Category: Value Investing

Thoughts on the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Letter & Report

Thoughts on the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Letter & Report

I’m going to try to take this topically. ?Here goes:

On Acquisitions

Buffett still has a strong desire for more acquisitions. ?After $18B to buy?52.6% of Heinz (counting in the low strike warrants), and all of NV Energy through MidAmerican, there were additional?bolt-on acquisitions $3.1B after additional payments of $3.5B to buy the rest of Marmon ?and Iscar. ?After all that, the cash level at BRK was virtually unchanged from the beginning of 2013.

He might like to own far more of Heinz in the future:

Though the Heinz acquisition has some similarities to a ?private equity? transaction, there is a crucial?difference: Berkshire never intends to sell a share of the company. What we would like, rather, is to buy?more, and that could happen: Certain 3G investors may sell some or all of their shares in the future, and?we might increase our ownership at such times. Berkshire and 3G could also decide at some point that it?would be mutually beneficial if we were to exchange some of our preferred for common shares (at an?equity valuation appropriate to the time).

And he might want to buy more utilities:

NV Energy, purchased for $5.6 billion by MidAmerican Energy, our utility subsidiary, supplies electricity?to about 88% of Nevada?s population. This acquisition fits nicely into our existing electric-utility?operation and offers many possibilities for large investments in renewable energy. NV Energy will not be?MidAmerican?s last major acquisition.

The Powerhouse Five

MidAmerican is one of our ?Powerhouse Five? ? a collection of large non-insurance businesses that, in aggregate, had a record $10.8 billion of pre-tax earnings in 2013, up $758 million from 2012. The other companies in this sainted group are BNSF, Iscar, Lubrizol and Marmon.

If you look at BRK earnings now, leaving aside derivatives, one-third of earnings come from insurance, and the rest stems from the industrial & utility enterprises. ?[Note: Buffett uses the word “sainted” which he used in the 1980s to describe a group of much smaller private companies that he owned in full then. ?He doesn’t mean holy, but leading and valuable. ?They are driving the economics of BRK.

None of the Powerhouse Five did badly in 2013, though Marmon was a little weak. ?It’s difficult to find any part of BRK that did badly in 2013. ?BNSF was particularly impressive, and I am glad that I thought it was a good move when Buffett bought it, because too many criticized it at the time.

As an aside, it’s interesting how much MidAmerican is pouring onto wind and solar power.

Debt

I’ve always thought Buffett was clever with debt issues. ?He never guarantees the debt when he takes over a company. ?He is willing to live with the complexity of subsidiary debt issues. ?But hear these quotations from the Annual Report:

  • Berkshire does not guarantee any debt or other borrowings of BNSF, MidAmerican or their subsidiaries.
  • BNSF?s borrowings are primarily unsecured.
  • All, or substantially all, of the assets of certain MidAmerican subsidiaries are, or may be, pledged or encumbered to support or otherwise secure the debt. These borrowing arrangements generally contain various covenants including, but not limited to, leverage ratios, interest coverage ratios and debt service coverage ratios.
  • The borrowings of BHFC, a wholly owned finance subsidiary of Berkshire, are fully and unconditionally guaranteed by Berkshire.?

Buffett only guarantees the debt of a small finance subsidiary, and nothing more. ?The rest of the debt is non-recourse to BRK, and so bondholders take their chances on a subsidiary failing.

Derivatives

Our credit default contracts generated pre-tax losses of $213 million in 2013, which was due to increases in estimated liabilities of a municipality issuer contract that relates to more than 500 municipal debt issues. Our credit default contract exposures associated with corporate issuers expired in December 2013. There were no losses paid in 2013. Our remaining credit default derivative contract exposures are currently limited to the municipality issuer contract.

The equity puts are way out of the money, and only municipal issues remain among his fixed income derivatives. ?BRK “made” $4B on the derivative positions in 2013, something that will be impossible to repeat.

Give Buffett credit, though, because he structured some clever trades that have made a lot of money. ?Value investing won vs option pricing. ?At present, the future performance of the derivatives is?close to immaterial, unless we have significant municipal defaults.

Insurance

A few qualitative notes: Buffett mentions that GEICO has passed Allstate to become #2 in Auto insurance. ?He later mentions State Farm (#1 in Auto, I think the first time he has mentioned it):

Unfortunately, the wish of all insurers to achieve this happy result creates intense competition, so vigorous?in most years that it causes the P/C industry as a whole to operate at a significant underwriting loss. This loss, in?effect, is what the industry pays to hold its float. For example, State Farm, by far the country?s largest insurer and a?well-managed company besides, incurred an underwriting loss in nine of the twelve years ending in 2012 (the latest year for which their financials are available, as I write this). Competitive dynamics almost guarantee that the?insurance industry ? despite the float income all companies enjoy ? will continue its dismal record of earning?subnormal returns as compared to other businesses.

But after mentioning State Farm’s abysmal underwriting, though Buffett doesn’t say it is such, he mentions how well BRK has done:

As noted in the first section of this report, we have now operated at an underwriting profit for eleven
consecutive years, our pre-tax gain for the period having totaled $22 billion. Looking ahead, I believe we will
continue to underwrite profitably in most years. Doing so is the daily focus of all of our insurance managers who
know that while float is valuable, it can be drowned by poor underwriting results.

BRK had a light year for catastrophes, which inflated their income somewhat. ?It also seems that they put the poor deal that they did with Swiss Re behind them.

Buffett also talked about the “float” growing — assets held for future payment where no interest has to be paid. ?It’s $70B+ now. ?More on that later.

Buffett also trumpeted a move into Specialty Insurance. ?He poached a team from AIG in 2013 to start this. ?Specialty Insurance means niche markets with very careful underwriting guidelines. ?I’m sure that Berkshire will do this well.

Finally, the insurers have good underwriting and reserving. ?BRK still has a underwriting profit over the past eleven years, and they continue to release reserves from prior year claims.

The Structure of Berkshire Hathaway [BRK]

Though insurance no longer provides the majority of income for BRK, it is crucial to BRK’s functioning. ?The insurance companies own almost of the industrial and utility enterprises. ?BRK has little?in fixed income and cash vs insurance reserves. ?Buffett says:

 

Payments of dividends by our insurance subsidiaries are restricted by insurance statutes and regulations. Without prior regulatory approval, our principal insurance subsidiaries may declare up to approximately $13 billion as ordinary dividends before the end of 2014.

 

There is a rule of thumb in P&C insurance. ?Claim reserves are funded by high quality bonds of equivalent length ?Unearned premiums are funded by short-term debt like commercial paper. ?Surplus funds are invested in risk assets, like equities.

With BRK, more is invested in risk assets than the rule of thumb would allow. ?I’m not sure how the Risk-based Capital formulas allow this. ?Other insurance companies can’t do this.

Notes

Buffett uses his private investments in?real estate investing to show the difference between private & public investing. ?This explains why we should be slow to trade. ?He also says:

Most investors, of course, have not made the study of business prospects a priority in their lives. If wise, they will conclude that they do not know enough about specific businesses to predict their future earning power.

And as such, an investor in that state of ignorance should index.

Other Notes

Those who want to ask questions at Buffett’s annual meeting should send questions to:?Carol Loomis, of Fortune, who may be e-mailed at cloomis@fortunemail.com; Becky?Quick, of CNBC, at BerkshireQuestions@cnbc.com; and Andrew Ross Sorkin, of The New York Times, at arsorkin@nytimes.com.

Some have complained about a lack of transparency at BRK, and I have to disagree. ?BRK is a collection of small and large businesses. ?The annual report adequately talks about all of BRK, but gives less time to smaller issues. ?BRK is the fifth largest company by market cap, and Buffett reveals more of his intentions then most CEOs.

I have more to say regarding Intrinsic Value & Compounding, but that will have to wait.

