Labels

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Excerpts from Valuewalk Article- Li Lu on Charlie Munger :

- Till this day, the vast majority of individual investors and institutional investors still follow investment philosophies that are based on “bad theories.” For example, they believe in the efficient market hypothesis, and therefore believe that the volatility of stock prices is equivalent to real risk, and they place a strong emphasis on volatility when they judge your performance. In my view, the biggest investment risk is not the volatility of prices, but whether you will suffer a permanent loss of capital...They still accept the theories that say “volatility is risk” and “the market is always right.”

-But this old man spoke succinctly

-The numbers still fluctuate as before, but eventual result is substantial growth. From the fourth quarter of 2004 to the end of 2009, the new fund returned an annual compound growth rate of 36% after deducting operating costs. From the inception of the fund in January 1998, the fund returned an annual compound growth rate in excess of 29%. In 12 years, the capital grew more than 20 folds

-When Charlie thinks about things, he starts by inverting. To understand how to be happy in life, Charlie will study how to make life miserable; to examine how business become big and strong, Charlie first studies how businesses decline and die; most people care more about how to succeed in the stock market, Charlie is most concerned about why most have failed in the stock market.

-Charlie constantly collects and researches the notable failures in each and every type of people, business, government, and academia, and arranges the causes of failures into a decision-making checklist for making the right decisions. Because of this, he has avoided major mistakes in his decision making in his life and in his career.

-Charlie’s mind is original and creative, never subject to any restrictions, shackles, or dogmas. He has the curiosity of children and possesses the qualities of a top-notch scientists and their scientific research methods. He has a strong thirst for knowledge throughout his life and is interested in practically all areas. To him, with the right approach, any problem can be understood through self-study, building innovations on the foundation laid by those who came earlier.

-Circle of Competence: Charlie said, if I want to hold a view, if I cannot refute or disprove this view better than the smartest, most capable, most qualified person on Earth, then I’m not worthy of holding that view. So when Charlie truly holds a certain point of view, his thinking is not only original and unique, but also almost never wrong.

-A beautiful lady once insisted that Charlie use one word to sum up the source of his success, Charlie said it was being “rational.”. Even in a completely unfamiliar territory, with just one look he could see through to the essence of things. Buffett calls this characteristic of Charlie the “two-minute effect” — he said Charlie can, in the shortest time possible, unravel the nature of a complex business and understand it better than anyone else can.

-I asked Charlie: “You have your own private jet and so does Berkshire, why do you bother going through the trouble of flying commercial?”
Charlie replied:”Firstly, it is a waste of fuel for me to fly in my private jet. Secondly, I feel safer flying in a commercial aircraft.” However, the real reason is Charlie’s third reason, “I want to live an engaged life. I don’t want to be isolated.”

-Once he went to Seattle to attend a board meeting, taking the economy class as usual, he sat beside a Chinese girl who was doing her calculus homework throughout the flight. He was impressed with this Chinese girl because he has difficulty imagining American girls of the same age having such power of concentration to ignore noise on the aircraft and concentrate on studying.

-Because of this, he believes people must be strict and demanding on themselves, continuously improving their discipline in life in order to overcome the innate weaknesses of human nature. This way of life is, to Charlie, a moral requirement. To an outsider, Charlie might seem like a monk; but to Charlie, this process is both rational and pleasant and it allows people to having a successful and happy life.

-If Confucius returned 2000 years later to the commercialized China, his teaching will probably be: have your heart in the right place, cultivate your moral character, fortify your family, acquire wealth, and help the world!

From :

Tuesday, September 09, 2014

The career advice taht really helped me the most to decide what to focus on

2. Don’t expect people to change. They’ve realized how futile is to try to changes others’ behavior. We love to paint a rosy picture that things will be better after some special event happens (an acquisition, a marriage, kids, a move, a new job, whatever), but for the most part, how people act is out of our control. Make sure the people you surround yourself with are the right fit from the beginning.
“If we thought the success of our investment depended on them taking our advice, we’d move on.” – Charlie Munger
6. Don’t expose yourself to steps that can keep you from tomorrow. It can take a lifetime to build a masterpiece, but only an instant to destroy it. No matter what the possible benefit, these two guys refuse to do anything that opens them to the chance of going back to zero. That’s why they don’t use debt, and in their last 50 years have never faced a truly dire situation.
7. Tell the truth to a group of people who believe what you do, and things will work out. I do everything I can to run Live Your Legend the same way. Align with the right people and do it in an honest way. Pretty simple. 
8. Great things are built as a result of the combination of time and consistency towards a cause you deeply believe in. Find what you’re good at – what you want to build. Then put your head down and allow a lifetime to build it. 40 years ago Buffet wrote out 13 principles of what he wanted to create and how he wanted it run. He then built a culture that executed on that every day. Just about anything can be done with the right focus, time and consistency. As long as you care enough and aren’t in too much of a hurry.
10. There’s little progress without failure. These guys quickly admit not only that they’ve had plenty of failures, but that they wouldn’t have what they do if it wasn’t for the screw ups. Unsuccessful people avoid failure at all cost. The successful ones embrace it, learn from it and keep building. If you’re not screwing up every once in a while, you’re not trying hard enough. 
11. You don’t need to be able to do that many things right to succeed. In fact, success is inversely proportional to how many things you try to do. Do a few things really well. Focus on that. Hire others to do the rest or don’t do it at all. The most successful businesses and people have a much longer list of what they aren’t willing to do, than what they actually spend time on. Warren is notorious for how many things he’s says no to. Stay within your circle of competence. When in doubt, do less.
14. Purpose is the ultimate compensation. Job satisfaction and loyalty come from the autonomy to do the work that matters to you, not from a lofty salary or bonus. Give people autonomy and trust to do things they are good at. Avoid micro-managing. Don’t think you can do their skill better than they can.
Buffett recently mentioned how he’d give up his private jet long before giving up his Internet access. And who wouldn’t? But think what that means. A billionaire has access to every tool in the world, yet the most important is the one that all of us have equal (and free) access to.

