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From: | Travis Morien <travismorien@yahoo.com> |
Date: | Tue, 11 Feb 2003 09:30:50 -0800 (PST) |
--- "tennyson@caverock.net.nz" <tennyson@caverock.net.nz> wrote: > At last, another person on this forum that can think > for themselves! > > Excellent response Morgy. You just nailed Travis. > Or did you? I > hope Travis will excuse me for butting in at this > point, but I think > Morgy, you haven't quite got the point that Travis > was trying to make > (probably due to Travis not presenting his argument > clearly enough > for you). I'll try to keep it *really* simple in future, so there are no more understandings from the technical analysts of the group. > > First up, I have no argument with any of your > quotes. Trying to > predict earnings one year out is a minefield, two > years out is > incredibly difficult and ten years out is > practically insane. Yep, no disagreement there. See for example: http://www.afajof.org/Pdf/forthcoming/chan.pdf But, I never said I was going to nail the earnings, just test reasonableness. There are a number of ways of estimating future earnings, all involve simple arithmetic (no calculus) and none involve precise forecasting. Method one: EPS growth by a fixed %pa. You can take today's EPS and grow it year after year by an appropriate % growth rate. You then estimate dividends by multiplying this EPS by a div payout ratio in line with historical averages, or your own estimate. You also assume a PER that you'll sell the stock at in ten years time. ie.. stock today trades at 25x. After a detailed analysis of the business, especially comparing this with historical growth rates for that company and similar companies, not to mention a healthy dose of common sense, you think that the company shuld be able to grow its earnings at between 4%pa and 8%pa. You are highly sceptical that the company will grow its earnings at a greater rate than that because the best the company ever did over the long term in the past was 8% and you feel the future will be worse than the past. For the purposes of the model you assume that in 10 years you'll be able to sell this company at 15x earnings. *very* simple stuff, I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader to spend the required 2 minutes making an Excel spreadsheet that will do this. After plugging in these assumptions you notice that the price the stock is trading at in the market is too high because in order to pay a reasonable set of dividends plus 15x earnings capital in 10 years the company must grow at a minimum of 15%pa. You think this is highly unlikely, so you pass it by. Or, you determine that the company only has to grow at 2%pa to justify the present price. It appears to be a bargain because this is less than your conservative estimate. Method two: Comparing sustainable return on equity with growth in book value. Company has $1 per share in book value. After a look at the business's past returns, and the trend in profitability, and the growth in book value compared with retained earnings, and of course a certain amount of conservative judgement that incorporates regression to the mean for extreme ROEs and the same scepticism of high past performance you estimate the following: What ROE can the company sustain in the future? Will each dollar of retained earnings find its way to increasing the book value of the company, or has BV grown at a faster or slower rate than retained earnings? You also use the assumptions from the first model, what div payout ratio and what final PE to sell the stock. So, our company has $1 per share in equity, based on our judgement we assume that the company can earn 10% on this and that historically the company has grown BV by $1 for every dollar of earnings that they've not paid as a dividend. Assuming a 50% div payout and final sell price of 15x earnings... Year BV EPS Div Retained earnings 2003 $1 10c 5c 5c 2004 $1.05 10.5c 5.25c 5.25c 2005 $1.1025 etc Again, a very simple thing to set up in a spreadsheet. Real world example, in mid 2002 I noticed that Brambles (BIL) then selling at 2.54x its book value, could achieve an estimated return of about 12%ROE. I doubted they could do better than that though. Using an appropriate set of assumptions about future PE and div payout and the efficiency of converting EPS - dividends into an increase in book value I concluded that BIL was overpriced, in fact I concluded it was overpriced by about double. No feasable set of assumptions that I could make about any of these parameters showed the possibility of BIL giving a good return. When you find that in order to support the current price you have to come up with unreasonably optimistic assumptions you know something is wrong. I made similar observations of a number of high PE growth stocks, none of them seemed fairly priced based on any assumption I could make about ROE or growth in book value. With forecast returns over 10 years being low or negative I concluded that these stocks could not possibly be fairly priced. My only regret is that I told all my clients to sell, but didn't tell anyone to short sell. (Forecast return = internal rate of return of the final column which = dividends +- sell price(buy price)) Method three: Estimating sales and net profit margin. Third model, you notice that a company has consistently grown its sales per share by about 5%pa for the last 10 years, and that they've achieved an average net profit margin (EPS/Sales) of 2%. Another simple spreadsheet, take 2002's sales per share, grow them by 5% and multiply sales by 2%, voila you've estimated EPS, multiply that by div payout ratio, multiply the EPS in 10 years by your final PER and you've got your future cash flows. So you apply this model to the stock you are thinking of buying and find that the present price of the stock is simple too high. This would call for a large increase in the rate of sales growth or the profit margin. You perform a few experiments to work out combinations and fail to find a combination of sales & margin that appears remotely plausible. Of course, you can combine all of these models together as I do. What rate of sales growth is required to maintain that ROE? Too high? Use a lower ROE then. What rate of ROE is required to maintain the EPS growth assuming every dollar of retained earnings adds to book value? What rate of sales growth will be required to maintain that ROE? What margin? Etc, and in reverse. Setting up such a spreadsheet takes just a few minutes if you do a simple version (I've got a complex version that produces charts, calculates after tax returns, produces sensitivity analyses quite quickly etc). Using this spreadsheet takes about 10 seconds. That people rarely if ever do this (and that people laugh at the concept) is disgraceful, but it does explain why I've been able to identify so many mispriced stocks and why I've made a profit compared to a market that has been just plain awful. > > However, there is one special class of company > where, as strange as > it may seem, insanity can prevail. This is the so > called 'consumer > monopoly' as described in 'the Buffettology > Workbook', and all those > other Buffettology books. A consumer monopoly is a > company that is > a well established leader in its chosen market, with > a history of > profit growth. It will generally also show a > healthy return on > shareholders funds and be almost immune from > competition being able > to devastate its profit margins. There aren't many > companies that > can satisfy these very strict criteria. A failure > at any of the > qualifying hurdles means any ten year earnings > prediction is > nonsense. But find the select few companies that > clear those > hurdles, and it can work. This is what Buffett > does, but how to find > these companies? It takes hard work, but this is > the mission of the > 'Focus Investment Group' (one of the 'sharechat > message boards'). > Welcome aboard, if you would like to help us. Yes, while it is true that Warren Buffett style companies are generally the most predictable in terms of being able to maintain high ROE and good margins, this method works for any stock. It doesn't need to be a superior business franchise, if you do the math and find that the company needs to grow profits at 20%pa and achieve a 40% ROE and a 20% sales growth with a large increase in profit margins, despite never having achieved such results in the past and in your opinion being unlikely to do so in the future, then it is almost certainly overpriced. Stocks with the opposite criteria, expectations built in to them so bad that the company almost could not possibly do that poorly, are probably undervalued. BIL, CSL and several other stocks were overpriced by the former criteria according to my models, CLI was underpriced by the latter criteria. Without modeling of this sort it simply isn't possible to say based on any mathematical logic what the future return of the stock will be - even ballpark figures. If you have no idea whether the stock you are buying is going to average somewhere in the vicinity of 30%pa or 10%pa or -20%pa because your only buying tool is a chart then you just aren't an investor. > There is one more point about predicting future > earnings that needs > to be made clear. When Travis says he is predicting > future earnings > he does *not* mean he is trying to pin down earnings > figures five, > six or seven years hence. What Travis is plotting > here are *future > earnings trends*. An actual result for a particular > year *may* be > right on the trend line. But the result may also be > significantly > above or significantly below it. This sort of > thing does not > invalidate his analysis. Why not? Yes Snoopy, pretty much. Trends are important, and my first analysis usually uses trends to estimate the future return of the stock. But it would be more accurate to say that I use a test of believability. If I can believe the numbers that my model tells me i have more confidence buying that stock than if it feeds me unbelievable high results. For an idea of what I mean, I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader to try to work out what kind of insanely high return on equity and big PER end multiple is required to justify owning BIL at $9.50. When you are done with that, work out CSL at $50, $40, $30 and even $20. You may be shocked by what you see when you apply this to many "growth" stocks. > > There exists in business a phenomenon known as > 'regression to the > mean'. Put simply this means businesses have good > and bad years and > although some of these good/bad fluctuations are > quite unpredictable, > they tend to average out in the end. A company with 30% ROE is likely to earn a more normal ROE eventually. I'll plug an ROE of 10% into the model to see what drops out. Same for any number, what does the model say if you change it from below (above) average to above (below) average. > The secret to running a successful business lies in > hiring the right > people, getting the management structure right and > understanding your > market. Get these basics right and the single year > earnings > forecasting blips pale into insignificance. Bad > years are balanced > out by good years and looking back over several > years of trading > history the upward trend in earnings will still be > apparent. I agree with all this, but it wasn't really what I was trying to say. What I wish to say is that if you can't run some kind of simple valuation model to work out what you are buying and what return you might expect then you clearly don't deserve the title of investor, you are a speculator. Speculation is ok, but from what I've seen very few people are even good speculators. Most are third rate speculators whose idea of a viable financial strategy is to chase the performance of any asset class that seems to have done well or believe any quack on the net who says he can tell you what, for example, gold is going to do, especially if that person says so with a great deal of force and conviction and can provide mediocre links on the net to prove the point that another wacko things the same thing. > Reduced to this level you can see that what Travis > is saying is that: > if you have > > i/the right people > ii/doing the right things > iii/ in the right market, > > and > > iv/ this combination has been proven to work in the > past, > > THEN > > it is reasonable to conclude that the business will > continue to grow > in the future. > > To anyone who has run a business this is just common > sense. Travis > is *not* predicting that such a business will grow a > predictable > amount every year without fail. Travis is > predicting the longer the > ingredients of a successful business are there, the > better the chances > are it will be recognized by the market - > eventually. And as a long > term investor Travis is patient, able to bide his > time waiting for > that 'eventually' to really happen. > > SNOOPY I'm predicting that CSL can't grow their profits at 50%pa, and anyone that thinks CSL can is a twit. NB: I first became bearish on CSL in mid 2001 after reading a JB Were buy recommendation on the stock where they did in fact assume this, and stated as much in black and white. I'm predicting that BIL's return on equity isn't suddenly going to jump from 12% to 30% for no reason other than the market priced that kind of profitability in, so $9.50 was too much. I'm predicting that Telstra's sales, which have averaged 4-8% growth aren't suddenly going to double that, so I'm not forecasting great things for this stock. I'm predicting that CLI ought to be able to grow its profits at at least -10%pa or better. Which is why I told my clients to buy it in December when it was trading at about $1.60. I'm predicting that AMP, which trades at a similar PE multiple on strongly (and temporarily) depressed earnings and trades at 0.57x book value is more likely to enjoy the kind of modest profit performance needed to give a good return than the record high ROEs built into WOWs price. A commercial software program that does this sort of analysis is http://www.stockval.com.au/ There are a number of very nifty articles at that site as well. I don't use Stockval myself, having implemented a similar thing in Excel (before I'd even heard of this program), but the author of this software also wrote "A Wonderful Company at a Fair Price" which is a very good read as well, one of these days I might buy the software but for now I'm doing fine without it. > > > > PS You should also know that the mathematics needed > to carry out > this analysis *can* be carried out on a simple four > function > calculator. OK, I'll admit that a business or > scientific calculator > might have you pushing less buttons. But nothing > anywhere as complex > as calculus or heavy algebra is needed to solve > these 'valuing as a > bond' problems. A spreadsheet is best unless you have a lot of time on your hands. You can do all this stuff in your head if you want, but after you've done it a few times "because you can" you'll want to get that spreadsheet done. The maths only involves +-*/ there aren't even square roots, let alone calculus or stats. I'm familiar with the original Ben Graham quote and familiar with the context in which it was originally written. He was bashing the work of finance academics whose occupation at that time was complex calculus relating to the Capital Asset Pricing Model and Modern Portfolio Theory and the arcane world of derivative pricing. Travis www.travismorien.com __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Shopping - Send Flowers for Valentine's Day http://shopping.yahoo.com ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
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