Full disclosure: Long BRK/B for myself and clients

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Bitcoin

 

  • Mt Gox: The brief reign of bitcoin’s top exchange?http://t.co/9jSwvxrzOJ?What happens when u neglect basic acctg & programming controls?Mar 01, 2014
  • Bitcoin Exchange Mt. Gox Files for Bankruptcy Protection?http://t.co/aobpHTmsYi?B wary of opaque transaction systems, clever may steal $$?Mar 01, 2014
  • Where Did the Bitcoins Go? The Mt. Gox Shutdown, Explained?http://t.co/0OkksL8TPG?Currencies can’t exist apart from legal systems $$ $BTCUSD?Feb 26, 2014
  • The Bitcoin Collective Delusion?http://t.co/t51GGmuWbw?Inevitable that gov’ts get involved in currencies & trade 4 punishment of fraud $$?Feb 26, 2014

 

Companies & Industries

 

  • Wall Street Hates JPMorgan Fee 4 $1T Junk Loans?http://t.co/laoAXelOIr?It is a private market; if the distortions r bad enuf, biz will leave?Mar 01, 2014
  • Line Builds $15B Value With Teddy Bears, Wicked Witches?http://t.co/ccGFjIVQsQ?Freemium model applied to Asian messaging, watch 4 IPO?Mar 01, 2014
  • Old Mutual Plans IPO of US Unit After Profit Increases?http://t.co/a28VUvS23r?The final reconciliation of a decade-plus of mis-investment $$?Feb 28, 2014
  • Oil Giants Sell Pipelines as Shale Strength Drives Deals?http://t.co/OBVZ66Tm5y?They expect oil prices 2rise as they c cheap oil scarcity $$?Feb 28, 2014
  • Dream of US Oil Independence Slams Against Shale Costs?http://t.co/eFRnOdt0aX?If debt funds a large part of drilling, time 2b nervous $$?Feb 28, 2014
  • $MSFT ‘s Culture Is Like ‘ $IBM Circa 1990,’ New Chairman Says?http://t.co/gzy5NzCaAX?Use MSFT Office/Windows Cash Cow 2build new biz $$?Feb 27, 2014
  • What is ‘Forbes’ worth??http://t.co/mHpDgpfkpi?The Internet chgs everything; formerly important publications get digitally hollowed out $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Rolls-Royce Drone Ships Challenge $375B Industry?http://t.co/CCC9L0rynT?Problems here r considerable- control in bad weather, piracy, etc $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • US Issues Emergency Testing Order To Crude Oil Rail Shippers?http://t.co/bU5AuY7Ixd?Reasonable precautions 4 general safety $$ $UNP $CSX?Feb 26, 2014
  • Japan Post Prepares for IPO?http://t.co/yE7k137VjT?Lotsa assets, but the Q is what can be done w/them. Fuzzy situation w/no hurry $$ $EWJ?Feb 26, 2014
  • Zuckerberg Dines With Phone Frenemies Fretting Over Profits?http://t.co/NMga2US13J?Monet 2b made in solving mobile payments problem $$ $FB?Feb 26, 2014
  • Rising Premiums May Hit Small Firms?http://t.co/nBA1wjigHP?The lies told by the administration regarding cost control r astounding $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Saudi?s Allure Undimmed for Bechtel to DaVita Amid Fallout?http://t.co/ikppxlukf3?Someone has 2 buy from the US; $DTA helps w/diabetes $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • $BAC Reaches Deal With Buffett on Preferred Stake?http://t.co/bLpgqOMJzT?Buffett gets better call protection, divs can b waived in crisis $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Woes of Megacity Driving Signal Dawn of ?Peak Car? Era?http://t.co/npHTO6NtcJ?It may take ~10 yrs, this will right itself, w/fewer cars $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Google Buses Fuel Inequality Debate as Boom Inflates Rents?http://t.co/CaQ4msqBnW?I f you can’t afford living in San Francisco, move out $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • How ARM Holdings Dominates the Chip World?http://t.co/CCFJDitgh1?$ARMH vs $INTC – 2 clever approaches that r utterly different. Who wins? $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Health Law Already Has Impact on Bottom Lines?http://t.co/o4k5u6uWgB?Fitting that health insurers r getting hosed 4 cooperating w/Obama $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Repsol Agrees to $5B Deal W/Argentina on $YPF?http://t.co/piwKwxqS70?$REP decides half a loaf is better than none, nondefaultable bonds $$?Feb 26, 2014

Rest of the World

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  • China’s Yuan Slides Against US Dollar?http://t.co/VLBVTrLPEf?The Yuan is still a rigged market, we need 2c it float to ascertain value $$?Mar 01, 2014
  • Bulgaria?s Currency Board versus Ukraine?s Chaos?http://t.co/w1lAYExWuF?A currency that is anchored leads 2 better results in many ways $$?Feb 28, 2014
  • China’s Central Bank Engineered Yuan’s Decline?http://t.co/WmwpCa0H4L?It remains 2b seen where the yuan will trade when it freely floats $$?Feb 28, 2014
  • War Crimes Evident in South Sudan, Human Rights Watch Says?http://t.co/1AfsvPMYmG?Easiest way 2 call off dogs of war is not 2 loose them $$?Feb 27, 2014
  • Abe?s Southeast Asia Push Adds to US Ties Amid China Rift?http://t.co/3BDgdNznN4?Example of entangling alliances: Will US defend Asia? $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Ortega?s Zara Fashions Tax Avoidance by Shifting Profits to Alps?http://t.co/RGBMJ4Xmzc?Govts have an interest in unifying tax policy $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Crisis Gauge Rises to Record High as Swaps Avoided?http://t.co/hLKrltiEVk?Chinese corp spreads widening, same for their TED spread $$ $FXI?Feb 26, 2014
  • Investors Mount Attack on Norway in $20B Oil, Gas Row?http://t.co/VOPMQgMZKE?Norway becomes less predictable, may chase developers away $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Ukraine Pledges to Protect Deposits as Kiev Rally Called?http://t.co/iMGsdLODA2?Must ring hollow in Cyprus as EU moves 2 support Ukraine $$?Feb 26, 2014

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US Politics & Policy

 

  • How ADA, a Chemical Used in Rubber, Got Into 500 Food Products?http://t.co/moZqNNco85?Just because it’s not natural doesn’t mean it’s bad $$?Mar 01, 2014
  • Federal audit calls new school lunch rules a failure?http://t.co/RyEd0JpP7j?Missing middle ground where kids get yummy nutritious food $$?Mar 01, 2014
  • Study Finds SEC Staff Sold Shares B4 Cases Made Public?http://t.co/8xRzyCfIgx?SEC staffers don’t know what 2 buy, they know what 2 sell $$?Feb 28, 2014
  • GOP Targets Hillary Clinton With Obamacare Attacks?http://t.co/QKlHYwHUeG?It is fair to ask her what she would do differently than Obama $$?Feb 27, 2014
  • Here’s How Much People Are Actually Paying for Health Insurance?http://t.co/AeC4xs3y2d?Interesting, not sure what to make of it $$?Feb 27, 2014
  • Busted State Obamacare Websites Haven?t Caught Up to Healthcare gov?http://t.co/LLee1ovP2y?OR, MA & OR r worse than Fed’l website 4 PPACA $$?Feb 27, 2014
  • What Does Eric Schneiderman Know That the Rest of Us Don’t??http://t.co/aI4Crec3EZ?Oversteps his bounds, but gets sellside firms 2 stop $$?Feb 27, 2014
  • Dave Camp: How to Fix Our Appalling Tax Code?http://t.co/lx4VM2kHNz?Complex tax codes allow the wealthy 2 eliminate taxes that poor can’t $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • When the Minimum Wage Goes Up, the Menu Price Also Rises?http://t.co/ukEWzIjoje?The pain has 2go somewhere, including reducing employment $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • America’s 10-Year Experiment in Broadband Investment Has Failed?http://t.co/hjGuuu7JA0?We need to free up competition in the “last mile” $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • How Dodd-Frank Might Kill the CLO Market?http://t.co/ztV9PMdums?& we won’t miss it, b/c securitized credit is not accounted 4 properly $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • High-Priced Hydrogen Cars to Challenge Electrics?http://t.co/3akLFwjJuG?Hydrogen is not the solution, it is just fossil fuels in disguise $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Truth About Hydrogen Power?http://t.co/McG32mWHyT?Old article, explains y hydrogen is no panacea b/c it takes fossil energy 2 produce it $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • The same is true of fusion power. The costs of creating Tritium at a scale needed to power a city would be astounding. $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • A Surprise Guest at the SEC’s Annual Gathering?http://t.co/R15fMul7CU?@mcuban shows what a measured & classy guy he can b @ SEC meeting $$?Feb 22, 2014

