When in Doubt, Follow the Greats

By The Sizemore Letter

Stocks fell sharply as we started trading this week on fears that Europe’s sovereign debt crisis was again spiraling out of control.  Of course, I could have used that same opening sentence at almost any point in the last 10 months and it would have been equally true.  The remarkable thing about 2011 is that it has been largely devoid of any real news.  The macro concerns driving the market haven’t changed much in two years—and yet we continue to see some of the most volatile daily price swings since the Great Depression.

The art of investing is an exercise in making decisions under conditions of uncertainty.  But today, it seems that the cloud of uncertainty is a little thicker than usual.  Despite having two years to discount the likelihood and consequences of default by one or multiple “PIIGS,” the market’s persistent volatility shows that investors are as uncertain as ever.

I’ve been consistently bullish for most of the past year, arguing that the low prices on offer more than compensated investors for the risk of meltdown.  But I’m also the first to admit that the volatility of recent months has thoroughly frayed my nerves.

During times like these, I like to do what your college professor might have called “cheating.”  I like to look over the shoulders of other investors and see what they are doing.

As I wrote last week in an article on Warren Buffett’s recent acquisitions, you should never mindlessly ape the trading moves of another investor.  But studying the moves of successful investors can be an effective way to step back and get a little perspective on your own trades.

With all of this said, today I’m going to take a look at the portfolios of three of my favorite institutional investors: Mohnish Pabrai, Joel Greenblatt, and Prem Watsa.

Mohnish Pabrai

We’ll start with Pabrai, the author of the must-read The Dhandho Investor and a well-respected value investing guru.  Based on his SEC filing for the 3rd quarter, Pabrai went on a buying spree in the financial sector.  After initiating a massive position in Bank of America ($BAC) and adding to his already-large positions in Wells Fargo ($WFC) and Goldman Sachs ($GS), Pabrai’s weighting to the financial sector jumped from 39 percent of his portfolio to a whopping 58 percent with a fair bit of the reduction coming from basic materials. Materials dropped from 46 percent to 33 percent of the portfolio (see Pabrai’s portfolio here).

Though his returns are not reported, we can assume that Pabrai’s high allocation to financials has hurt his returns this year.  He wouldn’t be the first.  John Paulson’s flagship fund was at one point down by nearly half this year due to his high allocation to financials and his use of leverage (see Don’t Mess Up Like Paulson).  Still, Pabrai has proven to have a sharp eye for value over the years, even if he—like many other high-profile value investors—tends to be a little early.

Joel Greenblatt

Moving on, let’s now take a look at what Joel Greenblatt is buying these days.  Greenblatt runs Gotham Capital and is the author of the eminently readable The Little Book that Beats the Market.  Unlike Pabrai, Greenblatt tends to have a relatively high portfolio turnover.  He made few major moves in the third quarter, though he was a net buyer and added to his already large holdings in technology and industrials (see Greenblatt’s portfolio here).

Greenblatt is conspicuously under-allocated to the financial sector because much of the money he runs today follows his “magic formula,” which stresses high returns on capital.  Suffice it to say, the big banks are a little light on profits these days, so financials are not showing up on Greenblatt’s screen.  But with more than 40 percent of his portfolio invested in the cyclical technology and industrials sectors, Greenblatt is every bit as aggressively invested as Pabrai.

Prem Watsa

Finally, let’s take a look at Prem Watsa.  Watsa is the CEO of Fairfax Financial Holdings and is considered by many to be the “Warren Buffett of Canada.”  He has certainly earned the nickname.  He and his team have grown Fairfax’s book value per share by 25 percent per year for the past 25 years.  He was also one of the few managers that made money during the crisis year of 2008.  Not a bad run indeed.

Watsa’s portfolio moves will certainly raise a few eyebrows. In the 3rd quarter his added to his already large position in battered BlackBerry maker Research in Motion ($RIMM). He also increased his position in Citigroup ($C) by 50 percent.  Overall, his exposure to the financial sector rose from 9 percent to 24 percent in the third quarter (see Watsa’s holdings here).

Watsa was a slight net seller in the 3rd quarter, though the composition of his portfolio hardly suggests excessive bearishness at the moment.  More than 80 percent of his equity holdings are in technology, financials, and telecom.

As a caveat, there is a limit to what you can glean from reading SEC 13-F filings.  For example, only long positions are reported; short position and derivatives hedges are not.  And Prem Watsa, for example, does indeed hedge his equity positions.  Still, his willingness to be so heavily invested in some of the most volatile sectors would imply that he’s not quite as bearish as some of his public comments would suggest.

