Hai-O hits five-week low
Tags: Hai-O
Written by Joseph Chin
Friday, 20 November 2009 15:44
KUALA LUMPUR: Shares of Hai-O Enterprise extended their losses in late afternoon trade on Friday, Nov 20, falling to a five-week low of RM6.93.
At 3.23pm, the shares were down 27 sen to RM6.93, the lowest since Oct 15.
On Thursday, the shares fell 46 sen, the biggest one-day loss in recent weeks, as investors started taking profit after the run-up in the share price.
Hai-O is a manufacturer and wholesaler of traditional herbal and pharmaceutical products.
In late October, a local research house increased the indicative fair value for Hai-O to RM8.80 from RM6.80, based on higher price-to-earnings ratio (PER) of nine times CY2010 earnings per share (versus eight times CY2010 earnings per share previously).
This is a 38% discount to the research house's target PER for the consumer sector of 14.5 times due to its smaller market capitalisation as well as low liquidity.
The higher PER target, the research house said, was to reflect increased investor participation in mid-cap stocks,a lower risk premium and improved market sentiment.
http://www.theedgemalaysia.com/business-news/154142-hai-o-hits-5-week-low.html
Keep INVESTING Simple and Safe (KISS) ****Investment Philosophy, Strategy and various Valuation Methods**** The same forces that bring risk into investing in the stock market also make possible the large gains many investors enjoy. It’s true that the fluctuations in the market make for losses as well as gains but if you have a proven strategy and stick with it over the long term you will be a winner!****Warren Buffett: Rule No. 1 - Never lose money. Rule No. 2 - Never forget Rule No. 1.
Tuesday, 24 November 2009
Coastal Contracts profit doubles
Coastal Contracts profit doubles
Tags: Coastal Contracts
Written by Joy Lee
Tuesday, 24 November 2009 10:33
KUALA LUMPUR: COASTAL CONTRACTS BHD []’s net profit more than doubled for the third quarter ended Sept 30, 2009 on the back of a strong performance from its shipbuilding and ship repairs division.
Its net profit surged to RM47.95 million from RM22.52 million a year earlier while revenue jumped 113% to RM140.08 million from RM65.93 million previously. Subsequently, earnings per share rose to 13.31 sen from 6.39 sen. No dividend was declared for the quarter under review.
The shipbuilding and ship repairs division booked a higher revenue of RM132.8 million in the current quarter compared with RM60.4 million in the corresponding quarter a year earlier, an increase of 120%, due to more vessel deliveries in the current quarter. Its vessel chartering division recorded a 33% rise in revenue to RM7.3 million from RM5.5 million a year earlier.
“The improved performance was attributed to a combination of greater tonnage transported and higher fleet utilisation,” it said.
Year-to-date, the group said its net profit of RM108.69 million, which rose 66.3% year-on-year, has already surpassed 2008’s full-year profits of RM96.8 million. Its revenue for the cumulative nine months increased 33.5% to RM315.18 million from RM236.15 million previously.
The group said the steady resurgence of crude oil prices had caused previously shelved exploration and production projects to return on the back of revival in capital expenditures by oil companies.
The International Energy Agency has recently revised up its forecast for oil demand for 2010. As at 8.20pm yesterday, crude oil added 91 cents or 1.2% to US$78.38 (RM264.92) per barrel.
“In the light of these positive developments, the near-term outlook for demand of offshore support vessels (OSVs) is expected to improve, although a full-blown recovery may still be far from the horizon. In any event, Coastal group’s revenue and earnings will continue to benefit from the strength of its vessel sales order book, providing visibility for close to two years ahead. Coupled with a healthy balance sheet with low level of borrowings, Coastal group will continue to operate from a position of strength,” it said.
Moving forward, it said the group had increased optimism of securing new contracts to add to its vessel sales order book, especially in the OSVs category, as well as reaping recurrent returns from its chartering division through optimal deployment of the group’s fleet in energy transportation and in various oil and gas support services.
This article appeared in The Edge Financial Daily, November 24, 2009.
Tags: Coastal Contracts
Written by Joy Lee
Tuesday, 24 November 2009 10:33
KUALA LUMPUR: COASTAL CONTRACTS BHD []’s net profit more than doubled for the third quarter ended Sept 30, 2009 on the back of a strong performance from its shipbuilding and ship repairs division.
Its net profit surged to RM47.95 million from RM22.52 million a year earlier while revenue jumped 113% to RM140.08 million from RM65.93 million previously. Subsequently, earnings per share rose to 13.31 sen from 6.39 sen. No dividend was declared for the quarter under review.
The shipbuilding and ship repairs division booked a higher revenue of RM132.8 million in the current quarter compared with RM60.4 million in the corresponding quarter a year earlier, an increase of 120%, due to more vessel deliveries in the current quarter. Its vessel chartering division recorded a 33% rise in revenue to RM7.3 million from RM5.5 million a year earlier.
“The improved performance was attributed to a combination of greater tonnage transported and higher fleet utilisation,” it said.
Year-to-date, the group said its net profit of RM108.69 million, which rose 66.3% year-on-year, has already surpassed 2008’s full-year profits of RM96.8 million. Its revenue for the cumulative nine months increased 33.5% to RM315.18 million from RM236.15 million previously.
The group said the steady resurgence of crude oil prices had caused previously shelved exploration and production projects to return on the back of revival in capital expenditures by oil companies.
The International Energy Agency has recently revised up its forecast for oil demand for 2010. As at 8.20pm yesterday, crude oil added 91 cents or 1.2% to US$78.38 (RM264.92) per barrel.
“In the light of these positive developments, the near-term outlook for demand of offshore support vessels (OSVs) is expected to improve, although a full-blown recovery may still be far from the horizon. In any event, Coastal group’s revenue and earnings will continue to benefit from the strength of its vessel sales order book, providing visibility for close to two years ahead. Coupled with a healthy balance sheet with low level of borrowings, Coastal group will continue to operate from a position of strength,” it said.
Moving forward, it said the group had increased optimism of securing new contracts to add to its vessel sales order book, especially in the OSVs category, as well as reaping recurrent returns from its chartering division through optimal deployment of the group’s fleet in energy transportation and in various oil and gas support services.
This article appeared in The Edge Financial Daily, November 24, 2009.
Monday, 23 November 2009
Every mistake is an opportunity to learn
Error is defined as an unintentional deviation from a goal, caused by an act or omission that is in principle avoidable.
Errors happen when we make decisions.
Errors happen when we make decisions.
- By improving the way we make decisions, we can try to prevent errors, or minimise their probability.
- By improving the way we respond when things go wrong, we can try to manage errors, or minimise their impact.
- We can also try to create positive impacts in negative situations, by taking the opportunities for learning that mistakes provide.
Warren Buffett's Midas touch
The decisions that have made Buffett the second wealthiest man in the world have included investments in Coca-Cola, American Express, Gillette, The Washington Post and Wells Fargo, plus some major acquisitions in the fields of insurance, house building and building materials, clothing and furniture. During 2003 Buffett, contrary to some market expectations, engaged in currency speculation against the dollar. By the end of the year his company held some $12 billion in foreign currency.
Buffett's success is founded on information. When, during the 1990s, undervalued stocks were becoming more difficult to find, Buffett turned his attention to corporate acquisitions. His next field of operation, in 2002, was junk bonds - until prices rose. The subsequent foreign currency operation built on the US trade deficit when foreign investors were flooded with dollars.
Buffett takes a long-term view and typically shuns debt. During the dot-com boom he preferred to steer clear of high-tech stocks, his attitude appearing old-fashioned to many. In the event, his preference for more traditional and easily understood firms and products bore fruit. He had correctly gauged the low probability of dotcom stocks rising. He likes to ask 'discomforting questions' to avoid biased decision making.
Buffett also understands the need to avoid fatal downsides. He has said that he has 'never believed in risking what my family and friends have and need in order to pursue what they don't have and don't need'.
Buffett's success is founded on information. When, during the 1990s, undervalued stocks were becoming more difficult to find, Buffett turned his attention to corporate acquisitions. His next field of operation, in 2002, was junk bonds - until prices rose. The subsequent foreign currency operation built on the US trade deficit when foreign investors were flooded with dollars.
Buffett takes a long-term view and typically shuns debt. During the dot-com boom he preferred to steer clear of high-tech stocks, his attitude appearing old-fashioned to many. In the event, his preference for more traditional and easily understood firms and products bore fruit. He had correctly gauged the low probability of dotcom stocks rising. He likes to ask 'discomforting questions' to avoid biased decision making.
Buffett also understands the need to avoid fatal downsides. He has said that he has 'never believed in risking what my family and friends have and need in order to pursue what they don't have and don't need'.
Responding to risks: Summary
There are several possible responses to risk, ranging from tolerating to eliminating.
The right response to risk depends on the specific situation and also our calculations of probability and impact.
Transferring and insuring against risk involve others in risks, to the benefit of the business; the trade-off is increased costs.
Managing risks well depends on sharing information, clear responsibilities and consistency of approach.
The right response to risk depends on the specific situation and also our calculations of probability and impact.
Transferring and insuring against risk involve others in risks, to the benefit of the business; the trade-off is increased costs.
Managing risks well depends on sharing information, clear responsibilities and consistency of approach.
Sunday, 22 November 2009
Responding to risks: Insuring risks
Insuring risks is similar to transferring them, but rather than asking another company to tkae action if a risk occurs, you ask them to financially compensate you for its occurrence.
As with transferring, the company will want payment for taking on the risk in this way. This is familair concept from everyday life, where we have to insure our household goods, cars and mortgage repayments against a number of downside risks, from theft and accident to death.
Business also invest in many types of insurance, including public liability, employer's liability and so on.
Insurance is often a good response to operational risks. It is particualrly appropriate for low-probability downsides with hugely significant impacts, such as a fire at the workplace.
As with transferring, the company will want payment for taking on the risk in this way. This is familair concept from everyday life, where we have to insure our household goods, cars and mortgage repayments against a number of downside risks, from theft and accident to death.
Business also invest in many types of insurance, including public liability, employer's liability and so on.
Insurance is often a good response to operational risks. It is particualrly appropriate for low-probability downsides with hugely significant impacts, such as a fire at the workplace.
Responding to risks: Transferring risks
Transferring is the concept of placing risks with those outside the business who are best placed to manage them.
Typically, this means using another company to take on a business process that you do not wish to carry out in-house, or are unable to do yourself. There are benefits in terms of reducing the probability and impact of downsides and also in-house effort in managing the risk, but there will be a cost - people will want paying for taking on risks.
Risks can be transferred in different ways:
Tacit risk transfer is generally not beneficial - it often represents a situation where one party has wrongly assumed that the other one will take an action or respond to a situation. To prevent problems like this, you need share all information on the risk with the potential transferee: its nature, probability and likely impact (on both parties); what you will pay them to take it on, why you want to transfer it and so on.
Payment for taking on risks will be more realistic when there is frank and realistic discussion of probabilities, impacts and costs. Lack of communication may prompt the party taking on the risk to overcharge in order to cover themselves against the unexpected, or factors tha have not been clarified.
Typically, this means using another company to take on a business process that you do not wish to carry out in-house, or are unable to do yourself. There are benefits in terms of reducing the probability and impact of downsides and also in-house effort in managing the risk, but there will be a cost - people will want paying for taking on risks.
Risks can be transferred in different ways:
- formally: on a contractual basis (e.g. IT service agreement), or through some other written agreement
- informally: through discussions and meetings, on a basis of trust
- tacitly: through assumption, perhaps based on precedent or simply beliefs.
Tacit risk transfer is generally not beneficial - it often represents a situation where one party has wrongly assumed that the other one will take an action or respond to a situation. To prevent problems like this, you need share all information on the risk with the potential transferee: its nature, probability and likely impact (on both parties); what you will pay them to take it on, why you want to transfer it and so on.
Payment for taking on risks will be more realistic when there is frank and realistic discussion of probabilities, impacts and costs. Lack of communication may prompt the party taking on the risk to overcharge in order to cover themselves against the unexpected, or factors tha have not been clarified.
Responding to risks: Hedging risks
Hedging means taking additional risks that offset other risks, so that if the downside impact of one risk occurs, it is (in theory) balanced by the upside impact of the other risk.
An example would be betting an equal sum on both sides in a sporting fixture - whatever the outcome, you cannot lose. In investment or business, a 'perfect' hedge (one where the different outcomes are perfectly balanced) is practically impossible. A contractor can partially hedge his material cost prices of his contract with an advance order with the manufacturer for future delivery.
Hedging isn'tjust an approach to business or investment risk. We engage in many trivial hedging behaviours all the time in our everyday lives - in any situation where we wish to avoid the risk of commitment. When we hedge in everyday life, we set up alternatives for ourselves that will minimise the negative impact on us if things don't work out. Consider the planning of a Friday night out. We might make tentative plans to go out with one group of friends, but remain open to other offers. After all, a better offer might come along - with a higher probability of positive impact (more enjoyment). We are 'hedging our bets'.
An example would be betting an equal sum on both sides in a sporting fixture - whatever the outcome, you cannot lose. In investment or business, a 'perfect' hedge (one where the different outcomes are perfectly balanced) is practically impossible. A contractor can partially hedge his material cost prices of his contract with an advance order with the manufacturer for future delivery.
Hedging isn'tjust an approach to business or investment risk. We engage in many trivial hedging behaviours all the time in our everyday lives - in any situation where we wish to avoid the risk of commitment. When we hedge in everyday life, we set up alternatives for ourselves that will minimise the negative impact on us if things don't work out. Consider the planning of a Friday night out. We might make tentative plans to go out with one group of friends, but remain open to other offers. After all, a better offer might come along - with a higher probability of positive impact (more enjoyment). We are 'hedging our bets'.
