What Works on MAIN Street?

 

Main and Wall

Monday’s WSJ column about the waning of interest in investment clubs and dreadful undocumented under performance stirred memories of this column from Better Investing magazine about 12 years ago.  Why?  Because the talking heads keep bringing up that “comprehensive” study of 166 clubs and the Beardstown Ladies saga.  We need a new scientific study … because our experience is that investors embracing and heeding the modern investment club methodology (whether on their own or within the warm confines of an investment club) are doing pretty well when taken in full perspective and when dealing with FACTUAL internal rate of return records.  We’d rather focus on what’s working — even if so many of you lurk silently — and pardon me, but I might just puke if someone cites those 166 “clubs” again.

The coming of April showers means that, once again, March Madness has come and gone. March Madness. With each passing year, I find that I enjoy the mighty meetings of high school basketball teams, closely followed by their collegiate counterparts. By the time this magazine reaches your coffee table, there’s a pretty good chance that a number of magical moments will have happened. Gene Hackman and his Hoosiers were just one shining moment. There will be others. The goose bumps are “on ice” just waiting to be experienced. “Do you believe in miracles?”

We’ve acknowledged in past articles that [the grandfather of the modern investment club movement] George Nicholson always regarded NAIC and investment clubs as his “Grand Experiment.” Investment clubs are also human. The things that can be discovered are nothing short of miraculous. Exploring the rewards of investing while stripping away the myth and mystery is something that brings a smile to our faces. Learning to smile together is a gift that we hope to share with as many people as humanly possible.

March Madness. It brings out the best. Unfortunately, it sometimes brings out the worst, too.

The January/February 2000 issue of the Financial Analysts Journal features an article by Brad Barber and Terrance Odean entitled, Too Many Cooks Spoil the Profits. This publication is received by Chartered Financial Analysts. Although fairly few people will ever see this report, we believe that exploring some of the conclusions is worthwhile. If nothing else, Barber and Odean have been regularly appearing in the media. We think they could gain much from a better understanding of investment clubs and strategic long-term investing.

Quoting their conclusion: “Unfortunately, [investment clubs] do not beat the market.”

We have “been here” before and it won’t be the last time. A year ago, a number of publications assailed our Beardstown Ladies. Too many cooks? Most of us rather like cooking with our friends. There is some impressive cookin’ going on. There will come a day that we’ll demonstrate that we not only achieve (in the words of Barber and Odean) “savings, education, friendship and entertainment . . .” but we also achieve very promising performance levels as well. Collectively, NAIC investors achieve high returns. Clearly, this does not happen for every single club or every individual, but we have scores of success stories. We think it’s valid to point to our Top 100, this issue’s main feature, as substantial evidence. With Intel, Lucent Technologies, Home Depot, Cisco Systems, Merck, PepsiCo and Microsoft among the most widely held companies, clearly some level of success has been attained by our practitioners.

Nearly 4,500 investment clubs (11.9 percent of registered clubs) responded to our latest Top 100 Survey with complete portfolio summaries and club accounting reports. Barber and Odean assail the “touting” of investment club performance in the media by citing sample bias. Barber and Odean base their findings on 166 investment club account statements from a single discount broker! Not only that, they cite turnover levels of 65 percent (nearly a complete overhaul of the stocks within a club portfolio every year-and-a-half.) Barber and Odean also share that these club accounts were concentrated in high beta, small-cap stocks. These characteristics lead us to a simple question, “Are you sure that you’re assessing NAIC club performance?” That doesn’t sound like what the long-term investors we know about are doing.

Most people are not statisticians, but I think that they can sense that 4,500 data points might be more representative than 166. Particularly when the “166” are “weak.”

The authors dwell on excessive turnover and poor returns due to commission costs. We ran a quick, biased, completely unscientific survey to investigate a hunch. Approximately 50 online investors responded. I think we can assume that these investors are “most likely” to be the most active. We asked them to provide their turnover figure for 1999. The highest turnover rate reported was 40 percent. The lowest, from several respondents, was 0 percent. (No sell transactions for the year.) The average was 8 percent. Unscientific, yes. And admittedly biased. But, in my opinion, closer to the truth about what long-term investors are really doing.

