Friday, November 1, 2019

This week's interesting finds

November 1, 2019

Value and Growth
Over the past decade, investors holding U.S. value stocks have produced an annualized return of 12.9% compared to a 16.3% annualized return for growth stocks. This difference between value and growth makes many people wonder what’s wrong with value and then try to offer simple explanations for why value has underperformed growth.

Taking a closer look at the data a study found that it's not the performance of value stocks that have been out of whack — rather, the performance of growth stocks has been abnormally high relative to historical levels.

Over the last decade,  value has been more or less in line with its historical returns dating back to 1929.

Growth, on the other hand, has diverged greatly over the last decade compared to its historical average.  Over the 10-year period ending June 2019, growth produced an annualized return of 16.3%, much higher than its 9.7% return since July 1926.

History has also shown that these trends can quickly turn. Some of the weakest periods for value stocks when compared to growth stocks have been followed by some of the strongest. One example in history is during the dot-com era. On March 31, 2000, growth stocks had outperformed value stocks in the US over 1-year, 5-year, 10-year, and 15-year periods. Fast forward one year to March 31, 2001, value stocks had regained the advantage over every one of those periods.

Putting buy and hold to the ultimate test: the crash of 1929
To this day, no one is really sure why stocks crashed in 1929 and no one foresaw how long and terrible the bear market would be. As usual newspapers and economists tried to predict the bottom, but their efforts were in vain. The Dow didn’t surpass its 1929 high until Nov. 23, 1954, a quarter-century later.
Investors fled the stock markets and not many stuck around long enough to break even. A 1954 survey by the Federal Reserve found that only 7% of middle-class households said they preferred to invest in stocks over savings bonds, bank accounts or real estate. 

Investors should always regard the stock market as sailors regard the sea—a means to an end, usually benign, but potentially lethal.

To be a long-term investor in stocks, you have to be prepared to lose more money for longer than seems possible. Anyone who takes that risk lightly is likely to sell out, in the next crash, near the bottom.

Interview with Bernard Arnault of LVMH
The LVMH process has one goal: star brands. According to Arnault, star brands are born only when a company manages to make products that “speak to the ages” but feel intensely modern. Such products sell fast and furiously, all while raking in profits. “Mastering the paradox of star brands is very difficult and rare,” Arnault notes dryly, “fortunately.”

“Our philosophy is quite simple, really. If you look over a creative person’s shoulder, he will stop doing great work. Wouldn’t you, if some manager were watching your every move, clutching a calculator in his hand? That is why LVMH is, as a company, so decentralized. Each brand very much runs itself, headed by its own artistic director. Central headquarters in Paris are very small, especially for a company with 54,000 employees and 1,300 stores around the world. There are only 250 of us, and I assure you, we do not lurk around every corner, questioning every creative decision.”

“I would say that there are four characteristics required. A star brand is timeless, modern, fast-growing, and highly profitable. The problem is that the quality of timelessness takes years to develop, even decades. You cannot just decree it. A brand has to pay its dues—it has to come to stand for something in the eyes of the world. But you can, as a manager, enhance timelessness—that is, create the impression of timelessness sooner rather than later. And you do that with uncompromising quality.”

Interview with Dani Reiss of Canada Goose
“During the IPO roadshow, we fielded questions about whether Canada Goose was a fad and whether we were worried about becoming too popular. I’ve heard such questions probably every year I’ve been at the company, yet they still make me smile. Our brand is 60+ years old, and we’ve been growing every year for at least the past 15 years, but in so many ways we’re just getting started.”

“I hear stories regularly from people who are only now discovering us about how much they love our products. Young, old, local, international, outdoor explorers or fashionistas, they all respond to our commitment to quality, authenticity, and staying true to our DNA. That’s how we remain relevant as we grow and build an enduring brand.”

“And as we do, I’ve made it clear that one aspect of our business is non-negotiable. Canada Goose will forever be a champion for “Made in Canada.” There is simply no better way for us to remain timeless. Our Canadian heritage and commitment to manufacturing our parkas domestically are at the heart of our business and brand. Many companies in our industry outsource to offshore manufacturers, but we will keep aggressively investing in producing premium products in Canada. “

Trick or Treat!
EdgePointers had some fun with costumes







Friday, October 25, 2019

This week's interesting finds

October 26, 2019

Staying the course: Even stars are underdogs at times
Active portfolio management can be like riding a roller coaster at times. Even highly successful active managers often underperform over periods of time.

