Sunday, 12 January 2020

How Much Research and Analysis Are Sufficient?

Some investors insist on trying to obtain perfect knowledge about their impending investments, researching companies until they think they know everything there is to know about them. They study the industry and the competition, contact former employees, industry consultants, and analysts, and become personally acquainted with top management. They analyze financial statements for the past decade and stock price trends for even longer.

This diligence is admirable, but it has two shortcomings. 

  • First, no matter how much research is performed, some information always remains elusive; investors have to learn to live with less than complete information. 
  • Second, even if an investor could know all the facts about an investment, he or she would not necessarily profit. 
This is not to say that fundamental analysis is not useful. It certainly is.

  • But information generally follows the well-known 80/20 rule: the first 80 percent of the available information is gathered in the first 20 percent of the time spent. 
  • The value of in-depth fundamental analysis is subject to diminishing marginal returns. 
  • Information is not always easy to obtain. Some companies actually impede its flow. Understandably, proprietary information must be kept confidential. 
  • The requirement that all investors be kept on an equal footing is another reason for the limited dissemination of information; information limited to a privileged few might be construed as inside information. Restrictions on the dissemination of information can complicate investors' quest for knowledge nevertheless. 
Moreover, business information is highly perishable. 

  • Economic conditions change, industries are transformed, and business results are volatile. 
  • The effort to acquire current, let alone complete information is never-ending. 
  • Meanwhile, other market participants are also gathering and updating information, thereby diminishing any investor's informational advantage. 
David Dreman recounts the story of an analyst so knowledgeable about Clorox that he could recite bleach shares by brand in every small town in the Southwest and tell you the production levels of Clorox's line number 2, plant number 3. But somehow, when the company began to develop massive problems, he missed the signs....' The stock fell from a high of 53 to 11." 

Although many Wall Street analysts have excellent insight into industries and individual companies, the results of investors who follow their recommendations may be less than stellar. 

  • In part this is due to the pressure placed on these analysts to recommend frequently rather than wisely, but it also exemplifies the difficulty of translating information into profits. 
  • Industry analysts are not well positioned to evaluate the stocks they follow in the context of competing investment alternatives. 
  • Merrill Lynch's pharmaceutical analyst may know everything there is to know about Merck and Pfizer, but he or she knows virtually nothing about General Motors, Treasury bond yields, and Jones & Laughlin Steel first-mortgage bonds. 
Most investors strive fruitlessly for certainty and precision, avoiding situations in which information is difficult to obtain.

  • Yet high uncertainty is frequently accompanied by low prices. 
  • By the time the uncertainty is resolved, prices are likely to have risen. 
  • Investors frequently benefit from making investment decisions with less than perfect knowledge and are well rewarded for bearing the risk of uncertainty. 
  • The time other investors spend delving into the last unanswered detail may cost them the chance to buy in at prices so low that they offer a margin of safety despite the incomplete information.

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