Sunday 27 March 2011

Nestle (Malaysia) Bhd hits year-high


Nestle (Malaysia) Bhd hits year-high Add to your bookmarks!

Malaysia

  • Company news
  • NewsBites

NEWS BITES ASIAN MARKETS Nestle (Malaysia) Bhd (4707.KL), Malaysia's 3rd largest Consumer Products company by market capitalisation, hit a 52-week high of MYR48.0 during the week. In the last six months the stock has hit a new 52-week high twice....

© 2011 NewsBites


Read more: http://news.reportlinker.com/n08516219/Nestle-Malaysia-Bhd-hits-year-high.html#ixzz1HmXcd01m



HOW and WHY to own a piece of a business?

An interesting post by Special Situation on how investing is actually owning a piece of a business. I concur, though I am in business myself. ;-)




Quote:


It's ok. I don't really care people buying follow my advice or not. I would rather think of owning a piece of business, which is managed by capable management + capital. It's very hard to start a biz, which is making enough $$$$ for you.

Just make it simple.

If Mr. Lim start a biz with RM200k, the return is RM5k/month. This biz is not something profitable after RM5k-his own salary = ??!!. Further more, how long it takes to breakeven?

I would like to see net return after minus all his salary. Investing in stock, just like buying a piece of business,which is managed by well-capable management. For some biz, it's very hard for us to start it nowadays due to high initial invested capital. But, with share, we can buy a piece of GREAT biz like Parkson.

If you're a biz, how much capital required to start a business like parkson? Will bank approve your loan?

There're many things to consider when you start a big biz like parkson. They have powerful bargain with bank. For us, it's very hard. So, just buy a piece of business better Smiley





by Special Situation
http://www.investlah.com/forum/index.php/topic,18615.msg346266.html#msg346266

What is good business and what is good managers?


Good business is this: It generates more cash than it consumes.


Good managers is this: They keep finding ways of putting that cash to productive use.

In the long run, companies that meet this definition are virtually certain to grow in value, no matter what the stock market does.

http://hongwei85.blogspot.com/2011/03/what-is-good-business-and-what-is-good.html

Valuing an asset using DCF and PER

Value investing is theoretically simple: buy assets for less than they're worth and sell when they approach or move beyond fair value. 


What 2 methods do you use to value assets?


1)  DCF


So too are valuing assets:discount future cash flows back to today at an appropriate interest rate for the life of the asset. The discounted cash flow (DCF) model is a commonly-used tool, hammered into every finance and business student.

But DCF models quickly deteriorate when they meet a rapidly changing world. The fact that most analysts failed to consider the impact of falling US house prices on their models played a major role in triggering the global financial crisis. Worse still, the misleading precision imbues investors with unwarranted overconfidence. Too often, models are precisely wrong.





2)  Price Earnings Ratio

Other tools are available to help you avoid this error. The price-to-earnings ratio (PER) is a regularly used proxy for stock valuation but also one of the most overused and abused metrics. To make use of it you need to know when to use it and when not to.


Related:

Investor Dialogue: Soo-Hai Lim


Investor Dialogue: Soo-Hai Lim

Soo-Hai Lim, manager of Baring Asean Frontiers Fund, explains why he thinks Southeast Asia has the greatest potential in the region.



By Rupert Walker | 17 March 2011
Keywords: baring | asean frontiers fund | asean | southeast asia

Soo-Hai Lim joined Baring Asset Management in 2005 and manages its Asean Frontiers Fund, a $370 million Dublin-registered fund that is regulated by the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission. Lim also directs research in the Australasia and Asean markets, and is a key member of the portfolio construction team for all Asian regional mandates. Lim is Singaporean and was previously the country specialist for Australia and Malaysia for five years at Daiwa SB Investments. His frontiers fund started life with a wider Pacific mandate, but in 2008 the focus changed.


Why did you change the mandate of the original fund?

