Friday, 21 June 2013

Price is the essential determinant in every investment equation.

Zweig:
How does Baupost define a value company, and what is your average holding period?

Klarman:

With the exception of an arbitrage or a necessarily short-term investment, we enter every trade with the idea that we are going to hold to maturity in the case of a bond and for a really long time, potentially forever, in the case of a stock.  Again, if you don’t do that, you are speculating and not investing. We may, however, turn over positions more often.  If we buy a bond at 50 and think it’s worth par in three years but it goes to 90 the year we bought it, we will sell it because the upside/downside has totally changed. The remaining return is not attractive compared with the risk of continuing to hold.  In our view, there is no such thing as a value company. Price is the essential determinant in every investment equation. At some price, every company is a buy; at some price, every company is a hold; and at a still higher price, every company is a sell. We do not really recognize the concept of a value company.

No comments:

Post a Comment