Saturday 25 February 2012

BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY AND RETAINED EARNINGS


BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY AND RETAINED EARNINGS

Berkshire Hathaway does not, following Buffett’s mantra, pay dividends to its shareholders and this is one reason why its compound return over the years of Buffett-Munger management has been so high.

  • The downside of course is that shareholders have not received dividends, meaning, that if they were dependent on money coming in at a given time, their only recourse, in relation to their shareholding, would be to sell the shares or borrow against them.
  • Having regard to the huge price of a single share over the past few years, this meant that investors may have had to either keep all their shareholding or dispose of it, not always the choice they wanted. Berkshire Hathaway partly catered for this dilemma by introducing B shares, which are in essence a fractional unit of the normal shares.

A POWERFUL FORCE

When asked to nominate the most powerful force on earth, Albert Einstein is reputed to have answered ‘compound interest’. Buffett might well agree.

Buffett likes companies with high and increasing returns on equity (ROE)


HIGH RETURNS ON EQUITY

Buffett is interested in companies that have rights rates of earnings on equity and likes them even more where the return rates are increasing. He reasons that, with a company like this, he is better off if the company pays no or little dividends and retains the money to earn even more for its owners.
  • In addition, where no dividend is received, there is no income tax payable by the shareholder. 
  • Instead, the investor gets the value of the increase in value in the shares which will, eventually, rise to reflect the enhanced earnings. 
  • The shareholder can then retain the shares, sell them at a time that best suits them, if they wish, and take advantage of the capital gains taxation regime.

Compounding and Retained Earnings

Warren Buffet is said to look at the compounding factor when deciding on investments, requiring a stock investment to show a high probability of compound growth in earnings of at least 10 per cent before making an investment decision.

Warren Buffett has on several occasions referred to the use by a company of its retained earnings as a test of company management.
  • He tells us that, if a company can earn more money on retained earnings than the shareholder can, the shareholder is better off (taxation aside) if the company retains profits and does not pay them out in dividends. 
  • If the shareholder can achieve a higher rate of return than the company, the shareholder would be better off if the company paid out all its profits in dividends (taxation situation again excluded) so that they could use the money themselves.

Put simply, 
  • if a company can retain earnings to grow shareholder wealth at better than the market rates available to shareholders, it should do so. 
  • If it can’t, it should pay the earnings to shareholders and let them do with them what they wish.

The Wealthiest Life - Start In The Right Direction

Have you ever thought that your life could be better? It can be!
Start In The Right Direction
Most people step towards wealthy living with great anticipation, looking to everything that will change for the better. This is positive thinking but let us look at two principles that will ensure that your wealth dreams actually become a reality.
Two Keys To Living Wealthy
There are two keys to having the best life you could possibly hope for! 

  • We must dream big dreams and 
  • then commit to small steps that will lead us towards opportunities.

Dream Big
You were not meant to wake up in a year, or five years, and be in the same place that you are today. Dreams are the essence of life progress. Your dreams have the capacity to energize your present and future progress.
Take a pen and paper and write down all the improvements that you would like to see happen in your life. Take time to imagine your best life; see the end (the big picture). Then visualize the necessary changes taking place to propel you in the right direction.
Opportunities for advancement are awaiting each of us. Sadly, few experience the reality of these opportunities manifesting in their lives because they don't see them coming. Dreams open the hidden doorways to future life change.
If you have big dreams, you will eventually live a big life!

