞迪汽車部門專門負責製造工廠的隊伍達上千人。

  在銷售渠道上,比亞迪汽車複製家電和快銷業的“人海店海”銷售模式,曾被視為其市場快速擴張的源動力。與其他汽車品牌寥寥的區域管理人員主要負責統籌協調不同,比亞迪的上千名區域經理下沉到經銷店,直接監督、指導甚至參與經銷商的日常經營。

  在比亞迪汽車早年間,很多剛畢業的大學生就被推上區域總監或者經理的職位,薪水轉眼就可以過萬,但是隨著高效的擴張,比亞迪汽車在今年年初的時候設置了運營經理一職,責任是協助區域經理銷售,區域管理的基層編制也隨之增加了一倍。此前,區域經理每壓經銷商一款車就可以得到48元的提成,協助經銷商賣掉一款車又可以得到48元的提成,而現在區域經理負責壓庫,運營經理負責協助銷售,提成只能是兩人分。

  今年第三季度以來,比亞迪汽車似乎突然觸及系統極限,出現了的“宕機”跡象:在經銷商退網風潮席捲全國的同時,比亞迪(01211.HK)第三季凈利潤度同比2009年同期下降99%。10月26日,比亞迪公佈三季度業績報告數據顯示公司第三季度凈利僅為1134萬元,僅相當於去年同期11.6億元凈利的1%。

  對於突如其來的波谷,王傳福解釋了三個原因,其一,因為比亞迪去年的高增長,取得了很大的成功。其二,在第三季度,為了消化庫存,比亞迪削減了新車的出廠量。其三,比亞迪加大了銷售力度,這也導致一些利潤損失。

  王傳福分析,低排放汽車在中國的銷售腳步已經放慢,特別是1.6升以下車型。今年,這一市場的份額將從56%下降到46%,這正好是比亞迪的主要產品之一,但比亞迪汽車沒有能夠意識到這一點。

  今年比亞迪汽車經銷商大範圍反水事件以後,比亞迪汽車總經理夏治冰當眾表達了對經銷商的維權訴求也表現出了積極應對、壓縮今年銷售目標、收縮批發量、成立比亞迪汽車金融公司、加快提供新產品等“行銷新政”。

  由此,便出現了前面李彤離開比亞迪的一幕。從10月開始,比亞迪銷售公司開始召回大量的銷售人員,下放工廠,去掉了區域運營經理的職位。此前比亞迪汽車銷售分三大戰區,每個戰區有一號總經理和二號總經理,現在比亞迪撤銷掉其中一個戰區總經理,並且每個戰區同時負責4張網(比亞迪汽車銷售渠道分成A1、A2、A3、A4四個銷售網路,每個網都有自己的標準車型和盈利的重量級車型,比如A1網的F3、F6,A2網的F0、 L3,A3網的G3,A4網的M6、I6。)的銷售。此外,比亞迪汽車還計劃把A4網路併入A3網,大幅放慢網路擴張的腳步。

  “比亞迪模式”神話終結

  2005年比亞迪F3選擇了分城市上市,其中一站選擇了山東,和當時動則全球同步上市的合資品牌完全沒有可比性。就在這樣一個小型的媒體活動上,有幾位當地嘉賓領導在念稿的時候沒有任何一個人把“比亞迪”三個字念對,有人念“比迪汽車”,有人念“比迪亞汽車”。

  當時,比亞迪在汽車業務上甚至無法和中興汽車,吉奧汽車,江南汽車相比。但是5年過去了,比亞迪汽車已經躋身百萬輛汽車陣營,並且建立了獨特的比亞迪汽車的增長模式。這一點不得不讓同行業的人對這個後來居上的“外行”保持警惕,並不斷回頭審視這個膽大妄為不懂汽車的同行。

  一位經銷商這樣概括“比亞迪模式”的核心:把普通人的力量激發到極致,把供應鏈的成本壓縮倒極致,把經銷商的潛力逼到極致。

  比亞迪銷售公司招募了大量大學剛畢業的年輕人,也就是比亞迪汽車銷售公司總經理夏治冰口裏的“愣頭青”們,一齣道就被架上了慘烈的競爭,收入、前途和其所負責網路銷量密切掛鉤,與此同時,大規模密集建比亞迪汽車銷售店,讓各個經銷商之間的內耗大於外部競爭,利潤攤薄。

  王傳福一直認為,自主創新就是要敢於挑戰傳統製造業的觀點,要有膽略而不是迷信權威。所以比亞迪除了在生產環節高度垂直化,開創了目前國內本土汽車品牌的先河,極大的降低了生產成本。比亞迪在銷售渠道上也用全新的分網模式,分成A1、A2、A3、A4四張網,每張網裏賣的車型都不一樣,這樣一來,降低了經銷商的準入門檻,輕鬆增加銷售網路。

  王傳福分網的思路是,比亞迪品牌號召力還不夠強,但是為了實現銷量目標必須增加銷售網路,只有更多的網路才能有更多的銷量。而增加網路是很困難的。比如,在深圳A1網有5個店,你要把它擴到10個店,現有經銷商肯定不幹。比亞迪的做法就是把F3改一下,看得見的地方都不一樣,看不見的地方都一樣,變成G3或L3了,用A2或A3網銷售,這樣比亞迪就可以很輕易地擴大網路,因為車型不一樣,大家相安無事。這樣,比亞迪的店數就很輕鬆地從200家擴到1000家。

  就在所有汽車企業都在強調“4S”的專業化服務時,比亞迪反其道而行之,利用它的分網模式大建“2S”店、城市社區店、量販店將自此開始進入加速發展的時代。降低了經銷商的準入門檻,及其注重銷售數據,消費者滿意度卻不被列為考察範疇。這種方式讓比亞迪可以迅速的鋪開市場,在二三線城市也很容易買到比亞迪汽車,讓比亞迪汽車在很短的時間內做大規模,攤薄工業化生產研發的成本。這讓比亞迪汽車在短期內實現超100%的增長速度。但問題是,同樣是比亞迪品牌,消費者卻不能買到大部分的比亞迪汽車,比如你在A1網買不到F0,必須要跑到A2網裏才能買到。另外,比亞迪經銷商內部競爭加劇。這樣的模式並不被所有人看好,儘管A1和A2網的日漸成熟,以及每個網都有一款擔當萬級銷量的車型使得比亞迪銷量有了一定的保障。

  對於這樣的銷售網路設置,卻讓很多比亞迪經銷商不滿,事實上比亞迪經銷商反水並非今年發生的問題,只是在今年集中爆發。有經銷商分析,目前比亞迪的產品品種並不足以支撐這樣的銷售網路,網路的細分使全國建立了1000多家比亞迪經銷商,加上對銷售網路的建設缺少規則,佈局出現混亂。比如網路佈局缺乏科學、合理的論證;再比如在同一個城市兩個銷售網點之間的半徑應是多少公里等。網點越來越多,銷售政策苛刻,經銷商之間的競爭主要就是價格戰。同時,商家還會屢屢遭受廠家不顧死活的壓庫和承諾不兌現等欺詐。這種種行為令經銷商抱怨不斷。

  與此同時,比亞迪銷售網路的內耗也在加劇。A1、A2、A3、A4的銷售網路出現了相互挖角,區域經理之間相互競爭,區域經理和運營經理之間相互競爭。

  而由於區域經理考核基本僅與提車數量掛鉤,比亞迪的區域管理人員時常無視價格體系維護,甚至慫恿經銷商降價衝量。

  就在09年比亞迪汽車銷量超出預期達到40萬輛的時候,業內已經有人士預測,比亞迪的瓶頸和天花板將在年銷50萬輛的時候出現。同時由於這樣的瀰漫性發展的“千店計劃”難以顧全經銷商利益,會給銷售系統埋下重大的隱患,也給做品牌提升的廠商留下了市場空間。

  果然今年第二第三季度,紛紛出現了大規模經銷商激烈的退網反水現象。王傳福坦言:“今年年初我們定下的80萬輛的銷售目標,是一個很大的錯誤。由於我們在制定銷售計劃時,錯誤地高估了市場而造成了惡果。現在,我們付出了代價。”比亞迪認識到錯誤,並調整了預期。現在我們要減少庫存,並使之保持在一個合理的水準上,這是我們要去解決的首要問題。

  由於高庫存,比亞迪只好下調價格銷售,王表示:“降價會影響我們的品牌,由於汽車行業的週期波動很大,非常不穩定,如果沒有適當的規劃,公司將蒙受巨大損失。”

  作為一種顛覆性的銷售策略,比亞迪在“遊擊戰爭”中摸索出來的打法值得重視和研究。同時,比亞迪在已經完成的從10萬輛→20萬輛→40萬輛產能提升過程中的保供、物流、生產組織方面的策略同樣值得尊重和仔細研究。但是很明顯這樣一個網路系統卻超出了比亞迪公司的承載能力,經銷商反水對於比亞迪汽車並不是今年才發生的事情,只是在9月份所有的矛盾更加激化,顯現的尤為嚴重。

  下一個“F3”在哪?

  問及比亞迪汽車突出重圍,戰果纍纍的原因,比亞迪汽車的人一定會告訴你比亞迪垂直整合的優勢,把製造做透的能力。正如比亞迪汽車銷售公司副總經理王建均所說:“比亞迪就是把簡單的事情做到極致然後成了絕招。”

  但是今年比亞迪的系統“當機”反應的不僅僅是汽車銷售的問題,每個關心比亞迪汽車的人心裏都會有一個疑問,比亞迪F3的換代車型在哪?F3是比亞迪汽車生產銷售的第一款車,由於和豐田花冠相似的外表,精準佔領了7、8萬這樣一個當時本土品牌和合資品牌的空白市場,在業界有“黑馬”之稱。這款車型從第一輛車到第10萬輛,大概用14個月的時間,到第20萬輛的時候,只用了12個月的時間。今年上半月,全國單車型前十名的銷量中比亞迪佔了兩席,1-6月比亞迪F3銷量高達15.4萬台。

  比亞迪汽車山寨模倣的過程中有沒有升級自己的汽車研發體系?5年過去了,比亞迪汽車除了生產出一系列在F3平臺上開發出來的衍生車型外,沒有再升級換代F3。F3的售價從05的7、8萬賣到了現在的4、5萬。如果說,比亞迪垂直整合的能力成就了它低成本,高效的擴張模式,但同時意味著,一旦你的車型升級,你所有的垂直化的系統都要升級,這將是一個越來越難以做的選擇。

  如果僅僅押寶在新能源車上,這個未來是不是有著太多不確定因素?在王傳福看來,汽車工業發動機時代含金量很高的裝置,也許有一天都會被軟體所替代掉。對於一直缺乏相關部件核心技術的中國汽車企業而言,電動車時代實在是全面超越的最好時機。

  數據顯示,比亞迪F3DM雙模電動車自2008年12月上市以來僅銷售了300多輛。比亞迪E6純電動車的銷量也乏善可陳,目前僅有50輛E6作為計程車在深圳試運行。目前,比亞迪F3DM低碳版在深圳的零售價格是16.98萬元,經過各種補貼後價格已經達到8.98萬元,深圳市在新能源配套方面已經走在全國前列,但這些因素依然沒有促進F3DM的銷量。

