The Dumbest Investment I've Ever Seen

Published in Company Comment on 20 February 2009

The City whizz kids got it all wrong, making many dumb investments. Smart investors look for opportunities with tremendous upside potential. These four companies are the types you should be looking for.

While 2008 was a bad year for us individual investors, it was downright nasty for the Wall Street smarty-pantses who started this mess.

If "sophisticated" traders at firms like Citigroup (NYSE: C), Morgan Stanley, and what's left of Lehman Brothers learn anything from this debacle, hopefully it will be that they need to rethink the wisdom of massive debt and absurdly complex financial products.

They Clearly Haven't Learned It Yet

Take credit default swaps (CDSs) on U.S. government bonds, for example. They're essentially insurance policies. If the U.S. Treasury defaults on its loans, CDSs guarantee that other Wall Street firms would pay those claims.

It's true that, since October, the Treasury's balance sheet has taken on additional risk in the form of TARP and other bailout-related obligations.

But wait: What scenario can you imagine that would wipe out the U.S. Treasury yet leave AIG or even Goldman Sachs in good enough shape to pay out billions in Treasury bill claims?

Coming up blank? Me too.

Talk About A Dumb Investment

CDSs on U.S. government bonds are like insurance policies on a Monopoly game: Either you win and didn't need the policy, or you lose and get an IOU for money that's not worth the paper it's printed on. In other words, whatever happens, you're now down by whatever amount you paid for that policy.

So, why would some of the smartest minds in finance buy them?

Strangely, our brains are hard-wired to prefer certainty over uncertainty -- even if it sometimes means taking on higher risk. This psychological fact -- which is known as the Ellsberg paradox -- partly explains why Wall Street would take a certain loss in return for the false sense of security CDSs on Treasury bills provide.

Which Got Me Thinking...

If the dumbest investment around amounts to one with all downside and no upside, then the smartest would be the investment with almost no downside but tremendous upside.

And in fact, that's exactly what the best investors look for. Monish Pabrai, whose Pabrai Investments has managed 10.9% annualised returns since its inception nine years ago, compared to -2.9% returns for the S&P 500, explains his market-beating strategy as "heads, I win; tails, I don't lose much."

That is to say, he looks for:

  • simple, stable businesses with moats and high returns on capital -- think Unilever (LSE: ULVR);
  • distressed businesses in distressed industries, like Marks & Spencer (LSE: MKS);
  • high-uncertainty, low-risk situations. He cites Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) as an example, which in 1980, bought QDOS for $50,000 and sold a modified version -- MS-DOS -- to IBM (NYSE: IBM). One year later, Bill Gates visited Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and got the idea of a mouse and graphical user interface for free. It wasn't clear if either MS-DOS or the graphical user interface would work. If they didn't, it wouldn't much matter to the bottom line. But if they did, it'd make quite a difference indeed; and
  • large margins of safety. Warren Buffett's big bet on American Express (NYSE: AXP) in the wake of the Salad Oil Scandal -- which had been beaten down by a scandal that didn't ultimately affect its business's protective moat -- netted his company $3 billion on a $7 million investment.

Together, these criteria:

  • limit your risk; and
  • maximize your upside.

In other words, they're exactly the kind of smart investments we're looking for.

What Does Pabrai Like Today?

Environments like this one are ripe for Pabrai's strategy because the market is full of stocks that investors won't touch because it confuses uncertainty with risk.

As he recently told my colleague Morgan Housel, "Because of all the recent turmoil we've seen, there are some incredible opportunities outside the financial-services space. Right now, that's really the place to make some hay!"

Specifically, he's looking for companies trading at a discount to their book values and to their future cash flows. Who fits those criteria right now? I ran a quick screen to find out.

Each of these companies is profitable, has modest levels of debt, and is trading at a significant discount to its book value:

Company

Price-to-Book Value

Current Share Price

Forward P/E

Industry

Computacenter (LSE: CCC)0.72127p6Computer Services
Bellway (LSE: BWY)0.67575p34House Building
Kazakhmys (LSE: KAZ)0.4285p5Mining
Daejan (LSE: DJAN)0.362,039pn/aProperty Investment

None of these are official recommendations, but they could be interesting starting places for further research.

What You Should Do Now

Right now, the market is clearly pricing some bad news into stocks, which means that just like Buffett, Gates, and Pabrai, you can make a lot of money if you're willing to put in the work to separate the value traps from the tremendous bargains that are out there. To do that, you'll want to make sure your investments have:

  • strong competitive advantages;
  • limited or unlikely worst-case scenarios;
  • honest and capable management; and
  • significant margins of safety to their book values or discounted cash flows.

