Year: 2008

How Much Can the US Government Guarantee?

How Much Can the US Government Guarantee?

There are irregular miracles from God, the Creator of all, but there is no magic.? The US government can step forward and say, “We guarantee the liabilities of Fannie and Freddie, and take control of the companies.”? But who guarantees the US government?? In the economic world, there is always a cost for every action.

Yes, the US government will continue to borrow from the Saudis and their allies, who appreciate our military actions constraining their Shi’ite adversaries, and supporting their own regimes.? China wants to continue to “grow,” and they don’t care if they are paid back in “funny money” for now, buying Treasury securities with excess dollars.

The US Dollar rallied today, even as the government absorbed liabilities that are uncertain as to size, even though I think the eventual cost will be less than $200 billion.

Who doesn’t want to be guaranteed by the government?? The auto companies are in line, can I get in line too?? I could do amazing things with a $50 billion credit line from the government.? I would assemble a small empire of undervalued companies with earnings yields higher than what I would have to pay Uncle Sam in interest.

My point is this: when you take into account the structural deficit, funding for the wars, social security currently on the balance sheet (but not its increase in liabilities), Fannie and Freddie, and future demands for bailouts of homeowners and auto companies, where does the bailout stop?? Where does the willingness of foreigners to buy Treasury debt end?

I don’t know, and this is the biggest question facing the global debt markets now.? A century from now, a fellow resembling James Grant will write several popular books explaining the decadence of the era, and how the US squandered its leading position in the world by borrowing too much.

So, call me skeptical of the US Dollar and Treasury rallies today.? Those should reverse soon.

When Good Things Happen to Bad Stocks

When Good Things Happen to Bad Stocks

I’ll write something more about Fannie and Freddie at a later time.? Things have worked out there largely as I expected.

What I did not expect is that the market would be up a lot on a day like today.? I did expect that Treasuries would be down.? After all, there are more claims on the Treasury now than before.

Why should the market be up?

  • The possibility of lower mortgage rates, which will help those that can put money down on a new home, and those that can refinance within conforming limits.
  • Risk is shifted off the balance sheets of lending institutions that held the senior debt of the GSEs.
  • A big uncertainty is resolved.? (And the next uncertainty has not arrived… yet.)

Now, as for me, I am probably having my best relative outperformance day ever, and it is due to one stock in my portfolio: Gehl.? As the AP says, “Construction and farm equipment maker Gehl Corp. said Monday it is being purchased by its largest shareholder Manitou BF SA for $450 million, or $30 per share.”? 120% premium to the Friday close.? I can live with that. 🙂

I don’t play for takeovers, particularly not in this environment where financing is scarce.? But in value investing, if you have reasonable financed assets trading at a discount to their value, takeovers will sometimes come, though rarely at premiums like this deal.? Wow.

There’s one more thing I would like to point out here.? I sometimes get a little criticism for not having an automatic sell rule.? My first purchase of GEHL was around $20.? I averaged down twice.? Each time I reviewed the position, and concluded financing was adequate, though short-term earnings did not look promising.? I concluded that over a 2-3 year timeframe, I would probably be rewarded, or not lose much.? If I had used a mechanical sell rule, I would not have gotten the good side of Gehl.? (And, for those that keep score, this gain almost pays for the loss in Deerfield.)

That’s how it goes.? I could not predict this incident, and I have enough bad things that happen that I also can’t predict.? But in a well-diversified portfolio of cheap, well-financed stocks, there can be room for good surprises.? I just happened to get a big one today.? (And, it puts me in the plus column for YTD performance.? What a tough year for the market.)

Full disclosure: Flat GEHL — my limit orders got lifted as I wrote this…

Cash Ain’t What It Used To Be

Cash Ain’t What It Used To Be

I’ve always been a little reluctant when people argue that cash is building up on the sidelines, so it is time to buy.? First, this is an ill-defined concept.? What cash are we measuring?? For every seller, there is a buyer.? Thus, I am reluctant to be bullish after articles like this, or like this.

