Showing posts with label Edward Chancellor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Edward Chancellor. Show all posts

Thursday, February 28, 2019

Links

"Prices do amazing things in securities markets. And when they do something that strikes us as amazing in our direction...we will act. But we do not know today what we’re going to be doing tomorrow.... And there’s this business where somebody says, 'You should have 50 percent of your money in bonds and 35 percent in equities, and 15 —.' We don’t go through anything like that. I mean, we regard that as nonsense." --Warren Buffett (2004)

What the plow and lab-grown meat tell us about innovation - by Bill Gates (LINK)

Warren Buffett Moves the Goalposts! (LINK)

A 300-year lesson in bubble inflation - by Edward Chancellor (LINK)

Broyhill 2018 Annual Letter (LINK)

Where Joel Greenblatt sees value now (video) [H/T Linc] (LINK)

The Perils of Investing Idol Worship: The Kraft Heinz Lessons! - by Aswath Damodaran (LINK)

Status as a Service (StaaS) - by Eugene Wei (LINK)

Money Out of Nowhere: How Internet Marketplaces Unlock Economic Wealth - by Bill Gurley (LINK)

Modern Monetary Theory Isn’t Helping - by Doug Henwood [H/T @cullenroche] (LINK)

What’s the Water at the Church Lab? A Conversation Between George Church and Jorge Conde (LINK)

Conversations with Tyler (podcast): Sam Altman on Loving Community, Hating Coworking, and the Hunt for Talent (LINK)

Corner Office from Marketplace (podcast): Why no Wall Street CEO went to jail after the financial crisis [H/T Linc] (LINK)

The Tim Ferriss Show: Graham Duncan — Talent Is The Best Asset Class (LINK)

Freakonomics Radio: A Good Idea Is Not Good Enough (LINK)

Trailblazers with Walter Isaacson (podcast): Sports Analytics: What’s After Moneyball? (LINK)

The 60 Minutes segment on China's electric car industry from this past Sunday (video) (LINK)

Summary and notes from Brian Arthur's The Nature of Technology: What It Is and How It Evolves (LINK)

Nanotech Injections Give Mice Infrared Vision - by Ed Yong (LINK)

A Troubling Discovery in the Deepest Ocean Trenches - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Friday, October 20, 2017

Links

"...we take the reasons that people give for their actions and beliefs, and our own reasons for our actions and beliefs, much too seriously." -Daniel Kahneman

Daniel Kahneman: Why We Contradict Ourselves and Confound Each Other [H/T Phil] (LINK)

The Theory of Maybes - by Morgan Housel (LINK)

More '29 than '87 - By Edward Chancellor (LINK)

Mohnish Pabrai's ET NOW Interview on Compounding [Part 1 was linked to previously.] (LINK)

Warren Buffett's Mosquito: Mark Cohodes [H/T Linc] (LINK)

The Big Story: Edge of The Cliff | Real Vision (video) (LINK)

Canceling Puerto Rico Debt ‘Impractical,’ Says Hedge Fund Billionaire Klarman (LINK)

Why Investors Can’t Get Enough of Tajikistan’s Debt [H/T @Connor_Leonard] (LINK)

A Boom in Credit Cards: Great News for Banks, Less So Consumers [H/T @Sanjay__Bakshi] (LINK)

Amazon Expands in Brazil, Making Worst-Kept Secret Official (LINK)

Google Is So Big, It Is Now Shaping Policy to Combat the Opioid Epidemic. And It's Screwing It Up. (LINK) [You can also listen to this article on YouTube, HERE.]

The people vs. the opioid industrial complex. (LINK)

Adventures in Finance podcast -- Black Monday: First Hand Accounts of the 87 Crash (LINK)

Grant’s Podcast: Financial revelations of the day [Starts with an apology to Bridgewater about one of the claims they made in a recent Grant's issue.] (LINK)

Exponent podcast: Episode 128 — Counterfactuals (LINK)

Sam Altman: "The Winding Path of Progress" | Talks at Google (LINK)

Insects Are In Serious Trouble - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Will the World's Most Worrying Flu Virus Go Pandemic? - by Ed Yong (LINK)

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Edge and investing

A couple of days ago, John Huber wrote an excellent blog post called What is Your Edge? I recommend it if you haven't read it yet, and (cue the confirmation bias) pretty much agree with every he said. As someone who spends much of my time looking at small and micro-cap stocks, it got me thinking about a couple of things that I wanted to write down here, as the writing process helps me keep thinking out loud.

