Does this means pillar 2 above does not actually hold, the market can become unbalanced and passive investing can become "crowded" ?
Given the ever increasing inflows into passive investing and the death of active management
Also Sinner, any other recommendations for other papers illustrating similar "truths" in the market ? Would love to get ahold of your reading list.
ps sorry for hijacking your thread DS, started this post with only vague thoughts and it kinda grew from there.
Hi Deepstate,
Really appreciate your insights! - While many of your concepts go over my head (The detail you go into is impressive!) really interesting to read none the less.
Some quick questions:
1) You've previously mentioned having an investing checklist (although you said you're not checklist orientated), I feel at my current stage I need some form of checklist to influence my decisions. I.e. Yesterday I bought SPO on literally a whim. While only a small amount I feel that I need something to making me accountable.
2) How do I go about designing an investing strategy? Everyone seems to throw ideas and opinions around, however I feel that you're one of the few people who are truly immersed in the industry.
Apologies if this is below your level of expertise and guidance; I just feel lost...While I'm looking at learning, perhaps at my current state, I'd be better of investing in an ETF?
Feel free to delete if this derails your thread.
(I'm currently a graduate accountant - who has a moderate understanding of finance).
Many Thanks,
I feel at my current stage I need some form of checklist to influence my decisions. I.e. Yesterday I bought SPO on literally a whim.
Shall respond in pieces. I also need the answers to some of the questions you've posed.
Checklists:
How should you approach value investing from a purely quantitative standpoint? Easy:
Screen out stocks that have relatively high accruals
Avoid companies that may go bankrupt
Margin of safety: choose companies with strong balance sheets and profits
Look for long-term strength in profits.
Buy them cheap.
Buy when informed investors are buying.
Greatly Appreciate the advice Deepstate & Sinner.
From when I was at uni a couple years back I think Porter was at 7 haha, although I never really thought of using it as a way of picking a potential stock shorlist / indicator to use.
Tonight I've had a glimpse into the references you've provided and it looks like I have a ton of reading ahead of me; but I'll need to put in the hours to one day be in similar shoes to yourselves.
I guess the biggest factor of not being actively invested is the matter of losing out, which I believe DS covered earlier. The market being down 17% ytd in my mind is ringing BUY,BUY,BUY! but in reality signals could be pointing the other way & I'm merely buying stocks off a low p/e alone.
Once again, many thanks for the advice, I think I'll start on Ben G's security analysis book and pose a question to you gents once in a while.
Cheers,
Hi Deepstate,
Yesterday I bought SPO on literally a whim. While only a small amount I feel that I need something to making me accountable.
Item #1: Do not buy any names on impulse.
Item #2: Sell all names you bought on impulse.*
Underlying the checklist push is a book by Atul Gawande called "The Checklist Manifesto". If it's good enough for pilots and brain surgeons, it might be worth considering for investments too.
1. make a guess/estimate of what you think will happen (direction, magnitude movement, relationship, volume, CB action etc...)
2. Observe what happens
3. Figure out why you're wrong...yet again
4. Try to improve your understanding.
5. Repeat ad infinitum
Learning through a feedback cycle works for shorter term trading, but what happens when your time horizon is longer (e.g. Buffet style value investing - when your timeframe is "forever" ?).
i.e. I learn all I can, calculate IV for a business, then buy and hold its stock - when/how do I know I stuffed up the IV calculation or read the financials wrong ? If holding time frame is on the order of years to give the stock time to get to your IV, you dont get many cycles of learning/data to refine your own criteria/metrics.
An earnings-to-price yield at least twice the AAA bond rate
Dividend yield of at least 2/3 the AAA bond yield
Total debt less than book value
Current ratio great than 2
Buy stuff that doesn't have a lot of debt--only buy stocks that have common equity / total assets over 50%
Sell if a stock moves 50%+
Sell if a stock has been in the portfolio for 2 years
The banks hedge their FX exposure. Their clients often do not. The banks will see this on their balance sheet as default. A devaluation will see rapid capital outflow initially which will require a monetary response to prevent outright asset and consumer deflation which will trigger a second round. Whether a monetary response to this will be successful is unknown. What I do know is that the CCP and Co could not control the stock market and have not been able to stop their capital account leaking by deca-billions each month. Much research suggests that credit events are preceded by rapid credit growth and asset price inflation. All of the pieces exist for the market to rightfully be concerned. If China falls, EM is next, and Europe comes after that.
Contrary to some of the muttering out there, I don’t think Beijing is planning competitive devaluations in order to strengthen the tradable goods sector, in the hopes that surging exports will revive growth.
Thx.
FWIW, I think Michael Pettis is the only China commentator worth listening to. On consideration of your reply and trying to think for myself I went and re-read his most recent blogpost which is still relatively fresh. There is too much wisdom for me to choose a decent snippet for pasting, I'll just leave a link and single sentence
http://blog.mpettis.com/2016/01/will-chinas-new-supply-side-reforms-help-china/
Thx.
FWIW, I think Michael Pettis is the only China commentator worth listening to. On consideration of your reply and trying to think for myself I went and re-read his most recent blogpost which is still relatively fresh. There is too much wisdom for me to choose a decent snippet for pasting, I'll just leave a link and single sentence
http://blog.mpettis.com/2016/01/will-chinas-new-supply-side-reforms-help-china/
Learning through a feedback cycle works for shorter term trading, but what happens when your time horizon is longer (e.g. Buffet style value investing - when your timeframe is "forever" ?).
i.e. I learn all I can, calculate IV for a business, then buy and hold its stock - when/how do I know I stuffed up the IV calculation or read the financials wrong ? If holding time frame is on the order of years to give the stock time to get to your IV, you dont get many cycles of learning/data to refine your own criteria/metrics.
That is the bigger I am having struggling with - I used to punt a bit with options and short term stock trades, but now I have a much more significant sum to invest for the longer term and I am struggling to figure out a process/framework to manage that. Routine DCA passive indexing is the obvious candidate here, but has no feedback learning cycle at all as you take the mkt avg - this will be my fallback but I wonder if there is something more.
Any advice appreciated as this seems to be something missing from the longer term value investing books like Dodd etc (unless I someone missed a chapter or something).
DS, apparently the big trade has been short the EU banks, but aside from DB, the China syndrome and junk bonds related to oil in the US, do you think there are other shoes to drop?
chairman of the Economic and Development Review Committee at the OECD in Paris. Prior to that, Dr. White held a number of senior positions with the Bank for International Settlements (“BIS”), including Head of the Monetary and Economic Department, where he had overall responsibility for the department's output of research, data and information services, and was a member of the Executive Committee which manages the BIS. He retired from the BIS on 30 June 2008.
Three, everywhere you look it seems to me you can see a potential trigger. You look at China and it’s slowing, although nobody knows by how much because nobody believes the data. But things like railway transport and electricity use suggest China is slowing a lot. Unfortunately, if you look closely at the data, the conversion of the economy from investment to consumption is not really happening and the old growth model built on debt is coming to the end of its useful life. As well, you have problems in emerging markets and commodity producers – Brazil, Russia, oil regions – where associated fiscal difficulties could lead to greater social and political problems than might be expected in the advanced economies. In Japan, I think Abenomics is not working and will in fact backfire – raising prices when the typical salaryman hasn’t seen a salary increase in two decades equals a cut in real terms, meaning he will hunker down. For its part, Europe has a daunting list of problems – the Russian thing, the migration thing, the peripheral thing, the debt thing, and the absence of adequate political institutions to deal efficiently with all these problems. Even in the US people are talking about problematic student loans, low investment rates and the rising likelihood of recession.
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