There is enough derivative activity going on that the cash level may not represent buying power, because they represent cash that must be held to control derivative positions.? As for individuals, they are moving from individual stocks to mutual funds.

Cash levels are hard to interpret, and have not correlated well with market movements.

With that, I warn you to be careful.? With the GSEs in flux, there are many things, good and bad that can take place.? Until the plan is announced we won’t know how it is proceeding.? What will be guaranteed and what will be wiped out?? Who will bring lawsuits against the government for damages?

There is a mantra at present: if the government takes over Fannie and Freddie, mortgages will get cheaper, and the housing market will revive.? Well, that is true until foreign governments adjust their lending practices.? Will Treasury rates remain the same when Fannie and Freddie fund off the Treasury?? I would expect that Treasury rates will rise, but agency spreads would fall more.

Be careful in this environment.? Many are being dogmatic about what will happen with stocks, given the bailout of Fannie and Freddie.? I would be a seller on strength, on most lending financials.

My Interview on BizRadio

My Interview on BizRadio

On Wednesday afternoon I was interviewed on BizRadio’s The MoneyMan Report regarding my recent piece: The Fundamentals of Residential Real Estate Market Bottoms.? (Boy, did that get a lot of play all over the web.)

You can listen to the interviews here (at my site):

Or here (at their site):

The two segments together are about 15 minutes in length.

I enjoyed the interview, though it would have helped if I had done a little more homework into the prevailing philosophy of the show, and if I had been more clear about how to introduce me.? I sent them my bio, but they must not have looked too As it is, they never mentioned my employer (bad — I want them to be better known).? Nor did they mention my blog, so if someone wants to read the piece, they don’t know where to find it.

So, I get heard across Texas, and wherever else they syndicate their programming.? It’s interesting talking with people who are looking to make money, and had to say to them, “Not yet, not yet.”? But, I tried, and I did better than I expected.? I would be willing to do other radio shows as the opportunity arises.

Advertising, Blogrolls and Linkfests

Advertising, Blogrolls and Linkfests

As my blog has gotten more popular, I have gotten a lot of interesting “business” propositions.

“Join our ad network.”

I am still considering a few of them, but most rake off too much to the network.

“Let us republish your content at our site.”

Sorry, no.? Aside from Seeking Alpha, no one else is allowed to regularly republish my material.? Fair use is fine, but I regularly check to see if my content is being misused.? If you are swiping it, you better put it in a place where Google can’t reach it.

Anyone taking the headers of my articles and publishing text links is fine.? Good examples of that would be newsflashr, Realclearmarkets, and a new one, tradememe.? Their objectives are consistent with mine.? I want to drive traffic flow to where good content is located for the good of my readers.

“Would you exchange links with me?”

Generally, no.? I only link to people and articles with which I am impressed.? I am not out to sell my credibility.

“I loved your article on XXX.? Please write more articles like that and link to my site.? I will pay you well.”

Sorry, no.? If you want to advertise here, buy a Blogad.? That is clearly labeled as advertising, and I am not out to bamboozle my readers with ads disguised as my thoughts.? My Blogads aren’t expensive.

“Would you link up with our site?? We are trying to promote investor education, and we could use your content.”

Most of these are not trying to promote investor education, but to maximize their fees over the long haul.

As a rule, I have tried to segregate advertising to places where it is clearly distinguishable as advertising.? I am not out to trick readers or advertisers.

“I’ll place you on my blogroll if you place me on your blogroll.”

I don’t do that, either.? My blogroll is something special for me.? It is the group of blogs that I read anytime they post.? Aside from when I started up, I haven’t asked anyone to put me on their blogroll.

My blogroll is meritocratic.? If anyone wants me to consider them for my blogroll, fine, e-mail me.? I’ll read you for a little while.? If I find you indispensible, I will add you to my blogroll.? I always have a few bloggers that I have added to my RSS reader that I am trying out before I add them to my blogroll.? If I don’t place a blogger on my blogroll, it doesn’t mean that they aren’t good.? It does mean that they aren’t consistently useful to me.? (There are a few on my blogroll that are there for personal reasons.? But only a few.)

