Saturday 10 March 2012

Types of Growth and DCF models

Models of Investment Valuation





Declining DDM  



Constant DDM   


                
Slow Growth DDM  


             
Fast Growth DDM




Forecasts of Dividends or Free Cash Flow



Logit Growth DDM 
                     

2-Stage Growth DDM           



FCF Constant D/E                 



FCF Rising D/E




http://www.numeraire.com/value.htm

Some of the most common types of intrinsic economic valuation model.


Instead of estimating each cash flow for each time period using a general-purpose DCF model that can be used for any investment asset, we can make reasonable simplifying assumptions for different kinds of specific investments in order to develop formulas by which these estimates can be made.

  • These formulas provide shortcuts to operationalize the theory, and represent different types of the dividend discount model (DDM). 
  • In each model type, dividends or free-cash-flow continue forever, but a terminal price may be assumed to simplify the analysis. 
  • These model types can be given names so as to emphasize their specific simplifying assumptions.


Some of the most common types of intrinsic economic valuation model are
  • constant dividend in perpetuity,
  • constant dividend growth rate in perpetuity, e.g., decline (negative growth), slow growth, and fast growth,
  • constant multistage dividend growth rates, e.g., two-stage and three-stage,
  • variable logistic (LOGIT) dividend growth rates,
  • free-cash-flow (FCF) used to estimate the cash distributions to equity owners, e.g., free-cash-flow with constant financial leverage (debt/equity ratio) and free-cash-flow with increasing financial leverage (rising debt/equity ratio), which in turn can be used either in a general DCF model or in a specific DDM model,
  • special situations handled by a general-purpose DCF model that is customized to fit the circumstances of each investment case, e.g., rapid growth by external merger or acquisition (M&A) or by internal sudden expansion. Relatively complex M&A models are available elsewhere. In such cases the capital gains component of total return can greatly dominate the dividend component, especially when the number of years of dividends in the analysis is small.
Following the example of John Burr Williams (1938), four types of models of investment valuation and four types of dividend forecasts are illustrated below.

  • The vertical axis is cash flow, and the scale is log-linear except for FCF forecasts which is linear. 
  • The horizontal axis is time in years, and it continues to infinity. 
  • A company lives forever, but its estimate of dividends or cash flow can have a finite life with a capital gain at the end of the forecast period.

Types of Growth
 
Models of Investment Valuation
Declining DDMConstant DDMSlow Growth DDMFast Growth DDM
 
Forecasts of Dividends or Free Cash Flow
Logit Growth DDM2-Stage Growth DDMFCF Constant D/EFCF Rising D/E

  • Slow and fast growth are relative to current average growth rates, historical precedents and the discount rate used in the model.
  • Fast growth includes speculative growth. 
  • LOGIT growth is a special case of S-curve growth for rapid followed by slower growth phases. 
  • These growth patterns may be used in multi-stage models with different patterns for different stages of growth. See theory for the mathematics behind these models.


These models have been implemented in DCF Valuator, a free online web-based application that estimates intrinsic value per share, goal implied value, range of value with Monte Carlo simulation scenarios, and rate of return on investment for any common stock in any currency. For a walk-through tour of the DCF Valuatorclick here and invoke any of the model types in the table.

 http://www.numeraire.com/value.htm

DCF Valuation: The classic work of John Burr Williams

The valuation model for estimating the investment value of an operating enterprise in the private market, independent of the stock market price quotations, is based on the discounted cash flow (DCF) method using the time value of money. 


The classic work of John Burr Williams (see the models section at theory ) is the basis for the development of most equity valuation models, and his work is here referred to as the DCF Model rather than the narrower misleading name of Dividend Discount Model or DDM


For academic models of equity valuation, see Investments by Brodie, Kane and Marcus in General Books, or go to textbook models. For less academic approaches to firm valuation, see Damodaran on Valuation in Special Books, or go to his practical modelsof equity valuation. For a practical firm valuation model, see the McKinsey model tutorial with an example company valuation and downloads in a working paper at the Stockholm School of Economics. The McKinsey approach is the subject of the book titled Valuation by Tom Copeland et al in General Books.

The general model can be expressed verbally, mathematically, and graphically. 


Thus, in words:

1. If you commit your cash to a particular investment opportunity, then what cash can you expect to get out of it in return? What is your reward for abstinence and risk-taking?

2. What are the estimated net cash flows attributable to this proposed investment; i.e., what are the expected dividend distributions and the future terminal selling price?

3. What is the present value of these net cash flows, discounted at an appropriate rate of interest? This is the intrinsic economic value of the equity investment.

4. What is the margin of safety, both in dollars and in percentage? Is the intrinsic value per share of common stock greater than the stock market asking-price quotation by an amount sufficiently compelling to justify a long-term commitment to this particular investment?


Mathematically, the DCF model can be expressed both in an abstract standard form for the general case and in many concrete forms for simplifying special cases. Conceptually, the DCF Model is like an ideal of Plato which manifests itself in different empirical forms. We refer to these empirical forms types of the DCF Model. In all forms, the net present value of the investment, i.e., its intrinsic economic value, is equated with the sum of the products of each net cash flow and its discount rate. After intrinsic value has been estimated from fundamental data, it can be expressed in terms of earnings, book value, dividends, sales, cash flow, or other accounting measures, but this is not necessary. 

