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Book Review | Portfolio Yoga

Reading – 2019

I have always been someone who loved reading books. During school days it was fiction – I liked Hardy Boys and The Three Investigators. As I grew up, it was Stephen King, Robert Ludlum among others. My all time favorite for a very long time though remained Tintin Comics.

Somewhere down the line I stopped reading and I did that at a time when in hindsight I should have read more. I did read a lot of articles on subject matters that interested me but I now know that books would have helped better since it provides a better framework to understand and learn.

A structured way of learning can compress what essentially would take years or even decades into a smaller time-frame.

There are literally millions of books that cover every subject you can think about but not everyone is a great read. Many great reads though require a deeper perspective, one that you may not have been acquainted with when you read the book in the first place. I now understand what people are saying when they say, I shall re-read the book once again. 

While fiction can be read over a weekend at best, reading books on any subject matter requires much greater time for they require deep focus (something I sorely lack). That hasn’t stopped me from buying good books based on recommendations from people I trust and of course Amazon reviews.

Here is the list of some of the books I bought in 2019 (have read some start to end, skimmed a a few and hope to revisit them in the future).

Inside the Investments of Warren Buffett: Twenty Cases by Yefei Lu

Category: Fundamental Analysis

While Warren Buffett himself has not written a single book, there are hundreds of them with each author trying to dissect his methodologies and what made him click. In this book, Yefei Lu tries to get an understanding of how he choose the companies by looking at the Balance Sheets of the companies at the time when Warren bought into them.

The choice of 20 companies I believe is based on Warren’s famous 20-idea punch card. Its a good book but one that requires some amount of understanding with respect to fundamental analysis but even if you aren’t an accountant is still a good read on how to choose good companies.

The Go–Go Years: The Drama and Crashing Finale of Wall Street′s Bullish 60s 

Category: Financial History

Financial shenanigans isn’t new. Its been there in the past, is there currently and will be seen in the future regardless of the number of laws that are passed or better understanding by investors. John Brooks who has several interesting books to his credit wrote this book

This book focusses on the 10 years between 1960 and 1970. What is so special about that period you may ask and the answer is in what happened later. The US markets were in full steam going into the 60’s. The high just before the crash that led to the great depression had been crossed over in 1955 and markets were well and truly in a euphoric rally. 

Dow began 1960 at 680 and by crossed the 1000 barrier by 1966. A 50% rise in markets may not seem that great but this came on top of 300% rise in the preceding decade. While the 1965 high was breached a couple of times, such breaches ended in failure and it was only in 1982 that the high was well and truly broken to be never seen again.

Indian Stock Markets haven’t seen long periods of consolidation. Yet, if the coming future is showcasing a slower growth environment while our valuation remain high, the only outcome is a long time based correction. 

This book as Michael Lewis in the foreword writes is not about markets themselves as much as they are about morality tales of the most outlandish events of the 1960’s.

Book of Value: The Fine Art of Investing Wisely

Category: Fundamental Analysis

I have more of less frozen the framework I use to build a portfolio of stocks using the Momentum factor. One factor that keeps interesting me and one that I feel can add value is creating a Value based portfolio. This book was bought based on recommendation of a good friend who is for lack of a better word, Value Oriented.

The Author, Anurag Sharma is an Associate Professor Management at the Isenberg School of Management. In this book, he tries to provide a framework on how to go about building a portfolio of stocks – a Core Portfolio.

The Author believes that while information overload is fast becoming a problem for investors, the bigger problems arise from emotional and psychological vulnerabilities. 

One interesting chapter is “Investing as a Negative Art”. This is more inline with Mungers famous quote, Invert, always Invert. The chapter focuses on the importance of defining a criteria to use for disconfirming investment thesis.

The Bubble Economy: Japan’s Extraordinary Speculative Boom of the ’80s and the Dramatic Bust of the ’90s

Category: Financial History

Passive Investing is the current rage but what are the risks of buying and holding the index. As we have seen with Dow Jones and many other Indices, markets can remain flat for a long period of time. Do you know for instance that FTSE today is at 7600. The high it reached in 2000 was 6950.

