Will Facebook’s Latest Move Cripple the Finance Industry?

By WallStreetDaily.com Will Facebook’s Latest Move Cripple the Finance Industry?

In September 2012, shares of Facebook (FB) hit their all-time low of $17.55.

The stock has been on an upward trajectory ever since.

It even enjoyed a short-lived break above the $70 level back in March, which got me thinking…

In light of Facebook’s recent acquisition spree, including the $2-billion purchase of Oculus, were the lows of 2012 a historic buying opportunity? I believe so…

Already a fifth of the time that Americans spend on their smartphones is spent on Facebook. And now the social media juggernaut is reportedly weeks away from the regulatory approval it needs to launch an e-payments service in Europe.

With Facebook’s European headquarters in Ireland, the country’s central bank must approve Facebook as an electronic money institution.

The conquest of American banks would undoubtedly be next.

To shed more light on this developing storyline, I asked bestselling author Karim Rahemtulla to share his opinion.

Karim, who’s been covering the stock since it IPO’d, says that Facebook’s “ubiquity” makes it a legitimate threat to take over the world of commerce.

~ Robert Williams, Founder, Wall Street Daily

These days, it seems like everyone wants to know how social media will evolve.

Which companies will survive long enough to deserve seemingly commonplace valuations of 20 and 30 times sales or double and triple the market multiple for earnings?

Is Facebook (FB) dead because younger users are migrating to other media apps like Snapchat, Instagram (which is owned by Facebook, by the way) or whatever the next new thing might be?

Well, late last week, Facebook gave astute investors a glimpse into what the future holds, and the company showed why it’ll remain the dominant force in social media for some time to come.

Can You Say “Banking”?

Facebook announced that it’s close to obtaining regulatory approval from the Irish monetary authorities to provide financial services for users.

More specifically, Zuckerberg’s firm is seeking approval for a service that would allow users to store money on Facebook, use the funds to pay for goods and services, and exchange money with others.

Not only is Facebook’s Irish entry the first shot across the bow to companies like PayPal – owned by eBay (EBAY) – that offer services for money transfers and merchant payments, but it’s also a wake-up call to bigger banks that offer a whole suite of services.

You see, while both PayPal and the banks have been around much longer, they lack the one crucial ingredient that will make Facebook the dominant player of the future: eyeballs!

Like many others, I’ve come to rely on the site for events ranging from sports to social gatherings… and I’m not the “generation” that most people associate with Facebook. But I am in the age group (35 to 60) that’s joining Facebook faster than any other.

This is important, as Facebook needs us to spend money on things that give the company a cut. Tweens and Millennials may love posting pictures, but they don’t buy like we do.

Consider this scenario: Just the other day, I was on my Facebook page and noticed that a friend had a birthday. She was in a different state, and I thought it’d be a nice gesture to send her a present. With Facebook banking, I could do so in a matter of clicks!

Remember, Facebook’s power is its ubiquity: It’s become routine to check my page, converse with friends over the FB messaging service – and, most recently, text when I’m overseas, since Facebook acquired WhatsApp.

On top of that, my conventional bank doesn’t offer any particular benefits that make me want to stay with them. Security is suspect, especially in light of all the recent hacking. Why would Facebook be any less secure?

In an age where relationship banking with big banks is non-existent, why couldn’t a company that has dominated social networking succeed? I’d consider banking through them in a heartbeat, and I think others would, too.

If you’re still not convinced, consider the numbers coming from all of this: If Facebook were able to engage just 10% of its user base in banking services, it’d be the biggest bank in the world in terms of the number of clients.

Clearly, not all social media sites are created equal. Some, like Facebook, are leaps and bounds ahead of others in terms of user interface, offerings and clientele. And with this latest venture into the banking business, FB is starting to convince former skeptics (like myself) that it’s the single company with the potential to dominate the sector.

Ahead of the tape,

Karim Rahemtulla

The post Will Facebook’s Latest Move Cripple the Finance Industry? appeared first on Wall Street Daily.

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: Will Facebook’s Latest Move Cripple the Finance Industry?

EUR/USD Forecast And Price Action For April 17th

Article by Investazor.com

This week is almost ended, Easter is here and investors took a break. The Euro-dollar currency pair moved sideways from the opening price to the current moment. Tuesday the price stopped at 1.3800 even though the fundamental analysis was sustaining a US dollar strengthening. Both US CPI and Core CPI surprised with a 0.2% release while it was expected 0.1%.

Yesterday the EU Current Account was below expectations, while the CPI was in line with its estimates of 0.5% y/y. The Core CPI of the European Union did not meet analysts’ median estimation of 0.8% growth on an annual basis. While EU data was rather disappointing, the US releases surprised with some good numbers. Building Permits met their expectations as well as Housing Starts; Capacity Utilization Rate and the Industrial Production went above analysts’ expectations and should have triggered some buying for the US dollar, but it didn’t.

See our last analysis: EUR/USD Forecast And Price Action For April 15th;

The price of EURUSD moved sideways between 1.3800 and 1.3850 suggesting that investors are not that active in this period. This morning the European single currency managed to comeback to 1.3840. Now it is trading flat in a 10 pips range. German PPI was negative, -0.3%, but no one seems to care. See what are is expected to be published next and what would price action suggest.

The following are expected today:

US – Unemployment Claims (13:30). If it is Thursday the Unemployment Claims is published for the US labor market. As I said in my past analysis of this indicator, even if it is considered to be a medium to high impact indicators, it doesn’t influence investors that much in this period.

US – Philly Fed Manufacturing Index (15:00). This indicator still have an important impact on the market. Last month was published two times its expected value and today it is estimated to be around 9.6 points. A big surprise, like last month, would trigger some volatility.

In my opinion EURUSD will not do anything surprising this week. I believe that the price is under some buying pressure and it will close the gap. You will find more about its price action in the next paragraph.

EUR/USD Price Action

The price has drawn a symmetrical triangle. Not it is traded near the upper line of this pattern. A break followed by a close above the upper line would signal a rally which could target 1.3880. A break below the local support would only signal a possible retest on the lower line of the triangle. The volatility is pretty low, I would be very careful at a false breakout above the upper line and a comeback inside the pattern.

 

The post EUR/USD Forecast And Price Action For April 17th appeared first on investazor.com.

Renewed Tensions in Ukraine Push Oil Prices Up

By HY Markets Forex Blog

In the past couple of weeks it appeared as though tensions in Ukraine were easing. However, recent military action has renewed fears in the area, which pushed up the price of oil.

Commodity options traders should be paying close attention to this situation, as Russia is believed to be behind much of the action in Ukraine. Small economic sanctions have already been placed against the Eastern European nation, but if things get worse, the country’s supply of oil could be impacted. As a result, prices could continue to increase, which may provide investors with an opportunity to make money.

“The increasing tensions between the West and Russia over Ukraine could provide further upside momentum to the oil market, supporting crude oil prices higher,” Myrto Sokou of Sucden Financial Research in London, told The Associated Press.

Renewed worries began when pro-Russian militants ceased government buildings in Ukraine. In response, Ukraine’s government sent tanks and troops to regain these buildings. NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said the alliance would send troops to assist the effort, which could escalate the situation.

Oil is being driven more by the Ukraine situation,” Guy Wolf, global head of market analytics at Marex Spectron Group in London, told Bloomberg. “Does this situation mean more intense disagreements elsewhere, as in the Cold War? In a tight market, such as WTI, anything can have an amplified effect.”

Any further escalation could lead to future increases to oil. Commodity options traders should watch closely for any signs that could heighten tensions. For example, if Russian President Vladimir Putin announces he is going to increase military presence in Ukraine, the U.S. could impose more economic sanctions that drive up oil prices.

The post Renewed Tensions in Ukraine Push Oil Prices Up appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Doug Casey’s Coming Super-Bubble

By Louis James, Chief Metals & Mining Investment Strategist, Casey Research

In many of my conversations with legendary speculator Doug Casey since the crash of 2008, Doug has talked about a coming super-bubble.

