Showing posts with label Peter Lynch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Lynch. Show all posts

Saturday, December 21, 2019

Links

"Many people believe that investors must make the macro decision to be either bullish or bearish. Our preference is to be agnostic, objectively finding absolute bargains, and in their absence, holding cash. In short, we are neither bullish nor bearish. We are value-ish." --Seth Klarman

Peter Lynch: How to Find Growth Opportunities in Today’s Stock Market (LINK) ["My best stocks have been ones where I didn’t have to worry about the big picture."]

Fidelity’s Peter Lynch: Do your research, don’t ‘play’ the market (video) [H/T Linc] (LINK)

Value Investing with Legends Podcast: Bruce Greenwald - Staying on the Right Side of the Trade (LINK)

Masters of Scale with Reid Hoffman (podcast): Bill Gates — The biggest success story you haven’t heard (LINK)

Fall 2019 Exhibit | Finding the Edge: The Work and Insights of Edward O. Thorp (video) (LINK)

Druckenmiller on 2020 Outlook, Monetary Policy, U.S. Election (video) (LINK)

All Asset All Access – Insights from Research Affiliates (LINK)

Could It Be That a Minsky “Moment” Lurks in the Shadows? - by Frank K. Martin (LINK)

11 Lessons from the Success of Disney+ - by Matthew Ball (LINK)

SoftBank Vision Fund Employees Depict a Culture of Recklessness (LINK)

Key Countries Aren’t Ready for Historic Ship-Fuel Switch (LINK)

The Market Huddle Podcast: Christmas with Kuppy (LINK)

Acquired Podcast: Convoy (with CEO Dan Lewis) (LINK)

The Disruptive Voice Podcast: Choosing College: Bob Moesta and Michael Horn on Why We Hire Education (LINK)

Doctors Prescribe More of a Drug If They Receive Money from a Pharma Company Tied to It (LINK)

Farnam Street’s 2019 Annual Letter to Readers (LINK)

The Infinite Game - by Blas Moros (LINK)
I wrote an essay I wish I had been given when I graduated from college, retired from tennis, and began the transition from student-athlete to the “real world.” 
Through this essay, I hope to provide some awareness and tools, namely around self-reflection and self-awareness, how to think about how to spend your time, what to look for in a job, and the importance of coaches and mentors. 
While written through the lens of a student-athlete, hopefully some of these principles and tools apply to a broader audience.

Saturday, October 19, 2019

Links

"In baseball terms, you want to buy [a stock] in the second or third inning and get out in the seventh or eighth. Walmart was in only 15% of the United States when they were a 10-year-old public company. All they did for the next 30 years was go from 15% to 100%. The stock went up 50-fold. They had a great formula, and they just rolled with it in the United States." --Peter Lynch

Lessons from an investing legend: Former Fidelity fund manager Peter Lynch shares some of his secrets to success [H/T @TaoValue] (LINK)

Oaktree's Howard Marks on Negative Rates, Demanding Safety, U.S. Recession (video) (LINK)
Related memo: "Mysterious"
Time for Advisers to Speak to Us in Plain English - by Jason Zweig ($) (LINK)

Neil Woodford: the inside story of his rise and dramatic fall ($) (LINK)

Why It’s So Hard to Make a Better Baby Formula (LINK)

The World's Largest Geode Formed When the Mediterranean Sea Disappeared [H/T Linc] (LINK)

"Some things are inevitable. But you really shouldn't think you know when." --Howard Marks

Friday, July 5, 2019

Links

"You don’t get paid for what’s already happened. You only get paid for what’s going to happen in the future. The past is only useful to you in the extent to which it gives you insights into the future, and sometimes the past doesn’t give you any insights into the future." --Warren Buffett (2007)

Being Ethical Is Long-term Greedy (LINK)

Markel Omaha brunch 2019 (video) (LINK)

Use Your Edge (LINK)

Why Things Break: Easy Causes of Business and Investing Failure (LINK)

Tim Wu Explains Why He Thinks Facebook Should Be Broken Up (LINK)
Related book: The Curse of Bigness
The Absolute Return Letter - July 2019: Energy Misconceptions (LINK)

A Return to Tiananmen - by Peter Zeihan (Part I: The Evolution of China, Part II: The Ending of Hong Kong)

Grant’s Current Yield Podcast: Middle Kingdom microscope (LINK)

Eric Cinnamond talks small cap, absolute return value investing with Tobias Carlisle on The Acquirers Podcast (LINK)

The James Altucher Show (podcast): 468 - David Epstein: Proof That It’s Never Too Late to Master Something New (LINK)
Related book: Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World
Revisionist History Podcast: Tempest in a Teacup (LINK)

American Innovations Podcast: Biologist Timothy Mousseau Can’t Stop Going Back To Chernobyl (LINK)

AI: Hype vs. Reality: Doctor AI (LINK)