  其他汽車品牌推出的面向私人銷售的新能源車型也銷量慘澹。11月王建均在接受媒體採訪時表示:“比亞迪電動汽車的重點市場已經從個人消費轉向了面向公共交通等在內的公用事業。”雖然比亞迪汽車已經推動了中國電動車的進程,但是業內普遍認為電動車市場化之路仍然有很長的路要走。而比亞迪電動車重點從個人消費轉向公共交通似乎也印證了私人消費電動車的市場困境。

  從汽車工業發展歷史來看,王傳福開創的商業模式在通用、福特都有過先河。通用、福特、豐田都在生產環節採用過縱向一體化模式,但隨著企業規模的擴大,一家企業將難以承擔鉅額的研發費用,難以適應市場對整車品種多樣化的需求,從而在技術創新上產生滯後效應。所以現在許多汽車跨國公司已經將這一模式紛紛摒棄,代之以平臺戰略和全球採購的模式。

  然而,王傳福堅信:“要想突圍必須要走差異化的路線,通常的做法只有死路一條,1%的希望總比100%的失敗要好,所以戰略上一定要與眾不同。”在他看來,只要戰略上不出問題,抓好銷售和研發,企業就不會出大亂子。

  但是很多業內人士看來,比亞迪汽車是違背汽車行業規律,過於注重結果急功近利,忽略了研發體系的打造,太偏重於新能源車。只是對於比亞迪這麼一個民營企業而言,也許每一天都是生死關,它狂躁激進的擴張似乎是一種恐懼的本能。

January 07, 2011

discipline, hardwork, practice

charlie munger
Becoming a good investor
"If you're going to be an investor, you're going to make some investments where you don't have all the experience you need. But if you keep trying to get a little better over time, you'll start to make investments that are virtually certain to have a good outcome. The keys are discipline, hard work, and practice. It's like playing golf -- you have to work on it."

Investing mental models
"You need a different checklist and different mental models for different companies. I can never make it easy by saying, 'Here are three things.' You have to derive it yourself to ingrain it in your head for the rest of your life."

Views on Ben Graham's ideas
While Munger largely rejects Ben Graham's cigar-butt style of investing, he embraces the core principles: "The idea of a margin of safety, a Graham precept, will never be obsolete. The idea of making the market your servant will never be obsolete. The idea of being objective and dispassionate will never be obsolete. So Graham had a lot of wonderful ideas."

Stock valuations
Munger continues to report difficulty finding good stocks to buy: "In terms of the general climate, I think it's pretty miserable for anyone who likes easy, sure money. Common stocks may be reasonably fairly valued, but they are not overwhelming bargains."

The importance of reading
"In my whole life, I have known no wise people (over a broad subject matter area) who didn't read all the time -- none, zero... You'd be amazed at how much Warren reads -- at how much I read. My children laugh at me. They think I'm a book with a couple of legs sticking out."

How to get rich
A young shareholder asked Munger how to follow in his footsteps, and Munger brought down the house by saying, "We get these questions a lot from the enterprising young. It's a very intelligent question: You look at some old guy who's rich and you ask, 'How can I become like you, except faster?'"

Munger's reply was: "Spend each day trying to be a little wiser than you were when you woke up. Discharge your duties faithfully and well. Step by step you get ahead, but not necessarily in fast spurts. But you build discipline by preparing for fast spurts... Slug it out one inch at a time, day by day, at the end of the day -- if you live long enough -- most people get what they deserve."


Circle of competence
"There are a lot of things we pass on. We have three baskets: in, out, and too tough...We have to have a special insight, or we'll put it in the 'too tough' basket. All of you have to look for a special area of competency and focus on that."

Buying into stock declines
"Over many decades, our usual practice is that if [the stock of] something we like goes down, we buy more and more. Sometimes something happens, you realize you're wrong, and you get out. But if you develop correct confidence in your judgment, buy more and take advantage of stock prices."