Responding to risks: Concentrating risks
Concentrating risks is the opposite of diversifying - it means deliberately 'putting all your eggs in one basket'. The effect is opposite too: it increases the severity of potential impacts, but reduces management overheads, variables, unknown factors and dependencies.
An example of concentrating risk would be assigning a single person to a project full time, rather than assigning a small team part time.
The time and cost of running the project might well be reduced, and the project might well be reduced, and the project may be run in a more coherent way, but there is a risk that the key individual will move on, damaging the chances of delivery.
The equivalent in financial terms is investing heavily in one or two stocks or products that you believe are sound, rather than spreading risk around because you are less sure of your market knowledge.
Concentrating risk depends for its success on the skill and knowledge of decision makers. With fewer chances to correct mistakes, people need to get it right first time.
An example of concentrating risk would be assigning a single person to a project full time, rather than assigning a small team part time.
The time and cost of running the project might well be reduced, and the project might well be reduced, and the project may be run in a more coherent way, but there is a risk that the key individual will move on, damaging the chances of delivery.
The equivalent in financial terms is investing heavily in one or two stocks or products that you believe are sound, rather than spreading risk around because you are less sure of your market knowledge.
Concentrating risk depends for its success on the skill and knowledge of decision makers. With fewer chances to correct mistakes, people need to get it right first time.
Responding to risks: Diversifying risks
Diversifying is about 'spreading risk around' - reducing your potential exposure by not having all eggs in one basket. It reduces potential negative impact, but this normally results in extra costs.
Diversification can be a good tactic where there are problems in keeping the risk 'in one place', perhaps because there is a big potential downside. For example, printers are dependent on paper suppliers to keep their operations running. By setting up many suppliers for this commodity, they make it more likely that they will be able to get cover from another supplier if one can't delviver, thus reducing the potential downside risk of running out of paper. (They also reap a number of side benefits, such as the opportunity to benchmark the prices of different suppliers, gain information about suppliers, find out about different ways of handling their orders and transactions and so on.)
However, there's always a downside. There will be more administrative work in handling a large number of suppliers, and more management decisions to be made about which one will be used in each case; is price the only factor, or is the commercial relationship important too?
Diversification is also a good strategy for managing financial risk. Investment vehicles that give investors the chance to invest in a range of companies offer those with little stock market knowledge a way to invest with reduced risk of exposure to market volatility in comparison with direct investment in a singloe company.
The key to diversification is keeping the different risks as separate from each other as possible, or reducing interdependencies between them. No amount of diversification will protect against a worldwide recession, but investing in different economies around the world will offset the risk of a downturn in any particular one of them.
In a project contex, diversification can improve the chances of success. Suppose a project has a 0.8 (80%) probability of failure. It follows that the probability of success is 0.2 920%) - not particularly good. Perhaps it is a speculative research and development project aimed at creating a new product.
But what if we ran two such projects? The probability of both failing is 0.8 x 0.8 = 0.64 (64%) . And if we ran three, the probability of ALL THREE failing would be 0.8 x 0.8 x0.8 = 0.512 (51.2%), making the probability of having at LEAST ONE success nearly 50% (0.488 or 48.8%). As we add more and more projects, the chances of success in at least one case steadily increases. With 20 projects, our chances of having one success are 0.99 (99%) - we would be almost certain to succeed in one of the 20 projects.
Diversifying risk through multiple projects:
Probabiltiy of total failure ----- Probability of single success
Run a single project
80% (0.8) ---- 20% (0.2)
Run two projects
64% (0.8x0.8) ---- 36% (0.36)
Run three projects
51.2% (0.8x0.8x0.8) ---- 48.8% (0.488)
Run 20 projects
1% (0.8^20) ---- 99% (0.99)
This illustrates how diversification can improve the chances of success, although at a price. Running 20 projects will be much more expensive than running one. But it may be that 20 modest projects, each researching a different potential product, are a better way forward than a single 'all or nothing' project puttting lots of resource into a single product.
An important point to remember is that the 'winners' must pay for the 'losers' if you choose to go for diversification. The business must be able to afford to take all these risks, with all their respective potential downsides, and be confident that there is no risk of bankruptcy as a result.
Diversification can be a good tactic where there are problems in keeping the risk 'in one place', perhaps because there is a big potential downside. For example, printers are dependent on paper suppliers to keep their operations running. By setting up many suppliers for this commodity, they make it more likely that they will be able to get cover from another supplier if one can't delviver, thus reducing the potential downside risk of running out of paper. (They also reap a number of side benefits, such as the opportunity to benchmark the prices of different suppliers, gain information about suppliers, find out about different ways of handling their orders and transactions and so on.)
However, there's always a downside. There will be more administrative work in handling a large number of suppliers, and more management decisions to be made about which one will be used in each case; is price the only factor, or is the commercial relationship important too?
Diversification is also a good strategy for managing financial risk. Investment vehicles that give investors the chance to invest in a range of companies offer those with little stock market knowledge a way to invest with reduced risk of exposure to market volatility in comparison with direct investment in a singloe company.
The key to diversification is keeping the different risks as separate from each other as possible, or reducing interdependencies between them. No amount of diversification will protect against a worldwide recession, but investing in different economies around the world will offset the risk of a downturn in any particular one of them.
In a project contex, diversification can improve the chances of success. Suppose a project has a 0.8 (80%) probability of failure. It follows that the probability of success is 0.2 920%) - not particularly good. Perhaps it is a speculative research and development project aimed at creating a new product.
But what if we ran two such projects? The probability of both failing is 0.8 x 0.8 = 0.64 (64%) . And if we ran three, the probability of ALL THREE failing would be 0.8 x 0.8 x0.8 = 0.512 (51.2%), making the probability of having at LEAST ONE success nearly 50% (0.488 or 48.8%). As we add more and more projects, the chances of success in at least one case steadily increases. With 20 projects, our chances of having one success are 0.99 (99%) - we would be almost certain to succeed in one of the 20 projects.
Diversifying risk through multiple projects:
Probabiltiy of total failure ----- Probability of single success
Run a single project
80% (0.8) ---- 20% (0.2)
Run two projects
64% (0.8x0.8) ---- 36% (0.36)
Run three projects
51.2% (0.8x0.8x0.8) ---- 48.8% (0.488)
Run 20 projects
1% (0.8^20) ---- 99% (0.99)
This illustrates how diversification can improve the chances of success, although at a price. Running 20 projects will be much more expensive than running one. But it may be that 20 modest projects, each researching a different potential product, are a better way forward than a single 'all or nothing' project puttting lots of resource into a single product.
An important point to remember is that the 'winners' must pay for the 'losers' if you choose to go for diversification. The business must be able to afford to take all these risks, with all their respective potential downsides, and be confident that there is no risk of bankruptcy as a result.
Responding to risks: Minimising risks
If you choose to minimise a risk, you accept that it can't be eliminated, but take action to reduce its probability or negative impact (or both). Minimising probability means taking actions so that a negative outcome is less likely to occur; minimising impact means taking actions so that the consequences will be less severe if a negative outcome does occur.
We can see this in action by considering our own lifestyle choices. By choosing a healthy diet and exercising well, we minimise the probability of health problems in later life. By taking out health insurance, we hope to minimise the impact if they do occur. Clearly, we could do both these things - minimising both probability and impact as a result. How much action we take to minimise a risk, and the kind of actions we favour, depends on our own priorities, plus (as always) our assessment of probability and impact. If our past medical history suggested we were more at risk from health problems, we might be more motivated to take action.
A parallel from business would be typical responses to operational risks. Employees should be protected from physical harm wherever possible (minimising probability), but the employer is also obliged to have systems in place to deal with injuries should they occur (minimising impact).
Another example of minimising impact is double redundancy in computer systems. Here an entire duplicate system is created and maintained, so that it can take over in the event of malfunction. This hugely reduces the potential impact (though not the probability) of crucial data systems going offline; there is of course a trade-off in terms of cost. This is often the case: in general, the more you reduce impact, the more cost is involved. The business might choose to instate a repair contract with an IT service company instead, but this would not provide the same reduction of impact as the double-redundancy system.
We can see this in action by considering our own lifestyle choices. By choosing a healthy diet and exercising well, we minimise the probability of health problems in later life. By taking out health insurance, we hope to minimise the impact if they do occur. Clearly, we could do both these things - minimising both probability and impact as a result. How much action we take to minimise a risk, and the kind of actions we favour, depends on our own priorities, plus (as always) our assessment of probability and impact. If our past medical history suggested we were more at risk from health problems, we might be more motivated to take action.
A parallel from business would be typical responses to operational risks. Employees should be protected from physical harm wherever possible (minimising probability), but the employer is also obliged to have systems in place to deal with injuries should they occur (minimising impact).
Another example of minimising impact is double redundancy in computer systems. Here an entire duplicate system is created and maintained, so that it can take over in the event of malfunction. This hugely reduces the potential impact (though not the probability) of crucial data systems going offline; there is of course a trade-off in terms of cost. This is often the case: in general, the more you reduce impact, the more cost is involved. The business might choose to instate a repair contract with an IT service company instead, but this would not provide the same reduction of impact as the double-redundancy system.
Responding to risks: Tolerating risks
Your assessment of probability and/or impact may lead you to the conclusion that is is acceptable to tolerate a risk. Such a decision is likely to be based on one (or both) of these two perceptions:
If you are satisfied that one or both of these is true, a decision to tolerate the risk may well be the right one.
By making the choice to tolerate a risk, you are basically saying that you will do whatever is necessary to recover from a downside when it occurs, but nothing to prepare for it in advance. However, this decision clearly rests on your understanding of probability and impact. If you cannot be certain of probability, you may not be on safe ground tolerating the risk of a downside.
We have seen how impacts can often be quantified in financial terms, so that they can be compared to each other. If you tolerate a risk, the business needs to be financially prepared to sustain the impact of its occurrence.
For example, if there is a risk that one in every hundred units made in a factory will be defective, but changing the manufacturing process is prohibitively expensive, the risk may be tolerated. But the business needs to be sure that the waste resulting from this decision to tolerate a risk will not damage its profits. A decision might be taken to increase the selling price of the item, or sacrifice some profit margin, to offset the cost of the risk occurring.
- the probability of the downside is so low that it can be ignored
- the impact of the downside would be so insignificant that it can be ignored.
If you are satisfied that one or both of these is true, a decision to tolerate the risk may well be the right one.
By making the choice to tolerate a risk, you are basically saying that you will do whatever is necessary to recover from a downside when it occurs, but nothing to prepare for it in advance. However, this decision clearly rests on your understanding of probability and impact. If you cannot be certain of probability, you may not be on safe ground tolerating the risk of a downside.
We have seen how impacts can often be quantified in financial terms, so that they can be compared to each other. If you tolerate a risk, the business needs to be financially prepared to sustain the impact of its occurrence.
For example, if there is a risk that one in every hundred units made in a factory will be defective, but changing the manufacturing process is prohibitively expensive, the risk may be tolerated. But the business needs to be sure that the waste resulting from this decision to tolerate a risk will not damage its profits. A decision might be taken to increase the selling price of the item, or sacrifice some profit margin, to offset the cost of the risk occurring.
Responding to risks: Eliminating risks
Clearly, if a risk has potentially negative consequences, then eliminating it is the best alternative. Given the choice, we would like to live without the potential for downsides to occur.
In business terms, this is clearly the most desirable action to take - it reduces management effort both now and in the future if you don't have to worry about a particular risk any more. However, this is seldom possible - few risks can be eliminated completely, and some risk is going to be present in nearly every business situation.,
The key to considering elimination is the risk profile. As we've seen, any risk that involves a fatal downside is a strong candidate for elimination, since the occurrence of the downside, however low its probability, is totally unacceptable.
We would not choose to play a dice game that might bankrupt us. In business terms this might equate to changing manufacturing processes that endangered people's lives in some wqay. However unlikely the outcome, it would not be acceptable simply to tolerate the risk.
Eliminating a risk may involve doing things in completely new ways. If significant business change is involved in getting rid of a risk, you may need to consider what new risks will be created as a result.
In business terms, this is clearly the most desirable action to take - it reduces management effort both now and in the future if you don't have to worry about a particular risk any more. However, this is seldom possible - few risks can be eliminated completely, and some risk is going to be present in nearly every business situation.,
The key to considering elimination is the risk profile. As we've seen, any risk that involves a fatal downside is a strong candidate for elimination, since the occurrence of the downside, however low its probability, is totally unacceptable.
We would not choose to play a dice game that might bankrupt us. In business terms this might equate to changing manufacturing processes that endangered people's lives in some wqay. However unlikely the outcome, it would not be acceptable simply to tolerate the risk.
Eliminating a risk may involve doing things in completely new ways. If significant business change is involved in getting rid of a risk, you may need to consider what new risks will be created as a result.
Responding to risks
Responding to risks - the actions you can take once you've identified a risk and understood its probability and impact.
There are usually risks that cannot be avoided in business, no matter what alternative we choose. Our decisions therefore focus on how we will respond to them, rather than trying to avoid them. Responses to risk will vary from business to business and from risk to risk, but they tend to fall into one of these categories:
Getting it right
Whatever approach you choose to the risks you face, there are central themes to risk management that have to be in place for it to be successful.
Effective decision making and risk management are based on understanding, information and consistency. It is vital that everyone involved is working from a shared idea of the significance of the risks facing the business, the probability of them occurring and the actions that they need to take in order to minimise downsides (or maximise upsides).
