Thursday 19 January 2012

Warren Buffett on investing in a climate of fear


Warren Buffett on investing in a climate of fear 

– a Q1 letter to send clients



April 12, 2010

"I have no idea what the stock market will do next month or six months from now. I do know that, over a period of time, the American economy will do very well and investors who own a piece of it will do well."

Warren Buffet in an interview on CNBC on Friday, October 10, 2008



After the market roller coaster of 2008 and 2009, the first quarter of 2010 has been blessedly uneventful by comparison. The US markets gained about 5% in the first quarter, the best start to the year since 1998 - the US market ended up about 60% from its lows of a year ago. Canada did well also, up almost  3% in the first quarter.

That said, there is still a cloud of uncertainty that is making many investors nervous.

Causes for concern ... and for optimism

Even with the stabilization of the global economy, there's no shortage of short term causes of concern:

... continued questions on the direction and timing of the economic recovery in the United States and Europe and the timing of higher interest rates

... US housing prices that are staying stubbornly low and unemployment levels in North America and Europe that are stubbornly high.

... and in late March the deputy director of the International Monetary Fund made headlines as he talked about the need for advanced economies to cut spending in order to reduce deficits. 


The good news is that there are offsetting positives, even if the media headlines that feature them aren't quite as prominent:

... on Monday March 22, the Wall Street Journal ran a story about dividend hikes as a result of rising profits by US companies. The article also mentioned that cash on hand on US corporate balance sheets was at the highest level since 2007.

... on the same day the Financial Times ran a similar story about dividend increases in Europe

... and there's growing attention to the impact that Germany's emphasis on manufacturing productivity had in sheltering it from the worst of the economic downturn - and questions about whether  this might be a model for other countries. In March the Economist ran a 14 page feature on how Germany positioned itself for success.

Forecasting the future

Whether you choose to focus on the positives or the negatives, there's broad agreement that the steps taken by governments stabilized the financial crisis that we were facing a year ago - and there is almost no talk today of a global depression.

So the issue is not whether the economy will recover, but when and at what rate -and whether there might be another stumble along the way.

If you look for investing advice in the newspaper or on television, the discussion tends to revolve around what stocks will do well in the immediate period ahead ... this week, this month, this quarter.

We refuse to participate in that speculation - when it comes to short-term predictions, whether about the economy or the stock market, there's one thing we can say with virtual certainty: Most of them will be wrong.  Quite simply, no one has a consistent track record of successfully forecasting short term movements in the economy and markets.

Which is why in uncertain times such as today, one of the people I look to for guidance is Warren Buffett.

Advice from Warren Buffett

In an investment industry poll a couple of years ago, Warren Buffett was voted the greatest investor of all time; among the runners up were Peter Lynch, John Templeton and George Soros.

Buffett's returns are a testimony to the power of compounding.  From 1965 to the end of 2009, the growth in book value of his investments averaged 20% annually. As a result, $10,000 invested in 1965 would currently be worth a remarkable $40 million. By contrast, that same $10,000 invested in the US stock market as a whole, returning just over 9% during this period, would be worth $540,000.

In one of his annual letters to shareholders, Warren Buffett wrote that it only takes two things to invest successfully - having a sound plan and sticking to it. He went on to say that of these two, it's the "sticking to it" part that investors struggle with the most. The quote at the top of the letter, made at the height of the financial crisis, speaks to Buffett's discipline on this issue.

I try to apply that approach as well - putting a plan in place for each client that will meet their long term needs and modifying it as circumstances warrant, without walking away from the plan itself.

Boom times such as we saw in the late 90's and scary conditions such as we've seen in the past two years can make that difficult - but those conditions can also represent opportunity. Indeed, in his most recent letter to shareholders Buffett wrote that "a climate of fear is an investor's best friend."

Five core principles that shape our approach

On balance, I share Warren Buffett's mid term positive outlook, not least because many of the positives that drove market optimism two years ago are still in place, among these the continued emergence of a global middle class in developing countries like Brazil, China, India and Turkey. This educated middle class will fuel global growth that will make us all better off.

In the meantime, here are five fundamental principles that we look for in money managers and that  drive the portfolios that we believe will serve clients well in the period ahead.