First, I think this statement is entirely true: 
I also think that many investors think they have found information in small-caps that others don’t have. One of the advantages of writing a blog is I hear from a lot of readers, and in the past when I have mentioned small cap stocks, I’m amazed at how many people have already researched the company I’m looking at, and have found the same information I found.
As both an investor and a blogger, I've experienced the exact same thing. It is hard to get an information edge in today's world, and if you are looking at small and micro-cap stocks, there are likely plenty of other people looking at the same ones, at the same time. I think the reason this happens much of the time has to do with earnings-multiple obsession. I think many people that claim to be following a value/Buffett and Munger approach to investing are actually taking the Ben Graham approach of going to the grocery store every day and seeing what's on sale (i.e. what looks cheap based on a given multiple), as opposed the Buffett and Munger approach of going to the grocery store every day and looking at one's favorite items (i.e. the types of businesses one would really like to own if they ever go on sale).

This isn't just about quality vs. cheap, or growth vs. value. As Buffett and Munger stress, growth is simply a component of value (sometimes a positive, and sometimes a negative) and almost everything is a bad value at one price and a good value at another price. But with small companies, there is often less of a chance for a durable moat to have formed around the business, which means extrapolating current earnings too far into the future (as a multiple is essentially implying) can often lead to what many people call a value trap—something that looks cheap on the surface but where margins, and thus earnings, may be at risk going forward. In other words, while it may be a good place to look, it also may be more likely that the business deserves to be trading at that low multiple. As Brian Bares said in an interview a couple of years ago, when asked about the biggest mistake investors make:
I would say that—especially to the value crowd that sort of follows the Buffett/Munger philosophy—it's this mistaken notion that a low P/E stock can potentially outperform.... Companies with low valuations on rule-of-thumb metrics like price-to-earnings, price-to-cash flow, price-to-book are often indicative, even in the small and micro-cap space, of broken businesses.
What might be the reasons for these so-called "value traps?" From what I've seen among smaller companies, the major reason has to do with underestimating the role of competition (which includes competitors that may not even exist yet, but that may be enticed to enter the industry if returns on capital are attractive, or capital is plentiful). As Charlie Munger has said: "We have found in a long life that one competitor is frequently enough to ruin a business." That quote is one that I always keep close at hand, as is this excerpt from Ed Chancellor's introduction to the book Capital Returns:
From the investment perspective, the key point is that returns are driven by changes on the supply side. A firm’s profitability comes under threat when the competitive conditions are deteriorating. The negative phase of the capital cycle is characterized by industry fragmentation and increasing supply. The aim of capital cycle analysis is to spot these developments in advance of the market. New entrants noisily trumpet their arrival in an industry. A rash of IPOs concentrated in a hot sector is a red flag; secondary share issuances another, as are increases in debt. Conversely, a focus on competitive conditions should alert investors to opportunities where supply conditions are benign and companies are able to maintain profitability for longer than the market expects. An understanding of competitive conditions and supply side dynamics also helps investors avoid value traps (such as US housing stocks in 2005–06). 
Of course, the thing we are all looking for is a low multiple that doesn't deserve to be low because there is a long runway of profitable growth ahead. And if it doesn't deserve to be low and the growth transpires, then you are likely to get a re-rating as well as the growth, which can lead to the big home runs. But simply depending on a re-rating from a low multiple to justify investment is a tough game to play. And if one is willing to look 5-10 years out instead of the next quarter or year, then the multiple—unless at an extreme and especially at the higher end of that time frame—matters much less than whether or not one was right about the business. There's less competition in thinking this way, no matter what size company one is researching. As John concluded his post: 
In summary, I think the “edge” is less about knowing more than everyone else about a specific stock, and more about the mindset, the discipline, and the time horizon that you maintain as an investor. Thinking long-term is a commonly talked-about potential advantage, but one that is much less often acted upon. If you are a professional investor that is set up to capitalize on this, or an individual investor who has the right mindset, you can give yourself a significant edge in the stock market.
Below is a Peter Lynch example that I like on how important the long-term compounding of earnings growth per share can be. If you pay a 20x multiple for Company A and the multiple stays the same at year 10, you get 6-bagger. If you pay 10x for Company B and the multiple stays the same, you get a 2.5-bagger. And even if the multiple contracts on Company A from 20x to 10x, you still end up with more money than company B. 


