Tuesday 20 October 2009

Value Investing Congress 19th - 20th October, 2009

http://www.valueinvestingcongress.com/



AGENDA


An advanced seminar on value investing

How to Decipher Financial Statements, Avoid Value Traps and Pick Investment Winners

MONday MAY 4, 2009

7:30 - 8:00 AM

Registration

8:00 - 10:00 AM

How to Profit From the Mortgage Crisis:

Long Investments

• A beaten-down blue-chip

Case study: American Express

• Growth at a reasonable price (GARP)

and a beaten-down blue-chip

Case studies: Berkshire Hathaway & Wesco

• Out of favor financial

Case study: Resource America

• Distressed Debt

Case study: Subprime mortgage tranche

10:00 - 10:15 AM Break

10:15 - 10:45 AM

How to Not Lose Money in the Mortgage Crisis:

Stocks to Avoid

• Aggressive accounting, inadequate

reserving and the structure of CDOs

Case study: MBIA

10:45 - 11:30 am

Different Types of Value — Part One:

Piggybacking on Activism

• Piggybacking on structural activism

Case study: Wendy’s (Ackman)

• Piggybacking on operational activism

Case study: Wendy’s (Peltz)

• Catalyzing activism

Case study: CNET

11:30 AM - 12:00 Pm

Investor Irrationality and the Current

Market Meltdown

12:00 - 1:00 pm Lunch

1:00 - 3:00 Pm

Different Types of Value — Part Two:

Out of Favor Sectors (Retail/Consumer)

• Beaten down blue chip retailer and

piggybacking on activism

Case study: Target

• Profiting from a liquidation

Case study: Footstar

• Betting on a turnaround under new

leadership (1)

Case study: Borders Group

• Betting on a turnaround under new

leadership (2)

Case study: Wendy’s

3:00 - 3:15 pM Break

3:15 - 4:00 pM

Warning Flags

• Overvaluation

Case study: Netflix

• Overvaluation and unsustainable

business model

Case study: VistaPrint

4:00 - 5:00 pM

Different Types of Value —

Part Three

• An out-of-favor cyclical with too much debt

Case study: Huntsman

• Mispriced options

Case studies: dELiA*s, Ambassadors

International, TravelCenters of America,

PhotoChannel Networks, Proliance

International, General Growth Properties

5:00 - 6:00 pM

Networking Cocktail Reception
 
http://www.valueinvestingcongress.com/downloads/VICP09_Workshop_Agenda3.pdf

Most Companies Yet To Disclose Remuneration Levels

October 20, 2009 20:03 PM

Most Companies Yet To Disclose Remuneration Levels, Says Ernst & Young

KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 20 (Bernama) -- Most Malaysian companies have yet to disclose the remuneration level of their executive directors and relate it with performance, according to an international public accounting firm.

Ernst & Young Malaysia, in its 2009 executive and board remuneration report, said though the level of disclosure on remuneration of executive directors increased, there was still a lack of information on the correlation between level of remuneration and company's performance.

Ernst & Young's performance and reward leader for the Far East, Dharma Chandran, said majority of the companies that were assessed did not report on performance measures.

"They tell you what they paid the executives last year and how much they paid remuneration (but) they did not say much in terms of what kind of performance measures that they used, whether revenue, profit or economic values as benchmark," he told a media briefing here Tuesday.

The report was made based on analysis of information in the annual reports of the top 100 companies on Bursa Malaysia's Main Market with the financial years ended 2008 and 2007.

According to the report, only 23 per cent of companies disclosed remuneration details for all individual directors as recommended in the Malaysian Code of Corporate Governance.

Though there was still lack of disclosure, Dharma said the increasing weighting towards variable pay indicated that Malaysian companies were responding to international trends and reviewing their strategies to ensure alignment with their business strategy and shareholder value creation.

However, there was a need for long-term incentives for these executive directors to create long-term values and keep real talent in the company, he said.

Dharma said most Malaysian companies offered short-term incentives based on company's performance rather than long-term incentives to these directors.

"For the remuneration to be balanced, a mixed of short-term and long-term incentives could drive better future for the company," he said.

Short-term incentives are usually in the form of annual bonuses while long-term incentives can be equity- or cash-based programme with a vesting period of more than one year.

Moving forward, total remuneration levels are expected to remain stagnant or assumed downward trend this year as Malaysian companies are still feeling the effects of a weak global economy, the report said.

-- BERNAMA

Graham's view of people who trade continuously

"Everyone knows that most people who trade in the market lose money at the end.  The peopl,e who persist in trying it are either unintelligent, or willing to lose money for the fun of the game, or gifted with some uncommon and incommunicable talent.  In any case, they are not investors."