Graphically, the model can be expressed in two dimensions as a horizontal time line with vertical bars showing positive and negative net cash flows, above and below the line respectively, from the date of your investment at time zero to the date of your future sale at the end of your horizon for this investment.


http://www.numeraire.com/value.htm

PE/G ratio

Some investment strategies seek growth for its own sake or growth for the sake of growth rather than growth for the sake of value. 


Wall Street wisdom (pardon the oxymoron) adheres to the KISS principle as its highest virtue: Keep It Short and Simple. Most highly prized by brokers are slogans that fit easily on t-shirts and bumper stickers. 


As an example, one popular investment rule of thumb is that for a fully and fairly valued growth stock, the stock's price-to-earnings ratio should be equal to the percentage of the growth rate of the earnings per share of the associated company, i.e. PE = G. As with any such rule of thumb, this is not only superficial but also arbitrary and capricious. 


A common screen based on this heuristic is the ratio of the PE ratio to the EPS growth rate, or the PE/G. In an effort to better fit the historical performance of cyclical stocks and large-cap stocks, ad hoc variations on the PE/G ratio include 

  • (1) using an estimated future growth rate instead of an historical growth rate or PE/FG, 
  • (2) adding the dividend yield percentage to the EPS growth rate percentage or PE/DG, and 
  • (3) adding two time the dividend yield percentage to the EPS growth rate percentage or PE/2DG.

A rapidly growing company presents special problems in valuation.

A rapidly growing company presents special problems in valuation. John Burr Williams (1938:560) succinctly writes "They had high hopes for their business, but no logical evaluation of these hopes in terms of stock prices. The very fact that [the company] was one of the hardest of all stocks to appraise rationally was the reason why it sold at the most extravagant prices, for speculation ever feeds on mystery, as we have seen before."

The problem with estimating an approximate appraisal value for rapidly growing companies is presented most clearly in the St. Petersburg Paradox. As David Durand wrote: "With growth stocks, the uncritical use of conventional discount formulas is particularly likely to be hazardous; for, as we have seen, growth stocks represent the ultimate in investments of long duration. Likewise, they seem to represent the ultimate in difficulty of evaluation." 

For practical purposes, it is sometimes sufficient to estimate either the upper bound or the lower bound of the investment value range of a stock.

The investment value of a stock is conceptually a single point value, the mean of the distribution of investment value. Operationally, investment value is estimated as a range of values. 


For practical purposes, it is sometimes sufficient to estimate either the upper bound of the investment value range to deselect a stock or the lower bound of the investment value range to select a stock. 

  • As an example, if the upper bound of investment value of a given stock is confidently estimated to be no higher than $50 per share and the current quoted market price for this stock is $75 per share, then this particular stock can be deselected. 
  • Similarly, if the lower bound of investment value of another stock is confidently estimated to be at least $50 per share and the current quoted market price for this stock is $25 per share, then this particular stock can be selected.

Concerning the range of estimated appraisal values, Williams (1954:32-33) explained: 
"Scholar: Yes, economics supplies the answer to many questions of great practical importance. 
Skeptic: How can it possibly do so if it lacks the mathematical precision of astronomy? 
Scholar: Economics is more like chemistry than it is like astronomy. Or rather, it is like that branch of chemistry known as qualitative analysis, in contrast to quantitative analysis. In economics, just as in qualitative analysis, you don't always have to have an exact answer to have a useful one. For instance, if a chemist testifies in court that a dead man was found to have enough arsenic in his system to kill an ox, let alone a human being, then it really doesn't matter whether the amount of arsenic involved is two grams or ten, so long as the chemist is absolutely sure that what he found was really arsenic and not a related substance like tin or antimony. Precise measurement is unnecessary. The same is true in economics.

The four basic factors needed to appraise the intrinsic value of an operating enterprise and thus its common stock equity


An important distinction is the difference between reported accounting value (book value or net worth per share) and intrinsic economic value (discounted future dividends per share).

  • Book value does not reflect inflation and obsolescence, nor does it include intangible assets such as "franchises" and technological prowess resulting from R&D expenditures. 
  • In addition, book value per share is merely a mechanical screening ratio set at an arbitrary cutoff point which does not reflect judgment and does not reliably distinguish between underpriced bargain stocks and fairly-priced junk stocks.


Intrinsic economic value of an operating enterprise is appraised by use of discounted cash flow techniques in the so-called dividend discount model originated by John Burr Williams.

  • He made allowance for both dividends and future selling price. 
  • He also explains how the transposed dividend discount model can be used to determine what the market as a whole is expecting, and this can be compared with the investor's expectation.


As John Burr Williams (1938: page 466) wrote: "in other words, Investment Analysis usually measures the relative rather than the absolute value of any stock, and leaves to the economist the broad question of whether stocks in general are selling too high or too low. ... From the point of view of this book, which is concerned with absolute rather than relative value, ... "

According to Williams (1938), the four basic factors needed to appraise the intrinsic value of an operating enterprise and thus its common stock equity, two economy-wide factors and two company-specific factors. The economy-wide factors are general price level inflation and the real interest rate. The company-specific factors are the estimated future net cash distributions to the stockholders and the discount rate or rates applied to those cash receipts. For foreign companies, a fifth factor may be required: the currency exchange rate, which is discussed at length by Williams (1954). This is important enough to justify a table to repeat it for emphasis.
Factors of Intrinsic Economic Value
Number
Description
1
general price level inflation rate
2
real interest rate
3
dividends or free cash flows to equity
4
discount rate or rates
5
currency exchange rate, where applicable

Is faith in speculation about future earnings more, or less, reasonable than faith in appraisal of today's value?