As a final note, it's also important to remember that looking and thinking long-term shouldn't come at the expense of the anecdote to hubris, overconfidence and, as Ben Graham described it, the "vicissitudes of time": Margin of Safety. 

Thursday, August 11, 2016

Links

1997 paper from Michael Mauboussin: "Thoughts on Valuation" [H/T @BrattleStCap] (LINK)
This underscores the important point that P/E multiples are not a determinant of value, but rather a function of value. On Wall Street, the typical valuation formula is EPS x P/E = value. We just talked about earnings and how they can be misleading. Now we go to this thing called the P/E multiple. We are asking the P/E multiple to reflect growth, capital intensity, risk, quality of management, and competitive advantage. We are heaping a lot of responsibility on one number and we argue that it is practically impossible to know what that right number is. So we try to break value down into components. We believe that value is determined by the present value of a stream of future cash flows, and the P/E falls out of that equation.
15 interviews to read this summer [H/T @FourFilters] (LINK)

This former EMC exec says Amazon ate his old business and it will never recover [H/T @chr1sa] (LINK)

The Brooklyn Investor blog: Scary Chart Part II (LINK)
Books recommended in post: 1) The Money Masters; 2) The New Money Masters
FPA Crescent Fund's Q2 Webcast (LINK)

Veteran Stockpicker Bill Miller Parts Ways With Legg Mason (LINK)
Veteran mutual-fund manager Bill Miller has reached a deal to buy out Legg Mason Inc.’s stake in the entity that houses his funds, formally severing ties with the firm where he built his fame and fortune. 
Mr. Miller is buying out Legg Mason’s 50% interest in LMM LLC, the entity that houses the funds he manages, including the Legg Mason Opportunity Trust and the Miller Income Opportunity Trust. Financial terms of the deal weren’t disclosed. Mr. Miller already owned the other 50% of LMM.
In praise of failure - by Benedict Evans (LINK)

Episode 09 of Malcolm Gladwell's Revisionist History podcast (LINK)

The Overview Effect - by Jonah Lehrer (LINK)

Why Self-Help Guru James Altucher Only Owns 15 Things [H/T Abnormal Returns] (LINK)

Sunday, February 14, 2016

Links

East Coast Asset Management 2015 Letter - Twin Lights (LINK) [Chris Begg's letters are always one of my favorite reads, and this particular letter even more so, as I think the insights discussed relating to business culture are both important and enduring models of how the world works.]
The foundational understanding where we are looking to arrive at is to determine the compounding merit of the investment–superior returns, asymmetric risk, and ideally a long-duration.  We value the important truth that almost any advantage can be copied away eventually and  that  the  only  truly sustainable  long-term  competitive  advantage lies  in  the culture of  a business. 
... 
The more businesses we study, the more we find that these insights apply perfectly to what determines an outlier organization. The common thread that connects our greatest investments over the longest durations has been one of greater structural organization leading to the ability to scale those businesses whereby greater and greater amounts of work are attracted to that system. Intuition might suggest that the great investments came from being early to a revolutionary product or an early entrant into a huge market opportunity. This has not proven to be the case. What we have found is that an evolved system that values persistent incremental progress eternally repeated (PIPER mindset) has delivered the greatest return, while taking the least amount of risk over the longest duration.
A Dozen Things you can Learn from the Anti-Models that are Bernard Madoff and his Victims (LINK)

FPA Crescent Fund's Q4 2015 Webcast Replay and Transcript (LINK)

Heed the threats to globalization - By Edward Chancellor [H/T @ChrisPavese] (LINK)

Opalesque.TV talks to Michael Lewitt, whose new book, The Committee to Destroy the World: Inside the Plot to Unleash a Super Crash on the Global Economy, comes out next month (video) [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK)

Mohammed El-Erian on the Masters in Business podcast (LINK)

Sebastian Thrun on Charlie Rose (from December) (video) (LINK)

One friend and blogger's list of books read in 2015 is a good place to start if you're looking for your next read (LINK)

George Washington, the Whiskey Baron of Mount Vernon (LINK)
Related book: Washington: A Life
PBS Nova: Memory Hackers (video) [H/T Linc] (LINK)

How Jaguars Survived the Ice Age (LINK)

