Month: March 2012

At the Local Investment Research Challenge

At the Local Investment Research Challenge

Yesterday I was a judge (one of five) for the Washington/Baltimore Investment Research Challenge.? Five teams from local colleges participated to analyze a prominent local company, Under Armour.? (My kids love the stuff, I hate to pay the price.)

I have to say that I admire all of the young men and women who presented to us.? It takes a lot of guts to present to people 30 years older then you.? The experience differential is considerable.

One practical difference is that the students apply many methods from Modern Portfolio Theory that are roundly ignored by most investment managers.? Few investment managers apply Discounted Cash Flows [DCF], because it is too flexible, with too many parameters that are hard to calculate.? Some apply reverse DCF, attempting to estimate the rate of return of companies at their current price… same problems exist, though the comparability of results is simpler.

My advice to future contestants would be to spend more time on qualitative issues, and less on quantitative.? Regarding quantitative issues, I would encourage abandoning DCF in favor of simpler valuation methodologies.

Also, I would discourage using regression unless you really understand what it means.? It’s easy to teach people to use advanced statistical methods, but tough to teach them the limitations of where the methods get abused, or don’t work.? As I have often said, I rarely see advanced statistics used properly by Wall Street, and yesterday was no exception.

But all that said, there are a lot of bright people entering the talent pool for investing; for investment firms in a given region, going to an event like this could be a good recruiting tool.

PS — make sure you understand the liability structure in full, also…

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

I am considering making this an end-of-the-week feature as a news recap.? Comments?

 

Financials

 

  • BofA?s Clash With Fannie Intensifies as Insurers Reject More Loan Claims http://t.co/fKgxwcVO Originators need to bear UW error results $$ Mar 03, 2012
  • Life as Libor Traders Knew It Seen as Abusive http://t.co/H5o5cH3G An inside look at the problems of LIBOR. Collusion & marketless numbers Mar 03, 2012
  • $AIG Earnings an Illusion of a Bend in US Tax Laws http://t.co/GCZHUKsu IRS gives AIG special treatment by allowing it to use NOLs post-BK Mar 03, 2012
  • You have a good point, and I may reference it when I write this evening, but valuations have compressed for all insur? http://t.co/BRTuHnvf Mar 01, 2012
  • Fannie, Freddie and the $180 billion hole http://t.co/Lnoh7VPH F&F transferred wealth to early investors from taxpayers & late investors $$ Feb 25, 2012
  • Make losses and prosper, AIG edition http://t.co/EYykmbmZ Hey Q: how much $$ will $AIG make in the future in order to not pay taxes? $$ Feb 25, 2012

 

Berkshire Hathaway

 

  • Contra: Warren Buffett on Investing http://t.co/OH0dQxXP Buffett has not been a deep value investor for 30 years; this article misses it $$ Mar 02, 2012
  • +1 RT @valueprax: Thoughts On Mergers, Acquisitions And Conglomeration From Rothbard And Buffett (@AlephBlog, $BRK) http://t.co/khZH5Uiq Mar 01, 2012
  • The Truthiness of Berkshire’s Performance http://t.co/5iSsrAHL Don’t think Buffett anticipated the P/B squeeze in insurance stocks. $$ Mar 01, 2012
  • Buffett Plans More Solar Bonds After Topaz Deal http://t.co/pjrAKQub Buffett doesn’t give suckers an even break, no guarantees on solar $$ Mar 01, 2012
  • RE: @TheStreet_News When I wrote for RealMoney, I was often critical of Buffett, but I have shifted.? He is a great e? http://t.co/r4z14uUC Feb 29, 2012
  • When you think you made a great purchase (Warren Buffett edition) http://t.co/ME9RwqFf I was surprised to learn about this $BRKa sub also $$ Feb 28, 2012

 

Home Schooling

 

  • Question of priorities, could conserve RT @ReformedBroker: “How am I supposed to live on $350,000 a year?” – you’re right, kill yourself $$ Mar 01, 2012
  • @ReformedBroker Have his wife call my wife; can save lots of $$ if u go from private school 2 homeschool, & it is easier than 1 would expect Mar 01, 2012
  • @ReformedBroker The downside is that it is a lot of work, but not hard work, and the challenge is controlling your children frequently $$ Mar 01, 2012
  • @merrillmatter I know you’re kidding, but the mothers I know who homeschool would be fearsome in the business world were they redirected $$ Mar 01, 2012

 