Reliance on the earnings estimates of experts can range from blind faith at one end of the spectrum to reasoned faith at the other end.. 


Even if an investor knows the difference between either cash flow or "free" cash flow, however defined, and true long-term economic earnings, and even if an investor accepts the operating definition of earnings used by experts, the acceptance of their estimates of earnings and growth in earnings constitutes an act of faith. 


Is faith in speculation about future earnings more, or less, reasonable than faith in appraisal of today's value?


Forward-looking statements about capital spending plans, R&D projects, share (re)purchase programs, and other uncommitted contingent activities find their public forum in press releases that are carefully worded to avoid class action lawsuits by disgruntled shareholders.

The important point is that growth per se does not always create value for the common stock owners. As John Burr Williams wrote (1938: 419): "That a non-growing industry can be profitable is shown ... , and that a fast-growing industry can be unprofitable is shown ... "

Statements about future earnings growth rates are opinions, not facts.

There are three main types of estimates of the future. In order of increasing sophistication, they can be referred to as the naive, the gullible, and the expert. 
  • The naive forecast is based on linear trend extrapolations. 
  • The gullible forecast is based on analysts' estimates, such as provided by S&P Compustat's Analysts' Consensus Estimates, ACE, or by Institutional Brokers Estimate System, I/B/E/S. 
  • The expert prediction is based on rigorous systematic study of a company, its industry, and the economy.
John Neville Keynes in his Scope and Method originated the use of the term "positive" to refer to "what is" and the term "normative" to refer to "what should be."   These terms make the distinction between 
  • facts about the present, on one hand, and 
  • opinions about either the speculative future or an ideal state on the other hand, respectively. 
The important point here is that statements about future earnings growth rates are normative, not positive. They are opinions, not facts. 
  • No one's crystal ball is any more reliable than any one else's. 
  • Therefore, if not self-reliant, then one must rely on the expert opinion of others who have different agendas and conflicting interests. 
Similarly, statements about efficient and rational markets where all prices instantly converge to intrinsic value are normative, not positive. 
  • They are not reality, but rather utopian ideals approached by stock markets as complex aggregates but not by individual stocks. 
  • Perfectly efficient markets are necessary as a fixed standard for comparison, and thus serve a useful methodological function.

The valuation method considers no daily quotes, no charts, no breaking headlines, and no hot tips.

The method of valuation contrasts with both the method of forecasting growth for the sake of growth and the method of technical analysis. 


The valuation method considers no daily quotes, no charts, no breaking headlines, and no hot tips. 

  • Also, it does not take at face value any broker opinions or brokerage house research: neither fresh, bullish-sales biased, investment-banking compromised, buy/sell/hold recommendations with occasional self-contradictions and internal inconsistency for presentation to the larger institutional customers, nor stale versions of these same recommendations repackaged for smaller individual customers. 


  • Most importantly, no forecasts: neither those for official public consumption, nor the private "whispered" versions shared among colleagues. 
In short, no distractions, just the relevant facts. This, of course, does not greatly increase the demand for such information services.

There is no intrinsic value of gold or other commodities. They are inert, non-earning assets.

There is no intrinsic value of gold or other commodities. They are inert, non-earning assets. 

  • As an investment, gold is a pure speculation because there is no internal creation of value. 
  • Industrial metals, such as copper, are less speculative than precious metals because their prices more generally reflect demand and supply. 
Nevertheless, extrinsic factors operating through buyers and sellers determine the price of every commodity. 


In contrast, for equities and other claims on assets, their value is intrinsic because it is generated by the underlying operating enterprise in the form of earnings, dividends, and cash flows. 


There are no intrinsic prices, only intrinsic values.


http://www.numeraire.com/value.htm

Economic value refers to intrinsic, long-term, ultimate value of an operating enterprise as determined by net cash flow analysis.

The term value can refer to either accounting value, market value, or economic value. 


Measures of accounting value include book value per share, net worth per share, net asset value per share, and net tangible asset value per share. 


Market value refers to common stock equity capitalization or financial "size", and is equal to the share price times the number of shares outstanding. Publicly-traded market value includes only those shares that are not held in private accounts. 


Measures of accounting value and market value can be used for quick mechanical screening criteria for filtering out common stocks for further investigation. 


In contrast, economic value refers to intrinsic, long-term, ultimate value of an operating enterprise as determined by net cash flow analysis using spreadsheets and formulas. 

Intrinsic value is independent of quoted market prices. Accounting value is commonly confused with economic value. 

Economic value can refer to either value in use or value in exchange.


Economic value can refer to either value in use or value in exchange.
  • For example, water has high value in use but due to an excess supply may have a low price or be free for the taking. 
  • Diamonds, in contrast, have high value in exchange due to their real or artificially-managed low supply relative to demand. 

