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Book Reviews
Book Review – The Little Book That Beats the Market
“The Little Book That Beats The Market” by Joel Greenblatt is easily the investment book of the year. In fact, it’s the best investment book that I’ve read in many years. In 130 pages, which can easily be read in a couple of hours, Greenblatt gives the reader a stunningly simple, crystal clear formula for beating (make that trouncing) the market that anyone — and I mean anyone — can follow.
Joel Greenblatt is a professor of securities analysis at Columbia University as well as the founder and managing partner of Gotham Capital, a hedge fund with average annualized returns of 40% for over twenty years. When it comes to great investors, he’s among the best of the best.
Greenblatt has an entertaining and humorous writing style that makes each page fun to read. And, like most great teachers, he has a knack of explaining sophisticated financial concepts in a common sense, down-to-earth way that a sixth grader could easily understand and enjoy. In fact, the book begins with Greenblatt using Jason, an 11-year old boy with a chewing gum business as an example (he buys gum for 25 cents a pack and sells each stick at school for 25 cents for a $1 a pack profit).
He asks his young son, “Ben, if Jason offered to sell you half of his business, how much would you pay?” As Ben thinks about how much Jason’s business might earn during his years in school, Greenblatt explains that evaluating the value of businesses so he can buy them a bargain price is what he does for a living.
“The Little Book That Beats The Market” is about how to find good businesses to buy at bargain prices. By buying shares of companies for much less than what they’re worth you, the investor, will have a large “margin of safety” that will lead to safe and consistently profitable investments.
So the plan is to buy a percentage interest (shares) of good businesses at bargain prices. That’s how to make a lot of money. How do you find these businesses? Are you going to have to learn how to pour over balance sheets and income statements and do sophisticated financial analysis? Not at all. And that’s the beauty of the Little Book. Greenblatt gives you a simple “Magic Formula” that you can use to find great investment opportunities.
A good business is one that can invest its own money at a high rate of return. In other words, a good business is one that can earn a high return on capital. There is more than one way to determine return on capital. The formula that Greenblatt uses is operating profit as a percentage of net working capital and net fixed assets. The higher the return on capital the better the business.
So now you know how recognize a good business. But how do you know when a good business is being sold at a bargain price so you can make a lot of money? Greenblatt uses earnings yield to determine that. As with return on capital, there are various ways to determine earnings yield. Greenblatt uses operating profit as a percentage of enterprise value (market value of equity plus net interest-bearing debt). The higher the earnings yield the better the bargain.
The only Magic Formula you need to discover good companies selling at bargain prices is to find the ones with the best combination of a high return on capital and a high earnings yield. However, that still requires a certain amount of actual work (yikes!). And it requires a familiarity with terms like “operating profit,” “working capital,” “fixed assets,” “enterprise value” and the like. So Greenblatt has even made that part easy for you. He has a free website (magicformulainvesting.com) that identifies good companies being sold at a big discount.
All you have to do is follow the step-by-step instructions in the book and go to the website to find the best investment opportunities. That’s literally how simple it is.
Following this simple, common sense approach has worked extremely well over the years. Over the past 17 years, owning a portfolio of about 30 stocks that had the best combination of a high return on capital and a high earnings yield would have returned approximately 30.8% per year. As the Little Book says, “Investing at that rate for 17 years, $11,000 would have turned into well over $1 million.”
There are a couple of questions you should be asking yourself at this point:
1. If these are such good businesses, why would someone want to sell their shares to me at a discounted price?
2. Since this guy has put the Magic Formula in a book and even on a free website, everybody will use it. How is it going to continue to work after everybody and his dog is aware of it?
Good questions. In fact, they’re so good that “The Little Book That Beats The Market” answers them very well.
First of all, why would shares of good companies be trading at bargain prices? The short answer to that is nobody knows why market participants behave irrationally at times, but the fact of the matter is they do. The way Greenblatt proves that to his class of very bright business school students is by having them look at stock tables in the paper. Take Abercrombie and Fitch, for example. The stock closed yesterday at $61 a share. But over the past year it has had a low of $43 a share and a high of $74 a share. So there’s a $30 a share difference between the high and low for the year. That’s a big range in a short period of time.
Why is there such a big difference in the high and low of the stock price for a big well known company like Abercrombie and Fitch during a single year? After all, the profitability of the company didn’t change that much.
Again, nobody knows why people behave like they do — willing to sell their shares at a low price one moment but demanding a high price the next. Greenblatt’s short answer to that is “Maybe people go nuts a lot.” And, I guess, that answer is as good as any. But it doesn’t matter what the answer is. The fact that it happens is the reason that you can get really good deals on very profitable businesses.
And, eventually, the market always gets it right. A good business will always ultimately be priced at its true value. Or as the father of value investing, Ben Graham (Warren Buffet’s mentor), famously put it: In the short run, the market is like a voting machine — tallying up which firms are popular and unpopular. But in the long run, the market is like a weighing machine — assessing the substance of a company.
Why is the Magic Formula going to continue to work after everybody knows about it? That question is answered in the most important chapter in the entire book — Chapter 8. The best thing about the Magic Formula, and the reason that it’s going to keep working even after everybody knows about it, is that it doesn’t always work. In fact, sometimes it doesn’t work at all. There have even been times when the Magic Formula did worse than the overall market for as much as three years in a row. Isn’t that wonderful?
It’s wonderful because most people are not disciplined and patient enough to follow a winning formula that doesn’t work for weeks, months, or even years at a time. Therefore, the Magic Formula will continue to work very well because very few people will have the discipline to stick with it. So there should be no worry about it losing its effectiveness. Most people won’t use it simply because it doesn’t work all the time. And that’s wonderful news for the few who have the discipline and confidence to stick with it.