We decided that it was too restrictive and not consistent with our belief that the greatest potential within the region was among the Asean nations — despite the original fund’s strong performance. The Asean countries are on a secular growth trend, supported by young demographics — especially in Indonesia and the Philippines — and it is at least as convincing as India’s story. So we gained the approval of unitholders to change the mandate to an Asean focus, and hence changed the benchmark, and we also gained the flexibility to invest in companies on the frontier of the region, such as Sri Lanka, to give some extra spice to our investors. We can invest up to 30% of our net assets in non-Asean countries: so far that’s only been Sri Lanka, but Bangladesh is now on our radar. Overall, we are restricted to 15% more or less than a country’s representation in the benchmark, and 5% either way for a named company, and a 10% absolute limit. Currently, the fund is invested in around 70 stocks.
LIM'S TOP THEMES
Focus on unrecognised growth stocks in Asean and frontier countries
 1 
Rising consumption by half a billion people offers vast opportunities
 2 
Asean learned hard lessons in 1997 and passed the global crisis test
 3 


What is your investment philosophy and style?

We are stock pickers and make our selections through intensive bottom-up analysis and use the well-established “growth at a reasonable price” criteria. But, we also have our own five-point check-list to help find attractive opportunities. These are growth, liquidity, valuation, management and currency. We have a stock template and score each proposition from one to five, with “one” denoting outperformance potential, “five” for underperformance and “three” as benchmark performance.
Basically, we look for stocks where growth potential isn’t fully priced in, and can expect to produce excess returns — that is alpha — over our benchmark, the MSCI Southeast Asia Total Net Return. In terms of our broader approach, geographical focus dominates sector considerations, although we have certain preferences, such as energy and materials. The key is that we gain outperformance through stock selection rather than asset allocation.


And your process?

We use both qualitative and quantitative methods to screen for ideas in our investment universe. Our qualitative methods include the use of top-down macro, thematic, sector views from our strategic policy group in London, as well as our own views of the catalysts for the individual Asean markets to direct our research focus to look for alpha-generating ideas. A key part of this process is intensive meetings with companies’ managements in our search for unrecognised growth stocks. We also use these meetings to assess potential stock ideas in any part of the value chain of that company’s industry. To supplement the qualitative screening, we have our in-house quant screens based off several growth and value factors like earnings per share revision, momentum return on equity to rank stocks in our investment universe into deciles.
Just as important, our process is continuous, involving constant discussion, analysis and review. We are also happy to receive input from brokers, as long as they add value. By that I mean that they have reliable market information, come up with original ideas early and can provide access to company management.


Who are your investors?

We enjoyed substantial inflows last year from European retail customers, and always have a healthy distribution in Hong Kong to retail investors and funds of funds.


What are the best opportunities now?

At the moment we are underweight Singapore (which makes up more than a quarter of our benchmark) and Malaysia, and overweight Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines. Indonesia’s improving macroeconomic trajectory is well established, and there are key companies such as Astra that are tremendously placed. In fact, Astra has a great story: it has a 50% share of the domestic market for the assembly and distribution of motor vehicles, and historical precedents show there is a linear correlation between vehicle penetration and increases in per capita GDP. So, if Indonesia’ growth continues, Astra will be a major beneficiary. The Philippines is especially exciting — it has a young, educated and increasingly affluent population that could sustain a consumer boom and is almost underwritten by the traditional remittances from its diaspora. If the new president can deliver on his promises of reform, like reducing corruption and increasing tax collection, then its potential is enormous, in particular in the consumer and infrastructure sectors. We have already enjoyed strong performance here, taken profits, and are now looking to reinvest in some stocks that have fallen to attractive levels.
Thailand has some great companies and can justifiably boast about being an agriculture superpower; unfortunately it has suffered from unstable politics during the past couple of years. Malaysia is perhaps too reliant on commodities riches, to the detriment of the development of other industries and companies, but its closer relationship with Singapore should lead to opportunities. Meanwhile, Singapore constantly re-invents itself, and it always offers attractive, well- managed companies to invest in. Our underweight position simply reflects better investment opportunities elsewhere in the region.


What about the frontier markets?

Sri Lanka
appealed to us because companies such as the conglomerate John Keells and a couple of bank stocks looked undervalued following the end of the civil war and evidence now of political stability. We also have exposure to greater China through a holding in the Baring China A-Shares Fund. Bangladesh has enormous potential, but valuations have already shot up, so we will be looking for opportunities on any weakness. Laos is a country we’re now examining closely as the latest frontier market this year.


