Showing posts with label Bad news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bad news. Show all posts

Sunday 18 January 2015

### Attractive Buying Opportunities arise through a Variety of Causes

Attractive buying opportunities for the enterprising investor arise through a variety of causes.

The standard or recurrent reasons are
(a) a low level of the general market and
(b) the carrying to an extreme of popular disfavor toward individual issues.

Sometimes, but much more rarely, we have the failure of the market to respond to an important improvement in the company's affairs and in the value of its stock.

Frequently, we find a discrepancy between price and value which arises from the public's failure to realise the true situation of a company - this in turn being due to some complicated aspects of accounting or corporate relationships.


It is the function of competent security analysis to unravel such complexities and to bring the true facts and values to light.


Benjamin Graham
Intelligent Investor


Summary:
Attractive buying opportunities (discrepancy between price and value) due to various causes:
1.  low level of the general market
2.  extreme of popular disfavour towards individual stocks
3.  failure of market to respond to improvement in the company
4.  failure to realise hidden value in the company due to some complicated aspects of accounting or corporate relationships

Friday 2 April 2010

Thursday 9 October 2008

The Bad News that creates a Buying Situation - Industry Recession

The second kind of situation that presents a buying opportunity is an industry-wide recession. In this case an entire industry suffers a financial setback. These situations vary in their intensity and depth. An industry recession can lead to serious losses or it can mean nothing more than mild reduction in per share earnings. Recovery time from this type of situation can be considerable, one to four years, but it does present excellent buying opportunities. In severe examples, a business may even end up in bankruptcy. Don't be fooled by too cheap a selling price. Stay with a well-capitalized leader, one that was very profitable before the recession.

Capital Cities/ABC Inc. fell victim to this weird manic-depressive stock market behaviour in 1990. Because of a business recession, avertising revenues started to drop, and Capital Cities reported that its net profit for 1990 would be approximately the same as in 1989. The stock market, used to Capital Cities growing its per share earnings at approximately 27% a year, reacted violently to this news and in the space of six months drove the price of its stock down from $63.30 a share to $38 a share. Thus, Capital Cities lost 40% of its per share price, all because it projected that things were going to be the same as they were last year. (In 1995, Capital Cities and the Walt Disney Company agreed to merge. This caused the market-revalued Capital Cities to upward of $125 a share. If you bought it in 1990 for $38 a share and sold it in 1995 for $125 a share, your pretax annual compounding rate of return would be approximately 26%, with a per share profit of $87.)

Warren Buffett used the banking industry recession in 1990 as the impetus for investing in Wells Fargo, an investment that brought him enormous rewards. Remember, in an industry-wide recession, everyone gets hurt. But the strong survive and the weak are removed from the economic landscape. Wells Fargo is one of the most conservative, well run, and financially strong of the key money center banks on the West Coast, and the seventh-largest bank in the nation.

Wells Fargo, in 1990 and 1991, responding to a nationwide recession in the real estate market, set aside for potential loan losses a little over $1.3 billion, or approximately $25 a share of its $55 a share in net worth. When a bank sets aside funds for potential losses it is merely designating part of its net worth as a reserve for potential future losses. It doesn't mean that losses have happened, nor does it mean they will happen. What it means is that there is potential for the losses to occur and that the bank is prepared to meet them.

This means that if Well Fargo lost every penny it had set aside for potential losses, $25 a share, it would still have $28 a share left in net worth. Losses did eventually occur, but they weren't as bad as Well Fargo prepared for. In 1991, they wiped out most of Wells Fargo's earnings. But the bank was still very solvent and still reported in 1991 a small net profit of $21 million, or $0.04 a share.

Wall Street reacted as if Wells Fargo was a regional savings and loan on the brink of insolvency, and in the space of four months hammered Wells Fargo's stock price from $86 a share to $41.30 a share. Wells Fargo lost 52% of its per share market price because it essentially was not going to make any money in 1991. Warren Buffett responded by buying 10% of the company - or 5 million shares - for an average price of $57.80 a share.