 

US Economics & Monetary Policy

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  • Foreclosures Climaxing in New York-New Jersey Market: Mortgages?http://t.co/NPQeYY7Rc3?Judicial foreclosure states catching up rest of US $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Home Prices in 2013 Notch Biggest Annual Gain Since 2005?http://t.co/FjTjdA7YcU?Demand from investors pads purchases, rates higher now $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • America?s Hottest Housing Market Has Suddenly Cooled Down?http://t.co/00uIJ4gSo3?Phoenix RE rises out of ashes on speculative demand $$ $Z?Feb 26, 2014
  • March 4 Hearing for Three Fed Nominees?http://t.co/McV2Tt7p29?One bullet & 2 blanks in the gun. Stanley Fischer will bring some wisdom $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Fed Crisis Transcripts Highlight Futility of FSOC Crystal Balls?http://t.co/XComU1xA5K?Bureaucrats can’t/won’t predict disaster coming $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • The Fed knows less than average?http://t.co/cnA4nBBwU0?& http://t.co/5wG84hxPGi & http://t.co/C5y3re8ajV 2008 Transcripts show clueless $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • How to Profit from the Yellen Fed?http://t.co/4oAiBUdXDr?Yellen is core 2 the M.O. of the Fed, it’s like jazz, they make it up as they go $$?Feb 26, 2014

?

?

Market Impact

 

  • Banks Averting Bond Losses With Accounting Twist?http://t.co/VC83ByMGNC?Switching bonds from available 4 sale 2 held 2 maturity $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • The switch limits flexibility b/c u can’t change back w/o poss changing all back; also doesn’t change economics, moves losses 2 future $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Greed Turning Losers to Leaders in Russell 1000 Index?http://t.co/vpGTVXkD9t?Could this b a harbinger of a change in the markets? $$ $SPY?Feb 26, 2014
  • Outcome or process ? what investment focus succeeds over time??http://t.co/edXLqAX9pg?@Ritholtz tells us to focus on process not results $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Social psychology: Market madness?http://t.co/BtaVXAYWYZ?This is y the 1st priority of investment is risk control; can’t sleep @ night $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • 10 Value Investing Blogs You’d Be Crazy Not To Follow?http://t.co/mt8tZkGRAq?Happy 2b featured among this great group of blogs $$ Thanks!?Feb 26, 2014

 

Other Business

 

  • Harvard Brainpower Joins MIT Fueling Boston Sports Teams?

Titles?http://t.co/OZNC8wCIJi?Bright guys using math2analyze sports in Beantown $$?Feb 28, 2014

  • Big Data Comes to the Farm, Sowing Mistrust?http://t.co/ayBsxp8qAt?Farmers worry that data used to help them will b used against them too $$?Feb 28, 2014
  • Corporate Economists Are Hot Again?http://t.co/DUn5O7Idjz?An alternative would b actuaries, they r usually better at practical models $$?Feb 27, 2014
  • Dwindling Midwest High School Grads Spur College Hunt?http://t.co/iVURNV69EU?Demographics now fight against colleges, many weak will die $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • The Joy and Freedom of Working Until Death?http://t.co/wkGRoRSJIg?Find something that u enjoy doing that supports u & yours well forever $$?Feb 26, 2014

 

Medical

 

  • Dad May Join Two Moms for Disease-Free Designer Babies?http://t.co/yiXUO0sLok?Designer babies:many embryos die in order 2 produce 1 child $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Your Heart May Be Older Than You Are?http://t.co/46PbtkWQ7h?Cute way 2 get people to take care of themselves; may have false negatives $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Mystery Medical Symptoms Hit a Surprising Number of Patients?http://t.co/6DoJnAjt6w?Stress can trigger pains; this teaches stress control $$?Feb 26, 2014

?

Pimco & Bill Gross

  • Pimco’s Gross: ‘U don’t always produce productive family by sweet talking&always being inclusive’?http://t.co/sjKnhN76jh?Allianz happy w/him?Mar 01, 2014
  • Counterpoint: It?s time for Bill Gross 2 retire?http://t.co/UB1ikZhTlI?Everybody Should Get Off Bill Gross’s Back http://t.co/hbbAYRXuBN $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Inside the Showdown Atop Pimco, the World’s Biggest Bond Firm?http://t.co/kVtk8Zf5d8?Gross developed the theories guide Pimco & he stays $$?Feb 26, 2014

 

Wrong

  • Wrong: Templeton Braving China?s Housing Bubble?http://t.co/rjVSQUXoAe?China looks like Japan in 1989, or the developed world in 2007 #avoid?Mar 01, 2014
  • Wrong: NASA Scientists Discover 715 New Planets?http://t.co/6KhRpp2Y5A?Life is finely tuned on Earth +/- 10% in size of Earth -> no life $$?Feb 27, 2014
  • Wrong: Fed s Tarullo Eyes New Tools to Limit Interest Rate Risk?http://t.co/fA4l6omDVi?Dreams 2 undo effects of bad policy w/o undoing it $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Wrong: It Takes How Much Water to Grow an Almond?!?http://t.co/u8kpW7kJFj?Misses the idea that water does get reused many times: rain $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • Wrong: Can Amazon Dominate in Insurance, Too??http://t.co/zAP8GkunSx?Except 4 simple products, Insurance is too complex 4 people to pull $$?Feb 24, 2014

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Comments, Replies & Retweets

  • @jasonzweigwsj @AlexRubalcava I wrote an article on the problems w/zero cost investing recently?http://t.co/ALu1ijgVev?”sand in the gears”?Mar 01, 2014
  • RT @AlexRubalcava: Zero commission stock trading sounds like a product tailor made to amplify investors? behavioral finance mistakes.?Mar 01, 2014
  • “Currencies & trade cannot exist in a vacuum apart from legal systems, because fraud is a crime?” ? David_Merkel?http://t.co/7fJX26SEyP?$$?Feb 26, 2014
  • ‘ @GSElevator Tattletale Exposed (He Was Not in the Goldman Elevator)?http://t.co/S1NVy13sZn?I don’t get out much, 1st I’ve heard of this $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • “Regarding First Data, many might think it quite desirable to step out of the spotlight @ $JPM &?” ? David_Merkel?http://t.co/COHGctym2A?$$?Feb 26, 2014
  • . @dpinsen The ancient retirement tripod of course?http://t.co/k06EUCbHa1?unless the modern one works. $$?Feb 26, 2014
  • @dpinsen That was icky, and more… gotta go wash my brain out… brrr.?Feb 22, 2014
Letter from a Reader

Letter from a Reader

Here’s a letter from a reader on insurance topics:

Hi David. I’ve been following your blog. Just want to say thank you for willing to share your knowledge in the public domain.

I have a question for you – as you know, “climate change” is happening… whether human caused or not, it certainly feels like we are seeing more extreme weathers of late.

How do you see this affecting P&C insurers? Does this give them the chance to start rising prices? ?

Lastly, just wondering if you have an opinion about Markel and Lancashire and Allied world. I owned allied for a long time. Made some gains. But the recent blow up at tower and short attack at Am Trust prompted me to really stick with firms that have a much longer record. Which lead me to Markel and Lancashire. Not that this verifies these guys are clean. I’m not an accountant and nor do I think accountants can catch anything. Nonetheless, their long term record offers me a better sense of security in my mind.?

