Buffett, Soros and Uncle Sam

 I recently came across an interesting piece comparing the returns of Warren Buffett and George Soros (h/t @ReformedBroker). The post immediately caught my attention, for both Buffett and Soros are two of my favorite minds in investing.  I am oversimplifying greatly, but from Buffett, I learned much about the importance of patience, quality and management integrity, while from Soros, I learned the importance of identifying self-fulfilling cycles and reflexive processes in financial markets. While some like to contrast these two gentlemen as taking opposing views to markets, I think their approaches are not mutually exclusive.  In fact, combining the lessons from these two gentlemen has been a potent force in crafting my own, unique approach to investing.

In the piece comparing the relative performance of Buffett and Soros, the author includes the following chart:

The author then asks, if “George's track record is better but Warren is richer. Why?” while offering the following answer:

The snowball of POSITIVE compounding for longer. Both were born in August 1930 and Warren ran his hedge fund from 1957 but George didn't set up his until 1969. Warren was lucky to be in Omaha while Dzjchdzhe Shorash was in Budapest, more affected by WW2. Also Warren got into currency trading and philanthropy later. George's outperformance is due to stronger international diversification and because reflexivity is ignored. Value investing is copied more than reflexivity investing. The boom bust of Eurozone sovereign credits and subprime CDOs are quintessential examples of reflexivity. Crises are PREDICTABLE. And profitable if you have expertise.

Sure some of these factors certainly played a role in Buffett’s wealth relative to Soros, though this is largely misleading and the most crucial point is ignored entirely. Simply put, these return figures are not presented on an apples to apples basis.  Buffett’s returns are presented using the growth in Berkshire Hathaway’s book value, while Soros’ returns are presented using his hedge funds’ returns.  In this comparison, the author is therefore comparing Buffett’s after-tax returns, with Soros’ pre-tax returns. (There is a second key point missed that many Buffett followers will pick up on: book value does not reflect the true realizable value of many Berkshire assets, and therefore, is understated relative to the intrinsic value of the company. While important, my intent here is to focus simply on the tax consequences so beyond this mention, I will skip digging into the consequences of this reality).

We can re-plot the relative returns of Soros and Buffett in order to more closely portray what the comparative returns would look like on an after-tax basis.  For the purposes of this comparison, I assumed that each year, 20% of Soros’ returns would be paid out in taxes.  This is obviously a simplification, and not intended to be historically accurate, as everyone has their own unique tax profile, and long and short-term trades have different consequences.  I am merely cherry-picking a number that if anything, is probably favorable to Soros in light of the following factors: 1) capital gains tax rates were higher than today’s 15% during much of the time period covered in this analysis; 2) we know that Soros profited in capital markets subject to hybrid tax rates between long and short-term capital gains (like commodity and foreign exchange markets); and, 3) from Soros’ own journal in Alchemy of Finance (which I strongly recommend reading), we know that he engaged in many short-term, speculative trades that would be subject to ordinary income tax rates.

There is a second simplification I’ve made for the purposes of this comparison in assuming that returns were earned on a straight-line basis, rather than calculating each individual’s returns per year, adjusting for taxes and plotting those out.  Again, the purpose here is to demonstrate the impact of taxes on returns, and not to be perfectly precise with who is better than whom.  

As we can see below, the end result looks quite different when compared on an after-tax basis:

 

 

Plotted this way, Buffett’s compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) remains 21.4%, while Soros’ is 21.0%.  Now some might argue that an investor in Berkshire would still have to pay taxes on his or her investment, and this is true, but the clear intent in the article cited was to compare the performance track-record of each investor as stated by the author, and as evidenced by the author’s focus on the CAGR of Berkshire’s book value, rather than the performance of the stock itself. 
One of the biggest problems with performance generally speaking is how reporting systemically does not take into account tax consequences, yet there can be huge differences between two strategies with identical “returns.”  In reality, it’s only after-tax returns that matter.  Buffett’s partner, Charlie Munger offered the following important point on targeting after-tax, rather than pre-tax returns (from Munger's "On the Art of Stock Picking"):
Another very simple effect I very seldom see discussed either by investment managers or anybody else is the effect of taxes. If you're going to buy something which compounds for 30 years at 15% per annum and you pay one 35% tax at the very end, the way that works out is that after taxes, you keep 13.3% per annum. In contrast, if you bought the same investment, but had to pay taxes every year of 35% out of the 15% that you earned, then your return would be 15% minus 35% of 15% or only 9.75% per year compounded. So the difference there is over 3.5%.And what 3.5% does to the numbers over long holding periods like 30 years is truly eye-opening. If you sit back for long, long stretches in great companies, you can get a huge edge from nothing but the way that income taxes work.