Everything Doug has studied about human nature, history, and economics—from Roman times right up to the present—has him absolutely convinced that the global economy is headed for high inflation, with a very real potential for hyperinflation in the US.

Ben Bernanke’s panicked deployment of squadrons of cash-laden choppers has been emulated around the world. The Bank of International Settlements estimates that global debt markets now exceed $100 trillion.

The laws of economics—maybe even physics—say that this inflation, whenever it arrives, must have consequences… and that those consequences cannot be avoided forever.

The easiest consequence to predict, and the one we’re betting heavily on, is that the price of gold will move higher. Much higher. That move will in turn ignite a bubble in gold stocks and, as Doug likes to say, a super-bubble in junior gold stocks.

Jeff Clark, editor of our BIG GOLD newsletter, recently illustrated what such a super-bubble can look like, citing figures from several historic bull markets. I hesitate to repeat any of his figures because the right junior stocks’ gains when the market goes bubbly are, frankly, hard to believe. However, it is a fact that quite a few junior stocks achieved the much-vaunted 10-bagger status (1,000% gains) in previous bubbles, and some even returned 100-fold.

Here’s the essential reason why junior mining stocks are Doug’s favorite speculations.

Let’s start at the beginning: Doug’s mantra is that one should buy gold for prudence and gold stocks for profit. These are very different kinds of asset deployment.

It’s particularly important not to think of gold as an investment, but as wealth protection. It’s the only highly liquid financial asset that is not simultaneously someone else’s liability. Every ounce of gold you physically possess is value in solid form—there is no short to your long. Come hell or high water, it is value you can liquidate and use to secure your needs. That’s why gold is for prudence.

Gold stocks are for speculation because they offer leverage to gold. This is actually true of all mining stocks and, more broadly, of stocks in commodity-related companies; they all tend to magnify the price movements in the underlying commodity. But the phenomenon is especially strong in the highly volatile precious metals.

Allow me to illustrate—and in an effort to avoid seeming overly promotional, I’ll show how gold stocks’ leverage works on the downside as well as the upside. Bad news first: here’s a chart showing how gold retreated during October and November of 2008, the worst two months of that year’s crash for mining stocks. Also shown are an index of gold juniors and our own portfolio performance. This was, of course, a terrific time to buy, resulting in spectacular gains over the next two years.

Now the good news: here’s a chart showing the performance of the same three things in January and February of this year, which saw a major rally in the gold sector.

 

 

Here’s one more, with a particularly telling point to make. This is the stock price of ATAC Resources (ATC.V) over the same time period as the chart above. The point I want to draw your attention to is that the company had no major news during the time period shown. It’s a Yukon gold play, buried deep under the famous snows of the Great White North, so there’s no exploration under way, and there won’t be until the snow melts weeks or months from now.

This third chart shows in one simple yet powerful way exactly why Doug loves buying these stocks when they’re on sale and selling them when they go into bubble mode. ATAC essentially did nothing and still shot up over an order of magnitude more than gold. Note that while this third chart looks like the second, the scales are quite different. (ATAC, by the way, is part of my special report, 10-Bagger List for 2014, that details nine companies I believe could show 1,000% or more returns this year. Note that the report was written before the big move upward you see in the chart above.)

It’s worth emphasizing that ATAC’s performance this year is just on a rebound from recent lows—imagine what a stock like this could do when Doug’s super-bubble for gold stocks arrives.

But what if it doesn’t? Or worse—what if we already missed it?

I remember a conversation with Doug back in 2011, when gold rose to within reach of $2,000 per ounce. Many mainstream analysts said gold was in a bubble. I told Doug I couldn’t understand why anyone would listen to analysts who’ve called the gold trend wrong every year since the current bull cycle started. I remember Doug chuckling and saying: “Just wait and see—this is barely an overture.”

I am certain Doug is right. That’s not because he’s the guru, nor because I’m a nutty gold bug, but because no government in history has ever multiplied its currency base without sparking serious and often fatal inflation. That’s a fact, not an opinion, backed by enough data to make me extremely confident in predicting what lies ahead for the US dollar, even if I can’t say exactly when we’ll reach the tipping point.

Since that 2011 interim peak, as we all know painfully well, gold has backed off on par with the correction in the middle of the great 1970s gold bull market. But economic realities require that the market turn around and head for his long-predicted super-bubble in junior mining stocks before too long. That makes the correction the last, best time to build a substantial position in the stocks best positioned to profit from the coming bubble.

And now Doug is saying that he believes the upturn is at hand. He expects a steadily rising market for a year or two, perhaps more, but not many more, culminating in a market mania for the record books.

Our market does appear to have bottomed. It may take a while to go into its mania phase, but it’s already heating up. No one is going to want to be short when this train leaves the station—and the conductor has blown the whistle.

To find out what you could be missing if you don’t invest in junior mining stocks right now, watch Casey Research’s recent video event, Upturn Millionaires—How to Play the Turning Tides in the Precious Metals Market. With resource and investment experts Doug Casey, Frank Giustra, Rick Rule, Porter Stansberry, Ross Beaty, John Mauldin, Marin Katusa, and myself. Watch it here for free, or click here to find out more about my 10-Bagger List for 2014.

 

 

The article Doug Casey’s Coming Super-Bubble was originally published at caseyresearch.com.

AUDUSD rebounded from 0.9331

Being contained by the lower line of the price channel on 4-hour chart, AUDUSD rebounded from 0.9331, indicating that the pair remains in uptrend from 0.8924, the fall from 0.9461 could be treated as consolidation of the uptrend. Further rise to test 0.9461 would likely be seen, a break above this level will signal resumption of the uptrend, then next target would be at 0.9600 area. Key support is now at 0.9331, only break below this level could signal completion of the uptrend.

audusd

Provided by ForexCycle.com

Austrian Economics: How Austrians Ride the Financial Bull

By MoneyMorning.com.au

The single most asked question I get at investment conferences is, ‘Do you have a list of money managers who invest guided by the Austrian School of economics?’ The question is a good one. After all, the Austrian School stands alone in predicting the fall of the Soviet Union and the housing and financial crash.

Anyone with a retirement account has been whipsawed by the stock market over the past few decades. Fidelity’s Peter Lynch told everyone to buy stocks and hold. Everything would work out great. Diligent savers would even end up millionaires, courtesy of an ever-expanding stock market. The efficient-market hypothesis (EMH) provided intellectual support for the idea. The market reflects all information, so there’s no way to beat it, said the economists.

Now everyone knows better. Or at least they should.

The average person’s 401(k) was turned into a 201(k) in 2000, and was destroyed again in 2008 if they were brave enough to stay or get back in the market. Many people swore off stocks after the last crash only to watch the S&P 500 triple. Now the Fed’s zero interest policy has pulled them back just in time for the next market train wreck.

Those educated in the Austrian School understand how the central bank creates the business cycle’s booms and busts. And they know there is a better way than just buying, holding, and hoping. But how does one apply it using Friedrich Hayek’s and Ludwig von Mises’ theories to make money in the market?

In a very readable 107 pages, Roger McKinney shows you how to turn theory into profit and financial survival in his book Financial Bull Riding.

Now is the perfect time to read McKinney’s book. Stocks are trading at all-time highs. More margin debt is outstanding than ever before. Price/earnings ratios are stretched, with market darlings like Netflix and Amazon trading at P/Es of 196 and 581, respectively.

However expensive it may be, if you’ve missed this market move, every day it goes up, you feel the regret and are tempted to jump in. If already fully invested, you’re rationalizing away any concerns.

Eugene Fama may have shared the Nobel Prize for his EMH work, but McKinney disposes of the idea using a folksy story from a serially successful investor — Warren Buffett — that strict adherents to EMH would deny the existence of.

Buffett finished his story about coin-flipping orangutans with, ‘I think you will find that a disproportionate number of successful coin flippers in the investment world came from a very small intellectual village that could be called Graham-and-Doddsville.’