What are the greatest risks?

Inflation is certainly a problem within the region. But, a large part of it is perhaps due to a temporary rise in food prices due to extreme weather events and farmers struggling against poor harvests. On the other hand, as these economies grow richer, dietary habits change, which could lead to a permanent, secular sift in food prices. Politics remains an issue in Thailand, execution of policy is an issue in the Philippines, Vietnam is suffering from the effects of an overheating economy and land acquisition difficulties are holding Indonesia back.
Despite these problems, the region offers among the best opportunities in the world today. And, crucially, local companies are rising to meet those challenges. That translates into great investment potential.

This interview was first published in the February issue of FinanceAsiamagazine.

Esso Malaysia Berhad

On 25.3.2011, Esso said that it was unaware of any plans by ExxonMobil (its parent) to take Esso private following a newspaper article.  Interestingly, exactly a year ago, on 30.3.2010, Esso also said the same, denying any privatisation move by ExxonMobil, following an article that appeared in the Malaysian Reserve on that matter.



Business structure of Esso

The company is involved in:
1. refining and
2. marketing of petroleum products.

Esso is a subsidiary of Exxon Mobil Corporation which is the world's largest energy company.  Currently, Esso's refinery is the third largest in Malaysia after Shell and Petronas.

April 1995:  Esso's licensed refining capacity was upgraded to 75,000 barrels per day (bpd) from 66,000 bpd previously.
1996: A further increase in licensed capacity to 88,000 bpd
Nov 1999:  Exxon merged with Mobil to form Exxon Mobil.
May 2000:  Esso entered into a Shared Services Agreement with Mobil Oil Malaysia.  Esso and Mobil will continue to operate as two separate companies each retaining their Esso and Mobil brand names.

Esso is also the third largest petroleum products player in Malaysia.  It is perhaps important to note one major difference between Esso and its main local rival, Shell Refining.  Shell Refining sells its products through its sister company, Shell Marketing, at prices determined by the Singapore free market (the so-called Singapore Postings).  Unlike Shell, Esso sells directly to the consumers of government fixed prices according to automatic pricing mechanism (APM).


Revenues are mainly derived from the sale of petroleum products to domestic customers including its affiliates and competitors, and sales to ExxonMobil Asia Pacific Pte. Ltd. (EMAPPL), Singapore.




Comments by SPG Dynaquest

Based on its end August 2010 price of RM 2.71, Esso as at 3.6.2010  was selling at:
  • prospective PER of 3.6 x, 
  • nett DY of 3.3% and 
  • 1.18 x its NTA of RM 2.30 
It is to be noted that Esso's gearing ratio of 1.3 (nett borrowings divided by shareholders' equity) as at 30.6.10 can be considered high by local standards.

Shares outstanding:  270m
Par RM 0.50
Major shareholders:  ExxonMobil International Holdings (18.3.2010):  65%
At a price of 3.80 per share, market cap is RM 1,026 m.

Past Performances
      
  
           DPS    EPS     
2000   0.0       8.1
2001   0.0     67.6
2002   7.2     -3.2
2003   7.2     21.1
2004   8.6     -9.0
2005   8.6       7.3
2006   8.6      2.6
2007   8.8     21.2
2008   8.9    -93.1
2009   9.0     53.9
2010  10.5   99.50
Total  77.4    176.0

(DPS is net after tax)

DPO ratio = 77.4 / 176 = 44%

Spreadsheet on ESSO Malaysia for latest VALUATION figures.
https://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=0AuRRzs61sKqRdHpkbEdmdmRIZkpGUjMtSzRwbEpOUFE&output=html


Commentary on Prospects 

The outlook for the Malaysian economy in 2011 remains positive, and demand for petroleum products is expected to be robust.  However, volatility in the crude price environment will continue to affect the industry. Recognising the potential for earnings volatility, the Company's focus shall remain on sustaining  flawless operations, cost control and product and services quality, as well as strengthening its business position through continued emphasis on strategic investment.



Esso pares gains after refuting privatisation news
Written by Joseph Chin of theedgemalaysia.com
Friday, 25 March 2011 15:12


KUALA LUMPUR: ESSO MALAYSIA BHD [] shares shed half of the early gains in late afternoon trade on Friday, March 25 after the company refuted a news report it could be taken private.