Municipal Finance, or lack thereof

 

  • If Stockton Is Broke, Then Why Isn?t San Diego? http://t.co/dzCE9FjX Govt Unions fight to keep benefits govts shouldn’t have granted $$ Mar 03, 2012
  • Pension Pain Mounts, Low Rates Boost Liabilities http://t.co/NZndpR5g More evil results of Fed policy substituting debt 4 organic growth $$ Mar 01, 2012
  • To Pay New York Pension Fund, Cities Borrow From It First http://t.co/feOXK8E3 Shell game at best; net contributions needed to DB plans $$ Feb 29, 2012
  • Raiding the coffers http://t.co/5h2Fx5ZL State pension plans r borrowing from their pension plans 2 fund their own pension contributions Feb 29, 2012

 

North Korea

 

  • @LSilverspar You made me laugh, yes, all of these have impacts on us… but given their counterfeiting, some action should be taken $$ Feb 29, 2012
  • @dpinsen And access of the Dear Leader to his favorite Scotch… hitting him where it hurts. 😉 $$ Feb 29, 2012
  • @dpinsen Agree, bigtime. We got them to the bargaining table last time by cutting off their financial access to the rest of the world. $$ Feb 29, 2012
  • Then once NK starts to counterfeit it, go back to new $50s & $100s; make their life tough. Feb 29, 2012
  • How the U.S. Could Pressure North Korea Tomorrow: Quit the $100 Bill http://t.co/DkXUZsy7 This is worth doing, and create a $75 bill $$ Feb 29, 2012

 

Eurozone

 

  • Greek PSI exchange summary – an offer you can’t refuse http://t.co/K4OUOqm3 Yes, we all voluntarily give up 70% of the value of r claims $$ Mar 03, 2012
  • Greek Crisis May Test the Value of Swaps http://t.co/hG27iIak ISDA wimps out and does not declare a credit event; will destroy Sov CDS mkt Mar 03, 2012
  • A Primer on the Euro Breakup http://t.co/OB2sdwzB Explains why the Euro will break up, at least at the fringe &y this should not surprise $$ Mar 02, 2012
  • ECB Free Money May Carry a Cost http://t.co/g1bNl281 Makes governments relax & ignore structural problems, & banks arb the ECB $$ Mar 01, 2012
  • ECB Allots ?529.5 Billion in Long-Term Refinancing Operation http://t.co/8o0OE7XO Higher than anticipated takeup of cheap funding $$ Feb 29, 2012
  • More signs of Draghi’s “stabilization” http://t.co/zdFol9Vj euro area banks show material tightening conditions in the banking system $$ Feb 28, 2012
  • On PIGS on Drugs http://t.co/VtOZYdwt European states owe ?12-15 billion to the pharma industry; they stop paying suppliers b4 cutting staff Feb 28, 2012
  • http://t.co/wQYFVFWH “Amused – Italian banks figured it out. An hour before LTRO results, 5 Italian banks issued & bought their own bonds.” Feb 28, 2012
  • Europe Gets Ready for Round 2 of Bank Loans http://t.co/N0rpX9O7 Heightening the dependence of stressed banks and govts on the ECB. $$ Feb 28, 2012
  • You may want to hold off on buying that Italian villa http://t.co/EP92Zd4m 66.5% of agents report a fall in housing prices during 4Q $$ Feb 28, 2012
  • @japhychron Can’t think of anyone, btw, there is a theory that a decent # of stressed banks used LTRO 2 buy in their own debt… $$ Feb 28, 2012
  • LTRO programs’ impact on sovereign bond purchases by banks (past and present) http://t.co/ffbNfY3B Indirect way of financing fringe govts $$ Feb 28, 2012
  • Mario Draghi reveals the Grand Plan http://t.co/Dal4wEDo & http://t.co/KNj9mhgx Good austerity results in freer mkts, more growth $$ Feb 28, 2012
  • Merkel torn by conflicting pressures in Greek vote http://t.co/0iCZV4kQ Any other Firefox users noticing that Reuters pages format badly? $$ Feb 27, 2012
  • @moorehn Good piece, I think many will benefit @soberlook has been writing some good stuff also http://t.co/tAlkFpXR & http://t.co/jcLBc04c Feb 24, 2012

 

China

 