November 28, 2010

保险公司的内含价值 93.45元对应的内含率是:2.97倍

http://www.ltkdj.com/bbs/viewthread.php?tid=39685&extra=page=1
“保险公司的内含价值”是内地投资者近些年才刚开始关注不久的指标,换句话说,净资产、净利润并不是保险股估值的最好指标。
  王小罡指出,保险公司(主要指寿险公司)的内含价值(EV)相当于其他行业公司的净资产,保险公司的内含价值收益(即内含价值的实际增长,或EVE,EV Earning)则相当于其他行业公司的净利润。因此,保险公司的实际市净率为P/EV,实际市盈率为P/EVE,实际净资产收益率为EVE/EV。
  李双武表示,市场经常只看一个公司的市盈率、市净率,而这不是判断保险股是否具有投资价值的主要因素。保险公司的特点是看其内含价值,比如说太保,按12%的折现率,意味着中国太保的净资产,每年是按12%的内含价值增速往上涨的,也就是说在内含价值以下买中国太保,内含价值每年都会有12%的增长。
  以市盈率来看,国寿、平安最近分别为50倍、46倍,太保则高达138倍。王小罡指出,从内含价值的角度看,2009年平安的内含价值为20元/股,国寿和太保均在11元/股左右;而从内含价值收益角度看,国寿、平安、太保分别为1.56元/股、4.01元/股、1.51元/股。由此得出国寿、平安、太保的实际市盈率(P/EVE)分别为19.1倍、12.9倍、16.7倍。
  王小罡表示,从这些数字可以看到,三大保险股的估值都比较低,特别是平安,2009年不到13倍,2010年预测值不到11倍。A股市场上平安现在每股50多块钱,对比其他两家保险公司,性价比更高、成长性也较好的平安其实已经相当便宜,很适合长期持有。
  在王小罡看来,三大保险股H股股价高于A股的现象在2010年还会持续,而且将来会持续多长时间,并不好判断。
  李双武表示,投资者在A股还是在H股投资保险股其实差别并不大,不过从目前来看,A股更便宜些。如果是一个长期投资者的话,当保险股的股价在内含价值以下时,应该买入,如果某一时间,保险股被炒作,价格远远超过内含价值,就应该卖掉,这是保险市场特有的。
  在三只保险股中,大多数分析师更看好估值相对较低的平安。海通证券(9.67,-0.12,-1.23%)特别看好平安,认为A股估值水平显著低于H股,具备较好安全边际;申银万国也建议投资保险股,应首选配置中国平安。
09年平安内含价值是21.1元
10年中平安内含价值是24.1元
预计10年平安内含价值:26.5元
按50元市价,10年市盈率才:50/(26.5-21)=9.1
太记住以后买保险股,价格在内含价值2、3倍,可以买进。4倍内含价值可以忍受,但5、6倍时考虑卖出。
低估了
港股的00945,宏利金融。2000年3月80元,到2006年5月是580元,还不计分红。宏利金融只是加拿大保险股,人口老化啊。
港股调整主要是AIA保险招股,最多1600亿港元,国外投资者配置保险股会调仓。但股价最终还是跟内含价值和新业务价值走,看好平安2019年股价在500-1200元,极端到2000元/股
三季净资产14.52
三季净资产增长14.52-13.75+0.45=1.22,不算太差,但也没超预期
分析一下正常经营净资产增长情况:09年11.57,10年1季:12.21,10年2季:13.75(扣换股增发实际12.6),10年3季:14.52
一季度增长:0.64
二季度增长:0.39
三季度增长:1.22
上面数字没考虑换股增发增厚,但考虑分红影响
再看内含价值增长:
正常经营:上半年内含价值增长:24.1-21.1-1.15=1.85元,其中净资产增长1.03,业务价值增长1.85-1.03=0.82,假设下半年也是0.82元。
假设四季度净资产也增长1.22元,刚全年内含价值增长:24.1+1.22*2+0.82=27.36。
留待以假设今年上证收在3000点,四季增长和三季差不多,粗算净资产4季也增加1.22元
正常经营全年净资产0.64+0.39+1.22+1.22-0.45=3.47,
年报净资产:11.57+3.47+1.15=16.17
内含价值:27.36
留待年报验证
后验证
09年净资产是11.57  10年16.17,增加39.7%
09年内含价值21.1    10年27.36,增加29.6%
净资产和内含价值有收购深发展增厚的1.15元,这不是可持续性的。所以年报净资产和内含价值增加超预期
当然我也估算平安2010年合理价格
数据:2009年内含价值21.1,寿险内含价值:13.71,一年新业务价值:1.61
2010年中报内含价值24.1,寿险内含价值:14.91,一年新业务价值:1.19
因保险业上半年保费比下半年高,但股市下半年比下半年好,假设寿险内含价值增长同上半年一样,一年新业务价值全年增长36%
则2010年报:内含价值27.36,寿险内含价值:17.30,一年新业务价值:2.19
1、寿险按25-35倍新业务价值,其它银行、财险、集团按15元/股,股价在87.05-108.95
2、按内含价值2.7-3.5倍:股价在73.87-95.76
平安稳含的利好:房地产投资价值重估,PE投资项目和深发展交叉销售贡献,但都要5-10较长时间体现。其中房产和PE靠以前累积的项目,大幅领先同行,相信过几年后,投行再给平安估值时,会提到上面,然后再给平安比同行更高的溢价8月末,A股市场的三大保险业巨头相继交出半年期成绩,在当前低迷的资本市场面前,保险股消费属性的重要性进一步凸显。三大保险公司在衡量新业务发展方面的重要指标一年期新业务价值的表现上迥然不同。  新业务价值是衡量保险公司业务长期可持续性增长的一个重要指标,是指在报告期间销售的新保单在签单时的价值。包括新业务预期续保和预期合同变动的价值。计算新业务价值时,应当考虑持有要求资本的成本。银河证券分析师许力平指出,保单缴费方式、缴费期限以及销售渠道都会影响保险公司新业务价值,期缴产品比趸缴产品对新业务价值贡献更大,营销渠道要比银保渠道销售的保单新业务价值更高,保单缴费期限延长也会增加新业务价值。  A  平安 迅猛增长44%  平安的新业务表现相当抢眼,一串漂亮的数字超出不少机构预期,使得多家分析机构对平安的前景看好。首年保费增长52.1%,一年新业务价值增速高达44%,华泰证券分析,平安证券全年的一年新业务价值至少要达到30%的增速。快速增长的新业务促成平安上半年规模保费收入达到931.25亿元,同比增长25.98%。银河证券分析师许力平认为,“平安在最近几年扩张速度非常快,主要压力还是来源于过去积累的一些高利率保单,必须依赖新保单收入来消化。”除此之外,寿险市场第二梯队泰康、新华的步步追赶也促使平安发力增加保费收入。  平安一年新业务价值增速远远超过规模保费增速说明平安新业务的开拓是“质”“量”双优。质的提高来自于业务结构的优化。从渠道看,利润率较高的个人业务渠道占比提高5.8%,占比达到78.8%。个险规模保费增长35.9%,催化一年新业务价值迅速增长。从缴费期限看,去年以趸缴保费贡献为主,而今年上半年期缴业务占比有了明显上升。从产品结构上,分红险取代万能险成为主打险种。除了结构上的优化以外,平安的销售能力提高也是促成新业务价值增长的重要因素,最显著的表现是件均保费提高,人均产能提高。  B  太保 稳步提升18%  中国太保继续稳步提升的趋势,一年新业务价值增长18%,表现也不俗。在新业务的推动下,上半年太保寿险总保费收入同比增长超过50%。尤其是分红险,增长速度最快,同比增速达到73%。不过也有市场相关分析人士认为,相对于新保保费53%的增速,太保一年新业务价值的增速差强人意。对此,许力平认为,“主要原因是依赖银保业务,银行业务中很多是趸缴产品,趸缴产品在为公司创造长期性的业务收入方面表现逊色很多。”据记者资料统计,上半年太保银保渠道增速高达92%,营销渠道的增速只有19%。营销渠道业务占比从2009年的将近五成下降到今年上半年的38%。除了渠道结构不合理外,缴费期限也呈现短期化趋势,缴费10年及以上的传统和分红型新保业务收入相比上年下降18.4%,中短期趸缴分红产品的比重上升。  C  国寿 调整中增长10.9%  中国人寿的一年期新业务价值增长较为缓慢,同比增长仅10.9%,低于行业平均水平。首年保费收入增长仅9.4%,这也导致中国人寿的市场份额出现一定下滑。  虽然中小保险公司尤其是寿险市场第二梯队的崛起给寿险巨头带来了冲击,但是银河证券分析师许力平指出,“中国人寿新业务价值增长缓慢主要还是受业务结构调整的影响。2008年以来保监会要求调整保险公司的业务结构,注重长期可持续性发展,中国人寿的调整力度是最大的。但是中国人寿的调整节奏有些缓慢,导致新业务保费收入增长缓慢。”  在资本市场表现糟糕的情况下,新业务带来的利润就成为挽救公司净资产下降的救命稻草,在如此缓慢的保费增长状况下,国寿上半年归属于股东的每股净资产比2009年年末下降了9.2%。  尽管中国人寿业务结构调整比较缓慢,但也取得一定成绩,突出的表现就是新业务价值增长速度超过首年保费增速。国寿的业务结构也的确朝更均衡、合理的方向发展:保单期限延长,10年期及以上首年期缴保费的比重达到27%,期缴率提高,首年期缴保费占新保保费的比重有所上升。  不过, 许力平指出,只有在公司经营持续稳定的情况下,新业务价值预期未来才可以为保险公司带来利润,但在短期内,新业务价值越高,并不意味着公司利润越高。平安2010年报预测和估值
先看内含价值增长:
正常经营:上半年内含价值增长:24.1-21.1-1.15=1.85元,其中净资产增长1.03,业务价值增长1.85-1.03=0.82,假设下半年也是0.82元。
假设四季度净资产也增长1.22元,刚全年内含价值增长:24.1+1.22*2+0.82=27.36。
再看净资产增长
假设今年上证收在3000点,四季增长和三季差不多,粗算净资产4季也增加1.22元
正常经营全年净资产0.64+0.39+1.22+1.22-0.45=3.47,
年报净资产:11.57+3.47+1.15=16.17
09年净资产是11.57  10年16.17,增加39.7%
09年内含价值21.1    10年27.36,增加29.6%
当然净资产和内含价值有收购深发展增厚的1.15元,这不是可持续性的。所以年报净资产和内含价值增加超预期
我也估算平安2010年合理价格
数据:2009年内含价值21.1,寿险内含价值:13.71,一年新业务价值:1.61
2010年中报内含价值24.1,寿险内含价值:14.91,一年新业务价值:1.19
因保险业上半年保费比下半年高,但股市下半年比下半年好,假设寿险内含价值增长同上半年一样,一年新业务价值全年增长36%
则2010年报:内含价值27.36,寿险内含价值:17.30,一年新业务价值:2.19
1、寿险按25-35倍新业务价值,其它银行、财险、集团按15元/股,股价在87.05-108.95
2、按内含价值2.7-3.5倍:股价在73.87-95.76
25-35倍是新业价值倍数,不是PE,这是保险业一种估值参数,这个参数定的很复杂,但一种最方便是新业务价值增长数相当倍数
正常经营全年净资产0.64+0.39+1.22+1.22-0.45=3.47,
年报净资产:11.57+3.47+1.15=16.17
原来这里算错,应该是
正常经营全年净资产0.64+0.39+1.22+1.22-0.45=3.02
年报净资产:11.57+3.02+1.15=15.74
09年净资产是11.57  10年15.74,增加36.0%
09年内含价值21.1    10年27.36,增加29.6%
07、08年内含价值估算在20-22,没有42这么高,当时股价是内含价值的5倍以上,确实可以考虑卖出
还是那句话,保险股,价格在内含价值2、3倍,可以买进。4倍内含价值可以忍受,但5、6倍时考虑卖出
合理估值=每股内含价值+每股一年新业务价值*新业务倍数。
这个是寿险的估值,平安还有财险、银行、投资、集团业务
寿险内含价值:17.30,一年新业务价值:2.19
按25-35倍新业务价值,其它银行、财险、集团按15元/股,股价在87.05-108.95
但这新业务倍数太难选,低时10倍,高时50倍都有,但按平安这两年都在35%增长,取25倍算保守,有人说增长多少就是多少倍
寿险按10、15、20、25、30、35、40、45、50倍新业务价值,其它银行、财险、集团按15元/股
股价分别为:54.2、65.15、76.1、87.05、98.0、108.95、119.9、141.8
我估计2010年很难见到10倍新业务倍数估值,既54.2元很难见到
寿险按10、15、20、25、30、35、40、45、50倍新业务价值,其它银行、财险、集团按15元/股
股价分别为:65.73、80.28、109.38、123.93、138.48、153.03、167.58、182.13
H股还在80以上。保险股的魅力在于,指数几年不动,保险公司可以靠内含价值的增长提高估值,明年平安再见到60以下有点难度,不然那新业务价值倍数在10倍以下了。发达国家保费增长才几个点,平均都在10多倍新业务价值倍数。
庄就是净资产、内含价值、新业务价值的增长速度。连业绩都不算2011.11.3 保险业:AIA与国内保险公司经营比较
AIA上市受追捧,首大涨17%投资者看好AIA亚太业务,中国溢价和低估值促使AIA受追捧。
  亚太地区保险业务发展潜力2009年亚太地区保险收入3580亿美元,占全球保险市场的15.4%,但亚太地区保险市场体现出不均衡状态,表现在高保费增长与较低的保险深度和密度,人口高增长与缺失的医疗体制,高经济增长与高储蓄率,人口老龄化与落后的养老金市场。这些都为商业保险提供了巨大的机会。
  AIA在中国大陆经营情况AIA目前只在广东江苏上海北京四地开展业务,但市场份额却占到第8位,从业务结构看,AIA主要业务来自于盈利较高的个人寿险。AIA、中国平安(60.44,-0.05,-0.08%)、中国人寿(25.63,-0.07,-0.27%)、中国太保(26.00,-0.01,-0.04%)年化后银保保费在年化总保费(年化保费=趸交保费*10%+新单期交保费)中占比分别为8%、9.6%、31%、52.5%。从业务经营和新业务价值情况看,中国平安与AIA最为接近。
  AH股风格比较A股注重市值较小成长较大的股票,而H股更多看中某类地区和行业具有垄断地位公司,因此两地上市的金融企业,H股溢价存在就不言而喻。
  投资建议和风险提示从AIA上市表现看,备受H股投资者追捧,我们继续维持现有行业买入评级。
  资本但平安这两年内含价值和新业务价值增长速度在26.5%和36%,假设以后都增长25%、30%,到2020年内含价值和新业务价值分别是:245元和28.7元。关键是平安以后十年能不能保持这个速度
友邦高速发展时股价是内含价值的3-5倍,或新业务价值20-35倍加一倍内含价值
市场波动提高内含价值还有一方法:并购,汇丰就是这样发展的会影响公司业绩。
每年下半后,评级机构都会说到平安保费放缓,有时不知道评级机构真不知,还是没做好功课。我一直在跟踪平保保费,看下表
平安保费每年一直是前高后低,特别是个险、期交的比例很高。期交意味着下一年最少还要交同样保费(没新单和退保情况下),
从表中,轻易判断平安10-12月保费收入,还要继续放缓(除非这三个月平保改变策,大量增加低价值的银保业务),明年1、2月保费又是同比、环比大增,其实都在预期之内
预计
1-10月总保费1890 
1-11月总保费2040
1-12月总保费22502011.11.1
港股平安不一样的90元
2007年9月平安H股上到90元,今天港股平安H收报93.45.
07年港币兑换人民币:100:97
今天港币兑换人民币:100:86
07年平安内含价值是20RMB
今天平安内含价值是27RMB
07年平安H股在93.45元对应的内含率是:4.53倍,A股在93.45元对应的内含率是:4.67倍
今天平安H股在93.45元对应的内含率是:2.97倍,A股在62.49元对应的内含率是:2.31倍


鉴别点 大顶特征 大底特征
估值面 2次大牛市顶部都发生在市场平均PE60之上,一次在50PE上,因此60PE是绝对的高危区 2次大底部都在市场平均PE15左右,大量的股票破发行价、增发价,破净资产。企业开始陆续出现回购,增持股票等行为。因此PE15左右是低估区。
技术面 大顶的日线基本是双头;月线特别注意第一不可跌破5月线(特别是下月依然无法收回),从此指数被5月线一路压制;第二是配合第一的指标同时,月MACD高位死叉迹象+KDJ高位死叉迹象;日线上30日线成为强压,历次反弹都难以连续站稳几天。市场演绎的是经典的盘久必跌轮回。 以月K线突破5月线为标志,且KDJ低位20左右金叉成功,此后一路依托5月线上行不得跌破确认;同时配合周线5金叉10,依托5上行,周KDJ20金叉;日线突破长期下沉趋势线压制,市场持续放量,底部盘整没有再次盘久必跌,反而是越盘越缩量并几根大阳线突破,之后每次盘整低点逐步抬高;放量突破30日线,特别是30日线开始有上拐倾向时
政策面 从对市场的支持到模糊,再到不断的提示风险,再到实质上的频频出手干预政策(如印花税提高),打压股市的态度越来越强烈和露骨 从对下跌的默许,到言论开始明确挺市,到开始局限于市场本身的干预(调印花税红利税等),到频频呼唤信心并动用资金手段(降息,发基金,停IPO等),最后到实质性的产业政策刺激(投资或者对多行业的长期利好或者股票市场的大改革等)
资金面 连续的加息、基金窗口指导、暂停新基金发行、基金仓位几乎都处于极高位、大盘股不断上市或者大额度融资 连续的降息,加大基金发行力度,力压IPO冻结,否决所有大额的融资计划,基金仓位几乎都处于合同约定的最低位
心理面 市场不断的找寻泡沫支持的理由,几乎没有机构看熊市场,一致性的看好市场的持续走好,基金和股票开户数连创新高,特别是周围从不关心股市的人开始纷纷入市 市场一开始绝不会相信牛市已经结束,其中的几次反弹都会带来新的憧憬,到开始绝望不顾一切的抛售,再到对任何利好都漠不关心且不看好,对经济前景极度绝望和恐惧
其它
配合技术面,出现前景不明的重大隐患事件,比如金融危机、严重的通胀迹象、某热点经济泡沫崩溃迹象等
另一个值得注意的,则是强周期类股票的全面溃败。
配合技术面,出现大热点板块,开始有讲故事的基础。同样,强周期类股票特别是有色等股票的反弹猛烈,也往往是市场底部形成的迹象。

November 27, 2010

Mohnish Pabrai - 2

Interview With Value Investor Mohnish Pabrai
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It is my privilege to bring you the following interview I recently conducted with value investing superstar Mohnish Pabrai. Mohnish is my favorite investor who doesn't have the initials W.B. His stock selection style is similar to mine, except that he's more successful at it. Much, much more successful.