"Too many clever and experienced people are engaged simultaneously in tryng to outwit one another in the market.  The result, we believe, is that all their work and effort 'cancel out', so that ... each conclusion ends up by being no more dependable than the toss of a coin  ... the activities of the stock market analysts are the same as the activities of a tournament of bridge expert.  Everyone is very brilliant indeed, but scarcely anyone is so superior to the rest as to be certain of winning a prize .... because the analysts communicate freely with each other, it is as if all the contestants in the bridge tournament gathered around and argued with each other what strategy each should use."

All the clocks have no hands

We are all at a wonderful ball where champagne sparkles in every glass and soft laughter falls upon the summer air.  We know, by the rules, that at some moment, terrorists will burst in through the terrace doors, killing many and scattering the survivors.  Those who leave early will be saved, but the ball is so splended that no one wants to leave while there is still time.  Everyone wants to enjoy one more dance and sip one more glass of champagne.  So everyone keeps asking:  "What time is it?  What time is it?"  We look around and find that all the clocks have no hands.

Final answer to stock values

There is no such thing as a final answer to stock values.  A dozen experts will arrive at twelve different conclusions - Gerald Loeb

The barriers to success are psychological rather than physical.

What can an individual investor do?

Though it is believed that investment can be a  very profitable field, it is only profitable to those who are strong of will and are prepared to work at it.  There is no simple way to get rich quick in the stock market. 

The barriers to success are psychological rather than physical.   Psychological barriers are so much harder to cross for so few of us can bear the thought of not being part of a crowd. 

Here are the words of advice from Dreman in his book Psychology and the Stockmarket

"....  the best chance an investor has is to stand apart from popular thinking.  He must be willing to forego the thrill of being in unison with the market, in agreement with the expert opinion and with the exciting, seemingly surefire ideas currently in vogue....  This is no small sacrifice.  To own the 'right' stocks in a rising market is a heady experience.  There is a wonderful blend of monetary gain and ego satisfaction in being right in a popular manner. 

Man is a social animal.  To succeed, the investor has to be able to withstand the tremendous pressure leading to conformity... (he) will face a continuing flow of negative feedback from the market, from experts and from groups of people whom he respects.  The reader may feel a little like the patient whose doctor has advised him to give up sex for this health.  Some of us might just prefer to die happy."

Bulls versus Bears

"Only own those rare stocks whose earnings yield over the next few years will be much higher than the bond yields against which stock valuations must compete." Kenneth Fisher, son of Philip Fisher.  Just like his father, the young Fisher is a conservative investor.

"When the earnings yield on stocks is very low relative to bond yields, stocks will fall. "

"No one can precisely 'time' the market.  As PEs moved up from levels that were historically cheap to a range somewhat above long-term norms, pocket some of your equity profits now and build up your cash reserves to the 10%, then 15% and then 20% level."

"As the dream merchants continue to drive prices higher rapidly, raise more cash." 

"The near term nod still goes to the bulls.  Firstly, both Newton and experience have shown that a body in motion continues in motion until stopped by something more formidable than anything one can see at present.  Second, there is simply too much liquidity in the world with no better place to flow."

"The market has only recently gotten carried away, and it can still correct these excesses in a mild, orderly fashion."

Hong Leong group in focus

Hong Leong group in focus


Written by Joseph Chin
Tuesday, 20 October 2009 13:23

KUALA LUMPUR: Shares of several companies in the Hong Leong group topped the gainers list at the midday break on Tuesday, Oct 20 while the broader market was mixed


Hong Leong Industries rose 34 sen to RM4.50, Hong Leong Financial Group 31 sen to RM6.49 and Hong Leong Bank 16 sen to RM7.41. Cement maker Tasek-PA gained 26 sen to RM3.50 but Tasek shares fell seven sen to RM3.73.

Singapore fund exits KFCH

Singapore fund exits KFCH

Tags: Arisaig Asean Fund Ltd | Lembaga Tabung Haji | QSR Brands Bhd

Written by Financial Daily
Tuesday, 20 October 2009 11:00

KUALA LUMPUR: Singapore-based Arisaig Asean Fund Ltd has exited KFC Holdings (Malaysia) Bhd after it sold all its 6.89% stake or 13.65 million shares last Thursday.

A filing with Bursa Malaysia showed the fund sold the shares in a married deal for an undisclosed price. The buyer of the stake was not revealed.