Commit To The Small
A very wise man once said, "Hope deferred makes the heart sick, but a longing fulfilled is a tree of life." - King Solomon (The Book of Proverbs Chapter 13, verse 12)
I have watched people grow extremely bitter as they have allowed their lives to stagnate for decades, simply because they would not take some simple life changing steps.
Experiencing another year will not necessarily change your life unless you commit to personal change in specific areas. Without making selective changes to our life patterns we will most likely remain in the same state for decades. This is a sad truth for many!
Each small step you take to change your life will activate opportunities in corresponding areas. For example, if you lose weight, your self-esteem will rise, your attitudes will brighten, your emotional and physical appeal will advance and you will attract greater relationship opportunities.
Think about how you will move forward emotionally, relationally, physically and financially by making simple adjustments to your lifestyle.
5 Steps Towards Wealthy Living
1. Don't spend what you don't have. If you can't afford something, it's not your time to buy right now.
2. Brainstorm monthly for one creative idea to generate more wealth in your business, or personal finances!
3. Position yourself around people who have a higher net worth than you and ask sensible questions to help you increase financially. Do this at least once a month!
4. Keep track of your daily income and expenses. By making this a daily habit, your finances will never get out of control.
5. Start giving to others and form this as a habit in your life. What you do for others will happen for you in increased measure. This is a principle practiced by rich philanthropists.
If you will dream big wealth dreams and take small steps towards those dreams, doors of opportunity will open in your life for riches to come in!
You can have a wealthy life. Why not start on the path today.


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/6890105

The Wealthiest Life
By Dr Carmen Lynne

Money is actually a debt instrument: Over time debt grows per compounding interest and purchasing power diminishes with increased cost of living


Traditional financial recommendations typically ignore the risk factor represented by how money works in context of its monetary system. Same as with health issues; without knowledge of the cause of symptoms, treatments generally lack full effectiveness.
When it come to personal-finance success, responsibility for how we earn, spend, save and invest is obviously essential. However, financial objectives can easily elude us if we lack the whole story about money. The missing piece is systemic in nature. Overlooked and under reported, impersonal monetary-system mechanics grind away to leave families vulnerable; undermining goals of stability and wealth-building.
Also known as a hidden tax. Who benefits?
Central banks worldwide (Federal Reserve for the U.S.) issue currency at the precise moment it is borrowed via an automated procedure called fractional-reserve banking. Therefore, money is actually a debt instrument (Federal Reserve Note). This private profit, interest-delivering system was designed centuries ago.
Over time debt grows per compounding interest and purchasing power diminishes with increased cost of living. The cost of living rises as businesses add their interest cost from bank loans to the cost of the goods and services we purchase.
And so grows the gap between the haves and have-nots.
That brings me to the pivotal issue of how much purchasing power $1.00 has in the marketplace today. One dollar is only worth 4.5 cents and an online inflation calculator proves my point. An item purchased for $1.00 in 1913 (when the Federal Reserve System was created) would cost $22.10 in 2010; a 2000% increase in inflation!
It's a fact: Skilled advisers are definitely helping families lower their debt-loads and modify their budgets. That said, the "good-debt, bad-debt" conversation remains as conventional truth; leading individuals and families to believe they can tweak their budget and lifestyle here and there to make it through to better days.
Unfortunately, such household gains may not last. Without a working knowledge of money as debt, even the most sincere efforts may falter as a rising cost of living erodes hard-won forward movement. When following conventional financial wisdom, the solution to keeping up and making ends meet could well end up, once again, as participation in the vicious cycle of credit and debt. Who benefits?
More choices with the big picture.
When we add the missing-piece about money to our knowledge-base and decision-making process we also gain additional financial strategies. Those who set out to explore alternatives outside-the-traditional-personal-finance-box tend to develop a new part of their brain.They uncover a world of possibilities (perhaps previously under-valued) along with the thousands of others on the very same mission!