Yes, we are comparing a developed economy with an emerging one, but such risks exist everywhere. Japan on the other hand has been a different kind of markets altogether. Nikkei hit a high of 39K in 1989. In 2009 at the height of the financial crisis, the Index was close to breaking 7000. A fall of 82% from its high.

Christopher Wood’s book is one of the best that traces both the boom and the bust. An example from the book shows the excesses of the market. Nomura, the world’s largest stock broking firm then was at its peak was valued in excess of the total market cap of many companies. In a way, we are seeing something similar today with just Apple and Amazon having more market capitalization that entire stock markets of countries. 

India has been for a while now seeing the fruits of the excesses of the earlier years when loans were disbursed and property prices escalated beyond what most people have the ability to bear. Japan was an extraordinary case but it holds lessons on how excesses can result in mountains of bad loans, economy in recession and scandals.    

The Z Factor: My Journey as the Wrong Man at the Right Time

Category: Autobiography

As the Essel Empire slowly but seems to be surely going under, this is a good book to understand how he came to become India’s Media giant. Lots of interesting tidbits such as

https://twitter.com/Prashanth_Krish/status/1093161838924066816

The Predators’ Ball: The Inside Story of Drexel Burnham and the Rise of the JunkBond Raiders

Category: Financial History

In the United States,  just two companies have a AAA rating as of August 2019: Microsoft (MSFT) and Johnson & Johnson (JNJ). In contrast to US, in India we have dozens of companies with AAA rating, a rating that allows them a competitive advantage in their ability to borrow cheaply. For the credit companies, there is very little if any risk is things go bad. IL&FS went from being AAA to default. SEBI fined them 25 Lakhs, peanuts in the scheme of things

India despite having a large number of companies which are essentially high risk doesn’t have a junk bond market. An active junk bond would allow companies to diversify their ability to borrow other than from Banks and NBFC’s. For investors, it can provide a higher return opportunity for taking a higher risk.

The US Junk bond market was popularized by Michael Milken who found an opportunity to enable small and high risk companies an ability to borrow from the markets. He did this when working at Drexel Burnham Lambert. This book is about the rise and fall of he and the company.

What started out as an endeavor to generate fees soon turned to greed as access to information and insider-trading took root. The book is an interesting read on the path and the people involved.   

Trivia: Twitter is preparing to debut in the Junk Bond market with a $600 million deal at a yield of around 4.5%

One Hundred Years on Wall Street: Investment Almanack

Category: Financial History

I had written a review of the same here 

The Mind and the Market: Capitalism in Western Thought

Category: Economic History

While the book itself is around 400 pages, its deep on the thought of interaction between Capitalism and market as it tries to answer the question of moral, political, cultural and economic ramifications. From  Voltaire and Adam Smith to Marx, Hegel and Keynes, the book touches upon a lot of views on the utility and purpose of markets. 

Devil Take the Hindmost: A History of Financial Speculation

Category: Financial History

Speculation is as old as the hills. This book hence starts from Speculation in the Roman Empire. Did you know for instance that in 1351 (at a time when Muhammad bin Tughluq was the Sultan of Delhi), Venice introduced a law against rumours intended to sink the price of government bonds. 

While we have all heard about the Tulip Mania, the book showcases the Canal (Stock) Mania and the Rail Mania. The Canal Mania came about because of the high Return on Equity (as much as 50%) generated by the earlier Canals. The bubble burst due to the outbreak of the French Revolution. Return on Equity dropped from 50% to 5% leaving many a Canal without the ability to pay a return to its shareholders.

On the positive side though, many of the Canals that were built using such funds exist to this day. While the investors suffered, the permanent infrastructure would have yielded to others returns multiple times the Investment. The Railway Mania which followed the Canal one lived a bit longer but died similarly. But once again the gainer was general public with more than 8000 miles of rails in Britain having been laid. Britain at that point had the highest density of railways in the world. 

Warren Buffett’s Ground Rules: Words of Wisdom from the Partnership Letters of the World’s Greatest Investor

Category: Investment Management

The only reason I bought this book was to understand Warren Buffett before he bought Berkshire Hathway. Very little is known about his partnership days, partnerships where he had enormous success and one quite different from what he said or did in his later years.

