
The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Friday, May 20, 2005 ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: Because a 50-1 long shot named Giacomo won this year's Kentucky Derby, a few lucky trifecta punters cashed in on a $133,184 payday. Meanwhile, the hordes of bettors who plunked down money on the favorites walked away with nothing but regrets. Be one of the lucky few, Chris Mayer shows us how
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------------------------- VALUE INVESTING
BY A NOSE By Chris Mayer Because a 50-1 long shot named Giacomo won this year's Kentucky Derby, a few lucky trifecta punters cashed in on a $133,184 payday. Meanwhile, the hordes of bettors who plunked down money on the favorites walked away with nothing but regrets. Betting on favorites rarely produces satisfactory results, whether at Churchill Downs or on Wall Street. Out on the racetrack, the old-time handicappers know it's best to "copper the public," or to bet against the favorites. In the stock market, a few savvy investors have produced brilliant results by doing exactly the same thing: betting against the favorites, while betting on the underdogs. In August 2000, Fortune magazine published a list of its favorite stocks, entitled "10 Stocks to Last the Decade." Here's a list of the companies in the report: Broadcom Charles Schwab Enron Genentech Morgan Stanley Nokia Nortel Networks Oracle Univision Viacom Pity the investors who heeded Fortune's advice
"[These stocks] were the glory stocks of the fin-de-siecle bubble," recalls Louis Lowenstein, professor of Law and Economic Studies at Columbia University, "and their high price-earnings ratios - only one under 50 - reflected the faddishness of the age. Fortune, swallowing the popular perceptions whole, said they were ten stocks to let you 'retire when ready.'" On the contrary, owning these stocks probably pushed retirement back several years for many of Fortune's readers. Collectively, these stocks lost more than 80% of their value within two years. Even as the decade approaches the halfway mark, Fortune's "Top 10" is still producing abysmal results. But there were some investors who didn't own any of these names. In fact, Lowenstein, in his paper (titled "Searching for Rational Investors in a Perfect Storm") found ten of them. Lowenstein asked Bob Goldfarb of the well-respected value shop, Sequoia Fund, to select ten funds that practiced "true blue" value investment disciplines, as opposed to the many who simply wear the label. Goldfarb identified the following ten funds for Lowenstein: Clipper Fund FPA Capital First Eagle Global Longleaf Partners Legg Mason Value Mutual Beacon Oak Value Oakmark Select Source Capital Tweedy Browne American Value Lowenstein found that all of them steered clear of the names on Fortune's ignominious list, with one small exception. The celebrated Bill Miller of Legg Mason owned Nokia, but since it represented less than 2% of his portfolio, and since he bought it in 1996 and was holding a 1,900% gain - well, it's hard to be overly critical. (Mutual Beacon was actually short Viacom and Nortel). Lowenstein tested this group of funds for the years 1999- 2003, which he felt were among the most volatile in recent history. During these five years, the S&P 500 actually showed negative average annual returns of 0.57%. That's right, over the five-year stretch the market lost money and thus, should make a fine test for this stable of value funds. Well, they performed brilliantly. The boring old value disciples beat the market handily over that span - earning an average annual return of 10%. "A five-sigma event," Lowenstein calls the achievement, "a statistical marvel that pure chance cannot explain." More interesting, is how they did it. 1) Own a Limited Number of Stocks Contrary to the popular wisdom that advises holding lots of stocks for purposes of diversification, these investors pursued the opposite tactic. Most were fairly concentrated; Longleaf's top five stocks often represented one-third of its total portfolio's value. These funds were choosy about what they put in their portfolios and when they didn't find what they were looking for, cash filled the void. Sitting on cash is always better than doing something dumb. It's like the horseplayers who know not to bet every race. Most of these funds held large cash positions of 30-40% during the bubble years. Several were closed to new investor because they didn't want to accept any new money for which they had no compelling ideas. The average domestic mutual fund holds about 160 stocks, compared to 54, on average, for Lowenstein's value group. In fact, seven of the ten value funds surveyed owned 34 or less, with the average being pulled higher by the internationally diverse First Eagle and Mutual Beacon funds. 