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Always Yield to Individual Opportunities

In Howard Marks most recent Chairman memo, he remarks intensively about his disdain for investment generaliztions. He certainly is not wrong in his thinking because some of the biggest hazards (e.g. Long-Term Capital Management and the usual concepts behind most quant funds) come from generalizations.
There's little I hate more than investment generaliztions. For years, for example, self-styled authorities on the high yield bond market would say "bond defaults typically tae place 2-3 years after issuance." That always set my teeth on edge.

As he explains his viewpoints, the equity risk premium, brought up by FierceFinance that sparked the memo, gets the full brunt of what he believes is wrong with how equity risk premium is used. It may seem petty to harps on the article's present tense use of the term, as written in the corresponding online article in Pensions & Investments:
The long-term equity risk premium is typically between 4.5% and 5%.
How does one sentence gain such attention to spark a nine page assault?
The memo is a great read to gain better perspective in thinking about markets going forward. He brings a far more appropriate line of thinking in assessing markets by using earnings yield or the inverse property of the infamous price to earnings ratio, P/E. 
I have tried to use it in a similar fashion when assessing Lender Process Services Inc., $LPS, when it seemed to be destined for failure and written off by most. Howard Mark's memo has been a good reminder of what perspectives to hold when valuations, broadly speaking, gradually becomes richer with time.

Here is the memeo by Howard Marks: The Outlook for Equities

2009 interview w/ Cathy Baron Tamraz: PYMNTS.com Launch





CATHY BARON TAMRAZ: Greetings from San Diego, where we have just completed the Fortune Most Powerful Women’s Summit. I am Cathy Baron Tamraz, CEO of Business Wire, and I am here with the only male that is allowed into this conference and that is Warren Buffett, Chairman of Berkshire Hathaway, which is also the parent company of Business Wire. Warren has graciously agreed to answer some questions today, and kick off a conference that Business Wire and Market Platform Dynamics are holding in New York City, to launch a new Web site about the payment industry callexd PYMNTS.com. We are really excited about this new portal, which will be a primary source of news for the payments industry. It will havebreaking news and regulatory news in the payment industry, new technology and new products.













WB: Well, Wall Street is about trying to make a lot of money. It’s the nature of the system. You get a huge capitalist system, and it raises lots of money and it makes lots of big deals and people – some people get paid very well for it. What you have to change in Wall Street is you have to make sure that in addition to carrots, there are sticks. And it can’t be a one‑way street where they are making ungodly amounts of money when things are good and then they move on to someplace else for a while when things are bad. You have to create a downside. I hope there are some practices put into place – and I’ll have a few thoughts on them myself – but Congress undoubtedly will have a few thoughts too. You have to put in something where there is downside to people who really mess up large institutions and we need some new help in that. Too many people have walked away from the troubles they have created for society, not just for their own institution, and they have walked away rich. They may not be as rich as they were before, but they have walked away better than they should have. There have to be incentives – not only to get rich, but to behave well.


WB: It’s interesting. Exactly a year ago when I was at this conference, I had a proposal for the so‑called “toxic assets.” I called three people in the financial world who were going to write Secretary Paulson about it. I wrote them on October 6th. I called three people to help out on this, and it would have required a lot of effort on their part and some commitment of money and time and energy. I asked all three of them if this went forward to do it absolutely pro‑bono. I asked them not to make one dime out of it. And they all said yes to me. So, they are good people. Many are motivated by greed. None of us are perfect, you know? I always say that, “Every saint has a past, every sinner has a future.” We have got some sinners back there, but they are not all bad. They went along with a bubble that they helped create – but the whole American public did. You still have to have the right rewards and penalties for behavior. That’s how you get decent behavior. So, I don’t look at Wall Street as “evil.” I look at Wall Street as given to huge excess sometimes. I don’t want to get rid of it. We need something to allocate capital and distribute securities and all of that throughout the system. We have got a big capitalist system and we have to have a big capital market – but there is plenty of room for improvement.