Arisaig Asean Fund was the third largest shareholder in KFCH and the share price had performed well in recent months. KFCH closed at RM7.50 on that day. Analysts said Arisaig Asean Fund had been reducing its stakes in several Malaysian companies to meet redemptions.

The single largest shareholder in KFCH is QSR BRANDS BHD [] which owns 50.25% or 99.63 million shares. The second largest shareholder is Lembaga Tabung Haji with 24.87% or 49.31 million shares. KFCH yesterday closed 50 sen higher at RM8, the highest since Nov 13, 2007.


This article appeared in The Edge Financial Daily, October 20, 2009.

Lion Div further cuts stake in Parkson to 1.45%

Lion Div further cuts stake in Parkson to 1.45%

Tags: Amsteel Corp Bhd | Excel Step Investments Ltd | LDHB | Lion Corp Bhd | Lion Diversified Holdings Bhd | Megasteel Sdn Bhd | Parkson Holdings Bhd

Written by Ellina Badri
Monday, 19 October 2009 22:30

KUALA LUMPUR: LION DIVERSIFIED HOLDINGS BHD []'s (LDHB) subsidiary Excel Step Investments Ltd disposed of a total 36.74 million shares representing a 3.62% stake in PARKSON HOLDINGS BHD [] between June 29, 2009, and Oct 19, 2009, for RM185.8 million cash, to partly settle its deferred cash payments.

In a statement today, LDHB said 16.74 million shares were sold in the open market, with the remaining 20 million disposed off via a placement through JPMorgan Securities (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd.

It said its deferred cash payments payable were from its RM100 million acquisition of a 11.1% stake in Megasteel Sdn Bhd in February this year and its purchase of RM450 million Lion Corp Bhd Class B(b) bonds from Amsteel Corp Bhd, also in February.

It also said the balance of the proceeds from its share disposal would be used to repay borrowings and for working capital.

LDHB said following the disposal, its stake in Parkson was now reduced to 1.45%, adding that Excel Step held RM228.8 million redeemable convertible secured loan stocks 2007/2010 convertible into 57.2 million new Parkson shares.

"The LDHB group's original costs of investment in the 36.74 million Parkson shares was approximately RM147 million and the investment was made in Sept 2007," it added.

It said as of today, it had disposed of a total of 55.24 million Parkson shares, or a 5.44% stake, for a total cash consideration of RM272.3 million.

Between Apr 24 and June 26, it had disposed of a 1.82% interest in Parkson via the open market for RM86.5 million cash.

Hai-O riding high on China connection

Hai-O riding high on China connection

Tags: Changyu Pioneer Wine Co Ltd | China | Chinese herbs | Chinese medicated wines | Extensive network in China | Hai-O Enterprise Bhd | Tan Kee Hock

Written by Tony C H Goh
Monday, 19 October 2009 11:23

KUALA LUMPUR: HAI-O ENTERPRISE BHD [], widely known as a wholesaler and retailer of Chinese herbs and medicine, is now looking at expanding its reach in the wine, liquor and liqueur business by leveraging on its strong network in China.

“Currently, wines and liquor are considered as the second-liner products carried by the retail division. But with the current market trend towards drinking of red wine in the country, we foresee huge potential,” Hai-O’s general manager Tan Kee Hock said at the third Yantai International Wine Festival in Yantai, China, recently.

Hai-O has an extensive network in China, with business dealings dating back to 1975, particularly with Changyu Pioneer Wine Co Ltd, China’s oldest vineyard, which was established in 1892 and its biggest wine producer based in the wine-producing region of Yantai, Shandong province.

“As the sole distributor of Changyu’s wines in Malaysia, we are allocating a big portion of our promotion and advertising budget to raise awareness,” said Tan, who is in charge of the Chinese medicated wines, cooking wines, healthcare food and beverages division of the company.

Among Changyu products under the sole agency rights of Hai-O are Ling Zhi Medicated Liquor, Tze Pao San Pian Chiew, Te Zhi San Pian Chiew, Changyu Cabernet Dry Red Wine, Changyu Cabernet, Gernischt Dry Red Wine and Changyu Ice Wine.

While seeking to grow its wine and liquor business, multi-level marketing (MLM), wholesale and retailing are still the main contributors to Hai-O’s growth and revenue. It is exposed to all mainstream segments of Malaysia’s population, with the retail segment basically aimed at the Chinese, while MLM is mainly Malay-based.

For the fiscal year ended April 30, 2009 (FY09), Hai-O’s revenue increased 16% to RM435.2 million from RM373.8 million in the previous year. Net income rose 7% to RM52 million. The higher revenue reflects strengthening of the ringgit against the US dollar and the promotion of house-based products from the retail division.