Here are some questions to ask in key areas to assess your risk management capabilities:
understanding operational risk:
understanding strategic risk:
understanding probability:
understanding impact:
information:
clear roles and responsibilities:
reporting and monitoring:
consistency of approach:
consistency of analysis:
consistency of tools and techniques:
consistency of terminology:
There are usually risks that cannot be avoided in business, no matter what alternative we choose. Our decisions therefore focus on how we will respond to them, rather than trying to avoid them. Responses to risk will vary from business to business and from risk to risk, but they tend to fall into one of these categories:
- eliminating
- tolerating
- minimising
- diversifying
- concentrating
- hedging
- transferring
- insuring
Getting it right
Whatever approach you choose to the risks you face, there are central themes to risk management that have to be in place for it to be successful.
Effective decision making and risk management are based on understanding, information and consistency. It is vital that everyone involved is working from a shared idea of the significance of the risks facing the business, the probability of them occurring and the actions that they need to take in order to minimise downsides (or maximise upsides).
Here are some questions to ask in key areas to assess your risk management capabilities:
understanding operational risk:
- are the risks that can arise in key business process understood?
- are the implications of choosing or creating particular new processes understood?
- are the impacts of operational risk understood, in terms of their immediate impact and also any potential impacts at higher levels?
understanding strategic risk:
- are decision makers aware of the strategic risks facing the business?
- are the implications of 'doing nothing' or continuing along the present course understood?
- has 'business as usual' been examined in the same way as a 'risky' new direction would be?
- have the risks implied simply by entering or remaining in a particular market been examined?
understanding probability:
- have probabilities been quantified in a consistent way, that allows for comparison?
- what evidence is there to support estimates of probability?
- where there is uncertainty, has this been understood and acknowledged by decision makers?
- is there shared understanding of the subjectivity involved in probability calculations?
understanding impact:
- have impacts been quantified wherever possible, to allow for comparison?
- is it clear where risks might impact on more than one area of the business?
- is there the potential for risks to have interdependencies, making the occurrence of two or more risks together more significant?
- are the different levels of impact understood (operations, strategy, financial, cultural)?
information:
- documenting: how will risks, responses and results be documented? what proceducres will be used for recording the actions taken to manage risks and their results?
- sharing: how will information on risks and the success (or otherwise) of particular response be disseminated throughout the business, to avoid duplication of effort?
- communicating: who owns key information? who does it need to reach in order to support decisions on risk? what are the best media, formats and techniques for communicating?
clear roles and responsibilities:
- whose responsibility is each risk? who 'owns' it by default?
- who has enough authority and/or information to take a decision on how risks will be managed?
- who will take action to manage the risk? who will become its new 'owner'?
reporting and monitoring:
- who needs to know what, and when?
- what is the best medium or channel to provide information on risks, such that those who need to take decisions have the information they need in a format they will find conducive?
consistency of approach:
- if similar risks occur in different parts of the business, is the response the same?
- could risks easily be aggregated across the business if this kind of concentration brought benefits?
consistency of analysis:
- where possible, are risks assessed using standard, objective criteria, or at least those that are agreed by all within the business?
consistency of tools and techniques:
- where decision-making tools are used, are they used in a consistent way across departments and teams?
- is there a genuine shared perspective on risks that affect different groups?
consistency of terminology:
- are risks described in terms that allow meaningful comparison and evaluation across the business?
- are common terms used with the same sense throught the business?
- are there any aspects that need to be quantified, or made less subjective, to allow for more focused discussion between those involved?
Saturday, 21 November 2009
Understanding Risk and Decision Making
Key ideas:
Probability is the likelihood of an outcome. Probabilities are expressed numerically, but are often subjective.
Impact is the effect that a particular outcome will have.
Decision trees help us get a grip on our alternatives.
The concept of expected value helps us compare alternatives based on probability and impact.
Risk profies take us beyond expected value to consider unacceptable or fatal downsides.
Getting more information to reduce subjectivity in decision making takes time and costs money
Ref:
Risk: How to make decisions in an uncertain world
Editor: Zeger Degraeve
Probability is the likelihood of an outcome. Probabilities are expressed numerically, but are often subjective.
Impact is the effect that a particular outcome will have.
Decision trees help us get a grip on our alternatives.
The concept of expected value helps us compare alternatives based on probability and impact.
Risk profies take us beyond expected value to consider unacceptable or fatal downsides.
Getting more information to reduce subjectivity in decision making takes time and costs money
Ref:
Risk: How to make decisions in an uncertain world
Editor: Zeger Degraeve
It's important to remember that people are the real decision makers.
Tools and techniques for decision making: Means, not ends
However you go about making decisions, it's important to remember that people are the real decision makers. Tools and techniques such as decision tress help to generate insight into a problem, stimulate communication and build a shared understanding of it, but they cannot take the decision for you. In the last analysis, business decisions are about people - in every sense.
Our favoured courses of action often flow more from our own values than from what is objectively 'right' in a situation. Our estimates of probability are similarly subjective. And in assessing impact, we are likely to be highly subjective too, perhaps concentrating on those areas of downside or upside that affect us most directly.
The danger of using models such as those discussed in the previous postings is that they can give the illusion of objectivity. Writing things down and analysing them is important, but the main benefit of doing so is to bring clarity to a decision, rather than precision.
We have to remember that tools and techniques are only as good as the information we put into them. They are dependent on the extent and accuracy of information available at the time the decision is taken. No matter how we present or analyse the information we have, we cannot add to it or make it any more reliable than it already is. All we can do is aim for a shared sense of what we know and what we don't know, to build an informed consensus for particular courses of action.
Only people can build a bridge from the information that is available to a decision that can be taken forward.
Tools for risk assessement: and decisions making:
Probability
Subjective probabilities
Impact: hard and soft
Decision trees
Expected value
Fatal downsides
Life decisions
A business decision
Break-even analysis
Risk profiles
Probability/Impact matrix
However you go about making decisions, it's important to remember that people are the real decision makers. Tools and techniques such as decision tress help to generate insight into a problem, stimulate communication and build a shared understanding of it, but they cannot take the decision for you. In the last analysis, business decisions are about people - in every sense.
Our favoured courses of action often flow more from our own values than from what is objectively 'right' in a situation. Our estimates of probability are similarly subjective. And in assessing impact, we are likely to be highly subjective too, perhaps concentrating on those areas of downside or upside that affect us most directly.
The danger of using models such as those discussed in the previous postings is that they can give the illusion of objectivity. Writing things down and analysing them is important, but the main benefit of doing so is to bring clarity to a decision, rather than precision.
We have to remember that tools and techniques are only as good as the information we put into them. They are dependent on the extent and accuracy of information available at the time the decision is taken. No matter how we present or analyse the information we have, we cannot add to it or make it any more reliable than it already is. All we can do is aim for a shared sense of what we know and what we don't know, to build an informed consensus for particular courses of action.
Only people can build a bridge from the information that is available to a decision that can be taken forward.
Tools for risk assessement: and decisions making:
Probability
Subjective probabilities
Impact: hard and soft
Decision trees
Expected value
Fatal downsides
Life decisions
A business decision
Break-even analysis
Risk profiles
Probability/Impact matrix
The Information Trade-Off
Obtaining more information can help improve the quality of decisions by providing more detail about impacts and reducing subjectivity over probabilities. It also helps to build up awareness of other alternatives that could be taken. In general, it is a given that seeking more information will be beneficial to decision makers, having the general effect of reducing the level of uncertainty involved in a decision, and making it more likely that the outcomes of particular decisions will provide opportunities for learning.
However, there is a trade-off to be made. Decisions usually have to be taken within a particular timeframe, and getting more information takes time. It can also cost moneuy.
Both of these have implications for the level of extra effort that goes into facilitating more informed decision making.
The decision makers can reduce subjectivity by researching what is going on in various areas. As they learn more and more, the probability that they are assessing becomes less and less subjective. In the end (in theory at least), they can arrive at an objective probability. However, there are some important issues facing them:
Inevitably, decisions have to be made with limited information. Before you make a decision, you have to decide whether the information at your disposal is sufficient to make the decision, or whether you are going to make an investment (in terms of time or money, or both) in getting more information - and how this might affect the nature of the decision itself. (You also need to guard against certain psychological traps.)
Management actions feed into decisions and affect their outcomes, whether this is in the form of considering decisions for longer, obtaining more information or just bringing different personal perspectives and experience to bear on the decision. There will always be uncertainty involved, but by putting time and effort into decision making, its negative effects can be minimised. In many decision situations, there is a 'third way' - the choice not to follow one of the branches on the tree, but to invest more effort in refining the picture of the decision before it is taken.
This poses interesting questions:
Up to this stage, you have acquired the knowledge you need to assess whether simple games of chance are worth playing. Business decisions are much more complex and subltle than this, and you will never reach a point where you 'know everything', as in the dice game. The issue is how much time to put into making a decision, and whether to put additional resource in obtaining more information before making the decision.
In the end, this is likely to be a judgement call. While time can be quantified and given a nominal cost,k the benefit to be obtained from it is likely to be very difficult to quantify. In fact, until you actually invest the time, you cannot know how beneficial the information you gain will be. We have to deal with this contradiction every time we take a business decision.
However, there is a trade-off to be made. Decisions usually have to be taken within a particular timeframe, and getting more information takes time. It can also cost moneuy.
Both of these have implications for the level of extra effort that goes into facilitating more informed decision making.
The decision makers can reduce subjectivity by researching what is going on in various areas. As they learn more and more, the probability that they are assessing becomes less and less subjective. In the end (in theory at least), they can arrive at an objective probability. However, there are some important issues facing them:
- getting information takes time: the report must be submitted at a given deadline, even if they havent't pinned down the probability of the event occuring.
- gettting information costs money: doing research will use up the resources of the business; you have to decide how much investment in information to support decision making is appropriate; this means assessing how sure you can be of the information you do have, and how much more certainty can be achieved for a reasonable cost
- situations change over time: as you collect information to help you make a decision, the context or nature of the decision may be changing; there may be a limit to the accuracy you can achieve.
Inevitably, decisions have to be made with limited information. Before you make a decision, you have to decide whether the information at your disposal is sufficient to make the decision, or whether you are going to make an investment (in terms of time or money, or both) in getting more information - and how this might affect the nature of the decision itself. (You also need to guard against certain psychological traps.)
Management actions feed into decisions and affect their outcomes, whether this is in the form of considering decisions for longer, obtaining more information or just bringing different personal perspectives and experience to bear on the decision. There will always be uncertainty involved, but by putting time and effort into decision making, its negative effects can be minimised. In many decision situations, there is a 'third way' - the choice not to follow one of the branches on the tree, but to invest more effort in refining the picture of the decision before it is taken.
This poses interesting questions:
- how much is your time worth?
- what potential downside of this decision would you be prepared to accept if you could spend the time thinking about another issue instead?
- what potential upside do you regard as being a good 'purchase' to make with your time?
Up to this stage, you have acquired the knowledge you need to assess whether simple games of chance are worth playing. Business decisions are much more complex and subltle than this, and you will never reach a point where you 'know everything', as in the dice game. The issue is how much time to put into making a decision, and whether to put additional resource in obtaining more information before making the decision.
In the end, this is likely to be a judgement call. While time can be quantified and given a nominal cost,k the benefit to be obtained from it is likely to be very difficult to quantify. In fact, until you actually invest the time, you cannot know how beneficial the information you gain will be. We have to deal with this contradiction every time we take a business decision.
Probability/impact matrix to compare importance and urgency of one risk relative to another.
Probability/impact matrix
Having gauged the probability and impact of a number of risks, you can use the probability/impact matrix to compare them by assessing their importance or urgency relative to one another. This diagram shows some risks that many of us face in our working lives, by way of illustration. http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=t5huetUWENmggchcXyeL9MQ&output=html
As with the other tools in this section, the matrix functions as a starting point for decision making. It's a good way to display or share information on a number of risks facing the business, perhaps to form the basis for a meeting. It might be possible to compare the different risks to each other, perhaps in order to highlight situations where disproportionate effort is being put into managing a particualr risk that is unlikely to occur, while another risk that is far more likely is being neglected. Where risks are only expressed in verbal terms, there is a tendency to concentrate on those that sound worst rather than those that really do present the most likely or severe downside to the business. The matrix can be used to help prioritise actions or focus efforts where they will have the most beneficial effect.
As with the other tools, it is important to remember that the probability/impact matrix is only useful in proportion to the accuracy of your own assessments of probability and impact. You only get out of it what you put in.
Tools for risk assessement:
Probability
Subjective probabilities
Impact: hard and soft
Decision trees
Expected value
Fatal downsides
Life decisions
A business decision
Break-even analysis
Risk profiles
Probability/Impact matrix
Having gauged the probability and impact of a number of risks, you can use the probability/impact matrix to compare them by assessing their importance or urgency relative to one another. This diagram shows some risks that many of us face in our working lives, by way of illustration. http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=t5huetUWENmggchcXyeL9MQ&output=html
As with the other tools in this section, the matrix functions as a starting point for decision making. It's a good way to display or share information on a number of risks facing the business, perhaps to form the basis for a meeting. It might be possible to compare the different risks to each other, perhaps in order to highlight situations where disproportionate effort is being put into managing a particualr risk that is unlikely to occur, while another risk that is far more likely is being neglected. Where risks are only expressed in verbal terms, there is a tendency to concentrate on those that sound worst rather than those that really do present the most likely or severe downside to the business. The matrix can be used to help prioritise actions or focus efforts where they will have the most beneficial effect.
As with the other tools, it is important to remember that the probability/impact matrix is only useful in proportion to the accuracy of your own assessments of probability and impact. You only get out of it what you put in.