Here’s another aspect that the Barber and Odean study that raises questions. MANY investment clubs use dividend reinvesting. So, I went back and checked. In 1996, our investment club had 64 percent of our assets in DRPs. Our discount brokerage account would have been terribly UNinformative about the true performance of our club.

Barber and Odean include another rehash of the Beardstown Brouhaha of 1999 as “evidence” of poor performance. It bears repeating. Investment clubs, including our Beardstown Ladies, are human. A mistake was made. But, for the record, the Beardstown Ladies achieved a 15.3 percent annualized return for the 14 years ended in 1997. (This was part of the Price Waterhouse audit.) The annualized return for the S&P 500 for this same 14-year period was 16.9 percent. If the ladies are guilty of underperformance, consider this: In his book, Common Sense on Mutual Funds, John Bogle Sr. documents that only 14.1 percent of “growth and value” mutual funds beat the Wilshire 5000 (16.0 percent returns for the total market) for the 14 years ending in 1997. While committing their “crime,” our Beardstown Ladies “defeated” 5-out-of-6 mutual funds. March Madness, indeed.

Is the point that the ladies would have been better off stuffing their recipes and cold cash into the corners of their mattresses? I certainly hope not, because if that’s the case, these two educators are not only failing to educate –they’re DE-educating.

A number of us recently gathered online to discuss James O’Shaughnessy’s book, What Works on Wall Street. What works on MAIN Street? Patience. Discipline. Discovering the best companies, at the best prices, with our friends. Too many cooks? Not even close! It’s the best type of cooking capitalism has to offer.

Value Line Low Total Return Screen (2/8/2013)

Market Barometers

The average Value Line Low Total Return (VLLTR) forecast is 7.3%, down from 7.7% last week.

Companies of Interest

The average low total return forecast for this issue of the Value Line Investment Survey is 6.1% — and the opportunities are a little sparse. The number of material price forecast reductions continues to outnumber the bolstered forecasts this week.

A couple of recent favorites, Schlumberger (SLB) and National Oilwell Varco (NOV) continue to be worthy of further study.

Materially Stronger: Host Hotels (HST), Helix Energy (HLX)

Materially Weaker: Harte-Hanks (HHS), DreamWorks (DWA), Scientific Games (SGMS), Hyatt Hotels (H), Monster Worldwide (MWW), Forest Oil (FST), RPC (RES)

Annual Stockpicking Results (Groundhog VI)

At Manifest Investing, we celebrate Groundhog Day by ending one annual stock picking contest (Groundhog VI for 2012) and starting another (Groundhog VII).  Any and all investors are welcome to participate either individually or as part of a group.  For 2013, participants may select as few as five investments (stocks or funds) with a maximum of twenty.  $1,000,000 will be divided among the entry positions and we’ll create a dashboard and track entries from Groundhog Day to Groundhog Day.

Congratulations to Bernie Meister of Midland, Michigan for winning Groundhog Challenge VI (2012). The group champions are the Broad Assets Investment Club of St. Louis, Missouri. 1. Hoist trophy. 2. Pat back(s). 3. Get back to work on your 2013 selections. 🙂

The early years were phenomenal as you’ll see in the following slides — and performance has become more normal than we’re accustomed to seeing the last few years.  Even with that, our Groundhog Nation generally outperforms the herd of analysts, pundits and institutions with many participants sporting lofty alphas (relative return) over the years.

When Punxsy Phil sees his shadow, we think it has less to do with the weather and more to do with positive trends and achievements for us next year and beyond.

For more information or to enter the fray, contact manifest@manifestinvesting.com

Good luck to the 2013 field.

Annual Super Bowl Poll (2013)

It’s time for our annual Super Bowl survey.

The San Francisco 49ers are an “old NFL” team. The Baltimore Ravens are not an “old AFL” team, so traders and investors have already won. The Super Bowl Indicator is a lock.  It’s time to get out there and BUY SOME STOCKS. 🙂

At Manifest Investing, we’re 6-for-7 having selected the Giants over the Patriots last year.