The wholesale and retail division contributed RM16.8 million to the group revenue of RM148.6 million in the first quarter ended July 31, 2009 (1QFY10), down 11.2% from RM18.9 million in the previous quarter and 16.9% or RM20.2 million in the same period last year.

But given the promising potential of the wine industry in China, Hai-O believes its strategy of leveraging on the biggest wine company in the fast-developing Asian giant is likely to pay off. Hai-O has seen its share price jumping nearly 30% over the past three weeks to RM7.02 last Friday when it added another 12 sen, with 38,600 shares done.

Yantai is the largest wine-producing region in China, accounting for around 35% or one in every three bottles of wine produced there. The wine industry in China is the world’s 10th largest grape wine producer, and the only Asian country that produces grape wine on a commercial scale.

Other major grape wine players in China include Sino-French joint venture, Dynasty Winery Ltd and China Great Wall Wine Co, Ltd. Collectively, these top three wine producers control 40% of China’s wine market. Besides Shandong, some other famous wine-producing regions are found in Fujian and Guangdong provinces.

While growth in the traditional wine consumer countries has remained flat in the last 10 years, experts estimate that China would be the world’s most active wine market with a 36% growth through 2010. Over the same period, total global wine consumption is expected to grow at only 9.15%.

Research data from British research institute ISWR/DGR showed that based on current trends, total global wine consumption will reach 100 million litres by 2010, with China accounting for 5.58 million litres.

In a recent report on the company, RHB Research remained upbeat on Hai-O’s prospects going forward, even when there was a visible slowdown of the company’s retail and wholesale business.

This was largely due to the strong performance of its main business segment of MLM, for which the number of members has ballooned to more than 110,000 from 70,000 a year ago.

The company is well on track to surpass its internal target of 10% earnings growth in FY10. “Taking into account the robust 1QFY10 results and better-than-expected MLM sales, we raised our FY10-12 earnings forecasts by 22% to 28%,” said RHB.

“Hai-O’s attractiveness lies in its strong dividend payout policy of at least 50% of net earnings. Traditionally, the company has paid out above and beyond that amount, averaging 65% over the past five financial years.

“We project gross dividend per share for FY10 and FY11 to be at 54.5 sen and 57 sen, or a yield of 9.6% and 10%, respectively,” the research house added.

Some of the key risks include an unexpected reduction in dividend payout ratio to below 50% and the MLM division’s revenue coming in below expectations.


This article appeared in The Edge Financial Daily, October 19, 2009.

Top Glove eyeing acquisition targets in Malaysia

Top Glove eyeing acquisition targets in Malaysia

Tags: Influenza A (H1N1) | KM Lee | M&A | Malaysian entities | Medi-Flex Ltd | organic growth | Top Glove Corp Bhd

Written by Chong Jin Hun
Monday, 19 October 2009 11:21

KLANG: Top Glove Corp Bhd’s potential merger and acquisition (M&A) targets are most likely to be Malaysian entities and any such exercises will only be carried out at low and attractive prices, its managing director KM Lee said.

They will be financed via internal funds, helped by its net cash position of some RM176 million.

“It’s good to keep it (cash) handy in case the oppportunity of possible M&As comes our way,” Lee told The Edge Financial Daily in an interview.

Organic growth and M&As are expected to be key highlights of Top Glove’s intention to retain its supremacy in the international glove manufacturing sector. It aims to increase its present global market share of 22% to 30% by 2012.

Top Glove had in 2007 finalised the acquisition of a controlling stake in Singapore-listed rival Medi-Flex Ltd for some S$21 million (RM50.86 million).

The purchase of Medi-Flex, which owns two glove manufacturing plants in Klang and Banting in Selangor, was intended to help Top Glove expand its product range to include medical and cleanroom gloves.

Going forward, Lee said Top Glove was forecasting a conservative 10% annual revenue growth for the current and next financial year as the company builds more factories and expands its domestic production capacity.

With a cash hoard of RM176 million, Lee says Top Glove is in a good position to look for acquisitions that will help it maintain its position as the world's biggest rubber glove producer. Photo by Suhaimi Yusuf

For now, a larger output for Top Glove is deemed crucial to fulfil rising global demand for disposable gloves, due to the Influenza A(H1N1) outbreak.

Lee said these factories, to cost some RM35 million each, would be built on company-owned industrial land in Klang.

“Capacity expansion is the one (factor) that will see us moving forward in the long term. It’s quite traditional for us to build one to two factories every year.