The great 'paradox of value' was obvious when contrasting the useless dearness of the diamond to the cheapness of the water without which we cannot live.   A start is supposed to have been made at connecting value to a general theory of utility.  The apparent paradox between the value of water and diamonds is resolved by the difference between total utility and marginal utility.

Price is not value, pricing is not valuation, and pricing models are not valuation models.

A valuation model is an effective method for estimating economic value.


Another term that is used to refer to economic value is "fundamental value", which derives the quantity of value from so-called fundamental economic metrics generated by a firm at the firm-level, in contrast to pricing metrics generated by a securities market at the security-level. 


Price is not value, pricing is not valuation, and pricing models are not valuation models. 


The conventional academic capital asset pricing model has one factor, the beta coefficient. 

  • Models that include beta are pricing models, not valuation models. 
  • This is not merely a matter of semantics. 
The difference between price and value, referred to as the margin of safety, is the raison d'etre of investment valuation independent of market pricing.


http://www.numeraire.com/value.htm

The quantity of value is an estimate or approximation. Intrinsic value can be quantified as Net Present Value (NPV) based on Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis.

The quantity of value is an estimate or approximation. The estimated quantity of value is based on an appraisal or a valuation. It can be expressed either as 

  • an interval estimate or 
  • a range of quantitative values, or 
  • as a single-point estimate or 
  • a single quantity of varying precision. 
Either way, intrinsic value can be quantified as Net Present Value (NPV) based on Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis.

Price is not value, neither in concept nor in quantity. Price is a market-generated quantity. 

  • The confusing term "market value" is really market price. 
  • The confusing term "fair market value" is really fair market price. 
  • The fair market price is the price that equals the single quantity that best approximates investment value. 
The best point estimate of investment value is the mean of the distribution of values rather than the median of the distribution of values or the midpoint of the range of values.

    A distinction between deep value and surface value. Deep value is independent of market price.

    The term "investment value" refers to the concept of pure, true, intrinsic, economic value. 

    • The phrase "expected investment value" refers to investment value adjusted for risk and uncertainty
    • Economic valuation is the estimation of economic value.

    Even with all these qualifying adjectives to clarify the meaning, the phrase is awkward and remains ambiguous. A less ambiguous distinction is between deep value and surface value. 


    Deep value is investment value based primarily on intrinsic economic value estimated from expected future discounted cash flows and buttressed by accounting book value, quality and other aspects of value independent of market price. 
    • Deep intrinsic value can include qualitative factors such as brand recognition, franchise, corporate governance, labor relations, government contracts and assets that are not usually marked to market. 
    • A corporate governance score such as Standard & Poor's CGS [PDF or HTML] use criteria that may be indicators of long-term value creation, including both a Corporate Governance Score for a company and a separate Country Governance Classification for its country of origin. 
    • The criteria are fairness, transparency, accountability and responsibility, as elaborated in Standard & Poor's Corporate Governance Scores: Criteria, Methodology and Definitions, July, 2002. 
    Surface value is a misnomer -- it is not really value but rather market price, usually expressed as a ratio either with accounting items such as earnings, dividends, net worth, and sales, or with growth rate. 

    • Surface value is analogous to unit pricing of fungible commodities by number, by volume, and by weight, for comparison shopping without regard to quality.


    http://www.numeraire.com/value.htm

    Why not start a portfolio for your child, like Simple Soul does for his daughter, Nora?


    [quote author=soulsimple link=topic=27804.msg735122#msg735122 date=1328783721]
    http://www.investlah.com/forum/index.php/topic,27804.0.html
    goals for her portfolio.
    after she was borned i started a little portfolio for her. hope that it grows well till she is 20. simple goal of 15% returns yearly. hope to add funds yearly into it(on top of dividends received) n might diversify into diff assets as time n opportunity permits.
    how she is faring ok(i guess). pls feel free to share your opinions.
     :)
    [/quote]


    Nora was born on 8.9.2011.  Her father, Simple Soul started a portfolio for her.  Here is her portfolio.
    http://www.investlah.com/forum/index.php/topic,27804.msg735140.html#msg735140

                     Avg. Price         9.3.2012           % Gain
    Dlady............RM 19.8 ......RM.29.9............ 51.01%
    GuanChg......... 2.183...........2.61...........19.56%
    LPI..................12.29..........13.62..........10.82%
    Nestle..............47.46..........56.24..........18.50%
    Padini.............. 0.998..........1.52............52.30%
    PetDag.............16.02..........18.36.........14.61%
    UtdPlt.............. 17.36...........25............. 44.01%

    Let's have a good look.  It is a portfolio of 7 stocks that are highly selected, that is, a concentrated portfolio.  5 of these stocks are from the consumer sector (Dlady, GuanChg, Nestle, Padini and PetDag), 1 from the insurance sector and 1 from the plantation sector.

    All these companies are growing their revenues and earnings year on year.  Their businesses also throw up a lot of free cash flows.  All give dividends.  Another feature common to all these companies is they are growth companies, growing at various rates.  

    What about their durable competitive advantage and economic moats?  Yes, these businesses, except UtdPlt do have these qualities.  UtdPlt is a well run plantation company and presently enjoy the good returns due to the high price from the crude palm oil.  CPO prices can be cyclical and CPO is traded like a commodity with its price determined by supply and demand.