XLVI: New York Giants (defeated the New England Patriots)
XLV: Green Bay Packers (defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers)
XLIV: New Orleans Saints (defeated the Indianapolis Colts)
XLIII: Pittsburgh Steelers (defeated the Arizona Cardinals)
XLII: New England Patriots (Super Bowl won by New York Giants)
XLI: Indianapolis Colts (defeated the Chicago Bears)
XL: Pittsburgh Steelers (defeated the Seattle Seahawks)

CNBC Stock Draft 2012 (Final Results)

There are times in the world of investing when a relatively short period of time can seem like an eternity. Like all of those prop trading desks on the day of the Facebook IPO as they struggled to defend $38 as the closing bell rang.

In the case of the 2012 CNBC Stock Draft, we speculated that a photo finish was possible. That was only five days ago. Joshua “Reformed Broker” Brown had lagged the field for months — and had made the classic dramatic charge, dashing from last place to leading the field coming down the stretch.

To his credit, in his own words, “Five days is a long time.”

As it turned out, we could have used a Timelapse camera as our Reformed Broker’s entry (Research In Motion) had a really, really tough week — a Waterloo so to speak. In the meantime, Google stayed strong, carrying Reggie “No Glue” Middleton to victory.

We don’t know if there’s any truth to the rumor that a testy Herb Greenberg handed Josh a rose as he sulked into the sunset. Or if Jim Cramer really did give him a roll of Lifesavers and a Mean Joe Greene jersey.

Joshua Brown (JB): This is tough. I was serious about five days being a long time. But I had no idea it could be this long.

Herb Greenberg (Testy): No doubt. We were a little worried that you might go from first-to-worst in less than a week.

Jim Cramer (Booyah): House of Pain. Waterloo, baby. RIMM shot.

JB: OK, OK… but you and Herb need to accept some culpability here. Check out the twenty stocks offered up as the smorgasbord for the draft. Only five of them beat the market over the last year.

Booyah: You don’t have to out run the bull or bear. You just have to out run the other participating prey.

Testy: Touche. But you guys left a lot of potential on the cutting room floor.

Booyah: Now you know how a Lightning Round feels, huh?

Bill Ackman: Gotta feel bad for the young guys like Josh here, getting trampled. This was all going down during my discussions with debate moderator Wapner. So I called my friend, Carl to see if we could step in …

Carl Icahn: Yeah, thanks Bill. I looked it over and called Loeb and about ten other hedge fund managers to see if we could boost that RIMM noble steed. I thought about selling Netflix, Chesapeake and my Herbalife position to see if I could drum up some dry powder. In fact, I thought about joining you and going short on Herbalife for a little extra risk capital.

Ackman: Thanks, Buddy. We ran the numbers by Einhorn and Nate Silver. Turns out not even Punxsatawney Phil wanted a piece of this action.

Icahn: Yeah. I’ll give you a call next week and we can kick around some other opportunities.

Scott Wapner: Thanks, guys. I’ll set up a conference call and we can discuss and share with the investing world.

Testy: Thanks for pronouncing Herbalife correctly.

Icahn: Did I mention that I had Netflix (NFLX) all the way here? Do I get a trophy or some kind of prize?

Najerian: Do I get any credit for passing Josh in the final days with Starbucks?

Icahn: I repeat. Netflix was mine.

Scott Wapner:  Bully.

JB: We’ll gift wrap some Herbalife products on your behalf and send them over to Ackman. For now, congratulations Reggie. Time for a rematch?

Noble Steed Final Standings

1. Reggie “BoomBust” Middleton (GOOG)
2. Pete Najerian (SBUX)
3. Joshua Brown (RIMM)
4. Abigail Dolittle (DELL)
5. James Altucher (AAPL)
6. Guy Adami (RSH)
7. Paul Hickey (JCP)

Dashboard: http://www.manifestinvesting.com/dashboards/public/cnbc-stockdraft-2012

Heavy Hogs (2012): Groundhog VI Results

Groundhog Frigid

The Heavy Hogs for 2012 (the most frequently selected stocks one year ago) struggled a bit during Groundhog VI — checking in at 6.3% while the Wilshire 5000 gained 16.4%.