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/5646119

Personal finance action-steps to build a solid financial foundation


Here are personal finance action-steps formulated to help individuals and families build a solid financial foundation. Savings and investments are very important but in the 2011 economy they will be most SUSTAINABLE when a solid present-day foundation has been attended to first. You'll know you have completed the "foundation" step once you have more money coming in to your household than going out for at least four consecutive months!
  1. Write down your short-term, mid-term, and long-term financial goals and put them somewhere to easily refer back to them.
  2. Review your goals (at least) on a weekly basis.
  3. Figure out your exact financial status today. How much money a) comes in and b) goes out each month. Create a line-item and categorized itemization of money in and out. Don't forget things like eating out and entertainment.
  4. Track your expenses and out-of-pocket spending precisely for at least one month. Save all receipts and record out-of-pocket information daily. Also determine the exact amount of money (or average) that comes in each month.
  5. Do you have more money going out than coming in? If so, exactly how much?
  6. Use your list of current itemized expenses to create an action-plan regarding how and by when you will lower or eliminate line-items that exceed the amount of money currently coming in to your household. This may mean creative downsizing.
  7. Create an action-plan about how and by when you will increase money coming in to your household. As debt becomes reduced or eliminated, this action step becomes the most important one in order to stay ahead of the cost-of-living debt curve for the long-term.
  8. As you focus on ways to increase cash flow, perhaps consider an independent trade or service that people will always need and that best suits you. For example, car mechanics, computer techs, hair stylists, barbers, clean-water suppliers, pet care-givers, delivery-service providers etc.
  9. Make debt-elimination a high-priority; the final goal being to consistently live within your means and pay as you go.
  10. Once credit-card debt is paid off, get rid of all but one credit card because credit access is actually an instant-gratification state-of-mind.
  11. Do NOT keep your one remaining credit card in your wallet. Leave it frozen in a bowel of water in your freezer. This tactic builds time into the otherwise instant-gratification decision-making mindset of a credit card in your wallet.
  12. You might even want to reallocate existing assets towards building your "more money in than going out" household-budget foundation more quickly. Since money (as debt) is worth the most today than it will be tomorrow, it's best to put it to work today! A stable present situation will increase your well-being. Increased well-being empowers a healthy decision-making process
  13. Use cash first and foremost. Most people will pay more attention to what they spend when it comes straight out of their wallet.
  14. Stop shopping for entertainment. Shop purposefully using coupons, during sales and buy bulk whenever possible. Generally shop recycled including for cars.
  15. Include your children in the how and why of your decision-making process (should you accept this mission)and invite their imitation of your thinking and efforts.
  16. If you have savings and/or investments to preserve, keep some of YOUR money entirely out of the reach of the banking-services industry. They consider their own interests before they consider yours! More and more people are moving their bank capital into hard (tangible) assets.
  17. Specifically per 16 above, consider anything you have in savings, retirement funds or the stock market. (Remember the stock-market 2008 and FYI: The U.S. government is currently floating the idea of nationalizing 401(k)'s and IRA's given their nearly 14-trillion-dollar deficit. In other words, individuals would lose control over their account and the government instead would ration annuity-type payments.)


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/5646119

The Basics of Personal Finance Investing: Stocks, Bonds, and Short-term investments.


Overall, investing is a great way to build wealth or a 'nest egg' for your retirement. If you invest regular amounts of money on a consistent basis over a long period of time, you are more likely to be successful in reaching your financial goals. By knowing just a few investing basics, you can get started with a variety of income options.
Three Types Of Investments
There are three basic types of investments you can choose from. There are stocks, bonds, and short-term investments.

Stocks
Stocks can also be referred to as equity investments. These are investments in individual companies that are publicly held. Stocks allow you to hold a small ownership in these companies. When invested in long-term, stocks have a high potential for growth. Stocks are not without risk, however. If the price of the stock drops, so do the investor's earnings. If a company goes out of business, the owners of the stock can lose their entire investment. It is wise to invest in the stock of companies that have been around for a very long time and that have a track record of rising stock prices.

Bonds
Buying a bond is basically lending money to the company you are purchasing it from. An example of this is buying a bond from the U.S. Treasury. After purchase a bond, you would be paid back after you cash it in. Buying bonds has the potential to increase your wealth with a lower risk than purchasing stocks, as well as the benefit of having a bit of protection from economic inflation.