    By buying these companies at a time when the market was down in September 2011 and last quarter of 2011, Simple Soul has managed to buy these wonderful companies at fair or bargain prices.  The market is often volatile and in the short run, psychological factors drive stock prices.  However, over the long term, the stock prices are driven by fundamental factors.  By staying with wonderful companies with durable competitive advantage and economic moat, this portfolio is well constructed to protect against any downside risk and with a promise of a fairly good return.

    Let's study the gains of the individual companies in this portfolio over this short period since its inception in September.  For the smart and shrewd investor, the like of Simple Soul, it is comforting to know that he can find bargains in September when everyone was leaving the market in disgust.  But this isn't surprising for someone who practises value investing.  Another point of note is to realise that it is not uncommon to see a stock price going up 50% or down the equivalent 30% within a short period of 1 year.  3 stocks in this portfolio have gone up about 50%.  The gains in the other 4 stocks are in the teens.  Who said that you have to invest in "lousy" penny stocks to seek such gains?  

    However, the long term performance of this fairly concentrated portfolio will track the earnings growth of the individual stocks.  For this, Simple Soul has certainly selected his stocks well.

    This is a story of a caring father who is investing for his daughter Nora.  Warren Buffett started his investing at the age of 13 years, and seriously so in his early 20s.  As Nora has a good 20 years headstart in her investing career and knowing the power of compounding, I shudder to project her networth when she too reaches her age of 80s. :-)

    Well, Nora will realise someday how lucky she is having a caring father who has such a foresight.  Happy Investing to Simple Soul, 

    Friday 9 March 2012

    Currency Trading for DUMMIES (Getting Started Edition)



    Currency Trading for DUMMIES


    GETTING STARTED EDITION


    by Mark Galant and Brian Dolan




    https://secure.efxnow.com/forex2/eng/ct-dummies.pdf



    Investors In Common Stocks Must Get Valuation Right; Here’s How


    Mar 09, 2012 04:54AM GMT
     
    The investment industry is replete with pundits and self-proclaimed experts espousing various principles and rules that allegedly are the best way to value a stock correctly. Unfortunately, and in most cases, these rules are stated as fact, but unfortunately very few facts are ever presented to back them up.  In other words, much of it is either opinion or gleaned from something they’ve read or been taught before.  But even as a young boy, I was never willing to accept dogma as fact without simultaneously being provided supporting evidence and a logical explanation as to the “why” that they work.

    In fifth grade I was once sent to the principal’s office by my English teacher because I made her cry.  She cried because every time she would regurgitate a rule of grammar, punctuation or spelling, she expected me to accept it unconditionally, merely because she said so.  For example, she would say something like I before E except after C expecting me to simply accept this rule as fact. I, on the other hand, not meaning to be argumentative or disruptive, only inquisitive, would immediately raise my hand in class and ask a simple question-why? No matter what rule she would state, I would relentlessly raise my hand and ask okay, but why?  I was not willing to have the rule dictated to me; I needed to understand why it was the rule and why it was important.

    Now that I am an adult, I have continued to embrace my inquisitive nature, and to this day I will not accept a dogmatic statement without understanding why.  On the other hand, when I can review supporting evidence that validates the rule and therefore understand its significance, relevance and validity, then and only then, through my understanding it, can I embrace it willingly and passionately.  Therefore, as an author of financial articles, I believe my readers should hold me to this same standard that I hold others to.  Consequently, this article is designed to illuminate the “why” behind widely accepted notions of valuing a business primarily based on earnings (discounting cash flows).

    When Investing in a Business Earnings Determine Intrinsic Value

    In his best-selling book One Up On Wall Street, famed portfolio manager Peter Lynch dedicated his entire 10th chapter to earnings and thus titled it –Earnings, Earnings, Earnings. In the chapter’s second paragraph he succinctly stated the importance of earnings as follows:

    “There are many theories, but to me, it always comes down to earnings and assets.  Especially earnings.  Sometimes it takes years for the stock price to catch up to a company’s value, and the down periods last so long that investors begin to doubt that it will ever happen. But value always wins out-or at least in enough cases that it’s worthwhile to believe it.”

    An important foundational principle behind this discussion is the idea that we are talking about investing as part owners of strong businesses, rather than trading stocks.  Business owners are rewarded through the profits the companies they own are capable of generating on their behalf. These rewards can come in the form of salaries and bonuses for active owners, and from increasing value or cash flow from dividends for passive shareholders. In either event, all these rewards are ultimately a function of the businesses’ earnings capability, at least in the longer run.  Therefore, we should realize that when you truly invest in a stock, you really are investing in its ability to earn more money for you in the future.

    When I first read Peter Lynch’s famous book in 1990, I had already developed a strong belief in the importance of earnings regarding assessing the fair value of an operating business.  Therefore, the theory behind Peter Lynch’s wisdom already resonated deep within me.  However, as already stated, it was the facts behind the theory that interested me the most. In fact, I was so committed to the notion that earnings determine market price, that I developed my own stock graphing tool that allowed me to evaluate the true relationship between a company’s earnings and its stock price over time.

    The following additional quotes from Chapter 10 of Peter Lynch’s book titled: Earnings, Earnings, Earnings, speak to the importance of valuing a business based on its earnings power:

    “you can see the importance of earnings on any chart that has an earnings line running alongside the stock price….  On chart after chart the two lines will move in tandem, or if the stock price stays away from the earnings line, sooner or later it will come back to earnings.”