1.     Concentrate on quality                                          

 The record bounce in stock prices over the past year was led by companies with the weakest credit ratings. Some have referred to last year as a "junk rally", with the lowest quality companies doing the best.  That's unlikely to continue- that's why I'm focusing my portfolios on only the highest quality companies, those best able to withstand the inevitable ups and downs in the economy.

2.     Look to dividends

Historically, dividends made up 40% of the total returns of investing in stocks and have also helped provide stability through market turbulence. Two years ago, quality companies paying good dividends were hard to find - one piece of good news is that today it's possible to build a portfolio of good quality companies paying dividends of 3% and above.

3.     Focus on valuations

Having a strong price discipline on buying and selling stocks is paramount to success - history shows that the key to a successful investment is ensuring that the purchase price is a fair one. Investors who bought market leaders Cisco Systems, Intel and Microsoft ten years ago are still down down 40% to 70%, not because these aren't great companies but because the price paid was too high.

4.     Build in a buffer

 Given that we have to expect continued volatility, we identify cash flow needs for the next three years for every client and ensure these are set aside in safe investments. That buffer protects clients from short term volatility and reduces stress along the way.

5.     Stick to your plan

In the face of economic and market uncertainty, another  key to success is having a diversified plan appropriate to your risk tolerance - and then sticking to it. It can be hard to ignore the short-term distractions, but ultimately that's the only way to achieve your long term goals with a manageable amount of stress along the way.

In closing, let me express my thanks for the continued opportunity to work together.  Should you ever have any questions or if there's anything you'd like to talk about, my team and I are always pleased to take your call.

Name of advisor



P.S. If you're interested, here's a link to Warren Buffett's 2010 letter to investors:                       http://www.berkshirehathaway.com/letters/2009ltr.pdf



http://clientinsights.ca/article/warren-buffett-on-investing-in-a-climate-of-fear-a-q1-letter-to-send-clients


A Q1 letter to send clients - Warren Buffett on investing in a climate of fear 



An important note:

Over the past 18 months, the quarterly templates for a client letter have ranked among the most popular features on this site.

Research with investors has identified the five elements of an effective client letter. It has to be:

1.     balanced in outlook

2.      candid

3.     short enough for clients to get through comfortably but long enough to be substantial

4.      supported by facts

5.     indicative of the advisors voice and personality

On this last point, if you like the basic structure of the letter, you MUST take the time to customize it to your own philosophy and outlook - I can't emphasize this strongly enough.

Seven Most Deadly Sins of Investing


Greed
Motivation and Destruction: Greed it's a interesting one. Where it's hard to know how greedy to go, or how much should I really want. You've got something that you want to make into something more. No problem with that. But too much greed will ensure your failure. Stop chasing that fast cash, this one is a ringer, this one is it thoughts and investing. Make sure you are not getting greedy, but still investing wisely and not out of greed, motivation. Generations of stock market losers have proved that there's no such thing as a fast buck. But there are bucks to be made for those who can overcome their urges and avoid this sin, and the rest of the seven sins.

Gluttony, Envy, and Lust
When lusting about anything it's very unhealthy. Lust can leave you in the alley street with literally nothing. Especially in our commercial culture, fiscal gluttony is easily sparked by its sister sins, Envy and Lust. If you need to have the shiniest car on the block or the biggest granite countertops in all of Poshbottome Pointe, your absolute investment returns are sure to suffer.

Take this example, say Average Joe could invest and have a annual returns of 15% a year. (That would make you a very good investor -- so you shouldn't count on those kinds of returns.) For the example Average Joe is dreaming big. It still won't make you wealthy if you're earning that 15% on nothing. Remember: Buffett didn't get rich just by making great investments. He got rich by not wasting money that could be added to the kitty. Don't believe me? Do the math. No, wait, let us do it for you.

If you start with $1,000 and earn that 15% a year in a tax-free account, your money will be worth $87,500 after 30 years. Not too shabby. By contrast, if you can skip the gas station stops in the morning and bag a lunch a couple of times, you can scrape together a lousy $1,000 a year to add to your nest egg. The final result? $625,000. Drive an old clunker and ignore all those tempting incentive offers from keeping up with the jones, and then save the $500 a month you would have spent on coffee and cars, and you'll be looking at $3.3 million -- though perhaps not if you invest in GM, while it battles slowing sales and an expected earnings decline.