“A lot also depends on how the A(H1N1) unfolds in the coming winter months (in the northern hemisphere),” he said.

Top Glove’s latest set of financials has improved. Net profit more than doubled to RM56.83 million in the fourth quarter ended Aug 31, 2009 from RM25.11 million a year earlier, helped by cost efficiency and higher demand for disposable gloves due to the A(H1N1) outbreak. Revenue rose 17.2% to RM427.35 million from RM364.53 million.

Full-year net profit rose 53.6% to RM169.15 million from RM110.1 million, while revenue increased by 10.9% to RM1.53 billion from RM1.38 billion.

Globally, Top Glove owns 19 factories, of which 17 are glove production facilities while the remaining two are latex concentrate plants in Thailand.

The company has 13 glove factories in Malaysia, and two each in Thailand and China. Together, they produce up to 31.5 billion pieces of gloves a year.

The company may also build more factories in Thailand and China to meet rising global demand for gloves.

Top Glove has allocated some RM70 million for capital expenditure (capex) in the current financial year ending Aug 31, 2010, to finance the CONSTRUCTION [] of two factories in Malaysia with a combined annual capacity of three billion pieces of gloves.


This article appeared in The Edge Financial Daily, October 19, 2009.

Carefully examine the possible alternatives when you invest

Buy Quality Stocks, Sell Treasuries, Says Mauboussin
Author of Think Twice offers advice on investors and investments.

By Russel Kinnel | 10-19-09 | 06:00 AM |

Michael Mauboussin thinks about where you should invest and how you should invest. As chief investment strategist at Legg Mason Capital Management, Mauboussin focuses on the economy, markets, and investor behavior. Mauboussin is also an adjunct professor at Columbia.

About the Author
Russel Kinnel is Morningstar's director of mutual fund research. He is also the editor of Morningstar FundInvestor, a monthly newsletter dedicated to helping investors pick great mutual funds, build winning portfolios, and monitor their funds for greater gains. Kinnel would like to hear from readers, but no financial-planning questions, please. Contact Author | Meet other investing specialists

His new book, Think Twice, examines why investors make mistakes if they leap to judgment and how they can correct that by carefully examining the possible alternatives and learning from their mistakes. I asked him about where the economy and markets are headed as well as lessons we can learn about how we make decisions. Check out his outlook for inflation, U.S. equities, and Treasuries as well as his advice on how we can all make better investors.


Q. It seems like a company's debt level has been all that mattered the past two years. Have the markets corrected for that enough that they'll be moving on to something else and if so what will that be?


A. If you take a step back, stock prices have two basic drivers: future cash flows and a discount rate that brings future values to the present. If you look back on 2007, we had good levels of cash flow--corporate America was near peaks in historical operating profit margin and return on invested capital--and the perceived levels of risk were very low.


All of that changed in 2008. First, the perception of risk skyrocketed, especially after the failure of Lehman Brothers in September. As a rough proxy for perceived risk in the equity market you can look at the VIX (more formally, the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index), which measures the implied volatility of S&P 500 Index options. Realized volatility in the past 80 or so years had been roughly 20 percent, but the VIX shot into the 80s. When the perception of risk rises, stock prices go down.


The second shoe to drop was earnings. Also in the fourth quarter of 2008, earnings estimates dropped rapidly. The one-two combination of lower anticipated cash flows and higher risk punished the market--probably to an excessive degree. When investors fear risk, of course, credit spreads--a measure of the interest rate companies have to pay to borrow--also rise and that makes people worry about companies with debt going bankrupt.


Since the March lows, we've seen some retrenchment of the concerns about cash flow and risk. As perceived risk levels drifted back toward more normal levels--the VIX today is in the low 20s--the riskier assets performed very well--the so-called "junk trade." The market got a second lift in the summer on the heels of second-quarter earnings, which on balance came in better than what was expected. Most of the positive surprise came as the result of cost cutting. Companies have aggressively managed their cost structures--which has left the residual of a sluggish labor market--and have been super diligent with working capital as well. But earnings through cost savings cannot go on forever.


If the markets are to continue to generate attractive returns, we will need to see good old-fashioned sales growth. In my opinion, the evidence is clearly pointing to a recovery, but naturally the data will show fits and starts.


Q. Investors have been buying up huge sums of bond funds and with it inflation risk. All of the different inflation hedges have their own flaws and strengths, so what's the best way to hedge some of that inflation risk?


A. My sense is that at least some of the appetite for bond funds represents less a love of bonds than a distaste for stocks. The poor 10-year results for the stock market have left a lot of equity investors with a bad taste in their mouths--even though history suggests that poor past market returns are a decent predictor of future returns (and vice versa).