I'll let the numbers speak for themselves: A $100,000 investment in Pabrai Funds at inception (on July 1, 1999) was worth $722,200 on March 31, 2007. That works out to an annualized return of 29.1%, and that's after all fees and expenses. Assets under management are over $500 million, up from $1 million at inception. Although a person probably can't get into the investing hall of fame with eight years of outperformance (even if they crush the indices), Pabrai is already mentioned in most articles about the search for the next Warren Buffett, and justifiably so.

Equally importantly, he genuinely wants to help others become better investors, and in that spirit has just published his second book, The Dhandho Investor. The book is both illuminating and easy to read, and it deserves to be on every investor's bookshelf next to Benjamin Graham's The Intelligent Investor. This is why I felt extremely fortunate when he recently agreed to answer some questions about his investment strategy in this exclusive interview, conducted by email. I hope you find it useful, and I hope it inspires you to pick up a copy of his book if you haven't already.

Happy Investing,

Tom Murcko
CEO, InvestorGuide.com

InvestorGuide: You have compared Pabrai Funds to the original Buffett parternships, and there are obvious similarities: investing only in companies within your circle of competence that have solid management and a competitive moat; knowing the intrinsic value now and having a confident estimate of it over the next few years, and being confident that both of these numbers are at least double the current price; and placing a very small number of very large bets where there is minimal downside risk. Are there any ways in which your approach differs from that of the early Buffett partnerships (or Benjamin Graham's approach), either because you have found ways to improve upon that strategy or because the investing world has changed since then?

Mohnish Pabrai: The similarity between Pabrai Funds and the Buffett Partnerships that I refer to is related to the structure of the partnerships. I copied Mr. Buffett's structure as much as I could since it made so much sense. The fact that it created a very enduring and deep moat wasn't bad either. These structural similarities are the fees (no management fees and 1/4 of the returns over 6% annually with high water marks), the investor base (initially mostly close friends and virtually no institutional participation), minimal discussion of portfolio holdings, annual redemptions and the promotion of looking at long term results etc. Of course, there is similarity in investment style, but as Charlie Munger says, "All intelligent investing is value investing."

My thoughts on this front are covered in more detail in Chapter 14 of The Dhandho Investor.

Regarding the investment style, Mr. Buffett is forced today to mostly be a buy and hold forever investor today due to size and corporate structure. Buying at 50 cents and selling at a dollar is likely to generate better returns than buy and hold forever. I believe both Mr. Munger and he would follow this modus operandi if they were working with a much smaller pool of capital. In his personal portfolio, even today, Mr. Buffett is not a buy and hold forever investor.

In the early days Mr. Buffett (and Benjamin Graham) focused on buying a fair business at a cheap price. Later, with Mr. Munger's influence, he changed to buying good businesses at a fair price. At Pabrai Funds, the ideal scenario is to buy a good business at a cheap price. That's very hard to always do. If we can't find enough of those, we go to buying fair businesses at cheap prices. So it has more similarity to the Buffett of the 1960s than the Buffett of 1990s. BTW, even the present day Buffett buys fair businesses at cheap prices for his personal portfolio.

Value investing is pretty straight-forward - you try to get $1 worth of assets for much less than $1. There is no way to improve on that basic truth. It's timeless.

InvestorGuide: Another possible difference between your style and Buffett's relates to the importance of moats. Your book does emphasize investing in companies that have strategic advantages which will enable them to achieve long-term profitability in the face of competition. But are moats less important if you're only expecting to hold a position for a couple years? Can you see the future clearly enough that you can identify a company whose moat may be under attack in 5 or 10 years, but be confident that that "Mr. Market" will not perceive that threat within the next few years? And how much do moats matter when you're investing in special situations? Would you pass on a special situation if it met all the other criteria on your checklist but didn't have a moat?

Pabrai: Moats are critically important. They are usually critical to the ability to generate future cash flows. Even if one invests with a time horizon of 2-3 years, the moat is quite important. The value of the business after 2-3 years is a function of the future cash it is expected to generate beyond that point. All I'm trying to do is buy a business for 1/2 (or less) than its intrinsic value 2-3 years out. In some cases intrinsic value grows dramatically over time. That's ideal. But even if intrinsic value does not change much over time, if you buy at 50 cents and sell at 90 cents in 2-3 years, the return on invested capital is very acceptable.

If you're buying and holding forever, you need very durable moats (American Express, Coca Cola, Washington Post etc.). In that case you must have increasing intrinsic values over time. Regardless of your initial intrinsic value discount, eventually your return will mirror the annualized increase/decrease in intrinsic value.

At Pabrai Funds, I've focused on 50+% discounts to intrinsic value. If I can get this in an American Express type business, that is ideal and amazing. But even if I invest in businesses where the moat is not as durable (Tesoro Petroleum, Level 3, Universal Stainless), the results are very acceptable. The key in these cases is large discounts to intrinsic value and not to think of them as buy and hold forever investments.

InvestorGuide: For that part of our readership which isn't able to invest in Pabrai Funds due to the net worth and minimum investment requirements, to what extent could they utilize your investing strategy themselves? Your approach seems feasible for retail investors, which is why I have been recommending your book to friends, colleagues, and random people I pass on the street. For example, your research primarily relies on freely available information, you aren't meeting with the company's management, and you don't have a team of analysts crunching numbers. To what extent do you think that a person with above-average intelligence who is willing to devote the necessary time would be able to use your approach to outperform the market long-term?

Pabrai: Investing is a peculiar business. The larger one gets, the worse one is likely to do. So this is a field where the individual investor has a huge leg up on the professionals and large investors. So, not only can The Dhandho Investor approach be applied by small investors, they are likely to get much better results from its application than I can get or multi-billion dollar funds can get. Temperament and passion are the key.

InvestorGuide: You founded, ran, and sold a very successful business prior to starting Pabrai Funds. Has that experience contributed to your investment success? Since that company was in the tech sector but you rarely buy tech stocks (apparently due to the rarity of moats in that sector), the benefits you may have derived seemingly aren't related to an expansion of your circle of competence. But has learning what it takes to run one specific business helped you become a better investor in all kinds of businesses, and if so, how? And have you learned anything as an investor that would make you a better CEO if you ever decide to start another company?

Pabrai: Buffett has a quote that goes something like: "Can you really explain to a fish what it's like to walk on land? One day on land is worth a thousand years of talking about it, and one day running a business has exactly the same kind of value." And of course he's said many times that he's a better investor because he's a businessman and he's a better businessman because he is an investor. My experience as an entrepreneur has been very fundamental to being any good at investing.

My dad was a quintessential entrepreneur. Over a 40-year period, he had started, grown, sold and liquidated a number of diverse businesses - everything from making a motion picture, setting up a radio station, manufacturing high end speakers, jewelry manufacturing, interior design, handyman services, real estate brokerage, insurance agency, selling magic kits by mail - the list is endless. The common theme across all his ventures was that they were all started with virtually no capital. Some got up to over 100 employees. His downfall was that he was very aggressive with growth plans and the businesses were severely undercapitalized and over-leveraged.

After my brother and I became teenagers, we served as his de facto board of directors. I remember many a meeting with him where we'd try to figure out how to juggle the very tight cash to keep the business going. And once I was 16, I'd go on sales calls with him or we'd run the business while he was traveling. I feel like I got my Harvard MBA even before I finished high school. I did not realize it then, but the experience of watching these businesses with a front-row seat during my teen years was extremely educational. It gave me the confidence to start my first business. And if I have an ability to get to the essence of a subset of businesses today, it is because of that experience.

TransTech was an IT Services/System Integration business. We provided consulting services, but did not develop any products etc. So it wasn't a tech-heavy business. While having a Computer Engineering degree and experience was useful, it wasn't critical. TransTech taught me a lot about business and that experience is invaluable in running Pabrai Funds. Investing in technology is easy to pass on because it is a Buffett edict not to invest in rapidly changing industries. Change is the enemy of the investor.

Being an investor is vastly easier than being a CEO. I've made the no-brainer decision to take the easy road! I do run a business even today. There are operating business elements of running a fund that resemble running a small business. But if I were to go back to running a business with dozens of employees, I think I'd be better at it than I was before the investing experience. Both investing and running a business are two sides of the same coin. They are joined at the hip and having experience doing both is fundamental to being a good investor. There are many successful investors who have never run a business before. My hat's off to them. - For me, without the business experiences as a teenager and the experience running TransTech, I think I'd have been a below average investor. I don't fully understand how they do it.

InvestorGuide: Is your investment strategy the best one for you, or the best one for many/most/all investors? Who should or shouldn't consider using your approach, and what does that decision depend on (time commitment, natural talent, analytical ability, business savvy, personality, etc)?

Pabrai: As I mentioned earlier, Charlie Munger says all intelligent investing is value investing. The term value investing is redundant. There is just one way to invest - buy assets for less than they are worth and sell them at full price. It is not "my approach." I lifted it from Graham, Munger and Buffett. Beyond that, one should stick to one's circle competence, read a lot and be very patient.

InvestorGuide: Some investment strategies stop working as soon as they become sufficiently popular. Do you think this would happen if everyone who reads The Dhandho Investor starts following your strategy? As I've monitored successful value investors I have noticed the same stocks appearing in their various portfolios surprisingly often. (As just one example, you beat Buffett to the convertible bonds of Level 3 Communications back in 2002, which I don't think was merely a coincidence.) If thousands of people start following your approach (using the same types of screens to identify promising candidates and then using the same types of filters to whittle down the list), might they end up with just slightly different subsets of the same couple dozen stocks? If so, that could quickly drive up the prices of those companies (especially on small caps, which seem to be your sweet spot) and eliminate the opportunities almost as soon as they arise. Looked at another way, your portfolio typically has about ten companies, which presumably you consider the ten best investments; if you weren't able to invest in those companies, are there another 10 (or 20, or 50) that you like almost as much?

Pabrai: As long as humans vacillate between fear and greed, there will be mispriced assets. Some will be priced too low and some will be priced too high. Mr. Buffett has been talking up the virtues of value investing for 50+ years and it has made very few folks adopt that approach. So if the #2 guy on the Forbes 400 has openly shared his secret sauce of how he got there for all these decades and his approach is still the exception in the industry, I don't believe I'll have any effect whatsoever.