At 2.56pm, Esso was up 39 sen to RM3.88, off the high of RM4.40 at the midday break.

The FBM KLCI was up 1.67 points to 1,515.51. Turnover was 731.12 million shares valued at RM967.67 million. There were 420 gainers, 252 losers and 291 stocks unchanged.

Esso informed Bursa Malaysia during the midday break that it was not aware of any plans to take it private as had been reported.

“Esso wishes to also announce that there have been no undisclosed developments which would account for the apparent unusual market activity,” it said, referring to the high trading volume in its shares.


Esso surges amid talk on privatisation
Published: 2011/03/25

Shares of ESSO Malaysia Bhd (3042)rose to its highest in more than four years on unusually heavy volume yesterday, amid rumours the group may be taken private.


Some 1.32 million shares changed hands yesterday. This was significantly higher than its 30-day average volume of 143,000 shares.

The stock gained 8.7 per cent or 28 sen, to close at RM3.49 yesterday, its highest since August 2006.

Esso is 65 per cent held by ExxonMobil Corp, one of the world's largest oil companies.

Esso operates a refinery in Port Dickson, Negri Sembilan, as well as a growing network of petrol stations across the country.

For the financial year ended December 31 2010, it almost doubled its net profit to RM268.6 million. Revenue rose to RM8.42 billion from RM8.03 billion recorded in 2009.

http://www.btimes.com.my/Current_News/BTIMES/articles/esso24/Article/#ixzz1HmCWXDp0



Esso shares jump 31 sen
Published: 2011/03/26

ESSO Malaysia Bhd (3042) said it is unaware of any plan to take the company private, even as its share price jumped on heavy volume for the second straight day yesterday.


It put on 31 sen to close at RM3.80 yesterday, off an intra-day high of RM4.40. It has gained 18.3 per cent over the last two days.

Some 5.9 million shares changed hands, more than three times that of the previous day.

Esso, a unit of one of the world's largest oil companies Exxon Mobil Corp, told the stock exchange yesterday that it was unaware of any reasons for the share movements.


http://www.btimes.com.my/Current_News/BTIMES/articles/essoma/Article/index_html#ixzz1HmD7vdKj



ExxonMobil to add 12 petrol stations in 2011
Published: 2011/01/18

ExxonMobil is aiming to add another 10-12 petrol stations this year to the current 560.

"Last year, we opened 10 stations. For 2011, our target is about 10 to 12 stations," Esso Malaysia Bhd's head of the retail business sector, Faridah Ali, told reporters this at the launch of Exxonmobil's new Dual Fleet Card.

The new card is to complement the existing Fleet Card programme which is a convenient and value-added computerised payment method that helps companies manage their fleet and fuel expenses.

According to Faridah, with the new card, customers would get a vehicle card assigned to each vehicle and a driver card which carries a specific personal identification number.

With the card, customers can have better control for improved efficiency and cost management. -- Bernama


http://www.btimes.com.my/articles/20110118134941/Article/#ixzz1HmEGXdq1


Friday 25 March 2011

Price-Earning Ratio 101

What actually is PER?

It's often said that the PER is an estimate of the number of years it'll take investors to recoup their money. Unless all profits are paid out as dividends, something that rarely persists in real life, this is incorrect.

So ignore what you might read in simplistic articles and note this down: a PER is a reflection not of what you earn from a stock, but “what investors as a group are prepared to pay for the earnings of a company”.

All things being equal, the lower the PER, the better. 



But the list of caveats is long and vital to understand if you're to make full use of this metric.





PER:  Historical versus Forward or Forecast PER

The PER compares the current price of a stock with the prior year's (historical) or the current year's (forecast) earnings per share (EPS). Usually the prior year's EPS is used, but be sure to check first.

For example:

Last financial year, XYZ Ltd made $8 million in net profit (or earnings). 
The company has 1 million shares outstanding.
So it achieved earnings per share (EPS) of $8.00 ($8 million profit divided by 1 million shares). 
In the current year, XYZ is expected to earn $10 million; a forecast EPS of $10.00.
  • At the current share price of $100, the stock is therefore trading on a historic PER of 12.5 ($100/$8). 
  • Using the forecast for current year's earnings, the forward or “forecast PER” is 10 ($100/$10).