Monday, September 08, 2014

From http://www.businessinsider.com/munger-explains-buffetts-success-2014-9 :

So what exactly did Munger identify as some of the unique keys to Buffett being "so unusually successful"? He began by noting:
The first factor is the mental aptitude. Warren is seriously smart.
Munger continued by noting Buffett "out-achieved his mental aptitude." Then there's the good effect caused by his doing this since he was 10 years old. It's very hard to succeed until you take the first step in what you're strongly interested in. There's no substitute for strong interest and he got a very early start.
Warren is one of the best learning machines on this earth. The turtles who outrun the hares are learning machines. If you stop learning in this world, the world rushes right by you. Warren was lucky that he could still learn effectively and build his skills, even after he reached retirement age. Warren's investing skills have markedly increased since he turned 65.

Munger notes this reality is "really crucial," because he suggests, "having watched the whole process with Warren, I can report that if he had stopped with what he knew at earlier points, the record would be a pale shadow of what it is."
And Buffett hasn't just continued his learning, but he's also seen all of the steps laid out on the path set before him as a chance to gain better understanding. Munger compares Buffett to the Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius who "had the notion that every tough stretch was an opportunity — to learn, to display manhood, you name it. To him, it was as natural as breathing to have tough stretches."
As a result, Munger suggested, "Warren doesn't spend any time on self-pity, envy, etc."
Put simply, Buffett has continually dedicated himself to refining and expanding his understanding of investing.

The key to remember

Warren Buffett once said:
I insist on a lot of time being spent, almost every day, to just sit and think. That is very uncommon in American business. I read and think. So I do more reading and thinking, and make less impulse decisions than most people in business. I do it because I like this kind of life.

Sunday, September 07, 2014



Very nice interview at  Q&A With Guy Spier Of Aquamarine Capital :

My excerpts:

  1. What company have you owned the past that was the most surprising to you? (In prospect or in retrospect)
I think that many have surprised me in one direction or another, but one of the more memorable was Duff and Phelps Credit rating - which I purchased in the mid-1990's at a 7 Price to Earnings ratio. The company proceeded to increase in value by seven times over 2-3 years before being purchased by Fimalac, the owner of Fitch. I had expected the stock to double, but I did not understand that I had purchased a super high quality business with a manager who was committed to devoting every cent of free cash, which was in excess of reported earnings, to repurchasing shares.
  1. Which rule(s) of your checklist would surprise average investors the most, if any?
I actually think that none of them would. They are common sense items that anyone would look over and say, "yes - that makes obvious sense". What is key is not that they are surprising, but that in the wrong state of mind, I might easily skip over a particular factor in evaluating an investment.
  1. Would you advise young people to get a CFA charter or an MBA or is there a better way to become an investor?
I don't think that either is necessary in order to become a good investor. Attending the Berkshire Hathaway meetings, studying Warren Buffett and reading the Berkshire Annual Reports, along with Poor Charlie's Almanack are an absolute necessity, in my view.
  1. What would you say is the most common mistake that value investors make? Does this matter if the value investor is amateur or professional?
I think that all-too-often, we feel like we are forced to take a decision. Amateur investors, investing their own money, have a huge advantage in this over the professionals. When you are a professional, there is a whole system of oversight that is constantly saying, "What have you done for me lately!" or in baseball terminology, "Swing you fool!"
Amateur investors who are investing unlevered funds that they don't need any time soon have no such pressures.
  1. Financial companies are usually a big part of the portfolio of value investors, because they seem cheap to industrials and utilities. But every now and then financials wipe out in a credit crisis. Why don't many value investors pay attention to credit conditions?
Yes, that's absolutely true. And yes, value investors probably pay far too little attention to the credit cycle. In my case, I think that I was utterly convinced that my stocks were sufficiently cheap, such that I could invest without regard to financial cycles. But I learned my lesson big time in 2008 when I was down a lot. I now subscribe to Grant's Interest Rate Observer so as to help me track the credit cycle.
  1. How do you balance keeping an independent view versus interacting with respected professional friends who have their views?
I try to switch off, or distance myself from people who I think communicate in a way that is not productive for me. The key is to have the kind of discourse that allows other people to come to their own conclusion. Asking open ended questions and not telling someone what to do are important aspects of that. When I come across people who do that, I try to build closer relationships with them. If they don't I might still keep them in my circle, but I would not allow myself to interact with them too often - because I don't want to be swayed.
  1. How do you feel about quantitative value investors?
If you mean to use statistical methods to uncover value, Ben Graham style, then I'm all for it. That is what I did when I created my Japan basket. That said, I found it hard and monotonous work. Monotonous because, in the case of Japan it did not lead to greater knowledge or wisdom about the world, because there was a limit on the degree to which I could drill down.