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

THE TENETS OF CAPITAL CYCLE ANALYSIS

From Ed Chancellor in his introduction to Capital Returns: Investing Through the Capital Cycle: A Money Manager's Reports 2002-15:
The essence of capital cycle analysis can thus be reduced to the following key tenets:
  • Most investors devote more time to thinking about demand than supply. Yet demand is more difficult to forecast than supply. 
  • Changes in supply drive industry profitability. Stock prices often fail to anticipate shifts in the supply side. 
  • The value/growth dichotomy is false. Companies in industries with a supportive supply side can justify high valuations. 
  • Management’s capital allocation skills are paramount, and meetings with management often provide valuable insights. 
  • Investment bankers drive the capital cycle, largely to the detriment of investors. 
  • When policymakers interfere with the capital cycle, the market-clearing process may be arrested. New technologies can also disrupt the normal operation of the capital cycle. 
  • Generalists are better able to adopt the “outside view” necessary for capital cycle analysis. 
  • Long-term investors are better suited to applying the capital cycle approach.

Monday, January 25, 2016

More from Ed Chancellor on focusing on industry supply...

From his introduction to Capital Returns: Investing Through the Capital Cycle: A Money Manager's Reports 2002-15:
FOCUS ON SUPPLY RATHER THAN DEMAND 
Given that the future is uncertain, why should Marathon’s approach fare any better? The answer is that most investors spend the bulk of their time trying to forecast future demand for the companies they follow. The aviation analyst will try to answer the question: How many long-haul flights will be taken globally in 2020? A global autos strategist will attempt to forecast China’s demand for passenger cars 15 years hence. No one knows the answers to these questions. Long-range demand projections are likely to result in large forecasting errors. 
Capital cycle analysis, however, focuses on supply rather than demand. Supply prospects are far less uncertain than demand, and thus easier to forecast. In fact, increases in an industry’s aggregate supply are often well flagged and come with varying lags – depending on the industry in question – after changes in the industry’s aggregate capital spending. In certain industries, such as aircraft manufacturing and shipbuilding, the supply pipelines are well-known. Because most investors (and corporate managers) spend more of their time thinking about demand conditions in an industry than changing supply, stock prices often fail to anticipate negative supply shocks [33]. 
ANALYZE COMPETITIVE CONDITIONS WITHIN AN INDUSTRY 
From the investment perspective, the key point is that returns are driven by changes on the supply side. A firm’s profitability comes under threat when the competitive conditions are deteriorating. The negative phase of the capital cycle is characterized by industry fragmentation and increasing supply. The aim of capital cycle analysis is to spot these developments in advance of the market. New entrants noisily trumpet their arrival in an industry. A rash of IPOs concentrated in a hot sector is a red flag; secondary share issuances another, as are increases in debt. Conversely, a focus on competitive conditions should alert investors to opportunities where supply conditions are benign and companies are able to maintain profitability for longer than the market expects. An understanding of competitive conditions and supply side dynamics also helps investors avoid value traps (such as US housing stocks in 2005–06). 

[33] Several accounting based measures provide insights into the capital cycle. As observed above, stocks with the fastest asset growth tend to underperform. When a company’s capital expenditure relative to depreciation rises above its average level it may be a sign that the capital cycle is deteriorating (see 1.4 “Supercycle woes” and Chapter 1, “A capital cycle revolution”). A rising gap between reported earnings and free cash flow is another warning sign (see 1.7 “Major concerns”). The Herfindahl Index provides a statistical measure of industry concentration which may reveal changes in competitive conditions. Anecdotal signs prove just as useful in gauging the capital cycle. It’s generally a bad sign when a company starts building a grandiose new head office (see 4.9 “On the rocks”)
...................

Related previous post: Investors should be thinking 90% about supply...

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Investors should be thinking 90% about supply...