Buffett has a point. Even in the speculative world of junior resource investing, the legendary Rick Rule is an ardent adherent to the teachings of Ben Graham and David Dodd.

McKinney’s book may be about beating the markets, but the author gains his clear perspective not just through the lens of Austrian economics but from operating as a financial adviser far, far away in the flatland of Oklahoma. His perspective isn’t clouded by the canyons of Wall Street. Common sense still makes sense in the plains.

Bull Riding is Rothbardian in its scope of history used to support the book’s premise. Richard Cantillon is not a household name, but McKinney provides a brief, enlightening history of the man who made a fortune in the crash of John Law’s Mississippi Bubble in 1720 France.

And how many books on investing mention the University of Salamanca as the beginning of the marginal revolution? ‘Had [Adam] Smith been more familiar with the writings of the Salamanca scholars, he would not have made that mistake.’ ‘That mistake’ being the labour theory of value.

Readers shouldn’t worry about the author getting too bogged down in theory or history. He condenses these matters, as well as the Keynesian takeover. He then quickly gets into explaining the Austrian business cycle theory as the bedrock for investment timing.

Hayek’s and Mises’ insight was that monetary intervention by a central bank forces interest rates below their natural rate. This fools entrepreneurs into believing savings have increased and demand has shifted from consumer goods to higher-order (investment) goods. Of course, savings haven’t increased, and this misdirected capital becomes what Austrians call malinvestments, to be liquidated in the downturn.

Selecting good companies to invest in is important, but timing is everything. ‘If we can predict with some accuracy when profits will change in the business cycle,’ McKinney writes, ‘we should have some idea of when stock prices will change.

The author follows the money and, in turn, the profits of various business sectors, providing a road map to help investors determine entry and exits points in the market. It’s what he calls avoiding the ‘business cycle horns.’

Investors have different temperaments and risk tolerances. Very few are all-around cowboys. McKinney lays out three strategies for this investment rodeo depending upon what kind of cowboy you are.

You may be a calf roper, with plenty of skill and, most importantly, plenty of patience. But calf ropers don’t make as much as other cowboys. Steer wrestlers make more, but timing is more critical, while less patience is required.

The big money in any rodeo is made by bull riders, who risk life and limb for an eight-second thrill ride. The investment bull rider will try to ride all market fluctuations using margin, options, and futures. Bumps and bruises should be expected, but the rewards can be enormous for a successful ride. Especially if you use Austrian business cycle as a big-picture guide, with technical analysis to navigate the market’s daily bucking.

The best freedom is financial freedom. Rather than hand your hard-earned savings to a broker or money manager whose primary interest is to generate commissions or increase money under management, take control of your own nest egg.

Doug French
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Ed. note: The above article was originally published at Laissez Faire.

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Investing in Technology and Innovation is the Key to Australia’s Future

By MoneyMorning.com.au

When will the Australian government get the message?

The message I’m talking about is you need to invest in and support Australia’s start-up community.

In April last year Google Australia commissioned PWC to look into the Aussie tech scene. They released a paper, The Startup Economy, based on their findings.

But the push to get this all done and into the public domain came from a group of tech entrepreneurs who decided enough was enough.

The theme behind Google’s paper was ‘How to support tech startups and accelerate innovation.

In effect Google was doing the work of the government. All that Canberra had to do was listen and take action.

In the PWC/Google paper this was the biggest key finding:

The Australian tech startup sector has the potential to contribute $109 billion or 4% of GDP to the Australian economy and 540,000 jobs by 2033 with a concerted effort from entrepreneurs, educators, the government and corporate Australia.

Another key finding was jobs create jobs. Specifically that high tech jobs and innovation help to create new jobs that previously never existed. This is what happens when smart people think of better and new ways to do things.

In his book, The New Geography of Jobs, Enrico Moretti says, ‘In essence, a high tech job is more than a job… Research shows for each high tech job, five additional jobs are created outside the high tech sector.

What that means is when you invest in innovation it pays you back multiple times through jobs and economic activity.

In 2012, IBM also commissioned a paper titled A snapshot of Australia’s Digital Future to 2050.

In the paper IBM measured a number of industries. The point was to discover what tech startups today were focused on versus the potential those industries would have to GDP in 2050. These were the outcomes from that study.

The conclusion here is currently the majority of startups are in information media and telecommunications. And by majority, we mean over 75%..

But in terms of actual GDP in 2050, health care and social assistance will be the highest contributing industry. Yet right now there’s little to no support for startups working in this space. And there’s not many startups focused on this sector.

Most people would think mining or banking and finance would be the biggest contributors to future GDP. But based on this study, that’s not how it’ll play out.

If you’re wondering how health care can possibly be the biggest contributor to GDP by 2050, I’ll tell you.

Ageing Population is a Problem if you do Nothing Innovative to Solve it

You only need to look at the recent comments from the Treasurer Joe Hockey. In Washington on Wednesday Hockey said, ‘In fact the IMF fiscal report released just a few hours ago identified that Australia’s increased healthcare and pension spending alone, based on current settings, would mean an extra $93 billion of government spending per annum by 2030.
 
So what’s the government’s answer to these problems? Well they’re likely going to try and lift the retirement ago to 70. Added to that they’re looking at including the family home in assessing the eligibility for aged pension.

You see Australia has a problem. An ageing population that’s going to have increasing healthcare needs over the next 40 years. And the government knows this. Hockey even went on to say, ‘We will need to improve competition and efficiency in the delivery of healthcare and we need to ensure that access to the pension system is prioritised for those most vulnerable.

It’s not like the government doesn’t know what the problem is. But considering two years ago IBM identified this requirement. And then last year Google also backed this up with a viable strategy to combat the problem.

But what has the government done? (And I’m not playing favourites here because we’ve seen two governments miss the point).

I’ll tell you what they’ve done…nothing.

Speaking in relation to the upcoming budget Hockey went on to say, ‘If we want to maintain and improve our quality of life, then all of us, without exclusion, all of us need to help do the heavy lifting.

Well two years have flown by, and still the Australian government refuses to support innovation.

Entrepreneurs will just do it Themselves

Now as mentioned at the top, the Google report was thanks to a group of Aussie entrepreneurs. Together they decided they, not government, could do something to support the Aussie tech scene.

StartupAUS formed in late 2012. But it really came into being in March 2013 when over 50 people from Australia’s startup community decided to take some action and figure out a roadmap for an Australian tech ecosystem.

Now this kind of thing isn’t uncommon in the technology world. You see entrepreneurs realise government talks a big game but does very little to back it up. So in order to get things done and move things forward, entrepreneurs band together and do it themselves.

They do this because they are entrepreneurs. They know they can mobilise, and action plans faster and more efficiently than any government can. That’s the purpose of StartupAUS.

They say, ‘We believe a strong homegrown tech sector is vital to future Australian jobs and wealth. But getting there will require a national imperative to create the right environment, with a supportive culture and more entrepreneurs with the right skills.

Mr Hockey and Mr Abbott, it’s not a difficult problem to solve. If you want to shore up the future of the country you need to actually put some resources into the fledgling Aussie startup community.

The talent is there, the drive, the focus and the ambition is all there. But without national support great companies that turn into multi-billion dollar companies will move offshore.

You only need to look at some of Australia’s finest tech startups that are making waves around the world.

There’s Atlassian, Bigcommerce, Freelancer, 99Designs, 99Dresses and Shoes of Prey.

Atlassian is valued at over $3 billion and is looking to take the company offshore. I’m sure if the Aussie environment suited operations they’d stick around. But right now why would anyone want to?

With the government warning people and business that there’s some ‘heavy lifting’ to be done if I was Atlassian I’d pack up shop too. You can’t blame them.

Countries such as the UK and US are much more accommodating and supportive of tech companies. They know these are the companies that will drive economies in the future and they are willing to support them.

Also when you look at Bigcommerce, 99Designs and the others mentioned, the bulk of their funding comes from overseas investors. US Venture capital funds that understand the way these companies work and understand their potential are the ones pumping money into their operations.