  • China?s Billionaire Lawmakers Make US Peers Look Like Paupers http://t.co/d2haqyDc China’s lawmakers r absolutely more wealthy than US peers Mar 01, 2012
  • China May Double Rare Earth Exports as Demand Rebounds http://t.co/MaDQX4rc Quite a change from prior, makes u wonder why they change… $$ Mar 01, 2012
  • Why China Will Have an Economic Crisis http://t.co/xn3W2Wxa This is getting very mainstream, makes me think I could be wrong. $$ Feb 29, 2012
  • Fortress? Michael Novagratz on Lessons from OWS, and China http://t.co/yTSqXqYR Cronyism raises the odds of domestic violence in China $$ Feb 25, 2012
  • Evil Overlords or Lucky Devils: The Men Who Rule Hong Kong http://t.co/BEqw7Z0Z Long but interesting, re the influential wealthy in HK $$ Feb 25, 2012

 

Credit

 

  • Junk Isn?t http://t.co/olYEeOGe Spreads are down and investor interest is up; this is my biggest intermediate-term concern at present. $$ Mar 02, 2012
  • Junk vs. Loans http://t.co/JbIHAFtt & http://t.co/tccF8pML Loan participation funds cheap compared 2 junk, but downside still there. Feb 29, 2012
  • The rating agencies are the farm teams for credit analysts, in the same way that Value Line is for stock analysts.? A? http://t.co/Qfj1lYhu Feb 29, 2012

 

Upcoming Book of Josh Brown

 

  • I invite you to read his website http://t.co/Qom9t2Zy .? He writes a lot of clever stuff there.? One of ? http://t.co/r34pi1pR Feb 29, 2012
  • Confessions of a Reformed Stockbroker http://t.co/B4dkJ5XI Another preview article 4 @reformedbroker ‘s forthcoming book $$ Feb 29, 2012

 

Personal Investing

 

  • Dividends Rise Again http://t.co/gT6AcZXq Their coffers bulging with cash, companies are increasing the once out-of-favor common dividend $$ Mar 03, 2012
  • IRAs Get Sexier http://t.co/XVG5u56g All manner of illiquid assets can b crammed in2 an IRA if you have a friendly custodian $$ #beware Mar 03, 2012
  • Treasury yields and credit spreads divergence is not sustainable http://t.co/LvfHNU4t Ordinary times credit spreads r inverse 2 Tsy yields Mar 02, 2012
  • The Myth of Commodity Diversification http://t.co/ZoMhgv7M A defense of why gold is a true diversifier of portfolios versus commodities $$ Feb 29, 2012
  • Conflict of All Conflicts http://t.co/RgZmO3nv from @reformedbroker I rarely get angry, but this one annoyed me; skewed incentives $$ Feb 29, 2012

 

Accounting rules (yes)

 

  • Standard Setters Strain 2 Avert More Revenue-Recognition Angst http://t.co/jRlnmLPa Industry-specific revenue policies r better; reject IFRS Mar 03, 2012
  • Another “Case” of Terrible Decisions Borne of Terrible Accounting Rules http://t.co/wb2PB5BF Don’t compromise on revenue recognition. $$ Feb 29, 2012
  • Mark-to-Market Pensions Show Brutal Year http://t.co/NhwMePZG Some companies are biting the bullet and moving pension acctg to mark2mkt $$ Feb 25, 2012

 

Corporate News

 

  • Natural Gas Renaissance Sparks Favorable Chemical Reaction http://t.co/G0QHxkVu Petrochemicals benefit from cheap fracking feedstock $$ Mar 02, 2012
  • Apple Dividend May Return Part of $98B Cash http://t.co/FzFTTr2X If $AAPL can’t use all of its cash then give it to shareholders $$ Feb 29, 2012
  • @PlanMaestro Operating profitability is poor, and given their business mix, their P/B is fair for a company with a 5% anticipated ROE. Feb 29, 2012
  • @ToddSullivan Now if they can achieve a decent ROE, and not have weak reserving… I was wrong regarding Maiden Lane when I wrote about it. Feb 29, 2012
  • CNA: A P&C Insurance Turnaround Story http://t.co/WRwhf5sV A fair analysis of $CNA, worthy for insurance investors 2 read. O, he cites me $$ Feb 29, 2012
  • One thing that is not mentioned frequently is that shale gas production profiles tend to peak and decline rapidly. Th? http://t.co/flnQvRwt Feb 28, 2012
  • ?Hope Phase? for Stocks May End in Tears Again http://t.co/z6Sbfu7n Markets anticipate sustained US growth & soft landing for China $$ Feb 28, 2012
  • Confronting a Law Of Limits http://t.co/kIFgxwk8 How does $AAPL grow into its valuation? Especially where obsolescence moves rapidly? $$ Feb 25, 2012

