Archive for February, 2009

Bill Smead on About the Money (2/10/2009)

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

If you can’t see the video above, click here to watch the segment

Noise

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

William Smead
Chief Executive Officer
Chief Investment Officer


 

 

Dear Clients and Prospective Clients:

Sometimes you can’t hear because of all the noise and we at Smead Capital Management believe that this is one of those times. Let me share some interesting facts getting lost in all the noise this morning.

The inventory of homes for sale has dropped to a nine-month supply from as high as 11-months last year.

It is more economic in Seattle to buy a home with a $300,000 mortgage than it is to rent an appealing apartment.

Oil prices are holding below $40 per barrel, even though OPEC and an Army of investors are doing everything in their power to reverse the price.

More Babies were born in the U.S. in 2007 than in any year since 1957. We think that 2008 exceeded 2007 and as much as everyone has stayed home the last three months, 2009 could be a baby barn-burner.

We could probably be at the peak of distressed sales as a percentage of overall home sales.

The Federal Reserve reported that the savings rate has already risen to 3.8% in the U.S. from negative levels.

Many Americans thought that our country was going to be “ruined” by the “Socialist Policies” of the Roosevelt Administration in late 1932.

Stocks rose 370% from July 8th of 1932 to March of 1937.

Many Americans think that our country is going to be “ruined” by the “Socialist Policies” of the Obama Administration in early 2009.

The stock market has been miserable today, but most stocks are a long way from their November lows.

The U.S. Government seeks to stabilize the financial system and slow the economic contraction.

Unemployment is at 7.6% and could be headed as high as 9 or 10%.

Unemployment bottomed at 14.3% in 1937!

“History never repeats itself but it often rhymes.” (Mark Twain)

Best Wishes,

William Smead

Bill Smead on About the Money (2/03/2009)

Monday, February 9th, 2009

If you can’t see the video above, click here to watch the segment

Sixth Sense

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

William Smead
Chief Executive Officer
Chief Investment Officer


 

 

Dear Clients and Prospective Clients:

In the movie, “Sixth Sense”, the little boy could see dead people. Unbeknownst to the movie viewers, the dead people included the character played by Bruce Willis who was counseling him. On one hand, Willis’s Character helped calm this child’s fears surrounding the haunting episodes he had with dead people. At the moment we see dead investors/consumers and the U.S. Government is playing the role Bruce Willis played. Much like receiving counseling from a dead person, the U.S. Government’s Rescue and Stimulus plans can serve to make the patient (investors and consumers) more nervous.

SCM Portfolio Manager Tony Scherrer has come up with a great analogy to explain the current circumstances which we have described as an “Economic or Business Coma”. He reminded us that some people who have come out of comas tell loved ones that visited them that they heard them speaking while they were comatose! At Smead Capital Management we are speaking and writing to many folks out there who are in an investment coma. They are listening and hearing us, but they are immobilized by what they see around them. We know the news has been horrible on the job front and in the stock market (worst January in history) and here in Seattle we are just now getting hit by the layoffs and business closures that most of the country has been going through for over a year.

Many of those who are listening to us will call us when they and everyone else come out of this business coma. Unfortunately, they are likely to pay dramatically more to buy shares of the best U.S. companies at that time. The primary reason for not buying into our portfolios now is the worry that the coma will last longer than expected and we will look foolish in six to twelve months. There is $8 Trillion dollars sitting in T-bills, money-market funds, short-term CD’s, checking and savings accounts and those amounts represent incredibly high levels versus Total U.S. Stock Market Capitalization. The offset to the fear of looking foolish is the fear of avoiding a possible rampage of buyers. Imagine what it will look like if most of these people come out of the business coma at the same time and all try to reestablish their investments simultaneously.

On top of individual investors being in a coma, institutional investors like pension plans and endowment funds have spent the last three years chasing performance under the guise of wide asset-class diversification. Their emerging market, hedge fund, private equity, energy and commodity investments not only didn’t protect them, but also turned out to be illiquid in many cases. We see massive capital employed in dead investment strategies which will haunt them for years in the “Next Great U.S. Stock Market.” To get back on track for retirees and organizations, these institutional investors could ultimately come back to U.S. Large Cap Stocks and take advantage of their long-term historical success and constant liquidity. These institutional investors could be part of the rampage as well as they give up on the popular strategies of the last three years.

We have no idea when this business/economic coma ends, but we unequivocally believe it will end as all the previous ones did! We believe that those of us who act while we are surrounded by dead investors and consumers could be proven to have a “Sixth Sense”.

Best Wishes,

William Smead

SCM 4th Quarter 2008 Newsletter

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

The King is Dead, Long Live the King 

The French say, “Le Roi est mort, vive le Roi!” The King is dead, long live the King. When the Monarch or holder of the throne would die, a new one would immediately rise up and replace the old one. The saying is designed to show the durability of the monarchy and the underlying strength in their country. As a Democratic Republic the U.S. does not have a monarchy. If we were a monarchy we would be observing the death of President George Bush’s job title and acknowledging…

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