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  • Defying Reversion to the Mean

    October 18, 2019

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    Jon

    Mean reversion is a powerful force. It drives market cycles, stock prices, profit margins, earnings, growth rates…you name it.

    Michael Mauboussin wrote a piece about it in 2007 based on ROIC. ROIC (Return on Invested Capital) measures the profitability of a company. Positive is good, high is better, persistently high is great. Here’s the gist of his piece:

    Exhibit 5 shows one measure of persistence: the degree of quintile migration. This exhibit shows where companies starting in one quintile (the vertical axis) ended up after nine years (the horizontal axis). Most of the percentages in the exhibit are unremarkable, but two stand out. First, a full 41 percent of the companies that started in the top quintile were there nine years later, while 39 percent of the companies in the cellar-dweller quintile ended up there. Independent studies of this persistence reveal a similar pattern. So it appears there is persistence with some subset of the best and worst companies. Academic research confirms that some companies do show persistent results. Studies also show that companies rarely go from very high to very low performance or vice versa.
    Continue Reading…


  • Highlights from Howard Marks’s Mastering the Market Cycle

    October 16, 2019

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    Jon

    Howard Marks’s latest book, Mastering the Market Cycle, is a compendium on the different cycles investors contend with. The book stands as a lesson on observation over prediction. It’s a solid addition to his classic The Most Important Thing.

    Since I just started on my notes on the book, I thought I’d leave market cycles for another day. Instead, I want to share some highlights from the book.

    I avoided his more popular idioms, as well as quotes from his memos that he always includes in his books, and focused on the secondary lessons that stood out.

    Let’s dive in: Continue Reading…


  • Early Principles of “Investment Management”

    October 9, 2019

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    Jon

    Edgar Lawrence Smith concludes his classic book with the importance of “Investment Management.” I don’t know how original this concept was in 1924, but investment management is exactly like it sounds. Anyone who’s read a few investing books should recognize the principles Smith lays out since it fits the basic concepts of investment planning today.

    Obviously, the big difference between then and now is that most investors are analyzing funds or strategies instead of individual stocks and bonds. And analyzing might be an exaggeration.

    Smith’s point falls under the Peter Lynch maxim of “Know what you own” and keep a watchful eye over it.

    But first you need a sound plan. He lays out the case for management as an ongoing effort to balance a portfolio between stocks and bonds based on whatever the current environment warrants.

    Then he expands into having a plan for the long term (including the next generation), the importance of diversification, and understanding the limits of what’s possible.

    Here’s how Smith broke it down: Continue Reading…


  • Common Stocks As Long Term Investments by Edgar Lawrence Smith

    October 8, 2019

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    Common Stocks As Long Term Investments book coverBuy the Book: Print | eBook

    Edgar Lawrence Smith set out to prove a theory, only to fail. But, in failure, he discovered that stocks had a hidden advantage over bonds in the long run. His work was published in 1924 and influenced the late ’20s market boom.

    The Notes

    Continue Reading…


  • Quarterly Reading – Fall ’19

    October 4, 2019

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    Jon

    It’s time for another reading update. Last quarter’s slump got fixed…I think, mostly diving into a couple of old books and digging up dirt on Henry Singleton.

    Here’s what I’ve been reading the past three months: Continue Reading…


  • The Baloney Detection Kit for Investors

    October 2, 2019

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    Jon

    It was considered common knowledge, prior to 1924, that stocks performed better than bonds during periods of inflation and bonds were better than stocks under deflation. As far as “truths” go, it’s not that outlandish. It almost makes sense.

    Only, nobody bothered to test the assumption until Edgar Lawrence Smith came around. He tested it and came to a surprising conclusion for the time. Stocks, for the most part, do better than bonds during periods of inflation and deflation. He concluded it was because retained earnings, reinvested back into a business, increases the value of the company which eventually gets reflected in the stock price.

    His book, Common Stocks As Long Term Investments, spread the news far and wide, becoming the new common knowledge. But it was shortlived.

    Sometime between publishing the book and October 1929, some investors took Smith’s news to mean something else. “For the most part” was replaced by “always.” As in, stocks, for the most part always, do better than bonds…

    Investors and the market ate it up. And it ended horribly in the ’29 crash.

    Two basic lessons come out of this episode. Testing “truths” can lead to facts that reframe how people think about something and the narrative around facts can be warped, creating problems. Continue Reading…


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