 

Miscellaneous

 

  • FDA Warns on Statins http://t.co/7K37iJVe Every drug has side effects, w/statins it may be diabetes. Be wary, & avoid all drugs if u can $$ Mar 01, 2012
  • Seriously? Any reason to avoid it? RT @kasie: Days since Mitt Romney has taken questions from the national traveling press corps: 17. Feb 25, 2012
  • Slavery should be an issue where liberals and conservatives could agree for policy, and maybe apply the Palantir technology 2 root it out $$ Feb 25, 2012
  • Fishing as Slaves on the High Seas http://t.co/0Bakkir5 Another place where slavery still exists; sex trade, Dubai construction & more $$ Feb 25, 2012
  • Why Doctors Die Differently http://t.co/e3rnOTz8 Careers in medicine taught them the limits of treatment & the need to plan for the end Feb 25, 2012
  • ‘Japanese Madoff’ Flagged http://t.co/U7vgrOap Industry Newsletter Warned in 2009 About Firm’s ‘Unnaturally Stable Returns’ $$ #ponzi Feb 25, 2012
  • Killer App http://t.co/kUT8X9Ji Have a bunch of Silicon Valley geeks at Palantir Technologies figured out how to stop terrorists? Palantir. Feb 25, 2012
  • At 35, I was a devoted Husband and Dad of 5 children, with the oldest being 7 years old.? Nominally, I was the invest? http://t.co/AYUuRMsi Feb 25, 2012
  • War with Iran:Would you go bankrupt for your country? http://t.co/d5rVA9Ww War does not stimulate the economy, contrary 2 popular belief $$ Feb 25, 2012

 

Economy

 

  • Is Japan Doomed? http://t.co/qZev2jSA What? There’s a free lunch where the Govt can borrow indefinitely? NO! Cash flows about 2 shift b wary Mar 02, 2012
  • Core inflation is once again above expectations http://t.co/uxjbXofE There is inflation coming; stagflation even; bad policy begins to bite Mar 02, 2012
  • A Wake-Up Call for Japanese Watchdogs http://t.co/r1JMhnM2 Bigger than MF Global, smaller than Madoff; how do you say Ponzi in Japanese? Feb 28, 2012
  • Oil denominated in EU currencies is at record highs; demand destruction likely http://t.co/KwWkFvJM Wonder where breaking point is? $$ Feb 28, 2012
  • Gundlach warns U.S. stock market vulnerable http://t.co/g8hKrNSJ Investors concede rally almost over; still expect to earn coupon-> danger Feb 28, 2012
  • Architecture Billings Index indicated expansion in January http://t.co/nZV1OCdw leading indicator 4 new Commercial Real Estate investment $$ Feb 28, 2012
Difficult Decision

Difficult Decision

We would all like our practical decisions to go easily, and bear quick positive results.? That’s not reality.? As for me, I needed to decide whether I would:

  • borrow against my home at 3% for 15 years.
  • liquidate a portion of my taxable brokerage account
  • liquidate shares in best private manufacturer of commercial lawn mowers in the world.

I decided on the flexible and probably low-cost solution, selling some of the taxable brokerage account.? I have two accounts, an IRA and the taxable account.? They were invested differently, but my investors get a blend of the two accounts.? I used to put the higher income names into the IRA, while the taxable account would take the lower income names.

That has been changed. Both portfolios have the same proportion of names (companies). In the process, gains have been realized, but not so much as overwhelm the deferred losses of the past.

But for this exercise, one salient result was that both portfolios, which are the model portfolio in aggregate, would become like the model portfolio.?? They are now clones of each other, as is true of all client portfolios that I manage.? My promise to clients is that they get what I get, so I create a clone of my portfolio for each client.? It certainly aligns my incentives with theirs.? Even after today, my next-largest client is 20% of my aggregate portfolio.? So, yes, I eat my own cooking, and in general, my cooking has been tasty over the last twelve years, even though the last year has been less than inspiring.

On the bright side, with the market up, it has allowed me to harvest an amount that will take care of my family for a year, while leaving my portfolio up considerably from one year ago.? That helps a lot when revenues from managing money are still light.