2) Maintain a Low Portfolio Turnover The average mutual fund has a turnover ratio of about 121%, meaning they "flipped" their whole portfolio once every ten months, on average, thus incurring heavy transaction costs, while also reducing the amount of capital gains generated. By contrast, the ten value funds held their positions for five years - on average. However, these managers don't buy and hold forever; they sell when things get pricey. Miller, for example, sold Nokia almost at the same time Fortune was advising readers to buy it. 3) Stocks as Part Interests in a Business The last trait is harder to quantify because it is not statistical in nature. But Lowenstein found that each of these outperforming funds shared a common philosophical approach to investing - an approach inspired by Graham and Dodd, the "fathers" of value investing. "The group of ten all stands on the common ground of patient, company by company analysis," writes Lowenstein, "always mindful that the stocks they are buying are part interests in a business." For this select group of mutual fund managers, stocks are much more than mere ticker symbols. Each represents an operating enterprise, with its own unique attributes. Each of the funds that Lowenstein examined applies its investment philosophy in different ways. Some focus on small caps, some on large caps and some on international stocks. But they all seem to embrace the idea that successful investing relies upon a long-term commitment to a few, well-chosen stocks. The three main tactics common to the 10 managers that Lowenstein studied all seem pretty straightforward and intuitive. Yet, very few investors bother to pursue a similar approach. Bill Ruane at Sequoia Fund once estimated that only 5% of all professionally managed money follows the basic principles of value investing. Instead, most investors - professional and non-professional alike - prefer to bet on the favorites, and that's a strategy that almost always raises the odds against success. [Ed. Note: Chris Mayer is editor of the Fleet Street Letter, a service dedicated to finding true value in the stock market. If you are interested in investing in companies selected using the guidelines laid out in the essay above, click here: http://www1.youreletters.com/t/132173/4903447/775105/0 --- Advertisement --- ------------------------- Did You Notice
? By Carl Swenlin Decision Point tracks actual cash flowing into and out of Rydex mutual funds, and, while cash flow normally runs parallel to price, divergences can often appear ahead of price reversals. Back in December I wrote an article on the Rydex Precious Metals Fund showing how rising prices and negative cash flow will usually result in a price correction. Now we have a situation where cash flow into the Precious Metals Fund has been flat and now positive, while prices have been falling like a rock. This indicates that bulls are trying to hold their ground and that accumulation of precious metals shares has been taking place. The end result will probably be a rally in precious metals shares. 
While a longer-term rally could ensue, my observation is that these cash flow divergences only have short-term implications. Also, it is important to remember that the Rydex Precious Metals Fund only accounts for a small slice of the total market in gold stocks, and this small picture may not be representative of the big picture. [Ed. Note: Carl Swenlin is president of Decision Point, a market research website where you'll find all the info you need to make solid investment decisions, organized into charts and reports you can access with a click of your mouse. Take a free tour of the website here: http://www.decisionpoint.com ------------------------- And the Markets
| Thursday | Wednesday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,493 | 10,464 | 353 | -2.7% | S&P | 1,191 | 1,186 | 37 | -1.7% | NASDAQ | 2,043 | 2,031 | 66 | -6.1% | 10-year Treasury | 4.11% | 4.08% | -0.01 | -0.11 | 30-year Treasury | 4.44% | 4.44% | -0.04 | -0.38 | Russell 2000 | 610 | 608 | 28 | -6.3% | Gold | $420.60 | $421.90 | $0.20 | -3.9% | Silver | $7.14 | $7.19 | $0.23 | 4.8% | CRB | 293.54 | 294.85 | -0.31 | 3.4% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $46.92 | $47.25 | -$1.75 | 8.0% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 107.62 | JPY 106.85 | -0.30 | -4.9% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2627 | $1.2686 | 6 | 6.8% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.8372 | $1.8411 | 134 | 4.2% |
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