Inflation does not appear to be an imminent threat--there is too much slack in the labor market and unused capacity. But how the government's stimulative steps, which were necessary in my view, ultimately influence inflation is anyone's guess. While I don't think it's a worry for the short-to-intermediate term, I would keep it on the radar screen.


So if you are worried about inflation risk, how might you play that in the stock market? The goal would be to find companies that have sustainable competitive advantages--moats around their businesses--that will allow them to increase the price of their good or service at a rate consistent with inflation. So a portfolio of high-quality stocks with this attribute, purchased at attractive prices, is a very sensible way to address this concern.


Q. Should investors do anything about the declining dollar in their portfolios?


A. While it's important to be mindful of the role of a declining--or rising--dollar in evaluating a company, I'm not sure investors should do anything specific about it. If you are convinced the dollar is going lower, you should short the dollar. But forecasting currencies is not an easy game to play, and I know that I have zero edge there. On a company by company basis, it makes some sense to consider various scenarios for the dollar, assess the probability of those scenarios, and judge what those scenarios imply about value.


Probably the best way to manage currency exposure is to have a properly diversified global portfolio. While I'm optimistic about the future of the United States, I'm also a subscriber to what Fareed Zakaria calls the "rise of the rest." In other words, the U.S. should continue to do well but other parts of the globe may do relatively better. So long-term investors should have exposure to various markets around the globe.


Q. Where are the greatest opportunities in investing today?

A. One area that looks interesting in the U.S. market is quality companies. These are businesses that have high returns on invested capital, decent pricing power, good economic moats around their businesses, solid balance sheets, and good operating histories. These companies tended to trade at generous valuations in the late 1990s and have spent most of the 2000s treading water. Even considering the current recession, these businesses have grown sales and profits while sustaining good economic returns.


You can go down the list of the S&P 50 (50 largest by market cap in S&P 500) and find a number of these companies. And if they do well, it'll be harder for active managers to beat the market because the S&P 500 is a market-capitalization-weighted index and many money managers are underexposed to these kinds of businesses.

Q. What are the least attractive areas today?

A. A natural consequence of the high level of risk aversion has been a large move in U.S. Treasury securities. When you look at the 10-year note with a 3.4 percent yield, it's a reasonable case that equity markets will deliver much higher returns in the next decade--even adjusted for risk. So what may appear to be among the least risky assets may be among the riskiest, at least if you take opportunity cost into consideration.

Q. Your new book, Think Twice, suggests that we can avoid many mistakes by reviewing our gut reaction. How can we effectively review a decision so that we make the right call?

A. The main theme of the book is that in certain situations, your mind is going to want to go down one path to a solution when there is a better path. This is not true in all situations. In the book, I identify eight areas where this can occur. So you want to prepare for these decisions by learning about possible mistakes, recognize the mistakes in context, and apply tools to mitigate them.

I also offer some specific advice at the end of the book. Let me share a couple of those ideas. The first is to keep a decision-making journal. When you make a decision, write down what you decided, what you expect to happen, and why. If you're so inclined, you might even take note of how you feel physically and emotionally.

The journal allows you to periodically audit your decisions--effectively giving yourself feedback. It can also help you sidestep hindsight bias, the tendency to think you knew more in the past than you actually did. You can also see instances when you were right for the wrong decisions. Dealing honestly with those decisions is hard work.

Q. What's a common mistake that a fund investor might avoid by properly reviewing a decision?

A. One common mistake is a reliance on the inside view versus using the outside view. With the inside view, you try to solve a problem by gathering information, and using that unique set of input to decide. It's the natural way we do things in any planning task. The outside view, by contrast, looks at a problem as part of a larger reference class. It basically allows you to ask the question: When someone else was in this position, what happened?

A reliance on the inside view generally leads to forecasts that are too optimistic. If you've ever done a renovation to your house you know the feeling: Renovations always seem to come in above budget and behind plan. The outside view provides a better, and more grounded, assessment.

So, for instance, investors can use the outside view when working on their models. We have lots of data about corporate growth rates and return on invested capital patterns. An investor can check their assumptions against the larger reference to see if they make sense.

Q. It sounds like this is a rebuttal to Malcolm Gladwell's Blink, which argues our instant reaction is usually on the money. What did he miss?

A. I believe in the role of intuition in decision making, but I certainly don't glorify it. By and large, I believe that people rely more on their intuition than they should.