Eric Topol on the Making Sense podcast (LINK)
Related book: Deep Medicine: How Artificial Intelligence Can Make Healthcare Human Again
(Re)Building the Good Society (video) (LINK)

Humanization, Dehumanization and Other Things Psychologists Do (video) (LINK)

Alex Honnold: A Soul Freed (video) (LINK)

Edge #545: Collaboration and the Evolution of Disciplines - A Talk By Robert Axelrod (LINK)
Related book: The Evolution of Cooperation
Why Waves of Seaweed Have Been Smothering Caribbean Beaches - by Ed Yong (LINK)

For Smart Animals, Octopuses Are Very Weird - by Ed Yong (LINK)


"We learn who we are in practice, not in theory." --Herminia Ibarra

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Links

"My premise has always been that there are good stocks everywhere. Some people say you can’t buy companies with unions, or you can’t buy companies in dying industries; for instance, who would ever buy a textile company? I mean, I didn’t buy it but a company called Unifi went up, I think, a hundred fold in the textile industry. I missed it. But look at all the money I made with Chrysler and with Boeing. I also lost money with a few airlines and I made money with airlines. But you hear this concept that you can’t make money if you ever buy a company that has a union, because the union will kill it. These are prejudices and biases that prevent people from looking at a lot of different industries. I never had that. I think there are good and bad stocks everywhere." -Peter Lynch (via the 1997 book Investment Gurus)

Stock Picking vs. Portfolio Construction: The Role of Checklists - by Sanjay Bakshi (LINK)

The power of focus in turnarounds - by Sean Iddings (LINK)
Related previous post: The Characteristics of Easy and Difficult Turnarounds
Einhorn's Greenlight Warns of Bubble With Tax Reform Prospects Fading (LINK)

Contra Einhorn - by Josh Brown (LINK)

Constellation Software Inc. – 2016 President’s Letter (LINK)

The U.S. Makes It Easy for Parents to Get College Loans—Repaying Them Is Another Story (LINK)
Student loans made through parents come from an Education Department program called Parent Plus, which has loans outstanding to more than three million Americans. The problem is the government asks almost nothing about its borrowers’ incomes, existing debts, savings, credit scores or ability to repay. Then it extends loans that are nearly impossible to extinguish in bankruptcy if borrowers fall on hard times. 
As of September 2015, more than 330,000 people, or 11% of borrowers, had gone at least a year without making a payment on a Parent Plus loan, according to the Government Accountability Office. That exceeds the default rate on U.S. mortgages at the peak of the housing crisis. More recent Education Department data show another 180,000 of the loans were at least a month delinquent as of May 2016.
Lucky, Good or Tipped Off? The Curious Case of Government Data and the Pound [H/T @jasonzweigwsj] (LINK)
Some investors could be trading with knowledge of U.K. official statistics before they are published, according to a comparison of currency trading data for the Swedish krona and British pound.
Not OK, Google - by Ben Thompson (LINK)

Ten Year Futures - by Benedict Evans (LINK)

a16z Podcast: QR. AR. VR. (LINK)

Prof. Adam Alter discusses his new book, "Irresistible", with Malcolm Gladwell (video) [H/T ValueWalk] (LINK)
Related book: Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked
Robert Pirsig Reveals the Personal Journey That Led Him to Write His Counterculture Classic, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance (1974) (LINK)

How to Fight Cancer (When Cancer Fights Back) - by Ed Yong (LINK)

What Makes a Genius? (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. 

Monday, December 14, 2015

Links

Garrett Hardin on the Three Filters Needed to Think About Problems (LINK)
Related book: Filters Against Folly
What are Charlie Munger’s views on giving back to society? (LINK)

The Misunderstanding of Peter Lynch’s Investment Style (LINK)

CAN YOU PICK THE GUYS WHO PICK THE GUYS WHO PICK THE BEST STOCKS? - by Jason Zweig (LINK)

Nine Lessons From Third Avenue's Liquidation - by Mohamed A. El-Erian (LINK)

Financial Backtesting: A Cautionary Tale (LINK)

Jordan’s Furniture brings Buffett, ziplines and hooplah to New Haven [H/T Linc] (LINK)

Can Nikesh Arora Make Softbank the Berkshire Hathaway of Tech? (LINK)

How Elon Musk and Y Combinator Plan to Stop Computers From Taking Over (LINK)

TED Talk - Paul Greenberg: The four fish we're overeating -- and what to eat instead (video) (LINK)
Related book: Four Fish: The Future of the Last Wild Food
I've posted some quotes from the book Men and Rubber: The Story of Business in the past, and have some more planned in the future. While I still recommend the entire book if you can find a copy for a reasonable price, I did notice that there now appears to also be an abridged audio version out for those interested, HERE. The same is true of the book Be My Guest by Conrad Hilton, though there are plenty of cheap, used copies available of that entire book. 