The book is named after the Ground Rules Buffett wrote up when he formed his first partnership. 

“These are the ground rules of my philosophy. If you are in tune with me, then let’s go. If you aren’t, I understand”

The 5th Rule is something that every few fund managers of today let alone of those days would even bring up to a prospective client. The Rule was as follows

While I much prefer a five-year test, I feel three years is an absolute minimum for judging  performance. It is a certainty that we will have years when the partnership performance is poorer, perhaps substantially so, than the Dow. If any three-year or longer period produces poor results, we all should start looking around for other places to have our money. An exception to the latter statement would be three years covering a speculative explosion in a bull market.

In other words, Buffett felt that if a client gave him a 3 year timeframe and if evenpost that he was under-performing, they would be better off investing elsewhere. While the Index was the benchmark, Buffett felt that he should be performing at least 10% better than the Index to justify the risks of active investing.

In these days of Concentrated Portfolio vs Diversified Portfolio, here is Warren Buffett’s advice in the late 90’s which he delivered to a group of students

If you can identify six wonderful businesses, that is all the diversification you need. And you will make a lot of money. And I can guarantee that going into a seventh instead of putting more money into your first one is gotta be a terrible mistake. Very few people have gotten rich on their seventh best idea. But a lot of people have got gotten rich with their best idea. So, I would say for anyone with normal capital who really knows the business they have got into, six is plenty and I {would} probably have half of [it in] what I like the best. 

One interesting facet of his partnerships he ran for 10 years, he never had a down year. 

Risk Game: Self Portrait of an Entrepreneur

Category: Autobiography

As real estate developers in India unravel in a web of leverage and unsold apartments, this book by a US developer provides an interesting perspective on the risk and travails of real estate development. 

Francis J. Greenburger was finally able to pull if off, but just one project 50 West could have derailed all that he had achieved in the decades past. While it speaks of perseverance, it also is about ability to convince others and of course the role of luck. As with any other Autobiography, he does go overboard on his own wisdom and knowledge sometimes but given that this is his book and his achievement, I would give it a pass for the ability to learn about his life and how he overcame the odds.

The Rebel Allocator

Category: Investment Management

How do you distill the important facets when it comes to analyzing a business and yet make it a lovely read. Well, that is what the author has achieved here. While the focus is on learning, it doesn’t involve deep maths yet does touch upon a lot of philosophy more than once. For instance,

“Throughout your life, you should follow your own inner scorecard.  What does that mean? Don’t spend a lot of time worrying about what other people think of you.  Progress is only accomplished by those who are stubborn and a little weird. It’s easier said than done, but if you stay true to your own principles and follow your own inner scorecard, it’s your best shot at happiness”

There are very interesting insights on what type of companies survive and thrive for the long run and which don’t. Using a picture, it showcases that companies that thrive are those that make a profit while at the same time providing value which seems higher than the price of the product making it attractive to the end customer.

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I am not a compulsive reader yet thanks to the easy availability of books, its attractive to buy those that seem interesting based on the reviews of others. In addition to the above, I have in recent past purchased a few more but haven’t been able to read.

Even if you are not a big reader, I would recommend buying books that seem interesting or have been recommended by well meaning friends. There will be a day when you are bored with Social Media and Television and on such days, books can be a good friend if it’s easily available.

A book, especially non fiction is basically years of knowledge of the author compressed into a small digestible version in print. That being available for the cost of a Starbucks Coffee is cheap beyond imagination. For me the biggest benefit has been the ability to distinguish Bull Shit from what is not. In the world of finance, this gives me a nice edge when it comes to investing.

Book Review: DIY Financial Advisor: A Simple Solution to Build and Protect Your Wealth

Link to Book: DIY Financial Advisor:  by Wesley R. Gray

Self Medication is harmful says the Doctor. Do not try this at home say media before it showcases mind blowing antics performed by stunt drivers. When you receive a legal notice, you really cannot do it yourself and would need the help of a lawyer to draft a reply.