Saturday, August 30, 2014

From : Peculiar Habits of Incredibly Successful People

Adams writes in his book How to Fail at Almost Everything:
A system is something you do on a regular basis that increases your odds of happiness in the long run. If you do something every day, it's a system. If you're waiting to achieve it someday in the future, it's a goal.
The system-versus-goals model can be applied to most human endeavors. In the world of dieting, losing twenty pounds is a goal, but eating right is a system. In the exercise realm, running a marathon in under four hours is a goal, but exercising daily is a system. In business, making a million dollars is a goal, but being a serial entrepreneur is a system.
President Obama wears the same style suits to reduce low-level decision-making
He explained in 2012:
You'll see I wear only gray or blue suits. I'm trying to pare down decisions. I don't want to make decisions about what I'm eating or wearing. Because I have too many other decisions to make. You need to focus your decision-making energy. You need to routinize yourself. You can't be going through the day distracted by trivia.
Charles Darwin tried his whole life to prove his own theories wrong
Charlie Munger once explained Darwin's philosophy:
One of the great things to learn from Darwin is the value of the extreme objectivity. He tried to disconfirm his ideas as soon as he got 'em. He quickly put down in his notebook anything that disconfirmed a much-loved idea. He especially sought out such things. Well, if you keep doing that over time, you get to be a perfectly marvelous thinker instead of one more klutz repeatedly demonstrating first-conclusion bias.

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Munger quotes

My favorite quotes from http://www.valuewalk.com/charlie-munger-page/

CHARLIE MUNGER QUOTES

  1. You must value the business in order to value the stock.
  2. The best thing a human being can do is to help another human being know more.
  3. Experience tends to confirm a long-held notion that being prepared, on a few occasions in a lifetime, to act promptly in scale, in doing some simple and logical thing, will often dramatically improve the financial results of that lifetime. A few major opportunities, clearly recognizable as such, will usually come to one who continuously searches and waits, with a curious mind that loves diagnosis involving multiple variables. Then all that is required is a willingness to bet heavily when the odds are extremely favorable, using resources available because of prudence and patience in the past.
  4.  Just as animals flourish in niches, people who specialize in some narrow niche can do very well.
  5. The number one idea is to view a stock as an ownership of the business and to judge the staying quality of the business in terms of its competitive advantage. Look for more value in terms of discounted future cash flow than you are paying for. Move only when you have an advantage.
  6. Over the very long term, history shows that the chances of any business surviving in a manner agreeable to a company’s owners are slim at best.
  7. It is not given to human beings to have such talent that they can just know everything about everything all the time. However, it is given to human beings who work hard at it. Who look and sift the world for a mispriced bet – that they can occasionally find one.
  8. In addition, the wise ones bet heavily when the world offers them that opportunity. They bet big when they have the odds. And the rest of the time they don’t. It is just that simple.
  9. Acknowledging what you do not know is the dawning of wisdom.
  10. Determine value apart from price; progress apart from activity; wealth apart from size.
  11. Remember that reputation and integrity are your most valuable assets – and can be lost in a heartbeat.
  12. I think records of accomplishment are very important. If you start early trying to have a perfect one in some simple thing like honesty, you are well on your way to success in this world.
  13. We try more to profit from always remembering the obvious than from grasping the esoteric.
  14. Someone will always be getting richer faster than you. This is not a tragedy.
  15. Spend each day trying to be a little wiser than you were when you woke up. Discharge your duties faithfully and well. Systematically you get ahead, but not necessarily in fast spurts. Nevertheless, 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.
  16. Over the long term, it’s hard for a stock to earn a much better return that the business which underlies it earns. If the business earns six percent on capital over forty years and you hold it for that forty years, you are not going to make much different than a six percent return – even if you originally buy it at a huge discount. Conversely, if a business earns eighteen percent on capital over twenty or thirty years, even if you pay an expensive looking price, you will end up with one hell of a result.
  17. You must have the confidence to override people with more credentials than you whose cognition is impaired by incentive-caused bias or some similar psychological force that is obviously present. Nevertheless, there are also cases where you have to recognize that you have no wisdom to add – and that your best course is to trust some expert.
  18. The safest way to try to get what you want is to try to deserve what you want. It is such a simple idea. It is the golden rule. You want to deliver to the world what you would buy if you were on the other end.
  19. I am not entitled to have an opinion unless I can state the arguments against my position better than the people who are in opposition. I think that I am qualified to speak only when I have reached that state.
  20. Avoid working directly under somebody you do not admire and don’t want to be like.
  21. Intense interest in any subject is indispensable if you are really going to excel in it.
  22. Never, ever, think about something else when you should be thinking about the power of incentives.
  23. Everybody engaged in complex work needs colleagues. Just the discipline of having to put your thoughts in
  24. Good businesses are ethical businesses. A business model that relies on trickery is doomed to fail.