Yes, Averag Joe is now looking more like Donald Trump (okay we will not get carried away). But do the same at a more reasonable 8% rate of return, and you'll still end up with $730,000. The point is this: Unless you're already sitting on a pretty big pile of dough, your stuff-envy and financial gluttony will be a much bigger factor in your future financial independence than any magic you can conjure for your portfolio's performance. Control your urges accordingly.

Anger
If you don't know Anger around the stock market, then you have been to yahoo's message board before have you? Seriously, that at times can be the anger in and of itself just reading through those message boards or other stock forums. Anger is a natural reaction to adversity, but it's one that rational investors need to overcome if they hope to have consistent success.


Investing is an inherently risky activity that demands a hard look at the facts, good and bad. But a huge number of stock buyers view it like some kind of Sunday-afternoon competition. It's like a intense sports match, cheering on there team, but giving heck to the others! And the anger makes them blind to the negatives. Woe unto the drunk fan who points out the lack of steady revenues and complete absence of profits at a company like Lakers. Plenty of angry members of the Stinger crowd try to blame the others for any downtick, even though they can see for themselves the firm has minute sales; no profits; mystifying, short-lived management; and a CEO with long history of failures.

Mr. Crazy Fan, criticism of a company you own does not constitute an affront to your personal honor. Mr. I am right fan, my positive comments about your company's competitor in no way constitute an agreement to meet with pistols at dawn. That throbbing vein in your forehead is a good indication that you're fixated on the wrong things. Embrace the stuff that angries up your blood. You might learn something important.

Pride
I'm right, and everyone else is wrong. We all feel that way, so I'm not going to deliver a blanket condemnation of self-assurance. After all, acting on your convictions is part of the arrogance of investing. If everyone shares the same, correct opinion of a stock, then it must already be fairly priced. We are convinced we can find sweet bargains or future world-beaters ahead of the rest of the crowd. But not every time. If you believe that, you're in trouble.

That's the kind of pride that will kill investors over the long run. The problem is that, in individual cases, the market rewards the ignorant and the informed without pointing out which is which. It's nice to see the long-suffering shareholders finally catch a break, but it doesn't change the fact that plenty of people brought the suffering on themselves by ignoring the firm's consistently deteriorating financials to purchase a pig in a poke.

When a stock goes up, those who bought it purely because they like the product, or hate a competitor, will swear up and down that they are finally being rewarded for their smarts, but the truth is, they're just being rewarded. The trouble with being otherwise deluded is that such irrational pride and (in the long run) the odds, catch up with you. Investing is about maximizing returns, but you can't do that without minimizing risks. There is a difference between being right and being lucky. I've been lucky before in getting out at the right time, but the danger is taking particular pride in it. It scared me into being even more careful with my future decisions. You need to live and learn and plan for the future, ackowledge your winnings but most importantly your losing to grow and learn from them.

Sloth
Let's think a little more about being a sloth, and when it comes down to it sloth is being lazy. There's no room in investing for good, old-fashioned sloth aka laziness. If you are too lazy to look research your stock company, the stock companies nubmers and and proxy statements, you're setting yourself up for some major failures. Yet every day, we are treated to amazing examples of extreme investor laziness. There are countless times you hear about a stock, but then if you get caught into the one of the seven deadly sins of stock picking and decide to be to lazy to do your homework and research then your asking for trouble. Going strictly on hear say information, one person's picks, etc. We see them all the time...but don't get caught being lazy and not doing your homework!

The road to righteousness

Some of history's most successful investors have said it time and time again: The journey to stock market wealth doesn't require superior instincts, faster reflexes, or better information. What it does require is patience, perseverance, and the willingness to do some work and avoid the mistakes that others are too quick to make. If you can steer clear of the seven sins of stock picking, you'll already be one up on Wall Street. Always remember there is room for bears and bulls, but never any room for pigs on "The Street"!


http://www.investingfocus.com/seven-most-deadly-sins-p3.html

Warren Buffet Quotes

Wide diversification is only required when investors do not understand what they are doing.
Warren Buffett - Stock Market - Investing - Knowledge

Only buy something that you'd be perfectly happy to hold if the market shut down for 10 years.
Warren Buffett - Stock Market - Long Term Investing