I am a fan and student of Mr. Buffett and Mr. Soros and have no bone to pick in this race, though it should be clear to all that both men’s returns are about as good as they get over such a long time-frame.  To summarize, there are two key points here that I want to emphasize.  For individual investors, it’s extremely important to plan your investments in such a way as to maximize after-tax, not pre-tax returns.  Don’t be fooled simply by the appreciation in your portfolio.  Think about what portion of your gains you are paying to Uncle Sam (taxes) come April 15th each year.  For those who work with investment managers or invest via funds, when looking at performance reports, it’s extremely important to think about what the after-tax returns of a strategy look like.

 

Disclosure: Long shares of BRK.B in my own and client accounts.

 

Beware of Mistaking a Symptom for the Cause

I know posting on this blog has been sparse of late, with the occasional promise to write more.  That will change starting shortly.  Meanwhile, while this blog has been neglected, I have been writing plenty in our commentaries at RGA Investment Advisors.  Embedded below is our Q3 2013 Commentary: "Beware of Mistaking a Symptom for the Cause."

RGA Investment Advisors Q3 2013 Commentary

The Psychology of Markets at All-Time Highs

Here is our latest market commentary from RGA Investment Advisors, taking a look at the psychology of markets trading at all-time highs.  This is an interesting moment, for it is the first time in my professional investment career that markets are in fact at highs.  This is our attempt to put things into perspective:

The Market at an All-Time High 

Last month, we pointed out the significance of all the major market indices (sans the NASDAQ) surging to record highs.  April was an interesting month in a very different way.  While the major indices digested their gains, there was absolute carnage in the commodity space.  Most notably, gold, the safe-haven of choice for investors over these last few tumultuous years, shed 7.57% on the month.  In one day alone, gold lost 9.6% of its value.  Many continue to blame the decline in gold on some sinister plot or dismiss it as a warning sign for the broader economy.  We think these explanations are far more indicative of the “religion” around gold as an asset, than it is of something meaningful for the economy; we discussed this in our February 2013 Investment Commentary.  To that end, we attribute the decline in gold to two important forces: 1) gold’s failure as a safe-haven during the worst of the Euro crisis, during which the price actually declined; and, 2) the market’s continued resilience at all-time high levels.  Today, we would like to focus on this second point and what it means for the broader investment environment.

First, a necessary digression: we are pleased to say this is the first time in the history of RGA Investment Advisors with the U.S. stock market in milestone, record high territory.  This company was founded amidst the biggest financial crisis since the Great Depression and we take pride in how we have navigated through what even the most experienced sages of market wisdom declare as one of the least forgiving, most challenging investment environments ever.  We promise both to you and ourselves that these years will serve as an important lesson in patience, strategy and humility, for we all know that while today the market giveth, it can just as easily taketh away.

We are self-reflexive at this moment because we think it’s important to be cognizant of the many emotions induced by the market over time.  Further, we constantly want to learn more about how and why the market does what it does from a behavioral perspective, and to that end, have studied the great thinkers in that arena.  One particularly intriguing school of thought is Prospect Theory, which we have introduced in commentaries past.  Investopedia defines prospect theory as “A theory that people value gains and losses differently and, as such, will base decisions on perceived gains rather than perceived losses. Thus, if a person were given two equal choices, one expressed in terms of possible gains and the other in possible losses, people would choose the former.”[1]  To that end, it is the study of how people make probabilistic decisions when there is a degree of both risk and reward, and it holds that people are more sensitive to losses than they are to gains.  In other words, the pain from losses leaves a more profound impact on the human psyche than the pleasure derived from gains.  This idea was introduced by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky in 1979 in a paper entitled Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision Under Risk[2] and has been expanded upon ever since.