In one of the interviews Edward Chancellor gave recently, he made the comment below, which I think was probably the most practical investing lesson that can be used going forward:
Ed: And this interesting point is that people, I don’t quite know why, but they love to think about and project demand into the future. They love it, I suppose, because… well, they like projecting demand because demand is unknowable. And because it’s unknowable, then you can have any fantasy you want about it at all, optimistic or pessimistic. 
But given the nature of mankind, those would tend to be optimistic. So a huge amount of work goes into forecasting demand. As our mutual friend Russell Napier says, analysts spend 90% of their time thinking about and forecasting demand, and 10% of their time thinking about supply. 
Now, the interesting thing about supply is that supply actually can be forecasted because in most industries, it takes quite a while for the supply to come on stream. You can see how much assets have grown inside an industry, or inside any particular business. You can see it through any number of measures. 
Through IPO issues, through secondary share issues, through companies taking on more debt, through companies going through a boom, such as the mining companies or the US homebuilders, who have had a surge in profitability, and have reinvested those profits. 
You can measure it technically through looking at things, like current capital spending to depreciation ratios. Or you can look at it, for instance, the rate of reported profitability of a company to its cash flow, the so called cash conversion rate. And if a company is generating large profits, but not generating any cash flow, it’s probably in a negative phase of the capital cycle. 
So the point, to go back to what you were saying, is that investors, if they knew the right way to approach, would be thinking 90% about supply, and then fantasising 10% about the completely, or not quite completely, but more or less completely unknowable demand side.
In his introduction to the book Capital Returns he gives several recent examples where a focus on supply instead of rosy demand projections would have allowed one to better grasp the risk one was taking investing in particular stages of those industry cycles, including the telecoms in the late 1990s, shipping in the 2001-2007 period, and the homebuilding industry that peaked in 2006. The below excerpt on the homebuilding boom is a good example showing the capital cycle and the importance of focusing on industry supply:
Rising house prices after 2002 prompted another capital cycle in the US homebuilding industry. By the time the US housing bubble peaked in 2006, the excess stock of new homes was roughly equal to five times the annual production required to satisfy demand from new household formation. Spain and Ireland, whose real estate markets had even more pronounced upswings, ended up with excess housing stocks equivalent to roughly 15 times the average annual supply of the pre-boom period. Whilst under way, housing booms are invariably justified by references to rosy demographic projections. In the case of Spain, it turned out that recent immigration had largely been a function of the property boom. After the bubble burst and the Spanish economy entered a depression, foreigners left the country by the hundreds of thousands. 
Several well-known “value” investors who ignored capital cycle dynamics were blindsided by the housing bust. In the years before US home prices peaked in 2006, homebuilders had grown their assets rapidly. After the bubble burst, these assets were written down. As a result, investors who bought US homebuilders’ stocks towards the end of the building boom when they were trading around book value – towards their historical lows – ended up with very heavy losses [5]. From a capital cycle perspective, it’s interesting to note that although UK and Australia experienced similar house price “bubbles,” strict building regulations prevented a supply response. Largely as a consequence, both the British and Australian real estate markets recovered rapidly after the financial crisis [6]. 

[5] For instance, the large US homebuilder KB Home experienced a 28 per cent compound annual growth in assets between 2001 and 2006. By summer of 2006, its shares were trading at 1.2 times book. From that point, KB’s book value declined by 85 per cent, and its shares, already well below their peak, fell a further 75 per cent 
[6] The fact that UK housing supply didn’t respond to the British housing bubble is reflected in the superior performance of UK homebuilding stocks relative to their US counterparts over the last decade

Monday, December 28, 2015

Ed Chancellor on the capital cycle...

From his introduction to Capital Returns: Investing Through the Capital Cycle: A Money Manager's Reports 2002-15, which was released in hardcover today:
Typically, capital is attracted into high-return businesses and leaves when returns fall below the cost of capital. This process is not static, but cyclical – there is constant flux. The inflow of capital leads to new investment, which over time increases capacity in the sector and eventually pushes down returns. Conversely, when returns are low, capital exits and capacity is reduced; over time, then, profitability recovers. From the perspective of the wider economy, this cycle resembles Schumpeter’s process of “creative destruction” – as the function of the bust, which follows the boom, is to clear away the misallocation of capital that has occurred during the upswing. 
The key to the “capital cycle” approach – the term Marathon uses to describe its investment analysis – is to understand how changes in the amount of capital employed within an industry are likely to impact upon future returns. Or put another way, capital cycle analysis looks at how the competitive position of a company is affected by changes in the industry’s supply side. In his book, Competitive Advantage, Professor Michael Porter of the Harvard Business School writes that the “essence of formulating competitive strategy is relating a company to its environment.” Porter famously described the “five forces” which impact on a firm’s competitive advantage: the bargaining power of suppliers and of buyers, the threat of substitution, the degree of rivalry among existing firms and the threat of new entrants. Capital cycle analysis is really about how competitive advantage changes over time, viewed from an investor’s perspective.