Tools for risk assessement:
Probability
Subjective probabilities
Impact: hard and soft
Decision trees
Expected value
Fatal downsides
Life decisions
A business decision
Break-even analysis
Risk profiles
Probability/Impact matrix
A picture of complex risks and their profiles is more useful than knowing expected value is positive or not
Risk profile
A risk profile is a graph showing value - usually expressed in financial terms - and probability. Looking at the profile of a risk can give a more sophisticated view of it than expected value alone.
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=tHk2EpsXiBSmmV6BILRm7IA&output=html
Let's consider a third version of the dice game - version C. As before, throwing different numbers brings different outcomes. But in this version, there is the possibility of a severe downside. Thowing 5 or 6 wins $10; throwing 2, 3, or 4 wins $5; throwing 1 incurs a $10 penalty.
The different outcomes and probabilities are shown in the table above, along with the calculation of expected value for this game. As before, expected value is calculated by adding together the products of impact and probability for all possible outcomes.
At first glance, this game looks like the best so far - its expected value is far higher than that of either version A or version B. ( http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=te9MzyHoIN6EyuoHmfDxMaw&output=html)
But what about the potential downside? With $5 in our pocket to play with, we could easily incur a debt that we can't pay, and have to declare ourselves bankrupt. With $20 to play with, we would be a bit safer (the wealth effect).
The key to this decision is the profile of the risk. (see the diagram of the risk profile for dice game version C above). Each vertical black coloured bar represents a possible outcome. Its position denotes its impact (negative to the left, positive to the right); its height denotes its probability. The positive side of the graph looks promising, with high probabilities for positive outcomes. But over on the left, we see the possibility of a serious negative outcome - a potentially fatal downside. The risk may have an unacceptable profile for us, despite its positive expected value.
More complex risk profiles bring in more and more possible outcomes and probabilities. They build up a picture of complex risks and their profiles that is more useful than the simple question of whether the expected value is positive or not.
Histograms plot value against probability density, to give a continuous version of the risk's profile. They are created through advanced risk anlalysis involving techniques such as Monte Carlo simulations, where a large number of probabilities is used to create the risk profile.
A risk profile is a graph showing value - usually expressed in financial terms - and probability. Looking at the profile of a risk can give a more sophisticated view of it than expected value alone.
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=tHk2EpsXiBSmmV6BILRm7IA&output=html
Let's consider a third version of the dice game - version C. As before, throwing different numbers brings different outcomes. But in this version, there is the possibility of a severe downside. Thowing 5 or 6 wins $10; throwing 2, 3, or 4 wins $5; throwing 1 incurs a $10 penalty.
The different outcomes and probabilities are shown in the table above, along with the calculation of expected value for this game. As before, expected value is calculated by adding together the products of impact and probability for all possible outcomes.
At first glance, this game looks like the best so far - its expected value is far higher than that of either version A or version B. ( http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=te9MzyHoIN6EyuoHmfDxMaw&output=html)
But what about the potential downside? With $5 in our pocket to play with, we could easily incur a debt that we can't pay, and have to declare ourselves bankrupt. With $20 to play with, we would be a bit safer (the wealth effect).
The key to this decision is the profile of the risk. (see the diagram of the risk profile for dice game version C above). Each vertical black coloured bar represents a possible outcome. Its position denotes its impact (negative to the left, positive to the right); its height denotes its probability. The positive side of the graph looks promising, with high probabilities for positive outcomes. But over on the left, we see the possibility of a serious negative outcome - a potentially fatal downside. The risk may have an unacceptable profile for us, despite its positive expected value.
More complex risk profiles bring in more and more possible outcomes and probabilities. They build up a picture of complex risks and their profiles that is more useful than the simple question of whether the expected value is positive or not.
Histograms plot value against probability density, to give a continuous version of the risk's profile. They are created through advanced risk anlalysis involving techniques such as Monte Carlo simulations, where a large number of probabilities is used to create the risk profile.
Making Life Decisions: appraising cost, risk and expected value, with limited information about the future
The dice games are simple parallels with the type of decision we take every day in our lives. Investments offer the most direct comparison. With a limited sum to invest, you have to evaluate the probability of making a profit, the expected value and the risk involved for each investment alternative. And, as with the dice, you hve the alternative not to play, which is 100% safe, but will not make you any money.
We make other kinds of decisions too, where the investment is not always financial:
However vaguely or subconsciously, we are appraising cost, risk and expected value, with limited information about the future, all the time - even if the only cost is our leisure time, the only expected value a fleeting enjoyment, and the only potential loss a mild feeling of irritation.
We make other kinds of decisions too, where the investment is not always financial:
- selecting a savings account (which will make you richest in the long term?)
- buying a house ( will prices fall or rise?)
- deciding which people to socialise with (who will turn out to be better company?)
- renting a film to watch (which will you enjoy the most?)
However vaguely or subconsciously, we are appraising cost, risk and expected value, with limited information about the future, all the time - even if the only cost is our leisure time, the only expected value a fleeting enjoyment, and the only potential loss a mild feeling of irritation.
Fatal downside and Wealth effect
Although the overall expected value of dice game version A is positive, there is one situation in which you should not play it - when the potential downside would be fatal or disastrous for you.
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=te9MzyHoIN6EyuoHmfDxMaw&output=html
If you had just $1 in your pocket, played the game once, and failed to throw a six, you would be bankrupt. The positive expected value of the game would be no help to you, since you would be unable to play any more - a fatal downside would have occurred. In other words, it is not enough just o look at the expected value of a decision. The probability of a fatal or disastrous worst-case scenario has to be considered too.
The presence of a fatal downside might temper your enthusiasm for a decision with a positive expected value, perhaps encouraging some kind of trade-off between expected value and the potential for exposure to a fatal downside. You might be better finding another dice game perhaps a version that cost 10 cents to play, with a prize of 50 cents. This would have the advantage of allowing you to stop playing before you went bankrupt, should you hit a bad losing streak.
By doing this, you would be spreading the risk around rather than going for an 'all or nothing' risk- trading off a better risk profile for a lower expected value. (This approach to managing risk is known as 'diversifying'.)
In business terms, this translates into considering whether the downside of a risk, if it occurred, would result in bankruptcy or any situation from which the business could not recover. The possibility of this, however remote, would have to be taken into account when contemplating a risk with positive expected value.
The fact that fatal downsides in investment loom much larger for smaller companies results in the 'wealth effect' - the relative ease with which larger companies can accumulate wealth. They can take investment risk with positive expected values but serious potential downsides, because the fear of bankruptcy is more distant for them. And the more positive-value decisions they take, the more money they accumulate and the more risks they can tolerate in their investments. They can also afford to take more risks when considering and trying out new directions. Individuals can also exhibit the wealth effect: people with more cash saved up can afford to take bigger risks with their careers, perhaps allowing them to achieve greater successes.
It is the nature of know risk probabilities that the longer the run of risk taking, the closer one gets to the delivery of expected values. This is how gambling becomes a science - with deep enough pockets (the wealth effect) and enough time, pay-offs come to reflect odds. It is in the short run that 'luck' brings fortune or disaster.
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=te9MzyHoIN6EyuoHmfDxMaw&output=html
If you had just $1 in your pocket, played the game once, and failed to throw a six, you would be bankrupt. The positive expected value of the game would be no help to you, since you would be unable to play any more - a fatal downside would have occurred. In other words, it is not enough just o look at the expected value of a decision. The probability of a fatal or disastrous worst-case scenario has to be considered too.
The presence of a fatal downside might temper your enthusiasm for a decision with a positive expected value, perhaps encouraging some kind of trade-off between expected value and the potential for exposure to a fatal downside. You might be better finding another dice game perhaps a version that cost 10 cents to play, with a prize of 50 cents. This would have the advantage of allowing you to stop playing before you went bankrupt, should you hit a bad losing streak.
By doing this, you would be spreading the risk around rather than going for an 'all or nothing' risk- trading off a better risk profile for a lower expected value. (This approach to managing risk is known as 'diversifying'.)
In business terms, this translates into considering whether the downside of a risk, if it occurred, would result in bankruptcy or any situation from which the business could not recover. The possibility of this, however remote, would have to be taken into account when contemplating a risk with positive expected value.
The fact that fatal downsides in investment loom much larger for smaller companies results in the 'wealth effect' - the relative ease with which larger companies can accumulate wealth. They can take investment risk with positive expected values but serious potential downsides, because the fear of bankruptcy is more distant for them. And the more positive-value decisions they take, the more money they accumulate and the more risks they can tolerate in their investments. They can also afford to take more risks when considering and trying out new directions. Individuals can also exhibit the wealth effect: people with more cash saved up can afford to take bigger risks with their careers, perhaps allowing them to achieve greater successes.
It is the nature of know risk probabilities that the longer the run of risk taking, the closer one gets to the delivery of expected values. This is how gambling becomes a science - with deep enough pockets (the wealth effect) and enough time, pay-offs come to reflect odds. It is in the short run that 'luck' brings fortune or disaster.
Decision making: Risk, Probability, Impact, Subjectivity, Decision trees and Expected Value
You are invited to play dice games version A and version B. In this game, you bet $1 on the throw of a dice. Throwing a six wins a prize; throwing any other number means you lose your $1.
In version A of this game, a bet costs $1, but you can win $10. Faced with this game, you have two alternatives - to play or not to play. Once playing, there is nothing you can do to affect the outcome - so your decision on whether to play has to be made on the basis of the probabilities and impacts involved. They are depicted on the decision tree here to help your decision.
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=te9MzyHoIN6EyuoHmfDxMaw&output=html
Because the situation is simple, the probabilities of the various possible outcomes can be objectively known. There is no subjectivity over the probabilities. The impacts, too, are fixed and clearly set out by the rules of the games (the prizes and the cost of playing). If a choice is made to play, the probability of winning is 1 in 6 (0.166 or 16.6%) and the probability of losing 5 in 6 (0.834 or 83.4%). If a choice is made not to play, risk is avoided (there is a single outcome that is certain) but there is also no potential benefit.
In version B of the dice game, the stake and odds remain the same, but you can only win $5. The alternative not to play remains. In each case, we have to decide whether to play or not. There is the alternative to walk away, but this offers no benefit. Is it better to play or not to play? Version A seems better than version B, but how much better? Is B worth playing as well, despite the lower prize? How can we make a decision about where to make an investment? Most people can offer answers to these questions based on an intuitive, subjective grasp of probability and impact. We make decisions all the time on this basis. But for business decisions, we need to move beyond subjectivity whenever we can. We need to quantify things wherever possible.
The concept of expected value (EV)
To compare different alternatives against each other in a quantitative way in order to determine whether a risk is worth taking, we can use the concept of expected value (EV). The expected value of a risk is obtained by multiplying probability by impact for each possible outcome, and adding all the results together. If a particular impact is negative, the value for that outcome is also negative.
The table below shows the expected value calculation for playing version A of the dice game. The expected value is 0.66. Because this is a positive value, it indicates that the game is worth playing.
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=te9MzyHoIN6EyuoHmfDxMaw&output=html
In version B, because of the reduced prize (a variation in impact), the picture is different. This is shown in the table also. Because of the reduced prize, the expected value of version B is negative. If you play it repeatedly, you will steadily lose money over time.
In this case, the alternative not to play, although it brings no benefit, has a higher expected value (zero) than playing (-0.17). You are better off keeping your $1.
Expected value helps us ascertain whether a particular alternative is worth taking, based on our knowledge of probabilities and impacts. But, unless the outcome of a decision is certain, expected value can only ever be used as a guide.
In version A, for example, the expected value of not playing is zero, and this is certain. But if you decide to play, the only possible outcomes are winning $10 or losing your $1 - in other words, values of either +9 or -1. An impact of +0.66 (the expected value) is impossible.
And, while a positive expected value of 0.66 makes the game nominally 'worth playing', the outcome of playing is not certain. You might still lose.
Conversely, the negative expected value of version B, while it indicates you should not play, doesn't necessarily mean you won't win if you do. The possible outcomes are value of +$4 or - $1. You might play once and win. You might even play three times in a row and win all three times, although the probabhility of this is 0.0046 (or less than 1%). Despite the negative expected value, a positive outcome remains possible.
The actual probability of realising the expected value as a result of a single decision is zero. However, if you played version A 100 times, you would find the average value across those many decisions tending towards 0.66 - you would have around $166 in your pocket. This would prove the accuracy of your initial calculation of expected value.
Calcuating or estimating expected value wrongly - or not wanting to calculate it at all - has serious consequences for decision making. Consider the National Lottery. Although the prize (potential upside) is enormous, the tiny probability of winning gives the game a negative expected value. But the lure of the prize outweighs the rational considerations of probability, making people mentally distort probabilities (if they consciously think in those terms at all) and decide to take an illogical risk. This is the essence of the appeal of gambling, and points the way towards the psychology of risk.
So, despite the name, we can never expect the expected value. Some may ask, in that case, why use the concept at all? The answer is to help in making decisions, rather than in predicting the future. As we've seen, there are no facts about the future, only probabilities. In this case, probabilities are known but a reliable prediction of the outcome remains impossible - the dice will decide!
We have already seen how, in most business decisions, the picture is clouded by subjectivity. Not only is it impossible to predict the future, there will also be uncertainty over impacts and probabilities.
Expected value is calculated from probability and impact information or estimates. Whatever subjectivity or imprecision is inherent in our probability and impact figures will feed through into expected values. There are only as good as the information from which they are calculated. Therefore, just as with probabilities, it is important to remember, and explain to others, when subjectivity is a factor.
In version A of this game, a bet costs $1, but you can win $10. Faced with this game, you have two alternatives - to play or not to play. Once playing, there is nothing you can do to affect the outcome - so your decision on whether to play has to be made on the basis of the probabilities and impacts involved. They are depicted on the decision tree here to help your decision.
