Friday, March 15, 2019

Weekend catchup

Your weekend edge - catch up with this week's readings:

Get the Edge - Click here to view an archive of investment education, daily musings, book recommendations and more.
_________________

Listen to the story behind "The Incredibles" and the power of misfits (Link)
Pixar was founded on a disruptive vision. Their leaders fervently believed it was never too early to throw your own recipe out the window. Pixar founder Steve Jobs wanted to keep raising the bar—bigger hits, longer run times—so he picked a couple of outsiders to drive a shakeup. So they hired Brad Brid who was just fired from Disney. Brad hated being told “that’s the way we’ve always done it” as he believed you needed to continually shake things up. Brad joined Pixar with an idea that was far beyond what Pixar had ever done. That idea was The Incredibles, which required animating a whole family with super powers..Pixar had never animated humans before because the coding behind creating a realistic animated human was something viewed as impossible in CG animation. Brad searched Pixar’s ranks for people who were frustrated with the status quo and willing to give Brads idea a try. It turns out Brad was onto something as his new team of frustrated individuals was super motivated to develop fresh new solutions and wanted to bring Brads incredible idea to life. The Incredibles went onto gross over $600 million and win two Oscars. Not bad for a misfit like Brad.

Twenty crazy investing facts (Link)
- Since 1916, the Dow has made new all-time highs less than 5% of all days, but over that time it’s up 25,568%. 95% of the time you’re underwater. The less you look the better off you’ll be.

- The Dow has compounded at less than 3 basis points a day since 1970. Since then its up more than 3,000%. Compounding really is magic.

- The Dow has only been positive 52% of all days. The average daily return is 0.73% when it’s up and -0.76% when it’s down.

- The Dow has spent more time 40% or more below the highs than within 2% of the highs (20.6% of days vs. 18.4% of days) No pain no gain.

- In 1949 the stock market was trading at 6.8x earnings and had a 7.5% dividend yield. 50 years later it reached a high of 30x earnings and carried just a 1% dividend yield.You can calculate everything yet still not know how investors are going to feel

Human development: fueled by energy - Chris Slubicki, CEO of Modern Resources Inc. (Link)
Chris Slubicki provides an objective perspective of the global and Canadian energy industries. Canadians are benefiting greatly today because we had the courage to build in the past.The world needs energy and no one is better at providing it then Canada. Chris concludes with great examples in Canadian history where we had to courage to build. We need to step up again and build. 

Government policies have made Canada less attractive to investment in energy industry (Link)
U.S based, Devon Energy adds to the exodus of foreign oil and gas companies leaving the Canadian oil patch. Devon Energy has roots in Canada dating back to 1998 and opened its first facility in 2007. Their Canadian operation represented about 24% of their overall production with 750 employees in Canada. The company is leaving Canada to complete its“transformation to a high-return U.S. oil growth business". According to the 2018 Global Petroleum Survey, the U.S. is the most attractive region for oil and gas investment, while Canada now ranks fourth.

California is building unnecessary power plants (Link)
California uses 2.6% less electricity annually from the power grid now than in 2008, despite this reduction residential and business customers are paying $6.8 billion more for power than they did then. The added cost to customers will total many billions of dollars over the next two decades, because regulators have approved higher rates for years to come so utilities can recoup the expense of building new plants. California regulators have for years allowed power companies to go on a building spree, vastly expanding the potential electricity supply in the state. Today the gap between what Californians pay to turn on their lights versus the rest of the country has nearly doubled. California has this tradition of astonishingly bad decisions.

How did the U.S. stock market get so old? (Link)
The average age of companies listed on US exchanges has been steadily rising for three decades. Now it’s 20 years which is almost twice the average in 1997, during the dot-com craze. The trend toward fewer and older companies has been developing for years. Firms are staying private for longer, and initial public offerings—once a rite of passage for a successful startup—get done later. Once companies do list, they quickly become prey. In a market dominated by megacaps, behemoths swallow up competitors with ease.
US prime age labour force has room to grow
Ex-cons are now joining the US labour force
US prison populations are declining and a thriving job market is giving many ex-prisoners a second chance in the labour market.

Thursday, March 14, 2019

20 crazy investing facts I Labour force participation rate

Get the Edge - Click here to view an archive of investment education, daily musings, book recommendations and more.
_________________

Twenty crazy investing facts (Link)

- Since 1916, the Dow has made new all-time highs less than 5% of all days, but over that time it’s up 25,568%. 95% of the time you’re underwater. The less you look the better off you’ll be.

- The Dow has compounded at less than 3 basis points a day since 1970. Since then its up more than 3,000%. Compounding really is magic.

- The Dow has only been positive 52% of all days. The average daily return is 0.73% when it’s up and -0.76% when it’s down.

- The Dow has spent more time 40% or more below the highs than within 2% of the highs (20.6% of days vs. 18.4% of days) No pain no gain.

- In 1949 the stock market was trading at 6.8x earnings and had a 7.5% dividend yield. 50 years later it reached a high of 30x earnings and carried just a 1% dividend yield.You can calculate everything yet still not know how investors are going to feel

US prime age labour force has room to grow
Ex-cons are now joining the US labour force
US prison populations are declining and a thriving job market is giving many ex-prisoners a second chance in the labour market.

Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Canada's energy industry

Get the Edge - Click here to view an archive of investment education, daily musings, book recommendations and more.
_________________

Human development: fueled by energy - Chris Slubicki, CEO of Modern Resources Inc. (Link)
Chris Slubicki provides an objective perspective of the global and Canadian energy industries. Canadians are benefiting greatly today because we had the courage to build in the past.The world needs energy and no one is better at providing it then Canada. Chris concludes with great examples in Canadian history where we had to courage to build. We need to step up again and build. 

Government policies have made Canada less attractive to investment in energy industry (Link)
U.S based, Devon Energy adds to the exodus of foreign oil and gas companies leaving the Canadian oil patch. Devon Energy has roots in Canada dating back to 1998 and opened its first facility in 2007. Their Canadian operation represented about 24% of their overall production with 750 employees in Canada. The company is leaving Canada to complete its“transformation to a high-return U.S. oil growth business". According to the 2018 Global Petroleum Survey, the U.S. is the most attractive region for oil and gas investment, while Canada now ranks fourth.


Sunday, March 10, 2019

Misfits. Unnecessary power plants. Aging stock market

Get the Edge - Click here to view an archive of investment education, daily musings, book recommendations and more.
_________________

Listen to the story behind "The Incredibles" and the power of misfits (Link)
Pixar was founded on a disruptive vision. Their leaders fervently believed it was never too early to throw your own recipe out the window. Pixar founder Steve Jobs wanted to keep raising the bar—bigger hits, longer run times—so he picked a couple of outsiders to drive a shakeup. So they hired Brad Brid who was just fired from Disney. Brad hated being told “that’s the way we’ve always done it” as he believed you needed to continually shake things up. Brad joined Pixar with an idea that was far beyond what Pixar had ever done. That idea was The Incredibles, which required animating a whole family with super powers..Pixar had never animated humans before because the coding behind creating a realistic animated human was something viewed as impossible in CG animation. Brad searched Pixar’s ranks for people who were frustrated with the status quo and willing to give Brads idea a try. It turns out Brad was onto something as his new team of frustrated individuals was super motivated to develop fresh new solutions and wanted to bring Brads incredible idea to life. The Incredibles went onto gross over $600 million and win two Oscars. Not bad for a misfit like Brad. 

California is building unnecessary power plants (Link)
California uses 2.6% less electricity annually from the power grid now than in 2008, despite this reduction residential and business customers are paying $6.8 billion more for power than they did then. The added cost to customers will total many billions of dollars over the next two decades, because regulators have approved higher rates for years to come so utilities can recoup the expense of building new plants. California regulators have for years allowed power companies to go on a building spree, vastly expanding the potential electricity supply in the state. Today the gap between what Californians pay to turn on their lights versus the rest of the country has nearly doubled. California has this tradition of astonishingly bad decisions.


How did the U.S. stock market get so old? (Link)
The average age of companies listed on US exchanges has been steadily rising for three decades. Now it’s 20 years which is almost twice the average in 1997, during the dot-com craze. The trend toward fewer and older companies has been developing for years. Firms are staying private for longer, and initial public offerings—once a rite of passage for a successful startup—get done later. Once companies do list, they quickly become prey. In a market dominated by megacaps, behemoths swallow up competitors with ease.

Friday, March 8, 2019

Weekend catchup

Your weekend edge - catch up with this week's readings:

Get the Edge - Click here to view an archive of investment education, daily musings, book recommendations and more.
_________________

Not caring: A unique and powerful skill (Link)
If you can remain dispassionate about what people think of you while you’re trying to get an outcome, or about the noise around you during the process, you have an advantage that 1 out of  100,000 has in the industry. 
- Not caring about looking dumb when you’re confident others are being dumber.
- Not caring about your reputation after you change your mind. 
- Not caring about not having no explanation for the majority of events.

Figure out what you can control and obsess over it. Identify what doesn’t matter and ignore it. Determine what you’re incapable of and stay away from it.Have room for error. Plan on things not going according to plan.

Advice from Charlie Munger : 2019 Daily Journal AGM (Link)
We’ve done better than average and now there’s a question why has that happened? The answer is pretty simple. We tried to do less. We never had the illusion we could just hire a bunch of bright young people and they would know more than anybody about canned soup and aerospace and utilities and so on and so on. We always realized that if we worked very hard, we could find a few things where we were right and the few things were enough and that that was a reasonable expectation. Audio recording here.

Only one constant in investing (Link)
You have to understand that there are no physical laws at work in investing. And the future is uncertain, and vague, and random. And psychology dominates. Richard Feynman said, "Physics would be much harder if electrons had feelings." You come in the room, you flip up the switch, and the lights go on. Because the electrons flow from the switch to the lights. They never flow the other way. They never go on strike. They never fall asleep. They never say, ‘Ah today I don’t feel like flowing from the switch to the light.'

You can use all the numbers, tables, and data visualizations you want, but you still won’t be able to quantify the only law in investing: everything is determined by your own behavior. Everything comes back to how you react to information.