On Linkfests

I like linkfests.? I think they can be useful. ? In my opinion, the best linkfests are:

  • Regular
  • Focused mainly on financial topics
  • Not pushing a political view
  • Of moderate length, but comprehensive (difficult balance)
  • Wise — They have a real sense of quality.

About a year ago, a friend of mine who is a really good credit analyst for financials asked me,

Friend: “If I were to read just one blog per day, what should it be?”

DM: Abnormal Returns.? He samples the finance blogs, and gives one concise daily post on the best of what was written.

F: Not your blog?

DM: Look, my quality varies, and what I write about is quirky.? I don’t have a narrow focus, like most blogs.? Half of what I write won’t appeal to half of my audience, and it is a different half each time.? Plus, I can’t cover everything.? I would go nuts.

Second place, but not a close second, would go to FT Alphaville.? Beyond that there is Naked Capitalism, occasional links at Alea, and a number of others, but if I had to pick just one, it would be Abnormal Returns.

Why don’t I do linkfests?? Well, I do them in my own way.? I try to write articles focused on a single topic, and then link to relevant content on the web.? It’s more work, but I think it produces a better product than those that make a few small comments and do big blockquotes.? I’m not out to overuse the content of others at my blog.? I might copy a couple graphs or paragraphs with attribution, but to paste whole articles into one’s blog violates “fair use” in my opinion.

One last bit of blog housekeeping.? I appreciate all of the feedback that I get, so feel free to e-mail me.? I read all of my e-mails, but I can’t respond to all of them.? Thanks for reading me.

Another Look at Preliminary Second Quarter GDP

Another Look at Preliminary Second Quarter GDP

The National Income and Product Account [NIPA] statistics are complex.? When I was an undergraduate student in economics I remember getting confused by them, but by the time I was a graduate student in economics, and began to dig into how the indexes are constructed, I became more comfortable with them.? Well, that’s 25 years in the rear-view mirror, but perhaps I can contribute something on the current Real GDP figure.

When the recent preliminary second quarter GDP number came out, it surprised a lot of observers, who were varyingly skeptical, because it was revised upward from 1.9% to 3.3% annualized, and the economy seems weak.? Among those surprised/objecting:

I’ve commented on this before, after the advance release of second quarter GDP.? My main point was that real Gross Domestic Product covers increases in production in the US, adjusted for price changes, whereas real Gross Domestic Purchases covers the increase in purchasing power for the average consumer in the US.? These are different concepts, but they track pretty closely, ordinarily.

You can find how the two concepts relate here, in this definition of Gross Domestic Purchases:

Gross domestic purchases
The market value of goods and services purchased by?U.S. residents, regardless of where those goods and services were produced. It is?gross domestic product (GDP) minus?net exports of goods and services. Equivalently, it is the sum of?personal consumption expenditures (PCE),?gross private domestic investment, and?government consumption expenditures and gross investment.


Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

Okay, so when I read Barry’s article at The Big Picture, I made this comment:

Barry, maybe you can straighten me out on this one… oil was up 25% in the second quarter (2Q avg / 1Q avg). Since they deduct imports in the calculation of nominal GDP, they have to do a similar deduction in the corresponding deflator. So, a large rise in oil/energy prices leads to a decrease in the deflator, leading to higher “real” GDP. Is that how this is working?

What that means is that GDP is asking the wrong question. It answers the question: how much more was produced inside the US compared to prior periods, adjusted for the prices on what was produced.

What I think reflects the sense of the average person in our country is the gross domestic purchase series, which represents how much more has been purchased compared to prior periods, adjusted for the prices on what was purchased. That series shows 0.4% growth over the last year, and 0.1% growth over the last 6 months.

That’s what I think the core of the story is. You agree?