It’s not too late for Australia to turn things around. Some initiative and some forward thinking can start to set us up for the future.

But what the country needs is a genuine innovation policy. However for decades, no government has had one.

The task will fall to private industry and organisations like StartupAUS. They will be the ones that grab the reins to help drive the country forward. And if we’re lucky we’ll get companies like Freelancer.com that stick around against all odds and bring great long-term benefit to the country.

Regards,
Sam Volkering+
Editor, Tech Insider

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Gener8 Disrupts the Big Data Status Quo

http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/gener8-disrupts-the-big-data-status-quo

Big data is taking over the world, and Rory Armes and Ken Scott of Gener8 Media Corp. know why. In this interview with Streetwise Reports’ Special Situations, the two Vancouver-based upstarts discuss the tribulations of getting in on the ground floor of the newest developments in information technology—and the many potential rewards.

Management Q&A: View From the Top

Special Situations: Gener8 is well known for its 2D to 3D conversion technology and work, but it has also been quietly developing a big data product to facilitate tracking its own 3D movie conversion process. What is the growth potential for these products?

Rory Armes: Our story started with inventing software for 3D movie conversion. Our big data visualization tool, Cumul8, emerged out of technology we developed to convert 2D films to 3D format. Cumul8 was a tool that helped track the immense amount of information needed to complete each frame of a movie. Cumul8 helps the team understand quickly “where the film is at.”

Our 3D division is focused on post-production for prereleased theatrical films for Hollywood. But box office growth for 3D has expanded far outside of North America, into China, India and Europe. Studio budgets for creating 3D films have increased, especially for action/adventure-style blockbusters. And big-time international directors are chomping to work in 3D.

Now we know that our high-quality film conversion software also has applications beyond entertainment. The 3D software can produce visual displays for medical, educational and industrial uses, and can be used to make visual sense out of complicated seismic data for the oil and gas sector, as an example. There is growth potential in a number of areas beyond simply film.

SS: When you talk about converting 2D into 3D, does that mean that the director shoots the movie in 2D, and then you convert it into 3D? Or are the filmmakers using special 3D cameras all along?

RA: There are two ways to create a 3D movie image. One is to film the action with two cameras; one camera is the left eye and the other is the right eye. The cameras are rigged to triangulate moving objects and that creates a 3D effect. We call that native filming. Avatar was filmed natively, with two cameras shooting each object. But, as is often the case, software solutions quickly surpass hardware solutions. We create the 3D stereoscopic effect by using software, as opposed to two-camera systems. Directors only need to use a single camera, and can get stunning 3D objects in post-production.

SS: Can you also convert films that were shot in 1940 to a 3D format?

RA: We can make any digital version of a movie into 3D. A good example is in Ridley Scott’s 3D film, Prometheus. There is a background scene from the 2D film Lawrence of Arabia, which we converted to 3D to keep the full illusion of 3D for the entire Prometheus film.

SS: How did your software get from 3D filming into big data applications?

RA: It turned out that managing the logistics of our data-heavy film conversion business was a big data headache. We wrote a piece of software, which we named Cumul8, to manage the insanity of big data in the film industry. Interestingly, most of our software engineers and designers come out of the gaming world, where “visualizing” data is the key to success. It was a natural progression for Gener8 to unbolt Cumul8 as a second source of revenue.

Industry is simply desperate to visualize mountains of digital data. The problem is that most of the computer tools today are used to manipulate operations data. This software is typically a custom solution that helps manage the necessary tasks of a complex industry. The software that runs a business is not meant to deal with the visualization of larger collections of data for analytical purposes. These systems are working, are collecting more data faster, but are not able to visualize the mountains of data or tell a quick story of what is truly happening in that second. That void has opened up a new, $50 billion, fast-growing industry for big data manipulation tools. The value of companies that can do this kind of work, like Tableau Software Inc. (DATA:NYSE) and Splunk Inc. (SPLK:NASDAQ), has rocketed into the billions.

SS: What are your backgrounds?

RA: I made video games for 20 years, both for my own company and also for Electronic Arts Inc. (EA:NASDAQ). But my main skills are the ability to set up an idea or a vision, and the ability to get programmers to create it. Ken has a strong background in corporate management, and I know how to lead the development teams.

My philosophy has always been to take a complex problem and provide a simple, well-articulated solution that allows decision making to move fast. We have created a design team around Cumul8 that focuses on that very vision. This team understands the deep complexity of how to bring out the data, and the visual designers are masters of transforming that data into a human interface form that is easy to read and gives the user an instant understanding of the situation. This is about taking all the knowledge from developing the top games and applying that to a broader industry.

SS: What about you, Ken?

Ken Scott: I am a chartered accountant with a long career in public practice. Rory was a client when we first met. I watched him take a talented group of software engineers that had been focused on gaming and inspire them to create these unique technologies, initially focused on 3D. In less than three years, we watched Gener8 go from being one firm in a field of 20 companies offering 3D conversion services to Hollywood to today, where only four of those companies are left standing. We are still the smallest and the least capitalized firm within that realm, but our 3D is recognized today as leading edge.

SS: Please explain.

KS: In converting pieces of, say, the Harry Potter film into 3D during post-production, it is vital to keep track of how each part of the complex process is progressing in comparison to every other part. We developed Cumul8 to tell us where each stage of the film was at in the conversion process. The product also allowed us to integrate what we were doing with the entire postproduction process, which incorporates multiple vendors to Hollywood. It quickly became apparent to us that we had a tool that could be used independently from our 3D product.

And more important, we realized our Cumul8 product could be used beyond the entertainment sector. It was literally industry-agnostic.

SS: How do you migrate preexisting data from any industry into Cumul8, so that Cumul8 knows what to do with it?

KS: What we offer customers is not data collection, but data visualization and data analytics, so that the user can interface with and control that data to make faster decisions. Cumul8 takes live data from any type of business and puts it into a useful visual form.

There are plenty of amazing companies that do a brilliant job of collecting data. As well, there are enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems that track the movement of data for every industry. The biggest opportunity we see is the “last mile,” the ability to take all that information and give it back to the user in a form that is useable and understandable. Cumul8 goes through any current data collection or ERP system and helps bring the data to life—bring it out in a visual form that tells the right story. We have pilot projects working in the gaming sector and in the film sector, and are about to launch a large development effort in the manufacturing sector. We are very excited about manufacturing because we see an industry that deals in a process that works all the way from hand-and-hammers to precise lasers. Cumul8 is showing it can bridge the technical gap.

The cool thing is that the interface can be tailored to any level of the organization: Whether a production line worker, middle management or the CEO. Cumul8 enables each employee to extract relevant information from any data source and present it in a manner that’s useful for their particular needs.

SS: How are you restructuring Gener8 to expand into these significant growth areas?

KS: In three short years, our 3D business went from ground zero to one of the leaders in the industry. Cumul8 has already been structured as a completely separate entity from the 3D division. Our senior management team oversees the whole Gener8 business, but Cumul8 is ramping up to go its own way. Today, both the 3D business and the Cumul8 business sit in the entertainment sector, because that is where we have been focused. But, as I mentioned, we are now applying Cumul8 to manufacturing. We believe we will see a quick expansion into the manufacturing area based on our early pilot talks with a number of different companies.

SS: You spun off the 3D division to a Chinese company?

KS: We knew we had to partner with a large postproduction company that could help take the 3D business to the next level. We went to China last year, initially thinking about building an outsourcing studio, and met Tianjin Fu Feng Da Movie & Television Technology Investment and Development Co. Ltd. (FFD; private), which made an offer to buy into our 3D business. We agreed to sell a majority interest in the business to FFD.

We will continue to maintain a 40% interest in the 3D side, and with that we will continue to manage and build the 3D business with FFD, as part of a bigger postproduction organization. The FFD partnership makes sense because that company shares the same vision for expanding the 3D world, not just in entertainment but beyond, into industrial, medical and education applications. FFD will enable Gener8 to learn and interact with the growing Asian entertainment market. To be No. 1 in this industry, we knew we had to partner with a company that could help us grow inside and outside of North America.

SS: What industries do you see as being the main customers for Cumul8?

KS: Our goal is to build Cumul8 with what we refer to as industry “pods.” The first pod is the entertainment industry, where we already have visibility with our 3D business. The goal is to continue to develop the Cumul8 product within entertainment for application at the large studio level.

We are building another pod for manufacturing—initially concentrating on turning machine-readable data into real-time visualizations. Other industry pods will be added over time, such as mining—a natural, given that we are located in Vancouver. We plan for the mining pod to have a pilot initiative before the end of 2014. Other industries, such as the life sciences, financial institutions and oil and gas, are also targets.

SS: Is there a strong digital workforce in Vancouver?

RA: I started making games in 1988, and I have been hiring creators ever since. Our Rolodex is strong, and Vancouver is very strong in digital media. Vancouver stormed into the digital realm with Don Mattrick’s Distinctive Software Inc. Don is now CEO of Zynga Inc. (ZNGA:NASDAQ). Don is considered the father of digital media in Vancouver.

We really are Silicon Valley North. There are many new tech startups here, and digital Vancouver is creating a culture in which 25-year-olds feel at home. I just read a National Post article about millennials. There is no such thing as work-life balance to millennials, it’s all a mix. Vancouver does a good job of creating a culture where programmers can have fun and work hard. The millennial is used to playing video games. And Cumul8 visualizes data in formats that the millennial already grasps with ease.

SS: What is the story behind Reelhouse?

KS: The third slice of our corporate pie is a digital distribution model, created and developed within Reelhouse Media Ltd., a majority-owned subsidiary of Gener8. With Reelhouse, the team has been working on a solution to digital distribution issues in the film industry. Reelhouse started out as a platform focused on providing independent filmmakers a place to distribute their films and seek input and reviews from customers.

Reelhouse quickly garnered the attention of a major Hollywood studio. Today, a number of studios are looking at a “Reelhouse” solution for digital distribution because of the ongoing shift from hard copy distribution, such as buying a DVD at a big-box store, to buying or renting your movie straight off the Internet.

Reelhouse is not that different than our 3D or Cumul8 technologies. Reelhouse took a digital media problem, built a team, got the product out and within a year was one of a handful of leading companies in the space.

SS: Let us talk about your balance sheet. Gener8’s revenue growth was great over the past year, but you showed a significant operating loss. Please explain.

KS: Gener8 was financed privately in its early stages. In our first three years, we launched three unique technology businesses, all three in different but highly disruptive sectors, and all three possessing leadership traits in their respective fields. And we accomplished this by raising only $12 million ($12M), of which approximately $8M was raised privately. The last $4M was raised through a public vehicle that we took over on the Canadian Securities Exchange.

SS: The Delon Resources Corp. (DLN:CNSX)?

KS: Yes. It was a reverse takeover (RTO). Since then, we have been financing the growth of our three businesses with revenues generated by the 3D business, also still in its infancy. Year-to-date sales for September 2013 were about $8.4M. We had a loss of $6M. Of that loss, $3.2M was due to the costs of the Delon RTO.

Also, if you look at operating efficiencies for the first nine months of 2013 over the prior year, they have improved significantly, and our sales revenue is growing.

SS: Do you have a debt load?

KS: The only debt is a shareholder loan payable to Rory, and we are not under any stress to repay it. To date, we have basically financed this company off our working capital.

SS: How has your stock performed since you went public on the Canadian National Stock Exchange (CNSX) a year ago?

KS: We went through a few share-pricing issues after going public. We need to be cognizant that until recently, capital raising in Canada has largely been focused into the resource sector. It was, and still is, very challenging for tech startups to garner attention for financings. Recently, our share price has recovered and settled in tandem with some good news during the past year. We completed a full-length feature film, 300: Rise of an Empire, which has had very good reviews; our Q3/13 results were break-even; we announced plans to partner with a Chinese postproduction business—all led to a recovery in our stock price. We believe the share valuation today reflects our three unique businesses.

RA: Our decision to go public was spurred by the need to raise capital through a public financing structure as opposed to a specific desire to be public.

SS: Do you have any big data contracts lined up already?

RA: We are working with clients in entertainment and manufacturing right now. Our own internal team was our initial pilot project and that created the basis for our SaaS (Software as a Service) product. From there, we have developed a number of pilot projects, which are helping us shape the focus of our underlying product. This will result in solid work in our growing sector list.

SS: It sounds like you’re positioned to keep growing in terms of revenue. Do you have any plans to be listed on any other exchanges?

KS: Ultimately, our goal will be to move onto a bigger board. We would also consider moving to a U.S. stock exchange.

SS: What’s the most important takeaway that investors need to know about Gener8?

RA: Our products are all very disruptive technologies. Similar big data-based companies are trading at very high share values. I am excited about where we are headed during the next 18 months. We have shown that we can design technology that is commercialized fast, and that we can hire seasoned managers used to running large teams with big revenue targets. I believe these add up to a very exciting future for our company.

SS: Thank you for your time today, gentlemen.

RA: Thank you.

Under the direction of Rory Armes, founder and chief executive officer, Gener8 has become a recognized industry leader in 3D stereo conversion. Armes is a former senior vice president at Electronic Arts Inc., where he headed game development in London, Sweden, Montreal and Vancouver. He was responsible for EA’s largest franchises, including Need for Speed, FIFA, Harry Potter and NHL. Prior to joining EA, Armes was cofounder and president of Radical Entertainment, a leading developer of interactive entertainment. He was also a senior executive with Distinctive Software Interactive, a company acquired by EA.

Joining Gener8 upon its public listing, President Ken Scott is working to grow the company’s reach and expand the market presence across Gener8’s product lines. Scott is a chartered accountant and former partner at KPMG LLP, with experience assisting clients in growing their businesses across many industries, including media, entertainment and technology. In addition to a long tenure at KPMG, Scott has been a senior executive and CFO in industry for a few private companies. Scott has significant merger-and acquisition and financing experience.

DISCLOSURE:

1) Peter Byrne conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of The Gold Report, The Energy Report, The Life Sciences Report and The Mining Report, and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an independent contractor. He owns, or his family owns, shares of the company mentioned in this interview: None.

2) Gener8 Media Corp. paid Streetwise Reports to conduct, produce and distribute the interview.

3) Gener8 Media Corp. had final approval of the content and is wholly responsible for the validity of the statements. Opinions expressed are the opinions of Ken Scott and Rory Armes and not of Streetwise Reports or its officers.

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Outside the Box: Dare to Be Great II

By John Mauldin

 

I can’t tell you how many thousands of hours I have spent, over the years, thinking about, reading about, and talking about how to be a consistently successful investor; but I can tell you this: I’m still working at it. And once in a while – less frequently as the years pass, it seems – I come across investment advice that strikes me as fundamentally strong, innovative, and worth assimilating.

I feel that way about today’s Outside the Box. It’s a client memo sent last week by Howard Marks, founder and chairman of Oaktree Capital Management. He calls it “Dare to Be Great II,” since it’s a follow-up to the famous memo by that name he wrote in 2006.

The first thing we need if we’re to become superior investors, says Howard, is an explicit investing creed. What do we believe in? What principles will underpin our process? He suggests that we ask ourselves questions like the following – and be willing and able to come to agreement on them with our colleagues.

  • Is the efficient market hypothesis relevant? Do efficient markets exist? Is it possible to “beat the market”? Which markets? To what extent?
  • Will you emphasize risk control or return maximization as the primary route to success (or do you think it’s possible to achieve both simultaneously)?
  • Will you put your faith in macro forecasts and adjust your portfolio based on what they say?
  • How do you think about risk? Is it volatility or the probability of permanent loss? Can it be predicted and quantified a priori? What’s the best way to manage it?
  • How reliably do you believe a disciplined process will produce the desired results? That is, how do you view the question of determinism versus randomness?
  • Most importantly for the purposes of this memo, how will you define success, and what risks will you take to achieve it? In short, in trying to be right, are you willing to bear the inescapable risk of being wrong?