These are just some of the criteria Maynard Paton, like Pabrai, looks for when he evaluates investment opportunities at The Motley Fool’s Champion Shares premium stock picking product. In fact, one of the companies mentioned in the above table is listed as a buy at today’s discounted share price. If you're interested in finding out which one, click here to access all his analysis, research reports, and most recent recommendations for 30-days for free. There is absolutely no obligation to subscribe.

More on the economy and the markets:

> The Motley Fool’s Share Dealing Service is always open for business. Buy and sell shares in real time for a flat rate of just £10. It’s hard to beat. Open an account for free today.

> This article was first published on Fool.com. It has been revised and updated.

> Bruce Jackson does not have an interest in any of the companies mentioned in this article.

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Comments

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Catenaccio 20 Feb 2009 , 1:21pm

"our brains are hard-wired to prefer certainty over uncertainty -- even if it sometimes means taking on higher risk. This psychological fact [is] known as the Ellsberg paradox"

Or, in other words, "better the devil you know".

Who's this Ellsberg and why is he re-writing Kylie Minogue songs?

FatMise 20 Feb 2009 , 3:43pm

Gah, conflating risk with expectation value is one of my pet peaves! The Ellsberg paradox describes situations where there is an *uncertainty in the risk*, given two equal expectation values, which is not what was described in the sentence above! I believe the author is trying to describe risk aversion, which is related but distinct.

jonesjeff 20 Feb 2009 , 6:43pm

I can't see either of the following criteria being met with the 4 stocks listed:
* strong competitive advantages;
* limited or unlikely worst-case scenarios;

uryjm 23 Feb 2009 , 7:35am

Yet another plug for the Fool's share picking service. I have a similar service available free of charge which undoubtedly "in the long term" will probably beat any other:
1) Buy dartboard
2) Pin Daily Mail stock prices page to board
3) Throw five darts at board
4) Buy impaled shares
5) Wait, and defer any criticism on performance with "I'm in it for the long term".
I can more or less guarantee some sort of performance with this strategy but you may well be dead by the time it's in profit. Or you may have doubled your money in two weeks. Serioulsy, what a lottery the whole racket is.

Iniq 23 Feb 2009 , 9:12am

Quote "... it was downright nasty for the Wall Street smarty-pantses ..."

What on Earth are "smarty-pantses"? Did your writer mean "smarty-pants"? Can you not find contributors capable of writing English?

retiredunhurt 23 Feb 2009 , 9:47am

Smarty-pants is singular, smarty-pantses is clearly plural, which is correct for the point being made. English is a flexible evolving language, and Shakespeare probably invented more words than anyone else in a creative, evolutionary way.


mer2k 23 Feb 2009 , 9:52am

uryjm, I like your strategy, and with enough darts it is likely to outperform 90% of professional fund managers with 1% charges.

This 'monkey score' should be everyone's benchmark for performance, or if you prefer to save the cost of a dartboard and papers, just buy a tracker with low management costs.

bugdc 25 Feb 2009 , 8:33am

Perhaps the word you are looking for is "smarties-pants" (as in "soldiers-at-arms", not "soldier-at-armses", "mothers-in-law" etc. ad infinitum).

(Shome mishtake, shurely.)

Max878 26 Feb 2009 , 12:38pm

'Pantses' is NOT plural, unless you are a three-year-old.

DowntheBottom 10 Mar 2009 , 7:28am

The problems with investment strategy and investor advice is that this advice is normally based on investor principles like Value investing, Elliot Wave, Dow Theory etc. Very few investors understand the economic effects on the markets.

All the sterling advice from the above article also completely misses the whole point of the current financial crisis in terms of it's economic effects. As far as most are concerned, when the bottom occurs, they will all pile back in to the markets - for, as we all know - after a bust, there's always a boom isn't there? Really?

George Soros - in a recent dinner speech at Univ of Columbia - admitted that the world financial structure was now insolvent as far as he was concerned and Paul Volcker, at the same time admitted that this crisis seemed to be far worse in its global effects than even The Great Depression of '29.

Still think a boom is coming?

Also, many gurus - amongst them Marc Faber, Jim Rogers, Soros, Peter Schiff etc. are saying that the dollar will crash soon and that this is inevitable. Jim Rogers has even left the US to live in Singapore. He has has now also dumped all his dollars and dollar denominated stocks in preparation for this dollar crash.

Get out of American stocks, get out of dollars. This - economically - is perhaps the best strategy,
since this recession is here for a while(think Japan...).


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