First, I *don’t* know that climate change is happening, except that it always happens.? Evidence for climate science is weak, like that for economics.? We don’t have a good model yet.? If we had a good model, we would have better predictions on hurricanes, which have been uniformly lousy for the last ten years.? And as for warm climates, the Earth has been warmer than now in the past, and far colder, if the history books are correct.

As to how it affects P&C insurers and reinsurers, for that we do have a simple and reliable model.? Look at industry surplus relative to the past — when it is high, as it is now, premium rates will be lower than the risk demands.? Most P&C pricing is weak now — I have been decreasing exposure to P&C insurers.

Markel and Allied World I know and respect.? Good companies both, though I own neither of them.? I’ve heard of Lancashire, but I do not know them in any detail.? To analyze, look in my On Insurance Investing series.

Thanks for writing.

Conservation of Liquidity, under most Conditions, Coda

Conservation of Liquidity, under most Conditions, Coda

I would like to add one more idea to my piece, Conservation of Liquidity, under most Conditions.? This is the concept of an asset-liability liquidity mismatch.? When absolute return managers like Buffett, Klarman, etc. start building up cash, the market should get a little nervous.? They don’t commit capital unless they can meet certain return targets.? When they aren’t investing, it means the markets are likely overvalued.

Think about it: long-term investors accumulating cash.? They are mismatching short with respect to time, and long with respect to liquidity.? Since the world in aggregate is always matched, who is mismatched long with respect to time, and short with respect to liquidity?? I can’t say for certain, but I would look at hedge funds and mutual funds that have to justify their existence quarter-by-quarter.? When they are fully invested, it is a time to be cautious, because a downturn in the market could turn them into motivated sellers.

And so, be wary when valuation-sensitive investors pull back.? It is not a good sign for the markets.

Conservation of Liquidity, under most Conditions

Conservation of Liquidity, under most Conditions

Have you ever seen the graphs showing “Look at all the money sitting on the sidelines!? This market has to go up!”? Those analyses are bogus.? Why?

Several reasons, but the leading one is that much cash has to be held as part of portfolio margining, securities lending, or derivative agreements.? What would be valuable, maybe is a graph of cash that is free to be spent on new securities.

The word “new” is important.? With most trading, liquidity does not disappear.? Instead, liquidity moves from the account of the buyer to that of the seller.? When is that not so?

With initial public offerings, where the proceeds are not solely going to selling shareholders, liquidity disappears into the coffers of the new company, that it can do business.?? That’s not a bad thing, aside from periods in the ’60s and late ’90s where there was a craze that led people to invest in bogus businesses that sounded cool.

When there is too much liquidity available to invest, Wall Street produces new companies to absorb the liquidity, many of which will be of dubious value, because there is money to be made.? Trot out the speculative stocks and bonds, especially near the end of the boom phase of the credit cycle.

Liquidity disappears into new corporations, and reappears when corporations are bought for cash.? Aside from a few other similar events, secondary trading has no effect on liquidity.? So when you hear that there is a lot of liquidity on the sidelines, review the above arguments and say, “There is almost always a lot of liquidity on the sidelines, but is it buying up new stock issues?”

Therefore, look at the quality of new IPOs.? Quality is a thermometer for whether the market is cold to overheating.? The same applies to corporate M&A to a lesser extent when they purchase poor assets for cash.? On the other hand, if corporate M&A is finding inexpensive assets that they buy for cash, the market as a whole may be cheap.

Secondary trading does not inform us much about market valuations.? Look to the primary markets, where cash creates new assets, and where old assets get sold for cash.? Valuations are on display there, and should inform our investing.

If Investing Were Free, How Would It Change What You Do?

If Investing Were Free, How Would It Change What You Do?

Sometimes I think people forget that they are people; they think that somehow technology will eliminate their foibles.? ETFs have lowered costs for investors, but the greater ability to trade has enabled investors to more easily be greedy or panic.

Go ahead.? Make trading free.? Lessen further the frictions that inhibit bad trades.

If investing is free, would we create better asset allocation models?? Costs are pretty low now, and I don’t see many imitating GMO, which has the best models of which I know.

Costs are already low now for common trades, and if you are willing to deal with poor customer service, you can trade cheaply in many places using Interactive Brokers. [I like Interactive Brokers.? They are the cheapest, and where they are good, they are very, very good.? Where they are bad, well…]

There is virtue to having some “sand in the gears,” i.e., things that hold us back from making too many adjustments to investments.? If investing is free, then human nature will lack one more roadblock against bad decision-making.

Investors get fixated on explicit costs, and miss the implicit costs, which are often higher.? Honestly, on any investment decision, you want to take time, and ask whether the change is worth it.? Are you really on the right side of the trade?? Just because there is little to no cost to do the trade, does that mean it is correct to trade?

Over the years, with ETFs, I have found that people trade more, and lose in trading.? Jack Bogle was/is right regarding ETF clones of low cost mutual funds.? To the degree that we encourage people to trade because of low transaction costs, the more we enable unintelligent fear and greed.

But As For Me

How would free trading affect what I do?? It wouldn’t.? The cost of trading for me is so low, that it does not figure into what I do.? It is better in investing to think hard about your decisions, and make fewer of them.? Thus I constrain myself to making major portfolio changes four times a year.? It’s a big process, and I do it at mid-quarter.? I think hard about the changes I make, and I make few of them, realizing that I am not immune to fear and greed.

This was written partially with an eye to an article at Abnormal Returns, which I rarely disagree with.? My main point is that human nature is a much bigger factor in investing than costs.? First learn to control human nature, if you can.? Then control costs.

This May Be Gold, But It Is Not Golden

This May Be Gold, But It Is Not Golden

I’ve done a number of articles on dollar-weighted returns in mutual funds.? There are rare cases where the shareholder base is smart, usually in value funds, where the shareholders add more money on declines, and lighten up when things are going too well.

Tonight’s target is the Gold ETF SPDR Gold Shares [GLD].? As with most volatile mutual funds, people tend to get greedy or panic.? They chase performance.? Consider this list of inflows and outflows from GLD. Cash flows are assumed to occur at mid-period.

Date

Cash Flow

9/30/2004

???????????? 13,081

3/31/2005

?????? 2,902,381

3/31/2006

?????? 3,152,826

3/31/2007

?????? 4,129,118

3/31/2008

?????? 5,163,301

3/31/2009

??? 10,326,761

3/31/2010

?????? 8,197,457

3/31/2011

??? (3,046,769)

3/31/2012

?????? 5,499,978

3/31/2013

? (18,958,700)

11/15/2013

??? (4,320,084)

12/31/2013

? (30,887,920)

Dollar-weighted

8.20%

Time-weighted

11.13%

Difference

-2.92%

Versus a buy-and-hold investor, the average holder gives up almost 3% of returns via market mistiming.? Technicians may talk down buy and hold, but buy and hold usually outperforms the average trader.? This is similar to what my friend Josh Brown talks about in his article Flows Don?t Follow Value, They Follow Performance.? Very few investors are rational businessmen, estimating likely returns over their funding horizon.? Rather they chase past success, and flee past failures.

Such has been true of the SPDR Gold Shares ETF.? Say what you will about the cheapness of large ETFs, people will still misuse them.? They will buy late in a bull phase, and sell late in a bear phase.

And so I say to all: Guard your emotions.? Be forward-looking.? Analyze likely value five years out.? Don’t make snap decisions out of regret.? Think about risk control before you buy shares, bonds, whatever.

Now, as a personal aside, it took me around eight years to learn to control my emotions.? Over the last 20 years, I have made at most a handful of errors reacting to bad market events.? I learned to analyze rather than panic back in the 90s.? It doesn’t mean that I am always right, but it does mean that I act.? I almost never react.

As for GLD, be wary about paper gold.? Is it really fully collateralized by audited gold in a warehouse?? There are lots of promises of gold being traded, but how much physical gold could you have delivered to you, should you want it?

That’s all for now.? Be careful in all of your investing; it is easy to err.