But when it comes to finance, one does need to question whether the experts are any better. This book is written by the team that runs the website http://www.alphaarchitect.com/ which for me is a go-to site for the humongous amount of testing they do with regard to strategies that range from simple and is executable by a individual investor to the complex (not of the convoluted type, but strategies that will be tough for a non finance guy to replicate).

The book is more or less a continuation of the same and being a regular reader of the site (as well as other related sites), the data and the strategies weren’t something that surprised me.

The book is divided into three parts with part one being the easiest of the reads as it focuses on the failure of experts. While the book in itself limits to a few charlie’s, there is no dearth of those who have lost investor money by the bagful.

For me the most impressive fact was showcasing of the study by Professors William Grove, David Zald, Boyd Lebow, Beth Snitz, and Chad Nelson who have performed a meta-analysis—or a study of studies—on 136 published studies that analyze the accuracy of “actuarial” (i.e., computers/models) vs. “clinical” (i.e., human experts) judgment. (Link)

Exp

I am a strong believer in using Models for both Investment & Trading and the above analysis just re-emphasizes the fact. In fact, if you have read The Checklist Manifesto by Dr.Atul Gawande, you will remember him showcasing how even the experts get it wrong and how using models (in there, usage of lists) can reduce the same by a large margin.

Compared to other fields, in the field of finance, use of models is growing due to fact that professionals have recognized the advantages of using a model compared to using one’s gut feel given our biases.

The book (as is their website) is aimed for the American Investor since many of the instruments that are available for investing aren’t even available here. But its nice to see how simple momentum / value based strategies can provide a investor with a better return compared to just being a passive investor.

Another surprising data from the book was whether it made sense to stick to the original Benjamin Graham approach of buying cheap stocks or shifting gears and buying Quality stocks at a good price as described by Warren Buffett.

Chart

On almost all counts, simply buying cheap stocks beats buying quality stocks at a good price. Yet, today we hear more about Buffett strategy than the original graham strategy. Once again, we fall for a good story which it seems is not backed by data but by sentiment.

On the whole, found the book to be a good read with the takeaway being that you can beat the experts if you are disciplined enough to follow the simplest of models (a 60:40 re-balanced portfolio for example).

If you are a Indian Investor, i would suggest that you browse through the site as the book in itself is pretty expensive and may not be a worthwhile investment.

Review of Restart by Mihir Sharma

Mihir Sharma is a well known Journalist whose writings I have followed for some time now and hence when I came across his book, Restart: The last chance for the Indian Economy, it was a no-brainer to read the same. While the book seems big, it actually a pretty easy read, divided as it is into 4 main parts and multiple chapters.

Mihir spends 75% of the book (first 3 parts) outlining all that has gone wrong in India. From the multitudes of law that a small factory owner should keep track and obey to the political shenanigans that brought about a few of the big moves such as Bank Nationalisation or the half hearted start of liberalization that was kicked off in 1991.

Anyone who has read his articles knows the fact that he does like our former prime minister Manmohan Singh a lot and this book is not much different out there. Then again, since he is in the circles which had access to him, maybe he is really able to see the part that majority of us could not. But then again, we are digressing from the book.

The problem I find in the book is that Mihir seems to believe that nothing we have achieved in India counts for anything. While the gains we have made in Information Science is placed squarely at the feet of we being a country of cyber coolies, he literally accuses pharma companies of cheating one and all.

The most surprising comment of his I found was his thought that the Ranbaxy Promoters sold to the highly innocent folks at Daiichi Sankyo a “Placebo”. Mind you the fact that unlike we small share holders, the big boys who did their own due diligence which I think includes access to not just the accounts but all the factories and records got cheated because Ranbaxy as like any other “Indian” teenager who when taking a test, cheated when it could and gamed the system when it could not.

In fact, he goes further and says “We are a Nation of Plagiarists”. Isn’t it amazing that when Japan / South Korea / China / ASEAN countries started their journey towards Industrialization, they did nothing different but actually copied what was invented in the West and build it cheaply.

Xiaomi phones have been a huge hit in China and now in India. But try as you want, they are not able to sell the same sweet cheap phones in any developed nations. Wonder why?

