Posts Tagged ‘Gold’

Lots of Experts at Extremes

Monday, March 9th, 2009

William Smead
Chief Executive Officer
Chief Investment Officer

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Dear Clients and Prospective Clients:

When a market has been strong, there is no limit to the number of people who will tell you how good it is going to be for the foreseeable future. When a market has gone down for a long time, a multitude will tell you how far down it is going and how long the downtrend will last.

At Smead Capital Management we have developed a term for this that we call a “Well-Known Fact”. By definition (Smead Unabridged Dictionary), a “Well-Known Fact” is a body of economic information which is known by all market participants and has been acted upon by nearly everyone who could care or has the financial wherewithal to care to act. It is best understood through the comments of former Intel CEO, Andy Grove, who said that the best advice he ever got in business came from a professor at the City College of New York. The professor said, “When everyone knows that something is so, nobody knows nothin’.” By nothin’ the professor infers nothing that could do you any good. When everyone believes a fact and has acted on it to an extreme, nothing good can come to you from believing it from an investment standpoint.

Here is a series of “Well-Known Facts” from recent history. Also noted are the assets that were purchased to act on the fact and the end result of the extreme:

Fact 1: The Internet will change our lives. — Asset Purchased: Tech Stocks — Result: From the peak of early 2000, tech stocks fell 80% in 2.5 years.

Fact 2: Residential Real Estate only goes up. — Asset Purchased: Homes in sunshine states of Arizona, Florida, Nevada and California. — Result: 40-50% price drops and a majority of the nation’s foreclosures.

Fact 3: Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC) will grow faster than the industrialized world. — Assets Purchased: Commodities and Emerging Market Mutual Funds. — Result: Commodities drop 60-80% and Emerging Markets fall 50-70%.

At the extreme, whatever value that is connected to the assets involved with the “well-known fact” doesn’t matter in either direction and there is no shortage of both expert and non-expert opinion on how high or low the asset prices will go. Henry Blodgett saw the moon for Qualcomm and internet stocks in 1999. No shortage of cable shows taught you to “Flip this House” in 2005. And in 2008, Goldman Sachs’ Oil analyst put a $200-250 price possibility on a barrel of oil. Not to mention T. Boone Pickens, who has been attempting to talk oil prices up since it peaked at $147 per barrel last year.

In the opinion of SCM, here is the new “Well-Known Fact”.

Fact 4: The massive amount of borrowing attached to homes and personal finances in the U.S. over the last ten years dooms us to a three to four-year recession/depression which is not treatable by policy makers and could ultimately cause a total collapse of our financial system. — Assets Purchased: U.S. Treasury Bills, Notes and Bonds; Gold and “virtuous non-U.S. currencies”. — Assets Sold: Common Stocks including the finest companies in America. – Experts: Nouriel Roubini, Jimmy Rogers, Marc Faber, etc., etc. etc.

The T-bills and gold are easy for us to see through. There is a bubble of fear and uncertainty. Therefore, any asset which seems to give protection against fear should get way over-priced at the height of the fear. We wonder how people are going to feel about earning little or no interest for years. I drove by a guy on Pima Road in North Scottsdale today selling Safes on the side of the road. Gun sales are through the roof. These actually make more sense to me than the money-market funds, savings accounts, CD’s and T-bills. If the premier U.S. companies don’t survive and prosper, there will be no tax revenue to insure deposits, back money-market funds and redeem government debt. If our Disney, Abbott Labs and WalMart don’t make it, you need a one-acre garden, a nearby water supply and a set of big guns and lots of ammo.

As bad as this decline has beaten our stocks in the short-run, you’d think that we wouldn’t love it just as much as the other “well-known facts”. You’d be wrong. This one is possibly setting up faithful and persevering blue-chip stock investors for the positive ride of their lifetime. First, today’s Wall Street Journal is talking about an additional decline of more than 20% off a stock market which has been pummeled more than any market other than the 1929-32 “Great Depression” decline. Second, sentiment polls from the American Association of Individual Investors and Bespoke Research show that a MAJORITY of market participants believe that the stock market will fall more than 20% from here. Third, our wonderful and well-trained clients have called me more times in the last two weeks to tell me that the market is going down more and is going down for another one to two years. All these prognostications coming from folks we’ve worked for for years and have n ever had an personal opinion about the short-term stock market direction prior to this year.Fourth, there is more cash on the sidelines in money-market funds relative to total U.S. stock market capitalization than any time in the last 60 years.