The chart below shows the performance of active managers over a 15-year period. As you can see most active managers did not even survive and only 14% of them survived and outperformed over the 15-year period. However, if we take a closer look at these most successful managers that outperformed over the 15-year period, we find that 72% of them experienced at least one three-year period of underperformance.
More than one study has shown that the vast majority of successful managers have at times failed to exceed their benchmarks or their peers, particularly over periods of three years or less. And they’ve sometimes lagged by a wide margin, Of course, it’s easy to lose confidence in an investment after suffering through a negative period but selling (or buying) purely based on short-term numbers is one of the worst things you can do as an investor.

Do yourself a favour – after picking the right investment for you, stay loyal. After all, the longer you stay in the game, the greater your chances of coming out ahead. Don’t replace one fund with another simply because it has underperformed lately. Invest in a fund because you believe in the investment approach and understand how it can help you in the long term.

The Ongoing Battle for Pipeline Projects in Canada
Canada has the world's 3rd largest oil reserves and is currently the 7th largest producer of crude oil.  Canada's crude oil production has increased from 2.3M barrels/day in 2005 to 4.6M in 2018. With the proper infrastructure built, the National Energy Board estimates the production will grow to 6M barrels/day by 2030. The critical question facing Canada's oil and gas industry is whether the necessary infrastructure will be built.

Over the last decade, many of the proposed pipeline projects have been cancelled or delayed as a result of regulatory challenges or political decisions. If all of the export pipelines applied for since 2012, which have now been canceled or delayed, were instead approved and completed as per their original proposed in-service dates, 3.4M barrels/day of additional capacity would have been added by 2019. Instead, between 2013 and 2016, only 1M barrels/day in additional capacity was added, and since 2016 no additional capacity has been added. This has contributed to a widening price differential for Western Canadian Select (WCS) compared to Western Texas Intermediate (WTI).

For a review of some of the most high-profile pipeline projects in Canada in recent history click here.

High flying
The combined value of the five biggest companies in the S&P 500 -Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet, and Facebook -- has reached 17% of the index's total market cap. That's the highest for the top five companies in any week since the burst of the dotcom bubble at the turn of the century.







Unprofitable IPOs

The percentage of companies going public that have yet to generate positive earnings has reached 70%. This is the highest since the peak of tech-industry excess roughly 20 years ago.

Friday Funnies


Friday, October 18, 2019

This week's interesting finds

October 19, 2019

What's your vintage year?

When did you become an EdgePoint partner? Let's take a walk down memory lane as we recall the major events and fun facts from your vintage year.

Focusing on best ideas

CFA Institute recently released a blog post looking at active managers’ returns by position sizing relative to benchmark. Looks like there’s a relation between best ideas and performance. Another reason it makes sense to run concentrated portfolios of high conviction ideas. 
Negative interest rates are nothing short of a mystery

Negative interest rates are likely to throw off whatever we knew about the financial world and how things worked in the past. Howard Marks discusses why negative rates have become prevalent, what implications they might have, whether they will reach the U.S., and what investors can do as they navigate these uncharted waters.

Why would anyone want to buy a negative-yield bond?
Fear about the future that causes investors to engage in a flight to safety in which they elect to lock in a sure but limited loss
A belief that interest rates will go even more negative providing a profit on bonds when they do (as bonds appreciate in price as they would with any decline in rates)
An expectation of deflation causing the purchasing power of the repaid principal to rise
Speculation that the currency underlying the bond will appreciate by more than the interest rate

What is there to do?
The most reliable solution lies in buying things with durable and hopefully growing cash flows. Investments with the likelihood of producing steady earnings or distributions that reflect a substantial yield on cost seem like reasonable responses in times of negative yields. The challenge lies in accurately predicting the durability and growth of cash flows and making sure the price you pay allows for a good return. In today’s environment, assets with predictability are often priced too high and investors are unusually willing to extrapolate growth far into the future. While simple in concept, investing is far from easy, especially today.

Leveraged Loans

Barely noticed in a corner of the financial markets, leveraged loans originally worth about $40 billion are staging their own private meltdown.

Loans tied to more than 50 companies have lost at least 10% of face value in just three months. Some have dropped a lot more, with lenders lucky to get back just two-thirds of their investment if they tried to sell.


Morgan Housel on behavioral biases and pitfalls

In January this year Morgan Housel- Partner, Collaborative Fund- gave a presentation on behavioural biases and pitfalls faced by ordinary investors at the India Investment Conference. Through five stories and various examples, he conveys that investing is not just about what you know but also about how you behave and that stocks become less risky the longer one holds them.

“The goal of investing is not to minimize boredom, it is to maximize returns! If you want clients to stick around, then do things simply.”

Friday, October 11, 2019

This week's interesting finds

October 12, 2019

Our Q3 commentaries are available now

This quarter, portfolio manager Geoff MacDonald explains why it's important to invest like a rational business owner, while fixed-income analyst Derek Skomorowski discusses why relying on others to do your credit work doesn't pay off.

America’s middle class can’t afford its cars

Car loans that are increasingly stretched out are a pronounced sign that some American middle-class buyers can’t afford a middle-class lifestyle. For many, the availability of loans with longer terms has created an illusion of affordability. It has helped fuel car purchases that would have been out of reach with three-, five- or even six-year loans. Low rates in effect served as a bailout for the auto industry over the last decade. 

A growing share of car buyers won’t pay off the debt before they trade in their cars for new ones, either because the car is in need of repairs or because they want a newer model. A third of new-car buyers who trade in their cars roll debt from old vehicles into their new loans. 

    Americans have been borrowing to buy their cars for decades, but auto debt has swelled since the financial crisis. U.S. consumers held a record $1.3 trillion of debt tied to their cars at the end of June.

    So far this year, dealerships made an average of $982 per new vehicle on finance and insurance versus $381 on the actual sale. 



    Momentum. After one year of outperformance, the next 9 are usually bad
    Momentum strategies show a tendency towards long-term reversal. Starting from around the one year point onward, they underperform. The green column shows the initial one-year annual excess returns of Winner portfolios over Loser portfolios. The blue column shows the excess returns of those same portfolios from the end of the 1st year to the end of the 10th year. 





    Free cash flow as a % of GDP is at a record high in the U.S.

    There have NOT been big investments by either households or businesses that create misallocations of capital.  Misallocations usually precede/cause a recession.


    Source: Empirical Research Partners

    Paying for stability

    Stable stocks have been more expensive only 4% of the time since 1976. Bank stocks have been less expensive only 5% of the time since 1976.


    Source: Empirical Research Partners


    Demographics

    Artist Profit Sharing


    Don't go chasing waterfalls...

    …unless you can take a photo of it like this spectacular shot. Our Q3 Photo Contest winner is Ted Chisholm.


    Friday, October 4, 2019

    This week's interesting finds

    October 5, 2019

    Warren Buffett's first television interview

    Invaluable lessons about investing that haven’t changed to this day. 


    Paying for stability

    The valuation gap between stocks with stable growth and volatile growth is larger today than at any time in at least the last 35 years. The 20% of S&P 500 stocks with the most stable EBITDA growth during the past 40 quarters currently trade at a median forward P/E of 21x. This represents a 23% premium to the median S&P 500 stock's multiple of 17x. Since 1985, this premium was only exceeded in early 2000 at the peak of the Tech Bubble. The 25% discount carried by the stocks with the most volatile earnings growth (13x vs. 17x) has been deepening for a decade and is now the largest on record.

    BUT…
    While the valuations of stable growth and volatile growth companies look extreme relative to history, valuations have generally not been a useful signal for predicting the forward returns of these stocks in the past. Exhibit 14 below shows the weak historical relationship between the valuations of stable growth stocks and their forward 12-month returns relative to volatile growth stocks. In the past, large valuation spreads have not indicated above-average risk of a reversal in valuations and performance. In fact, the times in the past when stable growers carried the largest valuation premia relative to volatile growth stocks were often been followed by further stable growth stock outperformance. 


    Ever seen a 0.00% R squared before?*
    *R-squared is a statistical measure that explains to what extent the variance of one variable (valuation premium in this case) explains the variance of the second variable (forward 12-month excess returns in this case).  

    Bond and dividend yields since 2005







    Tech IPOs aren't working for the masses
    Many of the seemingly hot debuts this year have been much less so for most ordinary investors. Most big new tech issues from this year are trading below their opening prices from their first day of trading. For most new tech issues, the biggest gains come upfront. Relatively few investors get access to new shares at the listing price. But for the majority of investors who have to wait for trades to open, the returns aren’t so glamorous. 




    Shale boom is slowing












    Friday, September 27, 2019

    This week's interesting finds

    September 28, 2019

    EdgePoint Partners' back to school reading list
    Over the past few weeks, we have been collecting some of the reads that have caught your attention lately. The results are in! Here are some of the books that come highly recommended by EdgePoint partners: 

    S&P 500 Return: Earnings Growth vs. Multiple Expansion




    During the dot-com bubble, investors flocked to bet on the purported next big thing. A similar theme can be spotted in today’s IPO market, with some companies asking buyers to bet on unproven technology and untested revenue models. Many winners have emerged, but this deluge of disruptors has also laid down a minefield.