Like any true Socialist (though I do not think he is one who believes in their ideology), he more or less seems to suggest that Indian Promoters are a unscrupulous lot. After all, haven’t most of them gamed the system to make undue gains (and once again, the King of Good times is selected for some special treatment what with a whole chapter dedicated to him). And hence his suggestion that rather than leave the field open for private and allow for true competition, he hopes that the government can act as a “Stern Parent Who Supervises Homework Closely”. Good Luck with that I say.

On one hand, he correctly points out about the fact that Banks have accumualated huge Non Performing Assets due to ir-responsibility of some business-family scion, but at the same time does not provide the way out. Today, with much of the banking sector in the hands of the government, the field is more like a Oligopoly. The fact that banks with the highest NPA can raise deposits with the same ease and rates as a Bank with the lowest NPA. This distorts the whole picture and with limited time at the top, any CMD is more interested in securing himself than take on the risk of cleaning up the books.

The final section is devoted to making suggestions about what can be done to change that. While the suggestions on the face of it are pretty good, the fact of the matter is that they are too broad in scope and literally something that seems to be setting as one to fail. After all, regardless of how efficient Modi works, even he cannot do all the things necessary to boost the growth of India in the next 4 years even as he fights one state election after next.

Like Modi, Mihir seems to believes that the easy way to prosperity is by putting up factories, not to sell to ourselves but sell to the world. China is what is is due to the fact that it has a early mover advantage and dislodging someone like that is no easy game.

After all, despite the fact that every state government is wooing IT firms with hosts of benefits, why is that most of them still prefer Bangalore (despite all its ills) to be their first choice? I was reading a article about a IT firm that currently is in Mumbai saying that its next phase of expansion will be in Bangalore since they aren’t able to get the kind of people they want to work out there.

Yes, Manufacturing is important, but with Europe slowing down and China having build up a huge surplus in capacity, it will be tough to beat them at their own game. At one point, he showcases how even Bangaladesh has run ahead of us in terms of Garment Exports. But the reasons are not just due to our laws (which are a major reason, do doubt). The 2013 Savar building collapse showed the risks that were being taken to get there. China has its famous sweat factories and regardless of how we see them, I doubt we want to be like them.

I strongly believe that India shall grow, not because of the government but in-spite of it. Yes, there are a lot of things to set right, but like Sanitation, not all can be changed or righted in a few years and that is sure to disappoint us.

While the book is pretty fast paced read, I would have loved it even more if he could have identified one major issue (say in the Financial Industry) and come out with suggestions on what are the things one could do to set things right. Then again, being a Journalist means that he wanted to touch as many a sector / area as possible without having to make concrete suggestions. After all, how many would have bought the book if it was purely one on what Ails our Banking Industry and the way to set it right.

I give the book 4 Stars out of 5

Thoughts on Media and Review of Clash of the Financial Pundits

A book review of a subject matter where I have my bias will not do justice without me putting out the story which led me to such a bias in the first place. So, before I review the book, here is some history

The influence of media in the development of trader / investors cannot be understated. When I entered the markets in 1996, we did not have CNBC but did have the pink papers that are available even now. My first dose of investing wisdom was through reading such columns and trying to execute on ideas presented.

My first major brush with losses was also due to the influence of one such paper which in its Monday Edition had come out with a article on how buying Dividend Yield stocks was the best way to bet in the markets and listed 10 stocks which had seemingly good fundamentals and were available at very good dividend yields (Yield being based on previous year’s dividend). Since I come with neither a MBA nor from a family who has experience in shares, I jumped headlong and bought every one of them. To make a long story short, that was the last time I saw my money and of course, many of those shares still lie in my drawer having been delisted years ago even before dematerialisation became compulsory. 

My second brush and one that permanently led to me having a bias against reading pink sheets came in 2000 when a acquintance of mine who after accumulating a huge chunk of shares of a penny stock was able to post a article in a major newspaper on how the company was as good as gold with plans exceeding that of **** (name of the then favorite). Of course, once the article came out, the stock went up 20x before the crash of 2000 ensured that this along with other companies with dot come / Info sounding names bit the dust. Of course, well before this happened, the acquaintance of mine was able to bail out with a pretty hefty gains.