Short-Term Investments
Short term investments can include money market investments, certificates of deposit (CD's), and others. After a short period of time, you can earn interest on these investments. You can usually begin receiving interest in as little as one year or less. These short-term investments are much less risky than stocks and bonds, but there is lower potential for growth. This means you can not expect as large of a return on a short-term investment as you could from stocks or bonds.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/1408204


The Basics of Personal Finance Investing
By Richard MacGrueber

Jump-Starting Your Personal Finance - Achieving Higher Rates of Return

For many people, it is usually after years of not paying much attention to how they handle money, or after taking bad advice from others they've trusted (including professionals), that they finally realize: "Hey, this is my money and no one really cares more about it than I do. And it will not multiply unless I do something about it". At this point, the path you take can have long-term effects. Let me bring a few important points to your attention to help you on your journey.


Higher Rates of Return
When you finally come to the realization that you need to take a more active role in handling you personal finance there is a natural tendency to look to the stock market. That's usually because stock in a company is one of the easiest securities to acquire. There is also a sense of excitement or prestige with being in the stock market. However, lets put the emotions aside and look at what the real issues are.
One thing you must consider, especially when starting out is the return on investment. The stock market historically gives 7-10% annually. This is not a bad return if you are looking to park a huge amount of cash (say a few hundred thousand and up). But if you are starting out with not much excess cash, you need to get higher rates of return. If you have $5000 and you invest that at a rate of 10% a year, in 5 years you will have about $8000. That is not fast enough if you really want to take control of your personal finances. You will need to learn how to get higher rates of return than that. Remember the higher your rate the less time it takes for your money to multiply.
Assessing Your Options
The question then becomes how can you achieve higher rates of return. Many, at this point tend to gravitate towards using aggressive stock strategies or short-term trading to get higher rates of return. This could take years and many dollars (both in the cost of educating yourself and bad trades) to learn how to do and the probability of success is not very high. But if you are just starting out you don't have that kind of money to loose. Your best alternative for higher rates of return is to start a business that meets certain criteria.
The kind of business you want to start is one with low startup cost and high profit potential. Yes, it does take more effort to manage than a passive instrument such as stocks. But this is where you have a higher probability of getting returns that are in the 100% per year range, and even higher if you play your cards right. And these returns can be much more consistent than with stocks. Here are some other points to consider about starting your business for higher rates of return:
1. No longer is the option of starting your business limited to huge upfront investments (such as buying a franchise). Today it is possible to start businesses with very little money and have high profit margins.
2. The time requirement need not be prohibitive. Many successful businesses are started part-time buy full time employees. Also, depending on the kind of business you start, the internet can help to make it easier to manage.
3. You have more control of your investment. Once you place your money into a stock you have no control over what the price of that stock will be. With your own business, you control it. And there are many resources to help business owners.
4. The long-term prospects of starting your own business are good. You may not hit a home run on your first try (although that has been done before, and is far more likely than making a million on the first stock you pick) but if you keep at it you will improve and so will your personal finances.
Remember to approach your business like an investment. Learn how much is required to start, the expected rate of return, when you expect to make your money back etc. Even if you do decide to take a more active path in the stock market (i.e., trading stocks), take the time to learn how it is done before risking your hard earned money.
To your success.
Rodger Campbell is an entrepreneur and writes on various topics including personal finance and investing. For more insights similar to the article you just read, go to PersonalFinanceBuzz.com [http://www.personalfinancebuzz.com]


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/728466




Jump-Starting Your Personal Finance - Achieving Higher Rates of Return
by Rodger Campbell

Drop in business investment pulls down UK's annual growth


Drop in business investment pulls down UK's annual growth
Malaysia Sun
Friday 24th February, 2012  

  •  Biggest drop in business investment for a year at 5.6% Biggest drop in business investment for a year at 5.6% 
  •  Gross capital formation also fell by 7.6 %
  •  Household consumption, government spending, exports prop up growth
Data from the Office of National statistics UK has revealed that economy in the region has continued to contract
LONDON - The United Kingdoms economy contracted by 0.2 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2011, while gross domestic product (GDP) growth
of 0.7 per cent was lower than expectations, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS) data released Friday morning.