So there you have it.  Given the recent volatility, it’s entirely possible that the Dow has moved 100 points in the time it has taken you to read this article.  That’s nerve-racking, of course, even for an experienced investor.  Still, I see compelling bargains at current prices, and I consider the pervasive fear and bearishness among rank-and-file investors to be a contrarian bullish sign.  And when I start to get that feeling in the pit of my stomach, I take comfort in knowing that I’m on the same side of the trade as some of the brightest value investors in the business.

If you liked this article by Sizemore Insights, you’d probably enjoy The Sizemore Investment Letter, our premium members-only newsletter. Click here for more information.

Mirasol Could Fetch Billions for Qualcomm

Mirasol Could Fetch Billions for Qualcomm

by Ryan Fitzwater, Investment U Research
Thursday, November 24, 2011

The smartphone and tablet industry has revolutionized the way we communicate and consume information, entertainment and media.

Every day mobile devices are achieving stronger processing power and quicker downloading speeds, but one thing lags behind… liquid crystal display (LCD) screens.

Current screen displays siphon more battery power than any other part of tablets and phones. The LCD board needs a substantial amount of power to produce bright light to shape images.

And while Amazon’s Kindle offers e-ink technology, which guzzles a lot less energy than LCD displays, the e-ink surrenders color and the capability to generate video playback and game play.

Have No Fear, Mirasol is Here

At last, Qualcomm Inc. (Nasdaq: QCOM) has developed technology that could link low power consumption with colorful display.

Dubbed Mirasol, this display screen uses ambient light, which consumes a tenth of the power compared to LCD screens. The technology tunes the color of incoming light and reflects it back to the viewer – much like the wings of a butterfly.

Described like the pages of a magazine, Mirasol screens use small cavities that store color to push up against display glass to project the desired color, and use a very small voltage to do so. And Mirasol provides consumers an image with no glare.

Since this isn’t light projection but more of a canvas display of color, in-the-dark LED lights (installed around the edge of the panel) are used to illuminate the picture, still consuming less power than LCDs.

Pike Research has stated that the Mirasol display would permit more than twice as much web browsing than LCD displays.

In 2004, Qualcomm bought the startup company Iridigm that created the Mirasol technology. Since its acquisition, Qualcomm has been tirelessly refining this technology in hopes to bring it to the commercial market.

There are still some kinks to work out before production goes full scale, but the company hopes to push Mirasol out to consumers in the second half of 2012.

The company currently sells mobile chips to Samsung, HTC and LG – all customers they are hoping to sell Mirasol to once they’re ready for mass production.

Building for the Future

Qualcomm is currently building a factory in Taiwan that’s set for completion in 2012. Once online, the new factory will be able to produce Mirasol displays on a mass scale.

And with a $975-million price tag, they’re confident that their display technology will bring in big time revenue.

DisplaySearch analyst, Jennifer Colegrove, stated that Mirasol doesn’t have serious competition. Samsung is working on a rival type of display called electrowetting, but it’s not nearly as refined as Qualcomm’s. Colegrove believes that Mirasol’s exclusive type of display can match LCDs but with a fraction of power consumption.

A product like this could push Qualcomm’s revenue through the roof. The company already sports strong financials.

Qualcomm Flooded With Cash

qualcomm revenue chart

As of the end of Qualcomm’s 2011 third quarter, they have already pulled in record-breaking revenue of $14.96 billion.

Last year’s revenue totaled $10.98 billion. The company already achieved a 36-percent increase in annual revenue and they still haven’t added fourth-quarter sales.

Not only that – Qualcomm is flooded with cash.

The company currently sits on $11.65 billion in cash with only $1.16 billion in debt. Their debt-to-equity ratio is a low 3.69 percent – superb considering the industry average is currently 28.72 percent.

Operating margins are a healthy 35.44 percent, and third-quarter earnings growth was up 22.10 percent compared to the same period last year.

Investment bank juggernaut Goldman Sachs already holds over 21 million shares of Qualcomm stock.

With Mirasol display screens set for mass production in 2012, the company may possibly break its revenue record two years in a row, and hand investors big profits along the way.

Good investing,

Ryan Fitzwater

Article by Investment U

German Economic Data Temporary Lifts EUR

Source: ForexYard

printprofile

Germany received some good news today with the release of a better than expected German Ifo survey and a strong GDP reading. The positive data comes on the heels of a tough 24 hours for both the EUR and risky assets.