Sequoia Fund letter excerpts

Excerpts from Sequoia Fund Second Quarter Commentary


Sequoia Fund’s investment objective is long-term growth of capital. In pursuing this objective the Fund focuses on investing in equity securities that it believes are undervalued at the time of purchase and have the potential for growth. A guiding principle is the consideration of equity securities, such as common stock, as units of ownership of a business and the purchase of them when the price appears low in relation to the value of the total enterprise. The balance sheet and earnings history and prospects of each company are extensively studied to appraise fundamental value. Sequoia Fund typically sells the equity security of a company when the company shows deteriorating fundamentals, its earnings progress falls short of the investment adviser’s expectations or its valuation appears excessive relative to its expected future earnings.

We believe it is futile to try to predict the direction of the stock market from year to year. Rather than try to guess what might happen next, we think it more prudent to own a portfolio of market-leading companies that earn high returns on capital, boast strong balance sheets and self-fund their growth. We try to invest alongside motivated and ethical management teams and to identify businesses with many years of growth ahead of them. We try to buy these businesses carefully, taking advantage of occasional periods when their stocks seem to be mispriced. Though it contradicts academic theory, we believe a concentrated portfolio of businesses that has been intensively researched and carefully purchased will generate higher returns with less risk over time than a diverse basket of stocks chosen with less care. However, a concentrated portfolio may deliver results in an individual year that do not correspond closely to the returns generated by the broader market.

Monday, August 18, 2014

I found my favorite Mahatma Gandhi quote here on Goodreads :

“Do not worry in the least about yourself, leave all worry to God,' - this appears to be the commandment in all religions.
This need not frighten anyone. He who devotes himself to service with a clear conscience, will day by day grasp the necessity for it in greater measure, and will continually grow richer in faith."

Friday, July 25, 2014

Market value / GDP

Great historical chart of Market Value/ GDP from http://www.advisorperspectives.com/dshort/updates/Market-Cap-to-GDP.php





Saturday, June 07, 2014




From Importance of ROIC Part 1: Compounders and Cheap Stocks


 One very crucial point is often left out of these studies…. Holding period. Most of these studies pick a group of stocks based on some value measure (low P/E, etc…) and then after 1 year (or sometimes 2 years), sell those stocks and replace them with a new set of stocks that match that valuation criteria. Most of the studies turn their portfolios over once a year.
Over short periods of time, paying low P/E ratios or low EV/EBIT ratios will work very well, as the market typically corrects itself over 1-3 years or so. But over time, if you intend to participate in the long term results of your business and own the stock for 5-10 years or longer, you should be much more concerned with the quality of that business.
I prefer to find really cheap stocks, but I want them to be businesses that I think can grow intrinsic value.


Saturday, May 24, 2014

Guy Spier's Time essay and Jason Zweig's Guy Spier article

On Buffett from : http://content.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1819293,00.html
"It's very important to live your life by an internal yardstick," he told us, noting that one way to gauge whether or not you do so is to ask the following question: "Would you rather be considered the best lover in the world and know privately that you're the worst — or would you prefer to know privately that you're the best lover in the world, but be considered the worst?"
Buffett has made a fine art of keeping this kind of distracting noise at bay: he said he even limits his contact with managers of businesses in which he invests, preferring to assess their companies' financial records — a more neutral source of information. Equally vital to his success, Buffett said he focuses only on investments that lie well within his "circle of competence." As a result, he confided, whenever he makes an investment, he has no doubt at all that he's right

Saturday, May 10, 2014

"Successful stocks don't tell you when to sell. When you feel like bragging, it's probably time to sell."
-- John Neff

Tuesday, May 06, 2014


Quoth @LizWiseman: #Stress is caused by lack of control, not difficulty of work. People like hard work. #ChurchillClub #futureofwork

Monday, May 05, 2014

Warren Buffett on the impact driverless and safer cars will have on the insurance business:

“If they really work well then they are good socially. But sure, they could reduce the cost of insurance. Anything that improves, reduces accident rates, reduces death rates will reduce the cost of insurance. That’s basically a good thing for society. Overall the world would be better off if we didn’t have any car accidents.”