The consensus expectation was for an increase of 0.2% quarter-on-quarter, while the annual GDP growth expectations was for 0.8% .

The fall in GDP was largely driven by the biggest drop in business investment for a year at 5.6 per cent, while the production sector, which includes manufacturing, declined 1.4% compared with previous estimates of 1.2%.

The construction sector contracted and the energy services sector was flat.

The break up of the data shows that by components, final household consumption grew by 0.5%, government spending by 1.0% and exports by
2.3%. Imports, on the other hand, fell 0.4%, while gross capital formation fell by 7.6%.

Trade data showed that while gross fixed capital formation was down by 2.8%, the business investment also dipped by 5.6%.

When view from year-on-year terms, net trade added 1.2 percentage points to growth, while gross capital formation took away 0.3 percentage points.

But from quarterly data shows that while consumption contributed 0.3 percentage points to the GDP growth together with 0.6 points coming
from external demand and another 0.2 from public spending, but gross capital formation subtracted 1.2 points.

Economists are currently unsure about whether the UK's economy will continue to deteriorate in the first quarter of 2012, after encouraging industry surveys in recent months.

A further contraction in the first quarter of 2012 would see the UK economy officially enter a double-dip recession. However, economic data from the manufacturing and vital services sector in the early weeks of 2012 have been encouraging.

Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit, said: "Unless the euro zone debt crisis escalates, the coming year is therefore likely to see modest growth. However, there will no doubt be high volatility in the GDP numbers due to factors such as the Olympics and additional bank holiday for the Queen's Jubilee."

Ahead of the budget announcement on March 21, Shadow chancellor Ed Balls said: "For the sake of hard-pressed families, pensioners, young people and businesses, George Osborne needs to listen and use next month's Budget to change course. It's his last chance to make a difference to our economic prospects this year and next."

The Investment Philosophy of Warren Buffett - In 23 Quotes

Warren Buffett is the most successful investor of our time, perhaps of any time. He is famous for his pithy quotes, which often appear in his annual letter to shareholders.


Taken together, his quotes pretty well sum up his investment philosophy and approach. Here are his best sound bites of all time on being a sensible investor.
1. Rule No.1: Never lose money. Rule No.2: Never forget rule No.1.
2. Investing is laying out money now to get more money back in the future.
3. Never invest in a business you cannot understand.
4. I don't look to jump over 7-foot bars: I look around for 1-foot bars that I can step over.
5. I put heavy weight on certainty. It's not risky to buy securities at a fraction of what they're worth.
6. If a business does well, the stock eventually follows.
7. It's far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price.
8. Time is the friend of the wonderful company, the enemy of the mediocre.
9. For some reason people take their cues from price action rather than from values. Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.
10. In the short run, the market is a voting machine. In the long run, it's a weighing machine.
11. The most common cause of low prices is pessimism. We want to do business in such an environment, not because we like pessimism, but because we like the prices it produces. It's optimism that is the enemy of the rational buyer. None of this means, however, that a business or stock is an intelligent purchase simply because it is unpopular; a contrarian approach is just as foolish as a follow-the-crowd strategy. What's required is thinking rather than polling.
12. Risk comes from not knowing what you're doing.
13. It is better to be approximately right than precisely wrong.
14. All there is to investing is picking good stocks at good times and staying with them as long as they remain good companies.
15. Wide diversification is only required when investors do not understand what they are doing.
16. You do things when the opportunities come along. I have had periods in my life when I have had a bundle of ideas come along, and I've had long dry spells. If I get an idea next week, I'll do something. If not, I won't do a damn thing.
17. [On the dot-com bubble:] What we learn from history is that people don't learn from history.
18. You are neither right nor wrong because the crowd disagrees with you. You are right because your data and reasoning are right.
19. You don't need to be a rocket scientist. Investing is not a game where the guy with the 160 IQ beats the guy with 130 IQ.
20. You should invest in a business that even a fool can run, because someday a fool will.
21. When a management with a reputation for brilliance tackles a business with a reputation for bad economics, it is the reputation of the business that remains intact.
22. The best business returns are usually achieved by companies that are doing something quite similar today to what they were doing five or ten years ago.
23. Diversification may preserve wealth, but concentration builds wealth.