Now that’s what I call a worthwhile list of questions.

If we’re going to dare to be great, Howard asserts, we have to dare to be different.

Speaking of which, one of my personal heroines is Ayaan Hirsi Ali. Her courage in confronting the oppression of women at the risk of her own life is inspiring. In person she is a quiet, reserved, formidable force of nature. This last week she suffered an unjust, cowardly affront to her courage and her work dedicated to helping those who can’t help themselves.

Brandeis University decided to offer Ayaan an honorary doctorate for her efforts on behalf of women in Muslim societies. When the decision was announced, a group of students, faculty members, and the usual politically correct pressure groups campaigned to have the university withdraw the honor. Brandeis president Frederick Lawrence quickly capitulated. Not even bothering to sign his own notice, he offered that Ayaan’s story is “compelling,” whatever that means. But, he added, “That said, we cannot overlook certain of her past statements that are inconsistent with Brandeis University’s core values. For all concerned, we regret that we were not aware of the statements earlier.”

That is simply Academic Bullshit. First of all, no one requested or forced Brandeis to offer the degree in the first place; it was their own clear choice. Secondly, after two best-selling books and hundreds of public appearances, Ayaan has made her views well-known. That she has criticized certain aspects of Islamic culture is no secret. For the Brandeis administration to say that they were unaware of her views stretches one’s sense of credulity beyond the limit. In Texas we would simply call it a lie.

I would be interested in the views of those who opposed her. Precisely which of the practices she condemns would they like to see maintained? Female genital mutilation, honor killings, forced marriage, or Sharia law? Perhaps treating women as property is deemed appropriate by some people.

The simple fact is, there is a portion of the academic community that is so politically correct that they are socially useless. In the name of being tolerant they tolerate acts so despicable as to be worthy of shunning. They have the discernment of a fruitfly. And that is probably an insult to fruitfly-kind.

Even more interesting is that just a few years ago Brandeis awarded an honorary degree to playwright Tony Kushner, who had been quoted as saying, “The biggest supporters of Israel are the most repulsive members of the Jewish community.” At the time the Brandeis president justified the award saying, “Just as Brandeis does not inquire into the political opinions and beliefs of faculty or staff before appointing them, or students before offering admission, so too the University does not select honorary degree recipients on the basis of their political beliefs or opinions.” So which is it, President Lawrence? Or is it just that women cannot hold strong beliefs?

If I were Brandeis graduate, I would be profoundly embarrassed. But a good way to voice your displeasure might be to write a check to Ayaan’s foundation at http://theahafoundation.org/, send a copy of it to President Lawrence, and say that until he personally apologizes for his cowardly behavior and ungentlemanly conduct in disparaging the character of a person so courageous as Ayaan Hirsi Ali, no more checks to Brandeis will be forthcoming. This whole distasteful event is especially galling when you realize that Brandeis was founded as a nonsectarian Jewish coeducational institution to counter oppression and a lack of tolerance.

The rest of my readers may also want to click on the link and make donations. There are tens of thousands of young girls around the world who face severe oppression that is justified in the name of culture and religion. Someone has to stand up and say no more. Ayaan does that, and perhaps we should stand with her. Think of your daughters and granddaughters and decide what kind of world you want them to grow up in.

I am back in Dallas and enjoying being home and next to my gym. I was not in the gym enough in South Africa, and I can feel it. I’m going to have to get better at scheduling workout time when I’m on the road. Have yourself a great week, and really sit and think through some of the questions that Howard Marks challenges us with. They are at the heart of the investing portion of our lives. Without clear answers to them, we are wandering aimlessly and can expect unsatisfying results.

Your back just in time to pay my higher-than-ever taxes analyst,

John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box
[email protected]

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Memo to:        Oaktree Clients

From:               Howard Marks

Re:                    Dare to Be Great II

In September 2006, I wrote a memo entitled Dare to Be Great, with suggestions on how institutional investors might approach the goal of achieving superior investment results. I’ve had some additional thoughts on the matter since then, meaning it’s time to return to it. Since fewer people were reading my memos in those days, I’m going to start off repeating a bit of its content and go on from there.

About a year ago, a sovereign wealth fund that’s an Oaktree client asked me to speak to their leadership group on the subject of what makes for a superior investing organization. I welcomed the opportunity. The first thing you have to do, I told them, is formulate an explicit investing creed. What do you believe in? What principles will underpin your process? The investing team and the people who review their performance have to be in agreement on questions like these:

  • Is the efficient market hypothesis relevant? Do efficient markets exist? Is it possible to “beat the market”? Which markets? To what extent?
  • Will you emphasize risk control or return maximization as the primary route to success (or do you think it’s possible to achieve both simultaneously)?
  • Will you put your faith in macro forecasts and adjust your portfolio based on what they say?
  • How do you think about risk? Is it volatility or the probability of permanent loss? Can it be predicted and quantified a priori? What’s the best way to manage it?
  • How reliably do you believe a disciplined process will produce the desired results? That is, how do you view the question of determinism versus randomness?
  • Most importantly for the purposes of this memo, how will you define success, and what risks will you take to achieve it? In short, in trying to be right, are you willing to bear the inescapable risk of being wrong?

Passive investors, benchmark huggers and herd followers have a high probability of achieving average performance and little risk of falling far short. But in exchange for safety from being much below average, they surrender their chance of being much above average. All investors have to decide whether that’s okay. And, if not, what they’ll do about it.

The more I think about it, the more angles I see in the title Dare to Be Great. Who wouldn’t dare to be great? No one. Everyone would love to have outstanding performance. The real question is whether you dare to do the things that are necessary in order to be great. Are you willing to be different, and are you willing to be wrong? In order to have a chance at great results, you have to be open to being both.

Dare to Be Different

Here’s a line from Dare to Be Great: “This just in: you can’t take the same actions as everyone else and expect to outperform.” Simple, but still appropriate.

For years I’ve posed the following riddle: Suppose I hire you as a portfolio manager and we agree you will get no compensation next year if your return is in the bottom nine deciles of the investor universe but $10 million if you’re in the top decile. What’s the first thing you have to do – the absolute prerequisite – in order to have a chance at the big money? No one has ever answered it right.

The answer may not be obvious, but it’s imperative: you have to assemble a portfolio that’s different from those held by most other investors. If your portfolio looks like everyone else’s, you may do well, or you may do poorly, but you can’t do different. And being different is absolutely essential if you want a chance at being superior. In order to get into the top of the performance distribution, you have to escape from the crowd. There are many ways to try. They include being active in unusual market niches; buying things others haven’t found, don’t like or consider too risky to touch; avoiding market darlings that the crowd thinks can’t lose; engaging in contrarian cycle timing; and concentrating heavily in a small number of things you think will deliver exceptional performance.

Dare to Be Great included the two-by-two matrix and paragraph below. Several people told me the matrix was helpful.

 

Conventional
Behavior

Unconventional
Behavior

Favorable Outcomes

Average good results

Above-average results

Unfavorable Outcomes

Average bad results

Below-average results

Of course it’s not that easy and clear-cut, but I think that’s the general situation. If your behavior and that of your managers is conventional, you’re likely to get conventional results – either good or bad. Only if your behavior is unconventional is your performance likely to be unconventional … and only if your judgments are superior is your performance likely to be above average.

For those who define investment success as being “average or better,” three of the four cells of the matrix represent satisfactory outcomes. But if you define success strictly as being superior, only one of the four will do, and it requires unconventional behavior. More from the 2006 memo:

The bottom line on striving for superior performance has a lot to do with daring to be great. Especially in terms of asset allocation, “can’t lose” usually goes hand-in-hand with “can’t win.” One of the investor’s or the committee’s first and most fundamental decisions has to be on the question of how far out the portfolio will venture. How much emphasis should be put on diversifying, avoiding risk and ensuring against below-pack performance, and how much on sacrificing these things in the hope of doing better?