For some reason, I have never been a fan of Television (other than to watch Films 🙂 ) and in that aspect, CNBC was something that I have never become addicted to (other than watching it in the years before twitter for breaking news with respect to Dow / RBI decisions). A good friend of me once commented that he had on one fine day counted the number of stocks that are mentioned / discussed on a normal day in the channels and the count came to the high 90’s. With so many stocks being discussed, its just a matter of chance that some stocks that were discussed and many that have news flow along with it tend to do well in the immediate term giving rise to the thought of media being a good way to absorb information. Nothing can be further than the truth though.

Its with this bias that I set myself to read the latest book of Joshua Brown and Jeff Macke. What prompted me to write was the following quote by Joshua 

Paying no attention  to “the media” allows you the luxury of blissful ignorance, and if you plan to die young, we highly recommend  it.

While I have no plans of dying young (or getting financially bankrupt), I have survived this jungle of a market for a pretty long time (as a full time trader / investor) without having to depend on the daily dose of media. In that sense, I believe that the statement over blows the importance of the Media as a medium of information for the retail investor.

Before the advent of social media, the small investor was at the mercy of the financial media for getting news on the companies / markets he had invested into. But today with information being the finger tip and crowd-sourcing of research becoming big, there is little excuse for anyone to depend on the media to get the information and analysis they are looking for. Of course, since both the authors are regulars on financial television, one could not have seem how the book could have come to a different conclusion.

Its in this context that I am reminded of this quote from the Oracle of Omaha in his recent Annual Report

“Forming macro opinions or listening to the macro or market predictions of others is a waste of time. Indeed, it is dangerous because it may blur your vision of the facts that are truly important. (When I hear TV commentators glibly opine on what the market will do next, I am reminded of Mickey Mantle’s scathing comment: “You don’t know how easy this game is until you get into that broadcasting booth.”)

To me, the greatest issue with television pundits is their uncanny ability to forecast the future. The more outrageous the forecast, the more the prime time they get to talk. Hence you have had Analysts commenting on how Nifty will go down to 4500 right when the markets were ready to take off higher or make a call to buy Infrastructure Funds / Stocks right at the time they peaked in 2007. 

This is not limited to India only as the book provides ample evidence of how “Hedgehogs” tend to occupy the limelight as well as continue to attract followers and attention even after umpteen number of failures. The very fact that they are able to provide a convincing story as to why Dow may hit 4000 or that Gold shall touch 5000 a Ounce is enough to gather the TRP they clamour.

The book in itself can be divided into two parts. Half the chapters have been written by Joshua Brown who as draws upon history to tell stories of the past pundits and how they came unstuck. The other half of the chapters are of interviews by Jeff Macke who has interviewed a variety of persons connected with the financial media. In terms of pages though, Jeff Macke hogs more than 75% of it with the rest being occupied by Brown.

The biggest revelation of the interviews I gained was that even the biggest stars of TV actually watched very little TV themselves and in that sense, it just confirms my view that one need to not be hooked to television to get across to news and analysis. The interviews themselves are ok especially if you were to compare interviews Jack D. Schwager has had in his Market Profile series. There is just so little insight that can be gained here that its completely lost in the noise of the leading questions and answers that proliferate. 

The best chapter I liked was the Chapter 15 aptly titled “All your investment rules contradict each other”. Other than that, this is a book that is once read and disposed off since there is not much to gain from a second or third reading.

I believe that most investors are better off sticking to index funds since evidence is plentiful about how very few investors actually are able to beat the Index in the long run. But then again, that is not a advise you shall hear on Television where the anchors want you to believe that you can be the next Warren Buffett or Rakesh Jhunjhunwala by buying the stocks that are recommended by their Star Analysts (and if you want more, you can always subscribe to the tips and newsletter they offer on their personal websites for a fee).

Watching television has made most of us experts in Cricket / Football (or any other sports you care to follow) and similar thought process gets developed by a investor who believes TV is the substitute for real analysis. Unfortunately the herd is seldom right and if your process of stock selection is dependent on the pontification of TV pundits, its just a matter of time before you shall see that while the analysts continue to be cheerful, your trading account is in tatters.