    A few pages later, Peter offers us another nugget of wisdom on the earnings and price relationship, plus a little bit of investing advice thrown in:

    “a quick way to tell if a stock is overpriced is to compare the price line to the earnings line……. If you bought familiar growth companies…… when the stock price fell well below the earnings line, and sold them when the stock price rose dramatically above it, the chances are you would do pretty well.”



    Now that we’ve reviewed some investing axioms and nuggets from Mr. Peter Lynch, let’s see if we can perform two extremely important tasks. 
    • First and most importantly, let’s see if we can answer the more important question as to why earnings determine market price; not just that it does. 
    • Next, let’s produce some evidence that verifies the veracity of Mr. Peter Lynch’s words. 
    In order to accomplish both of these important tasks we will rely on visual representation, and mathematical proofs provided by F.A.S.T. Graphs™. 

    How to Value a Company’s Earnings and Why

    The essential point underpinning the thesis of this article, is that when you’re investing in a business you’re not actually buying the stock, you’re buying the company’s earnings power.  The stock is only the vessel that contains the earnings you are purchasing When buying earnings, the principles of value apply just like they do with any other product or service. The easiest way to understand this clearly, is to think in terms of the price you pay to buy $1 dollar’s worth of one company’s earnings versus $1 dollar’s worth of another company’s earnings.

    In other words, let’s look at two companies to see what the price, and therefore, value, of $1 dollar’s worth of earnings are. However, before we do, let’s establish some doctrine that we are going to focus on. First and foremost, remember that we are going to buy $1 dollar’s worth of earnings for each of our two companies.  Now, we need to clearly understand that once either of those dollar’s worth of earnings are taken out of the business and put into our pockets, the value of each dollar’s worth of earnings is precisely the same. When separated from the business, a dollar is a dollar, and a dollar from one company will buy no more or no less than a dollar from another company.

    However, we also have to deal with the fact that $1 dollar’s worth of each respective company has a different cost.  This then begs the question, why? 
    • In other words, why would we pay more to buy company A’s dollar worth of earnings than we would to buy Company B’s dollar worth of earnings? 
    • Since a dollar’s worth of each company’s earnings once received outside of the business is worth exactly the same, why would we pay more to buy one of the dollars than the other?

    The reason, as we will develop more fully later, is that if we are long-term investors in businesses, we are actually buying future earnings, not current earnings. Therefore, the amount of earnings we accumulate in the future will be a function of the company’s earnings growth rate, and will determine what price we paid today to buy those future earnings of tomorrow. Let’s clarify this by examining the dynamics of our two example companies. We will start with history presented as evidence of what has actually already happened, and then we will move on to the future, which we believe is actually more relevant.

    Our first example is Sherwin-Williams Co. (SHW), which has achieved a historical earnings growth rate of 9.6% since 1999. At the bottom of the graph you can see that earnings have grown from $1.81 per share in 1999, to an estimate of $5.67 per share for fiscal 2012 (see yellow highlighted earnings at the bottom of the graph).  This represents approximately a three-fold increase in earnings over the past 14 years. The primary point is that every $1 dollar’s worth of earnings you bought in 1999, are now worth approximately $3 dollars. Another way to put this is that Sherwin-Williams’ future dollars in 2012 only cost one third as much as the original $1 dollars worth of earnings cost in 1999.
    SHW Chart 1
     SHW Chart 1

    Our second example, CSX Corp. (CSX), grew earnings per share at the higher rate of 12.9% since calendar year 1999.  Therefore, earnings per share grew from $.26 a share in calendar year 1999 to $1.86 per share estimated for fiscal year-end 2012 (see yellow highlighted earnings at the bottom of the graph). This is approximately a seven-fold increase in earnings per share over this 14-year period. The primary point is that every $1 dollar’s worth of earnings you bought in 1999, are now worth approximately $7 dollars. Consequently, shareholders that bought CSX in 1999 only paid 1/7th of the original price for calendar year 2012 earnings.  In other words, due to the company’s historical earnings growth rate, future earnings were significantly cheaper than original earnings. As we will discover next, herein lays the essence of fair value, or what others call intrinsic value of a business (common stock).
    CSX 1
     CSX 1

    Now let’s move to current time to examine what price we have to pay to buy $1 dollar’s worth of each of our example company’s earnings today, and attempt to calculate what $1 dollar’s worth of future earnings are actually costing us. The metric that establishes that price is the common PE ratio.  One of the definitions of the PE ratio is: The price you pay to buy $1 dollar’s worth of a company’s earnings.  Remember though, we are pricing $1 dollars worth of today’s earnings, even though in actuality what matters most is the price we’re paying to buy $1 dollars worth of future earnings.