What Warren Buffett saw in Wells Fargo was one of the best managed and profitable money-center banks in the country, selling in the stock market for a price that was considerably less than what comparable banks were selling for in the private market. Although all banks compete with each other, as we said, money-center banks like Wells Fargo have a kind of toll brideg monopoly on financial transactions. If you are going to function in society, be it as an individual, a mom and pop business, or a billion-dollar corporation, you need a bank account, a business loan, a car loan, or a mortgage. And with every bank account, business loan, car loan, or mortgage comes the banker charging you fees for the myriad services he provides. California, by the way, has a lot of people, thousands of businesses, and a lot of small and medium size banks, and Wells Fargo is there to serve them all - for a fee.

The loan losses that Well Fargo anticipated never reached the magnitude expected, and nine years later, in 2000, if you wanted to buy a share of Wells Fargo you would have to have paid approximately $270 a share. Warren Buffett ended up with a pretax annual compounding rate of return of approximately 18.6% on his 1991 invetment. For Warren Buffett there is no business like the banking business.

In the cases of both Capital Cities and Wells Fargo, there was a dramatic drop in their share prices because of an industry-wide recession, which created the opportunity for Warren Buffett to make serious investments at bargain prices.

The Bad News that creates a Buying Situation - Stock Market Corrections and Panics

Stock market corrections and panics are easy to spot and usually the safest because they don't tend to change the earnings of the underlying business. That is, unless the company is somehow tied to the investment business, in which case a market downturn tends to reduce general market trading activity, which means brokerage firms and investment banks lose money. Otherwise the underlying economics of most businesses stay the same. During stock market corrections and panics, stock prices drop for reasons having nothing to do with the underlyng economics of their respective companies.

This is the easiest kind of situation to invest in because there is no real business problem for the company to overcome. If you let the price of the security, as Buffett does, determine whether or not the investment gets bought, then this is possibly the safest "buy" situation there is. Buffett began buying The Washington Post during the stock market crash of '73 - '74 and Coca-Cola during the crash of '87. While everyone else was caught in a state of panic, Buffett began buying these companies' shares like a man possessed with a deep thirst for value. He eventually acquired 1,727,765 shares of The Washington Post and 200,000,000 shares of Coca-Cola.

A market correction or panic will more than likely drive all stock prices down, but it will really hammer those that have recently announced bad news, like a recent decline in earnings. Remember, a market panic accents the effect that bad news has on stock price. Buffett believes that the perfect buying situation can be created when there is a stock market panic coupled with bad news about the company.

Any company with a strong consumer monopoly will eventually recover after a market correction or panic. But beware: In a really high market, in which stock prices are trading in excess of fourty times earnings, it may take a considerable amount of time for things to recover after a major correction or panic. Companies of the commodity type may never again see their bull market highs, which means investors can suffer a very real and permanent loss of capital.

After a market correction or panic, stock prices of the consumer monopoly type company will usually rebound withn a year or two. This bounce effect will often provide an investor an opportunity to pick up a great price on an exception business and see a dramatic profit within a year or two of purchasing the stock. Stock market corrections and panics have made Buffett a very happy and a very rich man.

Wednesday 8 October 2008

The Gifts that Keep on Giving

Short-Sightedness and the Bad News Phenomenon.

Warren Buffett discovered that everyone from mutual fund managers to Internet day traders are stuck playing the short-term game. It is the nature of the stock market.

The bad news phenomenon is a constant - people sell on bad news.

Companies that have consumer monopolies have the economic power to pull themselves out of most bad news situations.

Warren Buffett made all his big money investing in consumer monopolies.

The Bad News that Creates a Buying Situation

Bad news situations come in four basic flavours:

  1. Stock market correction or panic
  2. Industry recession
  3. Individual business calamity, and,
  4. Structural changes.

The perfect buying situation is created when a stock market correction or panic is coupled with an industry recession or individual business calamity.