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=te9MzyHoIN6EyuoHmfDxMaw&output=html
Because the situation is simple, the probabilities of the various possible outcomes can be objectively known. There is no subjectivity over the probabilities. The impacts, too, are fixed and clearly set out by the rules of the games (the prizes and the cost of playing). If a choice is made to play, the probability of winning is 1 in 6 (0.166 or 16.6%) and the probability of losing 5 in 6 (0.834 or 83.4%). If a choice is made not to play, risk is avoided (there is a single outcome that is certain) but there is also no potential benefit.
In version B of the dice game, the stake and odds remain the same, but you can only win $5. The alternative not to play remains. In each case, we have to decide whether to play or not. There is the alternative to walk away, but this offers no benefit. Is it better to play or not to play? Version A seems better than version B, but how much better? Is B worth playing as well, despite the lower prize? How can we make a decision about where to make an investment? Most people can offer answers to these questions based on an intuitive, subjective grasp of probability and impact. We make decisions all the time on this basis. But for business decisions, we need to move beyond subjectivity whenever we can. We need to quantify things wherever possible.
The concept of expected value (EV)
To compare different alternatives against each other in a quantitative way in order to determine whether a risk is worth taking, we can use the concept of expected value (EV). The expected value of a risk is obtained by multiplying probability by impact for each possible outcome, and adding all the results together. If a particular impact is negative, the value for that outcome is also negative.
The table below shows the expected value calculation for playing version A of the dice game. The expected value is 0.66. Because this is a positive value, it indicates that the game is worth playing.
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=te9MzyHoIN6EyuoHmfDxMaw&output=html
In version B, because of the reduced prize (a variation in impact), the picture is different. This is shown in the table also. Because of the reduced prize, the expected value of version B is negative. If you play it repeatedly, you will steadily lose money over time.
In this case, the alternative not to play, although it brings no benefit, has a higher expected value (zero) than playing (-0.17). You are better off keeping your $1.
Expected value helps us ascertain whether a particular alternative is worth taking, based on our knowledge of probabilities and impacts. But, unless the outcome of a decision is certain, expected value can only ever be used as a guide.
In version A, for example, the expected value of not playing is zero, and this is certain. But if you decide to play, the only possible outcomes are winning $10 or losing your $1 - in other words, values of either +9 or -1. An impact of +0.66 (the expected value) is impossible.
And, while a positive expected value of 0.66 makes the game nominally 'worth playing', the outcome of playing is not certain. You might still lose.
Conversely, the negative expected value of version B, while it indicates you should not play, doesn't necessarily mean you won't win if you do. The possible outcomes are value of +$4 or - $1. You might play once and win. You might even play three times in a row and win all three times, although the probabhility of this is 0.0046 (or less than 1%). Despite the negative expected value, a positive outcome remains possible.
The actual probability of realising the expected value as a result of a single decision is zero. However, if you played version A 100 times, you would find the average value across those many decisions tending towards 0.66 - you would have around $166 in your pocket. This would prove the accuracy of your initial calculation of expected value.
Calcuating or estimating expected value wrongly - or not wanting to calculate it at all - has serious consequences for decision making. Consider the National Lottery. Although the prize (potential upside) is enormous, the tiny probability of winning gives the game a negative expected value. But the lure of the prize outweighs the rational considerations of probability, making people mentally distort probabilities (if they consciously think in those terms at all) and decide to take an illogical risk. This is the essence of the appeal of gambling, and points the way towards the psychology of risk.
So, despite the name, we can never expect the expected value. Some may ask, in that case, why use the concept at all? The answer is to help in making decisions, rather than in predicting the future. As we've seen, there are no facts about the future, only probabilities. In this case, probabilities are known but a reliable prediction of the outcome remains impossible - the dice will decide!
We have already seen how, in most business decisions, the picture is clouded by subjectivity. Not only is it impossible to predict the future, there will also be uncertainty over impacts and probabilities.
Expected value is calculated from probability and impact information or estimates. Whatever subjectivity or imprecision is inherent in our probability and impact figures will feed through into expected values. There are only as good as the information from which they are calculated. Therefore, just as with probabilities, it is important to remember, and explain to others, when subjectivity is a factor.
When Was the Last Time You De-learned?
When Was the Last Time You De-learned?
05:44 PM Thursday November 19, 2009
By Vineet Nayar
Students all over the world are hard at work in school at this time of year. There's a buzz on every campus as young women and men learn the rules of life, challenge them, and try to develop their own ideas, values, and principles.
For people in business, especially those who graduated a long time ago, it's time they went back to school in order to, for want of a better phrase, de-learn and un-graduate. That's the only way we will learn to challenge all that we have so far accepted as time-tested truths.
Although it isn't easy, executives should shed their fear of the unknown and display childlike enthusiasm for radical ideas. They need to ask tough questions even if there are no answers to them — yet. In business, unlearning entails changing the manner in which markets are defined and the way companies are run. It also involves rethinking perceptions about competition and collaboration.
As it is, executives tend to gravitate toward their zones of comfort as they grow older — and then wonder why the magic has disappeared from work.
Revisit your youth and ask yourself: Was I looking for simple and practical solutions then? Or did I ask tough questions that challenged people's assumptions, beliefs, and values? History suggests that people who challenge the status quo — like Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein — often come up with great inventions.
Most important, executives have to change their approach to business and society. They usually believe they have all the answers and that their ways of doing things are the best. However, leaders must accept the fact that they don't have all the answers and re-program themselves for a world of infinite possibilities.
Great leaders are often lonely thinkers who ask uncomfortable questions, walk tough paths, and challenge popular perceptions. Only in retrospect are Mahatma Gandhi and Nelson Mandela — who faced criticism for most of their lives — regarded as great leaders who fought for the right causes. They loom large even now not because they had the answers, but because they dared to question. And by doing so, they achieved results whose value can't be questioned.
When was the last time you dared question the status quo?
05:44 PM Thursday November 19, 2009
By Vineet Nayar
Students all over the world are hard at work in school at this time of year. There's a buzz on every campus as young women and men learn the rules of life, challenge them, and try to develop their own ideas, values, and principles.
For people in business, especially those who graduated a long time ago, it's time they went back to school in order to, for want of a better phrase, de-learn and un-graduate. That's the only way we will learn to challenge all that we have so far accepted as time-tested truths.
Although it isn't easy, executives should shed their fear of the unknown and display childlike enthusiasm for radical ideas. They need to ask tough questions even if there are no answers to them — yet. In business, unlearning entails changing the manner in which markets are defined and the way companies are run. It also involves rethinking perceptions about competition and collaboration.
As it is, executives tend to gravitate toward their zones of comfort as they grow older — and then wonder why the magic has disappeared from work.
Revisit your youth and ask yourself: Was I looking for simple and practical solutions then? Or did I ask tough questions that challenged people's assumptions, beliefs, and values? History suggests that people who challenge the status quo — like Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein — often come up with great inventions.
Most important, executives have to change their approach to business and society. They usually believe they have all the answers and that their ways of doing things are the best. However, leaders must accept the fact that they don't have all the answers and re-program themselves for a world of infinite possibilities.
Great leaders are often lonely thinkers who ask uncomfortable questions, walk tough paths, and challenge popular perceptions. Only in retrospect are Mahatma Gandhi and Nelson Mandela — who faced criticism for most of their lives — regarded as great leaders who fought for the right causes. They loom large even now not because they had the answers, but because they dared to question. And by doing so, they achieved results whose value can't be questioned.
When was the last time you dared question the status quo?
Top 10 paradoxes of Warren Buffett
Top 10 paradoxes of Warren Buffett
Mr Buffett still lives within a mile or two of where he was born
Warren Buffett is different from the rest of the super-rich in many ways, large and small.
He makes investment sound simple and has a talent for explaining it to the public.
But, as his biographer, Alice Schroeder says in BBC Two's 'The World's Greatest Money Maker: Evan Davis meets Warren Buffett', his method is "simple, but it's not easy".
There's more to the billionaire investor than meets the eye. However simple he'd like to make earning $40bn (£25bn) look, the Buffett story isn't entirely straightforward.
Here are 10 paradoxes that could offer an insight:
1. Mr Buffett has managed to make more money than other investors by being less ambitious. While Wall Street whizz kids set their sights on high returns, using leverage, Mr Buffett's steady annual compounding of increases, avoiding debt, has worked better.
2. Mr Buffett uses a conservative approach to picking investments - "don't lose money" is one of his favourite rules. But much of his cash comes from insurance companies that specialise in very high risk events - catastrophe insurance.
3. Mr Buffett is famous for his analytical study of the figures and unemotional response to the market. And yet among his greatest assets are his personality and reputation - both unquantifiable - and the trust they engender in potential business partners.
4. Extremely cautious with money, Mr Buffett is nevertheless happy to make "big bets" when he likes a company or a share. Unlike most investors, he believes that, for professionals at least, diversifying one's investments only means including among them, second rate choices.
5. He has come a long way in his life, but still lives within a mile or two of where he was born.
6. Mr Buffett has made more money than almost everyone, but appears to have no use for it personally - except for the single indulgence of his private jet, which he called "The Indefensible".
7. The most acquisitive man in the world is also one of the most philanthropic. Three years ago, Mr Buffett announced he was giving away the bulk of his fortune to charity, including $31bn (£19bn) to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
8. Mr Buffett says he has "no strategy" for Berkshire Hathaway, and yet he puts endless time and energy into communicating his ideas about markets and how to run businesses.
9. The man who is famous for a simple, down-to-earth approach to money-making has been chairman of investment bank Salomon Brothers, has a huge investment in another, Goldman Sachs, and trades in currency and derivatives.
10. Mr Buffett is one of the world's best-known business people, and yet he has no use for marketing or promotion of his business, Berkshire Hathaway.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8322995.stm
Mr Buffett still lives within a mile or two of where he was born
Warren Buffett is different from the rest of the super-rich in many ways, large and small.
He makes investment sound simple and has a talent for explaining it to the public.
But, as his biographer, Alice Schroeder says in BBC Two's 'The World's Greatest Money Maker: Evan Davis meets Warren Buffett', his method is "simple, but it's not easy".
There's more to the billionaire investor than meets the eye. However simple he'd like to make earning $40bn (£25bn) look, the Buffett story isn't entirely straightforward.
Here are 10 paradoxes that could offer an insight:
1. Mr Buffett has managed to make more money than other investors by being less ambitious. While Wall Street whizz kids set their sights on high returns, using leverage, Mr Buffett's steady annual compounding of increases, avoiding debt, has worked better.
2. Mr Buffett uses a conservative approach to picking investments - "don't lose money" is one of his favourite rules. But much of his cash comes from insurance companies that specialise in very high risk events - catastrophe insurance.
3. Mr Buffett is famous for his analytical study of the figures and unemotional response to the market. And yet among his greatest assets are his personality and reputation - both unquantifiable - and the trust they engender in potential business partners.
4. Extremely cautious with money, Mr Buffett is nevertheless happy to make "big bets" when he likes a company or a share. Unlike most investors, he believes that, for professionals at least, diversifying one's investments only means including among them, second rate choices.
5. He has come a long way in his life, but still lives within a mile or two of where he was born.
6. Mr Buffett has made more money than almost everyone, but appears to have no use for it personally - except for the single indulgence of his private jet, which he called "The Indefensible".
7. The most acquisitive man in the world is also one of the most philanthropic. Three years ago, Mr Buffett announced he was giving away the bulk of his fortune to charity, including $31bn (£19bn) to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
8. Mr Buffett says he has "no strategy" for Berkshire Hathaway, and yet he puts endless time and energy into communicating his ideas about markets and how to run businesses.
9. The man who is famous for a simple, down-to-earth approach to money-making has been chairman of investment bank Salomon Brothers, has a huge investment in another, Goldman Sachs, and trades in currency and derivatives.
10. Mr Buffett is one of the world's best-known business people, and yet he has no use for marketing or promotion of his business, Berkshire Hathaway.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8322995.stm
Hands up if you want investment success like Warren Buffett
Warren Buffett's best investments
Hands up if you want investment success like Warren Buffett
When Warren Buffett bought Berkshire Hathaway in the 1960s, it was a working textile mill in New England.
He later closed down production when he decided it could never be a profitable business, but retained its name for his holding company.
Berkshire Hathaway is the corporate face of Warren Buffett - the firm in which he holds his investments and the businesses he has bought.
Its constituent companies and investments provide an insight into Mr Buffett's thinking.
So how has he chosen where to put his money?
BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY (1965)
Tracing its roots to a textile factory founded in 1839, by the 1950s Berkshire Hathaway had grown to fifteen plants employing 12,000 people. From 1962, Warren Buffett began to buy stocks in Berkshire Hathaway and by 1965 he had gained a majority share.
In 1985, struggling against competition from cheaper labour in overseas factories, the textile mill was closed. He is happy to admit that Berkshire Hathaway wasn't one of his best investment decisions.
But its share price tells a different story: Mr Buffett began buying shares in Berkshire Hathaway at $7.60 a share. Today, as his investment vehicle, each share is valued at around $100,000.
GEICO (1951-1996)
Mr Buffett's involvement in Geico stretches back to 1951, when his interest was sparked by his mentor, the business writer and investor, Benjamin Graham. Mr Graham was an investor in the insurance company, and the young Warren visited the company in Washington and began to buy a few shares.
Geico's success continued throughout the fifties and sixties, but by the mid-seventies the firm had run into trouble. In 1976 Mr Buffett stepped in, and through Berkshire Hathaway bought half a million shares in the company, only to see them quadruple in value in six months.
Twenty years later, the business cycle drooped again, offering Mr Buffett a chance to buy the company outright for $2.3 billion.
