I was browsing some of Marty Whitman’s old Third Avenue shareholder letters I had dug up a few years back. The nice thing about these old letters is the ability to go back to see someone’s thought process around bigger market events.
An excerpt (below) from one of those letters stood out for two reasons. First, Whitman wrote it in July 2000, a few months after the peak of the Dotcom Bubble, though nobody knew it was the peak at the time. The opening paragraph shows the juxtaposition of Dotcom enthusiasm versus the ignored value stocks Whitman was buying.
Those ignored stocks were trading at 10x earnings, while the market was going nuts over Nasdaq stocks at 141 times earnings. Even the P/Es of the Nasdaq versus the S&P 500 was hugely distorted.
The idea of paying $141 for $1 of earnings seems insane today, but that was typical back then. I remember friends asking about getting into eToys.com after the IPO. It practically tripled the first day, closing with a market cap 35% higher than Toys R Us despite only having $34 million in revenue and zero profits (Toys R Us had $11 billion in revenue at the time). Continue Reading…