Quality has a price to match

Quality usually comes with a price to match. 



It costs more, for example, to buy handcrafted leather goods from France than it does a cheap substitute from China. Stocks are no different: high quality businesses generally, and rightfully, trade on higher PERs than poorer quality businesses.





Low PER doesn't alone guarantee quality business
  • Value investors love a bargain. Indeed, they're defined by this quality. 
  • But whilst a low PER for a quality business can indicate value, it doesn't alone guarantee it. 
  • Because PERs are only a shortcut for valuation, further research is mandatory.

High PER with strong future earnings growth maybe a bargain
  • Likewise, a high PER doesn't ensure that a stock is expensive. 
  • A company with strong future earnings growth may justify a high PER, and may even be a bargain. 
  • A stock with temporarily depressed profits, especially if caused by a one-off event, may justifiably trade at a high PER. 
  • But for a poor quality business with little prospects for growth, a high PER is likely to be undeserved.

Avoid a Common trap: Use underlying or normalised earnings in PER


There's another trap: PERs are often calculated using reported profit, especially in newspapers or on financial websites. 


But one-off events often distort headline profit numbers and therefore the PER. 


Using underlying, or “normalised”, earnings in your PER calculation is likely to give a truer picture of a stock's value.





What is a normalised level of earnings?

That begs the question; what is a normal level of earnings? That's the $64 million dollar question.



 If you don't know how to calculate these figures for the stocks in your portfolio, now is the time to establish whether it's skill or luck that's driving your returns. And if you don't know that, history may well make a monkey of you.




An old encounter with low PE stock: Hai-O


It is nostalgic to re-read an old post on Hai-O by ze Moola. Smiley

http://whereiszemoola.blogspot.com/2008/04/more-on-haio.html

Sunday, April 13, 2008
MORE ON HAIO

My dearest BullBear,

A low PE stock means only one thing and that is the stock is trading on a lower valuation compared to what it is currently earning.

Some simply consider that what is happening is the stock is being ignored in the market despite its impressive earnings.

Why?

The market could be wrong and that perhaps this is a stock that's an ignored gem. Yeah, the classical hidden gem and if this is the case, investors who invests in the stock could be rewarded for their stock selection.

However, on the other hand, sometimes the market could be right and that they do sense something is not right within the stock.

And because of this reasoning, I have always realised that a low PE stock does not make a stock a QUALITY stock.

It just means the stock is trading 'cheaply'.

It could be a bargain but it could also be a trap.

Tuesday 22 March 2011

Don't be a stockpicking monkey, mistaking skill for luck. Learn DCF and PER 101.

Don't be a stockpicking monkey
Greg Hoffman
March 21, 2011 - 12:06PM

Monkeys are great stockpickers. Had your common-or-garden variety primate randomly selected five stocks in March 2009, chances are it would now be sitting on huge capital gains, contemplating reinvesting them in bananas - by the truckload.

It's easy enough for us to see that our monkey, who now sees himself as a future fund manager, is mistaking skill for luck. What's harder for us to see is how we might be making the same mistake ourselves.

If examining your portfolio's returns over the past few years engenders in you a feeling of self-satisfaction, you're running that risk. With the sharemarket falling recently now is the time to educate yourself. Consider what follows a lesson in fire safety.


Value investing is theoretically simple: buy assets for less than they're worth and sell when they approach or move beyond fair value. So too are valuing assets: discount future cash flows back to today at an appropriate interest rate for the life of the asset. The discounted cash flow (DCF) model is a commonly-used tool, hammered into every finance and business student.

But DCF models quickly deteriorate when they meet a rapidly changing world. The fact that most analysts failed to consider the impact of falling US house prices on their models played a major role in triggering the global financial crisis. Worse still, the misleading precision imbues investors with unwarranted overconfidence. Too often, models are precisely wrong.

Other tools are available to help you avoid this error. The price-to-earnings ratio (PER) is a regularly used proxy for stock valuation but also one of the most overused and abused metrics. To make use of it you need to know when to use it and when not to.