The investment, along with Berkshire Hathaway's other insurance companies, provides a cash float that allows Mr Buffett and his partner Charlie Munger to invest without having to borrow money.
DAIRY QUEEN (1998)
Buffett's love of ice cream and his eye for a business opportunity came together when Berkshire Hathaway bought Dairy Queen for $585 million.
With its familiar logo, glimpsed from highways and movies alike, the soft ice-cream company founded in 1940 has in excess of 5,700 outlets from Omaha to Oman.
Dairy Queen's fare now includes hamburgers and fries and soft drinks such asg Coca-Cola - a business in which Mr Buffett also has a large stake.
Since 2005, Dairy Queen has been expanding and lately announced its intention to open 500 more outlets in China over the next few years.
As Buffett put it in his annual shareholders' letter: "We have put our money where our mouth is."
COCA-COLA (1988)
Mr Buffett says he likes businesses he can understand.
Coca-Cola's business model isn't quite as simple as you might imagine - involving separate syrup production and bottling plants - but it's not rocket science.
First produced in 1895 as a syrup, the soft drinks company's advertising and its unique bottle gave Coke global recognition.
During the 1980s, Mr Buffett believed that Coca-Cola's share price did not reflect the company's steady returns, strong brand and opportunities for growth, so he started buying its shares.
Now with an 8.6% stake in the company, Berkshire Hathaway's commitment to this once-undervalued firm has paid off - and is now worth more than $10 billion.
GOLDMAN SACHS (2008)
Warren Buffett may be best known as the Oracle of Omaha, but he became Goldman Sachs' knight in shining armour during the financial crisis which hit Wall Street last year.
On 23rd September 2008, Berkshire Hathaway invested $5 billion in the company, matching a publicly raised investment.
Within hours, Goldman's shares had risen 6%.
Mr Buffett bolstered confidence in Goldman, and, at the same time, secured a favourable deal for Berkshire, with Goldman agreeing to pay Berkshire Hathaway a 10% annual dividend on the preferred stock, irrespective of Goldman Sach's common stock price.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8322999.stm
Hands up if you want investment success like Warren Buffett
When Warren Buffett bought Berkshire Hathaway in the 1960s, it was a working textile mill in New England.
He later closed down production when he decided it could never be a profitable business, but retained its name for his holding company.
Berkshire Hathaway is the corporate face of Warren Buffett - the firm in which he holds his investments and the businesses he has bought.
Its constituent companies and investments provide an insight into Mr Buffett's thinking.
So how has he chosen where to put his money?
BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY (1965)
Tracing its roots to a textile factory founded in 1839, by the 1950s Berkshire Hathaway had grown to fifteen plants employing 12,000 people. From 1962, Warren Buffett began to buy stocks in Berkshire Hathaway and by 1965 he had gained a majority share.
In 1985, struggling against competition from cheaper labour in overseas factories, the textile mill was closed. He is happy to admit that Berkshire Hathaway wasn't one of his best investment decisions.
But its share price tells a different story: Mr Buffett began buying shares in Berkshire Hathaway at $7.60 a share. Today, as his investment vehicle, each share is valued at around $100,000.
GEICO (1951-1996)
Mr Buffett's involvement in Geico stretches back to 1951, when his interest was sparked by his mentor, the business writer and investor, Benjamin Graham. Mr Graham was an investor in the insurance company, and the young Warren visited the company in Washington and began to buy a few shares.
Geico's success continued throughout the fifties and sixties, but by the mid-seventies the firm had run into trouble. In 1976 Mr Buffett stepped in, and through Berkshire Hathaway bought half a million shares in the company, only to see them quadruple in value in six months.
Twenty years later, the business cycle drooped again, offering Mr Buffett a chance to buy the company outright for $2.3 billion.
The investment, along with Berkshire Hathaway's other insurance companies, provides a cash float that allows Mr Buffett and his partner Charlie Munger to invest without having to borrow money.
DAIRY QUEEN (1998)
Buffett's love of ice cream and his eye for a business opportunity came together when Berkshire Hathaway bought Dairy Queen for $585 million.
With its familiar logo, glimpsed from highways and movies alike, the soft ice-cream company founded in 1940 has in excess of 5,700 outlets from Omaha to Oman.
Dairy Queen's fare now includes hamburgers and fries and soft drinks such asg Coca-Cola - a business in which Mr Buffett also has a large stake.
Since 2005, Dairy Queen has been expanding and lately announced its intention to open 500 more outlets in China over the next few years.
As Buffett put it in his annual shareholders' letter: "We have put our money where our mouth is."
COCA-COLA (1988)
Mr Buffett says he likes businesses he can understand.
Coca-Cola's business model isn't quite as simple as you might imagine - involving separate syrup production and bottling plants - but it's not rocket science.
First produced in 1895 as a syrup, the soft drinks company's advertising and its unique bottle gave Coke global recognition.
During the 1980s, Mr Buffett believed that Coca-Cola's share price did not reflect the company's steady returns, strong brand and opportunities for growth, so he started buying its shares.
Now with an 8.6% stake in the company, Berkshire Hathaway's commitment to this once-undervalued firm has paid off - and is now worth more than $10 billion.
GOLDMAN SACHS (2008)
Warren Buffett may be best known as the Oracle of Omaha, but he became Goldman Sachs' knight in shining armour during the financial crisis which hit Wall Street last year.
On 23rd September 2008, Berkshire Hathaway invested $5 billion in the company, matching a publicly raised investment.
Within hours, Goldman's shares had risen 6%.
Mr Buffett bolstered confidence in Goldman, and, at the same time, secured a favourable deal for Berkshire, with Goldman agreeing to pay Berkshire Hathaway a 10% annual dividend on the preferred stock, irrespective of Goldman Sach's common stock price.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8322999.stm
Warren Buffett's words of wisdom
Warren Buffett's words of wisdom
Warren Buffett, known to many as the Oracle of Omaha, is considered one of the world's greatest investors.
His financial success means that his words of wisdom, or Buffettisms, are treasured by many as elixirs of truth. Here's a selection:
Warren Buffett has built up a fortune estmated at $40bn
• Rule No.1: Never lose money.
Rule No.2: Never forget rule No.1
• Be fearful when others are greedy.
Be greedy when others are fearful
• It is far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price
• Whether we're talking about socks or stocks, I like buying quality merchandise when it is marked down
• Price is what you pay. Value is what you get
• It takes a lifetime to build a reputation and five minutes to ruin it
• Cash combined with courage in a crisis is priceless
• Never invest in a business you cannot understand
• Only buy something that you'd be perfectly happy to hold if the market shut down for ten years
• Someone is sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago
• Risk comes from not knowing what you're doing
• If you don't feel comfortable owning something for 10 years, then don't own it for 10 minutes
• If a business does well, the stock eventually follows
• I wouldn't mind going to jail if I had three cellmates who played bridge
• The fact that people will be full of greed, fear or folly is predictable. The sequence is not predictable
• Come to Omaha - the cradle of capitalism - in May and enjoy yourself.
The World's Greatest Money Maker
Warren Buffett, known to many as the Oracle of Omaha, is considered one of the world's greatest investors.
His financial success means that his words of wisdom, or Buffettisms, are treasured by many as elixirs of truth. Here's a selection:
Warren Buffett has built up a fortune estmated at $40bn
• Rule No.1: Never lose money.
Rule No.2: Never forget rule No.1
• Be fearful when others are greedy.
Be greedy when others are fearful
• It is far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price
• Whether we're talking about socks or stocks, I like buying quality merchandise when it is marked down
• Price is what you pay. Value is what you get
• It takes a lifetime to build a reputation and five minutes to ruin it
• Cash combined with courage in a crisis is priceless
• Never invest in a business you cannot understand
• Only buy something that you'd be perfectly happy to hold if the market shut down for ten years
• Someone is sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago
• Risk comes from not knowing what you're doing
• If you don't feel comfortable owning something for 10 years, then don't own it for 10 minutes
• If a business does well, the stock eventually follows
• I wouldn't mind going to jail if I had three cellmates who played bridge
• The fact that people will be full of greed, fear or folly is predictable. The sequence is not predictable
• Come to Omaha - the cradle of capitalism - in May and enjoy yourself.
The World's Greatest Money Maker
A falling market provides Buffett with the best opportunities
Sunday, 25 October 2009
Warren Buffett: Crisis, what crisis?
Warren Buffet explains his deal with Goldman Sachs
By Charles Miller
Money Programme
The world's greatest investor is weathering the financial crisis by practising what he preaches.
One of Warren Buffett's favourite sayings about the market is: "be greedy when others are fearful and fearful when others are greedy".
When the market was fearful last September, Mr Buffett was greedy, putting $5bn (£3bn) into the investment bank Goldman Sachs on exceptionally favourable terms.
He says he was only able to negotiate the deal because not many people had $5bn to hand at that particular moment.
But there is no doubt Mr Buffett's public show of confidence in the company was, in itself, a valuable asset to Goldman.
Mind-boggling returns
The deal already looks like a good one for Mr Buffett, with potential profits for him in the billions.
He has always enjoyed himself in a falling market, which, as he sees it, provides him with the best opportunities.
As if to prove his fabled status as the most successful investor ever, Mr Buffett prints his fund's spectacular growth record, all the way back to 1965, in the annual report of his company, Berkshire Hathaway.
It shows he has achieved an extraordinary 20.3% average annual growth in the company's value, which - he helpfully works out - comes to a mind-boggling 336,000% over the years - 84 times that of the standard US index fund, the S&P 500.
The numbers really are off the scale.
Friday, 20 November 2009
Using Decision trees to see how probability and impact relate to each other
We can use the simple example of a dice game. In this game, you bet $1 on the throw of a dice. Throwing a six wins a prize; throwing any other number means you lose your $1.
In version A of this game:
A bet costs $1, but you can win $10
Faced with this game, you have two alternatives - to play or not to play.
Once playing, there is nothing you can do to affect the outcome - so your decision on whether to play has to be made on the basis of the probabilities and impacts involved.
Because the situation is simple, the probabilities of the various possible outcomes can be objectively known. There is no subjectivity over the probabilities. The impacts, too, are fixed and clearly set out by the rules of the game (the prizes and the cost of playing).
If a choice is made to play, the probability of winning is 1 in 6 (0.166 or 16.66%) and the probability of losing 5 in 6 (0.834 or 83.4%).
If a choice is made not to play, risk is avoided (there is a single outcome that is certain) but there is also no potential benefit.
Decision tree for dice game version A:
Decision: Play dice game with chance of winning $10? Yes or No
NO
Decision ----> Risky Event ---> Possible outcomes ----> Probability -----> Impact
No -----> Nil ------> Avoid risk, keep money in pocket ----> 1.0 (certain) -----> Neurtral: spend ntohing, win nothing
YES
Decision ----> Risky Event ---> Possible outcomes ----> Probability -----> Impact
Yes -----> Stake $1 on throw of dice ----> Number 6 ----> 0.166 (1 in 6) ----> Gain Spend $1 Win $10
or
Yes -----> Stake $1 on throw of dice -----> Number 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 -----> 0.834 (5 in 6) ----> Loss Spend $1 Win nothing
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=te9MzyHoIN6EyuoHmfDxMaw&output=html
In version A of this game:
A bet costs $1, but you can win $10
Faced with this game, you have two alternatives - to play or not to play.
Once playing, there is nothing you can do to affect the outcome - so your decision on whether to play has to be made on the basis of the probabilities and impacts involved.
Because the situation is simple, the probabilities of the various possible outcomes can be objectively known. There is no subjectivity over the probabilities. The impacts, too, are fixed and clearly set out by the rules of the game (the prizes and the cost of playing).
If a choice is made to play, the probability of winning is 1 in 6 (0.166 or 16.66%) and the probability of losing 5 in 6 (0.834 or 83.4%).
If a choice is made not to play, risk is avoided (there is a single outcome that is certain) but there is also no potential benefit.
Decision tree for dice game version A:
Decision: Play dice game with chance of winning $10? Yes or No
NO
Decision ----> Risky Event ---> Possible outcomes ----> Probability -----> Impact
No -----> Nil ------> Avoid risk, keep money in pocket ----> 1.0 (certain) -----> Neurtral: spend ntohing, win nothing
YES
Decision ----> Risky Event ---> Possible outcomes ----> Probability -----> Impact
Yes -----> Stake $1 on throw of dice ----> Number 6 ----> 0.166 (1 in 6) ----> Gain Spend $1 Win $10
or
Yes -----> Stake $1 on throw of dice -----> Number 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 -----> 0.834 (5 in 6) ----> Loss Spend $1 Win nothing
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=te9MzyHoIN6EyuoHmfDxMaw&output=html
Subjectivity and Impacts
The problem of achieving objectivity applies just as much to assessing impacts as it does to gauging probabilities. It can be difficult to establish a basis for comparison, praticularly in the area of 'soft' impacts. As with probabilities, the key is to express impacts numerically. The commonest way to do this is in financial terms.
'Hard' impacts often lend themselves to quantification and comparison, making it relatively easy to express them financially. For example, an interruption to the operation of a production line resulting from a power cut or a fire could be translated into likely impact on revenues or profits.
'Soft' impacts are much more difficult to quantify, but they can still be hugely significant for the business. For example, falling revenues may result in disillusionment within the business - a negative cultural impact. This may result in talented individuals leaving the business, which could lead to a self-perpetuating cycle of decline (a strategic risk). Quantifying impacts financially helps to express the significance of 'soft' impacts in terms that everyone can understand, putting them on the same basis of credibility as 'hard' impacts.