Here's how I think about it. Psychologists often distinguish between two mental systems, creatively called System 1 and System 2. System 1 is fast, automatic, and hard to train. When you jump at the sight of a snake, you have System 1 to thank. System 2 is slow, requires input, and can be trained. It's your analytical mind. If you do something repeatedly, some aspects of System 2 thinking slip into System 1. Consider the first time you drove a car; you had to think about each action very deliberately. But after time and experience, you internalized many of the tasks, and driving migrated mostly from System 2 to System 1.

Intuition works when you have a System 1 that is well trained. Think of a chess master, or a finely trained soldier. But note that for System 1 to work effectively, you need to deal with situations that are linear and consistent. If you're dealing with decisions in a realm where the outcomes are nonlinear or the statistical properties change over time, intuition will fail because your System 1 doesn't know what's going on.

Increasingly, professionals are forced to confront decisions related to complex systems, which are by their very nature nonlinear and have changing statistical properties. This definitely applies to investing and business. So you have to be very careful if you rely on intuition.


http://news.morningstar.com/articlenet/article.aspx?id=311863

Monday 19 October 2009

KNM 19.10.2009




Valuation
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=tRskke5FybslzPlCGkTtM4Q&output=html

This stock fell off the cliff.  Presently, it is not classified as an investment grade stock.  There is much speculation on this stock.  There is some uncertainty of its business performance in the near term.  Hopefully, clarity will surface soon.

Latest qtr EPS (Q2, 09) = 1.82 sen
annualised EPS = 1.82 x 4 = 7.28 sen
Current Price = $ 0.82
Current PE (annualised EPS) = 82 / 7.28 = 11.3

"Buy from a sucker, sell to a sucker"

The “buy from a sucker, sell to a sucker” school of speculation is that for anyone to make money through the purchase and subsequent resale of a stock without the actual value of that stock increasing, he/she must rely upon the ignorance of either the seller or the buyer or both.

The odds are definitely against not being the sucker on either one or the other end of that transaction.

It's another way of expressing the "Greater Fool Theory." "I may be a fool to buy this stock at this price; but I'll find another fool to buy it from me at a higher price." This is what fueled many exploded "bubbles."

Buy good companies at reasonable prices.

Buffett's strategy for coping with a down market is to approach it as an opportunity to buy good companies at reasonable prices.

Buffett makes concentrated purchases. In a downturn, he buys millions of shares of solid businesses at reasonable prices.

And even in a bear market, although Buffett had billions of dollars in cash to make investments, in his 2009 letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders, he declared that cash held beyond the bottom would be eroded by inflation in the recovery.

Know When to Sell

Indefinite growth is not a realistic expectation, yet investors often expect rising stocks to gain forever. Putting a price on the upside and the downside can provide solid guidelines for getting out while the getting is good. Similarly, if a company or an industry appears to be headed for trouble, it may be time to take your gains off of the table. There's no harm in walking away when you are ahead of the game.

(To learn more about when to get out of a stock, see To Sell Or Not To Sell.)
http://www.investopedia.com/articles/stocks/07/when_to_sell.asp

Buying good companies when the headline news is bad

Buying good companies when the headline news is bad is the hardest thing to do (psychologically), but it's the simplest way to buy low. And buying low makes it a lot easier to sell high.

It's Different This Time – Or Is It?

In 2009, the global economy fell into recession and international markets fell in lockstep. Diversification couldn't provide adequate downside protection. Once again, the "experts" proclaim that the old rules of investing have failed. "It's different this time," they say. Maybe … but don't bet on it. These tried and true principles of wealth creation have withstood the test of time.

Discovering if we learnt the lessons of Black Monday, October 1987 Crash

From The Times October 19, 2009

Discovering if we learnt the lessons of Black Monday

Gerard Lyons: Economic view

Today is the twenty-second anniversary of Black Monday. On this day in 1987 stock markets around the world crashed. The Dow Jones fell 22.6 per cent in one day, London shed one fifth of its value over two days. The newspapers and television were full of pictures of traders in panic. Sound familiar?

Reflecting on 1987 is interesting in its own right and has lessons for today. Many of the factors that led to the 1987 crash are now being repeated around the globe: equity markets seen as out of touch with reality; concern about the twin US trade and budget deficits; and worries about the dollar.

Poor US trade figures on the preceding Thursday had spooked the markets, which had been worried already by a small interest rate hike by the Germans the week before.

That rise had triggered worries that global policy co-ordination was at an end. The period from September 1985 to the summer of 1987 was the golden era of policy co-ordination, with the Plaza and Louvre accords marking a time when the G7 acted together to first weaken and then stabilise the dollar. By October 1987, co-ordination was at an end.