According to Destatis, the German economy grew by 0.5% in Q3 and GDP rose by 2.6% y/y. Both metrics were in-line with consensus forecasts. The other positive on the day was the strong Ifo business climate survey, rising to 106.6 from 106.4. The EUR/USD rose as high as 1.3410 before falling back to 1.3370 as investors wait for comments from today’s meeting between Merkel, Sarkozy, and Monti.

The data caps a poor 24 hours for the EUR and risky assets in general. Yesterday’s release of European PMIs along with awful industrial new orders numbers hint at a euro zone economy that is sliding towards a recession. A potential restructuring of the Dexia bailout threatens to weigh on the France’s credit rating. Yesterday’s failed bund auction also highlights the arrival of the European debt crisis to the core European nations. Investors are looking for a political solution from the European elite but this solution may be further down the road.

The movement of the EUR/CHF back below the 1.23 level highlights the amount of stress in the markets. A move back towards 1.20 could bring additional jawboning from the SNB which may support the pair. For the EUR/USD yesterday’s low of 1.3320 has so far held this morning with resistance located at the base of the consolidation pattern from the November 17th low at 1.3430.

Read more forex trading news on our forex blog.

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

Potential EUR Short Squeeze Before the Weekend?

Source: ForexYard

printprofile

The EUR and equity markets have come off of their lows though sentiment remains fragile and any potential rally in riskier assets may only prove to be temporary. With US markets closed for the Thanksgiving holiday flows will be on the lighter side today. Today’s highlight will be the meeting between the three leaders of Germany, France, and Italy. There may be a possibility for a EUR rally going into the weekend should German PM Angela Merkel signal her willingness to compromise.

Today investors will be focusing on the meeting between Merkel, Sarkozy, and Monti. Perhaps this will be a prelude to the key Dec 9th European Council Meeting. The three leaders of Germany, France, and Italy are expected to hold a press conference at 13:00 GMT today. Should Merkel signal a more open minded approach to euro bonds or additional ECB involvement, EUR shorts could get squeezed going into the weekend. Strict risk management would be a necessity in this situation.

EUR/USD support is at yesterday’s low of 1.3320 followed by the October low of 1.3145. Resistance comes in at the base of the consolidation pattern from the November 17th low at 1.3430 and at 1.3610 from the November 18th high.

Read more forex trading news on our forex blog.

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

China Cuts RRR for Selected Rural Banks by 50bps to 16%

The People’s Bank of China reduced the required reserve ratio for selected (20) rural cooperative banks by 50 basis points to 16.00% from 16.50% according to FT/Bloomberg.  The move heralds a possible turn in policy settings in China, and follows previous comments from Chinese Premier, Wen Jiabao, that the Chinese government would “preemptively fine-tune policy at a suitable time and by an appropriate degree”.  The move also follows an apparent peak in inflation in China of an annual rate of 6.5% in July this year, dropping to 5.5% in October.  The move also coincided with the release of the preliminary HSBC/Markit PMI which dropped to 48 in November, from 51 in October; also showing weakness in input and output prices, and new orders.

The People’s Bank of China last raised the reserve requirements by 50 basis points in June this year to an average 21.50% for large banks, and 19.50% for small banks.  The PBC also adjusted the reserve requirement rules in August, effectively resulting in tightening of about 100bps.  Meanwhile the People’s Bank of China last raised the benchmark interest rate 25bps to 6.56% in early July this year.  The Bank for International Settlements recently published a paper on ‘China’s Evolving Reserve Requirements’ which provides an interesting and detailed analysis of the People’s Bank of China’s use of the required reserve ratio as a tool for monetary policy.

www.CentralBankNews.info

China’s Evolving Reserve Requirements [BIS paper]

The Bank for International Settlements recently published a working paper on China’s reserve requirements. The paper focuses on China’s use of the  Required Reserve Ratio (RRR) as a key tool in monetary policy in a number of capacities. The paper identifies that the RRR has been used as a multi-purpose tool by the People’s Bank of China for purposes such as sterilising foreign exchange intervention, influencing credit growth, influencing interest rates, and more broadly as a means of signalling the monetary policy stance (e.g. stimulus or tightening).

The authors point out that while the RRR is at historical highs, it could remain at relatively high levels in the medium term, notwithstanding an apparent peak in the RRR.  Indeed the authors note: “the outlook for higher reserve requirements may also relate to policy stances of major economies. Given the prospects of an extremely easy policy stance in most major economies for an extended period of time, the possibility of a continued preference for this sterilisation tool over others should not be discounted.20 Overall, China’s reserve requirement ratio appears to be peaking in the current tightening cycle.”