    In the case of Sherman-Williams (SHW), today we are asked to pay $20.90 (current PE ratio 20.9 see red circle at right of graph ) to buy our $1 dollar’s worth of current earnings.  As an aside, you can note from the graph that this is the highest valuation or price that you were asked to pay to buy a $1 dollar’s worth of Sherwin-Williams’ earnings since 1999.  In other words, Sherwin-Williams’ stock appears very expensive today based on historical earnings growth.
    SHW 2
     SHW 2

    In the case of our second example, CSX Corp. we discover that we are only being asked to pay $11.90 (current PE 11.9 see orange circle at right of graph) to buy $1 dollar’s worth of CSX Corp.’s current earnings. This is almost half the price we are being asked to pay to buy an equivalent $1 dollar’s worth of Sherwin-Williams Co.’s earnings. Therefore, the rational investor should ask this simple question:  Why should I be willing to pay almost twice as much to buy Sherwin-Williams’ earnings as I’m being asked to buy CSX’s earnings? The only logical answer would be because future earnings are expected to be much higher for Sherwin-Williams Co. than for CSX Corp. But in fact, this is not true, and as we will next illustrate, the real answer doesn’t make any mathematical sense.
    CSX 2
     CSX 2

    Utilizing the Estimated Earnings and Return Calculator we discover that the consensus (15 analysts reporting to Capital IQ) estimate earnings growth rate for Sherman-Williams at a very strong 13.1%. This calculates out that expected calendar year 2017 earnings of $10.64 will be approximately twice as large as 2011’s earnings of $4.95.  Therefore, we are, in theory at least, only paying approximately $10 today to buy a future $1 dollar’s worth of Sherwin-Williams’ 2017 earnings.  In other words, the PE ratio of the future earnings we are buying is approximately 10, or half of what we have to today pay for current earnings.
    SHW 3
     SHW 3

    Once again, utilizing the Estimated Earnings and Return Calculator we discover that the consensus (26 analysts reporting to Capital IQ) expect CSX Corp. to grow earnings at a very strong rate of 14%. This calculates out that CSX Corp.’s expected earnings in 2017 will also be approximately 2 times larger than today’s earnings of $3.63 in 2017 versus the original $1.67 in 2011.  To be clear, this means that the earnings growth rates in both of our sample companies are expected to be essentially the same or at least similar.

    Most importantly, it also means that we are only paying a PE of 5.6 to buy CSX Corp.’s $1 dollar’s worth of future earnings (2017) versus paying a PE of 10 for Sherwin-Williams’ $1 dollar’s worth of future earnings (2017). As we’ve previously established, if we received $1 dollar’s worth of dividends from both companies, each would be able to buy no more or no less goods or services than the other.  So once again we ask the question; why would we want to pay twice as much to buy $1 dollar’s worth of Sherwin-Williams’ future earnings as we would to buy CSX Corp.’s? Logically, it makes no sense, yet many investors do it every day.
     CSX 3

    In the two examples used in our analogy above, we identified two companies with somewhat similar historical growth rates, but more importantly with almost identical expectations for future growth.  Consequently, logic should dictate that both companies should be priced at approximately the same valuations.  The examples utilized, neither company has a real edge over the other company regarding earnings power. Therefore, why should the one, Sherwin-Williams Corp., have an edge in market price over the other, CSX Corp.? The straightforward answer; there is no rational reason.

    It’s also important to recognize that the market does not always price common stocks according to their fair value.  In fact, at any moment in time, the market can be mispricing the value of common stocks by significant degrees.  This is why the venerable Ben Graham gave us his famous metaphor: “in the short run the market is a voting machine, but in the long run it’s a weighing machine.”  This is the same lesson that Peter Lynch offered in the above referenced quote where he talks about value eventually winning out.  Shrewd investors know how to calculate fair value, and therefore, are capable of avoiding what is often the obvious mistake of paying too much.  On the other hand, shrewd investors also recognize a bargain when they see one.
    Furthermore, it should also be understood that there are valid reasons to pay more for one company than for another.  However, those reasons have to be mathematically sound and, therefore, make economic and prudent sense.  For example, thanks to the power of compounding; a company with a very high growth rate of 20% to 30% or more would obviously be worth more than a company only growing at 10% or 15%.
    • The point is that the faster growing company would be capable of generating significantly more future earnings than the slower growing one.  
    • Therefore, even though you pay more today to buy the faster grower, you can actually be buying future earnings cheaper, again, thanks to the power of compounding.

    Summary and Conclusions

    The moral of the story is simply that investors should be careful and willing to always run the numbers out to their logical conclusions. But, it all starts with knowing what you are buying (investing in) in the first place.  True investors, like Peter Lynch, and many of the other renowned investing greats such as Phil Fischer, Warren Buffett, etc., all invest as owners in businesses with a focus on the strength of the business behind the stocks they buy. Therefore, these investor greats are always buying the earnings power of the respective businesses they are investing in, relative to their goals and objectives.

    These principles of valuation apply equally to growth stocks as they do dividend stocks.  When applied to growth stocks,
    • investors need to understand that the more future earnings they can buy today at a good price, means more future earnings that the market can capitalize in the future.  
    • Since this is their only source of return, the more future earnings they can amass the more value or return they can expect.  
    • Fast growth does typically come at a higher price, but simultaneously it needs be understood that faster growth, if it occurs, also generates a bigger pile of future earnings. 
    • And, as this article has illustrated, it’s the future earnings that ultimately drive fair value.

    When applied to dividend paying stocks, the principle is just as valid, and maybe easier to see.  
    • Since the company is going to pay dividends, the dividend investor is going to receive some of the company’s earnings in cash outside of the business.  
    • As I illustrated above, when they go to spend $1 dollar’s worth of dividends from Company A versus $1 dollar’s worth of dividends from Company B, each $1 dollar’s worth of dividends will have the same value outside of the business.  
    • Therefore, it only logically follows that both of those dollars should have the same value while they are still in the business.