We could go on all day with additional evidence, but we think you get the picture. We believe there has probably never been a better day to buy quality U.S. stocks (for a two to three-year holding period) in our lifetime than today. The reason is that everyone knows that the opposite is so and, therefore, “nobody knows nothin’.”

BUY-BUY-BUY

Warm Regards,

William Smead

The securities identified and described in this missive do not represent all of the securities purchased or recommended for our clients. It should not be assumed that investing in these securities was or will be profitable. A list of all recommendations made by Smead Capital Management with in the past twelve month period is available upon request.

2+2=4

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

William Smead
Chief Executive Officer
Chief Investment Officer

 

 

 

Dear Clients and Prospective Clients:

I’m fond of saying that the Math you need to succeed in business is learned by the end of 7th grade. If you can do percentages and simple algebraic equations, you can be a huge success! There are two very important areas of investing and our economy which simple math could tell you are going to change.

The first is in housing. The loans attached to housing are the “Achilles Heel” of this economy. All the securities and balance sheets which are poisoned by mortgages have at their core an unknown. When and at what price will housing bottom in the markets that dominated mortgage origination (California, Florida, Arizona and Nevada)? Those states have also dominated foreclosure statistics and provided the most toxic paper in the most egregious mortgage-backed securities market. If the demand for homes remains relatively constant, then it is the supply of homes on the market which tell you if some kind of equilibrium is being reached.

Here is the simple math. Housing starts were the lowest in 50 years in January at an annualized pace of 466,000 new homes. Don’t just pass that statistic by. MORE HOUSES WERE STARTED IN THE U.S. IN 1960 WHEN WE HAD A TOTAL POPULATION OF 180 MILLION THAN ARE BEING STARTED TODAY WITH A P0PULATION OF 300 MILLION! Home sales are up sharply in the worst performing states. There are about 1.3 million homes absorbed each year in the U.S. The inventory of unsold homes dropped recently to 9-months supply from a high of 11-months last year. The media and internet outlets want you to believe that additional layoffs and foreclosures are the key to housing finding a bottom. However, we believe those negatives are only slowing the positives in rebalancing supply and demand. With more babies being born in the U.S. in 2007 and likely in 2008 than any year since 1957, it is likely that demand is not constant, but rather is growing underneath the surface. The new stimulus bill gives an outright $8000 tax credit to first-time home buyers (anyone who hasn’t owned a home for three years) which does not have to be paid back if you keep the home for three years.

Conclusion: More demand and less supply will lead to equilibrium. Equilibrium in housing prices would clarify the underlying value of mortgages and mortgage-backed securities. Clarification of mortgage and mortgage-backed security values could define financial institution book values. Definition of “real” book values would refocus investors on earnings power. Refocusing on earnings power would restore confidence in the surviving financial institutions and the stock market in general!

The second area for discussion is gold. I read recently that approximately 75% of the demand for gold comes in the form of jewelry. If you read the reports of any jewelry company, you’ll find that the demand for jewelry is down significantly (Tiffany Christmas sales down 21%). The price of gold is up to $970 per ounce this morning and has risen over the last three months. If 75% of your demand drops by 20%, you have a loss in demand of 15% (assuming supply is constant). For prices to rise while that was going on, you needed speculators, who make up something less than 25% of demand, to have demanded everything that jewelry buyers normally demand and buy a great deal more! It is too bad for them that supply is not constant. Thanks to M.C. Hammer and Ed McMahon, people are turning in their gold for cash in record numbers; enough to justify expensive adds at the Super Bowl and all day on television.