Posted by: David Merkel | Sep 1, 2008 1:05:21 PM

Another way to say it, is that the differences between the price indexes for Gross Domestic Product and Gross Domestic Purchases comes down to the changes in the prices of net exports (exports less imports).? Using data for the price indexes for Gross Domestic Product and Gross Domestic Purchases, I tried to test this hypothesis with data since 2000.

Second Quarter 2008 Price Indexes
Second Quarter 2008 Price Indexes

Now, it’s not exact, but it is close.? the average difference is 0.12%, and probably reflects some reweighting between the two indexes.? So, I think the surprise in the Real GD Product number of 3.3% comes from net exports.

Admittedly, this is perverse, as I noted in my comment to Barry, but that is how these statistics are designed.? The increase in energy prices in the second quarter fed into the Gross Domestic Purchases price index, but not directly into the Gross Domestic Product price index, because net exports get deducted.

The two statistics answer different questions:? Real Gross Domestic Product increased at a 3.3% annualized rate in the second quarter: net production in the US is doing well.? Real Gross Domestic Purchases increased at a 0.2% annualized rate, which means average consumers are not benefiting much from the increase in real production.? But, perhaps that is to be expected, because if the US is ever going to begin to balance its current account, it will mean more production relative to consumption in the US than at present.? That will feel more like recession than growth.

That’s how things feel now.? In summary, the reason the 3.3% real GDP number looks weird is that imports have a negative weight in the GD Product price index, so a large move up in energy prices (largely imported) makes the GDP product price index go down, and real GDP go up.? Real GD purchases treats the rise in energy prices as a real price increase to consumers, and so it rises at 0.2% annualized.? Some difference, and no surprise that many consumers don’t feel things are getting much better for them at present.

What Should Connie Lee Be Rated?

What Should Connie Lee Be Rated?

Just a short post, but there are two reasons why Connie Lee should not get a AAA from the rating agencies (Aaa if you speak Moody’s):

1) It violates their notching standards.? A parent company with a senior unsecured debt rating of A/A3 should only get ratings of AA/Aa3 maximum.? This is because a holding company can only provide so much incremental support to a subsidiary, so the degree of enhancement to a well-capitalized subsidary should only be three notches, particular given that there may come a time when the parent company is incapable of adequate support, and the subsidiary is in need as well.

Connie Lee is a small insurance company with a weak parent company.? Small insurers always get weaker ratings than large insurers, unless they have a deep-pocketed parent.

Now, maybe the rating agencies will say that because Ambac can now write new municipal guarantee business, the holding company itself deserves a higher rating, like AA-/Aa3, and thus Connie Lee can get a AAA/Aaa.

2) Connie Lee has no track record of its own, and many on the management team that made the faulty decisions at Ambac, Inc. are still in place.? Yes, they managed their muni business well, but what if they go down the same diversification path again?? Regulators have short memories, and they do move on to other pursuits after some time.

It seems that Connie Lee will be a subsidiary of Ambac Assurance, so fraudulent conveyance issues are probably dead.? If Ambac Assurance were unable to pay all claims, Connie Lee could be sold, and the proceeds used to help pay claims.

It will be interesting to see what the rating agencies do with this.? It would be in their short-term profit interest to make Connie Lee AAA/Aaa, but they’ve been burned by Ambac before.? If they make Connie Lee AAA/Aaa, they should get complaints from others alleging unfair notching.? Also, to give them a AAA/Aaa would be to put the rating agencies own business models at risk if something more goes wrong at Ambac, and their new notching means they have to downgrade Connie Lee.

If I were in the shoes of the rating agencies, I would wait to see how the non-municipal guarantee business matures over the next two years, particularly given softness in the residential real estate markets.? Then, if Ambac Assurance began to look healthier, I would consider upgrading it and Connie Lee, one notch at a time.