Warren Buffett on whether he would prefer investing in Blackberry or Bitcoin:

“I’d probably short them both.”

If a business earns 6% on capital over forty years, you’re not going to make much different than 6% return, even if you buy it at a huge discount. Conversely, if a business earns 18% on capital, you’ll end up with one hell of a return long term, even if you pay an expensive looking price."
-- Charlie Munger

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

On Lisbeth Salander


Abused as a child and wrongfully institutionalized, Salander engages in dysfunctional, even autistic, behavior that might just reflect an understandable skepticism about human goodness and potential. She exists off the grid, really — having as little to do with people and institutions as possible and following an avenging ethical code of her own devising...<snip> She can hack into anything.
Salander obviously owes something to Pippi Longstocking, the strong-willed character of Astrid Lindgren’s children’s books. But there is also something of Larsson himself in the character <snip>. They shared a diet consisting almost entirely of coffee and fast food, fanatical research habits and a single-minded, steadfast sense of justice and fairness.

Friday, April 25, 2014

My favorite quotes from Howard Marks book (some paraphrasing):

* Pg 16
In the end, I've come to an interesting resolution: Efficiency is not so universal that we should give up on superior performance. Efficiency should be presume to be true until someone proves otherwise.
Respect for efficiency says we should ask some questions before we embark on a course of action:
   -Why should a bargain exist despite the presence of thousands of investors who stand ready and willing to bid up the price of anything that's too cheap?
-If the return appears so generous in proportion to the risk, might you be overlooking some hidden risk?
-Why would the seller be willing to part with it at a price from which it will give you an excessive return?
-Do you really know more about the asset than the seller does?
-Why aren't others snapping it up?

*Pg 26
Like participants in any field requiring the application of skill under challenging circumstances, superior investor's batting averages will be well below 1.000 and marked by errors and slumps. Judgements that prove correct don't necessarily do so promptly, so even the best investors look wrong a lot of the time. "Being too far ahead of your time is indistinguishable from being wrong"

*Pg 27
Investors with no knowledge of (or concern for) profits, dividends, valuation or the conduct of business simply cannot possess the resolve needed to do the right thing at the right time.

*Pg 30
Hopefully, if I offered to sell you my car, you'd ask the price before saying yes or no. Deciding on an investment without carefully considering the fairness of its price is just as silly.

*Pg 31
At Oaktree we say, "Well bought is half sold". If your estimate of intrinsic value is correct, over time as asset's price should converge with its value.
What are the companies worth? Eventually this is what it comes down to. Its not enough to buy a share in a good idea. You must buy it at a reasonable (or, hopefully a bargain) price.

*pg 32
Most nonprofessionals know little about technicals. These are nonfundamental factors that affect supply and demand for securities. e.g. Levered investors receive margin calls and the inflows of cash into mutual funds that require portfolio managers to buy. (Mine: adding and dropping to indexes/ETFs, year end tax selling). People are forced to enter into securities transactions without much regard for price.

*Pg 32
Whereas the key to ascertaining value is skilled financial analysis, the key to understanding the price/value relationship lies largely in insight into other investors' minds. Investor psychology can cause a security to be priced just about anywhere in the short run regardless of its fundamentals.

*Pg 33
The discipline that is most important is not accounting or economics, but psychology.
The key is who likes this investment now and who doesn't. Future price changes will be determined by whether it comes to be liked by more people or fewer people in the future.
Investing is a popularity contest, and the most dangerous thing is to buy something at the peak of its popularity.

The safest and most potentially profitable thing is to buy something when no one likes it. Given time, its popularity, and thus its price can only go one way: up.

*Pg 38
Buying cheap is clearly the most reliable. Even that however, isn't sure to work. You can be wrong about the current value. Or events can come along that reduce value.
Trying to buy below value isn't infallible, but its the best chance we have.

*Pg 39
Investing consists of exactly one thing: dealing with the future. And because none of us can know the future with certainty, risk is inescapable.

*Pg 47
First, risk of loss does not necessarily stem from weak fundamentals. A fundamentally weak asset - a less than stellar company's stock, a speculative-grade bond or a building in the wrong part of town can make for a very successful investment if bought at a low-enough price.

*pg. 52
Understanding uncertainty: We mustn't think of the future in terms of a single result but rather as as a range of possibilities. We must think of the full range, not just the ones that are most likely to materialise.

*pg. 53
Now that investing has become so reliant on higher math, we have to be on the lookout for occasions when people wrongly apply simplifying assumptions to a complex world. Quantification often leads excessive authority to statements that should be taken with a grain of salt. 

*pg. 54
A portfolio can be set up to withstand 99 percent of all scenarios but succumb because its the remaining 1 percent that materialises. Based on the outcome, it may seem to have been risky, whereas the investor might have been quite cautious.