WB: It won’t disappear, but in the end – and that’s the genius of the American system – we do give the consumer what they want. If people want to use the convenience of cards, they will do it. Now there will be enough people that want to use cash, so consumers won’t turn their back on it entirely. They haven’t given up landline phones entirely for cell phones. The American consumer – in the end – is king. You can push them around for a week or a month maybe, but you either figure out what’s in your customers’ mind and decide you are going to serve them; or you are not going to be in business. They are right, and you are wrong. It’s what made this country, to some extent, what it is. Our market system where the customer – 300 million Americans – tell people what to make, where to serve them, and how to do business. Compare that to some totalitarian system, where somebody decides what people are going eat for lunch and we win.




WB: Cathy, I met Ralph Schneider who was the founder of the Diners Club back in the 1950s. He had just designed an IRA, and they are just using it around New York. They used to charge the merchants 10 percent and the card was very low priced then. American Express went into the business originally defensively. They had the Travelers Check and they were worried about what the credit card would do to it. In 1964, when American Express had what they called the great Salad Oil Scandal, we became this little outfit in Omaha and became the largest shareholders of the American Express Company. I went around to restaurants and service stations, and asked people about whether the Card was losing its appeal because of the scandal that was going around. They said the Card wasn’t losing it but that it was growing in appeal. So, I watched the credit card industry almost from the beginning in that respect. We got in early. I could see it was a powerful tool. First Data was in Omaha, and I have watched them all. Carte Blanche, the Hilton Card – some of those have disappeared over the years. Of course, Visa and MasterCard have been successful. There have been all kinds of developments, but the truth is, the American public likes to be able to go into their pocket and pull out a card.


WB: Well, what originally attracted me back in 1964 was that Diners Club got the jump. They were way ahead of American Express. American Express came in with a very interesting market and concept. People already were carrying Diners Club, and American Express wanted to enter the field. They charged more than Diners Club did for their product. Diners Club had this card that had a bunch of flashy little symbols and everything on it. American Express brought out that centurion, and originally it was the green card with the guy that looked like Mr. Integrity. If you went into a restaurant, and you were buying dinner for somebody, and you had a choice of pulling out this Diners Club card that looked like you were giving a check from your mother or pulling out this centurion that made it look you were J.P. Morgan or something – you went with Mr. Integrity. They actually took over the field by establishing themselves not as the low‑priced competitor but, but as the class competitor. It was a great marketing arrangement. Then it swept the country. The card I carry in my pocket says, “Member Since 1964.”






Fireside Chat w/ Warren Buffett & CEO Cathy Baron Tamraz

@ PYMNTS.com interview w/ Warren Buffett 2013

CEO of Business Wire, Cathy Baron Tamraz:
Good Morning,
I am Cathy Baron Tamraz, CEO of Business Wire and I am here today, February 26, 2013 with Warren Buffett, a man who needs no introduction. This is Warren's second interview for PYMNTS.com. We did the first one in the fall of 2009 around the time the site launched. The site has become the de facto destination for all important news and innovation around the payments industry and since money is Warren's sweet spot, his insights are a perfect kickoff to the innovation project. So let's begin, Good Morning Warren.

CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, Warren Buffett:
Thanks for having me.

CEO of Business Wire, Cathy Baron Tamraz:
It's good to see you as always. We have certainly come a long ways since we have spoken since the fall of 2009, when we were in...

A Word about Discounts and Expected Values

I left my comments on Whopper Investments. Any discussion about this topic has always caught my attention. I still grapple with the ideas put forth by different people but have come around to my own comfortable conclusions.




My comments in response:

Owen says:March 18, 2013 at 4:13 pmIn the context of generating profits for the risks taken, we are entering murky waters This is a good discussion on risk versus discounts but it is similar to how investor categorize their investment strategy as growth or value investing, they are joined at the hips. With the matter of expected values and discounts we have to consider timing as a key element. You have to tie in the risk/reward analysis and geo-expected(annualized) returns to make an investment worth the trip. Is the invest worth the risk and time given our “current” rational expectations? Discounting should be used more for assessing versus risk-adjusting expected returns.In terms of Kelly, you have a strategy that avoids gambler’s ruin should worse cases materialize, given a large sample space of bets.Cash flow projection another story: Amazon’s cash flow year end 2000 vs Washington Post cash flow 2000. It is better to be opportunistic in your approach than cash flow sensitive in projections.Good investing,Owen.

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