Monthly Archive for August, 2008

News Corp’s Wide Moat

MagicDiligence makes the case that Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp is a wide moat media company that is offering supreme value:

News Corp is one of the largest and most diversified media conglomerates worldwide. The company’s diversification covers both product line and geography. The lion’s share of sales come from it’s 20th Century Fox movie studio, it’s FOX television network, and the growing array of cable television channels such as Fox News, FX, and Fox Sports Network (or FSN). Recently, News Corp has also made a move into business media, purchasing Dow Jones (the publisher of The Wall Street Journal) and launching the Fox Business Network to compete with CNBC. The diversification doesn’t stop here, however. News Corp also owns SKY Italia, a direct broadcast satellite network in Italy, book publisher HarperCollins (one of the largest English language publishers worldwide), the Star TV network in Asia, several newspapers primarily in the U.K. and Australia, many well known websites such as MySpace.com and IGN, and so on. The full list of News Corp’s businesses takes several pages in the 10-K!

Please read the full article. Also, one should be reassured by value investor Seth Klarman owning a very large stake in News Corp. Its Klarman’s second largest holding taking up about 9.3% of his entire portfolio.

Disclosure: I own News Corp stock

Sukiyaki Western Django

A Japanese Spaghetti Western? The NYT describes Sukiyaki Western Django as “Sergio Leone Meets Reservoir Dog in Japanese Pastiche.

“Sukiyaki Western Django,” the latest offering from the protean and prolific Japanese director Takashi Miike, is a feast for genre fetishists, a loving and lurid pastiche of the spaghetti westerns that were themselves lurid pastiches of classic Hollywood cowboy pictures. It is fitting that the honorary master of ceremonies at this film-geek orgy is Quentin Tarantino, dean of the international film-geek fraternity, who elegantly disembowels a snake in the opening scene and who appears later to fill in some plot holes and speak in bizarrely accented English.

The film title itself alludes to the original Django, directed by the other Sergio, Sergio Corbucci (not Leone). Django spawned over 30 sequels, with only one being official.

Financial Crisis Is Absent From Candidates’ Agendas

For the past year, I have been bombarded with a steady stream of dire news and various statistics showing worst declines in decades. Bear Stearns and IndyMac have fallen and several huge financial institutions seem to be teetering, yet Bloomberg reports that neither of the political parties are addressing the current financial crises:

The U.S. is facing the worst financial crisis since the Depression. You would never know that from the Democrats’ platform in Denver or its Republican counterpart, or from listening to Barack Obama or John McCain.

While both candidates have bemoaned the ravages of the subprime crisis, they have yet to spell out steps for tackling it, such as using taxpayer money to shore up banks and housing.

“They fail to come to grips with the biggest danger that is going to hit the next president in his first few months in office: the crisis in the capital markets,” said David Smick, a Washington-based consultant to hedge funds and author of “The World is Curved: Hidden Dangers to the Global Economy.”

The Democrats’ platform, adopted at their Denver convention this week, labels the crisis a “debacle” and promises to jump-start the economy with a $50 billion stimulus package. It says nothing about helping banks or bailing out the mortgage-finance firms Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

The draft of the Republicans’ plank, to be adopted next week at their convention in St. Paul, Minnesota, supports “timely and carefully targeted aid to those hurt by the housing crisis” and opposes bailouts of private financial institutions. It doesn’t mention Fannie and Freddie.

The lack of attention to what has happened in the financial world in the past year most likely shows that this is not a winning political issue or that lots of people don’t really know what’s going on in the first place. I think this lack of attention is a serious mistake. Refusing to address and publicize the problems that gave rise to the crises decreases the likelihood that these problems will be solved in the future.

Choosing Stocks Over CDs

Bloggingstocks writes about ten stocks that are better than CDs. There are two separate posts: this one and this one. Most of them are related to the energy sector, a couple of banks, and one consumer discretionary pick.

However, if you feel safe trusting your money with WaMu, they are offering 5% for a 12 month CD in an environment where few banks are offering more than 4.25%.

The Uselessnes of Experts

I just finished reading Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets by William Bonner and Lila Rajiva. The authors are pretty staunch libertarians, which means they like gold, dislike fiat currencies, dislike George W. nearly as much as they dislike Stalin, rail against the so-called “wisdom of crowds”, etc., etc.

Despite these divergent views, I liked the book because it was very well-written. The authors opined on a multitude of topics in definitively witty manner. There were a bunch of great metaphors used to highlight the absurdity of human nature and the ease with which man can compound public spectacles and make a fool out of himself.

Two examples…

About investment newsletter business, the authors write, “If you really want to appreciate the media, though, you have to get close enough to see how things work—like a prairie dog peering into a hay bailor—but not so close that you get caught up in it yourself. The newsletter business is perfect; it is a part of the media, but no one would mistake it for the most respectable part.”

On conflicting desires: “Watching a fat man with the keen eye of a zoologist observing a species of dumb animal, you would come to the conclusion that losing weight is not his primary concern. He also desires other things—such as Krispy Kreme donuts and Aunt Jemima’s pancakes. The two desires, he knows as well as you do are incompatible. It is his preferences you see in his waste size, not his desire for weight loss.”

So, getting to main topic of this post, which is the uselessness of experts and efforts to predict the future as it relates to investing. Physiologically, the human brain was not designed for the complex world in which we live today. The authors write, “In order to think, people are forced to start simplifying and eliminating a lot of the detail. They have to abstract…theorize…generalize.” Though the heuristics of our brains are extremely useful in helping simplify a complex world to a point where we can understand it, I feel that simplification does not necessarily lead to good results or accurate predictions.