*pg. 55
Investment risk is largely invisible before the fact.
We hear a lot about the worst case projections, but they often turn out not to have been negative enough. I tell my father's story of the gambler who lost regularly. One day he heard about a race with just one horse in it, so he bet his rent money. Halfway around the track, the horse jumped over the fence and ran away.
Invariably things can get worse than people expect.

*pg. 58
High risk primarily comes from high prices.

*pg. 59
When investors are unworried and risk-tolerant, they buy stocks at high price/earnings ratios and private companies at high multiples of EBITDA(cash flow), and they pile into bonds despite narrow yield spreads and into real estate at minimal "cap rates" (the ratio of net operating income to price)
There are few things as risky as the widespread belief that there's no risk.
The riskiest things: A few times in my career, I've seen the rise of a belief that risk has been banished, cycles won't occur any longer, or the laws of economics have been suspended. The experienced, risk-conscious investor takes this as a sign of great danger.

* pg. 64
Market line:
 In increasing order of risk:
Money market 4%
5 yr. treasuries 5%
10 yr. treasuries 6%
High grade bonds 8%
S&P stocks 10%
High yield bonds 12%
Small stocks 13%
Real estate 15%
buyouts 25%
Venture capital 30%

A big problem for investment returns today stems from the starting point Fr. this process: The risk-less rate isn't 4%, its closer to 1%

*pg. 66
Where do we stand in mid-2007 ? I see low levels of skepticism, fear and risk-aversion. The promised returns from traditional safe investments seem so meagre. I see few assets that people are eager to get rid of, and few forced sellers; instead most assets are strongly bid for. Trust has replaced skepticism, and eagerness has replaced reticence.

*pg. 72
Risk is covert, invisible. Loss generally happens only when risk collides with negative events.
Homes in California may or may not have construction flaws that would make them collapse during earthquakes. We find out only when earthquakes occur.

Risk is the potential for loss when things go wrong.

*pg. 75
Since usually there are more good years than bad years, and since it takes bad years for the value of risk control to become evident in reduced losses, the cost of risk control - in the form of return foregone- can seem excessive. Controlling risk in your portfolio is a very important and worthwhile pursuit.

Bearing risk unknowingly can be a huge mistake, but its what those who buy the securities that are all the rage and most highly esteemed at a particular point in time-to which "nothing bad can possibly happen"-repeatedly do. On the other hand, the intelligent acceptance of recognised risk for profit underlies some of the wisest, most profitable investments-even though most investors dismiss them as dangerous speculations.

*pg. 76
What does it mean to bear risk intelligently for profit? LEts take an example of life insurance. How do they insure people when they know they're *All* going to die?
-Its risk they're aware of. They know everyone is going to die, they factor this reality into their approach.
-Its risk they can analyse - they have doctors assess applicant health.
-Its risk they can diversify. By ensuring a mix of policyholders by age, gender, occupation and location, they make sure they're not exposed to freak occurrences and widespread losses.
-And its risk they're well-paid to bear. They set premiums so they'll make a profit if the policyholders die according to the actuarial tables on average. If they can sell a policy to someone likely to die at age eighty at a premium that assumes he would die at seventy, they'' be better protected against risk and positioned for exceptional profits if things go as expected

We do exactly the same thing at Oaktree. We try to be aware of the risks, which is essential given how much of our work involves assets that some simplistically call "risky". We employ highly skilled professionals capable of analysing investments and assessing risk. We diversify our portfolios appropriately. 

*pg. 77
As Nassim Taleb wrote in "Fooled by Randomness"
"Reality is far more vicious than Russian roulette. First, it delivers the fatal bullet rather infrequently, like a revolver that would have hundreds of chambers instead of six. After a few dozen tries, one forgets about the existence of a bullet…

*pg. 78
You can't run a business on the basis of worst-case assumptions. You wouldn't be able to do anything.

*pg. 79
Risk control is the best route to loss avoidance. Risk avoidance, on the other hand, is likely to lead to return avoidance as well.

*pg. 80
The road to long-term investment success runs through risk control more than through aggressiveness. Over a full career, most investors results will be determined more by how many losers they have, and how bad they are, than by the greatness of their winners.

*pg. 81
In investing, as in life, there are very few sure things. Values can evaporate, estimates can be wrong, circumstances can change and "sure things" can fail. However there are two things we can hold to with confidence:
- Rule number 1 - Most things will prove cyclical
-Rule number 2 - Some of the greatest opportunities for gain or loss come when other people forget rule number 1

*pg. 83
The longer I'm involved in investing, the more impressed I am by the power of the credit cycle.
The process is simple:
-The economy moves into a period of prosperity.
-Providers of capital thrive, increasing their capital base
-Because bad news is scarce, the risks entailed in lending and investing seem to have shrunk.
-Risk averseness disappears.
-Financial institutions move to expand their businesses- i.e. to provide more capital.
-They compete for market share by lowering demanded returns (e.g. cutting interest rates), lowering credit standards, providing more capital for a given transaction and easing covenants.