In the memo I mentioned my favorite fortune cookie: “the cautious seldom err or write great poetry.” Like the title Dare to Be Great, I find the fortune cookie thought-provoking. It can be taken as urging caution, since it reduces the likelihood of enor. Or it can be taken as saying you should avoid caution, since it can keep you from doing great things. Or both. No right or wrong answer, but a choice. . . and hopefully a conscious one.

It Isn’t Easy Being Different

In the 2006 memo, I borrowed two quotes from Pioneering Portfolio Management by David Swensen of Yale. They’re my absolute favorites on the subject of institutional behavior. Here’s the first:

Establishing and maintaining an unconventional investment profile requires acceptance of uncomfortably idiosyncratic portfolios, which frequently appear downright imprudent in the eyes of conventional wisdom.

“Uncomfortably idiosyncratic” is a terrific phrase. There’s a great deal of wisdom in those two words. What’s idiosyncratic is rarely comfortable. . . and in order for something to be comfortable, it usually has to be conventional. The road to above average performance runs through unconventional, uncomfortable investing. Here’s how I put it in 2006:

Non-consensus ideas have to be lonely. By definition, non-consensus ideas that are popular, widely held or intuitively obvious are an oxymoron. Thus such ideas are uncomfortable; non-conformists don’t enjoy the warmth that comes with being at the center of the herd. Further, unconventional ideas often appear imprudent. The popular definition of “prudent” – especially in the investment world – is often twisted into “what everyone does.”

Most great investments begin in discomfort. The things most people feel good about – investments where the underlying premise is widely accepted, the recent performance has been positive and the outlook is rosy – are unlikely to be available at bargain prices. Rather, bargains are usually found among things that are controversial, that people are pessimistic about, and that have been performing badly of late.

But it isn’t easy to do things that entail discomfort. It’s no coincidence that distressed debt has been the source of many successful investments for Oaktree; there’s no such thing as a distressed company that everyone reveres. In 1988, when Bruce Karsh and I organized our first fund to invest in the debt of companies seemingly at death’s door, the very idea made it hard to raise money, and investing required conviction – on the clients’ part and our own – that our analysis and approach would mitigate the risk. The same discomfort, however, is what caused distressed debt to be priced cheaper than it should have been, and thus the returns to be consistently high.

Dare to Be Wrong

“You have to give yourself a chance to fail.” That’s what Kenny “The Jet” Smith said on TV the other night during the NCAA college basketball tournament, talking about a star player who started out cold and as a result attempted too few shots in a game his team lost. It’s a great way to make the point. Failure isn’t anyone’s goal, of course, but rather an inescapable potential consequence of trying to do really well.

Any attempt to compile superior investment results has to entail acceptance of the possibility of being wrong. The matrix on page two shows that since conventional behavior is sure to produce average performance, people who want to be above average can’t expect to get there by engaging in conventional behavior. Their behavior has to be different. And in the course of trying to be different and better, they have to bear the risk of being different and worse. That truth is simply unarguable. There is no way to strive for the former that doesn’t require bearing the risk of the latter.

The truth is, almost everything about superior investing is a two-edged sword:

  • If you invest, you will lose money if the market declines.
  • If you don’t invest, you will miss out on gains if the market rises.
  • Market timing will add value if it can be done right.
  • Buy-and-hold will produce better results if timing can’t be done right.
  • Aggressiveness will help when the market rises but hurt when it falls.
  • Defensiveness will help when the market falls but hurt when it rises.
  • If you concentrate your portfolio, your mistakes will kill you.
  • If you diversify, the payoff from your successes will be diminished.
  • If you employ leverage, your successes will be magnified.
  • If you employ leverage, your mistakes will be magnified.

Each of these pairings indicates symmetry. None of the tactics listed will add value if it’s right but not subtract if it’s wrong. Thus none of these tactics, in and of itself, can hold the secret to dependably above average investment performance.

There’s only one thing in the investment world that isn’t two-edged, and that’s “alpha”: superior insight or skill. Skill can help in both up markets and down markets. And by making it more likely that your decisions are right, superior skill can increase the expected benefit from concentration and leverage. But that kind of superior skill by definition is rare and elusive.

The goal in investing is asymmetry: to expose yourself to return in a way that doesn’t expose you commensurately to risk, and to participate in gains when the market rises to a greater extent than you participate in losses when it falls. But that doesn’t mean the avoidance of all losses is a reasonable objective. Take another look at the goal of asymmetry set out above: it talks about achieving a preponderance of gain over loss, not avoiding all chance of loss.

To succeed at any activity involving the pursuit of gain, we have to be able to withstand the possibility of loss. A goal of avoiding all losses can render success unachievable almost as readily as can the occurrence of too many losses. Here are three examples of “loss prevention strategies” that can lead to failure:

  • I play tennis. But if when I start a match I promise myself that I won’t commit a single double fault, I’ll never be able to put enough “mustard” on my second serve to keep it from being easy for my opponent to put away.
  • Likewise, coming out ahead at poker requires that I win a lot on my winning hands and lose less on my losers. But insisting that I’ll never play anything but “the nuts” – the hand that can’t possibly be beat – will keep me from playing lots of hands that have a good chance to win but aren’t sure things.
  • For a real-life example, Oaktree has always emphasized default avoidance as the route to outperformance in high yield bonds. Thus our default rate has consistently averaged just 1/3 of the universe default rate, and our risk-adjusted return has beaten the indices. But if we had insisted on – and designed compensation to demand – zero defaults, I’m sure we would have been too risk averse and our performance wouldn’t have been as good. As my partner Sheldon Stone puts it, “If you don’t have any defaults, you’re taking too little risk.”

When I first went to work at Citibank in 1968, they had a slogan that “scared money never wins.” It’s important to play judiciously, to have more successes than failures, and to make more on your successes than you lose on your failures. But it’s crippling to have to avoid all failures, and insisting on doing so can’t be a winning strategy. It may guarantee you against losses, but it’s likely to guarantee you against gains as well. Here’s some helpful wisdom on the subject from Wayne Gretzky, considered by many to be the greatest hockey player who ever lived: “You miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.”

There is no formulaic approach to investing that can be depended on to produce superior risk-adjusted returns. There can’t be. In a relatively fair or “efficient” market – and the concerted efforts of investors to find underpriced assets tend to make most markets quite fair – asymmetry is reduced, and a formula that everyone can access can’t possibly work.

As John Kenneth Galbraith said, “There is nothing reliable to be learned about makingmoney. If there were, study would be intense and everyone with a positive IQ would be rich.” If merely applying a formula that’s available to everyone could be counted on to provide easy profits, where would those profits come from? Who would be the losers in those transactions? Why wouldn’t those people study and apply the formula also?

Or as Charlie Munger told me, “It’s not supposed to be easy. Anyone who finds it easy is stupid.” In other words, anyone who thinks it can be easy to succeed at investing is being simplistic and superficial, and ignoring investing’s complex and competitive nature.

Why should superior profits be available to the novice, the untutored or the lazy? Why should people be able to make above average returns without hard work and above average skill, and without knowing something most others don’t know? And yet many individuals invest based on the belief that they can. (If they didn’t believe that, wouldn’t they index or, at a minimum, turn over the task to others?)

No, the solution can’t lie in rigid tactics, publicly available formulas or loss-eliminating rules . . . or on complete risk avoidance. Superior investment results can only stem from a better-than-average ability to figure out when risk-taking will lead to gain and when it will end in loss. There is no alternative.

Dare to Look Wrong

This is really the bottom-line: not whether you dare to be different or to be wrong, but whether you dare to look wrong.

Most people understand and accept that in their effort to make correct investment decisions, they have to accept the risk of making mistakes. Few people expect to find a lot of sure things or achieve a perfect batting average.