    Importantly, a few words on the differences between investing and speculating are perhaps in order. 
    Active traders will not find any value in this discussion, because
    • active traders usually don’t own a company long enough to think about earnings power at all.  
    • Active traders are only really interested in momentum and volatility.  
    • They are “the voting machine” segment of the market. 
    • This is a primary reason why stocks can become improperly or unrealistically valued by Mr. Market, the voter; however, there are others reasons that we will leave to future discussions. 
    • Additionally, to be a trader requires a continuous commitment to watching every little price tick of the market, which is beyond the interest of most people that are investing for their future economic benefit.

    True investors are interested in 
    • building long-term positions in great businesses bought at rational prices. 
    • It is to this segment of the financial community that this article is geared to. 
    • Frankly, we believe this is the largest segment of the market comprised of prudent investors that have other things to do with their time than watching the bouncing ball of often frivolous stock price movements.  
    • These true investors need to understand the principles of valuation presented in this article if they are going to achieve their financial goals while simultaneously doing so at reasonable levels of risk.

    Based on this discussion, of the two companies utilized as examples in this article, the principles of valuation would indicate that one is a buy and one is a sell. We believe that both of these companies are excellent candidates that when appropriately priced (valued) would make great additions to almost any long-term investors portfolio.  However, if the expected future growth rates are accurate, then Sherwin-Williams is clearly overpriced, while CSX Corp. looks like a great bargain today.  Of course, all prospective investors are encouraged to perform their own due diligence before taking any action.

    Disclaimer: The opinions in this document are for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as a recommendation to buy or sell the stocks mentioned or to solicit transactions or clients. Past performance of the companies discussed may not continue and the companies may not achieve the earnings growth as predicted. The information in this document is believed to be accurate, but under no circumstances should a person act upon the information contained within. We do not recommend that anyone act upon any investment information without first consulting an investment advisor as to the suitability of such investments for his specific situation.

    Beware of hard-sell tactics, warns SSM

    Beware of hard-sell tactics, warns SSM - Star Online

    1. Malaysians lured into investing in illegal interest schemes have been fleeced of at leastRM620mil over the past three years.

    2. The Companies Commission of Malaysia (SSM), concerned over the rise of such scams, published an advertorial in the wake of recent complaints over a Canadian land-banking scheme to remind investors of the risks involved.

    3. An interest scheme is a form of investment in a medium other than shares and debentures (unsecured loans) involving the pooling of public funds to finance the business activities of a company.

    4. In return, participants are offered a specific return on their investment in the form of money, benefits or facilities. A common modus operandi involves convincing people to make a one-off investment in a business endeavour that is managed entirely by the operator.

    5. Many illegal interest scheme operators often used aggressive marketing strategies, such as treating their potential “marks” to dinner or high tea at a posh hotel and preventing them from leaving before they commit to an investment.

    6. Sometimes, support letters by dignitaries or celebrities are used to lend credence to the operator. In many cases, we have noticed that the dignitaries or celebrities were not fully apprised of the details of the scheme, or were unaware that they were being associated with the scheme.

    7. Another is to convince investors to build their own business (often with a buyback guarantee) on the condition that they purchase their training and equipment from the operator. The operators are creative. Investors in interest schemes should be wary if an operator appears too eager to close a deal.

    8. A few years ago, agriculture and its products (like lemon grass, leeches, earthworms, seaweed) were very popular.

    9. Recent products include livestock (swiflets and arowana fish), plantations (palm oil, jatropha and agarwood), leisure and property development (holiday homes and hotels), equipment (ice-cream, ICT and water-vending machines) and gold. To date, SSM has registered 173 schemes worth about RM1.29bil.

    10. A list of registered interest schemes is available on the SSM website (http://www.ssm.com.my/en/company/is-registered-scheme-public) and the public can call 03-2299-5500 to check or verify offers from interest scheme operators.



    http://www.investlah.com/forum/index.php/topic,35078.msg771684.html#msg771684

    Thursday 8 March 2012

    Warren Buffett: About Socks and Stocks


    About Socks and Stocks

    "Long ago, Ben Graham taught me that 'Price is what you pay; value is what you get.' Whether we’re talking about socks or stocks, I like buying quality merchandise when it is marked down."


    Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/warren-buffett-quotes-on-investing-2010-8?op=1#ixzz1oXHwI5c2

    Warren Buffett: The "lack of change" appeal


    The "lack of change" appeal
    " Our approach is very much profiting from lack of change rather than from change. With Wrigley chewing gum, it's the lack of change that appeals to me. I don't think it is going to be hurt by the Internet. That's the kind of business I like."


    Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/warren-buffett-quotes-on-investing-2010-8?op=1#ixzz1oXHXPS6g

    Warren Buffett: Game Pressure


    Game pressure

    "The stock market is a no-called-strike game. You don't have to swing at everything--you can wait for your pitch. The problem when you're a money manager is that your fans keep yelling, 'Swing, you bum!'"


    Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/warren-buffett-quotes-on-investing-2010-8?op=1#ixzz1oXGjSl1y