PER 101

The PER compares the current price of a stock with the prior year's (historical) or the current year's (forecast) earnings per share (EPS). Usually the prior year's EPS is used, but be sure to check first.

Last financial year, XYZ Ltd made $8 million in net profit (or earnings). The company has 1 million shares outstanding, so it achieved earnings per share (EPS) of $8.00 ($8 million profit divided by 1 million shares). In the current year, XYZ is expected to earn $10 million; a forecast EPS of $10.00.

At the current share price of $100, the stock is therefore trading on a historic PER of 12.5 ($100/$8). Using the forecast for current year's earnings, the forward or “forecast PER” is 10 ($100/$10).

It's often said that the PER is an estimate of the number of years it'll take investors to recoup their money. Unless all profits are paid out as dividends, something that rarely persists in real life, this is incorrect.

So ignore what you might read in simplistic articles and note this down: a PER is a reflection not of what you earn from a stock, but “what investors as a group are prepared to pay for the earnings of a company”.

All things being equal, the lower the PER, the better. But the list of caveats is long and vital to understand if you're to make full use of this metric.

Quality usually comes with a price to match. It costs more, for example, to buy handcrafted leather goods from France than it does a cheap substitute from China. Stocks are no different: high quality businesses generally, and rightfully, trade on higher PERs than poorer quality businesses.

Value investors love a bargain. Indeed, they're defined by this quality. But whilst a low PER for a quality business can indicate value, it doesn't alone guarantee it. Because PERs are only a shortcut for valuation, further research is mandatory.

Likewise, a high PER doesn't ensure that a stock is expensive. A company with strong future earnings growth may justify a high PER, and may even be a bargain. A stock with temporarily depressed profits, especially if caused by a one-off event, may justifiably trade at a high PER. But for a poor quality business with little prospects for growth, a high PER is likely to be undeserved.

Common trap

There's another trap: PERs are often calculated using reported profit, especially in newspapers or on financial websites. But one-off events often distort headline profit numbers and therefore the PER. Using underlying, or “normalised”, earnings in your PER calculation is likely to give a truer picture of a stock's value.

That begs the question; what is a normal level of earnings? That's the $64 million dollar question. If you don't know how to calculate these figures for the stocks in your portfolio, now is the time to establish whether it's skill or luck that's driving your returns. And if you don't know that, history may well make a monkey of you.



Greg Hoffman is research director of The Intelligent Investor.

http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/business/dont-be-a-stockpicking-monkey-20110321-1c32p.html

Sunday 20 March 2011

Buffett at University of Kansas (2005): You can still earn extraordinary returns on smaller amounts of capital.

University of Kansas : Warren Buffett Q&A
Notes by Professor Hirschey, University of Kansas ( May 6, 2005 )

Question: According to a business week report published in 1999, you were quoted as saying “it's a huge structural advantage not to have a lot of money. I think I could make you 50% a year on $1 million. No, I know I could. I guarantee that.” First, would you say the same thing today? Second, since that statement infers that you would invest in smaller companies, other than investing in small-caps, what else would you do differently?

Yes, I would still say the same thing today. In fact, we are still earning those types of returns on some of our smaller investments. The best decade was the 1950s; I was earning 50% plus returns with small amounts of capital. I could do the same thing today with smaller amounts. It would perhaps even be easier to make that much money in today's environment because information is easier to access.

You have to turn over a lot of rocks to find those little anomalies. You have to find the companies that are off the map - way off the map. You may find local companies that have nothing wrong with them at all. 

A company that I found, Western Insurance Securities, was trading for $3/share when it was earning $20/share!! I tried to buy up as much of it as possible. No one will tell you about these businesses. You have to find them.

Other examples: Genesee Valley Gas, public utility trading at a P/E of 2, GEICO, Union Street Railway of New Bedford selling at $30 when $100/share is sitting in cash, high yield position in 2002. No one will tell you about these ideas, you have to find them.

The answer is still yes today that you can still earn extraordinary returns on smaller amounts of capital. For example, I wouldn't have had to buy issue after issue of different high yield bonds. Having a lot of money to invest forced Berkshire to buy those that were less attractive. With less capital, I could have put all my money into the most attractive issues and really creamed it.

