Sunday, April 30, 2023

Fire Drill - Weekly Blog # 782

 



Mike Lipper’s Monday Morning Musings


Fire Drill:

On board ships and in schools, why not in investing?

 

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

 

 

 

Any Smoke?

Implications: US stock index returns are almost normal for the full year if we use the year-to-date performance of the Dow Jones Industrial Average +7.16% and the S&P 500 +8.14%. Even the NASDAQ +18.64% is representative of a good speculative year, perhaps benefitting from short covering. The VIX indicator is almost asleep at 15.76, compared to 30 in past mildly troubling times.

 

There are some whiffs of smoke in the air, including a continuing 2 to 10-year yield inversion spread of 4.08% - 3.45%. Updating one of the oldest technical indicators with a more modern twist. In the latest week the 30-stock DJIA had 20 stocks rising to 10 declining, but the 20 transports split 6/14. (In the original Dow Theory, it was only the rails in the index. Today the number of rails has dropped, and a number of airlines, trucks, and other transportation securities have been added.) This could be significant if the normal buyers of rails, which are freight driven, are looking for future declines. 


Another group that appears to be worried are the CEOs of traditional financial services companies. The latest to announce a 10% layoff from both their investment banking and investment management functions was Lazard. (Mid-market M&A industry revenues hit a 9-year low in the first quarter.)

 

Publishers Note

The popular distinction between a recession and a depression is your neighbor losing his job in a recession and you losing yours in a depression. It can be helpful to explore the possible roads to a depression by focusing on the needs of securities analysts regarding layoffs. In focusing on the way companies handle layoffs, they should first be aware of the lost art of making money from bankruptcies. All too often layoffs are the first act of self-inflicted worsening conditions. Since they don’t teach about surviving bankruptcies today, they are unequipped to adequately analyze layoffs. (I admit the thought came to me in a recent meeting with the Dean of an upcoming Business School, where there are no classes on bankruptcies.) 


While a Columbia College undergraduate I was privileged to take Securities Analysis from Professor David Dodd, who was both an academic and investment partner with Benjamin Graham. David Dodd collaborated in producing the seminal work on Securities Analysis based on their experiences in the 1920s and 30s. It occurred to me that the whole basis for the course was the knowledge necessary for those who’d lived through the depression. This knowledge could be important in the coming era, and I will consequently devote the rest of this blog to the types of things one should look for prior to and during such a period.

 

The Fixed Income World is Different

There are two critical differences between fixed income and equity.

  1. The first is the legal relationship. Fixed income is a contractual relationship with an initial investment, periodic payments, maturity, and rank in the order of payments in a bankruptcy.
  2. Owners of fixed income securities are expected to be paid a pre-determined amount of interest and pre-payments of principal, as well as a final payment.


If payments are not delivered as promised, the default process is governed by the issuing documents. Things change dramatically when a bankruptcy begins. All debts immediately come due, sourced from the potential sale of all assets. Debts are paid in priority order, as specified in the issuing documents.

 

However, compromises are often made to get agreement from the holders of different classes of claims. This helps expedite payments rather than having to endure long, expensive court hearings. The size of the payments is a function of the price paid for the assets, less the costs of the sale. The cost of the sale includes the cost of highly specialized attorneys, accountants, and other experts.

 

Fixed income securities rights and privileges are senior to common stock rights. Owners of common stock will probably be wiped out, as there is generally no additional money to pay out after the senior debt holders have been paid. However, to avoid long and expensive court battles by equity owners, they will often be awarded a small amount of a subsequent new equity class.

 

What is a Bankruptcy Worth

Up to this time the focus has been on the current appraised value, usually in a quick liquidation. To the extent there is a belief that a “going concern” will survive bankruptcy, a different kind of analysis is needed based on the current use of the assets and their user in the future.

 

Growing up in Manhattan there were neighborhood cigar stores on many commercial street corners. They were good business in the late 1920s and became less good as time went on. By the early 1940s those businesses had effectively died. A chain of these went bankrupt, but their stock went up in price!!! The reason for this was that these stores were on busy corners and had long-term leases. A classic case of being worth more dead than alive.

 

There were a couple of cases of railroads who lost lots of money throughout the depression and went bankrupt. However, a couple of sharp investors saw a similar situation, as the railroads had considerable land along their right-of-way. In the WWII expansion of plants and military camps, these lands and their proximity to the rails became very valuable.

 

The unfortunate attitude of too many of today’s analysts and portfolio managers is that “value” is found on the published financial statements. To them, stock selling at a discount to book value is a bargain. In truth, book value is a collection of unamortized assets not written off. Because of changes in the market for a company’s products, the use of their facilities is less than their original purpose. For example, strip shopping malls in poor locations today.

 

What is not reflected in the financial reports are the developed new products, self-generated patents, a good sales force, key employees, etc. These are the types of assets we look for as investments.

 

The items mentioned in the last paragraph are critical in evaluating various layoffs. To the extent the layoff managers husband these types of assets I am not concerned, but if they are shedding valuable assets I am.

 

 

How Do You Evaluate Layoffs of Owned Stocks?

 

 

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

Mike Lipper's Blog: Early Stages of a New Grand Cycle? - Weekly Blog # 781

Mike Lipper's Blog: Pre, Premature Wish - Weekly Blog # 780

Mike Lipper's Blog: 3 PROBLEM TOPICS: Current Market, Portfolios, and Ukraine- Weekly Blog # 779

 

 

 

Did someone forward you this blog?

To receive Mike Lipper’s Blog each Monday morning, please subscribe by emailing me directly at AML@Lipperadvising.com

 

Copyright © 2008 – 2023

Michael Lipper, CFA

 

All rights reserved.

 

Contact author for limited redistribution permission.

No comments: