The Ignorant Investor

Ignorance Can't Stand in the Way of My Opinion

Sunday, November 27, 2005

 

Perish the Buffets

A couple of months ago I read a book on investing that laid out the principles of investing according to Warren Buffet. According to the book, Mr. Buffet isn’t just some guy playing half-assed Caribbean music to a bunch of drunken thirty-somethings in Hawaiian shirts, he’s also known as one of the world’s most successful investors.

What? . . . I’m confusing Warren Buffet with Jimmy Buffet? Hmm, okay. So Warren Buffet is the old guy with glasses from Omaha, Nebraska. Jimmy Buffet is the old guy with the guitar and baseball cap and the talent for relentless self-promotion. Glad we got the sorted out.

In any case, Warren Buffet has certain things he’s looking for in a company. In the interests of avoiding copyright infringement, I’ll summarize what the book says in as summary a fashion as possible. Warren says to:

1) Look for a company with a business model that’s simple and understandable, which has been shown to produce real profits in the past and which is likely to do so in the future.

2) The managers of the business must be sound, must be candid with their shareholders, and must resist something Warren calls the “institutional imperative”, a term which I can’t define since I returned the book to the library without noting down what it meant.

3) Ignore the earnings per share and instead focus on the company’s return on equity; you want to see big profit margins. Warren also says to calculate “owner earnings,” which sounds like an important measure of profitability, but, again, I don’t know what it means (Hmm, I may have to go back to the library to find out). Also, for every dollar retained by the company, make sure the company has created a dollar’s worth of market value. Which I assume means that if the company goes out and spends a million dollars to buy another company, the purchase should increase the company’s market value by at least a million dollars.

4) Accurately calculate the value of the business, and only buy the company if the company is trading at discount to its true worth.

5) Focus on buying fewer stocks rather than a big, highly diversified portfolio. Owning 10-15 great companies, Warren says, is better if you’ve picked companies with great prospects.

6) Examine the probabilities involved: what is the probability that you’ve miscalculated the profitability of the business? What are the chances you’re making a mistake trusting management? How certain can you be that management will return profits to investors?

7) Think long-term. Be patient. The market is not always efficient or rational over the short term, but eventually it recognizes value.

So there you have it. That's all very simple, isn’t it? Everything you need to know to invest the Warren Buffet way, straight from Warren Buffet himself.

Don’t be bothered by the fact that literally thousands of professional investors are familiar with Warren’s methods and we not able to do what he has done. Or that Warren often invests in companies by buying them outright after teams of very sharp people have gone over every available item of relevant information like starving peasants looking for grains of rice in the dirt (sorry about that analogy- was watching CNN International this morning). Basically, all you must do is assume that the financial acumen that Warren Buffet possesses his latent in all of us.

Frankly, I wish that I had Warren’s genius for investing, but I don’t. When he's evaluating a company, he brings to the table a wealth of business experience that I lack. He probably understands people better than I do. And he knows people who know stuff about the company that isn't generally known by the rest of us. Forget following Warren Buffet. Even following Jimmy Buffet is beyond me. I can't play a guitar. I don't have the self-possession to write mediocre songs about partying the Island way. So I am truly screwed.

So we come to the true point of this piece: Do not expect to replicate Warren Buffet’s success just by following the advice in his book. And don't annoy people by telling them how great Jimmy Buffet is in concert, or how people who aren’t parrotheads just don’t “know how to have fun.” Yes, I’m talking about you, Camilla. You work in an office, not the fry shack down at the beach in Saint Thomas. I’m tired of the sound of Jimmy Buffet coming over the cubicle wall. Knock it off, already. Would it kill you to listen to the Sex Pistols or the Ramones or Nirvana or, well, just anybody else once in a while? Try something bleak for a change.

Comments:
Hi again II,
Just to fill in the missing pieces, I had a quick scour and came up with the following Buffett-speak definitions:

Institutional Imperitive
A form of corporate inertia. It describes any company’s inherent propensity to do dumb things (or avoid doing smart things) simply for the sake of doing them.

Warning signs:
“An institution will resist any change in its current direction.”
“Just as work expands to fill available time, corporate projects or acquisitions will materialize to soak up available funds.”
“Any business craving of the leader, however foolish, will be quickly supported by detailed rate-of-return and strategic studies prepared by his troops.”
“The behavior of peer companies - whether they are expanding, acquiring, setting executive compensation, or whatever - will be mindlessly imitated.”

Owner Earnings
Reported earnings with non-cash expenses such as depreciation and amortization added back in and capital expenses subtracted. Similar to free cash flow.

Out of interest, what was the title of the book you're referring to? It sounds interesting although I agree that it's pretty much futile to try and copy the great man. Most people's circumstances are a million miles away from his.
 
I'm pretty sure it was this one:

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0471392642/103-7863178-5633418?v=glance&n=283155&s=books&v=glance

Or maybe this one:

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0471648116/103-7863178-5633418?v=glance&n=283155&s=books&v=glance

What strikes me about Buffet's methods are that they require in-depth knowledge about target company. You've got to intimately know the managers, how the business is run, what the strengths and weaknesses are. For the average individual investor, almost all of whom are relying on newsmedia or SEC reports for their information, getting to that level of detail seems kind of impossible to me.

He's basically saying to pick a few great companies that you know are much more likely to have outstanding earnings growth that the average company, because the more stocks you buy, the more likely it is you end up mirroring the averages.
 
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