We simply attempt to be fearful when others are greedy and to be greedy only when others are fearful.
Warren Buffett - Greed - Fear - Investing

Why not invest your assets in the companies you really like? As Mae West said, "Too much of a good thing can be wonderful".
Warren Buffett - Investing - Assets

Your premium brand had better be delivering something special, or it's not going to get the business.
Warren Buffett - Branding

Our favourite holding period is forever.
Warren Buffet - Long Term Investing

Investing is laying out money today to receive more money tomorrow.
Warren Buffett - Investing - Money Quotes

I always knew I was going to be rich. I don’t think I ever doubted it for a minute.
Warren Buffett - Rich - Optimistic Quotes

I will tell you how to become rich. Close the doors. Be fearful when others are greedy. Be greedy when others are fearful.
Warren Buffett - Fear - Investing - Rich - Greed Quotes

You ought to be able to explain why you’re taking the job you’re taking, why you’re making the investment you’re making, or whatever it may be. And if it can’t stand applying pencil to paper, you’d better think it through some more. And if you can’t write an intelligent answer to those questions, don’t do it.
Warren Buffett - Investing - Questions - Intelligent Quotes

Risk comes from not knowing what you're doing.
Warren Buffett - Risk

Can you really explain to a fish what it's like to walk on land? One day on land is worth a thousand years of talking about it, and one day running a business has exactly the same kind of value.
Warren Buffett - Business

I never try to predict the market.
Warren Buffett - Stock Market Quotes

The key to investing is not assessing how much an industry is going to affect society, or how much it will grow, but rather determining the competitive advantage of any given company and, above all, the durability of that advantage.
Warren Buffett - Growth - Investing - Company

Wednesday 18 January 2012

Conquer Your Fear of Investing


Updated: 8/11/2011 

Many of the most worthwhile things in life are scary at first. Consider, for example, going to school for the first time, falling in love, learning to drive, starting a family, figuring out your new Tivo…
Investing is no exception. The thought of possibly losing money is a terrifying prospect. And the fact that today’s economy has seen better days probably isn’t helping those fears. Investing in the stock market has its risks. But if you give in to fear, you’ll pass up some incredible opportunities—ones that come with big dollar signs attached.
Now is actually a good time for young adults to bite the bullet and get started investing. Think of a market downturn as a clearance sale: It’s a good idea to go shopping before prices climb again.
Bottom line: Surrendering to fear only holds you back. If you want to get ahead financially, you’ve got to invest in your future. Below are five common excuses and the strategies you’ll need to overcome them.

FEAR: I don't want to lose all my money.

CONQUER IT: Diversify.

If your investments are too heavily-weighted in one stock or even one particular kind of stock, you can deep-six your savings goal. (Remember the tech bubble or, more recently, the financial services crisis?) Mutual funds are a good way to achieve instant diversification because they allow you to invest in dozens of stocks within a single fund.
One of the quickest ways to diversify, if you’re new to investing, is with a fund of funds that invests in other mutual stock funds. Or if you’d like something a little more conservative in this uncertain market, go for a so-called “balanced” fund that owns stocks as well as bonds. But bear in mind that for long-term goals, stocks should earn you the highest return.

FEAR: How will I know the best time to invest?

CONQUER IT: Dollar-cost average.

There’s no crystal ball that tells you exactly when the market will rise and fall. The trick is to invest regularly no matter what the market is doing. A simple strategy called dollar-cost averaging eliminates the guesswork. By investing a fixed dollar amount at regular intervals, such as every month or every quarter, you smooth out the ups and downs of the market. This trick takes out all the emotion—it’s scary to invest when the market’s falling, for example—and investing becomes much less daunting.
Mutual funds are, again, a great investment for dollar-cost averaging because you aren’t charged a commission each time you buy (like you are for individual stocks).

FEAR: I'm too queasy for the ups and downs of investing.

CONQUER IT: Ignore your investments.

When you obsess over how your investment is doing from day to day or week to week, you could be more tempted to tinker with it instead of sticking to your long-term diversified plan. Not to mention, you’ll probably lose sleep.That’s not to say you shouldn’t ever reevaluate your investment choices. Just don’t fixate on them.

FEAR: I don't have the time or knowledge to manage a portfolio well.