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Market Impact

 

  • Companies Squeeze 401K Plans From Facebook to JPMorgan http://t.co/2glTizHOjm This should not surprise, many companies shrink labor costs $$ Feb 15, 2014
  • Wells Fargo edges back into subprime as US mortgage market thaws http://t.co/s8AJCKuzOH Isn’t a problem now, problem comes w/imitators $$ Feb 15, 2014
  • Homebuyers Get Break as Loan Rates Defy Fed Tapering http://t.co/i7PdmGThdz Housing & general economy weakened, so mortgage rates fell $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Pension politics http://t.co/3NaaI61AxM @felixsalmon points out how defined benefit plans r in general better 4 workers. Mind the PBGC $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Colleges Raise Record $33.8B Exceeding US Peak in 2009 http://t.co/PRjlMrKM9i Donations always follow creation of unrealized cap gains $$ Feb 12, 2014
  • Some Lines Say Maybe the Stock Market Will Go Down http://t.co/FdkJdRT9qe @matt_levine correctly criticizes the 1928-9 $SPY graph overlay $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • 1929 Stock Market Crash Chart Is Garbage http://t.co/PyPIulerCH Unequal left & right scales make the relationship look tighter than it is $$ Feb 12, 2014
  • ?When to Ignore the Investment Experts http://t.co/K2vyHgb1gv ?When all the experts &forecasts agree ? something else is going 2 happen.? $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • Comparing Economic Recoveries http://t.co/5za6QtEFKD In 1984-2006, growth was borrowed from future by increasing debt levels-> #payback $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • Aluminum Lines Still Trouble the London Metal Exchange http://t.co/f5OyWC5EHC Aluminum inventories will b a prob, til short intrates rise $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • Top Anecdotal Signs of a Market Bubble http://t.co/MavPhxB6vZ Good piece, like one of mine: http://t.co/bON7nJJFfk Watch the credit cycle $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • Ten Stocks to Own During a Market Correction http://t.co/RzBdaNf1ff Good list. I own a few of them. $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • Does trend-chasing explain financial markets? http://t.co/3Mkg4R99dx Partly. Difference between investment IRR and total return is big $$ Feb 10, 2014
  • ?Security. Safety. Stability.? http://t.co/VfKVcGgMRJ from @reformedbroker Gold is useful at certain points, but only when it is hated $$ Feb 10, 2014
  • Flows Don?t Follow Value, They Follow Performance http://t.co/9oIJ4M7HMo @reformedbroker wrote this little gem. Learn & internalize it $$ Feb 10, 2014
  • Long Term Charts 2: Western Markets Since The Middle Ages http://t.co/lsBfIot8pi Interesting charts from very messy data at Zero Hedge $$ Feb 10, 2014
  • Most Expensive Place to Find Out Who You Are http://t.co/szQfeKFZxT @jasonzweigwsj : Your reaction 2 minor crisis shows yr risk tolerance $$ Feb 10, 2014

?

Companies & Industries

 

  • AIG Takes $832 Million Charge on Death Bets as Hedge Funds Gain http://t.co/JmI7hBy9MH Life settlements should b illegal $$ $MET $AIG $PRU Feb 14, 2014
  • To Stop the Coffee Apocalypse, Starbucks Buys a Farm http://t.co/CPkyVAUnsR $SBUX helps create a variety of rust resistant Arabica trees $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Former BlackRock Manager Finds Billions on Rice Energy http://t.co/aBPTo3u4Ky Few investment mgrs have operating talent; Daniel Rice does $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Buffett’s Pal Munger Heads a Very Weird Company http://t.co/ztr3XizpKM Growth of $DJCO thru investing leads 2 # of growing pains & 13F $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Here?s Why the Biggest Cable Company in the Country Thinks It Can Get Bigger http://t.co/04cdg1J9VP Feds tolerant of cable re antitrust $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Why AOL ended up spending millions on ‘distressed babies’ http://t.co/d2lWs8eJit $AOL chose 2b in healthcare biz 4 its employees & lost $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • 3 High-Yielders To Buy On The Pullback http://t.co/8SUBI1M0ut In total $SNH issues more stock than it pays in divs. Divs -> cap losses $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Who is John Thompson? A look at Microsoft’s new chairman http://t.co/W7SrXqxtwm May have right stuff to protect new CEO from meddling $$ Feb 10, 2014

 

US Politics & Policy

 

  • Runaway Drones Map Land, Film ‘Wolf,’ Knock Down People, FAA Gives Chase http://t.co/rcTnjug8w1 Drones r here 2 stay; time license them $$ Feb 15, 2014
  • Teacher Tenure Put to the Test in California Lawsuit http://t.co/XP5fx6HpR3 Tenure has outlived its usefulness; older teachers can b lazy $$ Feb 15, 2014
  • Lincoln’s Foreign Policy in Today’s World http://t.co/t2RELj7uRB Kept England & France from joining Civil War; otherwise pragmatic $$ $SPY Feb 15, 2014
  • What Would Lincoln Do? http://t.co/hi6n4Rb8hl A clever man w/principles, who did not cease to be pragmatic pursuing 1 main goal – Union $$ Feb 15, 2014
  • Harvard Professor Attacking Google Thrives as Web Sheriff http://t.co/g1W7KXH94K At some point, lack of disclosure will blow up on him $$ Feb 14, 2014
  • The $2.2B Bird-Scorching Solar Project http://t.co/hIYWhJpUwQ Get used 2 idea: almost every form of energy imposes environmental costs $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Obamacare Damage-Control Teams Seek to Calm Complaints http://t.co/bPU95rVMxM Things r tough when u r trying to avoid media embarrassment $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Billionaire Musk Gets Brownsville to Pay for SpaceX http://t.co/eoAiygs9mq Like a football owner bargaining 2 get taxpayers buy a stadium $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Snowden Swiped Password From NSA Coworker http://t.co/1mJ5D6vGH3 & it cost him his job. Snowden denies it; NSA is Not Saying Anything $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Puerto Rico Legislators Amend Bill Calling for Bank-Deposit Shift http://t.co/fMaCvMi7ab Provincial govt’s attempt 2raid cookie jar stopd $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Obamacare Will, in Fact, Encourage Employers to Cut Jobs http://t.co/D3vaCFHOZY As the employer mandate comes into force, jobs will b cut $$ Feb 12, 2014
  • Tea Party Scorns Republicans as House Lifts Debt Ceiling http://t.co/fPohsF6Kbi t-party can b “pure” as Dems raise ceiling w/few GOP $$ $TLT Feb 12, 2014
  • A Lame Duckish Calm Falls Over the Capital http://t.co/u6bG2cg1nL Parties in DC act as if the next event is the November elections $$ $TLT Feb 12, 2014
  • Obama Rewrites ObamaCare http://t.co/Ym3CtHt3pI Another day, another lawless exemption, once again for business; WSJ bangs populist drum $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • The US Senate Again Insists on USPS Saturday Mail Delivery http://t.co/YnzmKE5Xrh 2 timid; end Wednesday & Saturday delivery $$ $UPS $FDX Feb 11, 2014
  • US firms ?paid effective tax rate of 2.2% in 2011? http://t.co/f2T5Qnrhri More than a tax haven, Ireland helps insurers shave reserves $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • No Honeymoon for Janet Yellen http://t.co/86QPfTcVE0 QE withdrawal will bite, & what will become of all the deposits? $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • Please Hold Your Bernanke Applause http://t.co/DCKPttFHNU Remember, when Greenspan left, he was viewed as a success, same as BB now $$ $TLT Feb 11, 2014
  • Sounding the Tax Alarm, to Little Applause http://t.co/r9JQmmaeLB IRS stiffs whistleblowers who often lose employability 4 being a tipper $$ Feb 10, 2014

 

Rest of the World

 