The paper provides a timely insight into one of the key monetary policy tools (along with interest rates) used by what is now the world’s largest economy. Indeed, there is much discussion around when China will begin to turn its policy settings from tightening to easing as inflation in China shows signs of moderating, and global growth concerns paired with various other risks in China e.g. a weakening property market, and recent rapid loan growth, present downside risk to the growth and inflation outlook.

Reference
Ma, G., Xiandong, Y., & Xi, L. (2011) China’s Evolving Reserve Requirements. BIS Working Paper No. 360

www.CentralBankNews.info

Stocks on the Australian Market Today – Three Things You Need to Know

By MoneyMorning.com.au

1: No one wants German bonds

Today on the Australian market stocks were down again this morning. Why? Germany was flogging nearly 6 billion euros of 10 year bonds… and the ‘take up’ was just over half at 3.64 billion.

‘This is nothing short of a disaster for Germany,’ said managing director of Southwest Securities Inc, Mark Grant. ‘If the strongest nation in Europe has this kind of difficultly raising capital, one shudders concerning the upcoming auction in other European nations.’

The failure to buy the nicknamed ‘gold standard’ German bonds is telling you something. No one has any faith in the market.

2: Dollar dives in Australia… China’s economy to blame for not working hard enough.

If you were planning on doing your Christmas shopping from American retailers this year, you may want to put those plans on hold.

The Aussie dollar was trading at US 96.83 cents this morning. So who’s to blame? The poor German bond sales and China’s preliminary manufacturing data.

But it could be worse. The PMI figure was just HSBC Bank’s estimate of the PMI. It estimates the figure will plummet to 48, the lowest in over two years when the official figure is released next Thursday.

Any number below 50 suggests manufacturing activity is slowing. If HSBC data is on the money, it could be ‘bye bye’ to a controlled soft landing from Chinese central bankers… and ‘hello’ to a ‘crash landing’ instead.

3: Supermodels know more than your stock broker…

We know the market’s in turmoil. Picking trades and planning your investments isn’t easy.

But perhaps you should do what the supermodels do.

If that sounds crazy, check out this chart.

Gisele Stock index versus Dow Jones Industrial Average

Source: Stockerblog

If you’d invested in the publicly listed company’s supermodel, Gisele Bündchen has been involved with… your stock portfolio would have outperformed the Dow Jones.

Since 2007 the ‘Gisele Index’ is up more than 47% compared to the Dow Jones Industrial Index. Companies she has endorsed in the past four years include, Volkswagon [PK: VLKAY], Polo Ralph Lauren Corp [NYSE: RL], Vivo Participacoes [NYSE:VIV], Newscorp [NASDOQ:NWSA], Procter & Gamble [NYSE:PG] and Disney [NYSE:DIS].

But if you’re going to use models as a basis for stock choices, pick ‘em carefully. Miranda Kerr, another model, is an ambassador for David Jones [ASX:DJS].

This morning it’s down 4%. And DJ’s has a lost a massive 49% since its peak 2007…

Shae Smith
Editor, Money Morning

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Stocks on the Australian Market Today – Three Things You Need to Know

German Bonds Sale

By MoneyMorning.com.au

“Germany failed to get bids for 35 percent of the 10-year bonds offered for sale today, propelling borrowing costs in Europe higher and the euro lower on concern the region’s debt crisis is driving away investors.” – Bloomberg News

In simple terms, Germany’s central bank only sold €3.9 billion-worth of German bonds out of €6 billion offered to the primary market. The rest was sold in the secondary market.

(The primary market gives a few select banks first bite before everyone else can have a go in the secondary market.)

But this isn’t the first time Germany hasn’t sold all its bonds. According to Bloomberg, “Six of the last eight bond sales by Germany have been ‘technically uncovered’, with fewer bids than the maximum amount on offer.”

It’s a great irony. The buyers of German bonds in the primary market are the same mob that wants Germany to bail out the rest of the European Union to prevent its collapse.

So while the banks are keen on bailouts, they don’t want to pay for it. And why should they? With moral hazard out the window, the banks figure Herr & Frau Taxpayer will come good and everything will be fine.

[Ed note: if you want to know the impact of the bodged German bond sale on the markets, check out Murray Dawes’ latest free stock market update video now].

But what the heck.

That’s Europe. We’re… 14,000 kilometres away in Australia – and China’s economy will bail us out… right?

Cheers.
Kris.

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For editorial enquiries and feedback, email [email protected]


German Bonds Sale

Why China’s Quicksand Economy Will Sink Australia

By MoneyMorning.com.au

One of the world’s biggest investors is worried.