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/528157



http://ezinearticles.com/?The-Investment-Philosophy-of-Warren-Buffett---In-23-Quotes&id=528157

What is Warren Buffett's investing philosophy?

Buffett's investment philosophy has changed over time and can generally be thought of in two parts:


  • Early Buffett (pre-1970): buy at a significant discount to intrinsic value. "Fair business at a wonderful price."
  • Late Buffett (post-1970): buy companies at a price at or near intrinsic value, that can consistently increase their intrinsic value,.  "Wonderful business at a fair price."

He has said that the latter philosophy is far superior to the former and that it took him far too long to realize it.  Buffett's investment philosophy certainly evolved over the course of his investing lifetime, and did shift towards more of a focus on quality rather than cheapness, in part due to his association with and learning from his business partner Charlie Munger.  The intellectual father - the "Benjamin Graham," if you will - of this quality focus was Phil Fisher.  Generally, Buffett is a value investor; he studied under and worked for Benjamin Graham, the author of The Intelligent Investor and Security Analysis and the man generally considered the father of modern-day value investing, and credits Graham for much of his investment philosophy and success.


The best way to truly understand Buffett's investment philosophy is to read the following (links below):
1. His letters to investors from his early investment partnerships
2. His letters to shareholders of Berkshire Hathaway
3. The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham
4. Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits by Phil Fisher


Early Partnership Letters (1959-1969):

Berkshire Hathaway Letters (1977-2010):


Intelligent Investor:


Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits:

http://www.quora.com/Warren-Buffett/What-is-Warren-Buffetts-investing-philosophy

Warren Buffett's secret - THE COMPOUNDING FACTOR


EXPLANATION

This may be old hat to some readers but it is worth remembering how compounding is one of the keys to Warren Buffett’s investment success.

The compounding factor is easy to understand. Compound interest (or compounding of earnings) is simply the ability of interest (or investment return) earned on a sum of money to earn additional interest (or investment return), thereby increasing the return to the owner of the money or investor. It works like this and we will use interest as the exemplar:

You deposit a sum of money, say $1,000, in a bank or other financial institution that earns interest at the rate of 5 per cent, payable annually. At the end of the first year, you have earned $50 and have the right to get your $1,000 back.

Suppose however that you want to invest the money long-term, for say 10 years. You now have two options.

OPTION A: TAKE INTEREST PAYMENTS

You can have the interest paid to each year, in which case you will receive $50 each year to spend or use as you wish. At the end of the 10-year period, you will get your final interest payment and your $1,000 back.

OPTION B: RE-INVEST INTEREST

You can choose to re-invest your interest and earn interest each year on the accumulated interest payments as well as on the original investment. This means that you do not get annual payments but, at the end of the 10-year period, you will get a lump sum payment of $1625. This is compound interest.

Why this much larger amount? Because your interest earns interest each year like this (calculations rounded to nearest 50 cents). 

YearPrincipal sumInterest earnedNew principal sum
11000501050
2105052.501102.50
31102.5055.001157.50
41157.50581215.50
51212.50611273.50
61273.50641337.50
71337.50671404.50
81404.50701474.50
91474.50741548.50
101548.50771625

The higher the interest, the bigger the capital gain. At 10 per cent, the sum would increase to $2594.00; at 15 per cent, to $4055.00.

Warren Buffet is said to look at the compounding factor when deciding on investments, requiring a stock investment to show a high probability of compound growth in earnings of at least 10 per cent before making an investment decision.