  • Putin is Playing a Game of His Own http://t.co/19Arh0aJOH Not so fast. Russia has significant resources & influence in Eastern H’sphere $$ Feb 15, 2014
  • Boy?s Life Hanging on 8-Hour Trip Shows Why Venezuelans Protest http://t.co/8G8CgGwGST Socialism is like a cancer that spreads til death $$ Feb 14, 2014
  • Let’s Watch Venezuela Destroy Itself http://t.co/g1Uy3zk1W3 Logical extreme of Socialism falls apart; pity that Chavez never lived 2c it $$ Feb 14, 2014
  • Chinese Join Winklevosses in L.A. Luxury Home Hedges http://t.co/TUdw4AItw8 Amazing what the wealthy will pay 4a fancy foreign retreat $$ Feb 14, 2014
  • Next crisis won?t come from the emerging markets http://t.co/Jei7oKJ8BD Argues France, Germany, Britain, Australia & Canada-> 2 much debt $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Mister Donut, Pan Am and Friendster Found Alive and Well http://t.co/vDaGi33cEN Old brands never die, they just move overseas & make $$ $SPY Feb 13, 2014
  • Bank of England points to 2015 rate rise, blurs guidance http://t.co/AWhyd8GZmd More precision than 1 can know; the world is messy $$ $FXB Feb 13, 2014
  • Italy Pays Record Low to Sell 3-Year Debt at Auction http://t.co/PWmUhXufjb Let the leverage build for the next crisis $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Fink to Mobius Touting Emerging Stocks Fails to Stem Outflow http://t.co/8PFKbOH8Lg A time 2 nibble, not a time 2 gulp $$ $EEM Be wary Feb 13, 2014
  • Greek Truckers Show Plight as Groceries Show Up Frozen http://t.co/XgAM737A7h Freeing up the labor market will work as attitudes change $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Tunisians Bolt Doors Even After New Constitution Passed http://t.co/lBhXz8iqWb Constitutions cannot create cultural change; asks 2 much $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Israel Desalination Shows California Not to Fear Drought http://t.co/BFidhnEF7S When resources r tight there are incentives 2 create tech $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • London Walkie Talkie Owners to Shield Car-Melting Beam http://t.co/76TP0u2tuT Reflective parabolic curve of building melts cars @ a spot $$ Feb 12, 2014
  • Rouhani Seeks Economic Fix as Iran Commemorates Revolution http://t.co/EDNL5WLOvB Will have to get the agreement of unelected true rulers $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • Argentina to Replace Bogus Inflation Index to Mend IMF Ties http://t.co/iSzQizrgnF Argentina tries 2 find cheapest way out of this mess $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • Who Should Pay for Trusts that Go Bust? http://t.co/aOXFbDltCZ If China is smart, protect depositors, but let banks & WMP holders fail $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • Iceland Girds for Fight as Suit Targets Half $14B GDP http://t.co/hX6M12PZ48 Icelandic taxpayer will refuse the bill; UK will b stiffed $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • Mobius Says Emerging-Market Rout Near End as Valuations Lure http://t.co/MMLjlAmN49 I dunno, a 4% earnings yield premium seems small $$ $EEM Feb 11, 2014
  • Rehabilitating Portugal http://t.co/tFy3GnIwRQ Long; Argues that a Greek-style bailout should b done, or Portugal will eventually default $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • Iranian TV Shows Rare Broadcast of Band Playing Music http://t.co/jTBFNcRsHJ Christianity has always been easier on music than Islam $$ Feb 11, 2014

 

Work Trends

 

  • Sheep-Shearing Wells Fargo Banker Bridges US Income Gap http://t.co/utMe1ekmir Sells coffeemakers too; many in US work multiple jobs $$ $TLT Feb 13, 2014
  • Workers Shed Caution, in a Healthy Sign for Labor Market http://t.co/zTq0NgbO0f When workers r willing 2 quit, labor mkt is healthy $$ $TLT Feb 11, 2014

 

Practical

 

  • A Little Valentine’s Day Straight Talk http://stks.co/j0I6p Sage counsel 2 younger women if they want to get married: start early $$ Feb 15, 2014
  • The Sex Question Readers Want Answered Most http://t.co/kRhYIgwI2Z Even Long-Married Happy Couples Ask, ‘How Can We Have Sex More Often?’ $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • Ten Ways You’re Probably Leaving Money on the Table http://t.co/KkjetkJsp9 Simple list of ways to save money for avg upper-middle class $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • Why Mom’s Time Is Different From Dad’s Time http://t.co/0Xr4IMsFfs Husbands, u can win if u reduce chaos for your overburdened wives $$ Feb 11, 2014

 

Other

 

  • US Scores Fusion-Power Breakthrough http://t.co/h6wDtXHcVj Bad news is Tritium very expensive @ $100K per gram; takes much energy 2 make $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • If Ocean Heat Pump Switches On, Expect to Feel It http://t.co/FlsYni5c62 Speculative; we don’t understand climate or hurricanes well $$ Feb 11, 2014
  • Who is Steven Reisman? Meet Hip-Hop VIPs’ Favorite Lawyer, The Man With The $2 Bills http://t.co/B3v87YDWrt Weird. Very, very weird $$ $SPY Feb 11, 2014
  • What Really Happened to Flappy Bird? http://t.co/3IiBxSIhYx Beware the success u wish 4? Also: http://t.co/ld6A2XaiKs Still a puzzle $$ $SPY Feb 11, 2014

 

Wrong, etc.

?

  • Skeptical: Blackstone-Fueled Single-Family Home Boom Lifts Chicago http://t.co/sETcWifBGx In past hi levels of investor ownership bearish $$ Feb 15, 2014
  • Wrong: Pros Panic, Retail Investors Stay Cool on Emerging Markets http://t.co/QXXpOcqKYw Too short a period time to judge $$ Feb 14, 2014
  • Wrong: Social norms: The indignity of no work http://t.co/6isHJo9fkw New technologies will create new jobs & make the whole world better $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • Wrong: Warren Buffett is laughing at you for selling http://t.co/S5LFS3jUk5 Poorly thought-out piece glues 2unrelated ideas together $$ $EEM Feb 13, 2014
  • Wrong: The #1 High-Yield Investment Of America’s Elite http://t.co/FUVyBblQpZ Spammy article that talks about REITs as if they r a secret $$ Feb 11, 2014

?

Replies, Retweets & Comments

?

  • 10 miles west of Baltimore, MD, we got ~15 inches of snow over the last last 2 days. #snow #weather #pax $$ Feb 14, 2014
  • “I made this comment six months ago: http://t.co/a82j8TRxm1… & then, I tipped the SEC. ?” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/gthPe5eQoA $$ $DJCO Feb 13, 2014
  • “Administrative Services Only” plus individual stop loss protection is in general the smart way2?” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/fPV6fQo1i1 $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • “This is a common confusion in statistics — you can have a high correlation and a low beta. Second?” ? Merkel http://t.co/sa6PLqEhdU $$ Feb 13, 2014
  • RT @Pawelmorski: Scary parallel my foot. http://t.co/omyovAKQaX Feb 12, 2014
  • @davidgaffen that would only be a temporary fix. I wrote this 3.5 yrs ago on the topic: http://t.co/q3lbyELN9d The internet eats USPS Feb 11, 2014
  • @quakkelaar I miss you too. If you are ever near Baltimore/DC, let me know; we can get together, brother. Last few years have been hard Feb 11, 2014
  • RT @ReformedBroker: Please explain how the wording of this investment advertisement on the Washington Post site could be legal: http://t.co? Feb 10, 2014
  • ‘ @quakkelaar Hail old friend. Yes, same old mistakes, b/c those wishing to retire are making the money sweat, until it rebels on them $$ Feb 09, 2014

?

Classic: The Fundamentals of Real Estate Market Tops

Classic: The Fundamentals of Real Estate Market Tops

I’ve mentioned before how all of my old articles at RealMoney were lost.? This was the draft version of Real Estate’s Top Looms published on 05/20/05.? I followed it up with? Housing Bubblettes, Redux on 10/27/05 and? September 2005 — The Residential Real Estate Inflection Point on 02/14/06.? Also, there was Wrecking Ball Looms for Big Housing Spec on 11/27/06, where I explained why it was likely that the subprime residential mortgage market was likely to blow up (can’t find the draft of that one).