While they accept the intellectual proposition that attempting to be a superior investor has to entail the risk of loss, many institutional investors – and especially those operating in a political or public arena – can find it unacceptable to look significantly wrong. Compensation cuts and even job loss can befall the institutional employee who’s associated with too many mistakes.

As Pensions & Investments said on March 17 regarding a big West Coast bond manager currently in the news, whom I’ll leave nameless:

. . . asset owners are concerned that doing business with the firm could bring unwanted attention, possibly creating headline risk and/or job risk for them. . . .

One [executive] at a large public pension fund said his fund recently allocated $100 million for emerging markets, its first allocation to the firm. He said he wouldn’t do that today, given the current situation, because it could lead to second-guessing by his board and the local press.

“If it doesn’t work out, it looks like you don’t know what you are doing,” he said.

As an aside, let me say I find it perfectly logical that people should feel this way. Most “agents” – those who invest the money of others – will benefit little from bold decisions that work but will suffer greatly from bold decisions that fail. The possibility of receiving an “attaboy” for a few winners can’t balance out the risk of being fired after a string of losers. Only someone who’s irrational would conclude that the incentives favor boldness under these circumstances. Similarly, members of a non-profit organization’s investment committee can reasonably conclude that bearing the risk of embarrassment in front of their peers that accompanies bold but unsuccessful decisions is unwarranted given their volunteer positions.

I’m convinced that for many institutional investment organizations the operative rule – intentional or unconscious – is this: “We would never buy so much of something that if it doesn’t work, we’ll look bad.” For many agents and their organizations, the realities of life mandate such a rule. But people who follow this rule must understand that by definition it will keep them from buying enough of something that works for it to make much of a  difference for the better.

In 1936, the economist John Maynard Keynes wrote in The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, “Worldly wisdom teaches that it is better for reputation to fail conventionally than to succeed unconventionally” [italics added]. For people who measure success in terms of dollars and cents, risk taking can pay off when gains on winners are netted out against losses on losers. But if reputation or job retention is what counts, losers may be all that matter, since winners may be incapable of outweighing them. In that case, success may hinge entirely on the avoidance of unconventional behavior that’s unsuccessful.

Often the best way to choose between alternative courses of action is by figuring out which has the highest “expected value”: the total value arrived at by multiplying each possible outcome by its probability of occurring and summing the results. As I learned from my first textbook at Wharton fifty years ago (Decisions Under Uncertainty by C. Jackson Grayson, Jr.), if one act has a higher expected value than another and “. . . if the decision maker is willing to regard the consequences of each act-event in purely monetary terms, then this would be the logical act to choose. Keeping in mind, however, that only one event and its consequence will occur (not the weighted average consequence),” agents may not be able to choose on the basis of expected value or the weighted average of all possible consequences. If a given action has potential bad consequences that are absolutely unacceptable, the expected value of all of its consequences – both good and bad – can be irrelevant.

Given the typical agent’s asymmetrical payoff table, the rule for institutional investors underlined above is far from nonsensical. But if it is adopted, this should be done with awareness of the likely result: over-diversification. This goes all the way back to the beginning of this memo, and each organization’s need to establish its creed. In this case, the following questions must be answered:

  • In trying to achieve superior investment results, to what extent will we concentrate on investments, strategies and managers we think are outstanding? Will we do this despite the potential of our decisions to be wrong and bring embarrassment?
  • Or will fear of error, embarrassment, criticism and unpleasant headlines make us diversify highly, emulate the benchmark portfolio and trade boldness for safety? Will we opt for low-cost, low-aspiration passive strategies?

In the course of the presentation described at the beginning of this memo, I pointed out to the sovereign wealth fund’s managers that they had allocated close to a billion dollars to Oaktree’s management over the preceding 15 years. Although that sounds like a lot of money, it actually amounts to only a few tenths of a percent of what the world guesses their assets to be. And given our funds’ cycle of investing and divesting, that means they didn’t have even a few tenths of a percent of their capital with us at any one time. Thus, despite our good performance, I think it’s safe to say Oaktree couldn’t have had a meaningful impact on the fund’s overall results. Certainly one would associate this behavior with an extreme lack of risk tolerance and a high aversion to headline risk. I urged them to consider whether this reflects their real preference.

Lou Brock of the St. Louis Cardinals was one of baseball’s best base stealers between 1966 and 1974. He’s the source of a great quote: “Show me a guy who’s afraid to look bad, and I’ll show you a guy you can beat every time.” What he meant (with apologies to readers who don’t understand baseball) is that in order to prevent a great runner from stealing a base, a pitcher may have to throw over to the bag ten times in a row to hold him close, rather than pitch to the batter. But after a few such throws, a pitcher can look like a scaredy-cat and be booed. Pitchers who were afraid of those things were easy pickings for Lou Brock. Fear of looking bad ensured their failure.

Looking Right Can Be Harder Than Being Right

Fear of looking bad can be particularly debilitating to an investor, client or manager. This is because of how hard it is to consistently make correct investment decisions. Some of this comes from my last memo, on the role of luck.

  • First, it’s hard to consistently make decisions that correctly factor in all of the relevant facts and considerations (i.e., it’s hard to be right).
  • Second, it’s far from certain that even “right” decisions will be successful, since every decision requires assumptions about what the future will look like, and even reasonable assumptions can be thwarted by the world’s randomness. Thus many correct decisions will result in failure (i.e., it’s hard to look right).
  • Third, even well-founded decisions that eventually turn out to be right are unlikely to do so promptly. This is because not only are future events uncertain, their timing is particularly variable (i.e., it’s impossible to look right on time).

This brings me to one of my three favorite adages: “Being too far ahead of your time is indistinguishable from being wrong.” The fact that something’s cheap doesn’t mean it’s going to appreciate tomorrow; it can languish in the bargain basement. And the fact that something’s overpriced certainly doesn’t mean it’ll fall right away; bull markets can go on for years. As Lord Keynes observed, “the market can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent.”

Alan Greenspan warned of “irrational exuberance” in December 1996, but the stock market continued upward for more than three years. A brilliant manager I know who turned bearish around the same time had to wait until 2000 to be proved correct. . . during which time his investors withdrew much of their capital. He wasn’t “wrong,” just early. But that didn’t make his experience any less painful.

Likewise, John Paulson made the most profitable trade in history by shorting mortgage securities in 2006. Many others entered into the same transactions, but too early. When the bets failed to work at first, the appearance of being on the wrong track ate into the investors’ ability to stick with their decision, and they were forced to close out positions that would have been extremely profitable.

In order to be a superior investor, you need the strength to diverge from the herd, stand by your convictions, and maintain positions until events prove them right. Investors operating under harsh scrutiny and unstable working conditions can have a harder time doing this than others.

That brings me to the second quote I promised from Yale’s David Swensen:

. . . active management strategies demand uninstitutional behavior from institutions, creating a paradox that few can unravel.

Charlie Munger was right about it not being easy. I’m convinced that everything that’s important in investing is counterintuitive, and everything that’s obvious is wrong. Staying with counterintuitive, idiosyncratic positions can be extremely difficult for anyone, especially if they look wrong at first. So-called “institutional considerations” can make it doubly hard.

Investors who aspire to superior performance have to live with this reality. Unconventional behavior is the only road to superior investment results, but it isn’t for everyone. In addition to superior skill, successful investing requires the ability to look wrong for a while and survive some mistakes. Thus each person has to assess whether he’s temperamentally equipped to do these things and whether his circumstances – in terms of employers, clients and the impact of other people’s opinions – will allow it … when the chips are down and the early going makes him look wrong, as it invariably will. Not everyone can answer these questions in the affirmative. It’s those who believe they can that should take a chance on being great.

April 8, 2014

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The article Outside the Box: Dare to Be Great II was originally published at mauldineconomics.com.

Central Bank News Link List – Apr 16, 2014 – Yellen: Full employment in forecast; still 2 years away

By CentralBankNews.info

Here’s today’s Central Bank News’ link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news.

          http://ift.tt/1iP0FNb