As the Economist said" The worst loans are made in the  best of times"

This leads to capital destruction - that is, to investment of capital in projects where the cost of capital exceeds the return on capital, and eventually to cases where there is no return of capital.


*pg. 84

When the above point is reached, the cycle is reversed -
-Losses cause lenders to become discouraged and shy away.
-risk averseness rises, and along with it, interest rates, credit restrictions and covenant requirements.
-Less capital is made available.
-companies become starved of capital. Borrowers are unable to roll over their debts, leading to defaults and 
Look around the next time there's a crisis: you'll probably find a lender. Over-permissive providers of capital frequently aid and abet financial bubbles. There have been numerous examples where loose credit contributed to booms that were followed by famous collapses: real estate in 1989-92, emerging markets in 1994-98, LTCM in 1998, venture capital funds and telecom companies in 1999-2001.
In each case, lenders and investors provided too much cheap money and the result was over expansion and dramatic losses.


*Pg 87
In the end, few things go to zero and trees don't grow to the sky. Rather, most phenomena turn out to be cyclical. 

*pg. 88
The first time rookie investors see this (cyclical) phenomenon occur, its understandable that they might accept that's never happened before-the cessation of cycles-could happen. But the second time or the third time, those investors, now experienced, should realise its never going to happen, and turn that realisation to their advantage.

*pg. 96
(on the oscillation of the investor pendulum)
The swing back from the extreme is usually more rapid- and thus takes much less time-than the swing to the extreme. (Or as my partner Sheldon Stone likes to say, "The air goes out of the balloon much faster than it went in".

*pg. 102-103
The best returns bring the greatest ego rewards. When things go right, its fun to feel smart and have others agree.
The tendency to compare returns is the most invidious.  Investing-especially poor investing-is a world full of ego. Ego can make investors behave aggressively just to stand out through the achievement of lofty results. 

In contrast, thoughtful investors can toil in obscurity, achieving solid gains in the good years and losing less than others in the bad. They avoid sharing in the riskiest behaviour because they're aware of how much they don't know and because they have their egos in check. This, in my opinion, is the greatest formula for long-term wealth creation-but it doesn't provide much ego gratification in the short run. Its just not that glamorous to follow a path that emphasises humility, prudence and risk control. 

*pg. 107
All bubbles start with a modicum of truth. 
Of course the entire furore over technology, e-commerce and telecom stocks stems from the companies' potential to change the world. I have absolutely no doubt that these movements are revolutionising life as we know it, or that it they will leave the world almost unrecognisable from what it was only a few years ago. The challenge lies in figuring out who the winners will be, and what a piece of them is really worth today… jan 3, 2000

*pg. 120
Certain common threads run through the best investments I've witnessed. They're usually contrarian, challenging and uncomfortable. 
Its our job as contrarians to catch falling knives, hopefully with care and skill. That's why the concept of intrinsic value is so important. 

*pg. 122-23
Finding bargains -
The first step is usually to make sure that the things being considered satisfy some absolute standards.
Examples include the risk of obsolescence is a fast moving segment of the technology world, the risk a hot consumer product will lose its popularity, or the industries are too unpredictable or their financial statements are not sufficiently transparent.

*pg. 125
What makes something sell cheaper than it should ?
-An asset class may have weaknesses, a company may be a laggard in the industry, a balance sheet may be over-levered
-The orphan asset is ignored or scorned. To the extent its mentioned in the media and at cocktail parties, its in unflattering terms.
-A bargain asset tends to be one that's highly unpopular, capital stays away from it or flees and no one can think of a reason to own it.

*pg. 186
I think of the sources of error as being primarily analytical/intellectual or psychological/emotional. The former are straightforward: we collect too little information or incorrect information. Or perhaps we apply the wrong analytical processes, make errors in our computations or omit ones we should have performed. 

*pg. 192
What we learn from a crisis - or ought to:
When there's too much capital chasing too few ideas, investments will be made that do not deserve to be made. 
When capital is in oversupply, investors compete for deals by accepting low returns and a slender margin for error. 
Bidding more for something is the same as saying you'll take less for your money. The higher bids for investments can be viewed as a statement of how little return investors demand.

*pg. 194
!!!!!!!!!!!!
Leverage magnifies outcomes but doesn't add value. 
It can make great sense to use leverage to increase investment in assets at bargain prices offering a high promised return or generous risk premiums. But it can be dangerous to use leverage to buy more assets that offer low returns or narrow risk spreads - in other words, assets that are fully priced or overpriced. It makes little sense to use leverage to turn inadequate gains into adequate returns.

-Be alert to what's going on around you with regard to the supply/demand balance for investable funds and the eagerness to spend them. Oversupply of capital can be dangerous for your investing health and must be recognised and dealt with. . Too much money chasing too few ideas and the accompanying dearth of prudence is worth noting.