As with probabilities, complexity also adds to subjectivity:
'Hard' impacts often lend themselves to quantification and comparison, making it relatively easy to express them financially. For example, an interruption to the operation of a production line resulting from a power cut or a fire could be translated into likely impact on revenues or profits.
'Soft' impacts are much more difficult to quantify, but they can still be hugely significant for the business. For example, falling revenues may result in disillusionment within the business - a negative cultural impact. This may result in talented individuals leaving the business, which could lead to a self-perpetuating cycle of decline (a strategic risk). Quantifying impacts financially helps to express the significance of 'soft' impacts in terms that everyone can understand, putting them on the same basis of credibility as 'hard' impacts.
As with probabilities, complexity also adds to subjectivity:
- range of impacts: impacts can affect many different areas of the business, making it hard to gauge the total impact.
- interdependence: one impact may result in another impact in a different area of the business
- lack of precedent: the situation may be unprecedented, or the precedent may be far in the past, making it difficult to assess the likely impact today.
Understanding IMPACT of a decision
Probability is the likelihood that a particular outcome will occur.
Impact is the effect that a particular outcome will have if it does occur.
Impacts can be positive or negative. We call positive impacts 'upsides' and negaive impacts 'downsides'. A single decision may involve the potential for both upsides and downsides.
Considering impact helps us
We can think of impacts as 'hard' and 'soft'.
'Hard' impacts affect areas of the business such as:
'Soft' impacts affect areas of the business including:
Impact is the effect that a particular outcome will have if it does occur.
Impacts can be positive or negative. We call positive impacts 'upsides' and negaive impacts 'downsides'. A single decision may involve the potential for both upsides and downsides.
Considering impact helps us
- weigh up different possible outcomes against each other,
- to assess how bad they will be for the business (if they are downsides), or
- how much benefit they will realise (if they are upsides).
We can think of impacts as 'hard' and 'soft'.
'Hard' impacts affect areas of the business such as:
- financial: losing or making money; changing profit margins; changes in share price
- performance: changes in turnover; changes in business volumes; problems with quality, or improvements; losing or gaining customers; growing the business or seeing it decline
- business continuity: whether business operations can continue when problems arise; whether new demands, or peaks in demand, can be met; the availability of business-critical systems
- individuals and groups: physical safety; financial status and reward; working conditions; workload; level of responsibility; status and authority; prospect for the future.
'Soft' impacts affect areas of the business including:
- reputation and brand equity: how the business, its products or services and its actions in society are perceived in the wider world
- morale and motivation: how people feel about working for the business
- faith in management: whether people believe in mangement's abilities and vision for the future
- sense of community: whether people identify with the business and its aims and fell part of the business's culture
- social standing: people's sense of value or relevance to the business; their sense of authority or power.
Subjective Probabilities are an unavoidable part of decision making
Subjective probabilities are an unavoidable part of business decision making.
You often have to make an opinion on strategic issues facing your business. For example, you may be setting the five-year plan for your business. You would have to assess all the factors which could have a big impact of the industry in which you operate in.
The situation is very complex. Your partners have different views and may not reach agreement. On top of that, other industry leaders are making their views and this may have an impact.
All these complexity doesn't prevent you and your partner from forming a view - maybe nothing more than an instinct or a hunch - as to what is going to happen. Perhaps, you both agree that it is "quite likely" that a certain factor will impact the industry in the next two years. Since this is of strategic significance to the business, you will need to accomodate this in the planning.
As you and your partner put your thoughts down on paper, what exactly does "quite likely" mean? You may think it means "almost certain", while your partner considers it means "fifty-fifty". In other words, you think "quite likely" equals a probability of (say) around 95%, while your partner assumes it denotes a probability of around 50%.
How can these two views be brought closer together. Perhaps, they could use a probability that is objectively knowable - such as the throw of a dice - for comparison. Do you think that such and such a factor is more or less likely to occur than throwing a six? If less, the probability is lower than 1 in 6 (0.166). If more, the probability is higher. By discussing the issue in these terms, you and your partner can move closer to a picture of probability that you both share - and one that you can communicate with some degree of confidence. You can both use this information to help pin down this probability - combined with your own opinions, experience and intuition.
Let's assume you and your partner agree on a probability of 75% that a certain factor will impact on the business within the next two years. It is important to note that just because two people have agreed a figure, the probability hasn't become any less subjective. Using numbers adds clarity and precision but does not necessary indicate accuracy. In your written report, you and your partner will need to explain the facts and reasoning behind your probability calculations, and stress the fact that the probability remains subjective even though it has been expressed numerically. (You might use a range, such as '70-80%')
Some decision makers may regard this as pointless - how can that help you make a decision? If you can't know probability objectively, why waste time trying to quantify it? The answer is that it doesn't help you make the decision, but it does focus attention on the objective basis (if any) for assessments of probability. It forces you to bring your information, reasoning and judgements into the open, so that others can see them.
In the above example, you and your partner are forced to reach a shared understanding of probability so that you can communicate it and also, to others in your report. While this doesn't necessarily makes it easier for you to make strategic decisions, it does mean that whatever decsion you take will be based on the facts that are available - or draw attention to the need for more facts. Expressing probability numerically is also likely to focus everyone's minds on the urgency of the issue, rather than letting them adopt whatever interpretation of "quite likely" suits their own values and priorities.
Another benefit is the potential for sensitivity analysis: to assess how the impact of a particular risk changes with respect to changes in probability of a particular factor. Bigger changes mean higher sensitivity.
You often have to make an opinion on strategic issues facing your business. For example, you may be setting the five-year plan for your business. You would have to assess all the factors which could have a big impact of the industry in which you operate in.
The situation is very complex. Your partners have different views and may not reach agreement. On top of that, other industry leaders are making their views and this may have an impact.
All these complexity doesn't prevent you and your partner from forming a view - maybe nothing more than an instinct or a hunch - as to what is going to happen. Perhaps, you both agree that it is "quite likely" that a certain factor will impact the industry in the next two years. Since this is of strategic significance to the business, you will need to accomodate this in the planning.
As you and your partner put your thoughts down on paper, what exactly does "quite likely" mean? You may think it means "almost certain", while your partner considers it means "fifty-fifty". In other words, you think "quite likely" equals a probability of (say) around 95%, while your partner assumes it denotes a probability of around 50%.
How can these two views be brought closer together. Perhaps, they could use a probability that is objectively knowable - such as the throw of a dice - for comparison. Do you think that such and such a factor is more or less likely to occur than throwing a six? If less, the probability is lower than 1 in 6 (0.166). If more, the probability is higher. By discussing the issue in these terms, you and your partner can move closer to a picture of probability that you both share - and one that you can communicate with some degree of confidence. You can both use this information to help pin down this probability - combined with your own opinions, experience and intuition.
Let's assume you and your partner agree on a probability of 75% that a certain factor will impact on the business within the next two years. It is important to note that just because two people have agreed a figure, the probability hasn't become any less subjective. Using numbers adds clarity and precision but does not necessary indicate accuracy. In your written report, you and your partner will need to explain the facts and reasoning behind your probability calculations, and stress the fact that the probability remains subjective even though it has been expressed numerically. (You might use a range, such as '70-80%')
Some decision makers may regard this as pointless - how can that help you make a decision? If you can't know probability objectively, why waste time trying to quantify it? The answer is that it doesn't help you make the decision, but it does focus attention on the objective basis (if any) for assessments of probability. It forces you to bring your information, reasoning and judgements into the open, so that others can see them.
In the above example, you and your partner are forced to reach a shared understanding of probability so that you can communicate it and also, to others in your report. While this doesn't necessarily makes it easier for you to make strategic decisions, it does mean that whatever decsion you take will be based on the facts that are available - or draw attention to the need for more facts. Expressing probability numerically is also likely to focus everyone's minds on the urgency of the issue, rather than letting them adopt whatever interpretation of "quite likely" suits their own values and priorities.
Another benefit is the potential for sensitivity analysis: to assess how the impact of a particular risk changes with respect to changes in probability of a particular factor. Bigger changes mean higher sensitivity.
Thursday, 19 November 2009
To measure risk we have to use probability
To manage risk, we have to be able to measure it, and to measure risk we have to use probability. Probability is the quantitative language of risk and uncertainty.
The probability of an outcome is a number expressing the likelihood of it actually happening. It can be a number between 0 and 1, where 0 indicates an impossible outcome and 1 a certain one, or it can be expressed as a percentage (a number between 0 and 100).
In some situations, probability is objective and factual. For example, the probability of calling the toss of a coin correctly is 0.5 or 50%. However, tossing a coin is a very simple event. It is easy to use past experience and real-world knowledge to assess the probability of a 'heads' or 'tails' outcome.
As situations become more complex, it becomes progressively more difficult to be objective about probabilities; they become more subjective. Business situations are extremely complex, and therefore the probabilities involved are highly subjective.
Because the decisions we make in business are so important, it is vital to try and pin down the probabilities involved, even though it may be impossible to achieve complete objectivity. The more precision we can bring to the situation, the firmer the foundation on which we make a decision. To move towards precision, we need to look at subjective probabilities.
The probability of an outcome is a number expressing the likelihood of it actually happening. It can be a number between 0 and 1, where 0 indicates an impossible outcome and 1 a certain one, or it can be expressed as a percentage (a number between 0 and 100).
In some situations, probability is objective and factual. For example, the probability of calling the toss of a coin correctly is 0.5 or 50%. However, tossing a coin is a very simple event. It is easy to use past experience and real-world knowledge to assess the probability of a 'heads' or 'tails' outcome.
As situations become more complex, it becomes progressively more difficult to be objective about probabilities; they become more subjective. Business situations are extremely complex, and therefore the probabilities involved are highly subjective.
Because the decisions we make in business are so important, it is vital to try and pin down the probabilities involved, even though it may be impossible to achieve complete objectivity. The more precision we can bring to the situation, the firmer the foundation on which we make a decision. To move towards precision, we need to look at subjective probabilities.
Wednesday, 18 November 2009
Premature fiscal exit would hurt Malaysia, says World Bank
Wednesday November 18 2009.Related Articles
Premature fiscal exit would hurt Malaysia, says World Bank
KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 18 — The World Bank warned today that Malaysia should not exit its fiscal pump priming as it could choke off the country's economic recovery.
However, the bank also cautioned that extending fiscal support for too long "may hamper the credibility of medium-term fiscal consolidation, reduce room for future stimulus, increase the risk of asset price bubbles and constrain the private sector once demand picks up," the World Bank said in a country report on Malaysia.
Malaysia is expected to rack up a budget deficit of 7.4 per cent of gross domestic product this year, its biggest in over 20 years, in part due to two fiscal stimulus packages worth a total of RM67 billion.
The extra spending was aimed at offsetting a slump in global demand that has hit Asia's third-most export dependent economy hard.
The government expects the Southeast Asian country's economy to shrink 3 per cent this year and to grow by 3 per cent next year, although the World Bank was more optimistic.
"With East Asia leading the recovery and advanced economies showing progressive improvement, the Malaysian economy is projected to grow at 4.1 per cent in 2010, following a contraction of 2.3 per cent in 2009," the World Bank said. — Reuters
Premature fiscal exit would hurt Malaysia, says World Bank
KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 18 — The World Bank warned today that Malaysia should not exit its fiscal pump priming as it could choke off the country's economic recovery.
However, the bank also cautioned that extending fiscal support for too long "may hamper the credibility of medium-term fiscal consolidation, reduce room for future stimulus, increase the risk of asset price bubbles and constrain the private sector once demand picks up," the World Bank said in a country report on Malaysia.
Malaysia is expected to rack up a budget deficit of 7.4 per cent of gross domestic product this year, its biggest in over 20 years, in part due to two fiscal stimulus packages worth a total of RM67 billion.
The extra spending was aimed at offsetting a slump in global demand that has hit Asia's third-most export dependent economy hard.
The government expects the Southeast Asian country's economy to shrink 3 per cent this year and to grow by 3 per cent next year, although the World Bank was more optimistic.
"With East Asia leading the recovery and advanced economies showing progressive improvement, the Malaysian economy is projected to grow at 4.1 per cent in 2010, following a contraction of 2.3 per cent in 2009," the World Bank said. — Reuters
Malaysian economy at the cross-road
The Malaysian Insider
Wednesday November 18 2009.
Malaysia has lost edge as low-cost producer, says World Bank
KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 18 — Malaysia risks missing its goal of becoming a high-income nation as it has lost its edge as a low-cost producer and lacks the investment to compete in more advanced industries, the World Bank warned today.
In its first country report on Malaysia, the Washington-based body also said that as a trade-dependent country, Malaysia should not unwind its RM67 billion in economic stimulus as that could choke off a nascent recovery.
“The economy seems to be caught in a middle-income trap - unable to remain competitive as a high-volume, low-cost producer, yet unable to move up the value chain and achieve rapid growth by breaking into fast growing markets for knowledge and innovation-based products and services,” it said.
Private investment in Malaysia, which famously spurned advice and cash from the International Monetary Fund in 1998, is below that of virtually every other Asian country and has fallen dramatically since the Asian financial crisis.
According to World Bank data, private investment in Malaysia fell to 12 per cent of gross domestic product in 2008 compared with 30 per cent prior to the Asian crisis.
The government that has ruled this country for 52 years has announced a series of economic reforms aimed at winning back foreign investment that increasingly finds a home in neighbouring Thailand and Indonesia.
However, portfolio and direct investment flows have been negative since the second quarter of 2008 and there have been few signs that investment has picked up in response to the government measures.
The World Bank noted that while Malaysia has a high proportion of high tech exports it served as a low-skilled assembler of imported parts “rather than a creator of technological and product innovations”.
One major limitation on moving up the economic value chain is Malaysia’s education system, which churns out tens of thousands of graduates who are ill-equipped for the kind of high-value work such as biotechnology that the government has identified as growth areas.