I know more about business and investing today, but my returns have continued to decline since the 50's. Money gets to be an anchor on performance. At Berkshire's size, there would be no more than 200 common stocks in the world that we could invest in if we were running a mutual fund or some other kind of investment business.


http://www.valueplays.net/wp-content/uploads/vinvesting-com.pdf

Saturday 19 March 2011

Nine reasons Warren Buffett loves Lubrizol (QVM approach)

MARCH 18, 2011, 10:25 A.M. ET

Why Warren Buffett Just Spent $10 Billion


In other news on the markets this week, Warren Buffett quietly made an acquisition.
A big one. Even by his standards.
The 80-year old investor put down $9.7 billion, or about a quarter of Berkshire Hathaway's entire cash pile, to buy Lubrizol Corporation, a specialty chemicals company based in Wickliffe, Ohio.
What does this mean for you? Warren Buffett's investment moves are usually worth a closer look, even if you're not one of his stockholders. After all, he's one of the most successful stock pickers ever. And it's never too late to practice your swing, even if your own stock portfolio is closer to $20,000 than, say, $20 billion.
A look through the company's financials reveals nine reasons Warren Buffett loves Lubrizol.


QUALITY (Q) 
1. It has a lucrative niche.
Lubrizol's main business is making additives for fuel, which make engines run better and last longer. They are a small part of the cost of the fuel, but they are valuable to the end users and they are lucrative. Lubrizol's gross margins last year were a thumping 33%, up from 25% five years ago. The company's return on equity is 34%.
2. It has a wide moat.
Lubrizol has little trouble defending its business from competition. It has been around for 82 years – even longer than Mr. Buffett – and has built up a strong franchise. It is the market leader in the industry. And the fuel additives industry is technically advanced. Lubrizol owns a remarkable 1,600 patents and has 6,900 employees worldwide.
3. It's in a dull industry.
Nobody goes into the fuel additives business for the glamour. Venture capitalists are not throwing money after new fuel additives start-ups. Companies in the sector do not typically give away their products for free to gain market share, "eyeballs," "mind share" or the like. Indeed some of the existing players have been getting out – making life better for those who are left.
4. It has pricing power.
Mr. Buffett recently said "the single most important decision in evaluating a business is pricing power. If you've got the power to raise prices without losing business to a competitor, you've got a very good business." At a time of rising raw material costs, that's especially important. Lubrizol fits the bill. The company's own raw materials jumped 10% last year, but it was able to pass those costs on to its customers.
5. It's stable.
Sales fell 9% in 2009, but gross profits actually rose, from $1.1 billion to $1.5 billion. And the company says less than half of its revenues rely on boom-and-bust cyclical industries, such as construction and industrial production. Lubrizol had $2.7 billion in total liabilities at the end of last year – and $2.5 billion in cash and other current assets. Dividends have risen steadily, from $1.04 per share five years ago to $1.39 last year.
6. It benefits from overseas growth.
Two-thirds of last year's revenues came from outside the U.S.A. The company has 40% of its plant and equipment overseas. And that's rising. Last fall Lubrizol broke ground on a new factory in southern China, that will begin production in 2013. The company is a big beneficiary from economic growth in emerging markets. In countries like China, India and Brazil, hundreds of millions of people are moving into the middle class, buying cars, and driving them more. Every drive needs fuel, and every gallon of gas needs additives.
7. It has low unionization.
Just 4% of Lubrizol's U.S. employees are members of a union (although some overseas workers are also members of collective bargaining agreements). That's good for profits. Mr. Buffett may be a Democrat at nights and on weekends, but when he's at the office he's all business.


VALUATION (V)
8. The stock was reasonably priced.
Even a great company can be a bad investment if you pay too much for it. In the case of Lubrizol, Mr. Buffett is paying $135 a share. That's less than 13 times last year's earnings, and 12 times forecasts for 2011. If you find a good company at a good price, who cares what "the market" is doing?


MANAGEMENT (M)


9. He likes the management.
Lubrizol chief executive James Hambrick has been with the company since 1973, when he started there as a co-operative education student. He's been CEO for seven years. "Lubrizol is exactly the sort of company with which we love to partner – the global leader in several market applications run by a talented CEO, James Hambrick," Mr. Buffett said when he announced the deal. "Our only instruction to James – just keep doing for us what you have done so successfully for your shareholders."



http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703328404576207040639038696.html

If you find a good company at a good price, who cares what "the market" is doing?"