Leading up to the 2008 crisis, what could investors have done?
-take note of the carefree, incautious behaviour of others
-preparing psychologically for a downturn
-selling assets, or at least the more risk-prone ones
-reducing leverage
-raising cash
-tilting the portfolio toward increased defensiveness.

pg. 197:

Since countercyclical behaviour was the essential element in avoiding the full effect of the recent crisis, behaving pro-cyclically presented the greatest potential pitfall. Investors who maintained their bullish positions as the market rose (or added to them), were least prepared for the bust and the subsequent recovery.

While its true that you can't spend relative outperformance, human nature causes defensive investors and their less traumatised clients to derive comfort in down markets when they lose less than others.
This has two very important effects. First, it enables them to maintain their equanimity and resist the psychological pressures that make people sell at lows. Second, being in a better frame of mind and better financial condition, they are more able to profit from the carnage by buying at lows. Thus, they generally do better in recoveries.

*pg. 198
One way to improve investment results at Oaktree is to thing about what "today's mistake" might be and try to avoid it.

*pg. 200
When there's nothing particularly clever to do, the potential pitfall lies in insisting on being clever.

*pg. 202

Equity investors can just emulate an index. Their performance will be the same as that of the index.

Active investors may take different approaches to deviate from the index. They may overweight stocks that fluctuate more than the market or utilise leverage. They may exploit their stock-picking ability, buying more of some of the stocks in the index and underweighting or excluding others, or adding stocks that are not part of the index. They alter their exposure from the market's to specific events that occur at specific companies. As the composition diverges from the index, their return will deviate as well. 
In the long run, unless the investor has superior insight, these deviations will cancel out, and their risk adjusted performance will converge with that of the index.

Active investors who don't possess the superior insight are no better than passive investors. They can try hard, put their emphasis on offence or defence, or trade up a storm, but their return may not be better than an index.. (And it could be worse due to risks borne and transaction costs that are unavailing)

*pg. 206
Without skill, aggressive investors move a lot in both directions, and defensive investors move little in either direction. These investors contribute nothing beyond their choice of style.

*pg. 207
Here's how I describe Oaktree's performance aspirations.:
In good years in the market, its good enough to be average. Everyone makes money in the good years, and I have yet to hear anyone explain convincingly why its important to beat the market when the market does well. No, in the good years average is good enough.

There is a time however when we consider it essential to beat the market, and that's in the bad years.
Thus, its our goal to do as well as the market in the good years and better than the market when it does poorly. At first blush that may sound like a modest goal, but its really quite ambitious.

If we're consistently able to decline less when the market declines and also participate fully when the market rises, this can be attributable to only one thing: alpha, or skill.

*pg. 210
Higher returns are "unnatural".
Their achievement requires some combination of the following:
-an extremely depressed environment in which to buy   (doesn't come along everyday)
-extraordinary investment skill  (rare)
-extensive risk-bearing (can work against if things go amiss)
-heavy leverage (can magnify losses)
-good luck (uncertain)

Thus, investors should pursue such returns only if they believe some of these elements are present.
Skill is the least ephemeral but its rare (and even skill can't be counted upon to produce high returns in a low-return environment)

*pg. 212
"The perfect is the enemy of the good" - Voltaire. This is especially applicable to investing, where insisting on participating only when conditions are perfect, can make you miss out on a lot. Perfection in investing is generally unattainable, the best we can hope for is to make a lot of good investments and exclude most of the bad ones.
We give up on trying to attain perfection or ascertain when the bottom has been reached. Rather, if we think something is cheap, we buy. 
One of our six tenets of our investment philosophy calls for "disavowal of market timing". Ye we expend a lot of energy to diagnose the market environment. But if we find something cheap, we won't say that it will be cheaper in six months, so we'll wait. Its just not realistic to expect to be able to buy at the bottom.

*pg.215
The best foundation for a successful investment career - is value. You must have a good idea of what the thing you're considering buying is worth. There are many components to this. To oversimplify, there's cash on the books and the value of tangible assets; the ability of the company or asset to generate cash; and the potential for these things to increase.

*pg. 217
Reason must overcome emotion.
If we avoid the losers, the winners will take care of themselves.
The defensive investor places a heavy emphasis on not doing the wrong thing.

*pg. 220
We don't know what lies ahead in terms of the macros future. Few people know more than the consensus about what's going to happen to the economy, interest rates and market aggregates. Thus, the investor's time is better spent trying to gain a knowledge advantage regarding the "knowable" : industries, companies and securities. The more micro your focus, the greater the likelihood you can learn things that others' don't.

*pg. 221
Many investors assume the world runs on orderly processes that can be mastered and predicted. They ignore the randomness of things and the probability distribution that underlies future developments.



Arthur Levitt:
Compare cash on hand to debt and liabilities. If too far apart, prob best to stay away,

Wednesday, April 02, 2014

“Markets crash all the time. You should, at minimum, expect stocks to fall at least 10% once a year, 20% once every few years, 30% or more once or twice a decade, and 50% or more once or twice during your lifetime. Those who don’t understand this will eventually learn it the hard way.”