Showing posts with label endowments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label endowments. Show all posts

Sunday, April 27, 2025

A Contrarian Starting to Worry - Weekly Blog # 886

 

 

Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings

 

A Contrarian Starting to Worry

 

Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018

 

                             

 

Misleading Financial Statements

First quarter earnings reports, led by financials, are generally positive. Good news if maintained often leads to rising stock prices, which is not what at least one contrarian is expecting. Nevertheless, comments and actions by decision makers at various levels highlighted those worries in April.

  • In the wealth management industry, one is seeing an increase in smart firms selling out at good prices. These firms are being paid by companies who believe they need to bulk up rather than do what they do best.
  • Some endowments and retirement plans are shifting to less aggressive investments or passive strategies, suggesting the intermediate future appears riskier.
  • Buyers of industrial goods or materials are paying less than they were a year ago. The ECRI price index is down 8.08% over the last year.
  • Active individual investors, or their managers, are predicting a worsening picture in the next six months. The American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) sample survey’s latest reading shows the bulls at 21.9% compared to 25.4% a week earlier.
  • In April, 48% of businesses announced reduced profit expectations, compared with 33% in March. More concerning, 41% lowered their hiring expectations, versus 29% the month before.
  • Fewer Americans are planning to take vacations this year. Those planning to take one are using their credit cards less, said American Express and Capital One.

We may get some useful commentary next weekend from the new Berkshire Hathaway Saturday annual shareholders meeting format. The somewhat shorter Berkshire meeting with different speakers maybe cause a day’s delay in sending out the weekly blog.

Since the middle of the last century, we have seen a growing concentration of investment firms and banks. In the first quarter of this year, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, and Citi were involved with 94% of global mergers & acquisitions (M&A). With more structural changes likely to be caused by modifications in trade, tariffs, taxes, and currencies, the odds favor continued concentration. This concentration may well lead to increased volatility and a reduced number of competent financial personnel throughout the global economy. This is unlikely to make investing easier for some of us.

 

Question: Can you show us a bullish point of view where we can invest for future generations?      

 

 

 

Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.

Mike Lipper's Blog: Generally Good Holy Week + Future Clues - Weekly Blog # 885

Mike Lipper's Blog: An Uneasy Week with Long Concerns - Weekly Blog # 884

Mike Lipper's Blog: Short Term Rally Expected + Long Term Odds - Weekly Blog # 883



 

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A. Michael Lipper, CFA

 

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Sunday, October 31, 2021

Securities Analysis as Taught Leads to Volatility - Weekly Blog # 705

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Securities Analysis as Taught Leads to Volatility


Editors: Frank Harrison 1997-2018, Hylton Phillips-Page 2018 –




The long-term history of making money in the market is not  following the majority  with their money. In simple terms, choosing not to conform with what others are doing. Winning in the market means converting some of the wealth of others, often the majority, to our own. This maneuver requires using different approaches and tools than others use.

 

Sector Bets Fail to Produce Top Results

The academic course on Securities Analysis is taught as a companion course to accounting, or worse, macro-economics. Both work on past history and have precious little to do with future movements of companies, stocks, or economies. More useful studies would instead focus on profits and securities. 

All too often securities selection processes screen for companies which appear to be in the same industry, as measured by misleading government data. As a junior analyst I was assigned the steel industry. I quickly discovered that although the number of steel companies was small, it was a mixed bag of companies. You could divide the group by the location of their headquarters and proximity to critical resources, usually coal, or to a growing customer base. In this case an investor did far better with Inland Steel, based in steel-short Chicago, rather than in Pittsburg and West Virginia coal country. 

Another worthwhile distinction was the cost and quality of labor. In the early days of the externalization of producing payrolls, commercial banks were prominent. However, overtime they lost market share and eventually lost the entire market to independent payroll service providers who provided better services. They provided more help filing payroll tax returns and offered lower prices, due to their labor not being paid bank-type overhead. Today the payroll market is dominated by service companies with extensive and modern computer systems, which are good at servicing. (Our accounts own ADP.)

A final example is computers. Many of the large industrial companies manufactured the early computers, the biggest and best being IBM, a stock my grandparents owned. The key to their success was not only adequate technology, but superior leasing prices and great sales engineers. IBM’s top salesman regularly presented to Wall Street and was a missionary sales person. However, the industry changed from massive main frames taking up large airconditioned rooms, to desktop personal computers whose parts could be produced in low-cost regions of the world and could be assembled elsewhere. 

Dell started out by taking customer orders for computers which could be customize and air shipped to customers. Today, many believe Apple (owned in our accounts) is the leading company. This is the result of the late Steve Jobs’ focus on style and ease of use. His most important achievement however was handpicking his successor, Tim Cook, an expert known for supply management and development. What relatively few investors appreciate is its global network of Apple Stores and a growing mail order business generating repeat business, essentially building its own annuity business. (Remember, US automakers had market level price/earnings ratios when customers replaced cars every three years with newer models.)