COMPOUNDING AND RETAINED EARNINGS

Warren Buffett has on several occasions referred to the use by a company of its retained earnings as a test of company management. He tells us that, if a company can earn more money on retained earnings than the shareholder can, the shareholder is better off (taxation aside) if the company retains profits and does not pay them out in dividends. If the shareholder can achieve a higher rate of return than the company, the shareholder would be better off if the company paid out all its profits in dividends (taxation situation again excluded) so that they could use the money themselves.

Put simply, if a company can retain earnings to grow shareholder wealth at better than the market rates available to shareholders, it should do so. If it can’t, it should pay the earnings to shareholders and let them do with them what they wish.

 HIGH RETURNS ON EQUITY

This is why Buffett is interested in companies that have rights rates of earnings on equity and likes them even more where the return rates are increasing. He reasons that, with a company like this, he is better off if the company pays no or little dividends and retains the money to earn even more for its owners.

In addition, where no dividend is received, there is no income tax payable by the shareholder. Instead, the investor gets the value of the increase in value in the shares which will, eventually, rise to reflect the enhanced earnings. The shareholder can then retain the shares, sell them at a time that best suits them, if they wish, and take advantage of the capital gains taxation regime.

BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY AND RETAINED EARNINGS

Berkshire Hathaway does not, following Buffett’s mantra, pay dividends to its shareholders and this is one reason why its compound return over the years of Buffett-Munger management has been so high.

The downside of course is that shareholders have not received dividends, meaning, that if they were dependent on money coming in at a given time, their only recourse, in relation to their shareholding, would be to sell the shares or borrow against them.

Having regard to the huge price of a single share over the past few years, this meant that investors may have had to either keep all their shareholding or dispose of it, not always the choice they wanted. Berkshire Hathaway partly catered for this dilemma by introducing B shares, which are in essence a fractional unit of the normal shares.

A POWERFUL FORCE

When asked to nominate the most powerful force on earth, Albert Einstein is reputed to have answered ‘compound interest’. Buffett might well agree.

What Warren Buffett Looks for in Company Growth


WHAT WARREN BUFFETT LOOKS FOR IN COMPANY GROWTH

An investor likes to see a company grow because, if profits grow, so do returns to the investor. The important thing for the investor, however, is that the company increases the returns to shareholders. A company that grows, at the expense of shareholder returns, is not generally a good investment. As Warren Buffett said in 1977:

‘Since businesses customarily add from year to year to their equity base, we find nothing particularly noteworthy in a management performance combining, say, a 10% increase in equity capital and a 5 % increase in earnings per share.’

COMPOUNDING EFFECT OF GROWTH

Regular growth in earnings per share can have a compound effect if all, or substantially all, of the profits are retained. A company, for example, with earnings per share of 40 cents growing regularly 9 % would, in ten years produce earnings per share of 87 cents.

Of course, if the investor can do better with retained earnings than the company can, his or her interests are better served by a full distribution of profits.

PAST GROWTH AS A PREDICTABILITY FACTOR

Although a consistent record of increases in earnings per share is not of itself an absolute predictor of either further increases, or the rate of any increases,Benjamin Graham believed that it was a factor worthy of consideration.

In addition, it is logical to conclude that a company that has had regular and consistent increases in earnings per share over a protracted period is soundly managed.

WARREN BUFFETT AGAIN ON GROWTH

For Warren Buffett the important thing is not that a company grows (he points to the growth in airline business that has not resulted in any real benefits to stockholders) but that returns grow. In 1992, he said this:

‘Growth benefits investors only when the business in point can invest at incremental returns that are enticing – in other words, only when each dollar used to finance the growth creates over a dollar of long term market value.
In the case of a low-return business requiring incremental funds, growth hurts the investor.’