The crash led to fears of a depression and prompted central banks to pump liquidity into the markets and to cut interest rates. The Bank of England base rate was 10 per cent on Black Monday and reached a low of 7.5 per cent the following May. At the time, I wrote in The Times of the problems to come. A year later, in October 1989, base rate was up to 15 per cent. Boom then became bust.

Today’s crisis has been worse, as the financial system almost collapsed, jobs have been lost, firms have gone bust. As a result, the policy response has been more aggressive. But, as in 1987, perhaps the stimulus may work better and quicker than initially expected.

If anything, Black Monday was a watered-down version of what we have experienced now and an early warning sign of the underlying volatility of markets. Then, there was talk of pro-cyclicality on the way up and down, triggered by programmed trading systems.

Also, I remember a speech by Robin Leigh-Pemberton, the Bank of England Governor, in February 1988 in which he placed the blame on regulation and supervision and said: “This will have implications for the capital resources that participants must be required to maintain.” Banks, we were then told, must learn the lessons about credit exposure and capital adequacy. How times change? Not much it would seem.

These issues were still centre stage ten days ago at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) meetings in Istanbul, where the mood was one of optimistic caution. Relief that policy had pulled us back from the brink was mixed with fears of over-regulation and concerns that we may be sowing the seeds of the next crisis.

The global outlook depends on the interaction between three key factors: the economic fundamentals; the policy response; and confidence. In Istanbul, the outlook for policy was at centre stage.

Central banks and policymakers in the West appear to be keen to co-ordinate their exit strategies from their stimulus. This is something they plan to discuss at next spring’s IMF meetings in Washington. Yet the next six months might test this accord to the full. There is every likelihood of a strong bounce over that time, as previous policy easing feeds through.

Just as we saw with the Bundesbank rate rise in early October 1987, coming months may force many countries to think about tightening policy to suit domestic needs. This great dilemma is already being played out across the world.

In recent weeks Israel and Australia have raised rates. The further east one goes, the greater the temptation to tighten policy. Indonesia and India have already hinted at higher rates, South Korea is in two minds, while behind the scenes in China policymakers appear to be at odds. There, the worries of the Premier and State Council over exports and jobs may take precedence over central bank concerns about asset price inflation.

The dilemma for many countries is that tightening early may attract hot money inflows, as investors seek higher yields. Waiting, however, may trigger asset price inflation, with liquidity flowing into equities and property, as we have seen recently in China. The question is: can any large exporting nation really tighten monetary policy before the United States, or indeed Europe, given that these are the destinations of the bulk of goods and services?

In view of such uncertainty, many countries appear keen to build up their defences, to be prepared for any eventuality. The lesson of Asia over the past decade has not been lost. After its crisis in 1997-98, Asia’s holding of global currency reserves rose from one third to two thirds now, the bulk in dollars. Others look set to follow suit.

It is not in anyone’s interests to actively sell the dollar, in case this triggers the collapse they fear. Thus, what I call passive diversification is taking place. As reserves rise, less and less are going into the dollar, although it still receives the lion’s share.

Over time, more countries will want to manage their currency against the countries with which they trade. If foreign exchange reserves were to reflect trade patterns, then $2.3 trillion of the present $6.8 trillion of global foreign exchange reserves would have to move out of the dollar. The private sector is already cautious.

As the dollar declines, the gainers are commodity currencies, gold, the euro and the yen.

Not everyone is happy. This dampens recovery prospects in countries whose currencies are appreciating and adds to problems for the most fragile economies in the eurozone. It is also adding to pressure on Asian countries, particularly China, to let their currencies strengthen. Perhaps this merits a repeat of the 1985 Plaza Accord to prevent an inevitable currency crisis.

Yet one currency that seems unlikely to rally against the dollar is sterling. In part, this is because of market caution towards the UK. It is also because a weaker pound is seen as central to Britain’s policy stance. This is alongside the need for a prolonged period of low interest rates and a much tighter fiscal stance.

The UK has had the biggest devaluation in its history. Yet there have been few squeals, as it has been gradual and is taking place in an environment where competition is tough and inflation is not a problem. As history has shown us, sterling remained the world’s reserve currency long after the UK’s economic power had peaked.

This is relevant in considering the dollar’s prospects now. The general feeling in Istanbul was that there are no alternatives to the dollar. Perhaps that is right, but the dollar and sterling face hard times ahead. If there is one thing this crisis and that of Black Monday have taught us, it is not to ignore the fundamentals.

• Gerard Lyons is chief economist at Standard Chartered

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/columnists/article6880225.ece