Education in Malaysia has become mired in a deep political row as the government recently switched to Malay language instruction for math and science from English, a move critics said was designed to appease its ethnic Malay voter base.
While private investment has plummeted, the government’s spending has risen sharply. Malaysia expects to rack up its biggest budget deficit in 20 years at 7.4 per cent of gross domestic product this year.
The government expects the economy to shrink 3 per cent this year and to grow by 3 per cent next year, although the World Bank was more optimistic.
“With East Asia leading the recovery and advanced economies showing progressive improvement, the Malaysian economy is projected to grow at 4.1 per cent in 2010, following a contraction of 2.3 per cent in 2009,” it said.
The bank was, however, less optimistic on the government’s plans to slash the budget deficit in 2010 to 5.6 per cent of GDP, forecasting that it would be 6.4 per cent of GDP. - Reuters
Wednesday November 18 2009.
Malaysia has lost edge as low-cost producer, says World Bank
KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 18 — Malaysia risks missing its goal of becoming a high-income nation as it has lost its edge as a low-cost producer and lacks the investment to compete in more advanced industries, the World Bank warned today.
In its first country report on Malaysia, the Washington-based body also said that as a trade-dependent country, Malaysia should not unwind its RM67 billion in economic stimulus as that could choke off a nascent recovery.
“The economy seems to be caught in a middle-income trap - unable to remain competitive as a high-volume, low-cost producer, yet unable to move up the value chain and achieve rapid growth by breaking into fast growing markets for knowledge and innovation-based products and services,” it said.
Private investment in Malaysia, which famously spurned advice and cash from the International Monetary Fund in 1998, is below that of virtually every other Asian country and has fallen dramatically since the Asian financial crisis.
According to World Bank data, private investment in Malaysia fell to 12 per cent of gross domestic product in 2008 compared with 30 per cent prior to the Asian crisis.
The government that has ruled this country for 52 years has announced a series of economic reforms aimed at winning back foreign investment that increasingly finds a home in neighbouring Thailand and Indonesia.
However, portfolio and direct investment flows have been negative since the second quarter of 2008 and there have been few signs that investment has picked up in response to the government measures.
The World Bank noted that while Malaysia has a high proportion of high tech exports it served as a low-skilled assembler of imported parts “rather than a creator of technological and product innovations”.
One major limitation on moving up the economic value chain is Malaysia’s education system, which churns out tens of thousands of graduates who are ill-equipped for the kind of high-value work such as biotechnology that the government has identified as growth areas.
Education in Malaysia has become mired in a deep political row as the government recently switched to Malay language instruction for math and science from English, a move critics said was designed to appease its ethnic Malay voter base.
While private investment has plummeted, the government’s spending has risen sharply. Malaysia expects to rack up its biggest budget deficit in 20 years at 7.4 per cent of gross domestic product this year.
The government expects the economy to shrink 3 per cent this year and to grow by 3 per cent next year, although the World Bank was more optimistic.
“With East Asia leading the recovery and advanced economies showing progressive improvement, the Malaysian economy is projected to grow at 4.1 per cent in 2010, following a contraction of 2.3 per cent in 2009,” it said.
The bank was, however, less optimistic on the government’s plans to slash the budget deficit in 2010 to 5.6 per cent of GDP, forecasting that it would be 6.4 per cent of GDP. - Reuters
Are you an Intelligent Investor?
Do you know how to minimize the odds of suffering irreversible losses?
Do you know how to maximize the odds of achieving sustainable gains?
Do you know how to control self-defeating behaviour that keeps most from reaching their full potential in investing?
Do you know that intelligent investing does not refer to IQ but rather to being patient, disciplined and eager to learn, and able to harness your emotions and think for yourself?
Do you know that high IQ and higher education are not enought to make an investor intelligent?
Do you know that being an intelligent investor is more a matter of 'character' than 'brain'?
Do you know the investment techniques, the adoption and execution of an investment policy suitable for laymen (yourself)?
Do you know the investment principles and investors' attitudes maybe of greater importance in investing than the technique of analyzing securities?
Do you know that there is limited usefulness in reading a book on 'how to make a million', as there are no sure and easy paths to riches on the stock market here and anywhere else?
Do you know of any single person who has consistently or lastingly made money by 'following (timing) the market'?
Do you know how to guide yourself from the areas of possible substantial error and to develop policies with which you will be comfortable?
Do you know the investor's chief problem -- and even his worst enemy -- is likely to be himself?
Do you know the importance of psychology of investors and the field of behavioural finance in guiding investing?
Do you know how to measure or quantify value of business or stock?
Do you know having the habit of relating what is paid to what is being offered is an invaluable trait in investment?
Do you know that for 99 issues out of 100, you could say that at some price they are cheap enough to buy and at other price they would be so dear that they should be sold?
Do you know that the art of investment has one characteristic that is not generally appreciated; that a creditable, if unspectacular, result can be achieved by the lay investor with a minimum of effort and capability?
Do you know that to improve on this above easily attainable standard requires much application and more than a trace of wisdom?
Do you know that if you merely try to bring just a little extra knowledge and cleverness to bear upon your investment program, instead of realizing a little better than normal results, you may well find that you have done worse?
Read: The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham
Do you know how to maximize the odds of achieving sustainable gains?
Do you know how to control self-defeating behaviour that keeps most from reaching their full potential in investing?
Do you know that intelligent investing does not refer to IQ but rather to being patient, disciplined and eager to learn, and able to harness your emotions and think for yourself?
Do you know that high IQ and higher education are not enought to make an investor intelligent?
Do you know that being an intelligent investor is more a matter of 'character' than 'brain'?
Do you know the investment techniques, the adoption and execution of an investment policy suitable for laymen (yourself)?
Do you know the investment principles and investors' attitudes maybe of greater importance in investing than the technique of analyzing securities?
Do you know that there is limited usefulness in reading a book on 'how to make a million', as there are no sure and easy paths to riches on the stock market here and anywhere else?
Do you know of any single person who has consistently or lastingly made money by 'following (timing) the market'?
Do you know how to guide yourself from the areas of possible substantial error and to develop policies with which you will be comfortable?
Do you know the investor's chief problem -- and even his worst enemy -- is likely to be himself?
Do you know the importance of psychology of investors and the field of behavioural finance in guiding investing?
Do you know how to measure or quantify value of business or stock?
Do you know having the habit of relating what is paid to what is being offered is an invaluable trait in investment?
Do you know that for 99 issues out of 100, you could say that at some price they are cheap enough to buy and at other price they would be so dear that they should be sold?
Do you know that the art of investment has one characteristic that is not generally appreciated; that a creditable, if unspectacular, result can be achieved by the lay investor with a minimum of effort and capability?
Do you know that to improve on this above easily attainable standard requires much application and more than a trace of wisdom?
Do you know that if you merely try to bring just a little extra knowledge and cleverness to bear upon your investment program, instead of realizing a little better than normal results, you may well find that you have done worse?
Read: The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham
Tuesday, 17 November 2009
Kuala Lumpur one of the worst-performing markets, in relative terms
Question marks make investors shy away from KL market
Tags: Andrew F Freris | Annual bond conference | economic recovery | Expensive valuations | FBM KLCI | Fiscal spending packages | GDP | Iskandar Malaysia | Local equity market | monetary policy | Mutted earnings revisions | RAM Holdings Bhd | stimulus packages
Written by Ellina Badri
Monday, 16 November 2009 11:36
KUALA LUMPUR: Expensive valuations, muted earnings revisions and uncertainty on the private sector’s role in driving the economy have made the local equity market unattractive relative to other regional markets, BNP Paribas Private Bank Hong Kong senior investment strategist for Asia, Andrew F Freris said.
“There is a mixture of good and some areas where investors may still have a question mark. By no means, I am not unhappy by what I’ve seen but in terms of relatives, that’s actually why some investors might prefer other markets.
“These are the reasons that have made Kuala Lumpur one of the worst-performing markets, in relative terms, because it has gone up less than other Asian markets,” Freris told The Edge Financial Daily on the sidelines of RAM Holdings Bhd’s annual bond conference here last week.
The FBM KLCI has gained 44.96% from the start of the year up to last Friday’s close. Singapore’s Straits Times Index has risen 54.82%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index has gained 56.76%, and China’s Shanghai and Shenzhen indices have risen 75.07% and 108.31%, respectively. The Jakarta Composite Index has surged 79.05%.
Nonetheless, Freris said due to the government’s two stimulus packages and the liberalisation of the financial system and capital markets, things here were changing rather quickly.
He also highlighted the government’s initiatives in Iskandar Malaysia, Johor, saying the progress and effects of that project were “major”.
“Malaysia has got a strong , structurally supportive fiscal environment and monetary policy that stay cautious, but I imagine the reason the market is not performing much more strongly is the question mark about how long the government will continue to lead and when the private sector will start taking over,” he added.
Freris
On the outlook of the Malaysian market and economy, he said the FBM KLCI could continue rising until the market saw two consecutive quarters of gross domestic product (GDP) growth, which would then impact earnings and in turn signal an interest rate hike.
He said sectors likely to benefit from the economic recovery included CONSTRUCTION [] and infrastructure, mainly due to the initiatives set out in the government’s RM67 billion fiscal spending packages.
Monetary policy here was likely to remain supportive of growth and the overnight policy rate would not be raised “anytime soon”, he said.
“Second quarter GDP was also better than the first, and we reckon 3Q09 will be pretty supportive,” he added.
Meanwhile, on the performance of global stock markets going forward, he said BNP Paribas was still very cautious, adding while there still may be room for markets to make gains, the G3 markets, especially the American market, remained very “jumpy”.
Hence, the bank also remained cautious about the Asian markets, although it was positive on China and South Korea, he said.
“As a whole, we’re very cautious and conservative. We’re quite boring, really. We’re not telling our clients to dive into equities, but neither are we telling them to stay away,” he said.
He also said the bank was neutral on India, adding the Singapore, Malaysia and Hong Kong markets were not included in its investment universe.
“Equity investment is fairly globalised, equity allocation takes place across and within markets, so it is no surprise if the S&P 500 index in the US goes up, the KL market will also go up.
“As long as there is quite a degree of jumpiness in the US market, because of the uncertainty of the extent and sustainability of a recovery, that will be reflected back in KL,” he added.
This article appeared in The Edge Financial Daily, November 16, 2009.
Tags: Andrew F Freris | Annual bond conference | economic recovery | Expensive valuations | FBM KLCI | Fiscal spending packages | GDP | Iskandar Malaysia | Local equity market | monetary policy | Mutted earnings revisions | RAM Holdings Bhd | stimulus packages
Written by Ellina Badri
Monday, 16 November 2009 11:36
KUALA LUMPUR: Expensive valuations, muted earnings revisions and uncertainty on the private sector’s role in driving the economy have made the local equity market unattractive relative to other regional markets, BNP Paribas Private Bank Hong Kong senior investment strategist for Asia, Andrew F Freris said.
“There is a mixture of good and some areas where investors may still have a question mark. By no means, I am not unhappy by what I’ve seen but in terms of relatives, that’s actually why some investors might prefer other markets.
“These are the reasons that have made Kuala Lumpur one of the worst-performing markets, in relative terms, because it has gone up less than other Asian markets,” Freris told The Edge Financial Daily on the sidelines of RAM Holdings Bhd’s annual bond conference here last week.
The FBM KLCI has gained 44.96% from the start of the year up to last Friday’s close. Singapore’s Straits Times Index has risen 54.82%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index has gained 56.76%, and China’s Shanghai and Shenzhen indices have risen 75.07% and 108.31%, respectively. The Jakarta Composite Index has surged 79.05%.
Nonetheless, Freris said due to the government’s two stimulus packages and the liberalisation of the financial system and capital markets, things here were changing rather quickly.
He also highlighted the government’s initiatives in Iskandar Malaysia, Johor, saying the progress and effects of that project were “major”.
“Malaysia has got a strong , structurally supportive fiscal environment and monetary policy that stay cautious, but I imagine the reason the market is not performing much more strongly is the question mark about how long the government will continue to lead and when the private sector will start taking over,” he added.
Freris
On the outlook of the Malaysian market and economy, he said the FBM KLCI could continue rising until the market saw two consecutive quarters of gross domestic product (GDP) growth, which would then impact earnings and in turn signal an interest rate hike.
He said sectors likely to benefit from the economic recovery included CONSTRUCTION [] and infrastructure, mainly due to the initiatives set out in the government’s RM67 billion fiscal spending packages.
Monetary policy here was likely to remain supportive of growth and the overnight policy rate would not be raised “anytime soon”, he said.
“Second quarter GDP was also better than the first, and we reckon 3Q09 will be pretty supportive,” he added.
Meanwhile, on the performance of global stock markets going forward, he said BNP Paribas was still very cautious, adding while there still may be room for markets to make gains, the G3 markets, especially the American market, remained very “jumpy”.
Hence, the bank also remained cautious about the Asian markets, although it was positive on China and South Korea, he said.
“As a whole, we’re very cautious and conservative. We’re quite boring, really. We’re not telling our clients to dive into equities, but neither are we telling them to stay away,” he said.
He also said the bank was neutral on India, adding the Singapore, Malaysia and Hong Kong markets were not included in its investment universe.
“Equity investment is fairly globalised, equity allocation takes place across and within markets, so it is no surprise if the S&P 500 index in the US goes up, the KL market will also go up.
“As long as there is quite a degree of jumpiness in the US market, because of the uncertainty of the extent and sustainability of a recovery, that will be reflected back in KL,” he added.
This article appeared in The Edge Financial Daily, November 16, 2009.
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