Conclusion: Less demand and more supply of gold will lead to much lower prices at the point that speculators run out of bullets in their gun (remember what happened last summer when Oil speculators ran out of “Peak Oil Theory” bullets in the face of falling oil consumption). Those bullets are all “fear’ trade bullets. The “fear” trade goes away when equilibrium is reached in housing, the financial institutions are stabilized and some confidence comes back into our economy. We at Smead Capital Management recommend that long-term investors sell their gold before the “fear” trade disappears and before two plus two goes back to equaling four.

Best Wishes,

William Smead

Smart or Wealthy

Monday, January 5th, 2009

William Smead
Chief Executive Officer
Chief Investment Officer




 

 

Dear Clients and Prospective Clients:

Before the next ten years of successful stock market investing gets away from us, we at Smead Capital Management would like to remind everyone that the purpose for investing is to build wealth to enhance future purchasing power. If you watch investment shows on T.V. or read investment magazines, newspapers or websites, you’d think that the object of the game is to be smart. However, let’s look at some of today’s key topics to see what is currently considered dumb and smart in the investment world. Then, let’s ask if they build wealth over long periods of time.

Ultra-Smart—Sitting in Cash, preferably U.S. Treasuries.
Those who were smart in 2008 held inordinate parts of their assets in cash or treasuries and missed some part of the stock market’s horrendous decline. They earned anywhere from 3% interest to as low as 0% toward the end of the year. It can be a very smart strategy in the short run, but has always been blown away as soon as everything returns to something more normal. We believe when normality returns those who sat in cash will have to stare longingly at the portfolios of their “dumb” friends who sat through abusive declines in the value of their blue chip stocks to get long-term returns averaging 10%.

Smart—Trading in and out of stocks.
Wade Cook hasn’t been out of business that long, but it is hard for you all to remember his advertisements which told people to “cash flow” their stocks. He said, “Buy a stock at $1 and sell it at $2, wait for it to go back down to $1 and do it again.” Wade spent time in jail for his misrepresentations, but the “Fast Money” people or Jim Cramer’s followers won’t. You’d have to be pretty “dumb” to sit through last year’s volatility when you could have been trading the enormous market swings (mostly down swings, they fail to mention). I think that if you add up the gains and losses, commissions taxes and you find that trading almost never builds wealth (unless your Charles Schwab).

Smart—Participating in highly sophisticated and esoteric asset classes.
Commodities, hedge funds, private equity, emerging international markets, short selling and the like always look and sound smart because of the exclusivity and complexity. The exclusivity and complexity contributes to dramatically higher participation costs (a leading cause of wealth destruction) and who knows if anyone ends up building wealth (see Bernard Madoff).

Smart—Gold.
Gold was $1000 an ounce when I was in college 30 years ago. It is $870 today. Am I missing something?

Dumb—Buy and Hold Blue Chip Stocks.
How could anyone be so dumb as to buy and hold the finest companies in the world like Disney or Microsoft or Nordstrom? Don’t they know that we have the worst recession since the 1930’s? Don’t they know what Professor Roubini says? Haven’t they been in China with Jimmy Rogers? Didn’t they see how bad it was last year?

Dumb—Buy American Stocks
Everyone knows that the smart people are investing in China and emerging markets! They must know that Warren Buffett will be wrong this time (NY Times Op-Ed Oct. 16, 2008—Buy American, I did). Didn’t he get wealthy?

Dumb—Leaving your stocks to your alma-mater.
I love reading the stories of the elderly man or woman who leaves their stock certificates to their favorite charity. A schoolmarm who left the school millions or the guy who left the Union Gospel Mission thousands and thousands of dollars of utility stocks buried under his mobile home. It was never gold or trading techniques or complex investments they left, it was common stocks.

At any given time the best investments can look smart or dumb depending on when you look and where we are in the market. However when traditionally solid wealth creation disciplines are challenged, it could be time to get excited. We love what we do at SCM and we hope you all join us in this worthy and hopefully wealth building endeavor.

Happy New Year!

William Smead

October 21, 2008 – Bill Smead on About the Money

Thursday, October 23rd, 2008

Chief Investment Officer Bill Smead on KCTS’s About the Money