CONQUER IT: All-in-one funds or index funds.

Think simple. When you start investing and aren’t sure what you’re doing, don’t pretend you do. Truth is, most actively managed mutual funds don’t beat their market benchmarks. If those fund managers have the time, the education and the motivating paycheck, and they can’t pull it off, don’t worry if you’re afraid you can’t either.
Go with funds of funds to achieve instant diversification. Or assemble a simple index fund portfolio. Index funds don’t try to beat the market benchmarks, they match them. Put 75 percent of your money into a fund that tracks the overall U.S. stock market, 25 percent into one that tracks international stocks. Then let ’em ride. As your investments rise and fall, all you’ll have to do is realign your money every year or so to maintain the proper weighting in each fund.
One more way to set it and forget it: Sign up with your broker or fund company to have your regular contributions automatically withdrawn from your bank account.

FEAR: What if I need the money?

CONQUER IT: Set clear goals and choose your investments accordingly.

Before you start investing, write down what you’re investing for and when you think you’ll need the money.
If you’ll need the money within the next three to five years, preservation is your number-one aim. Put that money somewhere safe and accessible, such as a money market mutual fund or a high-yield online savings account. You could also opt for a bank certificate of deposit. But bear in mind your money is locked in for the term of the CD, and you’ll pay a hefty penalty if you need to cash out early.
If you’re investing for the long term, growth is your goal. Invest that money in a broad-based mutual fund that holds mostly stocks. If disaster strikes and you really need the money, you can cash out at any time – but you’ll have to pay taxes on the money you made.

http://www.kiplinger.com/magazine/archives/2009/01/fred_frailey.html

Fear of Investing

Fear of Investing

My father's generation viewed investing as speculation. I'm afraid that same state of mind is back.

By Fred W. Frailey, Editor
From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, January 2009


The real tragedy of the market meltdown we went through in 2008 has scarcely been addressed.

Yes, there really is something worse than standing helplessly by as your savings are depleted by forces over which you have no control. Those of you who have patiently invested in your future retirement all these years, you'll get by. What went down will eventually bob back up. It's our sons and daughters -- my term for the people who are now too scared to invest -- that I'm worried about.

My dad was truly a child of the Great Depression. He finished high school in Kansas in 1928 and college in 1932. Pop was as traumatized by the stock-market crash as everyone else, waiting more than 30 years to become an investor. My father's generation viewed investing as speculation.

Flight to safety

I'm afraid that same state of mind is back. Investors today are fleeing the stock market. Net redemptions from stock mutual funds for the 12 months ended November 3 totaled $245 billion, reports TrimTabs Investment Research. That all but erased the net inflow of money into stock funds in 2006 and 2007. TrimTabs foresaw another $48 billion leaving stock funds in November.

The money is going primarily into money-market funds (which earn almost nothing), CDs (which don't earn you much) and under mattresses. Even bonds are too hot to touch.

You may wonder, given how volatile and ugly the stock market has been lately, what's so bad about a flight to safety. You may even have taken that leap yourself. If such is the case, answer me this: What will be your cue to get back in? Do you ever plan to get back in? And just how do you expect to achieve your financial goals now?

Twice in late 2007, I tried flights to safety in my stock-trading account. Each time that I went to cash, I was soon lured back into stocks. So much for my market timing. I question whether you can do any better. You'll either be drawn in by the first decent rally or still be waiting on the sidelines two years after the bottom for some definitive sign that the coast is clear. If you have an investing plan that made sense a year ago, before this whirlwind began, you should stick with it.

Sidelined

I suspect a lot of people, having been burned by two ferocious bear markets in less than a decade, would reject that advice. They're out and they're staying out. But 80 years of experience tells us that stocks provide the best long-term returns. I believe that more than I do the doomsayers. This is still a great country, working through its problems, and we'll emerge a lot better off for having done so. When will that be? Perhaps sooner than you think.

The last question -- reaching your financial goals from this point forward -- is the biggie. I imagine your goals haven't changed. Achieving them without the long-term help of the stock market is like driving a car on a flat tire or piloting a 747 on one jet engine. In other words, you may get where you're going, but you'll arrive shaken up or in a cold sweat. If you now regard stocks the way my father once did, you had better double or triple the amount you once put aside because you'll need to buy bales of CDs.