PS — maybe larger municipalities will finally be weaned from needing insurance, and this market will amount to still less in the future…

The Value of Financial Slack

The Value of Financial Slack

During crises, assets shift from weak to strong hands, from the weakly capitalized to the strongly capitalized.? This morning I see at least two examples:

Hedge funds are an inherently weak structure for managing assets, because the liabilities often don’t match the assets.? Lockups are short, and in some cases, very short to non-existent.? All it takes is a significant series of bad picks, and investors will bail, and the lack of liquidity exacerbates asset management thereafter.? Beyond that, the best talent is often lost after a few bad years with no bonuses, and the high water mark is distant.? Hedge funds in better shape are there to pick up business at a discount, and the best talent.

Buffett gets to pick up residential real estate sales firms when they are out of favor, and need liquidity.? He gets them at favorable terms; his managers will rationalize them, and they will likely be the #1 real estate brokerage when the dust settles and the next bull market in residential real estate starts in about 2 years from now.? Little tuck in purchases at 20-25% of past levels can be quite a deal, and Buffett has the capability of doing the deals because he was prudent during the boom phase, and let others do deals at imprudent levels while we watched, sat on cash, and tended his insurance and other enterprises.

Sitting on financial slack is tough during the bull phase.? Not only do you look dumb when other seem to be making easy money, but you can become a target for acquisition yourself.? Surviving in such a position requires good management of the operating businesses, such that your stock is expensive enough, that potential acquirers can’t make the M&A math work.

But, if you have excess purchasing power in the bear phase, how delightful it can be.? Whether buying distressed assets or whole companies, the intelligent acquirer can add new markets, technologies, or cheap capital assets to make the existing business more productive.

The Banking Industry Should Learn from the Insurance Industry

The Banking Industry Should Learn from the Insurance Industry

I can’t comment on everything, at least above the degree of quality that I try to impose on myself.? (I know, the standards could be raised. 😉 )? But I did want to comment on a paper on banking capital regulations that came out of the Jackson Hole conference.? Odd Numbers and Naked Capitalism commented on it, and I thought both had good things to say.? I have my own twist to share, having been a risk manager inside two insurance companies.

The basic idea of the paper is that risk levels have to be reduced at banks, but banks want to stay highly levered so that they can earn high returns on equity, so asking them to reduce debt levels or internal leverage is not feasible.? Instead, why not have them buy insurance policies that pay out during banking crises?? Then they will have the capital when it is needed, and they can continue to lend in all environments.

(SIgh.)? I have oversimplified their arguments, but I have done it to help make some points, which are:

1) The cost of the insurance policy will get factored into the equity calculation for return on equity, at least at far as a prudent bank manager would view it.? The insurance policy is illiquid, and its cost should be reckoned as a part of the surplus it replaces, which may allow for a reduction in overall surplus levels carrying the business.? (Note to regulators: anytime you allow a financial entity a reduction in required surplus from a risk transfer agreement, you should analyze the alternative of using the premium(s) paid to add to surplus, and ask, which looks better.? Also, these are collateralized agreements, but in uncollateralized agreements, analyze the counterparties, and deny surplus credit frequently.)

2) Do the authors realize how expensive these agreements should be?? Consider:

  • The insurer is asked to post the collateral, which takes money out of its surplus.
  • The insurer is asked to be ready to lose an asset at a very bad point in the credit cycle.
  • The monies are invested in Treasury securities, so there is no possiblity for the insurer to make money from investing the premium more aggressively, but still safely.
  • Large banking crises happen about once every 20 years or so, with smaller ones more frequent.? With a long enough agreement, the loss of the Treasury collateral is almost certain, making the cost high.
  • If these were common, a sort of moral hazard would develop, similar to what has happened with the financial guarantors.? Banks would conduct business aggressively, realizing that they have the capital backstop.? Initial results would look good, until the crisis. Then, double surprise! The insurers figure out that they didn’t charge enough for the insurance, and the banks find out that their losses were larger, because of their aggressive behavior.? Wound banks be willing to pay premiums around 5-15% of the face amount insured, depending upon where the risk trigger kicks in?

3) Beyond that, there would probably be a scarcity of providers.? Few want to dedicate a large portion of their capital bases to the events that are entirely a process of human action.