Less popular ways of analyzing securities included: 

  • Paying more attention to insufficient supply than excess demand.
  • Focusing on differences in manufacturing approaches and costs.
  • Understanding the personalities of key operational people vs known leaders and their educational biases.


We Don’t Create Winners, Losers Do

No matter how prescient and bright we are, to have great results we need others to create attractive entry prices and unreasonably excessive exit prices. Utilizing these as working assumptions, I am getting nervous about the flow of institutional and individual money in private equity/debt (private capital). For many years there were more good private companies offering participation in their attractive futures than potential investors. They attracted investors with relatively low entry prices. 

Recently we have seen a reversal, with a huge flows of institutional and individual money seeking to exit the public markets and enter the private markets. By definition, entry prices either directly rose or the firms had to carry senior debt prior to generating private capital returns. There is so much reversal of traditional roles that one of the oldest buyout firms, with a great long-term record, is converting some of their US and European investments to a publicly traded fund. For some of its investments Sequoia is trading up in liquidity.

One of the disturbing concerns in the privates market is the number of new advisers that have entered the market. They have increased the number of funds and are spreading the investment talent more thinly. In response, T. Rowe Price, an experienced investor in privates, is buying an existing manager to get the necessary talent in an increasingly competitive market. (Owned in Financial Services Fund accounts)

A number of well-known university and institutional portfolios have announced performance in excess of 40% for the fiscal year ended June 30. Some are probably reporting private investments with at least a quarter’s lag. (My guess is performance for the year ended March was better than the year ended June 30.) Most investors did not do as well and consequently some are likely to pile into an overheated private market with scarce investment talent. The history of investment returns is that it is extremely rare to find a manager who can consistently return over 20%, which is roughly three times the growth of industrial profits. The organizations that reported 40%+ profits undoubtedly benefitted from lower entry prices and better terms than is currently on offer. 

I am a long-term member of the investment committee of Caltech, an internally managed investment account with a talented staff. They have put a cap on their exposure to buyouts and venture capital. I applaud this decision because of the history of hedge fund performance. It shows that even very good hedge funds suffer when a minority of hedge funds experience serious liquidity problems. This was in part because of debt, but some of their holdings were also owned by trading interests desperate to liquidate some of their excessively leveraged holdings created by falling prices. This is a classic example of others causing some investors to have poor results.

Moody’s is also concerned about the rapid growth of inexperienced managers offering private capital vehicles. The credit-rater was criticized for the exponential growth of CMOs. (Moody’s recovered, and just this week was selling at a record stock price. Moody’s is owned in our managed and personal accounts.)


Historical Odds of Equity Bear Market

There is wisdom in the saying that history does not repeat (exactly), but rhymes. The ebb and flow of markets are driven by emotional excesses, with investors reacting to various stimuluses. I previously mentioned a successful pension fund manager liquidating his equity portfolio after it gained 20% in a calendar year, reinvesting the proceeds at the beginning of the next year. He produced a record absent of large losses, with reasonably good gains on the upside.

We may be approaching a “rhyming event”. I feel more confident taking a contradictory view when it is supported by large scale numbers. The US Diversified Equity Funds (USDE) have combined total net assets of $12.4 Trillion, representing 2/3rds of the aggregate assets in equity funds. According to my old firm’s weekly report, the year-to-date average gain was +21.01%, vs a 3-year average gain of +19.21%, and a 5-year average of +16.76%. More concerning is only 4 of the 18 separate investment objectives within the USDE bucket produced over 20% 5-year annualized growth rates. Of the 14 Sector Equity funds, only 2 grew +20%, and only the World Sector Fund average gained 20%+. At the individual fund level, only 3 of the 25 largest funds produced 20% growth rates. During the same 5-year period, the average taxable fixed income fund gained 3.34%, and the average high yield bond fund grew 5.47%.

Recently, a number of endowments reported gains of over 40% for their June Fiscal years, driven by successful private equity/venture capital investments. Some of these private investments were reported on a logged basis. Remember, in many cases they had spectacular performance through March, and have been relatively flat since then.

The cyclical nature of human emotions suggests that when earnings growth does not support lofty valuations, we are likely to have a “rhyming event”.


What do you think? 




Did you miss my blog last week? Click here to read.

https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/10/are-we-listening-as-history-is.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/10/guessing-what-too-quiet-stock-markets.html


https://mikelipper.blogspot.com/2021/10/what-is-problem-weekly-blog-702.html




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Copyright © 2008 - 2020


A. Michael Lipper, CFA

All rights reserved.