Take the example of Petrochina. The stock went up some 8% after Buffett's stake was disclosed. One could have easily bought boat loads of Petrochina stock at that 8% premium to Buffett's last known buys. Well, since then Petrochina is up some eight-fold - excluding some very significant dividends. The entire planet could have done that trade. Yet very very few did. I read a study a few years back where some university professor had documented returns one would have made owning what Buffett did - buying and selling right after his trades were public knowledge. One would have trounced the S&P 500 just doing that. I don't know of any investors who religiously follow that compelling approach.

So, I'm not too concerned about value investing suddenly becoming hard to practice because there is one more book on a subject where scores of excellent books have already been written.

InvestorGuide: You have said that investors in Pabrai Funds shouldn't expect that your future performance will approach your past performance, and that it's more likely that you'll outperform the indices by a much smaller margin. Do you say this out of humility and a desire to underpromise and overdeliver, or is it based on market conditions (e.g. thinking that stocks in general are expensive now or that the market is more efficient now and there are fewer screaming bargains)? To argue the other side, I can think of at least two factors that might give your investors reason for optimism rather than pessimism: first, your growing circle of competence, which presumably is making you a better investor with each passing year; and second, your growing network of CEOs and entrepreneurs who can quickly give you firsthand information about the real state of a specific industry.

Pabrai: Future performance of Pabrai Funds is a function of future investments. I have no idea what these future investment ideas would be and thus one has to be cognizant of this reality. It would be foolhardy to set expectations based on the past. We do need to set some benchmarks and goals to be measured against. If a fund beats the Dow, S&P and Nasdaq by a small percentage over the long-haul they are likely to be in the very top echelons of money managers. So, while they may appear modest relative to the past, they are not easy goals for active managers to achieve.

The goals are independent of market conditions today versus the past. While circle of competence and knowledge does (hopefully) grow over time, it is hard to quantify that benefit in the context of our performance goals.

InvestorGuide: Finally, what advice do you have for anyone just getting started in investing, who dreams of replicating your performance? What should be on their "to do" list?

Pabrai: I started with studying Buffett. Then I added Munger, Templeton, Ruane, Whitman, Cates/Hawkins, Berkowitz etc. Best to study the philosophy of the various master value investors and their various specific investments. Then apply that approach with your own money and investment ideas and go from there.

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Buffett Succeeds at Nothing

http://www.fool.com/portfolios/rulemaker/2002/rulemaker021030.htm

By Mohnish Pabrai
10/30/2002

Editor's Note: Occasionally, we like to feature articles from readers in this space. Mohnish Pabrai, the managing partner of Pabrai Investment Funds and mpabrai on the Fool discussion boards, offers his view on the difficulty investors have -- professional and individual alike -- in just sitting still.

Seventeenth century French scientist Blaise Pascal is perhaps best remembered for his contributions to the field of pure geometry. In the 39 years that he lived, he found time to invent such modern day fundamentals as the syringe, the hydraulic press, and the first digital calculator. And, if that weren't enough, he was also a profound philosopher. One of my favorite Pascal quotes is: "All man's miseries derive from not being able to sit quietly in a room alone."

I've often thought that Pascal's words, slightly adapted, might apply well to a relatively new subset of humanity: "All portfolio managers' miseries derive from not being able to sit quietly in a room alone."

Why should portfolio managers sit and do nothing? And why would that be good for them? Well, let's start with the story of D.E. Shaw & Co. Founded in 1988, Shaw was staffed by some of the brightest mathematicians, computer scientists, and bond trading experts on the planet. Jeff Bezos worked at Shaw before embarking on his Amazon.com(Nasdaq: AMZN) journey. These folks found that there was a lot of money to be made with risk-free arbitrage in the bond markets with some highly sophisticated bond arbitrage trading algorithms.

Shaw was able to capitalize on minuscule short-term inefficiencies in the bond markets with highly leveraged capital. The annualized returns were nothing short of spectacular -- and all of it risk-free! The bright folks at Shaw put their trading on autopilot, with minimal human tweaking required. They came to work and mostly played pool or video games or just goofed off. Shaw's profit per employee was astronomical, and everyone was happy with this Utopian arrangement.

Eventually, the nerds got fidgety -- they wanted to do something. They felt that they had only scratched the surface and, if they only dug deeper, there would be more gold to be mined. And so they fiddled with the system to try to juice returns.

What followed was a similar path taken by Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM), a fund once considered so big and so smart on Wall Street that it simply could not fail. And yet, when economic events that did not conform to its historical model took place in rapid succession, it nearly did just that. There was a gradual movement from pure risk-free arbitrage to playing the risky arbitrage game in the equity markets. A lot more capital could be deployed, and the returns looked appealing. With no guaranteed short-term convergence and highly leveraged positions, the eventual result was a blow-up that nearly wiped out the firm.

Compared to nearly any other discipline, I find that fund management is, in many respects, a bizarre field --where hard work and intellect don't necessarily lead to satisfactory results. As Warren Buffett succinctly put it during the 1998 Berkshire Hathaway(NYSE: BRK.A) annual meeting: "We don't get paid for activity, just for being right. As to how long we'll wait, we'll wait indefinitely!"

Buffett and his business partner Charlie Munger are easily among the smartest folks I've come across. But, as we've seen with Shaw and LTCM, a high I.Q. may not lead to stellar investing results. After all, LTCM's founders had among them Nobel Prize-winning economists. In the long-run, it didn't do them much good. In fact, they outsmarted themselves. In a 1999 interview with BusinessWeek, Buffett stated:

Success in investing doesn't correlate with IQ -- once you're above the level of 25. Once you have ordinary intelligence, what you need is the temperament to control the urges that get other people into trouble in investing.

Events at Shaw and LTCM show that high-IQ folks have a hard time sitting around contemplating their navels. The problem is that once you engage in these intellectually stimulating problems, you're almost guaranteed to find what you think are the correct answers and act upon them -- usually leading to bad results for investors.

Having observed Buffett and Munger closely over the years, and gotten into their psyche through their speeches and writings, it is clear to me that, like the folks at Shaw and LTCM, both men need enormous doses of intellectual stimulation as part of their daily diet. How do they satisfy this intellectual hunger without the accompanying actions that get investors into trouble?

Consider the following:

While Buffett plays bridge (typically 10-20 hours per week), Munger spends his time mostly on expanding his worldly wisdom and constantly improving his latticework of mental models. He is a voracious reader of intellectually engaging books on a variety of subjects, ranging from the various Ice Ages to The Wealth and Poverty of Nations. He spends considerable time in applying perspectives gained from one field of study into other disciplines -- especially capital allocation.

At the Wesco(AMEX: WSC) annual meeting this year, Munger acknowledged that the first few hundred million dollars at Berkshire came from "running a Geiger counter over everything," but the subsequent tens of billions have come from simply "waiting for the no-brainers" or, as Buffett puts it, "waiting for the phone to ring."

Buffett still has a tendency to run his Geiger counter over lots of stuff. It's just too enticing intellectually not to. How does he avoid getting into trouble? I believe there are three reasons:

1. Running the Geiger counter can work very well if one knows when to run it. Reflect on the following two quotes:

In 1970, showing his dismay at elevated stock prices, Buffett said: "I feel like a sex-starved man on a deserted island."

In 1974, expressing his glee at the low levels to which the market had fallen, he said: "I feel like a sex-starved man in a harem filled with beautiful women!"

By 1970, he had terminated his partnership and made virtually no public market investments until 1974. The P/E ratio for the S&P 500 dropped from 20 to 7 in those four years. By 1974, he had acknowledged selling "stocks he'd bought recently at 3 times earnings to buy stocks selling at 2 times earnings."

Then, from 1984-1987, Buffett did not buy a single new equity position for the Berkshire portfolio. Berkshire Hathaway was sitting on a mountain of cash, and still he did nothing. In the latter half of 1987, Berkshire used that cash pile to buy over a billion dollars' worth of Coca-Cola(NYSE: KO), over 5% of the company. He invested 25% of Berkshire Hathaway's book value in a single company that they did not control!

What were Buffett and Munger doing from 1970-1973 and 1984-1987? Both men realize that successful investing requires the patience and discipline to make big bets during the relatively infrequent intervals when the markets are undervalued, and to do "something else" during the long periods when markets are fully priced or overpriced. I'm willing to bet that Buffett was playing far more bridge in 1972 than he was in 1974.

2. The Geiger counter approach works better in smaller, under-followed companies and a host of special situations. Given their typical smaller size, investing in these companies would do nothing for Berkshire Hathaway today. So Buffett usually makes these investments for his personal portfolio. A good example is his recent investment in mortgage REIT Laser Mortgage Management (LMM), where there was a decent spread between the liquidation value and quoted stock price. These LMM-type investments are significant for Buffett's personal portfolio and, more importantly, soak up intellectual horsepower that might lead to not-so-good results at Berkshire Hathaway.

Being versatile, he moves his Geiger counter away from the equity markets to other bastions of inefficiency whenever the public markets get overheated. These include high-yield bonds (Berkshire bought over $1 billion worth of Finova bonds at deep discounts in 2001), REITs (bought First Industrial Realty in 2000 for his own portfolio at a time when REIT yields were spectacular), or his recent investing adventures in silver.

3. The Munger/Buffett relationship is an unusual one. Both men are fiercely independent thinkers, and both prefer working alone. When Buffett has an investment idea, after it makes it through his filter, he usually runs it past Munger. Munger then applies his broad latticework of mental models to find faults with Buffett's ideas, and shoots most of them down. It is the rare idea that makes it past Buffett, and it has to be a total no-brainer to make it past both of them.

The Buffett/Munger approach of multi-year periods of inactivity contrasts starkly with the frenzied activity that takes place daily at the major exchanges. Which brings me back to the fundamental question: Why have we set up portfolio managers as full-time professionals with the expectation that they "do something smart" every day? The fund management industry needs to reflect on Pascal's potent words and how Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger have figured out how to sit quietly alone in a room, indefinitely.

Guest writer Mohnish Pabrai is the managing partner of Pabrai Investment Funds, an Illinois-based value-centric group of investment funds. He owns shares of Berkshire Hathaway. You can email him at mpabrai@pabraifunds.com, or find him on the Rule Maker discussion boards. To read his other writings, visitwww.pabraifunds.com. The Motley Fool is investors writing for investors.
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Mohnish Pabrai’s portfolio is not perfect because of what is inside, but rather because of how the fund is assembled. Pabrai is the managing partner of the Pabrai Investment Funds, a partnership with $500 million under management. Besides the 29% returned annually to partners, Pabrai has designed brilliant portfolio concepts.

Incalculable amounts of time are spent studying which investments to buy, but very little time is spent thinking about how much. The decision is usually left up to the investor’s confidence in the investment, something that has been shown to be unstable. The truth is, deciding how much to buy can have a large impact on a portfolio, occasionally just as much as what is bought. There are copious amounts of information on what to buy, but very little on how much.

To combat his untrustworthy feelings of self-confidence, Pabrai developed a new “portfolio theory.” I will call it the ten by ten portfolio. Ten investments that each make up ten percent of the portfolio. Pabrai holds between seven and fifteen different investments, but appears to stay close to the ten by ten benchmark. The fund is difficult to proportion perfectly, because a stock can run up before a full lot has been purchased or because a previous position has already advanced.