Hopefully, within a year, I will have enough clients that my revenues support my family.?? We’ll see; but if that doesn’t happen I know there are a number of firms that would like to employ me, so my downside is limited.

One final note: one reason why this was a difficult decision was that the low rates for mortgaging my home were more difficult to obtain while self-employed.? Aside from my investments, I am not earning as much as I used to.? The fixed costs of liquidating part of my portfolio were 6% of the fixed costs of obtaining the mortgage.? Beyond that the question remains as to how well equities will do in the future, a question for which I have no good answer.

I think I made the right move here; I usually do, generally, but we will see whether this was the right decision over the next few years.

Notes on the 2011 Berkshire Hathaway Annual Report, Part 4 (10K Issues)

Notes on the 2011 Berkshire Hathaway Annual Report, Part 4 (10K Issues)

From the 10K:

BHRG periodically assumes risks under retroactive reinsurance contracts. Retroactive reinsurance contracts afford protection to ceding companies against the adverse development of claims arising under policies issued in prior years. Coverage under such contracts is provided on an excess basis or immediately with respect to losses payable after the inception of the contract. Coverage provided is normally subject to a large aggregate limit of indemnification. Significant amounts of environmental and latent injury claims may arise under the contracts. Under certain contracts written over the last five years, the limits of indemnification provided are exceptionally large. In March 2007, an agreement became effective between NICO and Equitas, a London based entity established to reinsure and manage the 1992 and prior years? non-life liabilities of the Names or Underwriters at Lloyd?s of London. Under the agreement NICO is providing up to $7 billion of new reinsurance to Equitas. In 2009, NICO agreed to provide up to 5 billion Swiss Francs (approximately $5.3 billion as of December?31, 2011) of aggregate excess retroactive protection to Swiss Reinsurance Company Ltd. and its affiliates (?Swiss Re?). In 2010, BHRG entered into a reinsurance agreement with Continental Casualty Company, a subsidiary of CNA Financial Corporation (?CNA?), and several of CNA?s other insurance subsidiaries (collectively the ?CNA Companies?) under which BHRG assumed the asbestos and environmental pollution liabilities of the CNA Companies subject to a maximum limit of indemnification of $4 billion. In 2011, BHRG entered into a contract with Eaglestone Reinsurance Company, a subsidiary of American International Group, Inc. (?AIG?). Under the contract, BHRG agreed to reinsure the bulk of AIG?s U.S. asbestos liabilities up to a maximum limit of indemnification of $3.5 billion.

Retroactive insurance is an interesting business, and one that few insurers have as a core skill.? It is my estimate today that BRK is good at it, unlike most.? With Retroactive insurance, typically you are rescuing another insurer from some claim exposure that threatens their existence.? The insurer needs certainty, or something near it, and so they approach a much large and stronger insurer to absorb some of the risk of an exposure that is already incurred, but uncertain to to ultimate payout.

The rescuing insurer will charge a lot, and insist that the rescued insurer still have some risk on the matter, and probably limit its total payout, after which the rescued insurer is on the hook again.? That limit will likely be so high that the rescued insurer will say, “It’s never going to get that high.”? Fine, and maybe true, but this allows the rescuing insurer to have some certainty itself, that it will never pay an unlimited amount in the rescue.

For BRK, there is another angle, and that is that retroactive insurance produces a lot of float, and in most cases (Asbestos & Environmental) the float lasts a long time.? Thus BRK thinks it has an advantage in investing the float.? Together with their size, and the acumen of Ajit Jain, it makes them a unique place for insurers in trouble to seek shelter, for a tidy fee of course.

That doesn’t mean this can’t go wrong, but if properly managed, since BRK is one of the few companies that can do this, they probably make very good money on this.? (Ugh, they have AIG and Swiss Re as clients, which are large savvy firms.? If they need protection from BRK, and are willing to pay up, guess what — BRK is in the driver’s seat, because there is no one in the private sector capable of doing this.)

Insurance subsidiaries? investments are unusually concentrated and fair values are subject to loss in value.

Compared to other insurers, our insurance subsidiaries may concentrate an unusually high percentage of their investments in equity securities and may diversify their investment portfolios far less than is conventional. A significant decline in the fair values of our larger investments may produce a large decrease in our consolidated shareholders? equity and can have a material adverse effect on our consolidated book value per share. Under certain circumstances, significant declines in the fair values of these investments may require the recognition of losses in the statement of earnings.

