- the investors don't care about earnings and value
- the investors believe in America but don't believe in foreign currencies and foreign economies
- the cheaper company is more likely to be a fraud
- future growth will justify it.
Saturday, May 30, 2020
How Do We Beat the Market?
It's been two months since my last post when the coronavirus really became the world's
biggest problem. Back then, people were saying life will never be same, the world will hit a recession
worse than the great depression, and on and on.
To me what people are saying is not necessarily wrong, but it is the peoples tone that
I focus on. The media is having a field day with this. Their job is to maximize
their views or sell their papers and magazines. They will emphasize the
worst news over and over because it gets people's attention and hence sells.
After a long period of this blanket coverage, it
cloud peoples judgement.
And the key to successful investment is good judgement, even though
investment has a huge luck component.
When an investor's judgement is clouded they can seriously lose. An
investor whose judgement is not affected can win. Or to put it more bluntly,
the latter can take advantage of the former.
And the latter group consists of the great investors. They are
coming out of the woodwork to make some serious money. Among them are
Paul Ichan and Bill Ackman.
These people made bets against the market, against the coronavirus.
And they succeeded not because they were lucky but because
they noticed their bets had huge risk/reward ratios and
they had the guts to act on it.
One can easily google their names and
see their recent interviews on Youtube. I found them
highly informative and recommend others to watch.
Back in the 50s in Buffett's heyday when Buffett made 30 plus percent every year, his
secret
was find individual cheap stocks from
the Moody's Manual. That was an edge back then because
it is hard to read through several thousand pages of three-column
text and numbers.
And he did it twice! Today that doesn't work, because all such information
is digitized. So one can simply use screeners or write their own code to
do what Buffett did much faster and for much more stocks. Plus
Buffett has already spread the gospel of value investing, so his secret
is out.
Because of these two factors,
I heard many people suggest that
the stock market is more efficient today than before.
I vehemently disagree.
Take a look at the following log graph of the
S&P 500 (at top). The economy and market grow exponentially, so the trendline should be a straight
line. When gods are the only participants in the market I guess the S&P500 should also be a straight line,
because gods have perfect information.
But since the stock market participants are mortals with limited information, the graph is not
smooth. That doesn't mean the market is not efficient.
Next, we can look at two different time periods, one contemporary and one from the past.
The second graph show the index over the last 40 years. And the third graph show the index in the period covering the two world
wars, including the great depression.
If the market is more efficient today than earlier times then
it should show in differences between the second and third graph.
But looking at graph two and three it isn't clear that one is more volatile than the other. We have had massive peak to trough moves around 1989, 2000 and 2008.
Just as we had them in the 1910 panic and the great depression.
So I can argue the market is not any less volatile than earlier years! So the market has been and still is inefficient. But how can we take
advantage of this inefficiency. I already stated that stock picking is harder today than
in Buffett's early years. Well, the market is inefficiency today simply
because
all good American companies are expensive.
Take Microsoft for example. In the last 7 years the stock price has gone
up by approximately 7x. Meanwhile its earnings has only doubled!
Compare this with Tachibana Electech (TSE:8159), in the 7 years that I have held it the stock has
gone up 2.5x but its earnings also doubled.
And while Microsoft is selling at 30x earnings, Tachibana is selling at 10x earnings.
And I know different people will say that this anomaly is justified in different ways. I can
guess some of the reasons:
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