Take a lesson from the reinsurance industry.? Ideally, you would want an agreement that took the risks directly off of your books, such that the capital would come when you specifically had losses above a threshold.? That’s been done in the insurance industry for reinsuring companies as a whole, and the reinsurers have usually come off the worse for it.? The insurers almost always know their risks better than the outsiders.? Reinsurers prefer to reinsure specific risks that they can underwrite, not companies as a whole.

But, lest I merely seem to be a critic, let me offer three suggestions for how to try to make this work.

1) Call Ajit Jain at Berkshire Hathaway.? They have the capital.? Give him a detailed proposal of what you want, and let him give you the quote that makes your jaw drop, or, watch him decline the business, unless you put your bank into a straitjacket of terms and limitations of coverage.

2) Try setting this up through an Industry Loss Warranty.? You would get paid capital during bad times if the industry has suffered losses past a threshold, and you have suffered losses in excess of a threshold as well.

3) Or, try setting this up as a catastrophe bond.? Borrow money through the bond at a high rate of interest.? Junk bond buyers will fund you.? During a crisis, if the banking industry losses exceed a threshold, the principal of the notes gets written down, and voila!? You have capital when you need it.? Note that the junk bond buyers should require more of a premium here, because bank losses tend to be correlated with other junk bond losses — no big benefit from diversification here.

I will leave aside the idea of setting up captive reinsurance sidecars, because those are just regulatory arbitrage.

My main point here is that I don’t think that this type of insurance will work.? Even for those willing to contemplate the structure, the true price will be too high for the banks to gain any benefit.? Perhaps this could be done on a limited basis for one more turn of the credit cycle, but I think for those that offer the insurance, the banks that buy it, and the regulators, they will be less than happy with the results.

In my opinion, we need to bring down leverage ratios for the banks, slowly but inexorably.? If that hurts their ROEs, well, I’m sorry.? If we are going to do a leveraged fiat money system, the leverage must be considerably lower than where we are now, and all synthetic exposures (derivatives) must be brought on balance sheet as if they were cash transactions.? It is that lack of transparency and increase in leverage that has made our financial system so much more risky, as this other paper from the Jackson Hole conference states.? I did not feel that the discussants really understood what they were talking about, because they could see the micro level risk reductions from derivatives, but miss the added leverage, lack of transparency, and concentration of risk in the hands of parties that were greedy for yield, and may not be able to make good on all agreements in a crisis.

Much complexity and leverage will need to be unwound before this credit crisis is over.? The era of high ROEs for banks should be over for some time, that is, until the regulators fall asleep again during the next boom phase.? Some things rarely change.

Another Look at My Investment Screening Methods

Another Look at My Investment Screening Methods

Recently I received an e-mail from one of my readers on my investing methods.? I thought it might be useful for all of my readers, so I am going to answer it here.

I liked your post of your 8 investing rules and also your 4/16/08 post where you list your metrics for ranking potential stocks.? I too believe that a disciplined investing style that adheres to certain rules and metrics is very important in controlling the emotions that lead to subpar returns, and have been trying to develop a set of metrics for my own quantitative investing methodology. I noticed that some of your metrics are different that the common ratios I’ve usually come across while developing my methodology.??I was wondering?if you could answer a few questions regarding?them.

Note: the links are to posts that I think he meant.? If not, my apology.

P/E:??You use?three different P/E criteria, which makes P/E very important in your strategy.??Why do you?use P/E as opposed to P/Cash flow, which many believe is more telling than P/E???Do you have any concern in using forward P/E ratios, considering that analysts are notorious for being wrong with their earnings predictions (David Dreman?discusses this in his books)?

