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Zone of Competence

~ Dollars, Sense, and Probabilities.

Zone of Competence

Monthly Archives: April 2015

Lessons from the 2000 Tech Bust

24 Friday Apr 2015

Posted by JC in Uncategorized

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Cash Flow, Investing, Nasdaq, Tech Bubble

Yesterday the Nasdaq finally bested its record high set in 2000 at the zenith of the tech frenzy. This has occasioned a lot of “Where Are They Now” type features on many of the boosters of that bubble: Mary Meeker, Henry Blodget, Ryan Jacob, Jack Grubman, Frank Quattrone, and Paul Meeks.

Technology is not a sector that I’m generally interested in investing in because economic moats are so hard to find in that area. A tech company is only as good as their last product. Many tech companies seem to be about one product cycle from extinction. As Blackberry and many others have shown, you can be on top of the world at one moment, and then practically out of business five years later.

I skew more toward Warren Buffett’s skepticism toward investing in innovation. While great innovations improve society, innovative sectors are many times not great wealth creators — as experience has shown with autos and aviation. But I think there are a couple of great lessons we can take from the Tech Bust.

Valuation Matters

Jason Zweig reminds us that at the peak of the bubble, people were paying “dozens or hundreds of times” the long-term S&P 500 average of around 16 times earnings. And the thing is, at the height of the bubble it made sense to a lot of people, because their neighbors were getting rich by forgetting about valuation and just buying at any price. Which worked until the greatest fool had bought in.

“Success in investing is not a function of what you buy. It’s a function of what you pay.”
— Howard Marks

Cash Generation Is Key

Most of the high-flying Internet stocks had negative cash flow in 2000. The term cash-burn rate became the only metric that mattered once the air went out of the balloon. A company that cannot fund its operations through organic cash flow doesn’t have much of a future.

Paul Meeks, one of the Tech Bubble stars listed above, has bounced around since the Tech Bust and is again running money, although he is targeting very different companies these days. As he says in this article, “If it doesn’t generate cash, it’s not really a business.”

Words to live by.

“At a healthy business, cash is sometimes thought of as something to be minimized – as an unproductive asset that acts as a drag on such markers as return on equity. Cash, though, is to a business as oxygen is to an individual: never thought about when it is present, the only thing in mind when it is absent.”
— Warren Buffett

Howard Marks: Focus on Buying Cheap, Avoiding Losers, and Survival

19 Sunday Apr 2015

Posted by JC in Uncategorized

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Howard Marks, Investing, Probabilities and Consequences

This is a great talk from Howard Marks. What a joy to see a brilliant mind in action. My notes and thoughts follow.

Randomness Dominates

You shouldn’t act as if the things that should happen are the things that will happen. Humility is needed.

Beware of outcome bias. You can’t tell from an investment outcome whether a decision was good or bad because of randomness and luck. The longer the successful track record, the more likely skill is involved.

Balancing Probabilities and Consequences Is Key

Thinking in terms of probabilities and the expected value from a course of action is the first step. But then you must think about the consequences of being wrong. A very small probability event that you can’t survive may make you choose a different course of action.

As Marks puts it, you don’t want to be the skydiver who is right 98% of the time.

“It’s not sufficient to survive on average. We have to survive on the bad days.”
— Howard Marks

Focus on Avoiding Losers

Charles Ellis says that if the game isn’t controllable, it’s better to work to avoid losers than to try for winners.

Risk control is Oaktree’s primary focus. They don’t swing for the fences. Oaktree’s motto: “If we avoid the losers, the winners take care of themselves.” Just lop off the left tail of the probability distribution.

Weed out the problems, like tending a garden. Focus on consistency.

The Relationship Between Price and Value

If you buy a high quality asset but you overpay for it, you are in big trouble. Remember the Nifty Fifty in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

“The secret for success in investing is buying things for less than they are worth.”
— Howard Marks

Planning Assumptions Versus Macro Forecasts

Macro forecasts are worthless, but planning assumptions are necessary with individual companies. Just don’t make big one-way bets based on these assumptions. Assume a range of outcomes and seek survivability.

Don’t Chase the Crowd

You make no money doing the things that everybody wants to do, you make money by doing the things nobody wants to do that then turn out to have value.

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