But those links above no longer work — a real pity, and the one link below is corrected to point to the republished article at my blog.? Anyway, enjoy this if you want, because it outlines my thinking on how to recognize whether you are getting near the end of the bull phase of a market.

(Note: the italicized, indented portions, quote the original article The Fundamentals of Market Tops.? Much of what I write compares how residential real estate is similar to and different from stocks.)

-==-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=–=

About a year and a half ago, I wrote a piece called The Fundamentals of Market Tops.? It was an important piece for me because I received a lot of positive feedback from readers.? It was also important because it disagreed with the view of the firm that I worked for, and nearly led to my termination there, because they encouraged me to stop writing for RealMoney.? Neither termination happened, but it was touch-and-go for a while.

This piece unofficially represents the views of the firm that I work for, because my views of macroeconomics have become the firm?s views, but I don?t directly control our investment actions.? What I will try to accomplish here is to try to apply the logic of my prior article to the residential real estate market.? As opposed to my earlier article, I will try to show why I think we are close to a market top in residential real estate.? There is reason for pessimism.

The Investor Base Becomes Momentum-Driven

Valuation is rarely a sufficient reason to be long or short a market. Absurdity is like infinity. Twice infinity is still infinity. Twice absurd is still absurd. Absurd valuations, whether high or low, can become even more absurd if the expectations of market participants become momentum-based. Momentum investors do not care about valuation; they buy what is going up, and sell what is going down.

This is what I see in many residential real estate markets now: panicked buyers are saying ?this is my last chance,? and buying houses using risky forms of financing.? At the same time, I read stories of despair as some potential buyers give up and say that a house is out of their reach for now; they waited too long.? Occasionally, I see a few articles or e-mails regarding people who seem to be bright selling their homes and renting, but this is a minority behavior.

In the face of this, residential real estate prices continue to rise, particularly in the hot coastal markets, which tells me that the price momentum can continue a little while longer until it fails because there is no incremental liquidity available to expand the bubbles.

You’ll know a market top is probably coming when:

  1. The shorts already have been killed. You don’t hear about them anymore. There is general embarrassment over investments in short-only funds.

  2. Long-only managers are getting butchered for conservatism. In early 2000, we saw many eminent value investors give up around the same time. Julian Robertson, George Vanderheiden, Robert Sanborn, Gary Brinson and Stanley Druckenmiller all stepped down shortly before the market top.

  3. Valuation-sensitive investors who aren’t total-return driven because of a need to justify fees to outside investors accumulate cash. Warren Buffett is an example of this. When Buffett said that he “didn’t get tech,” he did not mean that he didn’t understand technology; he just couldn’t understand how technology companies would earn returns on equity justifying the capital employed on a sustainable basis.

  4. The recent past performance of growth managers tends to beat that of value managers. (I am using the terms growth and value in a classic sense here. Growth managers attempt to ascertain the future prospects of firms with little focus on valuation. Value managers attempt to calculate the value of a firm with less credit for future prospects.) In short, the future prospects of firms become the dominant means of setting market prices.

  5. Momentum strategies are self-reinforcing due to an abundance of momentum investors. Once momentum strategies become dominant in a market, the market behaves differently. Actual price volatility increases. Trends tend to maintain themselves over longer periods. Selloffs tend to be short and sharp.

  6. Markets driven by momentum favor inexperienced investors. My favorite way that this plays out is on CNBC. I gauge the age, experience and reasoning of the pundits. Near market tops, the pundits tend to be younger, newer and less rigorous. Experienced investors tend to have a greater regard for risk control, and believe in mean-reversion to a degree. Inexperienced investors tend to follow trends. They like to buy stocks that look like they are succeeding and sell those that look like they are failing.

  7. Defined benefit pension plans tend to be net sellers of stock. This happens as they rebalance their funds to their target weights.

Houses aren?t like stocks for several reasons:

  1. Unlike stocks, houses are used by their owners every day.
  2. We can short stocks, but we can?t short houses.? (Personally, I hope no one comes up with a clever way to do so.? We have enough volatility already.)? The most someone can do is sell his home and rent.
  3. Perhaps the equivalent of a long-only manager is someone who owns his property debt-free, like me, and doesn?t see the need to lever up by moving up to a larger home.? Measured against the standard of ?what might have been? is a terrifying taskmaster from an investment standpoint.? I avoid it in equity investing, and in home ownership.
  4. I am aware of a number of people (I have been assured that they are not mentally incompetent) who have sold their homes and started renting.? This to me is the equivalent of going totally flat in equities, or other risky assets.? Not that one faces negative carry, because the ratio of rent to in the hot markets is pretty low.? In many markets, you can earn more off the proceeds than you pay in rent (leaving tax consequences aside).? This leaves aside the issue of appreciation/depreciation of housing values, but when one can rent more cheaply than buying, it is a negative for the housing market.
  5. My point about momentum strategies is definitely pertinent here.? With the existence of contract-flipping, a high level of amateur investment (seemingly under the guise of ?buy what you know?), and a high level of investor interest (10%+), there is a lot of momentum in real estate investment.? People buy because prices are going up.? Some buy because it is ?the last train out,? and they have to jump rather than be stranded.? Nonetheless, momentum tends to maintain in the short run, and the slowdown posited last fall definitely has not occurred.
  6. Value vs. Growth does not exactly apply here, but in the housing market, people are paying up for future prospects more than they used to, which is akin to growth investing.
  7. This is just an opinion, but those who are making money in residential real estate today are inexperienced and less rigorous than most good businessmen.? They see the potential for profit, but not the possibility of loss.
  8. Unfortunately, it is difficult to partially own a home.? Home ownership is largely a discrete phenomenon.
  9. Using a concept from value investing we can look at the earnings yield that residential real estate is throwing off.? Compare the rents one could receive from a property versus the cost that it would take to finance the property on a floating rate basis.? What I am seeing is that more and more hot coastal markets earn less from rents than they require in mortgage payments.? Property price appreciation is no longer a nice thing; it is required to bail out inverted investors.? Contrast this with those that invested in tech stocks on a levered basis in early 2000; they paid cash out to hold appreciating positions, before they paid cash to hold depreciating positions, before they blew the positions out in panic.

Corporate Behavior

Corporations respond to signals that market participants give. Near market tops, capital is inexpensive, so companies take the opportunity to raise capital.? Here are ways that corporate behaviors change near a market top:

  1. The quality of IPOs declines, and the dollar amount increases. By quality, I mean companies that have a sustainable competitive advantage, and that can generate ROE in excess of cost of capital within a reasonable period.
  2. Venture capitalists can do no wrong, so lots of money is attracted to venture capital.
  3. Meeting the earnings number becomes paramount. What is ignored is balance sheet quality, cash flow from operations, etc.
  4. There is a high degree of visible and/or hidden leverage. Unusual securitization and financing techniques proliferate. Off balance sheet liabilities become very common.
  5. Cash flow proves insufficient to finance some speculative enterprises and some financial speculators. This occurs late in the game. When some speculative enterprises begin to run out of cash and can’t find anyone to finance them, they become insolvent. This leads to greater scrutiny and a sea change in attitudes for financing of speculative companies.
  6. Elements of accounting seem compromised. Large amounts of earnings stem from accruals rather than cash flow from operations.
  7. Dividends become less common. Fewer companies pay dividends, and dividends make up a smaller fraction of earnings or free cash flow.

In short, cash is the lifeblood of business. During speculative times, watch it like a hawk. No array of accrual entries can ever provide quite the same certainty as cash and other highly liquid assets in a crisis.

  1. Every time a new home is sold, a privately placed IPO is held, with one buyer.
  2. When rates are low, it is no surprise that the homebuilders try to take advantage of the situation, and provide supply to meet the demand.? But if it is only rate-driven, rather than from growth in real incomes in the economy, the quality of the new buyers will be low, because now they can just barely finance the house they could not previously.? If their income level falters, they will not have any safety margin allowing them to hold onto the house.
  3. Private investors in residential real estate have multiplied at present.? This is akin to an increase in venture capital.
  4. Leverage for new buyers has never been higher.? This occurs through second and third mortgages, as well as subprime mortgages.? Interest only mortgages are commonplace among new mortgages.? Beyond this, investors hide themselves so that they can get the cheap rates associated with owner-occupied housing.
  5. With housing, making the earnings estimate means being able to pay the mortgage payment each month.? The degree of slack here is less than in the past.