GROWTH FIGURES FOR ANHEUSER-BUSCH

Take Anheuser-Busch. Ten-year figures to 2002, using the Value Line summaries, show the following:
YearEarnings per shareReturn on equity %Return on capital %
1993.8923.014.9
1994.9723.415.2
1995.9522.214.3
19961.1127.917
19971.1829.215.6
19981.2729.316.5
19991.4735.817.7
20001.6937.618.2
20011.8942.018.8
20022.2063.421.9

GROWTH IN EPS

For Mary Buffett and David Clark, earnings per share growth, and its ability to keep well ahead of inflation, is a key factor in the investment strategies of Warren Buffett. Earnings that are consistently increased are an indication of a quality company, soundly managed, with little or no reliance on commodity type products. This leads to predictability of future earnings and cash flows.

On the other hand, with a company whose earnings fluctuate, future cash flows are less predictable. The reasons may be poor management, poor quality or an over reliance on products that are susceptible to price reductions.
Take an imaginary company with the following earnings per share:

YearEPS
12.00
22.25
32.98
41.47
51.88
6-.65
72.75
82.20
91.98
103.01

The only conclusion that follows from these figures is that this company has good years and bad years. Year 11 might be great, it might be dreadful, or it might be average. The only certainty here is the unpredictability.

Of course, a fall in margins for one or two years may be as a result of once only factors and this can provide buying opportunities.

The difficulty is making the judgment as to whether there is something permanently wrong, or whether the problem has been isolated and resolved.

WARREN BUFFETT'S INVESTMENT PRINCIPLES

Warren Buffett does not readily disclose the investments he makes on behalf of himself or Berkshire Hathaway. He does, every year, report on the substantial holdings of his company in other corporations. These provide only tiny clues however to why, when and where he invests.


He is prepared, however, and does so regularly, to outline general principles of sound investment. These have a consistent theme and can be summed up like this.


Stock investments should be looked at in the same way as buying a business. The stock investor is really buying a tiny share or partnership and should apply the same principles that they would in buying a business – the Benjamin Graham approach:


1. The company should be soundly managed. Tests of good management include:
2. The company has demonstrated earning capacity with a likelihood that this will continue. Tests of earning capacity include:
3. The company should have consistently high returns. Warren Buffett would look at both:
4. The company should have a prudent approach to debt.

5. The businesses of the company should be simple and the investor should have an understanding of the company.  See case studies

6. Assuming that all these thresholds are satisfied, the investment should only be made at areasonable price, with a margin of safety. This is always a matter for independent judgment by the investor but it is relevant to consider:
7. Investors need to take a long term approach.


Dealing With Information Overload When Investing


DenchaBy: IS
Date posted: 02.22.2012 (5:00 am) 
It’s a rather common feeling these days isn’t it? I generally feel like I have a fairly good grasp of most stocks that I follow but even that isn’t always true.
Think about how things were in previous generations:
Someone thinking about buying a stock might have bought a newspaper, looked at a few columns or an article about that company and tried to figure out how good of an investment it is. That research would probably have taken a few minutes…then what?

Researching A Stock In 1960

-Reading newspaper to get stock quotes and economic analysis

Researching A Stock In 2012

These days, that process can lead you down a very exhausting road:
-Looking at charts getting technical indicators such as trend analysis
-Going to read the company’s financial reports
-Listening to earnings calls as well as Q&A with analysts
-Going through Wall Street and other research which is often available on the web
-Going through media such as the Wall Street Journal and The Globe and Mail
-Going through Blogs analysis (this one alone could take many days)
-Looking at social media talk about the stock (Twitter, etc)
-Doing a similar analysis for the sector and for both clients and suppliers

There Is No Way To “Complete” Your Analysis

At what point would you consider that you’ve gone through all of the information? It just seems to me like you can never reach that point. At that point, the game becomes as much about being able to judge:
-what information has most value
-how to go through it quickly but efficiently
-how to either come to a conclusion or move on to a new stock if it non conclusive

Personally the RSS Reader Is My “Filter”

I personally have many of my top information sources setup in my RSS reader and every day I go through them very quickly marking those that I want to read further. How? I guess to some extent I must rely on the title and images to seem accurate as I probably spend a few seconds at most to make that determination.
How do you deal with information overload when investing?