Read more: http://www.kiplinger.com/magazine/archives/2009/01/fred_frailey.html#ixzz1jp2ANnsF

Comparing equity yields with term deposits is lazy

Marcus Padley
December 3, 2011

I have been getting a little bit irritated by the constant comparisons between the yield on equities and the yield on a bond or term deposit.

The argument goes that equity yields are now higher than bond yields and also higher than term deposits, so you should switch.

But the truth is that a comparison of the returns on term deposits or bonds with equity yields is simply lazy and ridiculous and reckless, because it misses the point about why people are in term deposits in the first place.

Let me explain by taking a well-known income stock - the National Australia Bank, one of the highest-yielding and safest blue-chip stocks in the market. The yield on the NAB is 7.5 per cent - 10.7 per cent including franking. That, everyone will tell you, is cheap and the argument is that all you mugs holding term deposits earning just 5.5 per cent are idiots because you get a whole extra 2.2 per cent in the NAB or 5.2 per cent including franking.

Fair enough, until you consider this exercise.

Chart forNAT. BANK FPO (NAB.AX)

Get a chart up of the NAB over the last year (one year will do). Now mark off the peaks and troughs since January and calculate how many and how big the variations have been. You will find that the NAB has had 10 fluctuations. Five rallies and five falls.

The size of the rallies has been +12.8 per cent, +17.8 per cent, +8.3 per cent, +23.2 per cent and +26.9 per cent. The falls have been -9.8 per cent, -15.3 per cent, -23.9 per cent, -13.5 per cent and -18.7 per cent and if we picked a smaller-income stock or took NAB out over a longer period, it would be even more dramatic.

Chart forNAT. BANK FPO (NAB.AX)

Now tell me after 10 moves of more than 7.5 per cent in just a year that I should be worrying about the 7.5 per cent yield on the NAB. Now tell me, amid that volatility and instability, that I should mention the yield on the NAB and the yield on a risk-free term deposit or bond in the same breath. Now tell me the prudence behind selling my term deposit and buying the NAB.


The NAB and almost all other income stocks in the current market, are not stable low-risk investments; they are volatile trading stocks and the message is clear and let's make it clearer, once and for all. You cannot compare the yield on an equity to the yield on a bond because one includes no risk of a capital loss (no risk of a gain either) and the other contains a currently huge perceived risk of a capital loss (or gain).

Promoting income stocks because they yield more than a bond is ignoring that extra risk and misunderstanding why people are now in bonds and term deposits. They are there because they don't want to lose any more money. Because they don't want volatility.

The only way to compare equities to bonds or equities to term deposits is if the equities came with a price guarantee, which they don't, or if you compare risk-free yields with the expected total return from equities, which includes the extra volatility and risk and not just the dividends.

In the current market, equities are nothing like a bond or term deposit because share-price risk is dominating the investment decision not the yield. Do you really think people are in term deposits to make 5.5 per cent? No, they are in term deposits to avoid losing money. The focus is on the risk not the return. Risk rules.

But it's not all gloom. The good news is that this is not a normal state of affairs. The sharemarket is supposed to be about opportunity not risk and the fact that risk is so in focus means the opportunity side of the equation is being ignored.

Also, risk can change very quickly. Ahead of the last European Union summit the market jumped 11 per cent in four days on lower perceived equity risk. The banks jumped 19.2 per cent. If the GFC doesn't reignite, the focus is going to very rapidly swing back to yields and price-to-earnings (PE) ratios. If the GFC is behind us, how long do you think the NAB is going to trade on a 10.7 per cent yield and the market on a PE of 10.7 times against a long-term average of 14 times?

Not long. In which case the game now is not debating the marginal merits of term deposits versus equities but waiting for a chink of light in the outlook for risk, because that is all that matters and because when it appears, the herd is going to smash down the door to get to those yields and PEs.

At the moment they don't believe in them. Your job is to be on the ball on the day they do.

Marcus Padley is a stockbroker with Patersons Securities and the author of sharemarket newsletter Marcus Today. His views do not necessarily reflect those of Patersons.



Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/money/investing/comparing-equity-yields-with-term-deposits-is-lazy-20111202-1oakh.html#ixzz1jkzaigzd