In an interview with Bloomberg News, hedge fund guru, Jim Chanos said, “The Chinese banking system is built on quicksand.”

He’s just wound up a visit to Australia. And our bet is Australia’s biggest resources stocks have entered his short book based on his own observations of China’s economy.

What Happens in Europe Matters in Asia

But we’ll get to that later. First, here’s what our old pal Michael Pascoe told his poor readers just last week:

“…Beijing is not about to engineer a hard landing in its efforts to smack the luxury apartment investors…

“And in both the short and medium terms, the transition to greater focus on Chinese domestic demand gets yet more impetus. The rise and rise of the Asian consumer matters much more than the faltering of the Old World consumer.

“Which is all wonderful stuff for Australia as sustained Chinese growth means sustained Asian growth and therefore the fundamental underwriting of our economy remains in place even as the North Atlantic faces years of recession and/or stagnation.”

We think Jim Chanos had Pascoe in mind when he told Bloomberg News:

“Our concerns about what we saw in Australia: an economy clearly tied to China… In terms of the general complacency, what we heard over and over… is, ‘yes, yes, there are some excesses, but the government will figure a way out. That the government is this all-knowing, omniscient basic entity that will not prevent me from losing money.’”

And no sooner had Mr. Chanos left these shores than Reuters reported:

“China’s factory sector shrank the most in 32 months in November on signs of domestic economic weakness, a preliminary PMI [Purchasing Managers’ Index] survey showed, reviving worries that China may be slipping towards a hard landing and fuelling fears of a global recession.”

Stop.

No.

That’s not possible.

Because on Tuesday the “all-knowing” World Bank said:

“On balance, we believe that while there are issues (in China), they are being managed and the magnitude of those issues does not add up to something that would lead necessarily to a major slowdown as some have talked about.”

The World Bank says the Chinese economy will grow 9.1% this year, and “9 to 10 percent per annum… for the foreseeable future.”

As we’ve warned before, the world economy is linked. Greece borrows from Italy. Italy borrows from France. France borrows from Germany (and Germany tries to borrow, but is having trouble – check out the German bond sale for more)… But don’t forget: Greece, Italy, France and Germany buy from China… and China buys from… that’s right… Australia.

In short, what happens in Europe, matters in Asia.

This brings us back to Jim Chanos and the Chinese economy…

Australia is Walking on China’s Quicksand Economy

Look, we know Chanos is talking his own book. But given a choice between two views – Pascoe or Chanos – we know which makes sense and which is jingoistic cheerleading.

You can watch the Chanos interview here. So we won’t repeat everything he said.

The important thing is economies don’t grow non-stop forever – even China.

But how about China’s huge savings? Chanos has an answer:

“The Chinese banking system is built on quicksand, and that’s the one thing a lot of people don’t realize. When they talk about the foreign reserves of $3 trillion, what everybody forgets is there’s liabilities against that.”

That’s the key. Even if China’s growth slows to 8% from 9%, it doesn’t mean things will be fine. A 1% difference in growth is worth about $60 billion to the Chinese economy.

That can buy a lot of products, services, resources and loans. But if the money isn’t there it’s bad news. Especially for companies that invested expecting the $60 billion to be spent.

Think about it, it means China needs less iron ore… less copper… less concrete. It means fewer machines and workers (the Financial Times headlined this morning, “China labour unrest flares as orders fall”).

Look, we’ve said it before: China doesn’t have a miracle economy.

It has an economy where bureaucrats push buttons and pull levers… where the mainstream has mistaken a plain old credit boom for ingenuity and innovation.

And like all credit booms, this one will end in a bust.

It you want a clue of what that will look like, look at Europe and the U.S. Only for Australia, the China bust will have a much bigger impact.

Cheers.
Kris.

P.S. Don’t forget to check out Murray’s latest free stock market update over at his YouTube channel. As he told me this morning, “If people were doubting the gravity of the situation before, they should be convinced now that things are getting very scary.” Before you place another trade on the stock market, check out Murray’s stock market video update now…

Related Articles

Totally Standard Hyper-Inflation

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The Gold Bubble and China

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From the Archives…

The Onward March of the State
2011-11-11 – Kris Sayce

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2011-11-10 – Kris Sayce

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2011-11-09 – Kris Sayce

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2011-11-08 – Kris Sayce

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2011-11-07 – Kris Sayce

For editorial enquiries and feedback, email [email protected]


Why China’s Quicksand Economy Will Sink Australia