Monday, December 7, 2015

Links

If you haven't bought one yet and are interested, Max Olson has set up a print-on-demand link for the hardcover version of the Berkshire Hathaway Letters to Shareholders (LINK)

What does Charlie Munger mean when he says that something is a lollapalooza? (LINK)
Related book: Charlie Munger: The Complete Investor
Peter Lynch, 25 Years Later: It’s Not Just ‘Invest in What You Know’ [H/T Will] (LINK)
Related books: One Up On Wall StreetBeating the Street
Valeant, Short Selling, and the Too-Hard Pile (LINK)

Sohn London Conference Notes 2015 (LINK)

Roger Lowenstein talks to Barry Ritholtz on the Masters in Business podcast (LINK)
Related book: America's Bank: The Epic Struggle to Create the Federal Reserve
Robert Shiller: Don’t Assume a Fed Action Will Move the Market (LINK)

Planet Money Podcast: How Four Drinking Buddies Saved Brazil (LINK)

Exponent podcast discussing when disruption theory is useful — and when it isn’t (LINK)

Short-lived fish may hold clues to human ageing (LINK)

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Monday, October 5, 2015

Peter Lynch quote

From One Up On Wall Street:
"If I had to choose a great single fallacy of investing, it's believing that when a stock's price goes up, then you've made a good investment."

Monday, September 28, 2015

Pay attention to mistakes of omission, but don't suffer over them.

From a learning perspective, paying attention to mistakes of omission is useful, but it's also important to keep the right attitude and not let "missing out" affect they way you do things going forward. I've recently re-read some excerpts from both Peter Lynch and Charlie Munger that say it about as well as it can be said... 

From Charlie Munger (via Tren Griffin):
"The most extreme mistakes in Berkshire’s history have been mistakes of omission. We saw it, but didn’t act on it. They’re huge mistakes — we’ve lost billions. And we keep doing it. We’re getting better at it. We never get over it. There are two types of mistakes [of omission]: 1) doing nothing; what Warren calls “sucking my thumb” and 2) buying with an eyedropper things we should be buying a lot of." 
"It’s important to review your past stupidities so you are less likely to repeat them, but I’m not gnashing my teeth over it or suffering or enduring it. I regard it as perfectly normal to fail and make bad decisions."
And one of Peter Lynch's "The Twelve Silliest (and Most Dangerous) Things People Say About Stock Prices" in One Up On Wall Street:
LOOK AT ALL THE MONEY I’VE LOST: I DIDN’T BUY IT!  
We’d all be much richer today if we’d put all our money into Crown, Cork, and Seal at 50 cents a share (split-adjusted)! But now that you know this, open your wallet and check your latest bank statement. You’ll notice the money’s still there. In fact, you aren’t a cent poorer than you were a second ago, when you found out about the great fortune you missed in Crown, Cork, and Seal.  
This may sound like a ridiculous thing to mention, but I know that some of my fellow investors torture themselves every day by perusing the “ten biggest winners on the New York Stock Exchange” and imagining how much money they’ve lost by not having owned them. The same thing happens with baseball cards, jewelry, furniture, and houses. 
Regarding somebody else’s gains as your own personal losses is not a productive attitude for investing in the stock market. In fact, it can only lead to total madness. The more stocks you learn about, the more winners you realize that you’ve missed, and soon enough you’re blaming yourself for losses in the billions and trillions. If you get out of stocks entirely and the market goes up 100 points in a day, you’ll be waking up and muttering: “I’ve just suffered a $110 billion setback.” 
The worst part about this kind of thinking is that it leads people to try to play catch up by buying stocks they shouldn’t buy, if only to protect themselves from losing more than they’ve already “lost.” This usually results in real losses.

Friday, September 25, 2015

A fast-growing company doesn’t necessarily have to belong to a fast-growing industry..

From Peter Lynch in One Up On Wall Street:
THE FAST GROWERS 
These are among my favorite investments: small, aggressive new enterprises that grow at 20 to 25 percent a year. If you choose wisely, this is the land of the 10- to 40-baggers, and even the 200-baggers. With a small portfolio, one or two of these can make a career. 
A fast-growing company doesn’t necessarily have to belong to a fast-growing industry. As a matter of fact, I’d rather it didn’t, as you’ll see in Chapter 8. All it needs is the room to expand within a slow-growing industry. Beer is a slow-growing industry, but Anheuser-Busch has been a fast grower by taking over market share, and enticing drinkers of rival brands to switch to theirs. The hotel business grows at only 2 percent a year, but Marriott was able to grow 20 percent by capturing a larger segment of that market over the last decade.  
The same thing happened to Taco Bell in the fast-food business, Walmart in the general store business, and The Gap in the retail clothing business. These upstart enterprises learned to succeed in one place, and then to duplicate the winning formula over and over, mall by mall, city by city. The expansion into new markets results in the phenomenal acceleration in earnings that drives the stock price to giddy heights.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Peter Lynch quote

From Beating the Street:
Buying a cyclical after several years of record earnings and when the P/E ratio has hit a low point is a proven method for losing half of your money in a short period of time.