
The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Tuesday, April 20, 2005 ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: Chris Mayer chips in today with a look at an unknown but wildly successful value investor. This man's book on value investing is so sought after, it goes for $300 a copy
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------------------------- OUT OF PRINT INVESTMENT IDEAS By Christopher Mayer Seth Klarman is a value investor who has seemingly mastered the craft. Not only are his results strong - his Baupost partnerships have averaged returns of nearly 20% annually since their inception in 1983 - but he is also a graceful writer whose brilliance shines through in his annual letters to shareholders. Klarman stays out of the limelight and most investors have probably never heard of him. His annual letters are not widely distributed a la Berkshire Hathaway's, and though he wrote a terrific book called Margin of Safety in 1991, it has long been out of print and is exceedingly rare (commanding prices north of $300). I was able to read his book for this issue, thanks to the kindness of a friend who loaned me a copy, and I also have his 2004 letter to shareholders. I would like to share with you some of Klarman's insights. Klarman's own investment activities are shrouded in secrecy and his positions are not disclosed even in his letter. Categorically, he discloses the amounts he has invested in various asset classes. And one can see right away that Baupost is no run-of-the-mill value outfit. Baupost's partnerships hold a wide array of investments. Their positions range from fairly traditional value stocks to more esoteric investments like distressed debt, liquidations, and foreign equities or bonds. Cash balances averaged 50% in 2004, reflecting Klarman's inability to find what he considers reasonable values. "We are not seeking perfection in our investments," he explains, "just acceptable return prospects for the risk incurred." Klarman doesn't mind "doing nothing" on occasion. He is completely unperturbed by the idea of sitting on the sidelines holding cash whenever investment opportunities are scarce, though he recognizes that by doing so, his clients may be forced to accept lower returns. But Klarman is unrepentant about his recent inactivity. "Investors," he observes, "confuse decisions with diligence, activity with insight, and a fully invested posture with a worthwhile portfolio." Investing, he cautions, is more than just producing absolute returns. Too often investors focus on that one easy number - return - and ignore the risks incurred to generate that number. Certainly, a 20% annual gain in a conservative value stock is a much better result than the same return generated by "naked" options trading. In the latter instance, the risks incurred would be much greater. Part of the reason why investors focus so simplistically on return, Klarman thinks, is that risks are so hard to quantify. Some investors buy gold, for example, as a means of avoiding risk. But during some periods of time, owning gold can FEEL far riskier than owning tech stocks. Also, Klarman feels that few investors are able to maintain a truly long-term focus and that the psychological pressure to generate near-term returns is great. We've all fallen victim to this, watching over our stocks, checking in on them several times a day. Klarman reminds us: "What matters is not who performs best during sequential short-term intervals, but the attainment of a successful long-term, risk-adjusted, cumulative result." Returns are deceptive too, because some portion of it may be due to luck or short-term factors. Remember when Internet funds posted triple-digit annual returns? Many of them are no longer around. They were products of a crazy time and were not sustainable investment operations. The underlying methodology is a more important indicator of long-term success than the returns themselves. As Klarman writes, short-term results often belie the "absence of an investment philosophy that would suggest any replicability of results." In other words, lacking a sound investment philosophy, these short-term star performers are not likely to reliably reproduce good results in the future. What's it take to succeed as an investor? According to Klarman, "analytical rigor, intellectual honesty, resolve, humility, sound judgment and a contrarian instinct." Klarman also shares our preference for tangible assets. He writes in his book, "The problem with intangible assets, I believe, is that they hold little or no margin of safety
Tangible assets, by contrast, are more precisely valued and therefore provide investors with greater protection from loss." Tangible assets, like land and mountain resorts, and a generous margin of safety provided by a cheap valuation. It's comforting to know we share a similar philosophy with such an accomplished investor. [Ed. Note: Buying companies with "tangible assets that sweat," as Chris likes to call them, is a proven investment methodology. You'll love his latest pick
these giant slab of concrete really do sweat 300% profit margins, 24 hours- a-day, and that's not even the best part
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------------------------- Did You Notice
? By Carl Swenlin At DecisionPoint.com we have recently added a chart of S&P 600 Small-Cap 52-week new highs and new lows (NHNL). (We also have NHNL charts of the S&P 500, S&P 400 Mid-Cap, NYSE, and Nasdaq). This allows us to examine and determine the condition of each sector. As with other indicators, we look for divergences between the indicator and prices. New lows are particularly good for identifying long-term bottoms. Note the sharp contraction of new lows in March 2003 compared to October 2002 associated with price lows that were about the same. This positive divergence was a good sign that the bear market decline was ending. From March 2003 new highs began to expand until they peaked in September 2003. From there they began to contract and continued to do so for almost a year. So why didn't this negative divergence signal a major price top? Primarily because in a bull market negative divergences are very unreliable.
One way we can determine if a contraction of new highs is probably meaningless is by observing what is going on with new lows. Note how between September 2003 and August 2004 there was virtually no expansion of new lows until the end of the period when the bull market correction climaxed. Next we can see how new highs peaked in December 2004, and they have been contracting ever since. This time we can see that the angle of contraction is much steeper than the previous one, and, more important, there is a visible and persistent expansion of new lows. The negative divergence of new highs along with the expansion of new lows is one sign that the bull market may be over. [Ed. Note: Carl Swenlin is the president of Decision Point, a profound resource for technical analysis. Take a free tour; follow the link
http://www.decisionpoint.com ------------------------- And the Markets
| Tuesday | Monday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,127 | 10,071 | 40 | -6.1% | S&P | 1,153 | 1,146 | 9 | -4.9% | NASDAQ | 1,932 | 1,913 | 24 | -11.2% | 10-year Treasury | 4.19% | 4.27% | -0.05 | -0.02 | 30-year Treasury | 4.53% | 4.60% | -0.07 | -0.29 | Russell 2000 | 595 | 585 | 15 | -8.7% | Gold | $433.20 | $427.20 | $8.40 | -1.0% | Silver | $7.24 | $7.04 | $0.23 | 6.2% | CRB | 304.03 | 297.69 | 5.20 | 7.1% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $52.29 | $50.37 | $1.80 | 20.3% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 106.79 | JPY 107.57 | 0.98 | -4.1% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.3068 | $1.3015 | -146 | 3.6% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.9180 | $1.9032 | -256 | 0.0% |
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