Monday, December 21, 2015

Links

Edward Chancellor: ‘intelligent contrarians’ should follow the capital cycle (video) [H/T Tom] (LINK)
Related book: Capital Returns: Investing Through the Capital Cycle: A Money Manager's Reports 2002-15
Edward Chancellor: why gold miners are a better bet than conventional miners [Part 2 of the interview above] (video) (LINK)

Howard Marks' CNBC appearance from this past Friday (video) [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK)

Why does Charlie Munger not invest in high-technology businesses? (LINK)

Aswath Damodaran on The Tech Challenge for Value Investors (LINK)

Benedict Evans: 16 mobile theses (LINK)

Apple and Tim Cook on 60 Minutes (videos) (Part 1, Part 2)

EconTalk: Philip Tetlock on Superforecasting (LINK)
Related book: Superforecasting
Ten Commandments for Aspiring Superforecasters (LINK)

Hussman Weekly Market Comment: Reversing the Speculative Effect of QE Overnight (LINK)
In recent quarters, I’ve remained adamant that the immediate first step of the Federal Reserve in normalizing monetary policy should have been to reduce the size of its balance sheet. The Fed’s failure to prioritize that first step, in the apparent desire to maintain an aggrandized role in the U.S. financial markets, has significantly increased the risk of a collapse from the speculative extremes the Fed has created in recent years. Given the increasing risk-aversion evident in market internals, we doubt that even a reversal of last week’s rate hike would materially reduce that prospect. 
To see why, it’s important to understand how the Federal Reserve’s tools - open market purchases, interest on reserves, and reverse repurchases - actually work in affecting the economy and the behavior of speculative investors.
Meet Dole, the World’s Full-Stack Banana Company [H/T @paulg] (LINK)

The tiny creatures that flew to the Moon twice, and survived [H/T @JohnSHendricks] (LINK)

Thursday, December 17, 2015

Links

Edward Chancellor: Why I’m cheering gold’s fall – and how to profit from it ($) (LINK) [I'm not a subscriber and don't have access to the article, but since it may be timely and since it is from Ed Chancellor, I thought it was worth mentioning.]

John Maynard Keynes and Currency Speculation in the Interwar Years [H/T @jasonzweigwsj] (LINK)

Summary and transcript of Sam Zell's appearance on Bloomberg yesterday (LINK) [I liked his quote about "...creating a competitive advantage by virtue of your entry price." This was also good: "I've sold real estate based on cap rates, I don't buy real estate based on cap rates. So I mean there's nothing more relevant than replacement cost. And so you can generate values that are way above replacement cost by virtue of very low cap rates. And that's a sucker's bet."]

An excerpt from Matt Ridley's latest book, The Evolution of Everything: How New Ideas Emerge (LINK)

If you sign up for Blake Boles' newsletter, you'll get links to two of his books sent to you for free, Better Than College in PDF format, and The Art of Self-Directed Learning in audio format, which looks interesting (LINK)

Book of the day: The Life and Work of George Boole

Quotes I'm thinking about today:
“At Baupost, we constantly ask: 'What should we work on today?' We keep calling and talking. We keep gathering information. You never have perfect information. So you work, work and work. Sometimes we thumb through Value Line. How you fill your inbox is very important.” –Seth Klarman  
“The difference between successful people and really successful people is that really successful people say no to almost everything.” –Warren Buffett

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Edward Chancellor quote

Via the book Capital Account:
It is an axiom of capital cycle analysis, however, that future demand is very difficult to project. Partly this is due to the problems that afflict all attempts at forecasting under conditions of uncertainty. But it is exacerbated by the fact that those who supply forecasts of demand are likely to have a vested interest in inflating the figures. 

Monday, August 11, 2014

Edward Chancellor quote

Via the book Capital Account:
The turnaround of General Dynamics [from 1990-1993] and its dramatic share price performance illustrate two key aspects of the capital cycle approach to investment. First, shareholder returns are not necessarily determined by whether a company’s sales are rising or falling, nor whether the market in which it operates is growing or shrinking. Rather, the most important determinant of share price performance is management’s ability to allocate resources efficiently. If a company achieves a higher return on reinvested profits than the market has expected, then its shares will rise, regardless of what happens to turnover. Secondly, during the early 1990s General Dynamics benefited from the decline in competition in the US defence industry, as capital was withdrawn from the sector and businesses consolidated. This illustrates the second axiom of the capital cycle, namely that profitability is determined primarily by the competitive environment or the supply side, rather than by revenue growth trends. It is better to invest in a mature industry where competition is declining than in a growing industry where competition is expanding.