Because modern society “forces human beings to interact in groups far larger than their brains can handle effectively”, individuals will seek out the experts in hopes of gaining some sort of guidance in their lives. But the experts seem to be no good. The authors cite the work of political psychologist Philip Tetlock, who conducted a 20-year study of 287 political experts whom he asked a range of questions: “Would there be a nonviolent end to apartheid in South Africa? Would the United States go to war in the Persian Gulf? Would Canada disintegrate?”

Tetlock found that these experts were terrible in their predictions. Even more amazingly, “specializing” in a field of knowledge tended to make for worse predictions. The moral of the story here is that there is that the law of diminishing returns applies to knowledge and learning. The authors write, “Too much knowledge can actually trip you up, because it gets enlisted on behalf of your favorite hunches—or fears—instead of being evaluated objectively.” Lay persons are just as good as the experts at making predictions.

So, in relation to investing, one cannot and should not hope to achieve perfect or near-perfect knowledge of a company or potential investment. Time spent trying to gain near-perfect konwledge is inevitably a waste and would have been better spent in evaluating several other companies that you feel might be presenting a bargain. Furthermore, I am even more convinced that attempts at predicting the future are clearly a waste of time and a needless source of worry.

Who Wants a Hummer?

How is GM going to sell its Hummer brand? Who would be willing to buy it? I can’t help but think there are only two types of people who would want to own a Hummer: the rich or the insane. Or perhaps some combination of both. According to the WSJ (look at the link above):

The potential sale of the Hummer brand would be a minor part of GM’s plan to raise the $15 billion in additional liquidity by the end of 2009 that it needs to remain viable during a significant slowdown for the entire U.S. auto industry. GM will trim costs, pledge assets for new financing and sell assets to raise the needed cash.

Mr. Wagoner said Thursday that capital markets “have not opened up robustly” and are “moving in fits and starts.” He noted that GM anticipated the tough environment when it laid out its $15 billion liquidity plan.

How is GM even capable of raising $15 billion? The only thing going for GM is its long history in America. But, judging by its “next-generation of small cars” such as the Chevy Cruze,

things look good for GM if it can remain solvent. I have to admit I like the looks of this car, especially the Euro license plate.

Nearly Four Months Since Reading Graham

I read and studied Graham’s Intelligent Investor nearly 4 months ago. After gaining a good overview of the value investor philosophy, I decided to keep track of some attractive stocks I deemed to have a decent margin of safety. I used Tickerspy to track the stocks. I used Tickerspy because there’s nothing fancy about it—no need to decide about how many shares to purchase, it just puts an equal weight upon each stock pick.

Thus far, my portfolio has gained 25.2% versus the S&P500 (the blue line is my portfolio and the dotted gray line is the S&P).

The two essential elements to the initial success of this portfolio are (1) choosing undervalued stocks and (2) the concentrated nature of the portfolio. Not too bad for just four months, but its still too soon to say whether I could achieve similar long-term performance.

Another reason to be hesitant regarding the success of this portfolio is that it doesn’t necessarily mean I am a good stock picker in real life. I probably would not have made the same decisions if I had been using my own money in a real-life portfolio. Perhaps I would have been more conservative with my choices and allocations of capital, which would have affected my returns. The decisions people make can vary greatly depending on whether their own money is on the line.

Inflation or No Inflation?

Mish has listed some good reasons for why there is no cause for inflation fears. If a global slowdown is awaiting us in the future, this of course would mean that commodities and materials would continue their fall in prices.

However, at the moment, its difficult to see what appears to be great opportunities in the energy-related sectors. One stock that I’ve been eying is closed-end fund Tortoise North American Energy Corporation (TYN).

Recently, TYN has been trading at a steep discount to its NAV. For the past couple of weeks TYN has traded at 15-20% discount. I’m fairly certain the large increase of the discount to NAV is due to the large commodities correction: people simply wanted out of TYN. Also, TYN’s price has visited an all-time low and it has a very good distribution rate of 8.14%.

I believe TYN would be a good target for an activist like Bulldog Investors or Western Investment for the simple reason that TYN has traded at a steep discount since its inception in 2005. If an activist investor were to become interested in closing this large discount, I think hedging would be relatively easy.

The Commodities Correction

All commodities have experienced a large, much-needed correction. Oil, energy, metals, food; all the basic materials. The dollar has made a large move up. However, I’m not certain that we are at the beginning of a strengthening dollar just yet. I still believe America has a large inflation problem. Though there seems to be more evidence of global growth slowing down, which would bring down the price of commodities and materials down even more, I think now is a good time to take advantage of the dollar and commodities correction.

Here’s a chart of the Euro versus the US dollar:

There may or may not be further downside for the Euro. I’m guessing the dollar will weaken again over the next six months.

Here’s a chart of the gold ETF:

Gold usually increases along with inflation and oil. If we’ve got an rising inflation and oil, gold will go up.

Here’s a chart of the price of platinum:

I particularly like the prospects for platinum. I recently purchased some Jan. 2010 calls on Stillwater Mining (SWC), the only US producer of platinum and palladium. With many good reasons to expect a continuation of a commodities bull market, and this recent large correction, I felt the time was right to make such a purchase.

Turning Electricity Directly Into Sunlight

The New York Times reports on the building of two large solar power plants by California. Of particular interest to me was a new type of photovoltaic technology, which apparently can turn electricity directly into sunlight.

This might be just an editing error. A funny one.

Or maybe I am sorely mistaken about how solar technology works?