A corollary of Prospect Theory is an idea known as “the disposition effect.”  This idea holds that people sell stocks that have gone up far quicker than stocks that have gone down.  The disposition effect is closely tied to the concept of “myopic loss aversion” covered in our January 2013 commentary.  Why are these ideas relevant today?  Interestingly, the disposition effect has particularly strong consequences with markets in all-time high territory, and we feel it is important to review them in light of today’s investment environment.  Since people sell gains quicker than they do losses, there is a greater propensity for selling above all-time highs than below.  Therefore, when markets are at all-time highs, selling pressure tends to increase, leading to greater portfolio turnover in Bull than Bear markets.[3] 

Drawing this out further is the important idea that loss aversion does not exist in a vacuum, and as such, there is a reflexive relationship between the success (or lack thereof) of prior decisions and the nature of present and future decisions to be made.  For the typical investor, “after prior gains, he becomes less loss averse.”[4] In other words, people are most risk-seeking after periods of success and most risk-averse after periods of failure.  Meanwhile, prudence would dictate practicing the converse.  This pendulum of risk tolerance fluctuates back and forth dependent on the most recent market action.  Collectively, these ideas relate to another concept we have long discussed—the notion that people fear a crisis most in its aftermath, rather than its inception.  It is thus no surprise that some of the biggest doomsayers in today’s press are those who were caught most off-guard by the crisis in 2007-2009. 

So where do we stand today on this sliding scale of risk aversion?  We think it remains clear that investors have been severely impacted by the recent crisis.  Investors are so risk averse in today’s environment, that in aggregate, they would rather flee into the perceived safety and certainty of returns in bond markets, while simultaneously ignoring longer-term bond market risks and foregoing a more reasonable tradeoff between risk and reward in equity markets.  Despite markets making all-time highs, there remains a healthy skepticism, and even anger, at the very fact this is happening amidst what remains an economy performing closer to trough than peak levels.

As always, we continue to make our decisions based on our sensitivity to price in each and every individual investment that we make, though we are equally cognizant of the sentiment towards risk and reward around us.  When markets are making highs, so many want to be “the one who called the market top” yet we can assure you of only this—on the way up there will be many tops before there is THE top, and it is our belief that through prudent bottoms-up fundamental analysis and disciplined asset allocation we will best insulate ourselves from the type of risks that were borne out in 2007-09.

 

Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results.  The views expressed above are those of RGA Investment Advisors LLC (RGA).  These views are subject to change at any time based on market and other conditions, and RGA disclaims any responsibility to update such views.  Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No forecasts can be guaranteed. These views may not be relied upon as investment advice.   The investment process may change over time. The characteristics set forth above are intended as a general illustration of some of the criteria the team considers in selecting securities for the portfolio. Not all investments meet such criteria.  In the event that a recommendation for the purchase or sale of any security is presented herein, RGA shall furnish to any person upon request a tabular presentation of:
(i) The total number of shares or other units of the security held by RGA or its investment adviser representatives for its own account or for the account of officers, directors, trustees, partners or affiliates of RGA or for discretionary accounts of RGA or its investment adviser representatives, as maintained for clients. (ii) The price or price range at which the securities listed in item (i) were purchased. (iii) The date or range of dates during which the securities listed in response to item (i) were purchased.

 


[1] http://www.investopedia.com/terms/p/prospecttheory.asp

[2] http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/1914185?uid=3739808&uid=2&uid=4&uid=3739256&sid=21102235131477

[3] Notes from Nicholas Barberis at Sante Fe Institute’s Risk: The Human Factor conference. /compounding-the-blog/?currentPage=2

[4] http://forum.johnson.cornell.edu/faculty/huang/prospect.pdf

IMAX Corporation: An Investment Case

This afternoon we at RGA Investment Advisors published our investment thesis on IMAX Corp (NYSE: IMAX).  The report was featured at Manual of Ideas' Beyond Proxy, and I've also included an embedded PDF available for download below.  

We look forward to any additional thoughts, critiques, and/or ideas about our thesis.

 

IMAX Research Report by RGAInvestments

My Investment Checklist

Many great practitioners across a number of disciplines have professed admiration for a thorough checklist. Some notable investors who are in this camp include Warren Buffett, Charlie Munger, Michael Mauboussin and Mohnish Pabrai. There are many reasons to like a good checklist, for it's a great means through which to impose self-discipline and to leave no rock unturned in your analysis. Humans are constantly exposed to the perils of behavioral biases and checklists are the best method I have encountered to help combat human misjudgment (see some of my lessons learned from the Santa Fe Institute on Risk: the Human Factor).

Some people use checklists with binary (yes/no) questions, while others look for more thought-out analysis for each element. I have combined a little bit of both, with the aim of constructing a coherent and thorough basis for each investment I undertake. One of my goals in posting this checklist here is to elicit feedback from some of you readers out there on other elements that may be helpful, particularly in the qualitative areas. 