The proportioned ten by ten portfolio has other, less obvious effects. The benchmark percentage ensures the investor is confident enough to place 10% of their holdings in the investment. If they aren’t, then they should not invest at all. Simply put, the portfolio attempts to ensure only the best ideas get in.

As Buffett says repeatedly:
“ When making investments, pretend in life you have a punch-card with only 20 boxes, and every time you make an investment you punch a slot. It will discipline you to only make investments you have extreme confidence in.”

Additionally, a portfolio with ten stocks is focused enough to be able to beat the market, but not so focused that one wrong pick means the death of the whole fund. Pabrai admits he knows he is not as good a judge as Warren Buffett, who put nearly his entire wealth into GEICO stock at a young age. Therefore, if Pabrai is wrong, his fund can still do quite well. He has been wrong in the past ten years, while still returning nearly thirty percent per year after expenses.

Pabrai gave the following portfolio as an example at his 2005 annual meeting. He provided the following information to demonstrate how the ten by ten portfolio will do well even with some bad investment decisions.




Invested


Returned

Holding 1


$100


$10

Holding 2


$100


$50

Holding 3


$100


$100

Holding 4


$100


$100

Holding 5


$100


$180

Holding 6


$100


$180

Holding 7


$100


$180

Holding 8


$100


$200

Holding 9


$100


$200

Holding 10


$100


$300




$1,000


$1,500



He went on to explain that if the above returns took three years to achieve; the fund would have an annual return of 14.5%. If the returns took two years to achieve, the fund would have returned 22.5% per year and if only one year passed, the return would be 50%.

Another Pabrai concept is the “placeholder.” He contends that money sitting in the bank is actually risky because of the potentially declining dollar. Economically speaking, this is true. To combat the risk, Pabrai believes one should invest the cash in something safe, yielding enough return value. Currently, he is using Berkshire Hathaway as a placeholder until he finds other cheaper investments. Putting the money in the hands of the world’s greatest investor seems like a better idea than leaving dollars in the bank.

A past placeholder returned an annualized rate of about 116%. In mid October of 2004, Pabrai began buying Canadian Oil Sands, a company that owns 35% of Syncrude, when oil was forty dollars a barrel. The stock price was still undervalued by over 25% in comparison to the price of oil at the time, and appeared to value the company as if oil was never going to rise. In essence, Pabrai decided to take his cash and buy crude oil reserves at thirty dollars instead. He believed this to be a “productive commodity hedge against a declining dollar.”

He began buying the stock at forty-eight dollars and eighty one cents. Over an average of fourteen months, Pabrai had realized a gain of 145%.

His rational was stunningly simple. If oil prices did not rise, Pabrai did well from the dividend he was collecting. If prices rose to forty or fifty dollars a barrel, then he won big. Oil as it turned out climbed around sixty dollars and Pabrai began selling. He had invested in a stock that appeared to have little risk, was already selling at a decent discount, and had a catalyst to rise a great deal in the future.

Pabrai knows the dollar over time will likely decrease in value, and he has developed a concept to protect his portfolio from the risk. He has chosen to buy commodities or other safe companies that will be a better steward of his cash.

The last part to Pabrai’s portfolio is actually the first concept he addresses when researching an investment and is unique to the Pabrai Investment Funds.

In an article published on February ninth, 2004, Pabrai explains what he calls the “Yellowstone Factor”. He explained that Yellowstone national park is actually one large volcano that statistically speaking erupts every six hundred thousand years, with enough force to kill everyone within 700 miles. An eruption has not occurred in six hundred and thirty thousand years.

Therefore Pabrai explains, no matter how small the probability an event might occur, the risk must be taken into consideration. He goes on to point out that no business on earth is totally risk free. There is always a Yellowstone.

Before Pabrai makes any investment, he will “first fixate on what factors can cause the investment to result in a significant permanent loss of capital”. He believes simple estimations or “back of the envelope accounting” is all that is required. Similar probabilities can be assigned to other kinds of risk such as accounting fraud.

While the analogy of Yellowstone erupting is interesting, the message is paramount. Consider all possible risks of loss and ascribe a probability of the event occurring.

To reduce risk as much as possible, Pabrai ensures his holdings have little overlap. For instance, he will usually only hold one investment in the oil industry. He can minimize industry specific risk effectively by isolating his holdings.

Pabrai has simplified portfolio design with straightforward concepts. He has whittled Buffett’s ideas into easily followed rules. By limiting holdings, hedging against the declining dollar, and estimating risk, Pabrai has developed a portfolio that will certainly improve any investor’s performance.
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Mohnish Pabrai, is Managing Partner of Pabrai Investment Funds, a group of focused value funds. Since inception in 1999 with $1 million, Pabrai Funds has grown to over $500 million in assets under management. Pabrai is the author of two books on value investing,Mosaic andThe Dhandho Investor.

Mohnish Pabrai’s talk centers on checklists for investing. Mohnish “highly, highly recommends reading Dr. Atul’s book,The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things Right.”

In 1935 when the US was looking for next bomber, Boeing invented the B-17 bomber widely exceeded everything the army had previously put out, however they had a test run and two pilots died.

Boeing went back to look at what happened. And they realized that this was too complex. So Boeing engineers came up with a checklist. Afterwards the plan had a flawless bomber.

Today the aviation check list has become very organized, and the pilots are trained to live and die by that checklist.

The list is highly practical and easy to understand. The checklist is extensively researched and is stimulated by flight simulators to see if anything should be added or subtracted.

In America there are five million lines inserted into America in ICUs. About 80% of these line insertions led to infection, of which 20-25% of which were fatal.

A doctor in John Hopkins had nurses stand by the doctors before line insertions.

He listed five points in his check list which are all pretty basic thinks like washing hands with soaps before line insertions.

Nurses noticed that a lot of these rules were missed, so he had the nurses make sure the doctor kept to the five rules. After this happened the amount of infections went down to zero. He took this approach to other hospitals. And nowadays this procedure has become standard in US hospitals.

The FAA is actually one of the most successful agencies.

The FAA has very little to do with actual flights, they only go into action when an accident occurs. The FAA gets down of what happened. Bird hits happen to be a major problem for airplanes. When the Hudson crash occurred due to the Canadian geese, the FAA made sure to keep better track of Canadian Geese.

Flying is very cheap and safe. However, the nuclear industry took a different approach which was not pragmatic and could not tolerate a single human life. And we are praying the price 20 years later.

Mohnish found that the FAA approach could be used in investing. He compares a crash to a loss of capital.

Mohnish started building an investment checklist. He looked at mistakes Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger made and mistakes by other great value investors.

Mohnish compiled a list of 70 items two years ago. Since then Mohnish has achieved a zero error rate. However, Mohnish warns there are bound to be errors in the future.

Mohnish looked at many the great fund’s 13Fs from 2004 to see approximately what their buy price and look at their sell price. He analyzed twelve investors and came up with a list of 320 companies that these investors lost money in totaling $20 billion. He looked at why they might have bought and sold these securities.

He picked 26 of the 320 companies and looked in depth at them. He only looked at three financial companies to diversify across industries. Now Mohnish is up to 97 points in his checklist.

Mohnish quotes Jack Welsh as stating that GE will only be in an industry where they are number one or two.

HP and Lexmark had a duopoly in printers. Oakmark and Davis Funds lost a lot of money in Lexmark.

However, if you looked at checklist you likely would have avoided this investment. Lexmark was more similar to Schick than to Gillette.

One are with the largest area of mistakes has to do with moats. The question that must be asked is if the moat is sinking. LongLeaf lost $550 million in Sun Micro systems.

There was a huge decrease in computer prices over the past few years, plus a shift from desktops to laptops this affected Dell a lot. LongLeaf, and Fairfax had some pain in that company.

LongLeaf bought GM thinking that GM owned the truck business. When gas went to $4, GM was decimated. One of the checklist items is to look at what other factors can affect a moat in this case being commodity prices.

There are give categories in the check list:

Personal biases are a small part.

Leverage, Management, Moat and valuation are the main four items of the checklists.

The checklist highlights the possible main failure points. But there will never be an investment that will fit all 97 items.

Mohnish is currently building a cheap Japanese basket of cheap stocks. Mohnish believes there is a great opportunity in that market. Despite the fact that it is hard to invest in the low cap and micro cap Japanese stocks.

Mohnish does not currently have a checklist for selling.
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Forbes.com


Intelligent Investing Transcript
Transcript: Mohnish Pabrai
Steve Forbes, 04.12.10, 6:00 AM ET

Lessons From Buffett

Steve Forbes: Mohnish, thank you very much for joining us today.

Mohnish Pabrai: You're most welcome.

Forbes: You are one of the noted value investors, one of those who is an admirer of Warren Buffett. What did you take from Warren Buffett? And what do you do differently from Warren Buffett? You're not a clone.

Pabrai: Well, you know, we will never have another Warren. I think Warren is a very unique person. And also, I think that his investing prowess is so strong that many of his other attributes and, I would say, his other qualities get ignored. I believe the best things about Warren have nothing to do with investing. But they have everything to do with leading a great life. So many of the things, I think, most of the great things I've taken from Warren have more to do with life than investing.

Forbes: Such as?

Pabrai: Well, such as, you know, how to raise a family, interaction with friends, the importance of keeping your ego in check. You know, humility. Just a whole bunch of different attributes. The importance of candor, the importance of integrity. Just all these, the soft skills that are very important in life.

Forbes: They do interconnect. Now, in terms of how you approach an investment, you, I think, probably pay more attention to intangibles than perhaps Warren Buffett or Ben Graham might have done.

Pabrai: Well, Warren pays attention to intangibles, but Ben Graham was very much a tangible guy. And yeah, so we're looking at the qualitative as well as the quantitative. And yeah, so I would say that one way to look at that is to consider what Charlie Munger would call his latticework of mental models. So when you look at a business, look at it in a broader context of how it fits into the world. And sometimes, if you can see it in a light that the world is not seeing it in, that can give you an edge.

Forbes: Munger also said, "You have three choices: yes, no, or too difficult." You subscribe to that too.

Pabrai: That's right. And 98% is too difficult.

Find Deep Moats

Forbes: So that gets to knowing your areas of competency. You share Warren Buffett's antipathy to technology. Not that you dislike it, but you just don't feel you're going to bring value added there.

Pabrai: Yeah, you know, my degrees are in computer engineering. I spent a lot of time in the tech industry. And I like to say that I don't invest in tech because I spent time in it. And I saw firsthand that the durability of technology moats is many times an oxymoron.

Forbes: Now quickly define moats, in terms of a business that keeps the competition away.

Pabrai: Well, you know, if you talk to Michael Porter, he would give you five books on what is meant by, you know, strategy and competitive advantage and durable competitive advantage. And if you talk to Warren and Charlie, they would just say it's a moat. And they'd break it down to one word. But basically it's the ability of a business to have some type of an enduring competitive advantage that allows it to earn a better-than-average rate of return over an extended period of time. And so some businesses have narrow moats. Some have broad moats. Some have moats that are deep but get filled up pretty quickly. So what you want is a business that has a deep moat with lots of piranha in it and that's getting deeper by the day. That's a great business.

Invest Leisurely

Forbes: So summing up in terms of what do you think do you bring to value investing that others perhaps don't, that give you a unique edge?

Pabrai: I think the biggest edge would be attitude. So you know, Charlie Munger likes to say that you don't make money when you buy stocks. And you don't make money when you sell stocks. You make money by waiting. And so the biggest, the single biggest advantage a value investor has is not IQ; it's patience and waiting. Waiting for the right pitch and waiting for many years for the right pitch.

Forbes: So what's that saying of Pascal that you like about just sitting in a room?

Pabrai: Yeah. "All man's miseries stem from his inability to sit in a room alone and do nothing." And all I'd like to do to adapt Pascal is, "All investment managers' miseries stem from the inability to sit alone in a room and do nothing."

Forbes: So you don't feel the need to pick 10 stocks a quarter or one stock a quarter, just what turns up?

Pabrai: You know, actually, I think that the way the investment business is set up, it's actually set up the wrong way. The correct way to set it up is to have gentlemen of leisure, who go about their leisurely tasks, and when the world is severely fearful is when they put their leisurely task aside and go to work. That would be the ideal way to set up the investment business.

Forbes: Does this tie into your ideas and other value investors' ideas of low risk, high uncertainty?

Pabrai: That's right. I mean, I think the low risk, high uncertainty is really something I borrowed from entrepreneurs, and you know, the Patels in India or the Richard Bransons of the world. Basically if you study entrepreneurs, there is a misnomer: People think that entrepreneurs take risk, and they get rewarded because they take risk. In reality entrepreneurs do everything they can to minimize risk. They are not interested in taking risk. They want free lunches and they go after free lunches. And so if you study any number of entrepreneurs, from Ray Kroc to, you know, Herb Schultz at Starbucks and to even Buffett and Munger and so on, what you'll find is that they have repeatedly made bets which are low-risk bets, which have high-return possibilities. So they're not going high risk, high return. They're going low risk, high return.

And even with Bill Gates, for example. The total amount of capital that ever went into Microsoft was less than $50,000, between the time it started and today. That's the total amount of capital that went into the company. So Microsoft you cannot say was a high-risk venture because there was no capital deployed. But it had high uncertainty. Bill Gates could have gone bankrupt. Or Bill Gates could have ended up the wealthiest person on the Forbes 400. And he ended up at the extreme end of the bell curve, and that's fine. But he did not take risk to get there. He was comfortable with uncertainty. So entrepreneurs are great at dealing with uncertainty and also very good at minimizing risk. That's the classic great entrepreneur.

Low Risk, Low Capital

Forbes: This is your almost third career. And this idea you have on uncertainty and risk. You started a company. It worked. You sold it. You started another company. It did not work. What did you learn from that that gave you insights on investing that, those that had not been in the trenches, don't bring?

Pabrai: Well the first company took no capital and generated an enormous amount of capital for me. Then I got fat, dumb and happy and my second company, I put in a lot of capital.

Forbes: You thought you knew what you were doing.

Pabrai: And I violated the low risk, high uncertainty principle. I got my head handed to me. And I got that seared heavily in my psyche. And now the third business, if you call Pabrai Funds a business--I call it a "gentleman of leisure" activity--but Pabrai Funds is, again, low risk, high uncertainty in the sense that there is no downside. It never took capital. So it's a great business.

Forbes: So as a gentleman of leisure, is that why you take a nap each day at 4 p.m.?

Pabrai: There's nothing better. Do you have a nap room?

Forbes: I wish.

Pabrai: You know, when I went to Warren's Berkshire headquarters last year, my friend Guy asked Warren, he said, "Warren, Mohnish has a nap room in his office. Do you have a nap room?" And Warren's answer was, "Yes." OK, so I was surprised. So I said, "Warren, you're telling me in Kiewit Plaza, there's a nap room for you." He says, "Yes." He says, "Not every day, but every once in a while, I need to go to sleep in the afternoon."

Forbes: Well there's something to that. My father called it having a conference.

Pabrai: That's right. No, it does wonders. I have a hard time getting past the day without the nap, so the nap is a must.

Forbes: So having those two experiences--no capital, then as you say, fat and happy and then you got your head handed to you--when you look at an equity, when you look at a possibility, what are those experiences, give what insight do you get from those experiences.

Pabrai: Well, the insight is the same, in the sense that I think that, you know, Warren says that I'm a better investor because I'm a businessman, and I'm a better businessman because I'm an investor. So the thing is that my experiences as a businessman have very direct, long-term positive impacts on me as an investor, because when I'm looking at an investment, I now look at it like the way I looked at my first business, which is, the first thing I'm looking at is, how can I lose money on this? And can I absolutely minimize my downside?

The upsides will take care of themselves. It's the downsides that one needs to worry about, which is why even the checklist becomes important. But so the important thing that value investors focus on is downside protection. And that's exactly what entrepreneurs focus on--what is my downside? So that is the, I would say, the crossover between entrepreneurship in investing, and value investing especially, is protecting your downside.

Pabrai's Fees

Forbes: Now you're a hedge fund manager, but you're unusual. First, your fee structure. Explain that.

Pabrai: Well you know, my fee structure, one of my attributes about a great investor is be a copycat. Do not be an innovator.

Forbes: What's it, pioneers take the arrows?

Pabrai: Yeah. When I started Pabrai Funds, I actually didn't know anything about the investing business. And the only, if you can call it a hedge fund, that I was familiar with was the Buffett partnerships. And when I looked at the Buffett partnerships, I found that Warren Buffett charged no management fees. He took 25% of the profits, after a 6% hurdle. And all of that made all the sense in the world to me, because I felt it aligned my interests completely with my investors. So I said, "Why mess with perfection? Let's just mirror it." And that's what I did. And what I didn't realize at the time--it took me a few years to realize it--is that that mirroring created an enormous moat for Pabrai Funds. Because the investors who joined me will never leave, because it's the first question they ask any other money manager they go to work for or they want to put money with is, "What is your fee structure?"

When they hear the fee structure, they say, "I'm just going to stay where I am." And so first of all, it creates a moat where the existing investors do not want to leave. And the new ones who join the church are happy to join.

Forbes: You're also unusual in another way. You don't seem to go out of your way to woo institutional investors.

Pabrai: Yeah, I mean, I think I'm looking for people who want to invest their family assets for a long period of time. I really don't want investors who are looking at putting things into style buckets or going to look at allocations every quarter or might need to redeem in a year and those sorts of things. So their frameworks are very different. So in general--

Forbes: So someone who comes with you is a minimum of, what, two years, three years, what, before you allow them an exit?

Pabrai: Our exits are annual. So people can get out once a year. But what we suggest to them is to not invest if they don't have at least a five-year horizon. But we don't impose any, because people can have hardships. They can have all kinds of things happen.

Forbes: Now, low cost, one of the things that apparently institutional investors are flummoxed by is, it's you.

Pabrai: Our total expenses for running the funds, which the investors get charged for, is between 10 and 15 basis points a year. That's what they pay for, for all the accounting, audit, tax, administration and everything. They don't pay for my salary or my staff's salary. We take that out of the performance fees. And they only pay the performance fees after 6%. So what a deal.

Forbes: Now, you're not big on schmoozing investors.

Pabrai: You know, I think the thing is that every business ought to figure out who their ideal customer is.

And at Pabrai Funds, what I've found is that investors who do their own homework find me and do the research on me on their own, without any middlemen involved, and then invest in Pabrai Funds like Amazon--which is wire the money and send the forms--tend to be the best investors. In fact the investor base we have is mostly entrepreneurs who created their wealth themselves. And they're very smart. And they're in a wide range of industries. In fact, my analyst pool is my investor base. So I have investors in all kinds of industries. And when I'm looking at investment ideas in particular industries, I can call them. And I get the best analysts at the best price with no conflict of interest. So it works out great.

Forbes: Free. That sounds really good. They pay you.

Pabrai: Yeah, exactly. It's great.

Forbes: You're not even registered with the SEC?

Pabrai: I think the hedge funds so far have not had to. I don't know if the rules will change. If the rules change, of course, we'll follow the rules. But you know, we have audits by Pricewaterhouse. We have to report 13fs to the SEC. So I think there's plenty of disclosure and transparency.

Forbes: You also don't engage in things like short-selling.

Pabrai: You know, why would you want to take a bet, Steve, where your maximum upside is a double and your maximum downside is bankruptcy? It never made any sense to me, so why go there?

Forbes: You focus on a handful of individual investors, maybe institutional investors, but people who know you, are with you.

Pabrai: Right.

Forbes: You're not part of a formula, not spit out of a computer.

Pabrai: That's right.

Use Index Funds

Forbes: What's an individual investor to do? You have some unique advice for individual investors.

Pabrai: Well the best thing for an individual investor to do is to invest in index funds. But even before we go there, you know, Charlie Munger was asked at one of the Berkshire annual meetings by a young man, "How can I get rich?" And Munger's response was very simple. He said, "If you consistently spend less than you earn and invest it in index funds, dollar-cost average," because you're putting in money every paycheck, he said, "that in, what, 20, 30, or 40 years, you can't help but be rich. It's just bound to happen."

And so any individual investor, if they just put away 5%, 10%, 15% of their income every month, and they just bought into the low-cost index funds, and just two or three of them, to split it amongst them--you're done. There's nothing else to be done. Now if you go to active managers, the stats are pretty clear: 80% to 90% of active managers underperform the indexes. But even the 10% or 20% who do, only one in 200 managers outperforms the index consistently by more than 3% a year. So the chances that an individual investor will find someone who beat the index by more than 3% a year is less than 1%. It's half a percent. So it's not worth playing that game.

Forbes: And in terms of index funds, S&P 500 or--

Pabrai: I'd say Vanguard is a great way to go. I think you could do S&P 500 index. You could do the Russell 2000. And if you wanted to, you could do an emerging-market index. But you know, I think if you just blend those three, one-third each, you're done. And if you're in your 20s and you start doing this, you don't need to even go into bonds and other things. You can just do this for a long time and you'll be fine.

Don't Go in the Roach Motel

Forbes: On TV when these folks make recommendations--you compare it to if you buy something that you heard somebody recommend on TV as going into the roach motel. Can you please explain?

Pabrai: Well you know, you remember those ads that ran where the roaches check in.

Forbes: Yup.

Pabrai: But they never check out. So the thing is, you watch some talking head on TV. And he tells you, "Go buy whatever company, Citigroup."

When its price gets cut in half, he's nowhere to be found. And now you're like that roach in the roach motel and you don't know what to do. You don't know whether you should hang on or sell or stay. So the only reason--

Forbes: Or if it goes up, do I get out? Do I wait?

Pabrai: Yeah, yeah. If it goes up 10% or 50% or 100%, what are you supposed to do? Do you want to go for long-term gain, short-term gains? Basically you have no road map. So the only way one should buy stocks is if you understand the underlying business. You stay within the circle of competence. You buy businesses you understand.

And if you understand the business, you understand what they're worth. And that's the only reason you are to buy a stock.