    Historical market returns vs. ISM manufacturing index
    The left chart shows the correlation between ISM manufacturing index and 10-year Treasury yields since 2010.  A PMI index above 50% indicates that the manufacturing economy is expanding, and a PMI index below 50% indicates that the manufacturing economy is declining.  The right chart shows the correlation between S&P 500 returns and ISM readings over or under 50.

    Mixed signals from bond yields 
    According to government bond yields, we are making a bee-line for Armageddon. According to credit spreads, clear skies on the horizon.
    Stock market returns are inconsistent.
    Maybe the best and worst part about the markets is the fact that two investors can look at the same exact data and come to completely different conclusions. Looking at the two stats below many might say that “buy & hold doesn’t work” or “this is why I time the market”.

    $10k invested in the S&P 500 in Jan 2000 would be worth $29,181 by the end of Aug 2019

    $10k invested in the S&P 500 in Jan 2010 would be worth $32,100 by the end of Aug 2019

    The first situation invested at the height of the dot-com bubble which might have been the worst entry point in U.S. stock market history. The dot-com bubble soon burst leading the S&P 500  to fall by 45%; 10 years later the financial crisis hit and the S&P 500 fell again, but this time by 51%. Despite this, the investors still managed to triple their money and earn 5.9% annually as of August 2019. How many investors would sign up for 5.9% annual returns today for the next 20 years?

    Stock market returns are inconsistent. Sometimes returns are front-loaded, sometimes they’re back-loaded and sometimes they’re not great, even over longer time frames. One period of inconsistent or poor returns isn’t a reason to give up on the stock market. That’s how it works.

    Friday, September 20, 2019

    This week's interesting finds

    September 21, 2019

    Earlier in the summer, we presented our Investment team’s top literary picks for the season. We hope you enjoyed them! Now, in the spirit of sharing interests, we’d love to hear which books and podcasts have caught your attention lately. Share your recommendations HERE and we may feature them in an upcoming edition of Inside Edge! 

    Video: An investor's journey with EdgePoint

    We’re proud of how we’ve been able to help our partners and end clients by building their wealth during the first 10 years of our existence. To help build for EdgePoint’s second decade, we’ve made a video to remind people that the first one wasn’t always a smooth ride but that it paid to be patient during the tough times. Volatility is a constant in the market, how our clients react to it however will determine if they can get to their Point B. 

    More on negative-yielding bonds

    According to Jeff Gundlach: “79% of all negative-yielding bonds are held by central banks.”

    With $14 trillion in negative-yielding debt globally, that means that $3 trillion was bought by actual investors.



    Saudi oil reserves

    Members of the International Energy Agency are required to hold emergency stocks of oil that could cover 90 days’ worth of lost imports. They can deploy these reserves in unison to avoid an oil shock, as in June 2011, when the U.S. and 27 other countries acted to release 60 million barrels of oil from strategic reserves to drive down prices during the disruption caused by the civil war in Libya. The U.S. holds around 600 million barrels of oil in reserve and other governments have a further 1.2 billion.

    Saudi Arabia’s own oil reserves have fallen in recent years, but remain sufficient to ensure the kingdom’s customers don’t experience shortages. The only stipulation is that the disruption must be short-lived. The nation holds enough to cover the country’s exports for around 35 days.

    A look at what countries are dependent on Saudi oil.

    The chart on the left shows total crude exports from Saudi Arabia by destination country with Japan, China, US, South Korea & India making up the bulk of their exports. The chart on the right shows Saudi Arabia’s share of each nation’s crude petroleum imports with Japan and South Korea being the most dependent.



    How Buffett's Brain Works

    Here are some key factors Warren Buffett considers when looking at potential opportunities:

    Simplicity - Is the business easy to understand?
    Operating History  - Has the business been around for a long time, with a consistent operating history?
    Long-Term Prospects - Is there reason to believe that the business will be able to sustain success in the long-term?
    Rational Decisions - Is management wise when it comes to reinvesting earnings or returning profits to shareholders as dividends?
    Candidness - Does the management team admit mistakes? Are they honest with shareholders?
    Margin of Safety - What’s the chance you’ll lose money on the stock, in the long run, if you buy it at today’s price?