I’m not going to tell you that “The Little Book That Beats The Market” will make you rich, although I believe it can. I am going to tell you that if you’ll pluck down twenty bucks or so for the Little Book, and if you’ll spend the two hours it takes to read it, you’ll be very glad you did.
(c) Larry Holmes
By: Larry Holmes
The Big Pop – Understanding and Avoiding Bubbles In 2008′s Wake
Understanding the chemistry that fuels stock market bubbles is a difficult and complex study that even risk aversion professionals have a hard time grasping. So I wondered, is there any chance that we as first-time or even some of the seasoned retail investors can anticipate or predict, with even the most modest certainty, when and how these investment and asset bubbles will pop in the future?
I think the answer is no, not really. I do, however, believe that with just a little diligent effort in analyzing the patterns of previous bubbles, perhaps we can at least avoid them. Let’s face it; bubbles not only exist and contributed almost first-handedly to the Great Recession and the financial crisis of 2008, but the phenomenon will continue and is almost guaranteed to happen again – maybe even sooner rather than later.
Let’s start by looking at some of the U.S. history’s biggest pops and use the knowledge and lessons learned in applying them to our hunt for today’s stock market or asset bubble.
Two bubbles for the price of one
Unquestionably, the most devastating, and perhaps until recently the most infamous stock market crash of all time came between the months of September and November of 1929, when the DOW nose-dived from roughly 380 to 200 points, cleaning slicing off about 50%.
But what’s “conveniently forgotten”, says Michael Bordo, Professor of Economics, and Director at the Center for Monetary and Financial History, Rutgers University, in a presentation called the CFR Symposium on a Second Look at the Great Depression and the New Deal “is that over the next several months, from early November 1929 until sometime in the middle of April 1930, the Dow Jones average went up almost to 300 points again”.
That seems fine and dandy, until the newly created U.S. Federal Reserve decided to reel itself off the god standard while the rest of the public was still knee-deep in a love affair with the precious metal. The result, many scholars and economists who study the events will argue was a world-wide boom in demand and squeeze in supply for gold, bank illiquidity, and the Great Depression, during which the Dow Jones sank back down to 42 points by July of 1932.
One lesson I would like to take away from here is that before, during, and after the catastrophic financial events of the 30′s, gold has been widely considered a safe, hard asset to invest in during economic crisis.
The smartest bubble ever
What do the words, “Pets.com” mean to you? As a first-time investor, you’re likely drawing a blank. As a seasoned retail investor in hindsight, that cute and naïve domain name could have served as the single most important lesson you’ve ever had the irritation of learning.
While the dot-com bubble’s bursting affects weren’t necessarily powerful enough to bring the entire economy to its knees, after hitting highs of around 5,000, more than double its valuation from just a year before, the technology-laced Nasdaq Composite index lost more than 60% and $5 trillion in the market value of the companies listed on the exchange between 2000 and 2003 as the tech bubble popped and deflated.
The lesson I would like to take away from the dot-com bubble is the reminder of the definition of a stock market bubble itself, which according to Wikipeda.org, is a “self-perpetuating rise or boom in the share prices of stocks of a particular industry.”
Absorbing the shock of the next pop
I think we can use these two valuable lesson and combine them to formulate our own personal “bubble preparedness plans” for our individual investment goals, and here’s how: identify where you think the next bubble could be forming, pick specific price points for getting in and out, and always be ready to let go.
Gold again is making big headlines all over print, media, and the Web, and for the same classic and recognizable reasons as those listed above: the price of the ubiquitous metal is hitting new highs (although inflation-adjusted, some will argue that gold actually hasn’t yet hit new highs, but that’s a whole other article).
We don’t have to look very far to identify the parallels between the historical crashed detailed above and the potential for a modern day gold bust. Panic ensued in the late 1920′s and early 1930′s as financial chaos set in to the economy, sparking a nasty recession, unemployment, and investor panic in the same fashion as the financial panic of 2008. The comparison is almost seamless.
Next, government officials, lawmakers, and the Fed’s from both eras’ poured billions of dollars into newly created laws that were designed to stimulate and kick-start growth in the economy. Both Feds also enacted fiscal monetary policies that included artificially low interest rates.
What happened next is again predictable for both eras’ as investors piled into the safe, hard asset that is gold, driving prices sky high among the worries and concerns of inflation, a weakened dollar and continued turmoil in the stock market.
Now let’s consider again the definition of a bubble as a self-perpetuating rise in asset prices. Fist, inflation isn’t really much of a concern – in fact, the Federal Open Market Committee has recently been talking about deflation becoming more of a concern than inflation, which if true, could be a fatal blow to gold prices.
Secondly, the dollar isn’t as weak as it once was going into the most recent crisis. Unpleasantly, the Euro was battered this year as Greece and a handful of other Euro-zone countries admitted the fiscal debt had become too much to bear, in some cases over 100% of GDP, resulting in a massive bailout for the country and the strengthening of about 11% in the U.S. dollar against our overseas currency counterpart.
Lastly, turmoil in the stock market may have finally stabilized. It’s a bold claim, I know; but I’m making this prediction based on how far we have come since the beginning of the financial market fallout of 2008 and subsequent rally in March of 2009 to today. Despite some confidence-crushing stumbles like the Flash Crash of early May and continued volatility in all the major indices, September of 2010 has brought significant and solid gains almost across the board.
I don’t think we as first-time investor or even seasoned retail investors will ever be able predict or correctly identify and avoid stock market bubbles, but I do believe it’s never too early to start thinking about the next pop. After all, if I’m wrong, the only think I lose is some credibility or confidence in my investing abilities, which is probably good every now and then anyway. However, if I’m right, there’s no limit to how much I can win – or save.
By: Tom Copeland
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