Ideally, we want an accurate forward estimate of free cash flow.? No one knows that, so I have to compromise.? P/E did have three spots in my April post, but that gave it a weight of 3/13ths.? Why not cash flow?? I’m open to the concept, and I have used it in the past.? In tough markets where M&A is not happening, CFO and EBITDA measures tend not to work as well.? I give forward P/Es higher weights when we are in the beginning of a recovery, with corporate bond spreads starting their rally.? Once the rally is established, and spreads have tightened, that is when M&A heats up, that is when EV/EBITDA, and P/CFO metrics have more punch.? During bear phases, I give more weight to P/B and P/Sales.

I’ve talked with a lot of different investment managers, and some like trailing P/Es and others, forward P/Es.? In general, the sell side is optimistic, but there is an advantage to using their estimates.? They provide a control mechanism.? Their estimates drive stock performance in the short run and they provide a gauge to how results are tracking against expectations.? I think that their estimates reflect the view of the market as a whole usually.? I try to balance optimistic and pessimistic indicators in my valuations, so as not to overplay either side.

Net Operating Accruals:? Do you use this metric based on the research done by Sloan and used in Piotroski’s Z_score?

No, I got this through Hirshleifer and a number of other financial economists.? That doesn’t mean that it might not be the same thing researched by Sloan and Piotroski.? Piotroski’s Z-score has a lot to commend it; the only trouble is that very few companies get those high scores.

Volatility, RSI, Neglect:? These are metrics that I have seen few people discuss. ?What is?your basis for using them? I believe I read an abstract to a?study that found that low volatility stocks outperform high volatility stocks- is this what you are trying to take advantage of???What is the measurement for neglect anyway???Sorry for my lack of knowledge on this subject.? When I read this post I was suprised that, as a contrarian fundamental investor,?you used so many technical metrics.? Do you try to use metrics that have?very little following because?methodologies lose their?effectiveness when?they becomes popular (like the small cap effect)?

What is a technical indicator?? I don’t read charts.? I do try to look for stocks that are off the beaten path, and there are some non-price measures that indicate that.? As for volatility, I would point you to this article at the excellent CXO Advisory blog.? Yes, low volatility tends to outperform.

It’s not that I am looking at technicals, but anomalies.? I believe in the Adaptive Markets Hypothesis, which says that inefficiencies exist in the markets, but only for a while because when they are big enough, investors take advantage of them, and compete them away.? The markets are only mostly efficient, and I try to take advantage of what is “on sale” when I reshape my portfolio.

The neglect measure is what fraction of the company’s shares trade.? In general, companies with lower share turnover tend to do better.

As for RSI, that is one area where I have changed.? I used to use momentum as “buy what’s falling” metric.? There’s too much evidence for the contrary, and so I have flipped RSI so that weight is given to stocks with positive momentum.? Positive momentum tends to generate positive returns, because people are conservative in their estimates.? Buying momentum makes sense except when many are doing it.? After things have been running hot for a while, I would drop the metric.

What helps me go where others will not are my industry models.? One of my core beliefs is that industries are under-analyzed.? Also, Industry behavior is more basic to the market than size and value/growth distinctions.? If I analyze industries that are out of favor, and buy financially strong names in those industries, it is difficult to go wrong.

When I look at anomalies, I look for things where retail and professional investors tend to err.? Those are places where human nature tends to encourage people to make wrong decisions.? People like to play controversial stocks — they tend to be overvalued.? People like to play well-known stocks.? They are overvalued as well.? Momentum?? The market as a whole is slow to react to new data.

I don’t aim for metrics with small followings.? I aim for things that have worked over time.? Before the calculation of the metrics, my industry models toss in a number of out-of-favor names.? After the calculation of the metrics, I look at earnings quality, frequency of beating estimates, a more detailed look at the balance sheet, etc.

I view my non-fundamental variables as measures that complement the valuation side of the analysis.? (Valuation is most important, but it is not everything.)? They help in avoiding value traps (net operating accruals), and point at stocks that other investors are ignoring.? They aren’t perfect, and if they were perfect, I am sure that I don’t use them perfectly.? The object is to tilt the odds in my favor of having a successful investment.? That is what my screening methods (rule 8 ) intend to do, as well as the rest of my eight rules.

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