The Chinese Books

Forbes: And looking around the world, you made mention I think in the past, if you want an index fund with the emerging markets, OK. But you have us take a skeptical eye to investing in other countries around the world. You don't preclude it, but you see some risks.

Pabrai: Well, you know, Steve, there's plenty of great opportunities in many countries. But I would say it's probably a no-brainer to avoid Russia, Zimbabwe. And even if you look at a place like China, which I think will create incredible amount of wealth for humanity in this century, the average Chinese company has three sets of books.

You know, one for the government, and one for the owner's wife and one for the owner's mistress. And so the problem you have is you don't know which set of books you're looking at. And so I think in Chinese companies, or even in Indian companies, there you have to add another layer, which is you have to handicap the ethos of management. And that can get very hard, especially when someone like me is sitting in Irvine with naps in the afternoon, trying to figure that out.

Forbes: You also say you don't think you get much talking to CEOs, because they're in the business of sales.

Pabrai: Yeah, you know, the average CEO, first of all, the average public CEO is a person you'd be happy to have your daughter marry, any five of them. But they got to those positions because they have charisma and they are great salespeople. Now you cannot lead, you cannot be a leader, without being an optimist. So CEOs are not deceitful. I think they are high-integrity people. But if you sit down with a high-charisma CEO of an oil company, and he knows everything about oil and you know nothing about oil, by the time you finish that meeting, you just want to run out and buy all the stock of his company that you can. And it's just not the right way to go about it. So you're better off not taking the meeting, but looking at what he's done over the last 10 or 15 or 20 years. So not being mesmerized by charisma will probably help you.

Forbes: And what areas are you looking at right now? You remember back in 1968, '69, we did a story on Buffett when he was fairly unknown. And he was getting out of the market, height of the bull market of the '60s. Five years later after the crash of '73, '74, we went out to see him again, to see what he was saying after the market had gone down 50%, 60%. And he politically incorrectly said that he felt like a sex maniac in a harem because of all the bargains around.

Pabrai: Right.

Forbes: You've probably had the same feeling a year ago. What do you see? How does the harem look now?

Pabrai: That's right. In 1969 Warren told you "I feel like a sex-starved man on a deserted island." And in '74, that deserted island had become a harem. Well nowadays, we're twiddling our thumbs. It's good that I enjoy playing racquetball and bridge and so on. So there's a lot of bridge. There's a lot of racquetball. And you know, I have an eye out on the markets, but there's just not a whole lot of value presently. But value can show up tomorrow, for example. So we're not in a hurry. Happy to have a leisurely lifestyle and wait for the game to come to us.

Make Checklists

Forbes: So in the first quarter of 2010, did you add any positions?

Pabrai: Yeah, actually, we did. We did find. In fact, there's one I'm buying right now. But I found two businesses, but they're anomalies. They were just, you know, businesses that had distress in them because of specific factors. And I think we'll do very well on both of them. They'll go nameless here. But no, I think, for example, in the fourth quarter of 2008 or the first quarter of 2009, you could have just thrown darts and done well. And that is definitely not the case today.

Forbes: And finally, telling you about mistakes, one of the things I guess an investor has to realize, they cannot control the universe. Delta Financial: You had done the homework, you fell and then events took it away from you.

Pabrai: Well Delta Financial was a full loss for the firm, for the fund. We lost 100% of our investment. It was a company that went bankrupt. And we've learned a lot of lessons from Delta. And one of the lessons was that Delta was, in many ways, a very highly levered company and they were very dependent on a functioning securitization market. And when that market shut down, they were pretty much out of business. And they were caught flat-footed. And so there's a number of lessons I've obviously learned from Delta.

It's easier to learn the lessons when you don't take the hits in your own portfolio. But when you take the hits in your own portfolio, those lessons stay with you for a long time.

Forbes: So that gets to, you're a great fan of The Checklist Manifesto. And you now have checklists. You said one of the key things is mistakes, in terms of a checklist, so you don't let your emotions get in the way of analyzing. What are some of the mistakes on your checklist now that you go through systematically, even if your gut says, "This is great. I want to do it."

Pabrai: Yeah, so the checklist I have currently has about 80 items on it. And even though 80 sounds like a lot, it doesn't take a long time.

It takes about 30 minutes to go through the checklist. What I do is when I'm starting a business, I go through my normal process of analyzing the business. When I'm fully done and I'm ready to pull the trigger, that's when I take the business to the checklist. And I run it against the 80 items. And what happens the first time when I run it, there might be seven or eight questions that I don't know the answer to, which is great, which what that means is, "Listen dummy, go find out the answer to these eight questions first." Which means I have more work to do. So I go off again to find those answers. When I have those answers, I come back and run the checklist again. And any business that I look at is going to have some items on which the checklist raises red flags. But the good news is that you're looking in front of you with all your facilities at the range of things that could possibly cause a problem.

And when you look at that list, you can also compare it to how those factors correlate with the rest of your portfolio. And at that point, kind of, you have a go, no-go point, where you can say, "I'm comfortable with these risk factors here. I'm comfortable with probabilities. And I'll go ahead with it." Or you can say, "I'm just going to take a pass."

And one of the things that came out of running the checklist was I used to run a 10x10 portfolio, which is when I'd make a bet, it was typically 10% of assets. And after I incorporated the checklist and I started to see all the red flags, I changed my allocation. So the typical allocation now at Pabrai Funds is 5%. And we'll go as low as 2%, if we are doing a basket bet.

And once in a blue moon, we'll go up to 10%. In fact I haven't done a 10% investment in a long time. And so the portfolio has become more names than it used to have. But since we started running the checklists, which is about 18 months ago, so far it's a zero error rate. And in the last 18 months, it's probably been the most prolific period of making investments for Pabrai Funds. We made a huge number of investments, more than any other period, any other 18-month period in our history. So with more activity so far, and it's a very short period, we have a much lower error rate.

I know in the future we will make errors. But I know those errors, the rate of errors will be much lower. And this is key. The thing is that Warren says, "Rule No. 1: Don't lose money. Rule No. 2: Don't forget rule No. 1." OK, so the key to investing is downside protection. The upsides will take care of themselves. But you have to make sure that your losers are few and far between. And the checklist is very central to that.

Forbes: Can you give a couple of the things that are on your 80 [item] checklist?

Pabrai: Oh yeah, sure. The checklist was created, looking at my mistakes and other investors' mistakes. So for example, there's questions like, you know, "Can this business be decimated by low-cost competition from China or other low-cost countries?" That's a checklist question. Another question is, "Is this a win-win business for the entire ecosystem?" So for example, if there's some company doing, you know, high-interest credit cards and they make a lot of money, that's not exactly, you know, helping society. So you might pass on that. Also, a liquor company or tobacco company, those can be great businesses, but in my book, I would just pass on those. Or a gambling business, and so on.

So the checklist will kind of focus you more toward playing center court rather than going to the edge of the court. And there's a whole set of questions on leverage. For example, you know, how much leverage? What are the covenants? Is it recourse or non-recourse? There's a whole bunch of questions on management, on management comp, on the interests of management. You know, just a whole--on their historical track records and so on. So there's questions on unions, on collective bargaining.

So you know, and all of these questions are not questions I created out of the blue. What I did is I looked at businesses where people had lost money. I looked at Dexter Shoes, where Warren Buffett lost money. And he lost it to low-cost Chinese competition. So that led to the question. And I looked at CORT Furniture, which was a Charlie Munger investment. And that was an investment made at the peak of the dot-com boom, where they were doing a lot of office furniture rentals. And the question was, "Are you looking at normalized earnings or are you looking at boom earnings?" And so that question came from there. So the checklist questions, I think, are very robust, because they're based on real-world arrows people have taken in the back.

Forbes: Terrific. Mohnish, thank you.

Pabrai: Well thank you, Steve.
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Los Angeles hedge fund manager Mohnish Pabrai, 39, seems to have some talent as a stock picker. Since he started Pabrai Investment Funds in 1999, he has delivered a 35.3% compound annual return (after fees), to the 14.2% a year you would have made owning Berkshire shares.
There are two reasons the $116 million portfolio has done better than the competition in Omaha. One, says Pabrai, is that he doesn't try to emulate Berkshire's holdings in wholly owned subsidiaries. That has kept him out of property/casualty insurance, which accounts for a big part of Berkshire's revenue and had suffered some setbacks (such as claims from Sept. 11). The other is that he hews a little more closely to the kind of value investing espoused by Buffett's mentor, Benjamin Graham. Graham liked to buy companies for less than net current assets, meaning cash, inventory and receivables minus all obligations. Buffett has pushed the definition of intrinsic value in new directions. He is willing to pay for intangibles, like a consumer brand name or a newspaper monopoly, provided those assets throw off "owner's profits"--cash that can be extracted from a business after necessary capital outlays are paid for.

Like Buffett, Pabrai keeps his distance from Wall Street. He buys no research and has no hired help. If he can't understand a company, he doesn't buy the stock. Further, Pabrai won't meet with a company's executives; if he socializes with one, he'll never invest in the stock. "Chief executives are salesmen, as Graham says," Pabrai intones. "That's how they get their jobs."

Pabrai last year bought the Norwegian oil tanker firm Frontline when shipping rates fell to $5,000 a day. To remain profitable, the company needs rates of at least $18,000 a day on its 70 double-hulled oil tankers. Investors fled the stock, and it fell to $3. Frontline wasn't a classic Graham value play since it didn't have much in the way of net current assets. But it did have hard assets--those tankers.

After noticing the stock on a new lows list, Pabrai looked into the oil shipping business and discovered that small Greek shippers with near-obsolete single-hulled tankers were being hurt more than Frontline and were selling their ships for scrap. So he knew that when oil demand next surged, Frontline would be better able to command premium rates. Near the end of 2003 Frontline was charging $50,000 a day per tanker. Pabrai is long gone, but the stock, at $29 a share, trades at a cheap five times trailing earnings.

In 2002 he beat Buffett to the convertible bonds of Level 3 Communications. Like his hero, Pabrai saw value in telecom's distress.

C. Douglas Davenport, manager of the $52 million Wisdom Fund in Atlanta, is Buffett's shadow. If Buffett does something, Davenport will, too--going so far as to buy proxy stocks for companies that Berkshire acquires. Davenport keeps the identical proportion of cash that Berkshire does, a sizable 22% of his portfolio.

Davenport's fund, with backing from Sir John Templeton's family, started in early 1999 as the Berkshire Fund but changed its name after the real Berkshire complained. Davenport, 53, follows Berkshire's public filings and news reports to see what Buffett has been up to. "Buffett is quite well followed. It's amazing how much you can find out about the man on the Internet," he says. Thus Davenport has 8% of his assets in Coca-Cola, and 4% in American Express, just like Berkshire.

When Berkshire acquired carpetmaker Shaw Industries in 2001, Davenport went after competitor Mohawk Industries, waiting two weeks for its share price to settle down. Last year Berkshire bought Clayton Homes, a builder of prefab homes, and Davenport bought into similar Champion Enterprises. To roughly match Berkshire's huge stakes in auto insurance and reinsurance, Davenport has American International Group.

Since inception just over five years ago Wisdom is up an annual 5.2%, after its 1.5% expense ratio, matching Berkshire's showing.