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  • 2021: First Half Returns

    July 7, 2021

    ·

    Jon

    For the most part, markets in 2021 have shown continued improvement on last year. In fact, the worst place to have money so far this year is cash. The U.S. and the broader international and emerging market indexes are positive year to date.

    Investing in a world where everything seems to be working out — except “safe” bonds and cash — it can be tempting to tweak your portfolio. Why not move that money earning nothing (high yield bonds — U.S. Agg index is -1.6% YTD) into something much better? After the last six months, and the six months prior to that, I bet a lot of people are thinking exactly that. When thoughts like that pop into your head it’s always worth asking yourself a few questions.

    First, am I taking enough risk to meet my goals? Building a portfolio is not an exact science. Uncertainty around the future makes that impossible. But it’s certainly plausible that some investors are taking less risk than they can handle. If you have less money in stocks than you’re comfortable with, can handle more risk and volatility, then maybe a change is warranted.

    However, the alternative should also be considered. If you have more money in stocks than you’re comfortable with, reducing your exposure might be warranted. Successful investing has never been about getting the highest return this year. It’s about getting the best long-term return at a risk you’re comfortable taking. Continue Reading…


  • Quarterly Reading – Summer ’21

    July 2, 2021

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    Jon

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


  • How EV Value Metrics Performed This Century

    June 30, 2021

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    Jon

    For decades, a company’s market cap was used in valuation ratios but it has a fatal flaw. It can be misleading for companies with piles of debt. So enterprise value emerged as an alternative.

    The advantage of enterprise value is that it’s a closer approximation of what a business might cost if it was bought outright. When you buy a business, you get everything — the business, its assets, and its debts. So enterprise value includes the company’s market cap, plus its outstanding debts (including preferred stock), then subtracts out the cash.

    Including debt can dramatically change the valuation of a company. A company might look cheap based on market cap alone. But if it’s sitting on piles of debt, it will look expensive based on enterprise value. It’s not perfect, but using enterprise value makes for a better comparison between different companies.

    The value metrics below are built using enterprise value. All tests were run with the following setup: Continue Reading…


  • Wise Words on the Folly of Forecasting

    June 25, 2021

    ·

    Jon

    Investors have a long history of wanting to know what the market does next. And why wouldn’t they? It’s the quickest way to riches.

    That demand has had a constant supply of people foretelling the future. cAnd what stories they sell. They weave confident tales around a few data points that prove what the stock market or the economy will do next.

    Except, it’s never that simple.

    Take inflation. Its rate is tied to billions of people making financial decisions every day. Decisions tied to the income they want to make versus what their job will pay. Decisions tied to the number of products a company makes versus how many their customers will buy. Decisions tied to the price a store charges versus what consumers will pay. Decisions tied to how wealthy they feel that day or healthy or safe or afraid.

    It’s a complex mess. There are too many unknowns — the Fed can’t even predict it. Yet, there are folks arrogant enough to think they can not only predict inflation but what the Fed will do about it. And it doesn’t end there.

    There are specialized soothsayers for everything. We got gold bugs, inflationistas, doomsayers, permabulls, and more offering their niche opinion on the future. And if you pay attention long enough, you’ll realize they repeat the same thing year after year. It’s like a broken record. Continue Reading…


  • Arthur Rock’s Keys to Evaluating Management

    June 23, 2021

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    Jon

    Arthur Rock made a habit of financing great businesses. He was venture capital before venture capital was a thing.

    It all started in 1961. Rock left a cushy job at Hayden Stone to team up with Tommy Davis to invest in new companies.

    Their first investment was Teledyne. Henry Singleton’s conglomerate would go on to make a fortune for shareholders. That was quickly followed by investments in Scientific Data Systems, Intel, Intersil, and more.

    His partnership with Davis lasted until 1968. Over that seven-year period, Rock invested $3 million and earned $100 million in returns.

    What was the secret to his success? First, his timing was impeccable. He was practically the only person investing in Californian startups at the time.

    Second, he looked for opportunities that appeared to have no limits. The business should have the ability to capture a large share of a giant market. Continue Reading…


  • How Cash Flow Based Value Metrics Performed this Century

    June 16, 2021

    ·

    Jon

    Early value metrics were dependent on information that was easy to find. Price/Earnings and Price/Book came out of that era. Both did a decent job of capturing value’s outperformance.

    But as financial statements became more widely available, it spawned other value metrics that performed even better. Cash flow-based value metrics are a good example of this.

    The cash flow metrics tested below are built using market cap (enterprise value metrics will be next). All tests were run on the following assumptions:

    • No OTC stocks or ADRs.
    • No stocks trading below $1/share.
    • No low-volume stocks.
    • Market cap greater than $50 million.
    • Deciles are equal-weighted, as is the Universe.
    • Benchmarked against the Russel 3000 total return index (It’s a cap-weighted benchmark. The universe of qualifying stocks is included for a better comparison).
    • Stocks are bought on January 1st of each year, held for one year, then sold. Rolling backtests are done at four-week intervals with a similar one-year holding period.
    • Assume all metrics are based on trailing twelve months (TTM) unless indicated.
    • Data are from 2000 to 2020, sourced from Portfolio123.

    For the metrics below, higher is cheaper and lower is more expensive. Each one follows a similar pattern where the cheapest decile outperforms the most expensive by a wide margin. The cheapest decile also outperforms the universe and the benchmark. Though, some do a better job of it than others. Continue Reading…


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