When buying a great wonderful company, also ensure that the stock was reasonably priced.
Even a great company can be a bad investment if you pay too much for it

In the case of Lubrizol, Mr. Buffett is paying $135 a share. That's less than 13 times last year's earnings, and 12 times forecasts for 2011

If you find a good company at a good price, who cares what "the market" is doing?

Friday 18 March 2011

Do you live in a meritocracy?

Judge a person on his merits, rather than on your personal feelings.

What is merit?   This is basing your opinion on what is worthwhile about a person or thing.

The decision on whether to retain or replace a person should be based on one criteria – merit.

Do you live in a meritocracy?  Are you ruled by such people of  high ability?

'Nepotism' - Murdoch sued for buying daughter's business


March 17, 2011 - 11:38AM

The board of News Corp has been sued by shareholders for agreeing to buy a business owned by chairman Rupert Murdoch's daughter for about $US675 million.

A trustee for several retirement funds said the board of News Corp approved the "unfairly" priced deal without questioning or challenging the elder Murdoch, who founded the company and is also chief executive.

News Corp spokeswoman Teri Everett described the suit as "meritless".

The chairman of News Corp said he expected his daughter Elisabeth to join his company's board after buying her Shine Group television production business.

The acquisition still needs approval by News Corp's audit committee and the approval of each companies' respective boards. It also requires an independent fairness opinion.

The deal raised new questions about succession at News Corp, which owns the broadcaster Fox and publishes the Wall Street Journal.

"In short, Murdoch is causing News Corp to pay $US675 million for nepotism," said the lawsuit, which was filed overnight in Delaware's Chancery Court.

"In addition to larding the executive ranks of the company with his offspring, Murdoch constantly engages in transactions designed to benefit family members," said the lawsuit by Amalgamated Bank, a trustee for several investment funds holding more than 1 million News Corp shares.

The lawsuit also was joined by the Central Laborers Pension Fund.

The lawsuit seeks damages and a declaration the board breached their fiduciary duty to shareholders.

The case is Amalgamated Bank et al v K. Rupert Murdoch et al, Delaware Chancery Court, No. 6285.

Reuters

Thursday 17 March 2011

Parkson Holdings to expand into Indonesia retail market

Parkson Holdings to expand into Indonesia retail market
Written by Joseph Chin of theedgemalaysia.com
Thursday, 17 March 2011 19:23


KUALA LUMPUR: PARKSON HOLDINGS BHD [] is teaming up with PT Tozy Bintang Sentosa (TBS) to expand its Parkson department stores in Indonesia.

Parkson said on Thursday, March 17 it signed an exclusivity agreement with TBS Group for the proposed collaboration.

The TBS Group operates six retail stores under the brand names of Centro Lifestyle Department Store and Kem Chicks in Indonesia and it planned to add another two more stores.

The eight stores were expected to generate more than US$100 million in sales turnover in 2011.

“The proposed collaboration provides Parkson with an opportunity to establish a presence in Indonesia and extend its international network into Indonesia which has a large domestic retail market given its population base of over 240 million people,” it said.

Parkson operates 89 department stores in Malaysia, China and Vietnam.

Wednesday 16 March 2011

`Worst Case' Nuclear Disaster Hangs on Unlikely Events. There is a 10% probability still.



For Tokyo Electric Power Co.’s stricken nuclear reactors to release catastrophic amounts of radioactive material into the atmosphere, a rare chain of events needs to happen.
Averting a full-scale meltdown -- which scientists say isn’t likely -- depends on cooling the uranium-containing rods at Fukushima Dai-Ichi’s Reactor No. 2, said S.K. Malhotra, a scientist at India’s Department of Atomic Energy in Mumbai. A worst-case outcome may occur if overheating in the reactor culminates in the rupture of the steel lining protecting radioactive material.
“In the worst scenario, an explosion could occur inside the steel pressure vessel, fuel bundles melt down and the radioactivity is exposed,” Malhotra said in a phone interview. “I would say there is a 10 percent probability still.”

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