Google vs. Amazon (Link)
Steve Yegge spent years at both Amazon and Google. His famous posting from 2011 gives an insiders look what Amazon was able to figure out early on and what hindered Google. Google did nearly everything better than Amazon, yet Amazon continued to be more successful. The difference came down to products vs. platforms and Amazon’s CEO Bezos was fierce about building platforms and Google didn't understand this. Products are always built on top of platforms. Platforms are all about long-term thinking. The power of a platform comes from the variety and sophistication of the products it enables. Bezos realized long before the vast majority of Amazonians that Amazon needs to be a platform.

What Happened When I Bought a House With Solar Panels (Link)
I’d soon learn that the system was tied to the title of the house. It appeared that if we bought Jug’s place, we’d have to assume his lease arrangement with Sunrun. On consumer review sites and in local news reports, rueful customers warn others to stay away from TPO solar offered by Sunrun and other companies. State attorneys general and politicians have fielded complaints from people who say they were sold expensive systems they can’t afford after signing contracts they didn’t understand; or are paying more now on their electricity bills, not less as promised; or are having trouble selling their homes because potential buyers are turned off, just as I was. (Customers of Sunrun and other companies must sign binding arbitration clauses, barring them from suing or joining in class actions.) Salespeople would cherry-pick data, skim over crucial details, and prioritize speed above all, he told me. A trainer from California who listened in on hundreds of sales calls for quality control estimated that 60 % of customers knew no more than half of what they were signing up for and 10 % had no clue.

Booming used car market?
The average price of a used car is now about $20,000 for the first time in history. What's driving the trend? The declining number of older used cars and the increasing number of late-model leased cars hitting the used car market are driving prices higher. These late model cars are newer which means they generally sell for a higher price which is helping to drive the profits of used cars sales higher. The increasing number of used cars is also a money maker for dealership's parts and services departments which represent about 40% of  dealership's used car department profits.

Relative sizes of world stock markets 1899 vs 2019 (Link)
At the start of the 20th century, the UK equity market was the largest in the world, accounting for a quarter of world capitalization, dominating even the US market (15%). Germany (13%). Of the US firms listed in 1900, over 80% of their value was in industries that are today small or extinct. Today the US equity market us the largest in the world, accounting for 50% of world capitalization with the UK now under 6%.

World energy consumption through 2040
Fossil fuels projected to remain the largest energy source with natural gas, renewables and petroleum liquids being the fastest growing energy sources. Asia is projected to have the largest increase in energy use of non-OECD regions.



Thursday, March 7, 2019

Used cars. Constants in investing. EdgePoint culture

Get the Edge - Click here to view an archive of investment education, daily musings, book recommendations and more.
_________________

Only one constant in investing (Link)
You have to understand that there are no physical laws at work in investing. And the future is uncertain, and vague, and random. And psychology dominates. Richard Feynman said, "Physics would be much harder if electrons had feelings." You come in the room, you flip up the switch, and the lights go on. Because the electrons flow from the switch to the lights. They never flow the other way. They never go on strike. They never fall asleep. They never say, ‘Ah today I don’t feel like flowing from the switch to the light.'

You can use all the numbers, tables, and data visualizations you want, but you still won’t be able to quantify the only law in investing: everything is determined by your own behavior. Everything comes back to how you react to information.

Booming used car market?
The average price of a used car is now about $20,000 for the first time in history. What's driving the trend? The declining number of older used cars and the increasing number of late-model leased cars hitting the used car market are driving prices higher. These late model cars are newer which means they generally sell for a higher price which is helping to drive the profits of used cars sales higher. The increasing number of used cars is also a money maker for dealership's parts and services departments which represent about 40% of  dealership's used car department profits.

Pancake Tuesday and Robert's 6th anniversary!

Tuesday, March 5, 2019

The power of not caring I Charlie Munger I World energy consumption

Get the Edge - Click here to view an archive of investment education, daily musings, book recommendations and more.
_________________

Not caring: A unique and powerful skill (Link)
If you can remain dispassionate about what people think of you while you’re trying to get an outcome, or about the noise around you during the process, you have an advantage that 1 out of  100,000 has in the industry. 
- Not caring about looking dumb when you’re confident others are being dumber.
- Not caring about your reputation after you change your mind. 
- Not caring about not having no explanation for the majority of events.

Figure out what you can control and obsess over it. Identify what doesn’t matter and ignore it. Determine what you’re incapable of and stay away from it.Have room for error. Plan on things not going according to plan.

Advice from Charlie Munger : 2019 Daily Journal AGM (Link)
We’ve done better than average and now there’s a question why has that happened? The answer is pretty simple. We tried to do less. We never had the illusion we could just hire a bunch of bright young people and they would know more than anybody about canned soup and aerospace and utilities and so on and so on. We always realized that if we worked very hard, we could find a few things where we were right and the few things were enough and that that was a reasonable expectation. Audio recording here

World energy consumption through 2040
Fossil fuels projected to remain the largest energy source with natural gas, renewables and petroleum liquids being the fastest growing energy sources. Asia is projected to have the largest increase in energy use of non-OECD regions.