Other Gauges

These two factors are more macro than the investor base or corporate behavior but are just as important.? Near a top, the following tends to happen:

  1. Implied volatility is low and actual volatility is high. When there are many momentum investors in a market, prices get more volatile. At the same time, there can be less demand for hedging via put options, because the market has an aura of inevitability.
  2. The Federal Reserve withdraws liquidity from the system. The rate of expansion of the Fed’s balance sheet slows. This causes short interest rates to rise, making financing more expensive. As this slows down the economy, speculative ventures get hit hardest. Remember that monetary policy works with a six- to 18-month lag; also, this indicator works in reverse when the Fed adds liquidity to the system.

One final note about my indicators: I have found that different indicators work for market bottoms and tops, so don’t blindly apply these in reverse to try to gauge bottoms.

?There is no options market for residential housing, but the Federal Reserve is still a major influence in the housing market.? When the Fed is withdrawing liquidity from the system, the price of housing tends to slow down, if not reverse.? Like the equity market, this is not immediate but follows a six- to 18-month lag.? This is another case of ?Don?t fight the Fed.?

No Top Now

There are reasons for concern in the present environment. Valuations are getting stretched in some parts of the market. Debt capital is cheap today. There are an increasing number of momentum investors in the market. Making the earnings estimate is once again of high importance. Nonetheless, a top in the market is not imminent, for these reasons:

  • The Fed is on hold for now. Liquidity is ample, perhaps too much so.
  • Actual price volatility is muted.
  • Since all of the accounting scandals of the last few years, many corporations have cleaned up their accounting and become more conservative.
  • Cash flow from operations comprises a high proportion of current earnings. More dividends are getting paid.
  • Leverage has not declined, but most corporations have succeeded in refinancing themselves in a low interest rate environment.
  • Conservative asset managers have not been fired yet.
  • Most IPOs don’t seem outlandish.

Not all of the indicators that I put forth have to appear for there to be a market top. A preponderance of them appearing would make me concerned, and that is not the case now.

?Some of my indicators are vague and require subjective judgment. But they’re better than nothing, and kept me out of the trouble in 1999 and 2000. I hope that I — and you — can achieve the same with them as we near the next top.

The current market environment is not as favorable as it was a year ago, but there are still some reasonably valued companies with seemingly clean accounting to buy at present. Right now, being long the market is more compelling to me than being flat, much less short.

I would retitle this the ?The Top is Coming Soon.?? The reasons that I mentioned to be worrisome remain:

  • Valuations are getting stretched in some parts of the market.
  • Debt capital is cheap today.
  • There are an increasing number of momentum investors in the market.
  • Making the earnings estimate is once again of high importance. (Gotta pay my mortgage!)

But there is more that makes me even more bearish:

  • The Fed is on the warpath, and liquidity is scarce.
  • Appraisals overstate the value of property that financial institutions lend against.
  • Homeowners have a smaller margin of safety than they have had in the past.
  • Leverage has increased for the average homebuyer.
  • People are paying more than they ought to for new and existing homes.

I am decidedly a bear on housing prices (at least in the hot coastal markets) at present, but I recognize that momentum can carry prices far beyond sustainable levels.? That?s the way markets work.

Nonetheless, I am still a bear on those who build homes, and those who finance them.? We are at an unsustainable place in the ability to finance the residential hosing market.? Either an increase in interest rates or a decrease in ability to pay for housing can derail the market.? This is the inflection point that we are at over the next year.

Mimicking the 1980s Value Line Contest

Mimicking the 1980s Value Line Contest

A letter from a reader:

Dear Mr. Merkel,

I am organizing an investment contest in my university and I want to do it properly. Can you provide me with data of stock divided into 10 groups based on volatility? I searched for it in Yahoo Finance, but if you have it compiled in a better way, it would be really helpful.?

Also, what do you mean when you say a minimum capitalization limit? Do you mean that the students should hold a certain amount of cash, that they are not allowed to invest?

Sometime in 1985-1986, [Corrected from 1983-1984 — DM] Value Line held a contest where it asked participants to pick ten stocks, one from each of ten price volatility groups, ranked from lowest to highest.? Why such a contest design?? Well, with most stock picking contests, the winner picks a really volatile stock, it soars, and he is the winner by accident.? I say “by accident” because there were others with similarly volatile stocks that lost.

Forcing players to pick a portfolio of stocks, including less volatile stocks, creates a real challenge that resembles real portfolios.?? Even though the contest will still run over 6 months[Corrected from 3-6 months — DM], the luck component is substantially reduced, even though results over a short time horizon are highly affected by luck and momentum.

Well, I’ve created a file that divides the US-traded market into 10 volatility buckets for you, using data from a screening package.?? Here’s the link.

3,589 stocks made the cut.? No ETFs, closed-end funds, etc.? No market caps below $100 million. No stocks with less than 3 years of trading history.? The market cap limit is there because really teeny stocks can fly, and skew the results.? And no, no cash is in the results, just the average returns of 10 stocks.

Here are the average price volatilities by bucket.? [Volatility is actual price volatility for 36 trailing months]

Bucket Avg Price Volatility
1 15.04
2 19.80
3 23.28
4 26.67
5 30.01
6 33.69
7 38.16
8 44.38
9 54.21
10 107.02

As for industries, the volatilities are what you might expect:

Ten Least Volatile

  • 1206 – Natural Gas Utilities
  • 1203 – Electric Utilities
  • 1209 – Water Utilities
  • 0512 – Fish/Livestock
  • 0506 – Beverages (Non-Alcoholic)
  • 0524 – Tobacco
  • 0715 – Insurance (Property & Casualty)
  • 0503 – Beverages (Alcoholic)
  • 0933 – Real Estate Operations
  • 0730 – S&Ls/Savings Banks

Ten Most Volatile

  • 0912 – Casinos & Gaming
  • 0930 – Printing Services
  • 0124 – Metal Mining
  • 0409 – Audio & Video Equipment
  • 0427 – Photography
  • 0969 – Schools
  • 0118 – Gold & Silver
  • 0803 – Biotechnology & Drugs
  • 0966 – Retail (Technology)
  • 0424 – Jewelry & Silverware

That said, such a contest would force some choices from both safe and volatile investments.

Smaller stocks are a lot more volatile than large stocks on average:

Mkt Cap Bucket

Average Vol Decile

100-300M

7.03

300M-1B

6.58

1-3B

5.36

3-10B

4.47

10-30B

3.90

30-100B

3.40

Over 100B

2.61

Finally, some countries are more or less volatile than others.? Of the 50 countries represented, trading on US exchanges, here are the most and least volatile:

Least Volatile

  • Colombia
  • Denmark
  • Panama
  • Philippines
  • Turkey
  • Belgium
  • United Kingdom
  • Chile
  • Switzerland
  • Japan

Most Volatile

  • Israel
  • Bahamas
  • Finland
  • Portugal
  • Russian Federation
  • India
  • Monaco
  • Greece
  • China
  • Argentina

Summary

My point in showing some of the divisions is to give an idea of ways to analyze and play the game.? You could also do it by momentum or valuation variables.? Momentum would probably work best in a short contest.

As for me in the early ’80s, I was a busy graduate student, so I looked at the stocks rank ed highest for Timeliness by Value Line in each volatility group, and selected the one for each group that I thought was the most promising.? As it was, I finished in the top 1%, but not high enough to win a prize.

Anyway, I think this is a great contest design, because it minimizes the ability of players to pick volatile stocks.? With ten stocks of varying volatility in the portfolio, stock-picking skill has a greater chance of being revealed.? Better would be a longer-term contest, but few have the patience for that, and players will argue that they should be allowed to trade, making for a more complex contest.

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