The Company:
1. Can I say what the company does in 1 sentence? 
2. Do I understand the product and the target market?
Valuation:
1. What is the stock price today implying about future expectations? WACC? Growth? 
2. What is the preferred method for valuation (or combo of methods)? Earnings power value? DCF? SOTP? Franchise value? 
3. What is a reasonably conservative Earnings Power Value? With Growth?
4. How do the company’s ratios compare to their competitors? Market on the whole?
5. Is there a readily identifiable reason for why the stock is cheap?
6. What are the company’s ROE/ROIC like? What are the trends over time? 
7. Does the company have operating leverage to grow earnings quicker than revenues?
8. Has intrinsic value been increasing regardless of the direction of the stock’s price?
9. Is the company’s ROIC greater than its WACC? 1 yr, 3 yr?
10. What does the MICAP say about the duration of expectations?
11. Is the company’s capital investment increasing or decreasing? What is the trend in returns on invested capital?
Balance sheet:
1. Is the company well capitalized?
2. How is its debt-to-equity compared to industry norms?
3. Is debt less than stockholder equity?
4. Is long-term debt less than 2x working capital?
5. Are there any hidden assets I should take note of? How can these assets be valued? What are they worth? 
Management:
1. How is managements track record with capital allocation?
2. What is management’s track record with options?
3. Is the incentive structure of management aligned with shareholders? Is management “overpaid”?
4. Does management manage for quarterly earnings, or are they long-term oriented?
5. How does the company use its excess earnings? Dividend? Buybacks? Invest in growth? Build cash balance?
6. How did present management come to lead the company?
7. Does the CEO have a passion for the business? Or the money?
Competitive Dynamics/Qualitative Factors:
1. Does the company have a moat? Is the moat growing or shrinking?
2. Does the company have a sustainable competitive advantage? If so, what is its source? Is there a structural/cost advantage?  Switching cost?  Brand loyalty?
3. Does the business have pricing power? i.e. can they raise prices without losing customers?
4. Is the business cyclical? If so, where in the cycle are we?
5. What is the company’s sector like? Is there any chance the core business is a bubble? Has regulation or subsidies contributed to sector strength? 
6. Is this a capital-intensive business?  What are the capital turns like?
7. What type of relationship does the company have with its suppliers?
8. Does the business generate recurring revenues? Or is it one-off transactions?
9. Is there a readily identifiable mental model that comes to mind with the company?
10. Does the company have a strong brand? Do customers have an emotional connection to the brand?  Does the brand imply a social status?
11. Does the brand increase willingness to pay? 
12. Do customers trust the product because of the name?
13. What’s the likelihood of a disruptive innovation in the core market? Where would it come from? Who would make it? Are any currently being funded?
14. What share of the industry’s revenues does the company earn? What share of the industry’s profitability does the company make?  How has the distribution of economic profit changed over time in the industry?
15. Is capacity in the industry increasing or decreasing?
16. Is there a high degree of differentiation in products between competitors? 
Growth:
1. What are the future growth prospects like for the business?
2. Are secular forces a tailwind to the company’s growth? If so, what are the driving secular forces?
3. Does the business grow organically? Through competition? Or Both?
4. Has historical growth been profitable?
5. Does management have a patient or rushed plan to pursue growth?
Ownership:
1. Are there any large institutional holders? If so, are they “likeminded” to our strategy?
2. Are large holders buying or selling?
Catalysts:
1. Are there any readily identifiable catalysts for the company?
2. What is the expected duration for our holding period?
3. Is the 3-5 year outlook better than the 6 months-1 year outlook? 
Risks:
1. What are the primary risks to the business’ profitability?
2. What are the risks to our thesis on the business?
3. What’s a low-end valuation assuming everything goes wrong?
4. How does the macro environment influence the company’s fundamentals?
 
Technicals:
1. Is the stock in an uptrend? Downtrend or sideways? How long has the prevailing trend lasted for?
2. How has the stock performed relative to the market over the past 6 months, 1 year, 3 years and 5 years?
3. How has the stock performed relative to its peers?
4. Is the stock “in the gutter” and if so, for how long?  
5. Has the stock recently violated a trough in “the gutter”?
Behavioral:
1. Can I afford to wait?
2. Are there identifiable sellers for uneconomic reasons? i.e. forced selling

Investment Checklist