Contact author for limited redistribution permission.


Sunday, May 22, 2016

Investment Selection: “Horses for Courses”



Introduction

Each tool has its best single application. Each investment strategy has its best single application. In a similar fashion horse racing professional handicappers have often stated that there are "horses for courses." Meaning certain horses run better at certain race tracks than others. The most productive implementations of these choices are often the function of changed conditions from the immediate past.

As fund performance analysts and investment managers we have been urged to proclaim that past performance does not guarantee future results. Nevertheless all too many institutional and individual investors use past performance and particularly recent past performance as their primary selection screen. Many have taken this to the ultimate decision by investing the bulk of their money in Index funds.

The source of much of my analytical thinking came from handicapping horses races which is what track aficionados call analysis. The daily Bible reading for handicappers is the Daily Racing Form, (in  my day it was the Morning Telegraph.) In these pages the racing record of each horse is shown. From an analytical standpoint what I find of greater value than number of winning races are the conditions of the race to include which track, distance, time of the winner, time of the particular horse, weight carried relative to others, training times and conditions,  plus the names of the sire, dam, and sire of the dam and finally the conditions of the track. Professional analysts and portfolio managers can translate these factors into various selection screens in picking stocks, managers, and funds.

Selecting Investment Strategies for Different Portfolios

When choosing a bet in a race it is wise to start looking at the most popular which is called the favorite. The favorite is based on the most money being bet, not necessarily the horse that has the highest probability of winning. At the track and around the Investment Committee table most decisions are based on avoiding embarrassing losses, not optimizing the chances of large winnings.

The way I handle this challenge is not to bet on each race or every stock that is currently performing well. This tends to produce fairly concentrated portfolios of stocks, managers, and funds. The long-term (but evolving) focus is on a high aggregate dollar win/loss ratio. If you will, I am describing a contrarian bettor. However, as a contrarian, I should not disregard the weight of money bet on the favorite. This is even more true in investing than at the track because by definition popular stocks attract cash flow. In the short-term some investors can make them appear to be right.

Understanding the Investment Favorites

According to Moody’s* “Globally 10% of all public companies account for 80% of all profits.” Therefore these companies have less credit risk for their bonds. Also, almost by definition, they are large capitalization equities. With the goal of reducing the chances of losses, most investors prefer large-cap stocks or funds. This is particularly true for endowments. 

Endowments are one of the four TIMESPAN L PORTFOLIOS®, and depending upon on the needs of the account can be aggressively or conservatively invested.  Many of the standard endowment portfolio managers are getting frustrated as it has been a year on Monday since the S&P500 has hit a new high, and for the last four weeks the DJIA has been declining. (Perhaps there is some validity to the pre-air conditioning ditty of “Sell in May and go away.”)

The frustrated investors, the media pundits, and the various sales forces have not been paying attention to Charlie Munger, Warren Buffett, and their two investment associates. As a group, Berkshire Hathaway* has been selective long-term buyers of stocks and companies. As the oracles of Omaha have often said, they like declining markets for their long-term holdings. Despite what they recommend for others, they are not buying an S&P 500 Index, they are selectively buying a small collection of Large, Mid, and Small-Cap stocks.

I believe that size does not define a stock as a good investment, but due to size many stocks have increasing difficulty making progress. (This does not mean that investors are blind to the attractiveness of some Large-Caps in their recent purchases of Apple*, IBM, and Wells Fargo*.) One of the reasons that they are more active now than when there is more enthusiasm in the market is Charlie Munger’s belief that is wise to buy a good company at a reasonable price rather than a less good company at a good price.

Applying Betting Principles to The Preakness

In a postscript to my blog that commented on The Kentucky Derby,  I urged bettors not to bet on its winner to Win the second race of the Triple Crown for 3 year-olds. I suggested to find a good Place bet. (A Place bet pays off if the horse comes in first or second, a Show bet pays off if the horse comes in first, second or  third. The pool  of money that is used to payoff winning bets is divided into three parts for a Show ticket, two parts for a Place ticket and one part for the Winning ticket.  Thus it is normal that winning tickets pay more than Place tickets and Place tickets pay more than Show tickets.) I felt the dollar odds would be larger if the Derby winner came in first. This was before I knew that the track would be muddy on Saturday, and based on past experience was an advantage to the eventual winner. Racing luck and jockey skill  produced the result. Regardless of the change in track conditions, my suggestion to make a Place bet on a non-favorite was valid.  On a money basis a $2 Place bet paid $3.20 whereas the favorite, which came in third, paid $2.20.

*Stock owned in a managed private financial services fund and/or personally.

Question of the Week: What methods do you use when investing in Large-Caps and Small-Caps?
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Copyright © 2008 - 2016
A. Michael Lipper, C.F.A.,
All Rights Reserved.
Contact author for limited redistribution permission.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Some Endowments are about to Follow the Strategies of the Pentagon and the Old UK War Office to their Detriment


In a recent poll conducted by SEI (NASDAQ:SEIC) of US non-profits and endowments, 46% of responses indicated that volatility has had a high or extremely high impact on their investment strategies. The solution chosen by about half of these groups was to increase their illiquid holdings. Typically these choices were private equities and commodities.

Three concerns
 
I have at least three concerns with the currently preferred solutions for those institutions that are chartered for long-term or eternal uses. The first is that I believe almost all of life is cyclical. Almost every culture recognizes the regular changes of seasons and that good and bad times are occasionally bunched. Considering we have had a twelve year period of flat equity markets combined with perhaps a thirty year period of rising bond values, I believe we are due for a significant change in direction; with the values of stocks rising and those of high quality bonds declining. Because I serve on the boards of several non-profits as well as managing money for a few, I am conscious of the pressure from those board members who are focused on operations and grant-making rather than meeting the long-term needs of the institution. Further along in this post I will offer a strategic answer to these concerns.

My second concern is the current growth in the appeal of private equity investing. Generally this means subscribing to various private equity funds, usually with lengthy periods of lock-ups (no redemptions), and often with the requirement to make additional cash contributions. Historically some of these funds have done brilliantly. They have done so well that not only have they raised new money, but their success has caused others within the winning groups to start new funds and new fund organizations. We are even seeing new funds managed by some of the younger partners from the premier groups. Thus we have a situation today with a number of funds having more cash than they have immediate opportunities. Often this has led to higher entry prices and/or rushed decision-making. These are largely tactical considerations. A more basic strategic hurdle is at variance from the somewhat bearish views of those trustees questioning a long-term rising stock market. Keep in mind that the brilliant record from the past is based on exits from these portfolios, largely through the IPO (Initial Public Offer). What really appeals to certain investment committees of non-profits is the tradition of marking these holdings at their purchase price unless there is a transaction that takes place that causes the manager of the fund to write-off some of the value. This artificial expression of value does not represent the reality that every company gets better or worse on almost a daily basis. However the auditors will not allow the reporting of these changes unless there is a transaction. While this restriction is understandable, it does not truly recognize what is actually happening. For smaller and less experienced institutions, I would not be an advocate of starting into private equity today.

My third concern is with commodities. Often an investment is approached not on the basis of short-term scarcity, but as way to protect the value of the institution’s capital from expected significant inflation. Most responsible investors are concerned that the manipulations of various central banks will kick off several rounds of inflation way beyond what the learned doctors at the central banks can effectively control. The favored commodities are timber, energy-related resources and gold. While each of these have some investment value, most of the time they will not rise in price when stocks go down in value; thus they are not effective as a direct hedge. Somewhat contrary to these cautions, I am trying to find some good managers who know what they are doing in finding partial solutions to what I perceive as very long-term problems: the twin and related shortages of food and water.

The three-part buffer strategy

I believe very few can regularly predict the market. If you can, concentrate on your own account and prevent others from ruining your timing opportunities by not publishing your holdings. As mere mortals, we don’t know the future for our responsibilities. For long-term/eternal money, we need a strategy that can weather most storms. What I recommend is a three unequal-part strategy.

The first is for an institution, or even a family, to have up to two years of expected spending invested in the highest quality short-term paper. (Strange to say, considering my aversion to what governments are doing, I prefer US Treasuries with scattered maturities up to two years.)

The second layer would be a funding vehicle to rebuild the short-term layer as the money is expended. Typically one can start the refunding mechanism at the beginning of the second year. The portfolio for the second level would be publically traded securities of high quality depending on where one is in the investment cycle (inverse to the current enthusiasm). This balanced portfolio might be 75-80% in equities recognizing that the refunding need is paramount and could lead to selling some positions at a loss.

The third layer, the long-term portfolio does not have to have substantial liquidity. Nevertheless, the long-term portfolio has to be carefully invested to derive the optimum, not maximum result.

This three-part strategy is not a ‘Maginot Line’ type of approach.  The strategy is designed to buy time in order to prudently invest the corpus of the institutions.

In the past I have written about the folly of trying to learn from previous wars in preparation of fighting future wars.  Investing is no different. 

The US Pentagon and the old UK War Office used to regularly study past wars in preparation for the next series of wars.  In contrast, I know that the US Marine Corps regularly plans for future wars that are much different than those it has recently won. Perhaps endowments should not follow the patterns of the Pentagon or the old War Office.

In prior posts I have observed that the way the brain is wired is to compare each new decision point to its collected experience. Thus, all of us can understand that we have a tendency to fight the last war brilliantly as we deal with today’s threats.

How do you structure for the future?
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