This is potentially BRK’s largest weakness, and why I would love to see the statutory books for their insurers.? This goes beyond the large public companies that they have purchased.? Where are all of the private businesses lodged on the BRK balance sheet?? They may be there with really low valuations — I don’t know, because I have never looked — and that is why I want to ask BRK for their statutory statements.? I believe it would be intriguing.

Berkshire Hathaway Inc. has guaranteed debt obligations of certain of its subsidiaries. As of December?31, 2011, the unpaid balance of subsidiary debt guaranteed by Berkshire totaled approximately $16 billion. Berkshire?s guarantee of subsidiary debt is an absolute, unconditional and irrevocable guarantee for the full and prompt payment when due of all present and future payment obligations. Berkshire also provides guarantees in connection with long-term equity index put option and credit default contracts entered into by a subsidiary. The estimated fair value of liabilities recorded under such contracts was approximately $10.0 billion as of December?31, 2011. The amount of subsidiary payments under these contracts, if any, is contingent upon future events. The timing of subsidiary payments, if any, will not be fully known for several decades.

Add in $8 billion of holding company debt, and that is the risk that the holding company faces, which isn’t that much for a company the size of BRK.? BRK has bought a series of businesses that produce consistent cash flow, so don’t worry about holding company debt.

BRK has more debt than that, but Buffett lets bond investors take the risk by not guaranteeing subsidiary debt.? In acquisitions, Buffett never guarantees the debt.? But even with new debt issues, many BRK subsidiaries offer their own non-BRK-guaranteed debt, whether it is Burlington Northern, or a Mid-American sub offering debt to back a solar power plant.? Now bond investors know the BRK would never walk away from a subsidiary’s bonds, right?

No, actually they don’t know that, though Buffett’s record has been good with the debts of non-guaranteed subsidiaries.? Buffett is a better risk than most, but at the subsidiary level, you can’t be sure.? Buffett could save money and take on more risk by borrowing at the holding company, but he typically does not do that.

P/B Multiple Compression

Over the last decade, BRK’s P/B multiple has shrunk, and shrunk to the point where Buffett has drawn a line in the sand saying that subject to liquidity and market conditions, he will buy back stock at levels below 110% of stated book value.? (And, I suspect that is one reason why he spent so much time in the recent letter attempting to explain why the goodwill at BRK represented value.)? I think that means that there is now a limit, a floor to the price of BRK common stock, of course, subject to continued adequate performance.

Book Value and Insurers

Some have criticized Buffett’s growth in Book Value vs. the total return of the S&P 500 table, partly because of the declining P/B multiple.? I would simply say that this is endemic to an insurance mindset, where all we do care about is growth in net worth (book value).? Insurance is a mature, stable business.? No one has a way of obsoleting it, so we suspect.? It’s difficult to start a new insurer of any significant size, so we have protected boundaries to a degree.

Thus the focus on growing book value.? If we grow book value, eventually market value will follow, right? Right?!

Ugh, I think so, but sometimes I wonder, particularly with all of the insurers trading under book when they have little risk of insolvency.? Buffett can draw his line in the sand, but what of other insurers, many of which trade well below book?? Should they draw their own line in the sand, and defend a valuation level?

Personally, I would announce a generalized buyback without a lot of hoopla; make it boring, this is insurance after all so that should not be hard; get some actuaries to toss in big words to aid in obfuscation, so few conclude that the company will buy back significant stock.? Then start nibbling; be the bid or just behind it on days when things are weak. Don’t be a pig; rule #1 here is that the market should doubt that you are there.? But subject to that, buy, buy, BUY!!

The great Buffett after announcing his buyback only bought back 0.03% of all shares so far.? Most insurers can do much more quietly, with far less fanfare.? After all, Assurant bought back 14% of its shares last year.? Wow.? (This was the insurer that was offered in full to Buffett, and he said it was too complex… even the great one can goof.)

Now, maybe Assurant is my extreme case in buying back, and doing it at good valuations, but that in my opinion should be the goal of most public businesses with low valuations that are earning a lot, and not getting the proper respect.? Money talks, but be quiet, not brash, and suck in shares quietly at low valuations.? Let the financial statements do the bragging for you when investors realize that you have been building value doubly through operations and buybacks.

Summary

Even if you don’t invest with him, you can learn a ton from Buffett.? He is a consummate investor, businessman, and insurance executive.? Though I have never met him, I consider myself blessed to have learned from him.

Full disclosure: long AIZ

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