This doesn’t bode well for the Groundhog field as our accountants continue to tally the final results. Chances are if you had Portfolio Recovery (PRAA), ResMed (RMD), Google (GOOG), Bio-Reference Labs (BRLI), Oracle (ORCL) or Walgreen (WAG) — you’re smiling. These were the only six out of the seventeen heavy hogs to outperform the market, or 35.3%. (Values shown in the accompanying table are $100 invested on 2/2/2012)

We’re accustomed to a higher number than 35.3%.

Heavy hogs dash 20130201

Our Groundhog VII Stock Selection Contest

We hold certain truths to be self-evident.

That most of us like to sleep at night.

That most of us believe in Occam’s Razor.

Most of us marvel at the performance of a relatively-passive model portfolio like our Bare Naked Million

We’ve also paid homage to Eddy Elfenbein and his six year winning streak of beating the S&P 500 with his Buy List at Crossing Wall Street.

Therefore, we’ll keep it even simpler for Groundhog VII (2013).

1. Enter by selecting a minimum of five (5) investments and a maximum of twenty (20) positions.

2. Participants will receive $1,000,000 in Groundhog dollars. The cool million will be divided evenly amongst the number of positions you decide to use. In other words, if you pick (5) stocks … we’ll divide the $1,000,000 evenly, creating a public dashboard with $200,000 each.

3. No transactions will be permitted between February 4, 2013 and February 2, 2014.

4. Entries can be made all weekend and will be accepted until the market opens on Wednesday, February 6.

Entries can be submitted by emailing manifest@manifestinvesting.com or by posting in the Groundhog Challenge forum folder at http://www.manifestinvesting.com. (Subscription or FREE trial accounts)

5. Stocks under $1 not permitted.

S&P 500 Monthly Returns (2005-Present)

Yes, January 2013 was a good month, a special month in the context of returns.

But there have been several months since March 2009 that have been even better.

In this graphic the red-shaded months are the months when the median return forecast was below average … and the green-shaded months when the return forecasts were outsized.

I was surprised to see the dispersion for above-average return forecasts, while the monthly returns during our “return forecast plateau” (2005-2007) are pretty tightly grouped. Hmmmmm.

Qualcomm (QCOM)

Qcom banner 20130201

In the realm of mobile communications, it’s clearly a jungle out there. The battle among the major providers is in full gear and profit margins (for most participants) show the impact. Enter Qualcomm (QCOM). QCOM has the #1 market share in application and graphics processing chips and 3G/4G/LTE modems used in smart phones. Let that sink in for a minute.

Qualcomm has revolutionized the mobile phone industry. Through a commitment to research and development and via a wide berth of partnerships with other firms, innovative solutions are built and distributed across the entire wireless industry.

Growth, Profitability, Valuation

The Manifest Investing sales growth forecast for QCOM is 11%. We’re using 33% for the projected net margin. The median P/E for the period 2006-2013 is 16.8×. We’re using 18x for the projected average P/E.

Qcom model 20130131
QCOM Business Model Analysis: The products are literally ubiquitous and although innovation continues (commitment to R&D) Qualcomm is somewhat mature with respect to life cycle … and naturally lower (but still blue chip leadership) growth rates lie ahead.

Qcom profitability 20130201

Qcom pe 20130201

At the time of selection, the stock price is $62.53, the projected annual return is 18-19%. The quality rating is 91.8 (Excellent, Top Shelf) and the financial strength rating is 98 (A++). The company has no debt.

The company is now ranked #38 in the MANIFEST 40 and although a newcomer to our 40 most widely-followed stocks, investors in our community have studied, owned and profited from QCOM over the years.

And we close with an echo of last month’s closing remarks on Atwood Oceanics — only this time we’re talking QCOM: globally diversified and serving a host of wireless companies … feels like a pretty good hedge vs. geo-risk and a little like 1960s Corning, they sold the tubes to all the dueling TV makers. Placing a bet on red, black and green?